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                    <text>Can a camel find
love and happiness
in Casselberry?

erudite attorney
keep his elbow room?

&lt;
L
J
L
m

77th Year, No. 152— Sunday, February 17, l?$5— Sanford, Florida

Evening

Herald

Freedom
Fantastic
Reporter
Exclaims

-

(USPS

4$t-2$0)

Threat Part
Of County
Land Offer

Where Do I Splice ?
Communications worker Charlie Baker,
left, seems to be asking partner Robert Post
where to splice as the pair work on a malor
above-ground telephone cable addition In
the Longwood area. Employees of En-

terprlse Communications, Inc., working out
of Winter Park, the men must Install a
group of 800 wires or 400 pair cables which
will add 400 phone lines to the Winter Park
system.

Olym pic Stor Not Guilty Of Soliciting
LOS ANGELES (U l'l) — Juror*
took Just tw o hours to find
Olympic gold medalist EdWth
Moaea Innocent o f offering an
u n d e r c o v e r H o lly w o o d

aecutora had not

n rn v rn

ih «

"A

m « u . r^ _ a

..

S 5 *S*0*dS I ®
? r S S a g S S
winner In shortly before his a r r e a tla a i

the 1078 and 1084 Olympic* month.
a n ^ f* r ,r! d .re” ?rd holdcr I " ‘ he
Follow ing the verdict, pro400-meter hurtles, was arrested aecutor Michael Ouarlno told
f i t .
o ffe r ,n « Susan reporters. "It's clear we didn't
O o n x a le s . an u n d e r c o v e r overcome factors such as
?1£!!.?nWOman■ * ,t&gt;0 for ,w o defendant's popularity, celebrity
a t m t ^ im * -cU on a *Wljrwood and his sympathetic character *
,h
Wc can'‘ dcny ‘n this case the
A lth ou gh the wom an told tremendous amount o f symoa-

f h ^ r I i ° r P ti

h°

“ *,0p around

he drove on and was

,hy r° r Edw,n Motca , m proud

of the effort we pul In. I wasn't

held In the same villa with him,
but he did not see them.
" I believe there were four
other people In the apartment
because the room I was kept In
•olltAry confinement in w u ne*t

Monument
Set For
Ceremony
Slxty-oU y e a n after It was first
dedicated. • monument honor­
ing the men o f Seminole County
who died In World War I will be
"ded icated 1 p.m. Feb. 34 In
cerem onlea at the Am erican
Legion Boat S3. Sanford.
Fifth District Congressman BUI
McCollum. R-Altamonte Springs.
«nd American Legion Deport­
ment o f Florida Adjutant Dyke
Shannon w ill be the gueat
■!*****■• Other special guests
Invited to attend will include
S fh to rt Mayor Bettye Smith.
Seminole County Sheriff John
Polk. Sanford M i c e Chief I t a
Butler, the cou n ty-------- ^ t - n
ers. American Legion
Dlstrtet Com m ander Paul Ryan,
commanders o f area
organizations and veterans a{

B y Donna Bates
H erald S ta ff W riter
The county commission Is
offering to buy a 5-arrr tract In
Casselberry as a main llbrary
slle. saying condemnation will
be discussed If agreement on
price cannot be reached.
Four county commissioners
voted earlier this week to send a
letter to Norman Kossman. rep­
resentative o f the developers'
group ow n in g the property,
•aylng the county Is willing to
pay $340,000 (the appraised
value) for the property and
noting In the letter the commis­
sioners "w ill discuss condemna­
tion" if their ofTer Is not ac­
cepted. Kossman had asked for
$375,000 for the tract, north of
state Road 438 on the Oxford
Road extension, said County
Commissioner Fred Slreetman.
Streetman said Rossman had
Inquired whether the county
was considering condemnation,
which can be advantageous to
the sell tax-wise. The letter to
Rossman was sent over the
strenuous objections of Commis­
sioner Bill Kirch hofT.
KtrchhofT sold If his colleagues
P u re h -e the site In a fashion
that Indicates threat o f con­
demnation. he will send a letter
to the Internal Revenue Service
telling them the county never
Intended to condemn land for
libraries.
"I want the IRS to know the
owners were not threatened."

The advantage to an owner
selling land under threat or
condemnation. KlrchliofT suld. Is
that the seller may not huvr to
pay taxes on the capital gain.
Meanwhile. Hester Donzlger.
o f the Jacksonville ofllrc of IRS.
said the owner of. a piece of
business property "under eon
demnutlon or threul o f con­
demnation or threat o f eminent
domain" may |&gt;oslponc (laying
taxes on capital gains for the
side of the property by buying
rr placemen I property within two
yrars.
tarsi summer when the rounty
w a s c o n s id e r in g b u y in g
Sanlando Utilities, the pn&gt;|x«cd

�» M -gya w tog Hsrali,

FI.

Easter Cross Planned

leadsy, Fsfc. 17, m s

NATION
IN BRIEF
• ♦.VVC-W*

AB A Told Law Firms Not
Hiring Enough Minorities
DETHOIT (UPI) — Pew blacks. Hispanic* and other
mlnorltiea have reached top Job* In Ihe while-dominated
leftal profession, and the American Bar Association should
do something about it, the group was told this week.
A taek force o f Ihe nation's largest lawyers group heard
20 hours o f testimony by 85 witnesses that a tiny number
o f the nation’s 25.000 minority lawyers are In major law
firms, and still fewer are Judges, taw professors and bar
leaders.
Blacks are "second-class citizens" In the whitedominated legal profession. Anthony Adams of the
National Conference o f Black Lawyers testified.
A 1084 survey by a lawyers* newspaper showed that few
o f the country's 100 largest firms employ Hispanlcs. while
those same law firms have only 1.5 percent black lawyers,
down rrom 2.9 percent In 1082.

Two Plants Fined For Violations
WASHINGTON — A key congressman says the govern­
ment Is guilty o f "reckless optimism” In deciding there Is
only a remote chance of an accident similar to Ihe chemical
leak that killed 2,500 people in Bhopal. India.
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif.. chairman of a House
environment subcommittee, said he Is disappointed In a
report by the Occupational Safety and Health Administra­
tion Friday that concluded safeguards In U.S. factories
using Ihe same chemical Involved In Ihe Bhopal disaster
make chances o f a major accident "extrem ely remote."
Bui OSHA also said Its Inspectors have accused two
plants that use the chemical methyl Isocyanate of violating
safety regulations.
OSHA proposed penalties totaling 84,200 against an
FMC plant In Middlcport, N.Y.. and a Union Carbide facility
In Woodbine. Ga. No further action will be taken until the
two firms respond to the allegations.

Retired Man Kills Family, Self
CKEVE COEUR. Mo. |UI’ I| — A police major who knew
Virgil Twlllmon says the former sergeant killed his wife
and two teenage children and then took his own life
because he was depressed by Ihe "u n k n o w n " of
retirement.
St. Uni Is County police sold Twillman. 53, called a
daughter by a previous murriage to his house early Friday
and told her, "It's a good day to die."
Twillm an guve her the title to his home, other papers,
some cash and several rifles and shotguns hut refused to
allow her Inside. Upset, she went to a neighbor's and called
police.
Officers surrounded the house but broke through the
front door when they received no response from Inside.

Hotel Torched Near Reagan Ranch
SA N TA BARBARA) Calif. (UPI1 - The hotel housing the
traveling White House press corps und some of Ihe White
House staff was the scene o f an npparenl arson fire early
Saturday.
Fire broke out ut 3:15 u.m. along a street udjucenl to the
Sheraton Santa Barbara Hotel, Just outside banquet rooms
used by the While House Press Office and Journalists.
Although (hr flames did not spread to the building, the
fire destroyed one purkrd automobile and damaged a
rented truck. No one was Injured.
One fire official said the arsonist may huvr chosen Ihe
site for publicity, knowing the holel Is used by members of
President Reagan's rnlouruge when hr Is vacullonlng ul his
runch 20 miles uwuy in the Santa Ynrz Mountains.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Israelis Pull O ut O f Sldon;
Residents Dance In Streets
SIDON. Lebanon (UPI) — Israeli troops lowered Star of
David flags and rvacuntrd advance positions along the
Awall River today — almost two days uhrud o f schedule —
leaving Ihe seaport to the Lebanese army and Jubilant
residents.
"T h e Lebanese army moved Into the Awall River
locations which the Israelis evuruuted. Some Lebanese
arm y units deployed there, and others pushed forward
further south and have already reached the center of
Sldon." witnesses said.
“ Th e people of Sldon are out In the streets. Thousands
are out on their balconies." the government-owned Beirut
Radio said In u special bulletin. "... It's a day o f rejoicing
and celebration."
Shiite Moslem rrllgloua leaders, meanwhile, Friday
called for u holy war against Israeli forces In southern
Lebanon, amid Increasing tensions linked to the pullout
preparations In the port city of Sldon.

Military Rule Ends In Uruguay
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPI) - Thousands of people
cheered wildly and waved blue-#ndwhlte Uruguayan flags
outside the legislative palace where a national congress
waa Installed to end nearly 12 years of military rule.
Th e 130-member assembly Friday promptly called for
the Immediate release or about 200 political prisoners.
"T h e real winners today are the Uruguayan people,
following more than 11 years of suffering, pain and
persecution." Sen. Carlos Julio Pereyra o f the center-left
Blanco Party said.

IOSPITAL
IOTES

March To Be Clean Up M onth
NwaWSlw»* *v 0« * wt

Show And Tea Time
Bob McKenney, Sanford, admiral some work local artists
Anna Herbst of Sanford, left, and Aurora Aumlller, Lake
Mary, will be exhibiting at the Sanford-Semlnole Art
Association Members' Show and Tea, to be held Sunday from
noon until 5 p.m. at the Sanford Civic Center. He will also ba
showing his paintings. Tha tea will be served from 2:30-4:40.
The tea and show Is open to the public.

Mercer also said he has found
someone who is willing to tow
aw ay Junk cars during the
month at no charge.

March has been d eclared
"clean up month” In Sanford.
Not only are residents en ­
couraged to clean up their pro­
perties, but city sendee clubs
will be Involved In assisting
where they can with their physi­
cal labor to accomplish the task.
The Sanford Rotary Club has
designated March 18 as the
specific clean up day they are
sponsoring, said City Commis­
sioner John Mercer.

The city commissioners and
Mayor Bettye Smith volunteered
to participate after adopting a
resolution endorsing the project.
Mercer said he thinks the
project ts a good one. crediting
Commissioner Bob Thomas with
the Idea.

Sp ea k es: There Is No Second Budget
W A SH IN G TO N (U P I) A
White House spokesman says
Ihe administration has not pre­
pared for a "fa llb a ck " position
on Its drastic budget cuts us
claimed by Senate Republican
leader Robert Dole.
Dole said In an Interview: "I've
seen a list ... that indicates some
areas where the administration
probably thinks they're not go­
ing to achieve what they have In
their budget, and agriculture is
In that Hat."
The "unofficial" Hat Included
cuts In farm subsidies. Am Irak
and student loans, but did not
mention defense. Dole said.
"Absolutely untrue." While
H o u s e s p o k e s m a n L u rry
S p e a k e s s a i d F r i d a y In
California, where he is staying
with President Reagan. "There's
no alternative list o f binlgrl culs
that represents a White House
fallback position. ... It does not
exist."
Speakes said Dole may have
been referring to n list of possible
cuts prepared by the Senate
Budget Committee for review by
other commuters.
A Dole spokesman said later
Friday the option paper, workrd
on by both White rfond rongres

slonal aides, docs Indeed exist.
"It's a worksheet that's made
the rounds on the Hill and at Ihe
W hile House." the spokesman
said. " I t basically la Just a
worksheet and nothing m ore."
R e a g a n 's 8 0 7 3 .7 b illio n
budget, even with drastic reduc­
tions In domestic programs. Is
still 8180 billion In the red and
Includes an Inflation-adjusted
Increase In military spending ol
nearly 6 percent.
Although Reagan to “ mindful
... that all legislation Is the
product o f negotiation." Speakes
said, "w e are pushing for the full
budget as we sent It up."
Dole said In the Interview, to
be published In the OOP's "First
Monday" muguzlne, that White
House officials are considering
accepting changes In the rerommended 816 billion In farm
price support reductions over
the next three years.
"There are going to be savings
In agriculture but not to the
extent of 816 billion," Dole said
In discussing the White House
w orking paper he said was
shared with a few Senate GOP
leaders.
"It's not any secret. You can
go through that budget and say

1986 budget and revenues
President Reagan proposed a *974 billion budget (or 1986. while *794
billion In government revenues are eipected lor the year
e a a s ro tN T m a o s n -s
1*** B U O O IT PSOeOSAL

N o n Delicti ms 160billion

Percentage distribution, by area

■xpfCTta teee

« M H • SS74 BILLION

FSOaHJO. M V IN U S 1

tea* - sraeanuoN

is

m

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i

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1Z4

SIMS
sound Ut 0« k* •* M««i |nm»l
lu*9»t
UI 0*p*rt**«i il tm w i

they arc not gotng to get all of
this and they won't get all of that
... like Am trak."
The Republican leader also
said several o f the administra­
tion's proposals for user fees —

fr*
P1TM ITI

Ul

©MoGtoph*. m i

like charges for patenting medi­
cines or using national parks, for
Instance — "are things In the
president's budget with question
marks" on the alternative admln IMrat Ion budget list.

Women Liked Reagan, But Not His Coattails
WASHINGTON (U PI) - A l­
thou gh wom en v o te rs gnvr
strong support to President
Reagan In his 1984 landslide
election, they disagreed with
Republicans an key Issues uuJ
'their votes cost the GOP seats In
Congress.
A report by Ethel Klein, u
Columbia University political
science professor, was released
Friday In conjunction with the
Women's Vole Project. The pro­
ject organized efforts by 75
women's groups that registered
1.8 million new women voters In
the 1084 election.
Klein said Ihe nation's healthy
economy and Reagan's populari­
ty gave him 55 percent of the
votea cast by women, despite his
fullure to support w om en's
rights and the presence of a
woman on the Democratic tick­
et.
"Despite Reagan's lurge popu­
la r support, the D em ocrats
ained two Senate seats and
eld their losses in the House to
o n ly 14 s e a t s . " sh e said.
"W ithout a substantial gender
gap In these races, Ihe results
would have slutted dramatically
In the president's favor.
"Clearly. Ihe women's vote
can deliver neither a resounding
defeat nor victory In itself."

R

Correction
A fro n t p a g e p ic tu r e In
T h u rsd a y's E v e n in g Herald
Incorrectly Identified a Hamilton
Elementary School teacher. She
Is Linda Base, kindergarten
teacher. Pupils at the school
gave a Valentine's Day tea and
cake party for the Dividends
school volunteers.

Kirin said. "But In competitive
races wuged between candidates
shurply divided on the Issues,
the women's vote can. and will,
make the difference."
She Said four R epu blican
Senate candidates. Incumbents
R o g e r J cp sen o f Iow a and
Charles Percy o f Illinois and
c h a lle n g e rs Ray S h am lc o f
Massachusetts and Jack Lousma
o f Michigan all lost because they
were opposed by a majority of
women voters even though they
captured the male vole.

"T h e same pattern holds In
House races, where women cast
a majority o f their votea for
Dem ocratic candidates w hile
men sided with Republicans,"
she said. "Again, the women's
vole stemmed ihe Republican
tide, providing the margin or
victory o f Democrats in close
race*."
She said w om en, voted 53
percent to 47 percent for Demo­
cratic House candidates, while
men supported Republicans by
the same percentages.

"H ad the male vote ruled the
day. a flood o f Reagan Re­
publicans would have entered
Congress and given the presi­
dent an even larger working
coalition o f conservatives than
he had in 1980," Klein said.
Census Bureau figures show a
dramatic Increase In women
voters In 1984. while the male
vote stayed the same. About 50
percent of eligible males voted tn
1984, while the num ber o f
eligible women voting Increased
from 59 percent to 6 1 percent.

WEATHER
F r e e s ln g te m p e ra tu r e s h it
northern Florida in the morning,
and a frost warning was In effect
for central Florida. Forecasters
said the central Florida citrus
ea would escape the freeze.
ever, with overnight ternper*Cures o f between 35 and 40
d e g re e s . N a tio n a l W e a th e r
Service forecaster Ray Bledlngcr
said the crazy weather o f early
1080, w h ich produced last
m onth's killer frecie In the
citrus, vegetable and sugar cane
growing regions, would soon
begin to moderate. "There might
be a brief moderation — I won't
say a wanning trend because It’s
"But we're not getting complete­ not going to be warm ." Bledly out of the woods." Although Infer said.
the aklea In Ohio were clear, tne
ABBA B E A B H W (B L S ) i
w eek 's snowfall forced Gov.
temperature: 39, overnight low:
Richard F. Celeste to declare a 32: Friday's high: 04: barometric
state o f emergency In 22 o f 88 pressure: 30.21; relative humidi­
counties. Th e Ohio National ty: 78 percent: winds: northwest
Ouard worked overnight to clear at 7 mph; rain: none: sunrise:
secondary roads dotted by 10-. 7.-03 a.m.. sunset 8 :16 p.m.
SUNDAY T B M i “
foot snowdrifts, hauling medical
and other supplies to stranded Baaefci highs, 6:35 a n .,' 6:18
p.m.; Iowa, 11:47 a.m.. 12:33
residents.

N A T IO N A L W B A TH EB i
Clear but cold air pervaded
m o a t o f th e M id w e s t and
Southeast, offering respite for
the snowbound and allowing the
National Guard lo dig Ohio out of
Its disastrous snowdrifts. A high
pressure system brought fair
aklea and unseasonably cold
temperatures to most o f the
Southeast today, aa snow dusted
portions o f the Orest Lakes,
upper Mtoslsalppl Valley and
northern New England. "It looks
a lot belter than enylKIng w e've
seen lately." said Jack Hates of
the National Weather Service.

K

p.m.: P a rt C an averal: hlgha.
6:27 a.m., 6:41 p.m.: lows. 11:38
a.m .. 12:24 p.m .: B a y p o r t:
highs. 11:03 a.m.. 12:38 p.m.;
lows. 6:23 a.m.. 6 0 7 p.m.
M O ND AY TID E S: D aytona
loach: highs. 7:20 s.m.. 6:40
p.m.; lows. 12:37 a.m., 1:18
p.m.; Port Canaveral: highs,
7:12 a.m.. 6:41 p.m.; lows. 12:28
a.m., 1:09 p.m.; Bayport: highs.
Il:5 2a.R l.. 1:06 p.m.; lows, 7.-00
a.m.. 8:45 p.m.
• O A T O fQ PO B E C A 8T : St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out SO
miles: Wind northeast 10 to 15
knots Saturday becoming vari­
able 10 knots Saturday night
and Sunday. Sea 2 lo 4 feet
decreasing by Sunday. Partly
cloudy.
A B B A FO BBCASTi Fair Sat­
urday with little temperature
change. High In mid to upper
50s. Wind northeast 10 mph.
Tonight continued lair and cold.
Low tn mid 30a. Light wind.
Sunny and not aa cold Sunday.
High In upper 80s. Variable light
wind.

Servicemens' Remains Found A t Crash Site te— i«sH»ua

B A N G K O K . T h a ila n d (U P I ) In ­
vestigators have found what are believed lo
be the remains o f U.S. servicemen at the
crash site o f a Vielnam-era warplane shot
down In southern Laos In 1072. an
American official said Saturday.
Deter? Mae
Lt. Col. Richard Stevenson o f the Pacific
Leeaere 4*4 Harvey I m|ea.
* Otieent
Command Llaiaon Office said the excavation
SsymeaS Hye. Wlater tertoft: terse
- team has located "what appears to be
Thirteen servicemen of 10 originally on

S S W S S S S -.S v r s
"This la a hopeful algn but still too early

1•f** ■

advertising the event.
On March 16. at one hour before
sunset. Black said Jerry Walsh,
a Seminole High School senior
who plans to go to Stetson
University to become a gospel
minister, will be leading young
people's groups. Including the
Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
Youth for Christ, the Klwanls
Key Club and others, in erecting
the cross.
Black said he is sending letters
to all the church and service
o r g a n i z a t i o n s I n v i t i n g to
participate In the March 16
ceremonies.

A crom will be erected In
Veterans' Memorial Park on the
Sanford lakefront for the Easter
season.
Hulon Black, an ordained
minister who spent 6Vi years aa
a missionary, got the Sanford
City Commission's approval to
erect the cross In the pork three
weeks prior to Easter. It will be
used for Easter sunrise services,
at 7 a.m.. April 7.
B l a c k s a i d 25 S a n f o r d
churchea are supporting the
service A banner will be strung
a cross 1st S treet, b etw een
Magnolia and Sanford avenues.

for excessive optimism, as much clerulng
and cutting of brush to being done around
Ihe Impact craters to allow for a thorough
search o f the crash site." Stevenson said.
Th e C-130 Hercules transport plane,
converted to a gunshlp. crashed at the foot
of a remote plateau 24 miles northeast of the
Mekong River city of Pakac. The plane had
completed a mission and exploded when hit
by Lao ground Ore.
A Joint UJL-Lao team Sunday began
excavating the site of the crash.
Positive Identification o f the remains are
not possible until they are taken to the
military's central identification laboratories
tn Hawaii. Stevenson said.

T h e __________
_
days after the U S. Embassy said Vietnam
would turn over five seta o f remains o f
American servicemen.
The 13 crewmen are the largest numbers
o f U.S. servicemen listed missing at one site
in Laos.
W a s h in g to n lla ta 2 ,4 8 3 A m a rlc a n
servicemen aa m isting tn act ton in In*
10 y m s after tha

�FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Man Kill$ Saif A m Pollca
Mova In To Ar^atf Him
ORLANDO (UP!) - r&gt;ollee investigated the background
Saturday o f a man who shot and tolled himself In a fast
food restaurant parking lot on U.S. Highway 17-92 In
Winter Park, rather than face arrest on abduction and
assault charges.
BUly Ray Owens. 39, o f Orlando, died during emergency surgery at Florida Hospital, about two hours after he shot
himself once In the head as oUlcers moved In on him In the
parking lot.
Oarens was wanted for the abduction and assault on hla
estranged wife Wednesday night.
It was the second time In three weeks Owens had forcibly
detained his wife. The Heat time, he held her hostage In a •
home In east Orlando for several hours Jan. 29 before
giving himself up.

Aganft Saha Jot In Drag Proba
MIAMI (UP1) — Customs agents seised the first jumbo jet
ever taken In a drug probe — and found 1600 million worth
o f cocaine aboard — but failed to nab any smugglers, and
the Incident erupted Into a federal law enforcement
squabble.
Customs officers discovered 2,479 pounds o f cocaine
concealed In a shipment o f flowers aboard a 9119 million
Avtanca Airlines Boeing 747 after It arrived Wednesday on
a flight from Bogota, Colombia.
The flower shipment was bound for Montreal and. after
replacing the cocaine with white powder, customs alerted
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and allowed the
shipment to continue as scheduled on another (light.
But a spokesman for the Vice President's Task Group In
Miami aald there apparently was no evidence the drugs
were Intended for the people who picked up the flowers In
Montreal and no arrests were made.
When the Avtanca Airlines aircraft returned to Miami on
a (light from Bogota at 5 a.m. EST Friday, It was seised.

Gam , Shutfla Rahaana Launch
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - Workers at the Kennedy
Space Center, facing an Increasingly tight schedule to
ready the shuttle Challenger for blastoff by March 3.
planned to load the ship's two-satellite payload Saturday at
the launch pad.
If all goes well. Challenger’s seven-member crew.
Including Sen. Jake Gam. R-Utah. waa to participate In a
dress-rehearsal countdown Sunday to clear the ship for
launch.
The 41 billion shuttle originally waa scheduled for liftofT
on Feb. 20 but continuing work to overhaul the ship’s
heat-shield tile system prompted an 11-day delay and some
tile work remains to be completed at the pad.

4 G u ilty O f Buying Votes
GAINESVILLE (UPI) - One of
four northwest Florida residents
convicted o f buying voles said he
did poor people a favor by
olTerlng them up to 9100 for
blank, signed absentee ballots.
A federal court jury deliber­
ated about four hours Friday,
finding all four defendants guilty
o f conspiracy and numerous
counts of buying votes In the
1984 Lafayette County sheriffs
race.
Prosecution witnesses from
the tiny, rural town o f Mayo had
testified they were promised
money — as much as 9100 —
and liquor for handing over
signed, blank absentee ballots.
" I was doing them a favor
because I know what kind of
(financial) shape they’ re In.”
aald Joe Adklna, who was con­
victed of 20 counts of vote fraud.
U.S. District Judge Maurice
Paul ordered pre-sentence In-

vestlgations but set no date for
sentencing. The defendants face
maximum penalties of five years
In prison and lines o f 910.000 for
each count.
Former Democratic state Rep.
Jamea Duffln Lancaster waa
found guilty o f 34 counts o f
election fraud and was acquitted
o f four counts. L a n ca ster’ s
lawyer. Daniel McKecver, said he
feela he has grounds for an
appeal.
Joe Adkins was found guilty of
20 counts and acquitted on four
counta o f vole buying. Hla wife,
Myra Adklna. waa found guilty o f
four charges o f vole buying and
Innocent o f Two. Lias Walker was
found guilty o f one count and
Innocent of one count of vote
buying.
Prosecution and defense law­
yers summoned about 10 per­
cent o f Mayo's 830 residents ss
witnesses during the trial.

Evonina Herald. Sanford, FI.

W ife Charged With
Beating Husband
A woman arrested for beating
her husband early today com ­
plained to deputies she broke
her fingernails.

his bedroom, cursed him. and
then beat him up. The deputy
reported that the man had sev­
eral cuts and scrapes on hts face
a torso.

According to a shertlTs report,
a deputy responded at 2:16 a.m.
to the scene o f a dom estic
argument at 1937 Vienna Drive.
Casselberry.

The deputy also noted that the
S-foot-2. 118-pound wife — a
nurse's aide — had complained
about several broken fingernails.

When he got there, he found
th e husband. Ruben Pruitt
Williams, locked In the spare
bedroom of the home.
Williams said his wife entered

B e in g h e ld tod a y In th e
Seminole County Jail In lieu o f
9500 bond was Jean Marie
Williams, 38. —Desna Jord a n

...M o s e s
C oatlnn ad from p age 1A
products, possibly costing him
millions o f dollars.
’ ’ Unfortunately, we live In a
society where accusation Is tan­
tamount to guilt." agent Richie
Bry explained.

...Monument
C o a tla s d from p age 1A
D. Loosing — and those of Archie
B. Liles. Joseph S. Lalng. J.
Oscar White. Harry Phillips, Carl
Malm. Edwin J. Robinson. M.W.
Lovell Jr.. George W. Calhoun
and Handy Jenkins.
It also bears the Inscription,
“ Only those are fit to live who do
not fear to die."
The Soldiers' Monument was
originally unveiled Feb. 23. 1919
In the Central Park — now
known as Centennial Park with
more than 1500 persona present
from Seminole and adjoining
counties, according to a news
story In the Sanford Herald
following the event. It was later
moved to the American Legion
property, which Is located 3500
Orlando Drive IU.S. Highway
17-92).
A photograph taken at the
original dedication will be on
display at the post home.
G.W. Spencer was chairman of
the 1919 program, which In­
cluded "speeches of presentation
and acceptance, as well as the

In his closing statement, de­
fense a ttorn ey Ed M cdvenc
argued his client had been
singled out by police because he
Is a famous athlete.

&gt;1 Crowning Night

"T h e y know he’s Innocent.'’
he salti. suggesting ofTleer* In
effect had said. "Close the book
on this guy. Edwin Moses, big
Olympic hero. Nall him.”

Angle Blackburn, right, takes a winning stroll past a
cheering audience after being named Ml»t Lake Mary High
School last week. First runner-up was Mary Beth.Wlllls,
a 15-year-old sophomore, at left. Forty-seven girls entered
the pageant.

oration were forceful and In­
spiring. touching upon the valor
of Seminole boys who were lost
In the Great Cause.”
Major Forrest Lake guve the
oration, representing Gov. S J .
Calls.
The monument was presented
to the county by F.L. Miller of
the MUvis Marblr Co., and was
unveiled by little Beth Losslng.
sister o f Arthur D- Losslng. who
was killed In France. Judge E.F.
Householder gave the accep­
tance speech.
The marble monument is in
the "form of u broken shaft,
emblematical o f the lives which
were given to the cause of Right
and Justice In the prime of their
you ng m a n h o o d .’ ’ said the
Herald, which added. "It will
forever stand In Central Park us
a constant reminder of the val­
orous deeds of these, our boys
who gave their lives that others
might live.”

...T h re a t
Continued fro m page 1A
KiiHsman tract fir some oilier
trail.
’ ’ll wc can’t buy anything, we
will discuss whether to condemn
any property.” S u m m o n said.
The purchase uf the Oxford
Road site was delayed early this
year after County Librarian Jean
Rhein said 3.3 acres o f the 5-acre
tra rl Is useable, while the
balance Is wetlands.
However. County Kugtnrer Hill
Bush, a county official for more
than 20 years, gave his opinion
that about 2.5 acres nf the Irurl
may t&gt;c useable with the baltmrr
unuseahle wetlands. He said
Thursday that the only real way
to tell ff the soils even on the dry
portion ran sup|K)Tt a building of
more than one story Is through
soli borings.
The C asselberry library Is
supposed to Ik - designed In such

Statevllle: two slaters. Mrs. W.C.
Howell Sr. and Mis. Hugh A.
Robertson, both o f Statevllle:
seven grandchildren.
O ra m k o w -G a ln e s F u n eral
Home. Langwood. Is In charge of
arrangements.
'*■ Mrs. Cartcse V cn onkx Hlser.
60. o f Route 3. Kewsnna. bid.,
died Friday at South Seminole
C o m m u n it y H o s p it a l,
L on gw ood . Horn M arch 14.
1B1&amp; In HawklnavtOe. Oa.. Mm

a way that a second story can be
udded for future expansion. The
first story to be constructed
Initially will have 23.000 squarr
fcct. When expansion Is needed,
a second floor, also o f 25.000
square feet. Is to be built.
The Casselberry facility (a to
be the county’s main library'.
Ms. Rhein said Thursday ihe
county has not received a survey
o f Ihe property and probaby
won’t receive one until March 6.
She said when the topographical
information Is received, It will be
sent to Bush for his review and
evaluation.
Bush said he hasn't been
contacted concerning the Oxford
Road property since his Initial
review.
"But. the only way to know
exactly whether ihe property
can be used for a two-story
building is soil barings to de­
termine what Is under Ihe sur­
face. The architect o f the library
facilities will nrrd that Informa­
tion." he said.

The Seminole County Guards
were present In n body for the
dedication under the leadership
o f three lieutenants recently
returned from the army.

"Midi tiibwrtb”

fot Hill

...F r e e d o m
ia

to the bathroom." he aald.
’ ’They would blindfold me and
take me to the bathroom and
when I wanted to get out. I
knocked on the door and they
w ould bring m e out. Every
morning and every evening 1
would hear four other knocks.

minister Benjamin Wetr. 60.
U.S. Embassy official WUUsm
Buckley. 56. librarian P eter
Kllbum. 60, and the Catholic
R e lie f S e r v ic e s d ir e c to r In
Lebanon, the Rev. Lawrence
Jenco. SO.

-IT'S SEWEASYRIDUCKD $S0

*149

Initial reports from Lebanon
T h u r s d a y In d ic a te d L e v in
escaped. Syria at first said It
helped win his release, then said
he had escaped.

“ I figure there must have been
four other people there," said
Levin. "M y conclusion waa that
there were four Americana there
... their voices were muffled."

ABC News quoted U.S. officials
as sa yin g there were signs
L e v in 's c a p to r s m sy h a v e
allowed him to escape and that
Syria had a hand In Ihe release.

Intelligence sources said there
were “ positive signs” the other
captives may (Ind their way to
freedom. ABC News reported.
M is s in g are P r e s b y te r ia n

CBS also quoted an unnamed
U.S. official as saying "the Unit­
ed States has indications Syria
was Involved ... In securing
Levin's release."

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SEW

ORANGE CITY

904-775-1275

AREA DEATHS
Mr. Robert Qienn Moore. 74, of
1013 W olf Trail. Casselberry,
died Thursday at Life Care
Center. Altamonte Springs. Born
June 1. 1010. in Statevllle, N.C..
he moved to Casselberry from
M iam i in 1875. H e w as a
machinist and a Protestant.
Survivors Include his daugh­
ter. Peggy Trotter. Casselberry;
two sons, James It.. Statevllle.
and Perry P.. Anderson. Ind.;
three brothers, H.C. Moore. M A

Sunday. Fab. 17, IM S -)A

Florida i Only Authoriied Center
Bradford. She was a member of
the Grass Creek United Method*
1st Church In Grass Creek. Ind.
and a member o f the VFW
A u x ilia r y P o st 3 7 8 0 o f
Loganaport. Ind.
S U r v Iv o r s In c lu d e h er
h u s b a n d , R o l a n d C ., o f
K e w a n n a . d a u g h te r . E y d a
Grace. Elkhart, Ind.. son. TuUey
W ., Brockton. Maas.: alster.
Grace M. Bradford. Longwood:
brother. B.F. McKinney. Albany,
Oa.t four grandchildren.
G ra m k o W 'O a ln e s F u n era l
Home. Longwood. la In charge o f
arrangements.

RED R. JULIAN ML
Mr. Ned N. Julian Sr.. 73. of
H ow ell Place. Sanford, died
Thursday at Lakevtew Nursing
Center. Born Jan. 14, 1013 in
Savannah. Oa.. he moved to
Sanford In 1369 from Bangley
Point, tbs Philippines. He was a
Naval Commander who served
from 1038 to I960 m World W u

Su rvivors Include his wife,
Sallye: one son, Ned N. J r .
Sanford: two daughters. Sher­
rills G. Compaln. Nshunta, Oa.,
a n d K a th e rin e F. V e n a b le .
Magee. Mias.: five grandchildren.
Gramkow Funeral Home Is In
charge o f arrangements.

d d L I A E. MASI
Mrs. Cecilia E. Maal. SO. o f 301
S p rin gtide Drive. Longw ood.
died Thursday f t her home.
Born July S, 1904. In South
Orange. N.J., she m oved to
Longwood from there In 1961.
She was a homemaker and a
Catholic.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e h e r
husband. William A : daughter.
Marie Ondo. Longwood; three
atstera. Florence Ptnnelll. South
Orange. Helena Carluccl. New
J e r s e y , and H elen R e la le r,
MlUbum. N J .i one grandchild.
B atdarIn-Falrchlld F u n eral
Home. Altamonte Springs, la to

LOSE WEIGHT

Friday at Sanford Nursing and
Convalescent Center. Bom Jan.
9. 1997 in New York City, she
moved to Sanford from Union
City, N J .. to 1971. She was a
homemaker and a Protestant.
Survivors Include her daugh­
ter. Dorothea Stmsnlder. San
ford; son. George, Leesburg;
brother, Henry Brohan. Sanford:
Isro grandchildren.
Brlsson G u ardian Fun eral
Home, Sanford, la In charge of
arrangements.
^ H 9 4 to l N

o

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ford, died

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Sunday, Fa». IT, HM

Two 14-Year-Old Boys Charged With Sexual Battery
T w o | 4 - y c iir - o ld S o u th
S rm ln olr C ou nty boy* have
brrn charged with sexual batlery In connection with a Feb. 10
ul lack on an 11'year-old Winter
Park girl.
One o f the boys was charged
T u e s d a y a n d Ih e s e c o n d
Thursday. S em in ole C ou nly
sheriffs Capt. Jay Leman said.
Doth boys turned themselves In
at the Slu-rlfTs Department and
after they were charged they
were released to their fathers.
Leman said. *
The one o f the two allegedly
lured Ihe girl from her home. He
knoc ked on her door and told
her a friend wanted to see her
across the street. When she
stepped out the pair chased her
and threw her to the ground, a
sheriffs report said.
The boy who lured her nut
rrportrdly stepped aside and Ihe
second youth forced the girl to
{triform ural sex, warned her not
to left and released her. the
rrport said. The Incident oc­
curred around 7:45 p.m.
F IG H TIN G COUPLE
CHAROED
Sanford poller who reported
breaking up u fight between a
Sanford couple and charging the
man with spouse abuse also
charged the woman with battery
on a police ofTlcer after she
reportedly slopped n lawman.
Both s u s p e c ts w ere a lso
charged with disorderly Intox­
ication. The man wns released
on $500 bond and the woman
was bring held In lieu o f $5,000
band.
Poller reported responding to a
disturbance cull nt 1100 Cornell
D r iv e ut a b o u t 0 :5 0 p .m .
Thursday. l*ollee reported hav­
ing to break up the fight between
the pair three times, with an
officer getting slapped by Ihe
woman In Ihe process.
Perry Oliver Mason, 47. and
liurburn June Muson. 37. were
arrested ut their home. Mason Is
scheduled to up|&gt;cur In court
Feb. 37.

36, of 1356 Btidlebrook Drive,
Casselberry, was stolen from a '
locker al Holiday Health Spa.
Butler Plaza, state Road 436,
C asselberry, around 3 p.m.
Thursday, a sheriff s report said.
Carolyn Jean Cooper. 25. of
Jacksonville, reported to depu­
ties $200 was stolen from her
m otel room al Quality Inn.
Longwood. between 4:30 and 0
p.m. Thursday.
A gold nugget necklace and
gold carring with a combined
value o f $650 were reported
m is s in g from the h om e o f
Dorothy A. Wolfe. 60. of 3908
county Road 427. Sanford, be­
tween Jan. 28 and 31, a sheriffs
report said.
Margaret C. Bateau. 28, of
4953 Couriland Loop, Winter
Park, reported to deputies her
boat, motor and trailer with a
combined value o f $33,000 waa
stolen from her driveway be­
tween 8 u in tuid 2:30 p.m.
Tueaday.
C arpet w orth $3,500 waa
stolen from a home at 1864
Stonegate St.. Longwood. ac­
c o r d in g to a r e p o r t B etsy
Cushman, 49, Longwood. filed
wllh deputies. The carpet waa
stolen Monday or Tueaday.
Auto parts with a total value of
about $430 were stolen for the
car o f Darren Anthony Green,
21. o f 1002 Bear Lake Road,
Apopka, while the vehicle was
parked at his home Monday or
Tueaday. a sheriffs report said.
A $400 demonstration kit for u
burglary ularm was stolen from
the car o f Mark J. Pusnah, 29. of
Altamonte Springs, while the
vehicle was parked near the Post
T im e Lnungc. U.S. Highway
17-92. Longwood. deputies re­
ported.
Jewelry worth $2,300 was
stulrn from the home o f Marina
Wilbur. 47. of 107 Pine Tree
Lane, Altamonte Springs, Feb. 7
or 8. a sheriffs report saltl.

BUROL A R IE S A THEFTS
The Ihlef who stole James It.
McPherson’s I OHO Mazda also
,ol away with his .357-mugmun
and gun, Th e theft occurred
Thursday while ihe ear wllh
Tools ami other Items with a
keysJn Ihe Ignition was parked combined value of $427 were
at the Hitching Post, slide Itoud reported stolen from a home
410. Chuluolii. McPherson. 37. tx-tiig built ut 1030 Whispering
of 351 First St.. Chuluola re­ Cove, Casselberry. The theft
ported Ihe theft o f the $5,300 car occurred Tuesday or Wednesday
and Ihe gun lo deputies
owner Mark Ramsay. 34. of 7085
Eddie
JUL lot 0 Abbey Lane. Winter Park, re­
Chlnabrrry SI.. Oviedo, reported ported to deputies.
lo deputies a Jar containing $50
A wooden door worth $168
In pennies was stolen from his
home along wllh a $60 shotgun was stolen from a home being
and a $150 pistol around ft p.m. built al 1641 Pine Hurst Drive.
Friday.
Casselberry, belwrrn Monday
and Wednesday, according to a
The $35 wallet containing $03 report Thomas Ronco, 25. of
lH-lmiglng to Paul Miguel Strong. General Homes of Winter Park,

e

Action Reports
* flrot
* Courts
* Follco Boat
filed wllh deputies.
About $100 In change and a
$30 watch were stolen from the
home o f Jeffrey Allan Robinson.
41. of 3107 Wlndchlme Circle.
Apopka. Wednesday, a sheriff's
repor* said
COCAINE CAPER
A man who reportedly sold a
small bag o f cocaine for $300 in
the parking lot o f a Fern Park
convenience store has been
charged with possession and
sale of cocaine and possession of
drug paraphernalia.
Seminole County drug task
force agents report watching a
suspect os he reportedly negoti­
ated with and sold a packet of
cocaine to a juvenile in a car at
Cumberland Farms on Oxford
Road at Fern Park Boulevard.
The transaction reportedly
occurred at around 11:30 p.m.
Thursday, and the man was
arrested at the acme, a sheriffs
report said. The Juvenile was
also taken Into custody.
Michael Robert GagUano. 20.
of 325 Carlton Road. Maitland,
has been charged In the case. He
was released on $8,000 bond
and Is scheduled lo appear In
court March 4.
VISITO R RAPED
Altamonte Springs police re­
ported a woman guest In an cast
A lta m o n t e S p r in g s c o n ­
dominium was raped around 4
a.m. Thursday.
T h e r a p is t e n t e r e d Ih e
apartment, where the 24-yearold woman was alone, after
breaking a window. The woman
reported she did not see u
weapon during Ihe attack. She
was examined at Central Florida
R egion a l H ospital. Sanford,
police reported.
•T O L E R * SOLD
Deputies reported charging an
Altamonte Springs man with
dealing In stolen property after
he allegedly sold a stolen radar
detector for $15.
The suspect was charged fol­
lo w in g q u e s tio n in g at th e
Seminole County Sheriffs De­
partment al 4:35 p.m. Tueaday.
Mario Larue Jones. 18, o f 317
Teak wood Lane, waa being held
In lieu o f $8,000 bond In the

the house, a police report said.
Following the emergency call
at 590 Georgia Ave.. Longwood.
a woman resident of the house
told an officer someone she
didn’t know had Just left her
home.
As one officer went out to tell
the other o f the Intruder the
woman yelled "H e ’s In here,”
the report said.
Police entered the house and
reported finding two men In a
bedroom. They reported recov­
ering from one suspect a Jacket
that held Jewelry reportedly
taken from the home and they
a ls o r e p o r t e d fin d in g a
.38-caliber pistol they believe the
suspects hid In a closet at the
house, the report said.
John Wesley King. 18. o f 709
S a n d p ip e r L a n e * 6 4 3 .
Casselberry, and Brian O’ Neal
Hahn, 18, o f 820 Gee Creek
court, Casselberry, were arrested
at about 3:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Hahn was being held in lieu o f
$5,000 bond and King has been
released on $8,000 bond and Is
scheduled to appear In court
March 4.

AB U SED POLICE
Casselberry police reported
charging a man with resisting
arrests. both with and without
violence, and battery to a police
officer offer the man allegedly
cursed and fought officers who
hwl Initially asked him lo fill out
an Identification form.
Police reported confronting the
man after he waa seen walking
in the roadway on Lake Triplet
D rive, C a sselb erry, and r e ­
portedly yelled to the officers.
Police said they recognized the
man and asked him to fill out an
Identification card, because he
frequently changes his address.
The man reportedly cursed the
officers and when he began to
walk away and was told he waa
b e in g a r r e s t e d r e p o r te d ly
grow led and rushed toward
three officers and punched one
In the face, the report said.
After a struggle with police the
m an w aa s u b d u e d and
handcuffed, the report said.
Steven Rex Cousins, 19, of
1417 Easton Way. Casselberry,
w as a rr e tte d at 6:54 p.m .
Tueaday. He waa being held In
lieu o f $5,000 bond.
CHAROED FOR DAM AQE
A 26-year-old Sanford man has
been charged with burglary and
fe lo n y crim in a l m isch ief In
connection with a burglary that
resulted In $1,500 tn property
damage at 1024 Miller Drive.
Altamonte Springs, on Jan. 28, a
sheriffs report said.
Wltneaaea reported seeing a
L o n g w o o d p o lice w ho re ­
suspect
at Ihe scene and that led
sponded to an overdose call
reported catching two Intruders to the arrest, the report said.
Mather Phillip Arena of 321
In the house they were called to
and both men were charged with Pack Court, was charged In the
grand theft for allegedly trying to case at the Seminole County Jail
take Jewelry from a bedroom In at 11 a.m. Tuesday. He waa

released without posting bond
and is scheduled to appear tn
court March 4.
Sanford police reported chas­
ing down a bicycle rider who
a lle g e d ly tried to snatch a
woman’s purse, but was scared
off after the woman’s screams
attracted police.
Police reported hearing the
screams and spotting a suspect
riding away from the Wtnn Dixie
parking lot on First Street.
Sanford, at about 7 p.m. Mon­
day. The officer pursued the
suspect and a sh eriffs detective
and another man Joined the
chase, a police report said.
A suspect was stopped by
police In a backyard at 519 E.
Second S t- Sanford, hiding be­
tween a boat and a garage, the
report said.
Willie Eddie Porta. 28. o f 89
Seminole Gardena. Sanford, was
charged wllh attempted robbery
at about 7:15 p.m. Monday. He
Was being held In lieu o f $5,000
bond.
CLEARED O UT C A M
An 18-year-old Fern Park man
has been charged with grand
theft In connection with the theft
o f $700 from a c a r b ein g
serviced at the Casselberry car
wash where the suspect works, a
sheriffs report said.
Deputies report the cash was
stolen on Feb. 3.
John Wilson Ross, o f 138
Terri wood St., was arrested at
his Jobsite at the Exxon Car
Wash. Casselberry, at 1:54 p.m.
Monday. He was being held In
lieu o f $5,000 bond.
FLEO BUT NABBED
A 34-year-old man has been
charged wllh burglary after depu l l r s n a b b ed h im n e a r a
Longwood home where d woman
reported seeing a man run from
her home after she spotted him
around 11 a.m. Thursday, depu­
ties reported.
Deputies report finding the
suspect near the home of Kara!
Lashrr of 155 Wisteria Lane.
Longwwxl. A security guard al
The Springs reported having
seen the suspect on a bicycle
and It was reportedly recovered,
u sheriff s report said.
Ronald Herbert Bowen, no
address, was arrested al Ms.
L a s h e r ’ s h om e at I I a.m.
Thursday. Hr was bring held In
lieu of $8,000 bond.
CASH ING BR INGS CHARGES
A 41-year-old Apopka man has
been charged with dealing In
stolen property after having
allegedly been linked to the
cashing In Seminole Counly of
money orders taken In a Georgia
holdup.
Sheriffs deputies rrport Ihe
money orders, iw o of which were
rushed In Seminole and one In
Orange County were from a
group of 127 m onrv orders

stolen along with $1,000 In an
armed robbery In Cordele. Go­
on No t . 24.
Sheriffs investigators reported
linking the suspect and a codefendant to the cashing o f the
money orders. Jarkle Redmond
Thomas o f 422 W. 13th St., was
arrested at the Seminole County
Sheriffs Department al 2 p.m.
Wednesday. He was being hrld
tn lieu of $8,000 bond.
SPOUSE ABUSE
A Longwood man who re­
portedly hit his wife on Ihe head
with a tie rack causing a cut has
been charged with spouse abuse
and was being held in lieu of
$500 bond.
,,j
Longwood poller repori re­
sponding to a call al 721 Ravr
Ave.. where Joyce Bright re­
portedly told them of Ihe alleged
attack on her.
A c t Bright J r- 49. w aa ar­
rested al his home al 11:46 p.m.
Wednesday.
DU1 ARRESTS
The following persons have
b r r n a rre sted In S e m in o le
Counly on a charge o f driving
underIheInfluence:
—Kingsley Edward Burkett. 46.
o f 108 Azalea Lane. Sanford,
was arrested at 12:51 a.m.
Thursday, after his car failed to
maintain a single lane on U.S.
Highway 17-92. Longwood.
—Harold Douglas Blue. 26. of
3’0 4 C y p r e s s L a n d i n g .
Longwood. at 9:56 p.m. Wed­
nesday. after his car was rlorkrd
traveling 74 mph In a 40 mph
zone on stale Roud 436 In
Altumonte Springs. Ills ear was
pursued Into Casselberry where
he was arrested on state Hoad 436.
—Mary Rita Supllek. 37. o f 104
Point View Lane. Longwood, al
3:10 p.m. Wednesday after her
ear was Involved In an accident
on slate Road 436 In Seminole
County.
—William James Lester. 23, of
1775 Aloma A ve- Winter Park,
was arrested on state Road 436.
Seminole County after persons
who said they were almost hit by
a car aliened deputies to a
possible drunk driver.
—George Albert Cipunl. 55. ol
Mrrllt Island, was arrested at
12:41 a.m . Friday on U.S.
H ighw ay 17-92. Casselberry,
after his car was reportedly )
Involved In a hll-uml-run accl- '
deni on U.S. Highway 17-92.
Longwood.
— Ronnie Hogers. 40. o f 205.
Palm Place. Sanford, al 11.59
p.m. Thursduy after hr was seen
driving his pickup truck on the
wrong side of slate Road 427
near U.S. Highway 17-92. San­
ford.
— Mary Bloomfield Pinkerton. 1
49. o f 300 Elm Ave.. Sanford, al
12:30 a.in. Friday at her home
after her car was reportedly
Involved In an uccldent.

Sanford M an Found G u ilty In Sex Case
By Doans Jordan
vestlgators on Aug. 10. An
H erald B u f f W rite r
e x a m in a tio n o f the girl at
A bomb ecare at the Seminole Central Florida Regional Hospi­
County C ourthouse did nut
tal supported Ihe girl’s allega­
rent a Jury from Onding a tion. a report said.
ford man guilty ol eexual
During the course of the trial,
battery to a 14-year-old girl.
two polygraph operators usln
A six-member Jury, moved
the same analysis technique sail
from the courthouse to city hall neither the girl nor Anderson
Thursday because o f a bomb appeared to be lying when they
acare Just before It began delib­ look the polygraph test. One of
erations, found Donald Alonzo the operators, however, used an
Anderson, of 5 Ruby St., guilty additional analysis technique
o f sexual battery. He faces 5Vk to and decided the girl did not
7 years when sentenced April 4. appear to be lying and Ihe
according lo the prosecutor
results on Anderson were nonSteven Plotnlck. Anderson, who conclusive, according to Plotwas free on bond, was remanded
nlck. Both parties agreed prior to
to the custody or the sheriff.
trial lo allow the results of
The Jury waa moved out o f the
polygraph testa to be uaed In Ihe
courthouse at about 10:15 a.m. courtroom. Unlesa prior agree­
after a man telephoned (he
ments are made, the results of
courthouse switchboard and
polygraph tesla are not adsaid there was a bomb In the mlaaablc In court. Plotnlck aald.
building and set to go o ff In
In other court action:
about an hour.
—James Johnson. 33. of Or­
Circuit Judge Dominick Saif] lando. arrested Aug. 9. pleaded
at the time of the call waa giving guilty Wednesday to grand theft..
He could receive up lo a year In
Inst ructions to the Jury.
Jail when he la sentenced by Salfl
Salfl finished the Instructions
April 4. A ccording to court
In about two minutes and the records. Johnson was arrested
Jury waa then m oved to a
early in the morning after a
courtroom In Sanford city hall.
Casselberry officer stopped the
According to court records. car he was driving after he left a
Anderson wss charged Aug. 13 service station and did not turn
with the crime after the girl and on the car’s headlights. A com ­
h e r m o t h e r r e p o r t e d th e puter check showed the car to be
"forced” sex sets to a Florida stolen. Four Urea found In the
H e a lth a n d R e h a b ilit a t iv e car were stolen from the service
Services counselor. The coun- *iaiion, records show.
reported the allegations to —Gary Lee Connelly. 20, o f 428
a m lnnote
o l^ BCou
o u n ty k h e r tffs ta - Ranc'h' T r i l“T c i i amT eT lbt e r r ^

K

Stamps Cost More Sunday
Blurting Sunday, sending u
first-class Irttrr will cast you 2
cents more — postage stumps
are Jumping from 20 cems to
22 cents.
John McKean, chairman o f
the Ikiartl o f Govemorm of Itir
U.S. Postal Service, said In
December when the Incrrasr
waa announced that Ihe price
Jump “ will enable us to break
even financially and continue
to operalr with no taxpayer

subsidy to ihe Postal Scrvlrr
whatsoever, as Ihe law re­
quires.”
McKeun detruded Ihe In­
crease saying II was Ihe dial
one In more than three years.
“ Nunr of us welcomes this
Increase, but wr have no
other practical dpi Ions.” he
said.
The above graphic shows
the history o f Postal Servjrr
lucrruscs.

pleaded guilty Thursday to crim­
inal mischief. He could receive
up to a year tn Jail when
sentenced by Circuit Judge S.
Joseph Davis Jr. on April 3.
A ccord in g to court records.
Connelly was being held In the
Seminole County Jail Oct. 22 on
charges o f burglary, which he
pleaded guilty to Oct. 9. when
Jailers heard him scream “ Lei
me out.” then heard a loud
banging noise. They discovered
that Connelly had smashed a
4-by-4 foot glass window by
pounding on It.
—Michael Chyle. 22. of Tampa,
pleaded guilty Wednesday to
escape from Ihe county Jail. His
brother. Jed Allen Chyle. 19.
also o f Tampa, pleaded guilty to
escape earlier this ihonth. The
C h yles, o rig in a lly ja ile d on
charges of burglary, face up lo
IS years for Ihe Aug. 23 escape

when sentenced by Circuit Court
J u d g e Robert B. M cG regor. U&gt;
Michael Is scheduled for senten­
cing March 12 and his brother
April 29. The brothers slipped
out o f Ihe county Jail by scaling u
20-foot w all topped w llh a
razor-sharp coll of barbed wire.
They were recaptured Oct. 26 In ’
Tennessee after a crime spree.
At the time of their escape they
were being held on charges o f 'I
Iwo counts of burglary each and
were scheduled to be transferred
to DcSolo Counly to face addi­
tional charges. They also face
charges In Tennessee.

* B IIK tlP POLL IN MO-

PAM MXT QINERAl, BUILOINB. MSDENTIAL
s How to qualify, com, stc. • Tskt • practice tnt w/tolutiont
• S u it appiicatioflt available
M U INTRODUCTORY CLASS (7 pm «a 8 pm)
OoytonaPam* . . .
3700 North Atlanta
Orlando.................
Florida Canter. M and 48$ North

Mouth-To-Snout Resuscitation Saves Dog
LA CR068C. Wla. tUFII Richard Abtchl aald he didn’t
think twice about giving hta dog
Daiay mouth-lo-anoul resuscita­
tion to get her breathing again
alter a racquet ball got stuck in
her throat.
.
”lt seemed like the natural
th in g to d o .” aald Richard
Abtchl. 40.. a. nurse, ” 1 couldn’ t
let her tUt and I knew what to
||q *•
- /,&lt;1-1Ablcht said although he had

#* ■$• *»

never done the procedure on a
Abtchl said he couldn't pull
human being, he never thought
the ball loose so he called an
twice about putting hta mouth animal hospital. They advised
him to bring the dog there. Hta
up to Daisy’s nose and blowing
wife drove, and when the dog's
air Into the animal.
“ She seems grateful.” he a$td /
Wedneeday.
The drama happened Feb. I at
ball to pull It out. but the dog
the Abtchl home. Daisy waa •topped breathing.
playing wllh the ball, which one
He lifted the dog’s head up lo
the
rhildren
h om
md.
e. T h e b a ll g o t I
behind the dog's tcrtl

her own. Her heart didn't
beating, because I M l
my other hand.” Ablcht paid.
After a vetemarian had exam
tned her. "h er UUl began
diiu
the recoflni&amp;fd i

SM J&amp;fMe SKhESd.

When they got Daisy
my wife kept saying she looked

Ablcht aald.

** *fc* w ** *4 • #*-.* *

"■

1 1"

I

�Evening Herald, tsaferd, FI.

Expect Students To Achieve And They Will
g u M t im : Many o f your e (Torts to Im­
prove education In Florida seem to involve
testing. Hat there always been an emphasis
on tesUng In this state? What purposes does
the testing program serve?
A n sw er: Testing as a key element In an
educational program la not a new concept
here in Florida. Beginning In 1935. the
Florida Twelfth Grade TesUng Program
provided in Information to assist In college
and university admissions and placement
decisions. In 1956. the Florida Ninth Grade
Testing Program was created to assist high
school counselors and teachers In curricu­
lum planning and student placement.
The Florida Legislature In 1976. enacted a
comprehensive accountability program re­
quiting the state to create minimum student
o b je c tiv e s . M ore r e c e n tly , the 1984
legislature enacted laws which require the
stale to take steps to encourage greater
consistency In high school districts.
Our testing program here In Florida Is but
one aspect of our educational program, but
It la a vital element. SctUng standards for

SC H O O L T A L K
with
C om m ission er o f E ducation
R a lp h D. T u r lin g t o n
students, making schools more accountable,
creating academic growth through com­
petition. and evaluating educational pro­
grams are all objectives derived from the
testing program now in place.
Giving students specific learning expecta­
tions and letting them know that their
progreu In school in dependent, in part,
upon learning what they are supposed lo
learn Is a key educational principle. The
results of our statewide assessment test
confirm that students perform belter when
there are clear expectations In front o f them.
In the final analysis, if students are expected
to achieve, they will.
A cornerstone of Florida's testing program
is public access to the results. A ll Florida

school districts are required to prepare and
distribute annual reports o f school progress.
Results of the state testing program, the
SSAT, are part o f these reports. The
Commissioner of Education, likewise. Is
required to publish an annual report
describing the status o f the educational
system. (Copies of this year's annual report
"Getting Ready for 1989" are now available.
Contact the Public Information Office at
904/488-0081 to get one.) This system of
educational accountability, with Its em­
phasis on public access to testing and other
data. Is Important. The schools belong to the
cttlxens.
Competition has long been an accepted
part of school life. Achievement on tests has
been made a “ competition" among schools
and districts as Florida strives for academic
excellence. There are no specific prize for
the winner, but the satisfaction that comes
from making progress and competing with
one's neighbor academically Is very real. To
be among the highest scoring school or
district In the state Is the goal.
aandy bNChN
linmant Sn tor
lion kit
you'*#X Sand lor your try* vocation information

Report: Schools Are
Cheating Poor Children
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Citing
a correlation between academic
performance and social class, a
new rep ort sa ys A m e ric a 's
s c h o o ls are " c h e a t in g our
children" by inadequately ac­
comm odating the underprivi­
leged.
T h e study by the private
National Center for Education
Information says schools must
recognize and respond lo the
needs o f poor children so they
can better compete with their
ell-to-do classmates.
It found that high school
tudents who score best In
liege admission tests come
m upper-class, two-parent,
burban families where both
ntsare highly educated.
The center's study Is baaed on
ta from the Census Bureau.
ie Education Department and
e College Board's Scholastic
ptltude Test, a widely used
liege admission exam.
Am ong the findings are:
—Aslan and whites outacored
all other student groups by race.
—Students from Catholic and

China Raising
Generation Of
Spoiled Brats

private schools scored higher
than their public school coun­
terparts.
—Students from the suburbs
scored higher than (hose In cities
and rural communities.
—One In live children now live
with a mother and no father.

Sunday, FtB. IT, 1W —»A

pqpiona

^

0 0 *9 1

25th G Airport Blvd.
(Behind Winn Dixie)

9114424

Name .
City _

. Addrtta.
. State

Sand to Daytona Beach Retort At m . P O Bor JTTB. Daytona Beach.

QUIT PUM PING MONEY
INTO YOUR INEFFICIENT
HEATING/COOLING
SYSTEM.

PEK1NO (UPI) — China's one-child-per-fsm ily population
policy has resulted In a genera­
tion o f spoiled bra ts whose
parents require special classes to
learn lo control them, a newspa­
per reported today.
China Dally newspaper said
more than 10.000 young parents
In northern Liaoning Province
were "attending schools to leant
how to cope with an only child."
More than 90 percent o f the
province's youngsters under the
age of 8 have no brothers or
sisters. China Dally said. The
figure Is evidence o f the success
o7 t h e g o v e r n m e n t 's on e-chlld-per-famlly policy, aimed
at controlling population growth
in the nation of more than 1
billion people.
‘ Many (children) are better fed
and clothed, but poorly brought
u p." the newspaper said. "K in ­
dergartens and schools find II
hard to control them ."
C hinese o fficia ls have de­
fended the policy o f limiting
couples to one child, saying such
drastic measures are necessary
to meet the country's crucial
goal o f holding the population to
1.2 billion at the year 2000.

FPL
vl will pay you tup to $600
to install a high efficiency central heat pump.
\bu11 also save up to 60% on your present
electric heating bills. Because a heat pump is
almost 2 xh times more efficient than conventional electric heating systems.
A heat pump bom heats and cools your
home. In tm winter, it extracts heat from
outside, pumping it indoors. In the summer,
it cools by removing heat and humidity
from your
ur home, (fo r;
r a detailed explanation,

contact an FPL participating contractor.)
And for more information about our other
CashBack incentives, from ceiling insulation
to solar water heating, Just call our 24-hour
toll-free line,
Or w rite Energy Conservation Department, Florida Bower Light, P.Q Box 029100)
Miami , Florida 33102.
Call right now 1-800-821-7700.

company you want.
_____________

;
i

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25 to 50% off

CALENDAR
BUND A T , F IB . 17
Re bos Club AA. noon and 5:30
C e n tr a l F lo rid a R e g io n a l
.m.. closed, 8 p.m., step. 130
Scholastic Art Awards Exhib­
ormandy Road. Casselberry.
ition featuring art and photo­ Clean Air Rebos at noon, closed.
graphy by middle and senior
Apopka A lcoholics A n o n y ­
h ig h s c h o o l s tu d e n ts o f
mous, 8 p.m.. closed. Apopka
Seminole, Brevard. Orange and
E p is c o p a l C h u rc h . 6 1 5
Osceola Counties. Robinson's.
Highland.
Altamonte Mall. Feb. 9-24, 10
A1J
•Anon Step and Study. 8
a.m. to 9 p.m.. weekdays and
p.m., Casselberry Senior Center.
noon to 5:30p.m. Sundays.
200 N. Triplet Drive.
Lupus Seminar. 2 p.m.. Uni­
Sanford AA. 8 p.m., closed,
versity of Florida Division of
1201 W. First St.
Rheumatology of Internal Medi­
Fellowship Group AA. senior
cine. 12901 N. 30th St.. Tampa.
citizens. 8 p.m., closed. 200 N.
M edical panel and speaker.
Lake Triplet Drtve, Casselberry.
Henrietta Aladjem. author.
TU B S D A T, FBB. IB
Senior Citizen trip to Lakeland
Casselberry Klwanls Club, 7
for the Chet Adkins show at 8 am .. Denny's. State Road 436
p.m. Leave Sanford Civic Center and Oxford Road.
at 4 p.m.; pick up Seminole
Free Income lax help for re­
Plaza, Casselberry. 4:30 p.m.
t ir e e s , 9 a .m . to I p .m ..
Dinner stop on the way. Return Long wood Recreation Center,
11:30 p.m. For reservations call
175 W. Warren St.. Longwood.
322-9148.
Through April 15. Bring copies
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p.m., of last tax return, forms for the
open discussion, Florida Power current year and other relevant
and Light building, N. Myrtle materials.
Avenue. Sanford.
Sanford Lions Club, 12:05
Alanon meeting. 8 p.m., 1201 p.m.. Holiday Inn. Interstate 4.
Sanford.
W. Flrat St.. Sanford.
G r e a t D e c is io n s , 8 -w e e k
University of Central Florida
foreign policy series lead by
C o m m u n ity S y m p h o n y
Orchestra and pianist David James L. W hitm ore, retired
Watkins, 7:30 p.m.. Congrega­ avalatlon consultant to the U.S.
tion o f Liberal Judaism Temple, governm ent. 1:30-3:30 p.m.,
7:30 p.m.. Malone Drive. Open Casselberry Senior Center, 200
N. L a k e T r ip le t D r iv e ,
free to the public.
Casselberry. Open to the public.
M ONDAY, FSB. IB
Central Florida Blood Bank
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch, 1302 Seminole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St., Sanford. 9 a.m. to E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.m.
5 p .m .; F lo r id a H o s p it a l- to 7 p.m . Florida HospitalAltamonte Branch, 601 E. Alta­ Altamonte Branch. 601 E. Alta­
monte Ave.. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
monte Ave., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Extension Home Economics
Sanford Senior Citizen Club,
program on "Motivation— Im­ noon. Sanford Civic Center. Bag
p ro v in g P a r tic ip a tio n ," d is ­ lunch and program.
Sanford Lions Club. noon. 1-4
cussion and audience participa­
tion, 9:30-11:30 a.m..Seminole Holiday Inn.
C ou n ty A g ric u ltu ra l C en ter
Sanford Toastmasters. 7:15
auditorium 4320 8. Orlando a.m., Season's restaurant, 2565
Drtve, Sanford. Open free to the 9. French Ave.
public. For Information and reg­
Sanford Optimist Club. 11:45
i s t r a t io n , c a ll B a rb a ra A. a.m.. Weatem Slzilln Restau­
Hughes. 323-2500. Ext. 179.
rant, Sanford.
Free Income tax help for re­
First o f alx-sessions on Cancer.tirees, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.. Sanford Focuatng on Today for cancer
Chamber o f Commerce. 400 E. patients and families. 5:30 p.m.
First St., Sanford. Through April to 7:30 p.m.. Flortday Hospl15.
tal/Orlando Cancer Center. Call
897-1600 for reservations.
F r e e b lo o d p r e s s u r e
Sanford AA, 5:30. closed dis­
screenings. 10-11 a.m., West
Volusia Medical Services build­ cussion. and 8 p.m., open dis­
ing, 1681 Providence Blvd.. De­ cussion. 1201 W. First St.
ltona.
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30
Bowling league for mentally p.m., closed. 8 p.m., step, 130
handicapped, 4-5:45 p.m., Alta­ Normandy Road, Casselberry.
monte Lanes, 280 Douglas Ave. Clean Air Rebos Club, noon,
closed.
Call 862-2500 for Information.
17-92 G roup A A, 8 p.m ..
Multi-Media First Aid class,
e ig h t h o u rs, w ill b e h e ld c lo s e d . M e s s ia h L u th e r a n
6 :3 0 -1 0 :3 0 p.m . to d a y and Church, 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road.
easy.
Overeaten Anonymous, open.
the Offices o f Community In­
structional Services, Seminole 7:30 p.m.. Florida Power A
Community College, 323-1450, Light. 301 S. Myrtle Ave., San­
ford.
ext. 304. p.m.

R

S u n d ay A nd M o n d a y O nly
Super Savings...Extra Special Values

Washington’s Birthday Sale
Women
25% Off

All Men’s Shoes

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Tu esday
Feb ru ary IB
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Hotdog
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8gt. Andre A. Joseph, eon o f
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514 Peach Tree Lane. Altamonte

25% Off

Springs, w as Involved In s
NATO-sponsored exercise by
participating In the U.S Arm y's
return o f forces lo Oermany
(KEFORQEH) 1965
The exercise was designed to
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standardise procedures for rapid
response to a crisis and demon­
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lo NATO goals and objectives.
Joseph to a communications
sergeant with the 8th Infantry
Division In Sandhofen. W est
Oermany.

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W inter Springs, recently re­
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A 1964 graduate o f Oviedo
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»

m

Airman Jeffrey J. Thomas,
son o f Allen and Shirley Thom ­
as. or 1212 W. 19th Court.
Sanford, has gratuated from the
U.S. Air Force cable splicing
specialist course at Sheppard Air
Force Base. Texas.
During the course, students
were taught to test, seal. Install
and maintain communications
cable systems. They also earned
credits toward an associate de­
gree through the Community
College lo the Air Force.
Thomas la scheduled to serve
with the 2034th Information
Systems Squadron at Mather Air
Force Base. Calif.
He la a 19B4 graduate o f
Seminole High School, Sanford.

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Th ursday
V ob ru a ry 31
B atroo
Uurrito w/sauce
Tossed Salad
Seasoned Corn
Pineapple Chunks
Milk
Baprosa
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Ham 'n Cheese
Hamburger
Tater Tots/French Fries
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F rid a y
Feb ru ary 21
B atroo
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with honey
Whipped Potatoes
Green Beans
Cherry Crisp
Roll
Milk
Baprosa
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Sizes Girl's 4-6x, 7-14, and Jr. High
Boy's 4-7, 8-16, and Prep Sizes

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_________________________________________________________________________________ C v w »m Hsratd, tan ford. Ft.

Sunday, Fs&gt;. 17,1 W - I B _________________________ _________________________________________

Raiders Seek To Be Host With The Most
By 8am Cook
H erald Sports E d ito r
DAYTONA BEACH — Seminole Community
College's Raiders battle Daytona Beach Commu­
nity College's Scots Saturday night In a game
which w ill decide the host team for the
Mid-Florida Conference post-season tournament.
Tip-off Is 7:30 p.m. at DBCC's tiny gym.
Florida Ju n ior has alread y clinched an
automatic berth In the state tournament by
posting an 11-2 record going Into the last
conference game. SCC and DBCC are both 9-4.
Saturday night's victor will receive a bye In the
tournament's first round and then be the host
school when the field Is reduced to four teams.
The survivor o f the four-team field earns a trip
to the state tournament where It Joins four
division winners and three other runnersup to
form the eight-team field. The tournament begins
at DeLand's Stetson University on Thursday,
March 28.
Although SCC has hosted the post-season
tournament the past two years. It hasn't helped.
"Everybody wants to play at home and get the
bye on Tuesday.” said coach Bill Payne. "W e've
had the home court two years In a row and
haven't won. Whoever Is hot that week seems to
win It."
The Raiders had their tickets practically paid
for last year but were upset by Valencia In the
championship game. The Matadors, behind the

Basketball
1-2 punch of Cleve Williams and Tony Fluker.
became one of the few trams to go to state with a
losing record.
Daytona, ranked No. 4 In the state poll, has
posted a 24-6 overall record and has not lost at
home. Charles Stevenson, a 6-3 forward. Is
considered the lop player In the division by the
coaches. Stevenson averages 19 points and six
rebounds per game. Anthony Anderson, a 6316
forv-ard. Is averaging 15 points per game and
shooting 60 percent from the field.
Carry Hamm, a 5-1116 point guard. Terry
Givens, a 6-4 forward, and Jim Gable a 6-6
center, complete the starting five. Sanford's Willie
Mitchell, who Is averaging 7 rebounds per game,
is the third forward while Sanford's Fred Miller Is
the third guard.
When the trams played on Jan. 26. Seminole
put together one of Its best games of the year for
an 84-73 victory. Stevenson totaled 22 points.
Anderson added 14 while Hamm and Miller each
had 12.
Greg Bates and Kenny Edwards, a pair o f 6-4
awlngmcn for the Raiders, tore up the Scots from
the outside, hitting 22 o f 33 shots for 48 points.
Bales hit 12 of 19 for 25 while Edwards his 10 of
14 for 23.

"W e need to get another good game from
Bales," Payne stressed Friday night. "T h ey
manned-up on Kenny and Llnnv last time and
that gave Bates the open jumpers. He made them.
"W e expect them to do the same thing as they
did before."
Grace, a 6-3 sophomore from Boone, leads the
Raiders with 18 points and 3.5 assists per outing.
He Is shooting 55 percent from the field. Bates Is
averaging 13 points per game. Greg "S lim "
Johnson. SCC's force on the boards with nine per
game. Joins 6-0 Mike Landed as the other starters.
Edwards' status, however. Is In question since
he suffered a cut eye during practice and had
some stitches taken In his eye.
If Edwards can't play. Payne said he will start
Brent Baird. "W e ’ll play a lot of people." said
Payne, ticking off the names o f Calvin "K lk l"
Bryant. Scott Hughes. Robb Brantley and Willie
Strother. "W e do have a better bench than they
do."
Payne said he expects Mitchell, who played lor
Payne at Seminole Hlght as a sophomore, to have
a better game this time around. "W illie will play
better." said Payne. "T h ey have to rebound
better. That's where we had a big edge the first
time we played,"
SCC outrebounded the Scots. 37-26. as
Johnson pulled down 13 boards and Bates snared

Sae LYM AN . P a g * SB

K enny

B a te s

E d w a rd s

right. Mltchrl! hud Just one board In limited
playing time.
"1 don'l think they played badly 1st tim e." said
Payne, "They Just didn't play their best game or
control Ihc tjueklionrds like they have been
doing."
The Raiders hung an overtime loss on DBCC
the Iasi year ut the Scots' gym. Il may have been
Ihe last time someone has beaten them at home,
"it's a quaint little gym ." said Payne. "But It's a
hostile crowd. They make a lot of noise und go
crary. It's a tough place to play."
Thirteen beaten visitors ran attest to that.

Bucs, McCloud Have
It Their Way, 64-50

Lyman
Returns
To State
ORANGE PARK - When a
team finishes second In the
state the previous year, not
much Incentive Is needed.
Lyman's Lady Greyhounds
had a whiff of that champi­
onship game last spring and
they have been sniffing that
cham pionship scent ever
since.
The aroma grew stronger
Friday night as the Lady
Greyhounds moved Iwlthln
two wins o f the state title.
Lyman's victory march hit
Its 22nd perfect beat as the
Lady Greyhounds knocked
o ff O range Park, 3-1. to
a d v a n c e to th e s ta te
tournament at Orange Park
High School.
By gaining the sectional
championship. Lyman. 22-0.
earns Its the right to play
C oral S p rin g s o r Stuart
Martin County In the semifi­
nals F rid a y. T h e Tam pa
C h a m b er la In -C le a r w a ter
Countryside w inner from
Friday night plays the South
Plantation-Coral Gables sur­
vivor In the other semifinal.
Lyman coach Tom Barnes
said his school would make a
"vigorous bid to host the
tournament." Barnes said,
though, hta school might be
at a disadvantage because
their are two south Florida
sections Involved.
Lyman didn’ t have any
problem with disadvantages
Friday. Sheila Mandy picked
up an opportunistic goal at
the 27:30 mark o f the first
half when she Joined a scuffle
at the front o f the Orange
Park goal mouth, controlled
the bail and booted It home
for a 1-0 Lyman lead.
" T h r e e o r fou r people
tapped I t . " said Barnes.
"Sheila got a good fool on It
and tapped It in ."
S e v e n m in u t e s la t e r .
Lyman upped Its lead to 2-0
w h en K a r e n A b e r n e th y
scored on an Indirect kick.
Setting up Just outside the
penalty area. Lym an's best
defender turned offensive
and boomed the shot Into the
upper right hand comer of
the goal.
The 2 0 lead atood up until

G reg

iw a raws h T a w t vt

Mainland's John Hall aats
spraad In hoot of drawing a
Samlnola's Rod Handarson

ralaasa his lump shot. Tha Bucs pul ltd
away In tha second half to op Seminole,
44-50, In Flva Star Confaranca baskatball.

Wittig, Black Shoot Down Greyhounds, 84-52
By C lu ia F itt e r
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - Wade W ittig
was "unconskma." and Rea Black was "out
o f his mind."
In medical terms. Lake Brantley's Patriots
would have been in bad shape Friday night
with one guy out cold and another ready for
the loony bin.
In basketball termingotogy. however, the
W ittig and Black-led Patriots were Im­
pressive.
Wittig poured In a season-high 24 points.
Including 16 in the first hair, and Black
scored 10 o f his 12 points In the second
quarter as Brantley built a commanding
40-20 halftime lead en route to a 84-82
thrashing of Lym an's Greyhounds In Five
Star Conference action before 400 fans at
Lake Brantley High.
"W ittig and Black played super." Lake
Brantley coach Bob Peterson said. "W ittig la
coming on real strong. The big thing for him
la his first step. Hc'a a 8-3 forward but he's
like a guard with hta quick first step. Rea
(Black! Just w en t w ild In the second

Basketball
quarter."
Wittig. a Junior forward, used his quick­
ness to get Inside for four points early as
Brantley reeled off the first six points of the
game. W ittig went on to score 10 points In
the first quarter while Mark Moser was
popping from outside with eight points as
Brantley took a 20-8 lead.
Austin Hodges hit a pair o f free throws to
open the second quarter and Black hit four
more points to boost Brantley's lead to 2 8 8
with 5:57 left In the first half. Black scored
10 straight points for the Patriots In the
second quarter on a variety of moves Inside
and out. The 8 3 senior's strong Inside play
was crucial for the Patriots since 8 8 center
G rc^C ourtney was on the bench In foul
trout
Courtney cam e back to provide the
offensive spark In the third quarter as Lake
Brantley, which led 40-20 at halftime, reeled
off the first six points, four by Courtney, to

lake a 4 8 2 0 lead.
Courtney, a senior, scored 10 of his 14
points In the third quarter as the Patriots
took a 60-34 lead Into the fourth. Courtney
also led Brantley underneath with seven
rebounds while Wittig hauled down six and
Black pulled down five.
Hodges and David Hardwick provided
strong play off the bench as Hodges, a 8 3
senior, scored nine points and ripped down
six boards and Hardwick, a 5-10 Junior,
tossed In nine points and dished out three
aaslts. Mike Morris, a 8 0 junior guard,
handed out a game-high six assists. Moser, a
Junior guard, added eight points and four
assists.
Robert Thomas was high for Lyman with
17 points. Ralph Philpott added 11 and nine
boards w h ile T.J- Scaletta and Brett
Marshall tossed In nine each. Scaletta had
scored 25 points Tuesday In a two-point loss
to Apopka.
"W e played good defense on Scaletta."
Peterson said. "W e needed to keep the ball

Bss ROUNDUP. Page 4B

B y 8am Cook
H erald S p orts E ditor
Mainland's Burs and George
McCloud did everything they
wanted to Friday night wliii
Sanford's Fighting Semlnoles.
Mainland, vying for No. 2 seed
for the district tournament, took
a big step In that direction with a
convincing 64-50 Five Star Con­
ference victory before 1.100 fans
at Seminole High School.
McCloud, touted as one of the
top players in Central Florida,
did nothing to diminish that
claim with a 30-polnt perfor­
mance which turned back the
Semlnoles every time they made
a push to get back In the game.
The 6-6 guard worked In and
around a Seminole sonc defense
to hit 8 of 14 floor shots and 14
of 18 free throws. The foul shots
came In the fourth quarter when
S e m in o le t r ie d to s lic e
Mainland's JO-point advantage
but couldn't.
"McCloud Is back lo where
M cC lou d s h o u ld b e . " said
Mainland coach Dick Toth. "He
was hit by a bunch o f nagging
Injuries In January which we
didn't tell anybody. He had the
flu, a groin pull, a 140-drgrrc
temperature and ptnk eye. He's
all right now."
Seminole will aurely attest to
that — especially the healed eye.
"W e took a chance on playing a
sane against McCloud," said
Seminole coach Chris Marlette.
"H e Just tore us up."
After building a 31-27 lead ul
halftime, Mainland outscored
Seminole. 13-8, In the third
quarter as McCloud broke loose
for 10 points. The Tribe pulled
within two points early In the
third quarter but couldn't ever
pull even. McCloud closed out
with 13 points In the fourth
quarter as the Buca steadily
pulled away.
Seminole's Henderson, a 6-3
sophomore, got untracked In the
fourth quarter and twice hll
Jumpers Inside the paint to cut
the deficit to 56-46 and 60-50,
but the Tribe could never break
below double figures.
McCloud received a 16 point
complement from sophomore
Mike Polite, who scored four In
each quarter. " It 's gotten to the
point where I don't even think of
him as a sophomore." said Toth
about his 8 6 center. "W e de­
cided early In the year he was
too good for Junior varsity.
Seminole's doing the same thing
with their young guys. That's
how you learn."
Sem inole's you n g guys —
freshmen Andre Whitney and
Craig Walker — learned the hard
way Friday. Walker missed a
couple o f easy shots underneath
while the Bucs left Whitney open
In the second half, urging him to
shoot while concentrating on
James Rouse and Ken Gordon.
“ It didn't like like such good
strategy when No. 10 (Whltneyl
hit his first shot." said Toth.
"But 1 think he mlsacd hla next
eight. Rouse and Gordon were
killing us In the first half. We
had to stop them."
They did. Rouse, who tossed
In six points In the first quarter
as Seminole took a 14-12 lead,
was held scoreless In the third
period. The 8 2 senior had 10
points at halftime and finished
with 10.
Gordon, a 8 2 senior, tallied
eight points In the first half as
Mainland seised a 31-27 lead. In
the third period, be. too, was
blanked from the field. Gordon
added five points in the fourth

Basketball
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period to finish with 13.
"W c played a rone with two
guys und the other ihree were
man-to-.nun," said Tolh. "W e
WAlifod Whitney to shout ihc
ball. I didn't reallie he's made all
o f his shots (four) against Lake
H ow ell. Bui that w as Lake
Howell. W e’ve got n pretty solid
team ."
Marlette said he didn't mind
the strategy but his Tribe failed
to lake advantage o f Its op­
portunities. "W e were busting
I heir press wide open, but then
we missed I he rasy shots un­
d ern eath ." said Marlette. "I
thought Whitney would smoke
them when they lei him shoot,
hill he didn't. Hr hurt his arm In
practice Thursday ami lie wasn't
shooting as well as usual."
Mainland, which hus won nine
In a row. improvrd lo 19-5
overall. The Hues are 10-4 In the
district and 10-6 In the confer­
ence. Seminole Is 14-9 overall.
9-5 In (he district and 9-7 In the
conference.
"W e've pretty much assured
ourselves that wc'l) be In the
opposite bracket from DeLand."
said Tolh. "But the rest o f them
(Seminole, Spruce Creek and
Apopka) are still In a dogfight."
All three have the same record
with Just two games tn play.
Seminole plays Apopka Tuesday
und Lake llru n llc y F rid a y.
Apopka hosts Spruce Creek
Friday. Spruce Creek, which
knocked Lake Mary out of the
running. 75-54 Friday, goes lo
Lyman Tuesday.
In Frlduy's first game, the
Seminole Junior varsity used 24
points by Jerry Parker to pull
ou t a 62 -6 1 v i c t o r y o v e r
Mainland. The Tribe Improved
lo 18-5 for the year.
"Parker probably had his best
game. He also rebounded very
w ell." said roach Tom Smith.
"Joe Holden did a good Job. loo,
especially In the second half."
Holden, a 6-3 forward, losacd
In 19 polntm. IS o f which came
In ihe final half.
Seminole built a nine-point
lead In the fourth quarter but
then mlsacd five straight free
throws in the closing minutes to
allow Mainland to make It close.
Rod Fossltt. a 8 4 sophomore,
chipped in seven points.
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N o A nnouncem ent But M cCorkle Still Confident
B v |tj|" Cook
H era ld Sports E d ito r
Coach Jim Brody and hla Lake
Brantley Patriots have one thing going
fo r th e m p r io r to t h e d la t r lc t
showdown with Lake Mary — there's
no school on Saturday.
Before Thursday's semifinal game
with ranked Lake Howell, Coach Larry
McCorkle grabbed the Lake Mary
public addreaa microphone and boldly
predicted that hla Rama would upaet
the atate’a No. I ranked team.
"T h a t waa aort o f d u m b." aald
McCorkle Friday. "1 didn’ t want to
prraa m y luck for Lake Brantley, so 1
didn't say anythlng Friday."
M c C o rk le. n e verth ele ss , haa a
method to hla madnesa. " In the two
games w e lost to Lake Howell this
year, we learned som ething each
e ." aald McCorkle. the holder of
state championships as Bishop
Moore coach. "But Lake Howell and
Casselberry soccer program had gotten
isn aura o f invincibility about them. I
think some of my kids were starting to
believe It. but we put that to rest
Thursday."

C

And Saturday at Lake Brantley High
School. McCorkle hopes hla 20-8 Rama
can slay another glam In the Patriots.
Brody's aquad, which haa a IB-2-1
record, haa been a steady climber In
Ihe 4A state poll. Last week, the
Patriots were ranked No. 4.

Lym an puahed the Pats Into five
overtimes before Lake Brantley pulled
It out with three penalty kicks Tues­
day night In a sudden death overtime.
Steve Eart. Cory Sheffield and Simon
Trum ble all scored In the OT while
goalie Aaron Klndel allowed Just one
goal.
"T h a t Lyman victory waa just what
we needed," said Brody. "W e are
really ready for this game. W e’ve set
some high goals for ourselves this year
and we don’t want anybody to atop
us."
McCorkle. perhaps playing the rote
of the coaching sage, advanced the
theory that the pressure waa on Lake
Brantley, since It waa the ranked team.
"T h e y have to beat u s," aald the
third-year Lake Mary mentor. "W e will
go Into thla game with the aame
attitude we had at Lake Howell. The
preaaure la on Brantley, w e’re nobody.
We were pretty loose Thursday and we
will be agidn Saturday."
Brody agreed, to a point. "T h a t may
be ao.” aald the first-year Patriot
coach. “ That was attitude against they
took against Lake Howell and they
were able to take the game away from
them.
" A lot o f times that (being
underdog) can be an advantage.
we know Lake Mary can play
w e've not complacment at all.”
The teams have met twice

Ihe
But
and
pre-

Soccer
vlously. Lake Brantley, using a atellar
effort by Klndel. blanked the Rams.
3-0, In the first meeting. Lake Mary
upaet the Pats. 2*1. on penalty kicks In
the Pizza Hut Classic the following
week.
Although the preaaure may be on
Lake Brantley, the press la on Lake
Mary. "T h ey put a lot o f pressure on
you,” aald McCorkle. "T h e y can do It
all game long. An analogy to basket­
ball Is that they full court press Ihe
whole way.
"Y o u have to make them earn the
oala. Brantley scored a couple goals
y deflected balls against a lot of
teams. Th ey’re really good at that.”
The beat of Lake Brantley's bunch is
Mo Moghaddam. who haa 21 goals for
the year, two which McCorkle re­
m em ber* very well. "W e haven't been
able to atop him.” he said. "M o scored
each time we played them and both
were 60-yard runs where he went past
every body."
W h i l e h e Is c o n s c i o u s o f
Moghaddam‘s skills. McCorkle Is quick
to point out that Lake Brantley haa
several good players. "M o has been the
most publicized.” aald McCorkle. "But
they have a lot o f good players.
Especially on defenae. There haven't

S

been many games when they’ve given
up more than one goal."
McCorkle’a team has been playing
better defenae and he said the Im­
provement o f keeper Greg Grlfflng has
been one of the major reasons. "Coach
(BUI) Elsaele has been a major Influ­
ence on Greg." said McCorkle. "Grtfflng has 13 shutouts so he must be
doing something right."
McCorkle. who had an all-state
keeper In Joe Dalton last year, said the
tending has been a learning process for
Grlfflng. "G reg mostly fullback on JVs
last year. He’s learned from all those
mistakes. Just had a great match
against Lake Howell. He and the rest of
our defenders are putting together a
solid defense." he said.
McCorkle said Grlfflng, who It 6-4.
doesn't have Ihe problem o f most tall
keepers. "It doesn’t take him long to
get up and down.” he said. "Som e­
tim es a tall keeper has trouble getting
down, but he gets down real quick."
Offensively. Andre Sanders has 29
goals. J erry ’ Meyers has kicked 16
w hile Tony Florentlno has added 10.
A ll are forwards. Paul Holmes, a
midfielder, haa 14 assists.
Su rprisingly. Ernie Broennle. a
freshman, came up with the lone goal
In the 1-0 win over Lake Howell. "H e's
a good player who haa been In right
place at right tim e." said McCorkle
about hla No. I sub. "H e waa in the
gam e when the ball was delivered and

he knew what to do with It. Ernie's a
very confident Individual. Even though
he was a freshman on the vanity, he
knows he can play."
Even though McCorkle aald a trend
toward conservative play was Lake
Howell's undoing. Brody aald that
won’t happen to hto Patriots. “ There'*
always the feeling out process In the
first 15 minutes." he said. "I don't
think we will get too conservative. We
have a strong defense but we never try
to sit on a lead. That's the easiest way
to lose."
While the Rams and Patriots will
decide the 4A district In this area,
coach Chris Hall's Oviedo Lions have
the stiff task o f upsetting powerful
Bishop Moore in the -3A final at
Montverde.
Sanford's Tim Fall, who has 59 goals
for the year, will be the man Oviedo
has to mark. "I don't know what we're
going to do with h im ." said Hall,
whose Lions knocked o ff Montverde to
gain the finals. " I hale to pul one man
on him because that hurts the rest of
our defense. W e'll probably Just play It
straight.”
Oviedo haa a scoring whiz o f Its own
In Greg Brick. The Oviedo sophomore
haa had several multi-goal games this
year and It was Brick's goal which
tipped Montverde. 2-1. Bishop Moore
pounded Jones, 6-0. ln,the semifinals.
The Hornets arc coached by Tom Fall.
T im 's brother.

Duda Cats
Clinch
1st Place

Rudy

Softer
M a y fa ir
G olf W r ite r

The Oviedo Duda Stray Cals
clinched Ihe title in the InterCounty Basketball Association's
Senior division while the three
other division leader* all re­
mained unbeaten. The Cats
clawed the Winter Park YMCA
86-23 to Improved thetr record
to 10-0 with two game* remain­
ing and runnerup Winter Park
already haa three loose*.
The well divided Oviedo scor­
ing had Demltrious Hill with 16.
Kelly Klukto 14. Eddie Norton
and Doug Ackerman 12 each.
Robbie Bowers 1) and Pop
Bowers 10. Danny Rubin added
7 and Tim WUlto 4. Norton
dished out 10 assists and HU1
pulled down a dozen rebounds.

M ixed Golf
Tourney
Draw s Well
It looks like the cold and flu
season la really here. Almost
everybody haa either had It or
haa It now. It's tough to avoid In
this kind o f weather.
Despite the weather, there waa
a good turnout for the member*
mixed tournament on Sunday.
Feb. 10. T h e tourney waa
sponsored by the Mayfair Ladies
Association. This waa a 4-ball
beat ball tournament. Here’s
look at the winners:
Low Oroaa Team: (751 Art and
Irene Harris and Dick Elam who
waa paired by blind draw with
Kathryn Park. Low Net Team:
(BS) Dick and Marg Manning and
Jim and Rose Buaaard. Second
Low Net Team : (56) Bob and Ada
O'Neil and Ken and Lawanda
Sandon. Third Low Net Team:
|B9) Dr. Charlie and Kathryn
Park and George and Peggy
Billups. Awards were given In
the clubhouse Immediately fol­
lowing the tournament.
The other tournament last
week waa held on Thursday,
Feb. 7 for all the folks who
volunteered their services to
help run the Mayfair Open,
which waa held the last week o f
January.
Twelve good men and 12 good
ladles were paired by a Mind
draw and teed It up at In a 2-ball,
beat ball tournament with full
handicap.
Although II was only a 9-hole
to u rn a m e n t. E v ery o n e
th orou gh ly e n jo y e d It. T h e
winner* were as follows: Low
Oroaa Team: John Johnson and
Stella Brooks: Low Net Team:
W e a W e r n e r a n d M ir ia m
A n d rew s: S e c o n d Low N et
Team: Stan Potter and Diddle
Weber.
All 24 o f these folks did a fine
job with the Mayfair Open and
they deserve a huge vote fo
thanks.
S p ea k in g o f tournam ents,
there are a few coming up In the
near future that may be o f
Interest.
On Saturday. Feb. 23. the
Mayfair Men's Golf Association
will hold a 4-Ball, beat ball
tournament which will be a 9
a m shotgun start. It’s not too
toon to get signed up. All MMGA
m em ber* are encouraged to
play. Sign up In the Pro Shop.
On Friday. March IB. the
Oreater Sanford Chamber o f
Commerce to holding Its annual
tournament which will be a 1
p.m. shotgun start. For more
I n f o r m a t i o n , c o n t a c t th e
Chamber at 323-2212.
The neat m em bers mixed
tournam ent w ill be the St.
's Day bash on Sunday.
1?. Th is will be a 1 p.m.
start and to sponsored
both tha MMGA andM WOA.
fu r th e r Inform ation on thla
tournament w ill be forthcoming.

O slo Takes 57-Pln Ltod
: FLORISSANT. Mo. (UPI) David Oslo. Vidor. Texas, look a
87-ptn lead over George Pappas
after Friday afternoon'* fifth
ad o f a $160,000 Professional
rlcra A ssociation tournaThe tournament to
AMF Angle Open.

tjj toI fru

m rUPfW"

griff ■fWlWl$i

to P ' ■*» *■ "I

In other Senior boys division
games Eaatmonte won a pair,
dropping Whiter Park Rec U 4 8
You only noed a windshield when It's raining, right? That's bender
bands during tho International Race of Champions Friday and Weatmonte 50-41. Lance
the way A J . Foyt, middle, looks at it as his windshield goes at tha Daytona Speedway. There were no injuries.
Wall led Use Greyhounds In the
on# way and ha spins out anothar during a flvo-car fender
first one with 14. Steve Falk had
13. Ray Wheeler 7. Leveechle
Nelson and Scott Russell 6 each.
Tony Emanuel waa high for WP
with 23. Terry Dixon scored IS
and Willie Brown 8. In the
second game Todd Rowland led
B y O a ry K a le
girl, but 1 want a boy." Waltrip aald. noting with 12 followed by Wall I I ,
U T l A n te Kao la g W r ite r
the older folks didn't want another driver in Falk 10 and Nelson 6. Willie
the family. " I f It'a a girl, she may be the first
DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) - The dizzy
Meadows topped Weatm onte
world of aulo racing look another bizarre
woman to win a Daytona BOO." Hto wire
with 21. Kevin Brown and Ryan
saw an opening and buzzed down lo Ihe
turn in thoropenlng race of the 8500,000
countered " I'll have something to say about
Walhouae had 10 each.
that too."
apron in a bid to pass. A chain reaction
International Race or Champions aerie*.
Weatmonte bopped the Winter
started aa Sneva tapped Yarborough's rear
Four of the leading five cars spun out In
Driver* Involved in the smashup emerged
bumper and the three-time Grand National
the last lap o f the 100-mlle event at Daytona
unscathed and laughing about the experi­ Park YMCA In another Senior
game. 67-23. Mike Young tallied
champion swerved Into Foyt.
ence.
Speedway Friday that featured 12 driver*
Darrell Waltrip was riding near the high
from different phases o f auto racing han­
" I knew Cale waa gonna try to paaa on ' 24. Meadows 14. Dave Martin 11
w a ll aa th e ca rs c a m e a ro u n d tne
dling Identical Camaroa. Three were In­
that last top. and he did." aald Foyt. "H e and Brown 10.
backstretch and he managed to avoid debris and I were running real tight there coming
volved In the accident and the fourth driver
In Girls play, the Scorpions
and take the checkered (lag. Bobby Rabat of o ff turn four, and I aaw Cate's rear get out of won three tn a row beating
waa blinded by oil on hto windshield that
C A R T w as tra ilin g W a ltrip . but hla shape (when Yarborough waa hit by Sneva). Winter Park twice, 15-12 and
caused him to swerve to a safe stop In the
windshield waa bathed by spewing oil and
Infield.
then m y rear got loose, my windshield 23-22 (after time had expired),
he groped for a safe spot in the Infield.
Five car* were locked In a draft coming
popped out and I couldn't see anything. Aak and the South Seminole Kittens.
Waltrip, who teamed he will be a father Sneva what happened. He waa the squirrel. 26-16.
around the third turn, with C A R T driver
for the first time In October, waa clocked at He ran out o f brains, as usual, and ran Into
A.J. Foyt leading and NASCAR’ a Calc
In the first W P game. Suzanne
1BB.341 mph and won $5,000. Even better, C ale."
Yarborough attempting move Into position
Hughes scored 10 o f the 15.
Waltrip haa a leg up on the four-race
for a slingshot manuever when the wild
Yarborough aald he passed Foyt on the breaking open a 12-12 tie In the
B u d w e la e r IR O C a eries w h ic h p a ys backstretch "and waa sitting pretty. A llo t s
finish began.
last minute or play. Sabena
$150,000 to the ultimate points leader.
While Yarborough waa trying to swoop
sudden I was sideways. I must have clipped Milligan and Jackie Goodman
"M y parents and Stevie's parents want a A J . when I went around."
low, CART driver Tom Sneva thought he
had 4 each for WP,. The second
W P game was even more exettIng aa WP led
td by 10 In
in the toat
quarter only to loaa aa Christen
Awaui
Iwsumb sank two foul shots at
the final buzzer for the Scorpi­
ons.
In JV Boys action the Jackson
Heights Lions defeated a scrappy
Lyman, meanwhile, waa Just
JH Wildcat*. 45 33. after being
explosive with the aluminum
up by Juat five potato going Into
LONOWOOD — Lyman and
and e v e n m ore so on th e
th e la st q u a r te r. D on ova n
Lake Brantley each picked up
m o u n d s . D e re k L lv e r n o la .
William led the Lions with IB
t h e i r s e c o n d v i c t o r i e s in
Lym an's flreballlng righthander,
and Vince Hollis added 10.
L y m a n ’s In vita tion a l round- the first, five in the second, one was u ntou chable. L lv e rn o la
The South Seminole Tomcats
robin baseball tournament Fri­ in the fourth and five In the fifth. hurled the first three innings to
beat Weatmonle behind Robbie
day night and will square off Mark Coffey singled home the pick up the win in the game
Crager's big 22 points, 46-25.
Saturday night at 7 to determine first Innlf run after Andy Dunn which waa shortened to five
Matt MacDonald led Weatmonte
the champion.
had singled and stolen second.
Innings by ihe slaughter rule. He
with 15.
Brad Dunn Ignited the five-run struck out seven or nine hitter*
T h e O re y h o u n d e crushed
In a n o t h e r J V g a m e
Leesburg. K M . for their third second with a walk and stolen and didn't allow a ball out o f the
Weatmonte nipped TuakawUla,
straight win. Kyle Brubaker, a base. After Rick Cook grounded Infield.
23. Kellom led the way wtth
Knvln Bass cam* on In tha 24t r a n s fe r fro m L a k e M ary, out. Brad Dunn reached on an
BUI Henley, a member o f the
12 had 6 Matt Davto waa high
first
Inning
and
allowad
|u*t
cracked three doubles and a error to score hto brother. Coffey A lta m o n t e S p rin g s * W o r ld
for Tuaky with 10.
sin gle. Jim O dom had two walked and Mike Beams reached C ham p ion S en ior Leaguera. two hits tha rost of tha way
In V anity boys play Winter
doublet and a single.
on a fielder's choice to set the mopped up, allowing two hits aa Laka Brantlay poundad P a rk d u m ped th e J a ck s o n
Lake Brantley won for the slag* for Davto' second homer in and striking out three over the Eustis. \b4.
Heights Lions, 72-42, gtvtng the
fourth time in five outings with a taro days at Lyman.
for an 6 0 bulge.
final two Innings.
i
their erennd straight toss
12-0 victory over Bust to. 0-3, aa
Lyman scored all o f Us runs tn
Lake Brantlcy'e big fifth put
IB B T * l
and the front running South
)untor Mike Davis continued hi* the game out of reach. Dan the first three Inning*. Brubaker
In junior college baaeball Fri­ Sem inole Bobcats a full-two
lusty hitting. Davto. a transfer Beaty singled before the Dunn led off the first with a double and day. Daryl Badger drilled a gr r r " lead In the pcnnnn
from Tennessee, Uned a grand brother* each walked to load the •cored when John Bane also double and single to drive tn two Erin McGuire and Billy
■torn over the center field fence bases. Lee Bembaum followed doubted. T w o outs later, the runs as the Seminole Communi­ tod W P with 20 potato
to highlight a five-run Patriot with a three-rua double to left red-hot Odom drilled a double ty C ollege R aiders trim m ed Qutacey Howard had 12. Far the
second Inning which erased a and Coffey continued to tear the for a 2-0 lead.
Brevard. 6 3 . tn Cocoa.
l io ns. Chad Duncan scored 12
B* 1 Eustis lead.
In t h e s e c o n d , B y r o n
cover off with a riplc to score
SCC. 3-3-1. received s com­ and Charles Warner 11.
Eustis hsd ch ased starter Bembaum. Beams then doubled Overstreet and John Elwood bined seven-hitter from Max
TuakawUla w on a pair o f
Larry Schumacher tn the ftrei to drive in Coffey for a 12
tingled. Darren Boyeeen reached Cornell. Kevin Rood and Billy gam es beating w h ipp ed the
inning en route to tta five runs. Beaty singled. Baas 6-4. Brad on an error to score Overstreet. Stripp. Cornell pitched shutout Jackson Heights Knights, 53-13.
After the fourth hitter reached. singled. Cook 1-5. Andy walked Brubaker then singled In Elwood ball over the fkst six Innings Wayne Z e h k d the wcO-dtvlded
and Bane reached on another b eam giving over to Rood, who neoring for the Warrior* wtth 13.
Smith called on Kevin Baa*. The t o lo a d b a s e s . B e r n b a u m
big righthander allowed ju attw o doubled to left to score three error to score Boyeeen. Livernoto hurled the seventh, and Stripp. Wayne Befovcr had 12.
hits and struck out seven while runs. Coffey tripled to left center also Jump aboard on an error
going tha rest o f the way to pick to so cre Bernbaum . B eam s and Odom doubtod in Bane. Left
up tha victory.
doubled to score Coffey for a fielder Mika Henley tripled to
right center to score two more
Th e Patriots scored one run In 12 5 bulge.

Waltrip Avoids Dizzy Spins To Win IROC
Auto Racing

Odom, Brubaker Rip Leesburg;
Bass Hooks Eustis With 2-Hitter
Baaeball

1

�••* *

» ** ' 1*

* s' : * '• f•*r *"*

Deja
Vu:Mays Upsets
Second Seed Johnson

■HKP*(w^H

Sheralton Mays, top, works over Lake
Mary's Craig Johnson. Mays upset Johnson,

fen
W
gB W

the tournament's No. 2 seed, for the the
second year In a row.

Basketball
Seminole Is expected to finish
the season at 14-2 In the dtslrtct
as It plays Apopka Monday.
Whoever wins between Lake
Mary and Brantley will end up In
a tie for first In the district wtth
Seminole and a coin toss will
decide the top seed In the district
tournament.
"It's a big one Monday." Lake
Mary coach Bill Moore said.
Leading the way for Lake
Mary, which has won six In a

LAKR MARY (111 - A«*rlll It. 0*
Stoll*, 10. Fanning 4. C Hat) 11. L Hall 7,
Lack)* 0. A P*l**r*on 71. C. P*(«*r*on 10.
R*ynotd» 7. tkwart 0. 1ton* 7 T*)*l« )7

n not

IP R U C i CREEK 14)1 - M**lh ||. Hill I).
Andtrton 7. Frott 4. H * „lt 0 Thay*r 4.
Bunch* TWaH 14*1*4)
Halttim* — Lak* Mary 14. Sprue* Cr**fc
It Foul* — Lak* Mary 17. Sprue* Crock 1*
F«u)*d pi* — non* Txhnkal* — non* A —

By Chris P la te r
H erald S p orts W r it e r
Lake Mary's Rams and Sanford's Fighting
Semlnoles. two of the fiercest rivals In Seminole
County, have yet lo meet In a dual wrestling
match this season. Although the regular season Is
over, the Rams and Semlnoles will have four
wrestlers going up against each other Saturday
morning In the semifinals o f the 4A-9 Tourna­
ment at Lake Mary High.
“ They {Lake Mar)') wouldn't wrestle us In dual
match." Seminole coach Roger Beathard said.
"So this Is the closest we’ll com e."
Both teams had successful first rounds Friday
night as the Rams advanced 11 o f 13 wrestlers lo
the semifinals and Seminole advanced six. Lake
Mary has a comfortable lead In the learn
standings after the first round with 52Vi points,
compared to 37 for U k e Brantley. 33 for Lyman
and 27 for Seminole.
"W e're hoping to get eight guys through to the
finals," Lake Mary coach Frank Schwarti said.
"That will give us a strong lead."
For Seminole, getting six wrestlers to the finals
was an Impressive showing after a disappointing
performance In the Five Star Conference tourney.
"S ix guys in the semifinals Is the most since
1973-76," Beathard said. "That was the year we
won the conference and finished third In the
district."
Sheralton Mays, a sophomore, got Seminole off
to a good start Friday as he upset Lake Mary’s
Cntlg Johnson at 109 pounds.
"Johnson (the second seed at 1091 got a
takedown In the first period and took a 2-0 lead,".
Beathard said. "Mays was on the bottom the
second period but he worked n barb series and
picked up three backpolnls early In the third
period.
"Maya treat Johnson in the district Iasi year
und went on to take second." added Beathard. “ It
wus sort o f deja vu tonight."
Also advancing for the Semlnoles were Steve
Chung 16-4 season record) at 130 pounds, Tony

Wrestling
Brown |23-0) at 142. Tracy Turner (17-4) got a
bye at 149. Troy Turner 119-0) at 159 and Walt
Lowry (11-4) at 171.
Mays goes up against Lakr Brantley’s Kevin
Oreensteln In Saturday’s semifinals while Chung
battles Brantley's Ban Black. Brown goes up
against Brantley's Steve Drake. Tracy Turner
takes on Lake Mary's Scott Ross. Troy Turner
clashes with Lake Mary's Mark Lindquist and
Lowry tangles with Lake Mary’s Walt White.
4A » Otitrtit Ttu iu m tn l
At Lak* M v | HtfS
T m i h m r n - lak* M*ry U M I JJ'i. H U Br#nti«y |LB) J7,
Lyman (LYI U. Wmlno* (SI 17. DaU n d (01 » . Mainland (M l I».
ApagA* (At IS Serve* Cr**k ISC) II. l*k* Mo**ll (L H ) 11
FrM ay'i Hr*t raaad r r u lh
I d - C Cartia ILM ) by* Ball &lt;M) d Moor* (A ). II* M!M*r
ILH ) by* Martin (LB ) d R *llly(D). I « «
i n - Dvsm (LV| d Cm* U H I . 70 Bate* (M ) by* Gr**n*t*m
(L S )d H**ko(A&gt;.) I May* IS) d JoAnwn ILM ). &gt; I
1I« - I Carbl* (L M ) d Horv*m ILM). It* Hunitk*, (L Y ) d
Tvbb* (LSI, f I Sn*)*f (M l by* Crkh*(DI|&gt; Clark ( SC). ] M
It ) - Ball &lt;LY) p McMorre*. (L M I.l It F lg l* r(L H )d Dou*i..
I SCI, 17 I ttrntman (L B ) by* Fair (A lp B m lk lD l.J 17
IM - Black (LBI p Hugh** (L Y I. J l « Chung (SI d Ho*kmi
(L H I .P ) a*yn*M* IM ) p Dwppard IA). &lt;7 Brotor* (LM I p Hall*
(0 )1 «
IM - Bmanual (M l p Mitika* (SI. I I I Maer* (SCI p Black ID).
1*1. Carvll* ILV ) d K*nn*y (LB ). 117 Ot**n (L M ) d Schn*id*r»
(L H ).lll
1*1 - Braon IS) d Dlckan* (A ). II 1 Drak* (L B ) p Schp*n«*tt*r
(SC). I n Rinaldi (M ) p Mlrlil* (LH). ] 40 Beauchamp (LM I p
Cavar) iLY ). S: is
t*t - Buckley (L H ) p Fil*r (M ). I U Na«arr* |LY| d William*
(A ). 4 POT R n t lL M Id William* (SCI. I 4 Tracy Tg rm r (S) by*
II* - Tray Turn*r IS) p Spic*r (A ). : 17 Llndguitl (LM ) d
F o rm ) (LY I. *1 OT Edward* ID) p H*lm ILH ). 1 n Wara*ak
tLB 1d Edaard* IM) 10 1
171 - Smith ILV ) d Lt«l*r IM ). 14 4 lacomb (D ) p O tto * (LM).
47. Lbvry (S) p Rally (L B I 41 W hltalLMId Karrlgan (A ). It I
i n - Murray (A ) p Hall (SI. I » Klngtbury (L M ) p tlraki*
(M l. I 17. Marrli ILBI p Sandbarg ILH). t 17 $choanw*H*r (SC) p
Hartman (LYI. t 00
IM — Caughpll ILM ) p P*t*f*on (LB ). 1 It Lombark (At by*
Parkin*(LVIp Barr (S). 41 Cr*vl*y ILH) by*
Ual - Brawn 10) p. Halllngton |S). 1:41 Jacktpn (L M ) p Smith
IL Y ). I M Cratl (LBI p LaCora (LH ). I X) Carr IA ) p Ranay (M l.

SCOREBOARD
Fn*l«W

Lako M ary Junior Varsity Takas
1st Flvo Star Baskatball Tltla
FORT ORANGE — Matt Napoli tosaed In 19 potnta aa the
Lake Mary Junior van ity basketball team clinched Its tint
Five Star Conference championship with a 63-51 victory
over Spruce Creek at Spruce Creek High School Friday
night.
The victory upa Lake M ar a record to 17-3 overall and
14-2 In the conference. Wltl
remaining, it ta Impossible for any o f the other teams to
catch Lake Mary.
The Rama Jumped to an H -5 lead In the first quarter
behind Terry "T h e C at" Miller's six points. The Rams
Increased the bulge to 29-17 at halftime aa Oscar "B ig O "
Merthle and Jimmy Stewart each scored six points.
Napoli, who had six points in the first half, came on
strong In the second 16 minutes with 13 more. "Matt had a
great all-around game." said coach Charles Steele. "H e also
had five rebounds and five steals."
Stewart led an aggressive Lake Mary board effort with
nine. Roosevelt CaJnea had eight. David Drawdy seven
while Merthle and Miller also had five. AffThony Sutton had
three assists.

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LAKE R U B Y JV ( i t ) - N p*)l If. M llpf W. M orSH II. CMn*t M. Itowwt 7.
Gtbto I. Bonhom A MfwW yllt* A McKImpp A tvttm t. Orbwpy A lopp I. T*u l»
M il H U
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Imy A L u c m A C. tewWWMh t T * t»ll: I I A 14t l .
Haltlim* — Lab# Mary I*. Iprvca Crrnk 17 Faull — Lak* Mary I). Sprue*
Cr**k I*. F*u4*p aul — nan* Txlm ka) — Saar*

Oostarhuls Birdlas Into Laad
LA JOLLA. Calif. (UP!) — Peter OoslerhuU hit seven
birdies In eight holes at the San Diego Open Friday lo fly
Into a first-place tie with Clary Hallberg.
Yet he took none o f the credit for hla B-under-04
performance.
"T h is is the perfect course for m e." said Oosterhuls after
completing the second round.
"Driving Is the wrakrst part or my game. These
(fairways) seem lo be lenient as far as the wild, vanishing
drives. Aa early as the second birdie I knew I had a chance
to do that kind o f scoring. The course was playing that
way.”
Hallberg fired a 67 after a slow start on the par-72 north
course at Torrey Pines as he and Oosterhuls held a
one-stroke lead at 13-under over three other golfers.

• o f f e r f f I W i f
C oatiaaed frost IB
halftime and for 22 minutes
o f the second half nutll Trrrir
Tabor slipped Inside Lyman's
possession return plan and
cracked In a goal from the top
c f the penalty area.
"W e took the punting op­
tion away from our goalie
(Uaa Chatman) lo spread out
fullback and halfbacks for

good p o s s e s s io n s ." said
Barnes. "W e made a mistake
and she scored."
It was the last Lym an
mistake, however. The Lady
Greyhounds controlled the
action the rest of the game
and Kellie Straw headed In a
corner kick on a nice paaa
from A b c r n e th y to g iv e
Lymsn a two-goal cushion
with 13 minutes to play.
Lym an ou tshot Orange
Park. 28-11.

No Joko: Covallars Stun Slxors
tipiiid Fuss lalaraaHaaal
The Cavaliers have been a bad Joke for longer than
Cleveland would like to remember. The Philadelphia 76era.
however, have slopped laughing.
The Cavaliers, who started the season 2-10. have won 15
of their last 31 games, the latest victory a 112*107 upaet of
(he Sixers In the Spectrum Friday night.
The last time the two teams met. Philadelphia needed a
basket by Maurice Checks in the closing seconds to escape
w ilha 101*100 victory on Jan. 23.
In other games Friday. New Jersey defeated Detroit
184* 183; Indiana defeated Chicago 114*66: Phoenix
defeated Dallas 186*103; Denver defeated San Antonio
186*116; Utah defeated the Los Angeles Clipper* 106*100:

118.500 Oral prize in Ike
hsmpkmshlp.
reached tha Qnai round of the
itaored by Upton, on Friday,
unford in 1661," said Davis,
an w * were in college. W e’ve

k th m

\ O K

T I I U '

M A I M

K &lt;6 f P ^ W*■ &gt;#■•%-

^ d*1^ as -»

♦s'' ti

J

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terrtsrd, FI.

f

t

I sedsy, F*». 17,tail

Joyce Recoveries
Save Shaky Flutie
O R L A N D O (U P I) - Dour
Plullc « y » he passed hi* first
professional lest as a football
player... barely.
*Td give m yself a C-plu*
for ru sh .
&gt;pl
coming bark after those first two
Joyce ran back one tumble
p a s s e s ," said the Helsm an
recovery 78 yards for the game’s
Trophy w inner from Boston
first score and he pounced on a
College Friday night. "T h e team
fumble In the end zone for a
hung with me and that was the
third-quarter TD. Roger Ruzek
key — they have no doubts I can
added a 27-yard field goal and
play."
Maurice Carthon went over from
Linebacker John Joyce balled
a yard out for the Generals, who
Flutie out of a shaky debut,
finished the exhibition season at
recoverin g tw o fu m bles for
2 - 1 .
scores In pacing the New Jersey
Orlando, also 2-1, scored on
Generals past Orlando 24-14 In
the final exhibition luneup for Jerry Golsleyn passes o f 10
yards to Joey Walters and 20
both USFL clubs.
Flutie, who signed a 97 million yards to Jerry Parrish.
contract 11 days ago that pro­
"Flutie sure had a rough start,
mpted the trade o f veteran but I saw him after the game and
quarterback Brian Slpc. suffered told him I was praying for him ,"
Interceptions on his first two said Golsleyn, who completed
pass attempts as a pro and 23-of-35 passes for 100 yards
finished' with
th jJust seven comple­ before yielding to Reggie Collier
tions In 18 attempts.
In the final period. 'H e throws
" I made a couple of rookie the ball on the run Just fan­
mistakes and starled to get down tastic."
on myself Just a little." said
Flutie took over on the New
Flutie, who played the entire
game. "Once I completed my Jersey 4-yard line In his first
first pas* and got my first big USFL possession and the Gener­
play, though. I relaxed. By the als opened w ith three runs
end of the game. I was happy before Flulle dropped back for
his first pro pass. Under prewith my performance."
Flutie threw for 174 yards and saure. Flutie tried to hit Carthon
but linebacker Jeff Gabrlelsen
a d d e d S I m o r e on t h r e e
scrambles. Impressing Orlando's stepped In from at the 30 to
rookie coach, Lee Corso. with his Intercept and returned 20 yards.
The Renegades, who finished
polae and ability to escape a pass

Pro Football

...Roundup
C ontlnaad from IB
oul of his hands."
U k r Brant Iry. 4-10 overall and 2-14 In
the Five Star, hosts Lake Mary's Rams
Tuesday while Lyman. 8-17 overall and
2-14 In the conference, travels lo Daytona
Beach to take on Seabreeze.
LYMAN t i ll Thom*. It. k M I U ». W lllLm . I.
AA.fVv.lt». Rtdiag I. Philpott 11, Imlth I ToUlt » II M I*
L A K I S R A N TL IV 1*41 ~ liar* A Wwrty 4. Hartfwrick t,
Mowr I. Willi* 14. Uo&lt;&gt;*» f. AAorrl* 0. Ofom O o m 0. Black II.
Couftnty 14 T t t .ll M i l l * 14
Halttlm* - L*k* Brand*? 4*. l?m*n M Fouli — Lyman
IS, L*k* Brand*? I*. F * g M *ul •
— Ttwrn*.. Csurhwy
Technical — n*n*. A — 400

Sprues Creak 75, Laha M ary 54
Speaking o f unconscious and out o f one's
mind, what about Spruce Creek's Mark
Nichols. The 0-10 giant has been asleep
most o f the season but he woke up against
Lake Mary's Rums In Five Star Conference
iMskctball at Spruce Creek Friday night.
Nichols scored a season-high 18 points,
pulled down 10 rebounds and blocked 14
shots as Ihe I lawks zapped the Rams. 78-84.
"Ills quality o f play wus thr best Individu­
al effort we've had nil seuson." said Spruce
Creek coach Roger Dorlo. "W e knew we had
lo stop (Donald) Grayson Inaldr and Mark
did Ihe Job on him ."
Grayson, who drnp|ied In 22 points In u

Hirsts P M i Si O rifWT M

Doug Flutie, left, zeroes In on Renegade linebacker Jeff Garielsen after throwing an interception Friday
3 -1 S la s t s e a s o n us t h e
Washington Federal*, fared a
fourth-and-two at the 12 before
Kerry Justin plrked off Golsteyn's pass at the 3-yard line.

Lake Mary win over Spruce Creek In
January, was held to Just two points. Darryl
Merthle led Ihe Rams with 10 points while
6-2 Jeff Reynolds added 10.
"Nichols hurt us all right." said Lake
Mary coach Willie Richardson. "But they let
him get away with murder. He waa blocking
the shot and then landing on the guy."
Jon Fedor. Spruce Creek's talented 6-8
forward, finished with 14 points and
Johnnie Bennett had 11. Tiny William Mill
chipped In nine.
LAK I MARY (Ml — Msrltil* I*. Cr*?ion I. Willi. I.
Rsyssm IS. H*rt*tl*M A Ci*fnl*|*w.kl A N*a*ll 0. N*w*y A

jK k u n l. W HhlnjIw l, Tol.l. U l 1114.

ir a u c i c r i c k tn&gt; - r*ew u. B«m*tt it, Nksw. 11.
W h . l l «. D*f Ihtfd A Hill t. H*l«m*n A tlM A 1. H «rrl. I.
T*til« M I M M !
Halttlm* — Iprwca Crook U. Laka Mar? I t Foul. — Laka
Mar? If. Iprwca Crook 14 Pouladaut — Nlchol. Tachnlcal Laka Mar? banch

Apopka 55. Lake Howell 52
CASSELBERRY - Apopka's Blue Darters
sipped to a 18-6 lead after one quarter und
never looked back en route to a 08-52
victory over Lake Howell's Silver Hawks In
Five Star Conference action before 500 funs
at Lake Howell High.
The Darters avenged an early loss to the
Sliver Hawks and In the process ran their
record lo 15-9 overall and IO-G In the
conference. Lake Howell now stands nt
11-14 overall and 3-13 In the Five Star.
"T h ey (Apopka) outplayed us In every
phase of the gam e." Lake llo w rll coach

Four plays later. Flutie rrrclved
ample protection but was In­
tercepted again by Gubrielsrn
with no receiver In sight down
the middle.

Greg Robinson said. "W e fell behind loo
rarly. When Efrrm (Brooks) got Into foul
trouble, he became reluctant lo shoot."
Brooks hit seven of Ills 13 points In the
second quarter lo pull the Hawks within six.
28-10. at halfllmc. But Ihe Darters regained
control In the third quarter and. behind Earl
Clayton's eight points, look u 48-28 lead
Into the fourth.

Gabrlelsen'* theft set Orlando
up at the New Jersey 24. but the
R e n e g a d e s d is p la y e d som e
Southern hoapltullty on the nexl
play when Joyce scooped up a

fumble by Reggie Evan* un
rambled 78 yard* down the lei
Hldcllnes for a 7-0 Generals* lea
with 2:15 left In (hr openln
quarter.

TIME FOR AN OIL CHANGE?
A E O T S4MBSS AMD StM V tC t YOU CAM COUM T OAf—
,

—-

V

’w W

C O U P O N

— ■■ ■ — ■■ •• ^

APORKA (Ml - Rk* 4. Shut* 1. JMmon «. I n n * . IA
Bow**. A Clmor. II. P k fc . 0. Clayton IA R H«rtf*kk I. K.
H*r*wkk I. Total. I ) I D J t f
L A K I H O W ILL (111 - Andar!on IA Brook. IA Ba.Uay 1.
WboIWMb * 4. Lianartf t. H k k . A Iv a n . A Schnltkar 1. Low*
0. Z k fltr 1. JannaO. Gammon. 4. Total, m m
Halttlm* — Apopka &gt;L L*k* Howoll It Pout. Apopka IA
Laka Howoll M Foul** out — Brook. Tafhnkal - Apopka
coach Slokat A — MO

Bishop M oors 62, Oviedo 41
ORLANDO — Bishop Moore's Hornets
oulscored Oviedo's Lions In every quarter
Friday nlghl ns Ihe Hornets claimed a 62-41
victory In Orange Hell Conference action at
Bishop Moore High.
" ! l was probably thr worst game we've
played all year." Oviedo coach Dale Phillips
said. " A l Unroe playrd well In the fourth
quarter but oilier than that we missed a lot
offrre throws und turned It over u lot."
O V IID O 141) - Ckmptwll I. M SWwkfl A BoDon !. Hill 1.
FtrguMn A Gf**n* I. Hugh*. A J Stowirl ). Unroo 14
Total. 14111141
BllttO P MOOS I 141) — Hortmon 14. Conroy A T m l lor*
1. Colvo *. Pron* II. Cwfll. t. Blrutl. A Suryott A Budionan
A Cohort? 1 Total. 14 1411.)
Hilltim* — BIttop Moor* M. OvxOo It Paul. - Ovt*d* X.
Bi Vtop Moor* 11 PoukOoul — non* Tochnkol — Unroo

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ENGINE REBUILDING
COMPLETE BRAKE WORK FRONT END REBUILDING
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ELECTRICAL REPAIR
CARBURETOR REBUILDING
TRANSMISSION REBUILDING
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SANFORD TRUCK &amp; SERVICE, INC.
1012 SANFORD AVE., SANFORD, FLA.
SHOP S ti-B B O l
JARTRAN S I S

Fran Fowler Scratches Out 1st 600 Series
Fran Fowler represented Bowl
America Sanford In an outstand­
ing manner In the finals of the
Central Florida Bowling Proprteters Assocatlon “ Best 3 out
of 4 Tournament" at Skybowl In
Orlando. Fran put together
games of 210. 202 and 102 for a
004 scratch series.
That waa Franny's first 600
aeries ever, but the wsy she's
bowling In definitely won't be
h e r la s t. C o n g r a t u la t io n s .
Franny.
O ur C F B P A " S w e e t h e a r t
Doubles" auallfylng ends this
weekend. If you plan to try for
the 5600 first prize, we have
squads Saturday at 3:30 p.m.
and 6:30 p.m. on Sunday. Sun­
day la your last chance —
anytim e before w e close on
Sunday we'll accept two or more
teams If lanes ore available.
W e'll also be having our "NoTap Singles" at the same time.
T h e S e m in o le C o u n ty
Women’s Bowling Association
ladles will be holding their an­
nual tournament this Saturday
lay
and Sunday, and next weekend.
Squads start at 1 p.m. on
Saturday and noon on Sunday.
If you are a No-Tap fan. we
have a really exceptional chance
for you to bowl In a No-Tap
League and yet not commit
yourself for too long. The dura­
tion of the league will be 14
weeks, and will start Monday.
Feb. 25. at B&gt;15 p.m. It U a
doubles league so you should be
finished by 10:30 p.m. The total
coot Including bowling, secretary
• * will
aril! be •e per
and prize fund
bowler. Sign up now by colling
Bowl America, or i
Belle at the
High scores bowled this week
krai T h ursday N ile M ixed:
Joanne Cason 204 and Richard
Heaps 203. Mooos Lodge: Steve
Richards 234. Jeff Gross 213.
Oene Rogero 204. Eve Rogers
200. Louis Joena 200 and David
Price 200. Scratch on Thursday:
PhU Roche 203. Donnie Oannan
202. 01) Benton 201. Prom
&gt;mny
Smith 235. Jay Smith 215.
Shsroo Kirkpatrick
Klrkpatr
ShArou
207 and
Larry Pteartft 225.

Nile Mixed: Sharon Decker and
Sharon Kramer 201. Jay Smith
200. Tom Nye 222 and Art
Braun 211. Unprofeaalonala:
H a ro ld S u n d v a ll 24 5 / 6 1 4 .
Charles Elbery 213. G ilbert
Herald
Ouellette 206. Buddy Keller 218.
Bow ling W riter Oene Rogero 211 and 205. Don
Witt 202. Alex Senses 210.
B e rn a rd H u d le y 21 2 . J im
Seniors: Lea Buddenhagen 200. Morace 220. Richard Heaps 200.
H arold Skllea 208, H ow ard Bob Richmond 213. Richard
Kimball 208 and Joe Jonlka Williams 210. Fred Neubert 203.
200. Shooting Stars Ladles: Dot­ Bob Adams 213. Scott Larson
tle Hogan 202. Rebels Seniors: 200. Jerry Forello 233 and Tim
Elmer StufYlet 203 and Nick
Oardlno 206.
T.O.t.F.i Jamie Poloera 204.
Jim Morace 243 and 622 aeries.
Bruce Berger 221 and 216. Lorry
Ptcordot 214. W illie Stevens
213. Al Bowling 236. Dick Minnick 223, Alice Viera 211. Hal
Rich 225. Dennle Dolgner 226
and Howie Harrison 200.
S o u th e a s t B a n k : R an d y
Judkins 231-211/612 aeries. Jeff
Johnson 204 and 203. Bill
OUbert 221. J. Hensley 200. Al
Fryer 211, Fran Fowler 214. Bob
Blanton 252.* Lynn EUand 202.
Nancy Swslm 224. Eric Storm
200. Claudia Jaaa 216. Vince
Cara 213. Mike Laubert 233.
Ron Robinson 203. Ed Houstoun
206. BUI Klrkby 204.
Islan der Vacation: G eorge
Mansfield 203 and 233. John
Smith 232. Mike Cruser 209.
Mark Quick 219. Tony Mazza
209. Ran Lemond 211. Harold
RoaenSeld 206. Charles Elbery
201. Todd M otion 203. Diane
Abbott 202. Bonnlt Pcnlck 202
(her vary first league 200).
Flooake Ladles: Allca 213. Dottie
212. Ruoty Juaacamuc 203. Drift
Inn: Dottie Bryant 208 and 213.
Chuck Stimiey 213-215/816. Joe
Ruffin 220. Doreen Macatecr
220, Kathy Bukur 204. Eddie
Kay 212. BlU Horn 203. Leon
Eafy 206 and Richard Heaps
234. Country Corners Ladles:
Alicia Fsury 203. 2 M S 8ENIORS1 Rollte Sc halier 212224/613 and Gena Dykea 200.
Woohday Dropouts: Roy Lync
210. Hurricanes Seniors: Harold
Rlppl 203-243/506. Educator's:

Roger
Quick

Waddle 213.
Sanford City League: Ton ey
J oh n son 240-204/635. J im
Carver 203 and 204. Leonard
Waddell 201. Bernard Hudley
218, Bob Bales 201. Ronnie
Green 201, Bill Oiler 211. Lynn
Elland 211. Mike Colbert 212.
Ron Kramer 218. Van Tilley. Sr.
203, Julio Ceballos 203. Ron
Allman 201, Kit Johnson 200
and Gerald Behrens 205.
Ball A Chain: Rich Reynolds
220. Ladles Match Point: Shirley
Buuer 200.

LEARN TO BOWL CLASSES!

The Premium
ROUND ONE

START W EDNESDAY NIGHT
FEB R U AR Y 2 7 . . . . 8:30 P .M .

Cirri*.'* high** quality

Model 38ED

Attend 5 Wssks Of Classes At Only *7.00
A Lesson, And Everyone Completing The
Course Will Receive Absolutely Free A
Columbia 300 Bowling Ball — This la a
•42*00 Ball. Bring Your Frianda Or Coma
Alone And Maka Naw Ones. You Receive
Both Classroom And On Tha Lana
Instruction.

NO TAP DOUBLES LEAGUE
STARTING MONDAY NMHT
• t o e 9:15 F.M.
. . . . 14 WOKS
•S F ttF U U O K

LOADS OF FUN. . . WIN CASH!!
g X W B y X D R B C flM

Sanford

Nothing Down!

s40 mo.

TNemonthly payment Rgure

can be reduced even low?
wkhOffioel Blue Boo* tradein atoeence and power co.

more than twice
ryou
Carrier

Special Offar. . .
A Proa N. Carolina
Vacation a s guwtu.. «t
A Naw Carrier
Air CondMonar
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S I * - ! R t f*

ML ta lk MBs

Carrier Dealer

THOUSANDSXMEER

omm-nu

CFRHi Jkn Clayton 200 and
Blair Agencyi Fred Blakely
206. Dave Not! 200. Gator* Tony Montriesve 229. Tuesday

•-W •
... w »

m

, . . . - . . »■-*V- . « «.

■v » e

M flS B r t S c e s M

�Ewnlwf Herald, toatsrd, FI.

Isaday. Fsk. 17. H M - 1»

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Pay Dirt

Seminar Coven How To
Start A Small Business
How to start and manage a small business Is the topic o f
an evening workshop Wednesday and Thursday in Orlando
sponsored by the Small Business Development Center at
the University o f Central Florida.
The two-part program, conducted In cooperation with
the U S Small Business Administration, will feature tips
from professionals In the areas of law. taxes. Insurance and
finance.
The cost for the two evenings Is $5. Both sessions will be
conducted at the Junior Achievement Center In Loch
Haven Park. Additional Information can be obtained by
calling the SBDC at 275-2796.

Dollar General Buys Eagle Chain
Dollar General Corporation, which has two stores In
Sanford, located at 203-09 E. First St. and 2701 Orlando
Drive, recently acquired the Eagle Family Discount Stores
In Florida, according to Dollar President Cal Turner. Jr.
'T h is 630 million transaction Includes 206 retail store
locations throughout Florida and a large warehouse near
Miami.
"Th is acquisition and our store conversion plans mean
that by mld-1985, Florida will have about 240 Dollar
Oeneral Stores, including the 36 already operating In
communities such as Sanford," Turner said In a press
release.
He said the acquisition o f the Eagle chain from lnterco
Incorporated, a St. Louis-based company, will provide a
greater concentration of Dollar General Stores In Florida
than In any other Dollar General market. Dollar is based In
Scotsvllle. Kentucky.

JJ Muggs Has Grand Opening
JJ Muggs Restaurant, located at 1375 N. Semoran Blvd..
In Casselberry, had Its grand opening this week featuring a
variety of food and a casual dining atmosphere.
Highlighting the JJ Muggs menu are the hamburgers,
featuring one-half pound o f a 100% choice ground chuck,
char boiled into such tempting burgers as the original
Muggs burger, with crisp bacon, sauteed mushrooms and
mild provolone cheese; the tasty Bacon and Swill Burger;
or the unique Fiesta Burger topped with refried beans and
crushed cheesy nacho chips.
The restaurant will serve lunch and dinner Sunday
through Thursday from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. and on Friday
and Saturday from 11 a.m. to midnight. Smoking and
non-smoking areas are provided for the convenience of
guests. JJ Muggs honors most credit cards.

Big E Changes Locations
The Big E Is m oving Its Deltona Boren Plaza office across
the street to *500 in the new Providence Plaza Shopping
Center. The new office, which opened this week. Is a 2.500
us re-foot facility featuring expanded lobby area, drive-ln
Iera a 24-hour HONOR ATM. and a Moneyplex Financial
Service Center.
Moneyplex will Initially be opening with brokerage
services through licensed representatives o f William M.
Cadden and Company Inc., a Big E subsidiary. Plans call
for additional services such as Insurance and real estate to
beaddedsoon.
n &lt;

H

Stenstrom Has Record Year
Stenstrom Realty, with offices In Sanford and Lake Mary,
announced a record sales volume for their firm o f *27.1
million In 1984.
This was an Increase of more than 50 percent over
1983's 617.6 million, and their finest year In their 27 year
history, according to Herbert E. Stenstrom. owner and
founder o f the company.

Blackfeet Indians Seek
Economic Self-Sufficiency
live on the 1.S-mllllon-acre res­
By Laoa D aalsl
ervation which adjoins Olacler
U P I National R eporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Chief National Park.
The chief said the tribe earns
Earl Old Person of Montana's
Blackfeet Indian tribe was In the about 6300.000 a year from oil
and gas on the reservation near
nation's capital to sell pencils.
His people make them In a the Canadian border but has no
manufacturing Jobs except for
factory on their reservation
along the Canadian border, he the pencil factory.
explained over breakfast at a
He said cutbacks In some
downtown hotel alx blocks from federal programs for Indians and
the White House.
the phasing out o f others under
O ld Person. 55. a form er the Reagan administration hod
athlete whose coal-black hair made things even more difficult.
and trim frame belle his name,
Social welfare programs come
was accompanied by a young
and go. Old Person sold, but the
man from a Madison Avenue
factory can help make his people
public relations firm who had economically self-sufficient.
come down from New York to
“ W e're looking for things that
help the chief promote the pen­
ore more permanent than federal
cils.
"O u r tribe's biggest problem la programs." he sold.
That Is why Old Person, chief
the lack o f Jobs." said Old
Person, who has been chairman executive officer o f his tribe's
firm , tra ve ls w idely, tellin g
o f the tribal council since 1964.
He was selected In 1978 as the potential buyers. "W e d on 't
traditional chief o f the 13.000 want your help. We wont your
Blackfeet. about half o f whom business."

Civic and business leaders
scoop the soil d u r i n g
groundbreaking ceremonies
at Country Club Road and
Lake Mary Boulevard, site of
the $1 million Shoppes of
Lake Mary. The plaza, con­
sisting of retail and service
shops, Is scheduled to open In
August. From left to right
are: Seminole County Com­
missioner Robert Sturm;
State Rep. Art Grlndle. RAltamonte Springs; Rodney
W a l t e r s , o w n e r of the
Shoppes; Lake Mary City
Manager Kathy Rice; and
Kent Kelley, Sandra Flbes
and Anne Schuck, co-owners.

Hw*M Mwt* W Tanunr VWcwrt

Commission: U.S. Products Inferior
B y D eals G. O allao
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United Stales
la turning out Inferior products that are
priced too high for foreign customers and
the problems go beyond • strong dollar,
high wages and high (axes, a presidential
commission reports.
The commission this week found the
same problems other experts have been
citing for years to explain record trade
deficits — chiefly seas of Industrial obsoles­
cence surrounding "Islands o f excellence."
But II carefully steered away from re­
commending that the government organize
some kind o f Industrial policy to remedy the
shortcomings It blamed on American busi­
ness.
"W e determined there Is no substitute for
attention to the basics." said Hewlett
Packard Co. President John Young, the

chairman o f the President's Commission on
Industrial Competitiveness.
"Am erican Industry needs to focus more
on excellence and executing business fun­
damentals."
Th e commission's report, "T h e New
Reality." did endorse the creation of a
Cabinet-level department o f trade Ihut It
said could help make trade a national
priority. But It studiously avoided calling for
a large-scale government effort.
The problems began long before the dollar
grew strong, the commission said. Far from
curing the trade problem, a falling dollar
would only cut Into the American standard
of living.
"T h ere Is no single action — no simple
solution — that can reverse the competitive
erosion w e rep ort," the com m ission's
statement said.
It would help, however. If the United

States could spend proportionately the same
on research and development as Its Interna,
ttonal competitors and better coordinate the
civilian research dollars spent by govern­
ment.
“ W e've concluded that this country has
neglected the development of a competitive
advantage In manufacturing." Young said,
“ Seven our o f 10 A m erican hightechnology sectors have lost world markrt
share since 1965." he added.
"It's really Jobs for not Just people lodny
but ou r k id s ," C om m erce S e creta ry
Malcolm Baldrlge said. "It's the jobs of the
future we're talking about."
The commission was created by the
administration In August 1083 spcclflcally
to draw support away Trom Capitol Hill
proposals for a government-run Industrial
policy.

Duo To Offer Overnight Service

Eastern Links Up With CF AirFreight
HOUSTON (UPI) — Eastern
Airlines and CF AirFreight will
combine resources to olfer re­
duced-fart, overnight passenger
service and delivery of up to
320.000 pound* of freight on
cargo planes In a 10-clty system,
company officials said this week.
The new service, beginning
April I, marks the first time a
m ajor freigh t forwarder has
contracted with an airline for
exclusive use o f cargo space for
an extended period.
" I t Is the most significant
partnership between a ground
freight forwarding company and
an airline in airline history."

said .Kastern V ice President
RusseU Ray. "It 's the largest In
terms of size. In terms o f scope.
"T h is Is a major, major un­
dertaking."
Houston will serve os a hub for
the system. Night and early
morning flights carrying freight
and passengers from the nine
cities will arrive In Houston
between 2 a.m. and 3 s.m.
Freight and passengers will be
u n lo a d e d and s w it c h e d to
appropriate fligh ts, and will
leave the city between 3 a.m.
and 4 a.m.
"It means w e're going to be
able to offer very, very low fares
for passengers who are willing to

put up with an all-night flight."
sold Eastern Chairman Frank
Borman in an Interview earlier
this week In Miami.
R ay w ould not d e ta il the
reduced passenger fares that will
be ofTered, saying Eastern still Is
developing plans. The fares will
be announced In two weeks, he
said.
S e v e n w ld e-b o d le d , A300
Airbuses owned by Eastern will
be used for the service, which
R a y said w ould re ju v e n a te
overnight passenger flights ihal
virtually disappeared with de­
regulation o f the Industry.
The A 300* can seat 252 pas­
sengers each. Ray said, and are

Ideal for height because they can
carry 20 standard air height
containers. Eastern now has 34
A 300* it has used since 1977 In
service on the east coast and In
the Caribbean, he said.
“ One o f the advantages to this
program to Eastern Is lo greater
utilise our fleet," he said. "O u r
fleet sleeps overnight as do most
carriers,"
Ray and CF AirFreight Presi­
dent W. Roger Curry declined to
say how much the companies
expect to m ake during th e
course o f the 3-year agreement.
But both men said they expect
little Initial capital outlay lo
support the service.

Health Jobs No. 2 Source O f Employment
By Thom as J. I
L O U IS V IL L E . K y. (U P!) M edical,
biomedical and health-related Jobs have
become the top source o f new employment
in Louisville, which sits on the southern
edge or the "R u st Bowl" w h en aging
factories have ted to declining manufactur­
ing employment rolls.
Th e trend here, highlighted by the
attention focused on "Bionic BUI" Schroeder
and the corporate sponsor o f his artificial
heart, the 62 btUlon-a-year Humana Inc.
hospital management chain, typifies what Is
happening natlonaUy.
During the lO-year period through 1964.
L o u i s v i l l e l o s t m o r e th a n 3 5 ,0 0 0
manufacturing Job*. At the height o f the
recession tw o years ago. the number
to 77.000 from the 1974 level of
120.600 factory Jobs.

The city, home o f the Kentucky Derby,
has lured nearly 4.000 health-related Jobs
since the end o f 1960. Humana employs
5.000 people In Louslvllle.
"It (the annual health field employment
Increase) has been going right about 1.000,"
said David Dieraing, who watches trends In
the Louisville Job market for the state
Department o f Employment Services,
At a 16 percent annual growth In the post
four years, the Increase In the number of
health-related Job* In Kentucky's largest
city la second only to the 24 percent hike In
Jobs In banking, which Is a smaller Industry
overall.
Nationally, the growth
service* field trails only
annual Increase In food
Dterslngsaid.
Dlerslng's office defines

In the health
the 9 percent
Industry Jobs,
health service

Job* as employment In areas Including
n u r s in g , h o s p ita ls , n u rs in g h o m e s,
biomedical research, medical and dental
offices, clinics and administrative positions,
such as those at Humana's corporate office.
He said the 4.000 Increased health
services Jobs come "across the hoard" in
those areas. A bureaucratic qulrjt added
1.200 o f the Jobs to the health services
category after removing them from the
government category when Humana took
over management o f the University o f
Louisville's old general hospital.
Mayor Harvey I. Blanc, a physician who
has made economic development the No. 1
priority o f his administration, said health
services represent " a very Important growth
Industry for us.‘ ‘
"Humana (a for-profit operation) Is very
key to that expansion but also a lot o f
not-for-profit hospitals that ore doing good."

West Germans Losing Faith In Their Politicians
HANNOVER, West Germany - With
their traditional respect for authority.
W est Germ ans would never have
believed a few years ago that their
public figures were anything except
rectitude. Dishonest pollll
‘ i of reel
dans. In their view, were confined to
countries like France and Italy.
But a recent survey conducted here
shows that more than two-thirds of
West Germans now consider the ranks
of their government lo be rife with
corruption. The attitude Is especially
prevalent m
1In opinion la
to the eocsDed FhckAB________ ______
resulted In the Indictment of two
___
J wRh taking
i of the country‘a '
this yew. are former Economics

v

In the same do *! . Hans
Minister Count Otto LambadariT and hto
Fridertchs, who later became bead of a
major West German bank.
The complaint against them, which
they deny, la that they accepted money
from the Flick company for fiscal
Juggling that aaved the firm the
equivalent of nearly 61 billion in taxes.
The Fhck chief executive. Eberhard
von Brauahchltach. has also been
Not

the West German republic
*i in the wake of World War

to w in a gu ilty verd ict against
Lambedorff and Frtderlcha. since pro­
ving that they actually took bribes will
not be easy. Nevertheless, even their
acquital will scarcely suffice lo dispel
the notion among West Germans that
something Is rotten In high place*.
Evidence dredged up during the
probe of their case revealed that Flick
has long been engaged in Illegally
financing West Germ any's political
parties, and that fact alone la con­
tributing to an erosion of faith in (he
system.
But a question bein g raised la
the system can fa c tio n at all

gained In the last election. However ,
they are consistently short of cash.
The law notwithstanding. It
common knowledge during the 1970s
that the1ggftleg
ended fo r1funds
tt
on
private banka, Industrial firms and
commercial enterprises, which Tun­
neled their donations through a variety
of channels in an effort to appear dean.
The authorities closed tlieir eyes to
th ese p ra c tic e s, to w h ich they
themselves owed their positions. It to
worth noting that Lambadorff and
Fridcrlchs. besides being Cabinet
minister*, were also treasurer* of the
Free Democratic Party.
The money presumably served to
underwrite election
BuL
Recording lo the pods, a majority of
West Germans now believe that politi­
cians regularly siphon off a proportion
of the donations to hne their own
well

Whatever the truth, 56 percent of
those under (h e age of 30 w ho
responded to the poll voiced the view
that "our entire society to corrupt."
And that opinion contains considerable
Importance far West Germany.
For those young citizens ate the
mainstay of the Oreetie. the radical
movement that opposes the party
structure. The Greens hare genuinely
honest. If only because they are
shunned by the big corporations.
The Greens, who usually win about
10 percent of the vote* In regional
elections, score aa well as they do
bffsntv (hey are
rtprfsfh Bo.
even If public dishonesty in West
Germany la exaggerated, the dietnrtIon
la a pout leal reality that cannot be
Ignored.
(W agn er is editor ot the H en-

AUgemelne ZeUuag. the
m deity.)

�IRS Eases Travel Log Rules
WASHINGTON (UPlJ - The In*
Irm al Rcvcnut Service Kmird Ms
promised formal rrgulailonx Fri­
day. cosing tlic controversial re­
quirements in keep dally logs nl
any use of a btihlnenh vehicle.
The 71 pugr*&gt; of regulation do not
go beyond the exemptions pro­
mised by the IKS late In January
under pressure from Congress.

The exemptions allow farmers
and ranchers to escape the re­
quirement for dally logs If they
acknowledge 20 percent of the
vehicle's use Is personal, and so
taxable as a fringe benefit.
Other business people who use a
company ear ran escape the log­
ging requirements by acknowledg­
ing 30 percent of the use Is
personal.

Gorbachev Eyed As
Possible Successor
U.S. Analysts Believe Ailing
Chernenko Has 6 Months To Live
SANTA BARBARA. Calif. |UP1)
U.S. ofnclalt.
who contend Kremlin leadership changes have
hampeied progress In U.S.-Soviet relations, are
eyeing yet another shift amid signs Soviet
President Konstantin Chernenko may be termi­
nally III.
U.S. analysts believe Chernenko, who sssumrd
power only a year ago as sucrcssor to Yurt
Andropov, Is suffering from emphysema and
other disorders — Including heart problems —
that could leave him with only six months to live.
Regarded as his likely successor Is Mikhail
Gorbachev, who at 53 yrars of age Is the youngest
member o f the ruling Politburo.
Chernenko. 73, last appeared in public Dec. 27.
although the Tass news agency rrpoHcd hr
addressed the Politburo Feb. 7. Ills physical
InflrmlUea have been a mailer of speculation for
months and his slip from view 1ms been likened
to those reported before the deaths of his two
predecessors: Andropov and Leonid Brezhnev, t
Andropov died Frb. 0. 1984. and was suc­
ceeded by Chernenko four days lalrr.
The cancellation nf a mrctlng this pasl Tuesday
In Moscow between Chernenko and Greek Prime
Minister Andreas Papandrcou fueled speculation
o f his III health, as did thr premature return to
the Soviet Union of Dr. Yevgrny Chnxov. a
Kremlin physlrlan visiting the- United Blairs.
Talk In U.S. government circles o f succession In
the Kremlin has centered on Gorbachev and

freeze or cut ll» arterial — IfPrraldent Rrugun will
Junk Ills ballistic mUnlit* defense program.
Arkudy Shevchrnko told the National ITrut
Club Friday thr coni uf mulching ur countering
thr U.S. "Star Warn" Byatrm would hr a heavy
burden on the Sovlcla' troubled economy.
He also said the Soviets "are serious about
these negotiations” starting March 12 InGrnrva,
Switzerland.
"N o w . really the Soviet leadership, both
[mlitlcal and military. Teel comfortable with the
situation and they (would) be Inlrrrslrtl to frrete
what Is now. even to reduce a level of ihrlr
armaments to a certain point."
Reagan has estimated thr Strategic Defense
Initiative will rosl D20 billion over the next live
years and has vowrd not to trade* It olf (or uny
Soviet roncessluos In Urncvu.
Shrvrhenko served five years as ail under
seerrtary-grnerul of thr Unllrd Nations and was u
spy for the CIA for more than two yrurs when he
defected In 1H7H. He worked for yrars with Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei G rom yko and his
Insldrr's vlrw o f the Kremlin was an Inirlllgrnre
roup for thr United Slates.

NOTICE OP
PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
BY T ME C I T Y O P
LONGWOOO. FLORIDA, tttal
IN Board ol Ad|uttmenl trill
hold a Public Haaring an March
4, MB to cartoldor a variantt
coquetted by Robert D. ttanr.
PE Agent 'o allow itit pork
Ing tpocet tor mo Longwood
Oftk# Building than I* required
by ordinance an tha following
legally doterlbodproperty:
Parcel I; Being a portion o*
Tract No I. SanUndo Spring*,
according to ttia plat thartol,
rarerdad M PB ». PO IJ. Public
Racerdt or Seminole County.
Florida, detenbed e* follow*
tato Tract Ha 1: ttianca along
tha tauttiarly right at way line at
SR 4141 irw 14" E. J»l 44 ft to
tha true POINT OP BEOIHN
ING thonc# continuing along
•aid Southerly right at way IIn*
I BENTI*1 f . IMPS It. thanca
SOOtoS'U'W looooti . ttwnra
S Et‘ IE‘14" . m « ft.. lhanca N
00*04 J* ■E , m » toot, thanca
S•rM'14'E , t« 00 foal: thanct
n

"T h r Soviet leadership Is not going lo use
nuclear weapon until thr moment (hut they
realize the United Slulrs can't retullutr properly."
Shevchrnko said.

CASE NO ISjrSCAM K
IN RE Tha Marrlagf a
PAULAGEORGE.
JOHN GEORGE.
Retpondent/Hutband
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO JOHN GEORGE
jmOOvarbrookDrlva
Lake Dreamland. KantuCky
YOU ARE HE R E B Y
NOTIFIED the* a Petition Ior
Ototolution ol Marriog* hot
bH" fitod •gainti you. and ISM
rou are required to h ) m • copy

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS
J*
•:JO A.M. - 5JO P M.
, ,
MONDAY Mm FRIDAY ,a ]
SATURDAY 9 •Msss

W ** ' f

•

ASSISTANT
ACCOUNTING CLERIC
SECRETARY
K E Y PUNCHER
WANG OPERATOR
CLERK TYPIST
CRT OPERATORS
I im k N I M eeelgr.mefttt avail

RATES
27— Nurstry A
Child Car*

rry WvlCTt HU**______
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT

S I-R m I Estate
Courses

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

Ettcaltonf SXIH*. n* Fhorthand
Far e.ecu'iv* Pika •*
company Permanent Pm !
(Ion. Never ■Pm

TtMP PERM774-lUt
55— Business

Opportunities

By: I V Cheryl R Franklin
Deputy Clark
PubtlHi: February 10. IT. 14

March0. IMS
DEC*

41-M o n t y to U n d

thanca along the Southerly right
at way Una ol SO an i emu 14
E . 44140 leal to the true POINT
OF BEGINNING. Itwnce con
tinwing along told Southerly
right ef way llna SPf*ir 14" W..
IM toat. thanca S OO-OTM’ W.
M tool; thanca N IWM'ir W..
2M loot to th* P O IN T OF
BEGINNING olw
Porcol I Being • portion ol
Trpcf No I. Sonlondo Spring*,
according to th* Plot Iherool. **
recorded In Plat Book 1. Pag*
n . Public Rocordt *1 Semi not#
County. Ptorlda. datenbad a*
follow* Beginning at lha NW
earner ot tald Tract No l;
thence along the Southerly right
*1 woy lino *1 SR 4)4, W
t**ir 14" E. H I 40 tool: thonc* S
OttoTM" W. Ml M toot to th*
tru* POINT OF BEGINNINO;
thonc* conllnu* S oo-aa k w
iff » toot, thonc* N P W liM "
W . 114 I I foot; thonc* N
00*04'la E. i n W toot: thonc* S
te*i»‘ 14” E. 114 li toot to Ih*
POINT OF BEGINNING.
Bolng mor* generally do
ter iked at th* recent lend lying
on Ih* S Hd* el SR 414 E4it ol
the Vot Clmk and we»l ol Ih*
Lot'l Putt Amork* Ooll Court*
A Public Hoorlng will bo hold
on March A IMS at f * P M by
lha Beard at Adluofmant at the
Long wood City Hall, IfS W.
Warren Avanut, Lang weed.
Ptorlda. ar at toon thereafter a*
poetibto Al thl* mooting, ail
inter tiled portlet may appear
to ba heard with retpact to lha
variance requeued Thl* hear
Ing may ba continued tram lime
to lime until IInal action It lakon
by th* Board at Ad|v*tm#nl A
copy at tha variance raquatl l*
an fiN with lha City Clark «id
may ba Intpoctod by tha public
may decide to appeal any da
cltton mad* at the*# hearing*
they will naed a vtfbaiim record
ol Ih* proceeding! ond tor tuch
purpoit* they will need I#
Incur# that a verholim record I*
made, whkh retort) to include
the tottlmany and avldanca upon
whkh lha appeal I* made Tha
City al L eng weed doe* not
provide fhlt vorbollm record
Ootod thl* February 4. INS
O L Tarry,
City Clark
City at Long eroad. Florida
Publlth February If, If, IN I
DEC 114

Clerk *1 IN Circuit Court,
Somlnoi* County. FlorIda in
accordant# with IN provltlon*
ot IN Fkill tout Nam* Statute*,
towlt Section 1*14* Florid*
SUIutot IMf
IV Shoroo Itch
Publlth January If 4 February
S. 14 If. IN)
OIB IIS

YOU AND EACH OF YOU are
hereby notified that tutl hat
boon commenced age init yau m
tha Circuit Court at tha Elgh
toanth Judicial Circuit at the
Slate at Florida In and tar
Semlnala County, tha ab
bravlafad title al which It:
WCKIVA VILLAS. INC . v*
DENNIS A. HIGHTOW. at at. In
Civil No. MMfTCAdfO Tha
nature at thl* tull N a crot*
complaint Nractotura at that
certain marlgaga held and
owned by Craaa Plaintiff. JOHN
A PINHOLSTER. and recorded
January N, IN I In Official
Record* Book 111*. Pag* 0tdf.
Public Rocordt ot Somlnato
County. Florida. encumbering
that certain piece or parcel or
property located, tiluato. and
being In told County and State,

an under tha name at SIMONS
P L A ITB R IN O COMPANY at
U S B SIpM Avenue. Sentord.
Florida. M H I, it B J. SIMONS
AND SONS Q U ALITY B U ILT
HOMES. INC., and lha eitont at
tha thtoTMt at *ald corporation
In laid bu*ina«* It I0t%
B. J. SIMONS AND SONS
Q U A L IT Y B U ILT HOMES. INC
By: B J SIMONS. SR . Pre*
ld#nl
STA TE OP FLORIDA
C O U N TY OF SEMINOLE
Swam to and tubtcrlbad ba
lore me thl* Ith day at Febru
a ry .A D l lt l
Lott M Butcher
N o ta ry P u blic. Slate at
Ptorlda
M y Cam m lttlan B eplrac

SDBF
Publlth February 10. If, 14.
March ), 1*0*

DIC IS

have 1 checkabH lob rator
men Application* being
accepted new Interview*
•tart an wwPwtday. Fab
Uth. •• I PM Apply at:
Tannaca Oil. 1000 Prtnch
Ay* Santork Fla EOE
CASHIER/CLERK Hr* II p m
to f a m Apply to parton at
Lll Peed Town. 110 Lake Mary
Btvd . Sentord EOE_______
CITY ATTORNEY. Appllcettont
ar# being accaptad tor pMI
lion at City Alternay tor
Langaraad. Florida Appll
cantt mini ba a member ol
Tha Florida Bar tor S year*
Municipal Eaparianca and
knewledge at local Govern
manl law dailred Salary
negotiable Submit raiuma to
City Clark, US W Worron
Ava . Longwood. FI HIM by
1» OS An Equal Opportunity

A M EMPLOYMENT
FICTITIOUS NAME

SAYS

Netka l* hereby given that I
am engaged in butlnate •• 14*
W L a k e B r a n t le y Rd ,
Lang weed. Semit.«i# County.
F lor Ida Iff n under the fklittowt
name H STANOARD IRRIGA
TION 4ND LAWN M AIN TE
NANCE, and that I intend to
reglttor told name with the
Clark of lha Circuit Court.
Samlnato Cauniy. Ptorlda in
accordance with lha prevttlane
at lha FktlHou* Name Statute*,
law il Section M l ot Florida
Statute* IHJ
t v Thome* W Dm c IA
I V Richard E Dearth
Publlth February 1. Id. If, )4,

BE EMPLOYED!
NO. 1 In SANFORD

323-5176

Acrylic Applicator* needed to
apply protective cooling on
car*, beat* and plana* SI to
111 par hour Vto train For

ITU
DEC*

CONSULT OUR

town

Unit B I I E , Building 4.
WEKIVA VILLAS, a Can
damlnlum. according to the Do
clorelien of Rettrkttont. Rotor
VlllVnl. UrWfiflnll. WOnwIllOril,

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

ond Eitomont* recorded In Ot
tklol Record* Booh Idll. Peg*
11) 1. Public Rockrdt *1
SomlnoN Caunty, P torlda

BACH OF YOU IS HE
QUIRIO to III* your ontwor or

Complaint with tho Clark at lha
C ircu it Court at Seminal*
Caunty. Ptorlda. In Nile proceed
Ing and to aarvo a copy Ihoreel
upon Ih* Crao* Ptolntlff'e of
tornoy, who** nom* ond eddrots
It MARK A K O T IB N . IS
QUIRE. 1140 Cloy Avanuo. Suit*
Iff. Orlande. Florida DEE4. ••
required by law, not I*tor men
Ih* 14th day at March. IN I In
at a Default again*! you
WITNESS my bond and tha
teal at thl* Caurt wt tha m day
ot February. I N )
IS IA L I
OAVIDN BERR IEN
Clerk al th# Court
By: I V Cheryl R Franklin
Deputy Clerk
Publlth February 10. If, )* A
Mar (h 1. IN I

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

Accounting A
Tax Service
computorltod llnanclol »lat
tomont Quarterly return*
m 4F4B A*k tar F rank III

Eltctrlcal

NOTICE
UN0ER FICITIOUS
NAMR LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that tha under*lgnad. dotIrIng to
ingan In bweloett under th*
llctltlau* name at Linen
Supermarket at number 404
Bail Ailamanto Drive, m me
City at Altamonla Spring*,
FlatIda. intend* to reglttor me
told namq wllh the Clark at lha
Circuit Caurt al Samlnala
Caunty. Ftorlda
Deled al Miami. Ftorlda. mi*
Slhday at February. IN)
LlnanSupermarket. Inc
Attorney tor Applicant
Karen l Raton, Etq
Wall. OatthalA Manga*
IBB Brkktli Avenue, Pan!

UndclMring

R A J IL E C T R IC
Tired at high prkatf Call R A J
■ toctrk Na job toe largo or
•mall. Free eHim*to* 14 Hr
tarvka Init# Iled •• paddto
tan*, i'ooo lighting. burglar
alarm*, *aryfca change. ra
madollng. addition*. ar now
homo* " M l IN I____________

BB1SOO SALES

0ICS4
FREE ESTIMATES

Free Btl ma*l any tab Bail
Rato* Ml 41)1 CaII Anytlma

ADDITIONS RIMOOI LING
TOWER S ir A U T Y SALON
FOR M ER LY Harr tot*'* Beauty

BIMOOELIMO..., RIPAlBlNO
VERVMUABLrjBkmiMS

Cauniy. Florida under IN
llcllliaut nsmt at POOH
■IRBY FARM, and INI I
■ C N O L ifia a iilvici
Tree » inmetotI Law Prkat
LlcanaodfInourwd/» ICT

zs s n s T m

/*/Jam** F. Saul*

Jg?MAGI&lt;;

Publlth February IE. If, )4 4
March 1. IN )
DEC 40

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

4 f

831-9993

OAVIDN BERRIEN
CLERK OP THE CIRCUIT
COURT

'

* * * * '

MHLSK.

oftr hash

7 02,

m , 1ST'

-^ u &gt; J ^

w is e r

f t "

322*2611

m n t _________

a d m in is t r a t iv e

Ing In the office of the Clerk of
the Circuit Cawrt. Seminole
County Cawrthovta. Sanford.
Ptorlda » f f l . on or betore ltd to
day at March, ins. It you fail to
00 to. a Default Judgment trill
ba taken again*) you tor tha
raiiaf iNmandad In tha Petition
O A TED at San lord Samlnato
County, Ptorlda. thl* tth day at
February, (Ml
1 SEAL)

GOOPMMT
nee is oft -

i

tip trM K td mwf aPP*Y

O rla n d o • W inter Park

Prtittonar/wito.

D o o n e s b u ry

■ *

Sem inole

Accepting aapHcaHan*
end Craw emiy

Slolulqtinr.

FROM FLORIDA

*♦■ W*| — f

CLASSIFIED ADS

ootN-w E. moo it to

am engaged In butmett al Ini
14 4 Hwy, 4*. Samlnato Caunty.
Florida under lha llcllliaut
name at SAULS 4 SON AUTO
SALES, and Rial I Inland to
reglttor ta&gt;d noma with IN
Clark al IN Circuit Caurt.
Samlnqla County, Florida In
accordance with Ih# provltlon*
*4 me Pklltlaut Name Statute*,
towll. Section 4*14* Florid*

ENJOY

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT.
IN AND POR SEMINOLE.
COUNTY. FLORIDA.

POINTOr BEGINNING alM
Parcel 1 Being a portion at
Tract No I, Saniencto Spring*,
recorded In PB I. PG SJ, Public
Record* at Samlneto County.
Florida, daterIbad a* follow*
baginning al lha Narlhwatl

Tlie former diplomat said the American nuclear
drlrrrrn! prevents a Soviet ultaek on thr United
Stales. Europe and China.
"Th ey had Itern playing wllh the Idea of using
mirlenr wrupons against Chinn but rven the
United Stairs drlrrrrd them." he said. "They
were no carrful even lo cheek (whull would he
(the) reaction of thr United Slulrs. ... So they
dropped this Idea.

71— H * lp W * n t«d

25— Special Notices

\

Shopping For A
Hew Or Used Cer?

THAIS A
UTTUtAAlY

oupimms
riixmia*

I

* * * * • • » W Pt » » fa - « • * * w to W- W • *

i
:.t A

een

—

mown

�^w iiliH H fiM . Satjed. FI.

Iwiii y, Fit. » , IWS—H

71— Help Wanted
n ir g U iN A 'M

»1— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rtnt

ff— Apartments
Unfumislwd / Rtnt

105— Duplex*
Triplex / Rent

C t e - m .'t lev tew

V .W 1fc CATFoofe

Cc^fAfp£lAW» iKTi
*WGt/.0C.
TO TA L B IT N IU C E W T IR

BAMBOOcove APTS
M E Airport Bird

A » )W t emo»ncy, from
U N M « |% dltcovnt for
Santar Cltlian*

BWm. I Bom DownHolrv
A ll appllancat W alk ta

Mlddtn Late- 1 kdrmfj bom
oppil.net* carpal, blind*
U N N IC II Mono now no roof
until More* Alford Rrally
r e a l t o r ru rn m

RIDGEWOOD ARMS
APARTMENTS
1*2*3 Bedrooms.

tarvico U l M S Call anytim*
IMIod to to* Aaoociato*. lac.

7J— Employ mtnt
Wanted
Barry BWAPT

Unlvortlfy Bird. Suit* H
WWltpr Part. El g T T l

ta rt lima la Mart Mo aapari
onro nacouary Will train,
nood ctorlcal/typlng tklllt
Affractlro appoaranca far
proto*Manal otflc*. m a i l t
far Inlarvlaw Downtown

Sales Counselor

For Your

Valentine
When you give her a beautiful home
with p &amp; i payment of *3 2 3 °° . . . .
We will give her a refrigerator and
microwave ovenl
National Training
Service, Inc.

O p en House
Sunday, February 17
" 5a00

p a lt la

A SAVE THOUSANDS ON A NEW HOME!
The A§pen Floor Plan

■aiymmi t ' l RWJPi i

l

1 :0 0

COME ANDSEE ONE OF OUR PROFESSIONAL HOME CONSULTANTS TO
LEARN HOW YOU CAN QUALIFY FOR ONE OF OUR SPECIAL MORTGAGE PLANS

WE P A Y A LL CLOSING COSTS!

34 Yean 01 Heme Betiding Experience A
Over 1800 Hemet Sold A Central Florida

line Model* To ChoooeiFrom
2 , 3 0 4 Btdroomt
3% BROKERS CO-OP

�V

105— DuplexTriplax / Rant

Sunday, Fab. IT, I f S

141— Homes For Site
KISSIMMEE

Sanlord L i l t Vary Area
bdrm /I bath i m a month

J

_________ ra m s_________

CARDIMAI

1 U r m . t bath hall dupMr IKO
aacurlfy deposit Good lata
lion m i Worth root » l u n
2 bdrm. 1 b«1N. (3 5 0 month,
IMP totally NoPot* m l* t

107— Mobile
Homis / Rent
la*a Modal Mob.la Home Air
condition sup*' claon and
furnished Lacalad on Golf
Court* Naar Sanlord Rant by
m l or aall tor MOO doom,
li f t par month
Oumar tl
nanclng AdulU. no pall

m Md)andlIt*4H

127— Office Rentals

OFFICES
NEW SHOPPIHO C EN TER In
E O RLANDO SR 4)4 at
Sail Wail E «p «y A Laka
Undarhlll Sait Vltlbtllty A
Accessibility! Hiyhatt Traflic
Cavntl Ptggly Wiggly Anchor
TERMS! *411*44: Anytime.

141— Homes For Sale
DELTONA

0 (A R D IN A |
CALDW ELL IT .
low
monthly paymanl* NEW I
badroom Cardinal Homo with
appllancaa. washor/dryor
hook upt. and Intlda utility
room, alllc storage wall lo
wall car paling, only MO too

Call i too ail ntf. ext *ir

PATRICK ST. NEW I bdrm /I
bath highly anargy ttfldnnt
Cardinal Homa tSI.aaO Larga
matter badroom with double
mirrored closet doort W hin
walking dit'ance of eiemontcy
and h ig h s c h o o l C a ll
I aOOMl U II, E X T i l l
RANK REPO Resale Specialist
LAKE M ARY R E A L TY
REALTOR......................M I 1144

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie Real Eilat* i raker
1444 Sanford Ava

321 0757 Eve 322-7643
DELTONA

CAKDINAl
TUNISIA DR. Quiet Hying In a
new 1 bdrm Cardinal Homa
Thick Insulation, double pane
windows that block noisa and
reduce utility bills, only
MO ttO Foe more Information
call I SOBO l S7II, E X T M l
ENTERPRISE S*. Johns ec
cats 1 Bdrm . 1 balh Owner
will help finance Call now l
Landtlock Brokers US T ill
M OSTF O R T M i M O N IV
No better buy t il Larga I
Bdrm , 1 balh condo with pool
and many aatrat Ashing only
tll.000 but owner
wonts
action! Call nowll I

CALL BART
BEAL E S TA T t
ORLANDO

0CARDINAI
CM* • 'N t

»a

•*»-. -da « •

H il-% 7 li

Why Rantf Own thl* 1 bdrm
block homa.nlcaaraa IM.SOO
Desirable Country Hama on
Iraad 'sort* Only M l OOO
Aalaw Mark at I bdrm' I balh
spill plan yllla No Qualifying
atiuma I I 1% morlg
tic too
Pool Hama Tla rm. bar/palio. ]
bdrm/1 bath nit* ara* v u 000
Naar Du*l«i lully ranlad. post
tlva rath How Mar* Otter 1
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
M U LTI FAM ILY LOTS
PRIME RUILDINO SITES
Oak SI al Park Ava I lot* lull
city Mwar •waitr aiii.too
W. Ind St. lonad lor apla.
water/sawrr all 1 lota SII.SOO
Traad 4 Plai Lal/u war SIC.000
I i t Altai Build a draam
llo rm OK
HO 000
Airport bird naar lf/»l l i t
Acral, lonad 40unlit/acral
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
COA4MERCIAL IISTINOS
Laka Mary Ollita'Commartlel
building prlma ilia M l 000
Langwaad Hwy tit aapotura
naar SpdrlngtPfaiallll.OOO
tanlard fluty Grocery Slot**
gather
Haducad lotlia.000
PRIME COMMERCIAL/APTS
t lT E All utllltlil
II 0OO 000

★ LIST FORLESSi*
WE W ILL LIST. ADVERTISE.
SELL YOUR HOME FOR 4 V
WHY PAY M OREI

KINOSWOOD MANOR Con re
nlant la everthingt Sallied
neighborhood
NEW
I
bdrm . 1 balh
Cardinal
Homa Only IM SSO lor this
anargy alllclanl homa with
thick Insulation, doubel pane
windows Wa'II help you
quality For more mice me
lion call til lei* e■1 i l l
ORLANDO

CARDINAL
CORBETT ROAD
Naar
U C F and Watlmghousa
Only sia.tto lor this NEW I
badroom Cardinal
Homa
Why pay more lor this
local ion I Larga lot lor
lu'uro expandability
For
mart
Informal ion
call
til lili^ e rl *11
ORLANDO

£ }( ARDINAl
M i l rt(,7 h
HILL TOP H0 Q U IET LIVING
In NEW 1 bdrm Cardinal
Homa Lai us help you quality
All anargy saving features lor
low utility bills Only Set 100
For more information call
S1I 1*1* e.I 411
RAVENNA PARK ) bdrm . 1
balh. family room, control
heal 4 air SU MO 111 T041

F R E E CO M PUTERIICO
Markal Analytlt al yaur
Kama Call USA Tadayl

3 2 1 -3 8 3 3

* i!1 4

io ihow
III &gt;1(1 l \ l ( l l

STENSTROM

( ARDINAl

0

•al &lt;t -

•• f

M

a • a* • ' i

ROSS LAKE SNORES
Nary 04 W/naar 14 New homes
team s iu aae silt.sea asv
financing available Acre♦
uraadad hamasltas from Sli.fWi
lakafrant learn Saf.SM
Hasher Realty, REALTORS
M l teas........... Evanlags ITT TUI

••STEMPER AGENCY INC.**
PRICE R EDUCED 1 bdrm /]
balh. half acre lot Loaded
with tetroS Now only M l.*00
Low down Owner will assist
1 bdrm /1 bath belch home
lonad tor duploe Period
floor
plan
Room
lor
another duploe
Owner II
nanclng Only U4 000
Larpe I bdrm /1 bath CE hama
In gaad era*. Law down
Balance IIV lor 10years

INVESTORS
111 acres 1000
It on SI Johns River 1000
on canal to river S1.S00 par
ecra/lorms Call todey'l
CALL ANYTIM E
R EALTOR m sttl
WE N E ED LISTINQSI

REALTYaREALTOR

CARDINAl
AIRFORT RD NEW 1 bdrm
expandable Cardinal Hama
only ScS.PSO Lai us help you
quality lor the mlg and en|oy
low electric bills an this
hlghlly enetgy alllclanl homa
Call I MO ell n il. EXT *11

H
i B hOh
B

8

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
A N TO N I IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY
C O U N T R V F IID 1 M em .. 1
bath Mobile Hama, aalln
kitchen Cant ale and hail. IS
acres plus mao*
WARM UP 1 bdrm . I bath
hama spilt bdrm. pien larga
living ream with Hrapiaca and
calhadral calling M ata.
*14.4*4
SHADY LOT I Sdrm . 1 balh
homa welt maintained Paddle
lag. spill bdrm. plan, lals al
star age space, largo potto,
good assumable mortgage.

S U N O A T I4 F M
114 MAIN RD
LA KE MARY
I Idem, I bath, larpe eat in
hitch**, screened patM, clone
llriplace. Slap In ladayl
SIII.SM
SANFORD Law dawn payment
an IMS 4 Bdrm. 1 balh home,
with screened porch and
Florida Ream 1 year war
ranly. MS.lSd
SANFORD Charming 1 Bdrm
ham* an shaded earner lot
naar town Family ream and
saparaM work shop so t**
OENEVA. Brick horn* an 1
air**. Owner will Hnanc*
Larga 1 Bdrm Priced at anly

HALL
■•All* IMS
MSI Hi
is 11bbs iim e s ti

HUOE I STORYI S bdrm 4
bilb. in Cavalry I Oakt. palmt
and Hull Iruutl Naar 4 H I Ian
Cant Heel and Air ai/haal
pump I New talar hat watar
haalart Daubla iidtd brick
llraplaia Ik' a I I ’ icraan
par chi
Raaulltvl
Viawl
UnbalWrabH SM.S44
CALL H A LL.................. U III1 4
FHA VA SPECIAL. Law dawn
p a y m a n tl la w m a n lh ly
paymanl) I Bdrm Kama In
nua laca lian I Call Sac datallit
Only IM S**
CALL H A L L ................ I l l SIM
O W NER PIN AN C IN O . Nlca
hama w/PIcaptaca. I pacchat
Detached garaga w /lalll
tii.aas cash daam.itW APR.
»II*.1I par month. It yoarsl
m i .ana
CALL HALL................. M I SII4

PARADISE 4 M rm . t balh
home in tha cavalry an M
acres M ether acres avail
able, sal la hllchaa. brick
Hrapiaca. tats more. SU M S*.
W ILL BUILD TO SUITt YOUR
LO T OR OURII EXCLUSIVE
A O E N T FOR W IN IO N O
DEV. CORF. A C E N TR A L
FLORIDA I I A D I R I M O R I
NOME FOR LESS M O N IV I
CALL TODAY I
a OENEVA OSCEOLA R O B
IO N IO FOR MORI L I II
I Acre Cavalry tracts.
Wet! tread sa paved Rd
M V Daw* IS Yrs.pl l l \ l
From III.MSI
II you are Making Mr a sue
cassM taeaae M Raal I stale,
lfenttrem Realty H Making
Me yap Call Lea Al bright
tedey at u i h m
“
US MM.

C A L L A N Y T IM E

323-5774

322-2420

W H O

II n

TS44I. Part. Laniard
M l Lb Mam Rhrd.Lk. Mary

• •' • +

MS 4410*41___
USSR Graves

.... as* i n n n
.... Orange City

II X OS 1 bdrm Mobil* Horn*
Family Park Easy financing!
t**io
im io o
ISt) Skyline 14 ■ 14. 1 bdrm 1
bath, split plan IS a IS shad.
IS e IS screen porch Adult
Section of Park Ashing
I lf 000
Call H I SIS!
I ) Villager } bdrm. I bath,
peddle Ian. air cond Musi be
moved 1)000 777 111)

321 5005 ____
Washington Oaks IMOO Down 1
bdrm /I &lt;y both Price tl* *00
I Ml lIQl.Ownor/REALTOR
I story house Can b* used lor
olllc* or homo To bo moved
11.000 )1J Old
I BR. 1 balh. formal dining
room, enclosed porch Family
room w/Flraplat* M l MO
Call otWr t. H I IS11_________
O ILTO N A

CARDINAL

223— Miscellaneous

B
PIANO FOR SALE
Wanted Responsible party to
assume small monthly pay
mpnti on piano lee locally
Cal l Cr edi t Ma n a g e r
I MQ 44? 4744_______________
Rebuilt k i r e y / l i l t eg b aa
Ooarantaad. Kirby C*
114 W 1st SI 171 S*aa ___
Riding Mow*' now angina |]]0
Alto cano* 11 H Mohawk 1110
Call m Mas________________
Salalllt* TV Syttamt
Complete All you need I0ON
F Inane Ing
St 1S4 00 Uni versa I H I 17u
T wo used 1tt dress
each with! drawers
Dark wood 170 41SS

159— Real Estate
Wanted
Are you potting Divorced Hans
tetrad foreclosed need quick
sale! Coll Dale 1H 4*t!
Private party needs
1 or l bedroom ham*
IU4441

1*1— Appliances
/ Furniture
Frigidelrt Sid* by S&gt;d*
I M0 or bast otter
__________ m n n ___________
Kanmor* Parts, ttralct
Utad Washars 111 ***I.
MOO N EY APPLIANCES
a R E N TTO O W N *
Color T V s . stereos washers,
dryers, refrigerator. Hearers
furniture, videoracordars
Special Isl weaksrania*t
Alternative TV B Add* Rentals
layras Shay*in* Cantar
___________ U1SSSS
TH E USE D STORE
Appllancas Furnitura
Buy Sail Anyone Financed I
a IIS E_. Ind Slraat 111 441* a
W ILSONM AIER FURNITURE
H I U S E FIRSTST
m M il

COLOR TELEVISION
RCA 11" Consol* color Mlovl
sian Original price over MOO
Balance dua 11*100 cash or
lake over payments DO par
month SHII In warranty NO
M ON EY DOWN Fro* homo
trial Noobligalion
Call *411144 Day at nlghl
RCA 1* inch i onsol#
color lelayision
ns use

117— Sporting Goods
Like Now Romlnglon II g* 110
pump shotgun. 7* barren,
modified coka Ashing S ill
Call altar 4 PM 171 1411

For Sal* A K c T a tk a ^ p a W o T l
year old Rad Mai* Ganll*
StooCaii 177 ri44*n#r 1PM
Two dogs Shepard Lab mla I
blond*. I black Fra* lo good
homa IM. W ISIh SI

CASH FOR YOUR CARS
Martin Motors
101$ French m i n *
Dabary Auto 4 Mann* Salas
Across th* river, lop of Mil
U4Hwy H t l Debar* 44* 1144
leap Right Hand Drive, lam
Runs good Call attar s,
_________ 777 4*77___________

DISCOUNT
A U TO
SALES

14»— C o m m trc lil
Property / Sale
Casselberry I Acr* lonad PR I
M l WO W Malinowski
Realtor )77 isgj
CHURCH Like Mary Sanlord
araa c acres on two roads
Call lor Dyer Real Esiaie
On* Cll 1)00

153— AcraagaLot*/ Salt
OSTEEN S A lots 11000 down
Tor ms Lake Privileges No
mobiles Kerry I Draggors
Rtailor MS M il
Sanlord naar. larga building
Mis. Haas. I l l 000
AssumabM mortgaga lie Site
laniard Araa larf* building
lots ml Haas 111 000 and up

155— Condominium*
Co-Op / Sal*
NEW SMYRNA BEACH
Inlra caatlal waferlrenl 1
B d r m . )&gt;s b a lh Can
dominium, luemshod includes
boat Back Financing 114 000
Baacbsida Raalty. REALTORS
S B M lM lil. Open I Paysi
Villas 1 bdrm t
bath, scraanad porch, pool,
washer dryar. calling Ians,
and other as Iras 111 AIM
SPOTLESS l M rm
Villas SIS.SM Haw appil
ancas/carpat/scr.palM/paal.
Saniry M g l.......MB SM*.a*J IIS*
WON T L A ITI Only SUM
l i l t m s ., II g u a lllia d
Sandlawood U n it C I. 1
bdrm/] balh all appliances,
washer dryer. Irg pc
BE LOW appraisal UISPM

157— Mobil*
Homo*/Sal*

M MMry lltf ...

. . H I IMS

Busts/Vans

/ V a n*

C N EVY V A IT l.......................... •*«
'83 FORD VAN
C M 'S _________________ SIMS* StOOOOorbostoHar 101*14
PRBNCHIB* CUSTOM VANS

m a in ...... .... ....— umtss

•Stitct From0m I00»

•0 Ford F 1)0 Heavy Duty

•1914 DODGE ARIES*

shocks B springs * cyl. a
spd stereo 44100 H I 1111

231-C ars
Bed Crrdit?
No Ciedil?
1 ) P i n t o BI BO Dn
I S Cou g a r S1S9 Dn
1* Cordoba S1S0 Dn

2 4 1 — Recreational
Vehicles /Cam pars

lMO Ford 1/a ton pick up dump
truck Now pain''"fl t**wl
*f*ry. tun* up and Hont and
alignment Apple pi* candi
Hon Your* lor MMO Dump
truck feature awn* it worth
n o w a d a y K ts s iiim

IMI French Are..............CT-HM

WE FINANCE

0) impale Travel Trailer, JO”.
*lr control heat. T tu If
rafrig . lull Hi* bod. sleeps 4
taaoo i n *w&gt;_______________

242— Junk Cars
BUY JUNK CARS 4 TRUCKS
From 110 lo$»0or more
Call Ml 1414 IT ) 4)11
TOP Doll*' Raid tor Junk 4
Used cars Mucks 4 haavy
iipmonl n u n s _________
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS ANO TRUCKS
CBS AUTO FARTS I D * « 1

aasoaoseraaagtw _____ _

NOT MAGIC
BUT FACT
W ANT AOS WORK WONDERS

•2 Door*4Door*
•• Station W ife ns **

•• FROM 54995 ••

WE FINANCE

• 10% DOWN •CASH •
•••0* TRADE •••

NATIONAL AUTO SALES

NEW CAR TRADE-INS
ALL
PRICES
#

•44 MONTHS FINANCING!*

CARSHOPPINOT
SAVE YOURSHOE LEA TH ER
R EA D TH EW A N T ADS
F O R E E I T E U T i ___
Chrysler Nawpart ..Sapor Clean
Leaded! Law Beam W* Finance

BOB DANCE DODGE
Hwy II SI..
.m m *
Ifll Honda Accord sharp rad
hatchback Automatic, air
17100 Longwood IM l« S
ISIS Mustang Ghia package
Eacallant condition SI.100
77? I 7 Y 7 ______________
’l l FI NTO-Sind X'tra Clean l
Oat Sarar. Bey Her* .Pay Mar*

0. K Cbtrtl Caa.... 323-1921

★ DAYTONA AUTO^
★ AUCTION ★
HwyW ............*«•(*

• f • * • Holdi l e • t • •
PUBLIC AUTOAUCTION

REDUCED
TlAat-WS

accvm

84 PONTIAC FIER0

0. R. C o rtiiC O T....... 323-1921
I* Pinto I Dr., air, AM/FM
cattatta starao Lowered to
SHOO Attar a Ttsur . F r l . all
day Sal 4 Sun M l H U

Every Wed Nlte a ll M 1W

* Where Anybody *
* Cen Buy or Sell! *
For mar* dal*lit
I SS42SI t i ll

8 4 ^ T 1 A C 6000

'10 Eiflg AMC- 4 w httl drift
4 dear....,......................... 1114)41

83 C H EV R fl

E R W IN M O T O R SRLCS
UJhoieiole To The Public
I 4 Al I t il

B 4t jf 'iw t t ' 9M I*

.

a — Ef, i f M i * | WMBR

I xkr M o m cir

82 PONTIAC BONNEVIIlE

321 2391 • 321 2410
' &lt;Aa/ O Ho [Aouen P r j t i / d h

^ ' ’9 W

1982 Caprice C !a»ic
4 Or Tulon* Dlua. Wltr W lirrlt Cloth
Inin lor, V 0 Loaded .What A Cat

1982 Cougar GS.
4 Of

6 Cyl Cloih Intcrlot. PfII

A/C. Till Ciuiw 6 Sftrto love Mik*

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
1976 Honda
A Spd . Cat lunt Real Good

1982 Mercury Lynx Hatchback
2 Ot . A/T.
A/C low Miles

1982 Monte Carlo
Wit* Wheels A/T P/S A/C Cloth Interior
Cruiw, V 6. L i U i C k »n C n

1983 Bulck Skylark Custom

N

4 D r . A/C. A/T P/S. P/O
Cloth Imetiot Ready To Go

O
W

Wat
IG'/V*)

1974 Mustang 3 Dr. Hatchback
V 6 A/t Duckrlt
D iivfi Lihr Mrw

‘6495
‘5495
*1095
‘4295
‘7395
‘6595
•1795

SUPREME C A U S l

82 CHR^SfA n J X K S Ii COUPE

T l CtkVMTEfiKwTT URUll
81 C A D IL L A ^ fS lJ P E DEVILLE
L0ADCD, O NE OW NER

CO U RTESY
PONTIAC

Ho Down
Payment
With Approved
C iedlt

1980 Ford E. 150
Managnt Special. A/T.
A/C, 6 C y l. P/S P it
Toid s flig 6 Cyl Gat Economy

1979 Mercury Marqult

NO MONEY DOWN
323-2121
429-5090 WAT
3211 HWY. 17-92

‘3495

A/t. A/C P/S P-tt
L iiilC ltd ri C«( Mull Drive

VAY
SANFORD

SEMINOLE FORD

2 0 3 -Livestock end
Poultry

OFFFRS YOU

S Rabbits good pt-fixers and
aattng s &gt;0 each Phono 111
k ill Horn* AM lok PM

A CAR FOR EVERY FAMILY...
A PRICE FOR EVERY BUDGET!

213— Auclions

1979 PLY. YOU RE

BARER. 4 M , M , CUTS ET.......................

1980 MAZDA GLC

f OCQC
4 0 9 3

. ^

»3495

1979 FORD P1RT0

M* SanMrd Ava
CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME I
323M i
POR ESTATE
Commercial or flatidanllal
Auctions 4 Appraisals Call
Dali t Auction 17) U N

510

217— Gerege Seles
Elec Sto*a, Ilk* new */corn&lt;ng
top burners 4 warmer IIS
Yamoho motor cycle. *000
mile* Itkt now Bor Items
I water pitchers, signs mlr
rots, otc.l chairs and many
household Hams Everything
mutt go Saturday 4 Sunday
H I Wilkins Circle H I 14*1 _
Moving SaM Anliqu* Rattan 4
pc sal. mint condition HOD or
boil oiler Antique wood
tlovo SIS 00 or bast altar
Utility Trailer SHOO Call

1979 MERCURY

*2695
•1995
•2995
•2995

4 N E C A/T, A/C..........................

L I E AUCTION

:iJ
•W -

W

210

1940 CHEVY CHEVETTE s a c q c
1M 2 T0Y0TA STARLET 13995

&gt;

1980 SAAB 900 TURBO

$5495

nr is**_________________

I Me. UC. IM .

Saturday and Sunday 10
S.
baby clothes 4 mite 71*0
Granada Av* oil llth St
behind Bahama Joes

1E7S HONDA
CIVIC
i .......................... ‘ 1495
1979 LID II
1 la at. m . m m a o a c a a oaaa

219— Wanted to Buy
Baby: Bad*. StrolMrs. CMtbas.
Playpens. El*. P*p*rb*(h
b*»kt t n u n ■W-SSB4
Paying CASH for
Aluminum. Cans. Copper.
Brats Land. Newspaper
Glass. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool t i l W Itl
I l 00 Sal * 111) 1100

i n .n m

10MX®
counni*

‘3495
IEE 0 CAMAR0
mubt ?c in, m, n m m w ...... *5995
1940 FORD T-SMD
u T .ix M c m w m is r................. ‘4995
19*0 MERCURY
a m a w ta a .M T .a x m .ra ........... *3495
1941 FORD
FAIRMONT
a w as
a n .............................. *3995
IS M FONT. TRANS AM
*9995
1M 4 SUBARU DL
t i e . l a s . uc.
.........
*7895

223— Miscellaneous
Avacado Gas Rang* Continuous
CleanOvan BaslOtMrl

ml

_______ 1)1 nn_________

oivoece

l iq u id a t io n i a
It mobile homo S7M. John
Deere 40 Tractor, bush hog
grader Race Weak Condo yr
round boach horn* assume
Fab balance Rich Plan, new
It It Haaiar assume Fab
balance Day* 11) tilt, aal
Ml. nights p i 1Y44__________
ELECTROLYSIS EQUIPMENT
FOR SALE

mica*

FLEAS?
NO M0REI
Utpst Nga...A...lhgd NeM b
He m Dagtw Ir iNi Araa.

u m s

It Dodge Von cyl. standard
shin Panelled carpatad
t t m ’is Jaap C Jl Ranagada
pachaga hardteg * cyttndar
1 sowed aii. AM FM radio

AUCTION EVER Y PRI NIOMT
HUNKIN CIR
NEW TO
A R E A I Cardinal has a I
bdrm horn* lor you loaded
with Matures Priced right al
tco.taoi Call I *00 411 i m
fJI^ ^ IT o ^ j/ o u rb ro k * ^ ^ ^ ^

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /

23S— Truck* /

2 3 1 -C a r*

1120 ISBfliBti 321-4075

Iff— Pels A Supplies

CALL HALL
Wa t u n many atbaesl

MODELS ON DISPLAY
IM S . Man thru Sat

till,***

_^ssumabl*jnor*2a2*_aic^ll^
CO N TEM PO R AR Y HOM E 1
Bdrm., 1 1/1 balk homa. M a
vary secluded setting, master
Bdrm. has vaulted calling
wills dock aver leaking land
scaped lot with stock pond
Paddle Ian. eat in kitchen,
Hrepieco. tats mare. lis t.tea

Adutt Mobil* Horn* Park

1*3— Television/
Radio / Stereo

J u liu d 't S l i d Ltidg i

AIRPORT HOAD NEW highly
anargy alllclanl. arpandabla.
allordahi* I bdrm Cardinal
Homa Only SCI IIS with Im
madiata availability Mlg It
nanclng a tlltlanca Call
I b0&gt;«ll IIII.E X T MI
Tot lala by Ownar Sanlord
Nlca I badroom homa with
Hying roam, dining room,
pa naiad family room laundry
roam workshop and larga
tcraanad porch Call lor In
formation III HOI Ml too
O EN E V A Custom. Mild wood. 1
bdrm . I 't balh. anargy saver.
S I arras tm laka SIP* 000.
by ownar ICS Sail

COUNTRY VILLAGE

KISSIMMEE

(II TOU HI ID

H IW Laka Marv Alvd
KISSIMMEE

Hidden Lake IS mos new 1
badroom. 1 bath
Blinds,
refrigerator 11 * 000 M too
down and ownar will pay
dosing H I )|T|____________

IO N IO FOR MOBILES Sacra
tracts from HO 000 with t l 000
down lOyrt onbelenco

REALTOR___________m ists

R ESIDENTIAL LIITIN O S

141— Homes For Sole

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

.

EB—tvgnlisj HOflMt SarHard, FI,

T T f

Wa have Iha curt I0ON money
back
EvaiantR* Tuckars
Farm B Cardan Cantar. San
hard, arsd Oofand____________
Oal* Wire Data* III U "a
11” 4 I H I* " a 4* ’ ' w Ills
pasry liftInge lot M l ISM

lo tm us

SEMINOLE FORD
SANFORD,FI.
MWry

1/ y.* ,|t 1 .th e M .« ,y B lv d

NftorwA M

M

A

laaiw I u :

II

Oti e f 441 gg

�PEO PLE

‘People Think I'm Nuts'
T h e Devers W o u ld W a lk M o re Than A M ile For A Cam el
By Busan Lodcn
Herald S ta ff W riter
With hi* chocolate brown, bedroom eyes
seductively shaded with super long lashes, he's
a real charmer and he's almost as quick with his
kisses as he 1s with his toothy grin. But
H um phrey the cam el saves most o f his
smooches for his Casselberry owners Jim and
Jane Dever.
For years. 38-year-old Dever, who grew up on
an Indiana farm, longed for an exotic camel for
reasons he can’t quite pinpoint, because. Mrs.
Dever said, "H e hasn't figured that one out y et."
Dever wasn't satisfied with the more typical
menagerie that roams their 10- acre tract off Red
Bug Lake Road. The four horses, four dogs (two
rescued from the pound), three cats. 30 wild
peacocks, an aviary filled with finches, button
quail, cockatlel. a macaw, and a Queen Amazon
parrot, plus an assortment o f common chickens
and wild squirrels and birds under the Devers'
care and feeding Just didn't do It for Dever.
In September his dream o f owning a drome­
dary came true when Dever handed over $3,000
to Circus World and brought Humphrey loping
Into his life.
"People think I'm nuts, but that’s half the fun
ol It ." Dever. general m anager o f Clark
Crysler-Plymouth. Casselberry, said, adding
that he loves having such a unique pet. "It's the
kind o f thing you don't see oflen. except In a zoo
or something like that."
Humphrey, a Florida native who will turn 3 In
March, Is all Dever hoped a pet cumel might be
and more.
"H e's unique because he was bottle fed and
has never been uround other camels." Dever
said. "Camels, from what little I know about
them, have a lot o f bad habits. They spit at you
and they aren't that great o f pets. But because
Humphrey was bottle fed as a buby he hasn't
been uround other cumels and hr doesn't know
he's supposed to do that.
"H e certainly thinks he's a horse or a big dog.
He Just follows you around the pasture and Is

Jim D « v « r warms up to hts affectionate pet camel, Humphrey.
the most curious animal you'll ever see."
But when Humphrey arrived at the Dcvrr's
bam he created quite a stir among the more
common horses.

A b a b y chick**
n a m e d O a tm e a l
perches co n te ntedly
on Ja n e D ever's arm
w h ile Jim D e v e r looks
on . A lth o u g h the
D evers share a lo ve o f
a ll a nim al life, Jim
prefers exotic pets
w h ile Jane's special
Interest Is birds.
Incidentally, O a tm e a l
took his n a m e from
w h a t else b u t his his
favorite cereal.

Pet Health

"Humphrey gets along grrut now. but the first
night I brought him home the two horses down
at the bam. their eyes got as big as saucers.
They went to the furtherest comer of the
pasture and didn't move or rut for two days,”
Dever said.
"Humphrey didn't have a problem. The other
animals had a problem with, 'What Is this?'"
Mrs. Dever said.
"T h e y eventually got closer and closer and
now everybody la best of friends." Dever said,
but he's still holds the top spot In Humphrey's
heart. The two play oatch with Humphrey's
favorite treat — apples, and soft, w oolly
hump-backed Humphrey Is a muster at hide and
"H e'll open his (stall) door a little and will
stand there and look at you and then will walk
back around and look at you again. Then he'll
open the door as far us he wants to. He’s
well-trained and on command will go down on
all fours.” Dever said.
Humphrey, during the recent cold snap,
showed off his Intellect when he o|&gt;cned his own
stall doors to enter and cuddle up on his hay-brd
after huvlng closed the door behind him, Mrs.
Dever said.
Other than that Humphrey pretty much leads
the life o f a horse, except he has developed the
troublesome habit of sucking the light bulbs oil
the rail fence that flanks Dever's driveway.
Humphrey's always ready to ride and has the
same diet and care needs as u horse, but he
needs fewer vet visits and Is seldom caught
drinking water. Dever said.
Humphrey, like the real ramcl hr Is. slashes
his supply of water In the form of Tat In his
single hump. Florida dry spells are nothing
compared to what he's capable of enduring and
Humphrey Is rarely caught wetting his whistle,
"unless you've got a garden hose oul and then
he wants to play with that. He loves to take a
bath." Dever said.
With their assorted pets, the Devers who have
been married two years are kept busy with
feeding and grooming, part of which Dever does
on his way to and from work and the rest — the
trips to the vet. the grocer and the feed store fall

to Mrs. Dever, who. Dever said, didn't have a
camel at the top of her wish list when
Humphrey came on the scene.
Since Mrs, Dever. 3 ). whose special lutrrrsl Is
birds, has put a cup on any new Inductees Into
their menagerie, except for those strays who
might be lucky enough, roam onto their farm,
the Devers have focused on extending Ibelr
loving care to animals In another way.
After a visit to Seminole County Animal
Control. Dever. who was moved by the* plight of
unwanted unlmals — the older pels. some with
Injuries who had no hope for adoption and faced
death because o f lack of a home, decided to do
something to help.
Last year the Devrrs gave llnanctal tracking to
Kindness A Care (KAC) an animal rescue center
at Falcon's Lair Kennel on Celery Avenue in
Sanford.
The shelter Is supported through fundraising
efforts of the Pet Rescue A Adoption Society,
nnd Dever said. "Our Intent In setting up K M '
was to save as many unlmals from l&gt;clng
destroyed us we could by taking In pets tli.it
aren't ndopled or clulmed from the county's
Animal Control Center. We also promote
low-cost spaying and neutering lo help control
the animal popoulatlon.
"W e take In sick and Injured pets loo There’s
a veterinarian on cull who cures for the animals
which we then try to find homes for.
" I got Involved." he said, lo try to make people
uwure there was such a place as Animal Control
und that the animals need lo be adopted. They
|usl don't have enough room or enough funds
for the county to support them. Semlnolr
County only has an allowance of $230,(KM) a
yeur for animal control."
"I'm ashamed that nobody has done It
Itrlore," he said o f his push for private sector
Involvment In the care o f needy animals. "II
everybody did a little. There are so many needs
around. I guess everybody has to do what they
feel comfortuble with.
"Th ere are u lot of children who need help and
u lot o f families. Everybody Just bus to do what
they're most comfortable w ith." lie said, and
added his primary Interest Is helping animals,
ulthough at Christmas he ulso. through the city
of Cnsselberry. assists with programs for
children and the elderly.
Dever who frequently calls on Humphrey to
add his exotic, unique touch to promotions for
his business, also calls on Ills dealership to hrlp

7 g o t In vo lv e d to try to m o k e p e o p le
a w a re there w as such a p la c e as
a nd that the anim als n e e d to b e
adopted. They fust don't ha ve enough
ro o m o r enough funds fo r the county
to support them . Sem inole County
A n im a l Control o n ly has an allow ance
o f $250,000 a y e a r for a nim al co n tro l.'
animals. Since April 1083, It has been a
tradition In that month for Clurk ChryslerPlymouth to donate $50 for every vehicle sold lo
an escrow urcount lo subsidize fanillles who
want lo adopt u pet from Animal Control, hut
who cun't afford the fees.
So fur. about $6,000 lias hern earmarked for
the progrum and over 100 cuts and dogs that
would have been destroyed have been saved,
Dever said.
And Humphrey's March blrthduy will also
bring usslstunre to other anlmuls The birthday
camel. Dever said, will Ire wishing for nothing
more Ilian perhaps u simple but succulent apple
or carrot, but he hopes blrthduy party guest*
might honor Humphrey by bringing along a bag
of dog or cat food lo help feed homeless animals

r.'.

Newcasties A Threat To Birds A n d Poultry
Last week. I mentioned that
we would continue a discussion
on heartworms in dogs which I
will at a later date.
In some areas o f Florida there
has been a great deal o f attention
focused on a disease affecting
pet birds called Newcastles.
The disease has been labeled
as avian distemper, fowl pest,
and a half dozen other names.
The term Newcastles Is said to
have originated from an area In
England. Newcastle-upon-Tyne,
where In the 1920a a fatal viral
disease In domestic chickens
was described.
What does this mean to those
who are not Interested In pet
birds? Well. It could potentially
mean higher prices on your
d in n er ta b le w hen s e r v in g
poultry.
*
The disease
paramyxovirus
vive for long
u n d e r th e
circumstances
ment. It can

Is caused by a
which can sur­
periods of time
r ig h t se t o f
In the environ*
affect finches.

M icha el T.
W alsh,
DVM

farms.
The Newcastle virus Is usually
divided Into four groups. These
divisions are based on the severi­
ty o f the signs caused by dif­
ferent strains of the virus. The
tw o less d an gerou s strain s
usually do not cause obvious
signs of illness and death Is very
rare. The two moat dangerous
strains are what the poultry
Industry fear*. Doth or these
result In high morbidity (animals
showing Illness) and mortality
(death).

during periods o f the day when It
la usually active, act sleepiy. and
lose Its appetite. Th e virus
eventually gains access to the
nervous system resulting In In­
coordination. tremors, w eak­
ness. etc. These birds soon die.

E ven r e c e n t ly a b ird wus
diagnosed as having Newcastles
which originally came from a
quarantine station In Miami.
This would Indicate that some
birds may be capable of carrying
the virus without being delected.

This would mean that a sec­
T h e g o ve rn m en t and the
ultry Industry concentrate on ond line o f detection must de­
eplng these two strains out o f pend on the general public.
the
country. Some poultry farms When the bird In Tampa died,
canaries, parrots, pheasants,
m
ay
c o n ta in th ou sa n d s o f had It not been autopsled we
quail, poultry and many other
animals
In a small area. You can might have had a much bigger
species of birds.
Imagine the results If the virus problem on our hands concern­
Some Individuals feel that the
gets Into this situation. In ing Newcastles. I um sure there
are those In thr pet industry who
parrots which have the disease
A vlacerotrophlc form (signs Florida alone, this Industry la
originally get It from poultry In see^' In the visceral organs) estimated to be worth more than have been affected who might be
the country of origin. It Is also usually shows Illness related to $200 million. With this Is mind wishing that this bird was not
possible that birds from the wild the Intestinal tract auch as the United Slates Department of diagnosed. This would be a few
may already have the dtsease/ dl4rThcm ^
olher
fonn Agriculture developed a quaran­ limited Individuals who have
present In their p o p u lation * to cUMed u neurotrophic (til- tin e p rogra m that runs or economically suffered from the
m onitors Im port stations In outbreak such as quarantine
Small outbreaks In the wild are
related to the nervous
various parts o f the country. stations and pet shops which
limited In their damage by the y t e m ) . Initially birds In this
find themselves under quaran­
natural tendency o f most species *rouP may ^ ow »»gna o f respl- These stations will hopefully tine.
to avoid concentration o f X h e t r ™tory Ulnero which may even- detect Newcastles before It can
This small bird from Tampa
members In one location. In |U* » V result In penum onla. get to the poultry Industry. As
captivity the worst may happen D u rin g the ea rly phases o f we can aec from past outbreaks has shown us the value o f
where birds are concentrated in sickness the bird may seem there Is no guarantee that the following up on a bird which has
quarantine stations or In poultry depressed, talk leas, stay ruffled affected birds will be detected. died from an unknown reason.

C

♦

•*• -

The cause for death In many
Individuals Is uflrn hidden away
unless thr owners are willing lo
allow autopsies to be done. In
the exotic held this Is even more
Important. Many diseases are
still not well understood at this
lime. As distasteful us 11 may
seem to the owners who loved
their animal an autopsy may not
only pin down thr cause o f death
o f that Individual but thr In­
formation gathered may help
other anlmuls In the future.
AH of us who arc Involved with
birds and other "e s o tir " species
must still strive to learn ull we
ran about the diseases which
affect these special pets. In some
cases It will take a personal
sacrifice In allowing an autopsy.
But. aa the bird from Tampa
showed us there Is often u grrat
deal to be gained. We will cover
this top It In depth In a later
column.
For the answers to your )x-i
health questions write to lit.
Walsh, OO The Evening Herald.
P.O. Uox I0H7. Sanford. 32771.

%4
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1C—Evtfilftf Herald, Sanford, FI.

Svnday, Feb. 11, 1WJ

Sorority Marks 77th Birthday
February o f each year Is an
Important month for the Alpha
Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. This
Is when the sorority commemor*
ates Its birth.. The members of
Kappa Sigma Omega. Sanford,
Nu lota Omega. Maitland, and
Delta Omlcron Omega. Orlando,
s e l e c t e d F e b . 0 fo r t h i s
auspicious occasion.
The celebration climaxed the
77lh observance o f the first
black greek-letter sorority. Prior
to a luncheon aboard the Star of
Sanford an Impressive program
and rededication ceremony were
held at the Holiday Inn.
Soror Vickie Smith extended
greetings to the sorors and gave
the occasion. The meditation for
the morning was given by Soror
Doris Hawthorne o f Nu lota
Omega Chapter. Musical and
poetic expressions were pres­
ented by Sorors Thelm a E.
Speight. Debra Allen and Annie
Ruth Johnson. Highlighting the
program was the special pres­
entation o f a plaque to Sorors
Eameatlne Roberts and Mary
Whitehurst for their sisterly love
and thoughtfulness and In ap­
preciation for their continuous
support and service to their
sorority,
S o r o r s n n d g u e s t s th e n
boarded the cruise ship for an
afternoon o f fun and lunch with
83 fun-seekers enjoying this
lovely event.
Chairmen for the occasion
were Sorors Vickie Smith. Kappa
Sigma Omega, Vickie Brooks.
Delta Omlcron Omega, and Doris
Hawthorne, Nu lota Omega.
Baslleus o f (he sororities are
Sorors Mertam Johnson. Alfreds
Gary and Doris Hawthorne.

Jo-Ann Alma Maad, Dwayna Daniel Nadaau

Engagement
Mead-Nadeau
Mra. Beatrice Mead o f Weal
Pawlet. Vl., announces the
engagement of her daughter,
Jo-Ann Alma, to Dwayne
Daniel Nadeau, son o f Mr.
and Mrs. Waller E. Nadeau.
203 Live Oak Blvd.. Sanford.
The bride-elect was bom in
Olens Falls, N.Y., and at*
tended public schools there.

Her fiance, also born In
Glens Falls. Is the maternal
grandson o f Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon J. Gamble of Argyle,
N.Y. He Is a 1084 graduate of
Seminole High School, San­
ford. and la employed by the
Golden Lam b Restaurant.
Sanford.
T h e w ed d in g wl|t take
place In New York.

D BAR MOTHER) You will be
ited to know that the Cabe Patch Klda had the atuffings beat out of them Insofar aa
my readers were concerned. The
mall ran 300-to-1 against them.

K

to put It out o f my mind? (It’s
not easy. Just because I don't
talk about It doesn't mean I
don’t think about It.)
THB HONEYMOON » OVER

DEAR ABBYt I've been mar­
ried for nearly two years to a
man I went with for about a
year. I thought wc had a grrat
marriage until I found some
C‘ Dtos und love notes In h is
cfcaac. These Items were from
a woman he works with. Abby.
please b elieve me, 1 wasn't
snooping; he had gone to bed
and I was looking for some
postage atamps.
t was thunderstruck! We have
associated'tilth this woman and
her husband since we started
going together, but I never
suspected there waa anything
between her and my husband.
My husband claims that the
affair lasted for only a short lime
and It waa over long before I
found the items. He begged me
not to talk with her about this,
aa It would m akr his life misera­
ble at work, and Jobs are scarce.
After the Initial ahock sub­
sided. I forgave him and agreed
not to bring It up again. Now l*m
wondering If I would feel better
knowing more about what hap­
pened. when, and for how1long.
Or would It be belter to Just try

D E A R O V R R i Y ou w e re
deeply wounded, and wounds
won’t heal until they have been
p r o p e r ly c le a n s e d . F a m ily
counseling for both of you Is my
recommendation. If he won’t go.
go without him. You need to
learn how to forget as well os
forgive.
DEAR ABBYt 1 am Ihe owner
of a profitable retail hardwurr
store with a good number of
employees. There's one woman
who has been with me for 22
ears. I have to admit she's
&gt;yal. honest and efficient. She
started as a bookkeeper, but now
she's a self-appointed "office
manager." She used to call me
"M r." but now she calls me by
my first name. Shc’a very bossy,
arts like she owns the place and,
to tell you the truth, she's
beginning to get on my nerves.
We don't have a retirement
age around here, but I wish
she'd retire (she's old enough) so
I could replace her with a
younger woman who Isn't so
bossy. They say u new broom
sweeps dean. What do you say?

K

D BAS BOBBi A new broom
may sweep clean, but the old
broom knows where the dirt Is.

D B A S NO NAMBt It is never
OK lo ask for money instead of
wedding gifts. Should the bride
and groom be asked If they
prefer money rather than a gin.
then, and only then, would It be
to Indicate that money la

t DRESSES %
• SPORTSWEAR
• SHOES
1

1

Participating In the celebration of the
anniversary of the first black Greek letter
sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha, are. from left,

In observance o f Black History
Month, w e salute the Black
Greek Letter organizations that
are con trib u tin g to ihe lm-

D BAR ABBYt My daughter la
getting married soon. W e are
addressing the wedding Invita­
tions. but here’s the question;
She and her fiance don't need
any household Items — all they
really need is money. Would It
be OK lo write something like
that on the Invitations? And how
should It be worded?
NO NAM E, PL BABE

J

Marva
Hawkins

I*

Readers 300-To-l Against
Cabbage Patch Craziness
D B A S ABBYl I couldn't agree
more with "Ashamed American
Mother," who refuses to buy into
the Cabbage Patch craziness. 1
feel exactly as she does.
C abbage Patch K id s have
become the new status symbol
for American youngsters. I a m
dumbstruck by the number of
otherwise Intelligent, sensible
adults buying Into this mania
and foatering a frenetic need In
their children to possess —
w hat? A cuddly baby doll?
Certainly there are cuddly baby
dolla galore that coat far lesa
than 150 and 5100, do not
require putting one's name on a
aix-monlh wailing Hal. and can
be dresaed, cuddled and loved.
But owning a Cabbage Patch Kid
la the newest form of snobbery.
When my daughter's peers arc
older and into drugs. I want her
to be able to think for herself and
aay "N o ." despite what everyone
clae la doing.
1 may be considered a "m ean
m om m y" by some, but I refuse
to follow along like one more
sheep to Ihe cabbage patch. My
daughter. In fact, ta rather proud
o f the fact that she doesn't own
one.
BANK AM ERICAN MOTHBR

and help lo the young people of
the area.
We also salute some o f the
citizens who are helping to
Improve this community: Mrs.
Thelma W. Mike. D C . McCoy.
Mrs. Ida Anderson. Mrs. Evelyn
121-Sill
Clark. Mrs. Thelma Franklin.
------------------------------------------- Mrs. Eliza Pringle. Mrs. Sallyr F.
provement of the community Benthly. Mrs. Evelyn Anderson,
through their many programs Mrs. Albesto Johnson. Herbert

United Why

Cherry. Charles Robert, WlUle
Ashely, H.L. Refro. Jr. Mrs,
Anglic Douglas. Mrs. Margaret
Oliver. Mrs. Bertha Valentine,
Mrs. Jose Merritt. Mrs. Ltllia H;
Hall. Mrs. Doris Thomas. Mrs;
Olive W. Johnson. Mrs. Louise
Blair. Mrs. Leola Bryant. Mrs.
Ola Brock. Mrs. Katie Sandtfier,
Mrs. Malessie Roberts and Mr,
and Mrs. Walter Curry.

Vickie Brooks, Alfreda Gary, Mertam
Johnson, Vickie Smith, Doris Hawthorne
and Dr. Elolse Slsfruck.

�r*

Evening Herald, Sintord. FI

A s h le y A u stin , a ge 17
m on ths, he ld b y h e r
m o th e r, Lynn, receives
the ‘M o s t Beautiful
B a b y' tro p h y In the
ca te g o ry, A g e s 1-2,
fro m Susan Brennan,
adm inistrator o f
S anford N ursin g
Convalescent C e n te r .

In A n d A ro u n d S a n fo rd

You Must Have Been A Beautiful
Baby, Cause Baby, Look A t You..
Sharyn S tens from
David A Stump
Exchange Vows

.

Sharyn Alane Stenstrom
and David Allen Stump were
married on Feb. 9 In Knowles
M em orial Chapel. Rollins
College. Winter Park. Dean
Wettsteln performed the 3
p m. double ring ceremony.
David Haines, soloist, sang
"In This Very Room." and
"T h e Lord's Prayer."
The bride Is the daughter
o f Mr. and Mrs. Herbert E.
Stenstrom. 308 Lake Blvd.,
Sanford. The bridegroom’s
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Stump. Tavares.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride chose for her
vows an exquisite Ivory silk
organza over taffeta gown
fashioned along the Queen
Anne silhouette. &gt;The fitted
bodice, lavishly embellished
with reembroidered lace and
pearls, featured a sweetheart
neckline. The front waistline
was enhanced with drops of
pearls and crystal beads to
create an elegant shimmer­
ing opulence. Lace, pearls
and buttoned cufTs accented
the traditional Queen Anne
sleeves. The full skirt, de­
tailed with lace and pearls In
the front, grarcfully cascaded
Into a sweeping cathedral
train bordered with rows of
delicate crystal pleating. Her
headpiece was an Ivory silk
Venlse lace hat. encrusted
with pearls. A cluster of silk
flowers held the brim that
was gently turned up at one
side. She carried a French
hand nosegay o f white roses,
a te p h a n o tls a n d b a b y 'a
breath showered with dainty
candlelight plcol streamers.
Marla Wolf, Winter Park,
attended the bride aa maid of

honor. She wore a formal
burgundy tissue taffeta gown
styled with a sweetheart
neckline and puffed sleeves.
The full flared skin fell softly
from the surplice bodice
draped with slight folds. She
wore a hairpiece o f pink silk
ro s e s , b u rg u n d y b a b y 's
breath and Queen Anne lace
and earned a nosegay o f pink
r o s e s , v a r ie g a t e d m in tcarnations, baby's breath
and slrphanotls.
Megan Wilkins, Sanford,
w as Ihe bridesm aid. Her
gown, flowers and hairpiece
wewre Identical to the honor
attendant's.
Jim Cook. Sanford, served
the bridegroom as best man.
Ushers were Rick Holloway,
Jay Morgan and Greg Wlngo.
G r o o m s m a n w as Pat
Stenstrom, brother o f the
bride, Sanford.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held In the
P a v t l l l o n R o o m o f th e
Longford Hotel. Winter Park.
After a wedding trip to
G a t lln b u r g . T e n n . . Ih e
newlyweds will make their
home at 136 Clear Lake
Circle, Sanford.
The bride Is employed us
office manager and REALTOR-Assoclate by Stenstrom
Really. Sanford. The bride­
groom la a builder/developer
and president o f Wlnaong
Development Corporation of
Central Florida.
A tten d in g the w ed d in g
were relatives and friends
from New Hampshire, Miami.
D a y to n a B e a c h . C o c o a .
Tampa. Palm Beach. DeLand
and Tavares.

R ick Rosa la w e ll known
throughout the Central Florida
area as an accomplished pianist
and organist having served aa
organ ist at Park Lake Preabytertan Church In Orlando and
aa organist-choirmaster at the
First Presbyterian Church in
Sanford. He serves aa organ
Instructor at Seminole Communlty College.
Tickets for the concert series
are required and may be ob­
tained by sending a donation to
the Seminole Community Col­
lege Foundatlon/Conoert Series,
c/o Dr. Burt H. Perlnchlef.
Seminole Community College.
Sanford. Florida 32771. A dona­
tion of 810 for general admission
or 84 for students w ill be

Who's Cooking?
■Hone for cooks of the week. Do
like to see featured In this spot?

Fifty truly beautiful babies
registered a* contestants for
Sanford's Moat Beautiful Baby
Contest held Feb. 9. at the
Sanford Nursing &amp; Convalescent
Center.
What a tough decision for the
following lodges: Sanford Mayor
B ettye Sm ith, Sanford C ity
Com m issioners Milton Smith
and R o b ert T h om a s. B etty
Tupker. Carrie Burgltt and Ned
Yancey.
A fter the traditional pomp,
pageantry and promenade, the
fo llo w in g w inners w ere announced:
Best Smile and Personality
Contest: Alexander Darnell, first:
Brandi Ftannagln. second: and
Kimberly Johnson, third.
Best Dressed Girls: Erlcka
Hills, (list; Kara Detwiler. sec*
ond: and Stacey Bacek. third.
Best Dressed Boys: Jim m y
Cannon, first: Joseph Bruno,
second: and Cassidy Sobol,
third.
M ost B ea u lfu l, A g e s 0-1:
Bonnie Ketth. first: Kara De­
tw iler, second: and Laquena
Grayson, third.
M ost B eautiful, A g e s I &gt;2:
Ashley Austin, first: Rebecca
Gilroy, second: and Jennifer
Sevceh. third.
Most B eautiful, A g e s 2*3:
Ashley Payne, first: Shawns
Thomason, second; and Angela
Pratt, third.

Doris
Dietrich

Altamonte Bowling Alley when,
they bowled, had Shamu birth*
day cake and supper along with
festive party trimmings.
Guests were Erin McKlbbln,
Natalie Nobles, Denise Fordham.
M arcy C h a g n o n , B r a n y
Dalmwood. Andrea Currie and
Valerie Weld.

Patti Edgemon. daughter o f
Dr. and Mrs. L.J. Edgemon, was
rsented the cap of the Georgia
ptlst Hospital School of Nurs­
ing In a ceremony at the First
Baptist Church o f Decatur on
Jan. 23.
Students receive the cap at the
end o f their first quarter In the
school. The capping ceremony la
a beautiful and-aaered service In
which a student accepts both the
responsibilities o f the Nightin­
gale ’Pledge aa well aa those
which the cap represents.
The Georgia Baptist rap has
three points which represent the
mental, physical and spiritual
aspects o f life. The points are
folded together and fastened
with a pearl button to symbolize
the necessity o f the three being
Integrated. The rounded front
C h ery l Ann Burch, re p re ­
represents a well-rounded per­
s e n t in g X I E p s ilo n S ig m a
sonality: the band exemplifies
Chapter, now reigns aa the
Sanford area Bela Sigma Phi service, the two ends o f the cap
Queen according to the results of stand for God and Man, both o f
the competition In the Annual whom Ihe nurse serves.
Charity Sweetheart Valentine
T h e S anford-Sem lnolc A rt
Ball held at the Sanford Ctvtc
Association
will hold the annual
Center Feb. 9.
member show and tea
In Ihe Mr. Legs Contest, by
popular vote. Bill Jack took the Sunday. Feb. 17. from noon to 5
crown with Monte Carmack as p.m .. at the Sanford C iv ic
the runner-up. There were 23 Center.
The show la dedicated to Ihe
Mr. Legs contestants.
Ball chairman Brenda Elswtck la te B eth G r e g o r y , an a c ­
s a id e v e r y t h i n g w a s ju s t complished artist who was a
member o f the association and
’ 'g r e a t . '* A b o u t 2 3 0 m e r ­
rymakers attended the glittering Its president In 1961 and 1962.
The event la free and open to
gala which Brenda speculates
the
public. Past SSAA presidents
will be the most popular social
gathering In Sanford In Ihe will serve as hostesses at the tea.
SSAA members donating their
future.
The proceeds, to be announced works o f art for drawings are :
at a later dale, will benefit the G in g e r A u m llt e r . C h a r le s
Dudley. Carol Gentry. Helen
Missing Children's Center Inc.,
Hickey. Ashby Jonea. Robert
Longwood.
Garcia. G ovena Powell. Faye
Bates Brockman was the guest Slier. E.B. Stowe and Marie
o f honor at a retirement recep- Richter.
lion Sunday. Feb. 10, at the
M ellonvlUe Avenue hom e o f
Rubye and Leo King. After Estes
and his wife. Glenns, arrived in
Florida from Cumberland. Md..
he spent more than 12 years
employed in the office of the
Seminole County Clerk of Court
as a statistical analyst,
A stead y stream o f w ell
wishers called during the hours.

from a beautifully appointed
table overlaid with a linen
cutwork cloth. Brase candle­
sticks accented the peach and

Infer. Nellie and Boyd Cofoman.
N ell and O rville Touchton.
LudBe JaneU. Mildred and Hood
Coker. Carolyn sad Archie Buie.
Edith Myers. Busts and Ahrtn
Calhoun. Clayda and Ashby

E

Doris Dunn Greer of Albany,
Oa.. was recently In Sanford to
visit her brother. Roland Dunn,
during his prolonged Illness.
Doris said that she and her
family wish to express their
gratitude to all who have been so
kind and gen erou s d u rin g
Roland's illness.
"The gifts of money, flowers
and food, as well as telephone
calls, visits, and especially the
prayers for his recovery, are
deeply apprpeclated.'' Doris
Bald. "The community love and
concern for Roland have been
overwhelming." she added.
According to Winifred "BUI"
Ole low. chairman of the Oreatcr
San ford C h a m b e r o f C om ­
merce's
Commit­
tee. the committee will hold a
plant sale from 8 a.m. to fl p.m.
on Friday and Saturday, March
8 and 9, at the Sanford Civic
Center.
BUI says that top quality rosea,
azaleas, caladluma and holly will
be offered.

Cheryl Ann Burch, Beta Sigma Phi Queen, and Bill Jack, Mr,
Legs, captured honors at the annual BSP Ball.

C L I P &amp; S A V E O N YOUFl
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Sunday, Ftb. U , IIU

Assembly

Episcopal

Baptist

Baptist

Nazarene

THE APPOINTMENT
Catholic
i u IM U C4TMUC C M C
Ml M In

M M , to

Sunday
Matthew

An upfinlnt ittc n i Is u p riv ileg e anil un
obligation.

3:13-16

Monday

It meuns that at a given lion rail else w ill lie
put aside liecuusc o f llic lnt|Mirtunec o f the mut­
ter wliieli pm nipteil the upfMilntmcnt.

13:3-10
Tuatday

Oalatiam
3:1-3

It menus that some thing nfenneem to you
Ik o f equal eoneem to som eone else.

Wadneaday
Qeneara

It means that fuels arc to Is: explained,
problem s studied, goals agreed on, progress
made.

93-13
Thurtday
Luka
Friday
n».t o m itim cam

IMwMm MCMM

IH IIW

kO h.

Jeremiah

The most lui|&gt;ortunt upjtolntmcnt In every
w eek Is the one ul worship. Your up|&gt;nlntmcnt
with (iud!

3:12-13
Saturday
Oenesit

Presbyterian

Anil— most o f ull— un uiqsilntmcnt means
thut the Issue involved is urgent und must lie
dealt ultlt \O W !

14 23-33

Christian

Pentecostal

{
J

22:9-13

Church Of God

Congregational

Spanish

Tho Following Sponsors M a to This Church Notlco And Directory Pago Possible

g u lp

smvics

Mai Dakla and Employoaa

Other Churches

�RELIGION
Briefly

Markle Named
Archbishop

Oviedo Baptist To Show
'Chariots O f Fire'Sunday

Bishop Dlsmas Markle,
Sanford* B i s h o p M a r k
Schultx, Ke nt u c ky , and
Archbishop John Adair,
Oklahoma, of the Eastern
Orthodox Catholic Church a
meeting of the Holy Synod
held In Sanford discuss busi­
ness. Markle, who was in­
stalled as the new metropoli­
tan archbishop Sunday In St.
John's Cathedral, Fern Park,
replaces Adair, who has re­
tired. Ordained bishop two
years ago, Markle will con­
tinue to live In Sanford with
his wife, Teresa and two
sons.

Chariots of Fire, the critically acclaimed motion picture that
won four Academy Awards Including "Best Picture." will be
presented In Its original un-cut form on Sunday at 8:15 p.m. at
First Baptist Church of Oviedo at the comer of State roads 434
and 428. The showing la free to the public.
The film traces the parallel stories of taro men durjng the
1920s— legendary Scotch track star. Eric Liddell, who later
returned to China as a missionary, and English runner Harold
Abrahams, both of whom followed different paths to win
Olympic gold medals.

Film Series Scheduled
Ptnccrcst Baptist Church will present the (11m. The God
Makers, at 0:15 p.m. Sunday In the fellowship hall. The
Investigative documentary Including on the Mormon Church,
will be shown as part of a series The Christian Confronting the
Cults. It Is open to youth and adults.

Scholarship Program
Hw»W nwto hr t M M f Vtatwrt

St. Matthew Missionary Baptist Church will hold Its third
scholarship program at 11 a.m. Feb. 24. Speaker for the
occasion will be Barbara Simmons.

Alliance
Missionaries
To Speak

Miracle Heeling Meetings Set
In order to minister to the needs of the surrounding
community. First Assembly of God In Sanford will hold miracle
healing meetings every Tuesday beginning Feb. IB at 7 p.m.
For further Information call the church office at 322-9222.

Scouts Perform For Church

The Rev. Raymond Rudes,
missionary with the Christian
and Missionary Alliance in In­
donesia, and Joanna Otis. CMA
misaionlonary to the Philippines,
will be speaking In a missionary
conference at The Sanford Alli­
ance C h u rc h . Sunday and
Monday at 7 p.m.

Boy Scout Troop 529. Paola. under the leadership of Bob
Brown, conducted a series of Indian dances on the grounds of
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church last Sunday afternoon to
highlight the church's annua] all member birthday celebration.
Elisabeth Circle of the Lutheran Church Women was In
charge of refreshments.

Lenten Services
Lenten services will begin this week on Ash Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church. 290O-A Orlando
Drive. Sanford. Application of ashes and Holy Communion will
be observed. Services will be held each Wednesday through
March 27.

R u d e s , a translator a n d
publishing specialist, will focus
his presentation upon the Im­
pact Christian literature makes
In a Muslim nation. With 30
years of service In Indonesia.
Rudes has ministered among the
Kenyah Dayak tribespeople as
well In urban area. He has
experience In every area of
missionary outreach—Including
m issionary aviation., ra d io
broadcasting and Bible transla­
tion.

Special Services Set
Messiah Lutheran Church of Casselberry will celebrate the
Transfiguration of Our Lord Sunday at the 8:30 and 11 a.m.
services. Holy Communion will be celebrated at 8:30 a.m. and
Sunday school for all ages at 9:30 a.m.
Ash Wednesday services will be held Feb. 20 with the
Imposition of ashes and Holy Communion.

Anniversary Services For Pastor

Men's Day will be observed si St. James AME Church, Ninth
Street and Cypress Avenue at 11 a.m. Sunday. The guest
speaker will be the Rev. David Connelly of Leesburg. The
Community Men's Chorus will sing. At 3 p.m.. the Rev. Joseph
Smith will be guest speaker. The Rescue Church of God Young
Adult Chorus will sing.

Black History Observed
Black History Month will be observed Sunday at First Shiloh
Missionary Baptist Church, W . 13th Street at the 11 a.m.
service. Speaker for the morning will be Sanford City
Commissioner Robert Thomas. First Shiloh Gospel Chorus will
sing. Mrs. Wilma Jones la chairman of the observance.

The Lenten Journey
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer. Sanford, will hold
midweek Lenten services beginning with Ash Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. on the theme Travel the Lenten Journey.

Fred Frank Concert
Fred Frank, TV-Gospel recording artist will appear In concert
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Rolling Hills Community Church.
Zeltwood. He has been featured on Dr. Robert Schuller's Hour
of Power, PTL and the 700 Club and prior to his music
ministry appeared In many films and musicals. Tickets,
though free, are required due to the limited seating. They may
be reserved and picked up at the night of the concert by calling
(300)880-7864.

Behnken Directs Campaign
Dr. L. Boyd Behnken. president of the Florida-Georgia
District and Campaign Director o f Ascension Lutheran
Church’s “A Time to Build" campaign will be the speaker at
the 8 am . 10:30 a m . services this Sunday. The church la
located at 351 Ascension Drive. Casselberry. New members
will be received Into the church at the 10:30 am . service and
welcomed at a rception following In Zehnder Hall.

Vietnam Vet To Speak

Jim and Joan Byars, Ovlado, and thalr vocal and trumpet
arrangements will be featured In the music series at 4
p.m. Sunday at First United Methodist Church, 419 Park
Ave., Sanford. Since 1977 they have dedicated their lives
and talents to sharing the Gospel of Jesus Christ through
their Mighty Wind Ministries. Their music covers a wide
range of classical, traditional and contemporary works.
The concert Is free to the public. A nursery will be
provided.

Mrs. Otis and her husband.
Gerald began their ministry In
the Philippines in 1987^.He has
been mission chairman for 10
yean and they have been In­
volved in church growth pro­
jects.

Members of West Sanford Free W ill Holiness Church. 814
Mulberry Ave.. will recognise the fifth anniversary as church
pastor of Elder Hexektah Rosa with a week of nightly services at
7:30 p.m. beginning Monday and climaxing Sunday at a 3 p.m.
service. There will be guest choirs and speakers will be
featured.

Men's Day A t St. James

Byers Concert

Report Cites Persecution O f Bahais
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
annual State Department report
on human rights singles out
Iran’s persecution of the Bahais,
citing "rampant” torture and the
assassination of at least 29 of
their faith.
The annua] report said there
were marginal Improvements In
Iran In 1904 but It still found
harsh evidence of torture,
murder and Islamic repression.
The report found that there la
considerable circumstantial evi­
dence of Iranian Involvement In
te rro ris m and p o litic a l
assassins Ilona in 1804 appar­
e n tly n u m bered se v e ra l
hundred.
Persecution of the Bahais In­
cluded the assassination of at
least 29 of their faith and reports
of torture are "ram pant." the
report said.
Assistant Secretary of Bute
Elliott Abram s called particular
attention to Iran’s apparent re­
nunciation of the Universal De-

Marriage Series
To Be Offered
Church counselor Peg Ley trill
lead a six-week Sunday School
class at Community United
Methodist Church. Casselbeny.
on The Care and Maintenance of

deration of Human Rights, the
first such action by any nation In
the 38-year history of the de­
claration.
Abrams said moat tyrants at
least pay Up service to the
standards set forth by the de­
claration. but pointed out that
Iran’s ambassador to the United
Nations recently told a U.N.
meeting that his country would
’’not hesitate to violate'* the
declaration.
Spokesmen for the American
Bahai community called on the
U.N. Commission on Human
Right* lo adopt a strong resolu­
tion condem ning Iran's vio­
lations of fundamental human
rights.
"It is essential to keep the
spotlight on Iran." said Flnix

Kazemxadeh. vice chairman of
the American Bahai.
"W e mourn the loss of nearly
200 Iranian Bahais who have
died for their religious faith.**
Kazemiadeh said. "But we are
convinced that the persecution
would have been far worse had It
not been for such expressions of
concern from the world outside
Iran."
Last March the U.N. com­
mission voted to send a special
repreaentaUve to Iran to make a
thorough study of the human
rights situation, for a report to
the commission’s 1905 session.
The Bahai faith, (bunded In
Persia, now Iran. In U » mid-19th
century, has some 3 million
adherents worldwide. Including
about 100,000 American Bahais.

Families are
for lovingt

GRANDPARENTS'
DAY

Central
Baptist

jf u e / id . . .

' W
M

CELEBRATION OF WOR8HIP IN
THE SPIRIT AND THE WORD.

SUNDAY SCHOOL ............. .......................
MORNING WORSHIP ....................................
EVENING W ORSHIP........... .......................
William Thompson, Pastor

MO

Sanford Church o f G od

M l Wsst n o d Street

ttM W

a Good Marriage.
Centered on the film series by
0. Dean Martin. It will run Feb.
24 through March 31 at 11 a.m.
Those Interested may register by
calling the church office,
Bess ton Utica Include: Why

Good Marriagea often ra t].
Identifying and Raising the Little
You. Scratching Where tt &lt;
Sex— Resetting the'
Charing Static on the Line and
Keya to Keeping a Good Thing
Going.

CHILD-ABUSE

Comm Jo in U s in
B a h S tu d y A s W s

North Central
Florida Friends
(NORCEFF)
P re se n ts

The Carter Tabernacle
Mass Choir In Concert

U e ts m T s O u r
Q m sd p sn m ts S in g
In T h s C h o ir,

BIBLE STUDY
9:SO A.M.
WORSHIP
11:00 A.M.
FEBRUARY
17th
•„*». a sww e v •

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4C— Evening Herald, Sanford, PI.

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Sunday, Feb. 17. ItU

Aniwer 10 Pr*YKXj» Punfe

HOROSCOPES

"o 1 S
R A V 1
U A _l_ A

What The Day
Will Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUARY 17. IM S

BEETLE BAILEY
YOUR SERSEAKIT
15 UNBELIEVABLE.'
WHAT'S MIS
f
NAM E ?
dT,

M EET M AC THE
KNIFE, PORK AM P
,
SPO O N

HAVE &gt;t&gt;U HEARD
OFMAGTHE KNIFE

THE BORN L08E R
FDR'&lt;O,tff'0OfiTM6
FIRST VOLUME CfIME

I'M BUYIW6 A NEW VOLUME EACH
MONTH JIILVOU HAVE ALL 241

r T ENCfcLCPEPlA..

M Y MOTH0 ? USED TD SW

rr is tar b e t t e r tdq\£

BUT TVS ALimtS BEEN
THE REBEUiCUS TYPE

T W S RAJWY..THATS
WHAT SHE USEDTOOMi ME

In the year ahead you can
derive substantial benefit* by
gaining more knowledge about
your chosen field. Expend upon
your education and take advan­
tage o f any new courses offered
you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
Extra effort w ill be required
today If you expect to achieve
your objectives. Take your set­
backs In stride and continue to
push on. Looking for Mr. Right?
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
can show you who you are best
suited to romatlcally. T o get
yours mall 52 to Astro-Graph.
Box 489, Radio City Station.
New York. NY 10010.
PUCES (Peb. 20-March 20)
Uncharacteristically, you m ay
be tempted to do something out
of spile to one who has wronged
you In the past. Forgive, don't
try to get even.
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 10)
Even If you are doing business
today with people you know and
trust, be sure to spell everything
out so there w on 't be an y
misunderstandings later.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You may not find easy answers
to tough questions today so
when assessing situations, do so
logically, not Just optimistically.
OEMIM (May 21-June 20)
Before getting yourself Involved
In new project* or ventures at
this lime, check out every ram i­
fication so you know exactly
what lo expect.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
You might be tempted to take
daks or buck odds today that
you normally w ouldn't Ira best
that you be cautious Instead o f
caprlcloua.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) In
Important fam ily matters today,
be sure to Include your mate In
the declalon-m aklng process.
Unless you're both In accord,
problems m ay result.
VIROO (A u g. 23-Sept. 22)
Today you may spend more time

8 Chttfl game
• Trick
10 First ret* (2

1B Towel word
20 UnpUyod golf

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11 Antarctic tea
17 Black
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23 For
23
25 Whole-.
28 Cold .nO d.mp
passenger
15 ****•'7
27 tUdwscwe els- „ eutomoWe
mom

18 Ab0v*

31 Novelist Hunter 22 P®*1
32 Forohood
28 Drawing cIom
33 Accountant
to
(•bbrj
30 Hawaiian itfand
34 lamprey
32 Conceal
35 Bother. (.1)
38 Chinos*
premier
3B Spam.h hero
1
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3

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14

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45 Egyptian deity
47 Join
48 Morne.
50 Environment
•goncy (abbr)
51 Spawn
52 Haggard novel

38 Hog.
3B Trot
41 Fleshy
42 Dip out
43 Biblical
propose

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41

44

41
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and effort figuring out ways to
dodge your responsibilities than
doing aomethlng constructive
about them.
LIBRA (S ep t. 23-Oct. 23)
Strive to be aa open and generoua with frlenda today as they
are with you. When the tabs arc
presented, volunteer lo pay your
fair share.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Although you'll make every ef­
fort today to be a nice guy. you
m ay sill) encounter someone

Impossible to please.

SAOITTAR1U8 (Nov. 23-Dec.
2 ) ) Be a good listener today and
ask quest Ions If you want some­
thing clarified. Don't pretend
you understand what Is being
said If you really don't.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jan.
10) Be wary o f catering lo
extravagant fancies today. If you
let your guard down. It's likely
you'll spend funds In a foolish
fashion.

THAN TO RECEIVE"
TOUR BIRTHDAY
PSBRUARY IS. 1945

by Harpraava* A Boiler*

f HEALTH IS )
V. WEALTH
J
WHICH
WOULD *Tt&gt;U
RATHER BE,
M R .H A P P Y

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(o ^ ) a
to

/..A M P ITS
( TAX FREE 1 J

[ w

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by W aroar Brothers

Cm &gt;‘A r j RBEARiN SAU20T.

PERSONNEL

(5 ^ ,

WOULD -TWIN*, o p
RUNNING- a MARATHON
Th QOUSN a SgVVER.

fk
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I PHYJ'CF ANP

£ x c m f m v t x y , TtvffLva yeAftf
ri

W ITH K L L LA * /, f i x

r=SL NO*fL p x a g f . . . .
w h a t*

New channels will open for
you In the year ahead that will
lead to advancement In your
field. These breaks will come In
an unexpected manner.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Be duty conscious today and do
what'a expected o f you. but also
leave youraelf som e time to
p a r t ic ip a t e In p le a s u r a b le
pursuits. Major changes are In
store for Aquarians In the com ­
ing year. _
PISCES. 20-March 20) Trends
and tides will be shifting In your
favor today. You may be able to
achieve an objective you pre­
viously thought was unattaina­
ble.
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 10)
Your greatest benefits today will
come through your more ag­
gressive contacts. Avoid In ­
volvem ents w ith people who
think “ status quo."
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A
unique Idea may dominate your
thinking today. Don't discount It
Just because It's a departure
fro m y o u r n o rm a l w ay o f
operating.
OBMINI (May 21-June 20)
Listen attentively when smart
people speak today. Someone
you'll be talking to may furnish

By James Jaoeby
Harry Ftahbeln. one of the
great experts In American
bridge, waa known aa "Master of
the Mayfair." That he owned the
Mayfair Bridge Club in New York
e x p l a i n s o n e p art o f h la
nickname. Today's deal show*
the aptncaa of the other part.
At rubber bridge, even oddaon
grand slams are not always bid.
After *11. If aomethlng devlttahly
unlucky occurs, you have loot
the points for making * small
•lam . When dummy cornea
down In today's deal, you
wonder why you didn't reach
•even spades Instead of six.
That's line, but meanwhile you

you with a brilliant point of view
you haven't yet considered.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Don't be hesitant lo experiment
with new procedures today at
work. You could develop some
step-savers that will enhance
your productivity.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
have the ability today lo analyze
situations on the spot and come
up with the right answers while
your associates arc still trying to
understand the problem.
VIROO (A u g. 23-Sept. 22)
Today you may have a tendency
to let duties go until the last
minute. However, you'll still be
Ingenious enough to squeeze
things In under the wire.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Ocl. 23) Try
to keep your schedule aa flexible
as possible today. There's a

chance something fun may pop
up that you'll want to do.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
C la n - t and circumstances tend
to favor you today where materi­
a l In terests are co n cern ed .
Something financially opportune
could come through n loving
friend.
SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23 Dec.
21) It will be easy for you to gain
the support of others today for
ventures In which you truly
believe. Associates will respect
your Judgment.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jar
19) Keep a weather eye peeled
for opportunities today because
you might be able to pick up
som ething of personal value
t h a t 's been o v e r lo o k e d by
others.

ti, CONNil WKNiN

UMUMi w* suoAu* ‘suoO Ul.| usu* yURII noA oq
son* *w 8*a - ..AS*** Amssjp A*n»»a po&lt;j i W i

spade* and got the bad news
that there waa a trump loser.
How fortunate that he had ru«ed
a club)
He cashed the heart queen and
played out hla high diamonds. If
East ruffed any nigh diamond,
hla exit card would let declarer
get to the dummy sooner or
later. If East held off until the
fourth round o f diamonds, at
which time declarer would
trum p In dum m y and East
would ovemiff. declarer would
then be able to pick up the

Opening lead: 4Q

ANY OTHER

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\/IFWPniNT
Robert Petree
If There Has To Be
Growth, He Still
Wants Elbow Room
By Rick Bronson
H erald S ta ff W rite r
Combine Indiana Jones, the
adventure-seeking archaeologist
o f movie lore, with activist at­
torney Clarence Darrow. and
naturalist James Audubon and
you gel Robert Petree — Lake
Mary City Attorney.
W h e t h e r h e Is s c a l i n g
volcanoes In Africa In search o f a
rare strain of orchid or Jousting
with a developer at Lake Mary
City Hall. Petree Is trying to
p r e s e r v e w h a t Is n a tu r a l,
beautiful and Just In the world.
The 50-year-old Peirce's world
view Is filtered with a love and
appreciation for orchids, birds
and ancient civilizations. He sees
everything In the light o f pre­
servation of history and con­
servation o f the environment.
That vision brought him to
what Is now Lake Mary 20 years
ago and Is what continues to
nourish his actions as the city's
attorney.
H e fe ll In lo v e w ith the
sp aciou sn ess o f th e sleep y
village, along with Its pastoral
atmosphere. He built a house on
an island on Crystal Lake on the
edge o f the city limits where he
said he feeds geese and ducks.
But before long the sleepy
village woke up to tractors and

dump trucks — the sounds of
developers razing trees and
building subdivisions.
With Caterpillar earth movers
c ra w lin g all over the area.
Petree's peace has been dis­
turbed and he's speaking out
about it whenever he gets the
chance.
From the den of his home,
surrounded by 6.000 books
about topics ranging from art to
z o o lo g y . P e tr e e r e c e n tly
lamented the results o f rapid
growth In Florida and Lake
Mary.
“ You used to step off a plane
at Herndon or wherever and
smell orange blossoms. Now you
smell sewage plants. And I don't
care how effic ie n tly th ey 're
managed, they smell like sewage
plants." Petree said. "A n d I
wouldn't eat anything out o f any
lake 100 miles around here."
Growth is taking Its toll on
more than the state's natural
resources, he said. Crowding
afflicts humans and their cultur­
al means o f relating to one
another, according to PeUee. To
him, a rural way o f life Is being
lost.
“ There's a whole generation
coming up that doesn't know
what blackberry pie tastes like,"
he said.

ttweWFlwNSr Oresenr e»lwi

Petree is a devotee of classical music and a pianist in his own right
Petree b elieves there Is a
definite relationship between
“ elbow room " and a communi­
ty's quality o f life.
" L a c k o f It (elbow room )

creates violent people," Petree
said.
He admits that growth In Lake
Mary and the state cannot be
stopped, but Is quick to add that

state and city ofllclals must take
steps to blunt the effects of
grow th on the ecology und
“ human spirits of those who
have to live close together."

Petree said the Lake Mary City
Commission, which hr serves,
h a s th e p o litic a l w ill am i
fortitude to control growth. Its

Baa PETREE. page 4D

Spending Patterns Shifting For Most Am ericans
NEW YORK (UPI) — Americans spend less o f
their Income on food than they did 10 years ago
and more than 32 percent o f their food dollars arc
now spent In restaurants, a Conference Board
study shows.
The study, prepared by the Board's Consumer
Research Center, reports that food consumption
overall accounts for only 17 percent of U.S. family
income, down frost -19 percent in 1070 and 22
percent In 1960. But more than 32 percent la now
spent on food eaten away from home, up from 26
percent In the early 1970s and 17 percent in the
early 1960s.
“ Th e degree o f a nation's economic well-being
can almost always be measured by the proportion
o f family Income spent for food.'Tablan Linden.
Board economist who directed the Hears!
Corp.-sponsored study, said.
"W hile food conaumptlon has Increased more

rapidly than population, it has grown more slowly
than Income." Linden said. Slightly more than
half the Increase in food expenditures was due to
population gains and "th e rest represents an
Important Improvement In living standards."
The study, based on data collected by _lhc
Bureau o f Labor Statistics between 1900 and
1961. revealed that the country's buying habits

ANALYSIS
have been strongly affected by changes In
education levels, women In the workforce and the
trend of amaller families.
Linden aald the changing demographics have
"profound and provocative Implications for the
economy In general."
Among other findings:

—Singles and two-person families account for
m ore than 40 percent o f all supermarket
urchascs, up from one-third a decade ago. Large
ouseholds account for leas than 20 percent of
food purchases, down from 30 percent.
—
r m a r k e t ------s h o-p------p e r s , am
r eo r e
. S
- u
- p
re
--------------sophisticated. College-educated families account
for 46 percent of all food industry sales, u p from
30 percent In 1970. Wofggn play an Important
role In this trend, accounting for 52 percent of all
college students, compared to 40 percent In 1970.
—Meat claims less than 25 percent o f the family
food budget compared to 29 percent In the early
1970s. Declines have been moot pronounced In
beef and pork.
—Spending for wine increases with education
— modestly educated families spend 15 percent
of alcoholic beverage budget on wine, compared
to more than 30 percent for families with college

E

education. Families with less than high school
education spend over 60 percent of their alcohol
budget for beer and ale, compared to leas than 40
percent among those with college degrees.
Spending on whiskey and other hard liquor
accounted foe 13 percent o f the alcohol budget,
down from M w rc c h tln 1970.
The stud/’Also nbtfcd that births lit the Dulled
Stales ire expected to reach 4 million in I960, a
numberrjust
Just below
bekr the peak o f the post-war Baby
Boom.
But women are having fewer children, shrink­
ing the average household size. Families o f five or
more, which used to account for 30 percent o f all
households, now make up leas than 20 percent.
And while people aged 25 to 34 hove been a
major purchasing force, the moat growth tn
household Income In the coming years will conic
from those aged 35 to 44.

The Graves They Dug Were For Their Own Children
It was a hard, high, dry land, a
land of mountains and deserts,
little blessed by nature.
But people survived In this
land. They lived a hard life, but
they lived.
There were droughts tn this
land, terrible droughts. The
droughta turned fields of grain
Into clouds of swirling dust, as
the land became aa dry and
parched as the faces of Its
people. But the people kept
fighting, kept producing, kept
existing.
And then a new government
seized power. It eras a govern­
ment committed to socialism, to
throwing off the yoke of its
capitalist oppressors. It was to be
a government for all the people.
The new government taught
school children to sing thia song:

We struggle against capital­
ism.
We fight to free the oppressed.
W e dig the graves o f the
Imperialists.
United we face all tests.
The children sang this song
with determination, with clen­
ched flats. Thetis araa a struggle
for the independence that would
bring prosperity. Theirs waa a
struggle against the stinginess of
nature, against the Imagined
oppressors.
Socialism required that pro­
duction benefit the people, not
the capitalists. And so the gov­
ernment seised the factories. It
seized the banks. It seized the
transpo nation fac111
Only when the government
controlled production. It araa
thought, could production serve

Dollars
ft

(Non)Contt

all the people.
But when production waa for
the people, and not for the
capitalists, it did not do as well.
Orowth in Industrial output,
which had been much more
rapid than growth In output In
outer poor countries, fell to half
the rate of growth in the those
countries.
Investment did not grow aa it
did tn other countries. It fell. It
fell year after year after year.

Not only industrial output was
to be for the people. Food was to
be for the people as well. The
government sought the advice ol
experts from the Soviet Union
and Cuba, who could explain
how to make agriculture for
everyone.
The government fixed the
prices fanners could charge for
food. It held those prices cons­
tant. year after year after year.
Other prices went up. but not
the prices farmers received for
food.
Farmers, stripped of the In­
centive to grow more rood, didn't
produce aa much. The output of
food per person plunged.
Controlling prices wasn't
enough. The government took
over the distribution of the food,
to ensure that It would go to the

people. But the government’s
system could not handle the food
the farmers produced. Grain
rotted in the fields.
The government also con­
trolled the price of the country's
currency, the birr. It held the
b i r r h igh a n d p r o u d and
expensive. And so the country's
exports were expensive. And so
they fell. They fell year after year
after year.
Then the next drought came.
It dried up the crops, as It always
had.
The people suffered, as they
always had. But this time their
suffering was heaped upon the
suffering already arrought by the
perverse policies of the govern­
ment. policies that bad shriveled
the economy In a way no
drought ever could.

And so the su ffering was
greater. People starved. They
starved by the thousands and
tens o f thousands.
Th e brave children with thr
clenched fists were grown up
now. They dug graves, as I heir
song had promised. But the
graves they dug were not for the
imperialists, but for their own
children.
Th ey had fought against
oppression. Bui In their turn to
socialism, the people of Ethiopia
had succeeded only In bringing
upon themselves the worst
oppression of all. the oppression
or poverty and death.

(Timothy Tregarthen welthe opportunity to con eapond with readers. Write him Mi
the Evening Herald).

TrucUau

DOONESBURY
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Evening Herald
Warn* D. Doyle. PuMIther
Them** Giordano, Managin* Editor
Melvin Adhlnt, Advortlilng Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.10. Month. 94.75: 3 Months.
914.25: 6 Month*. 927.00: Year. 951 00 tiy Mall: Week.
91.50: Month. 90 00: 3 Month*. 91ft 00: SMonth*. 932.50
Year. 960 00

Putting Thu Cart
Before The Horse
The Seminole County Commission aeema
to be putting the cart before the hone by
Including certain information In a letter to a
developer regarding the proposed purchase o f
land for a new library site.
: Indeed, the letter and additional negotia­
t i o n w ith the developer m ay alao be
premature, since the county can't be certain
without aotl borings If the site la suitable for
theproposed two-story library building.
The commission, by a 4-1 vote, agreed to
send the letter to Norman Roaaman, the
developers' representative, offering td buy a
five-acre tract In Casselberry as a main
library site. Only Commissioner BUI Klrchhoff
objected strenuously, especially because the
letter contains a reference to discussing
condemnation proceedings If the county Is
unable to buy a site for the new library.
K lrch h ofre opposed to that reference
because he fears the county wUI unwittingly
participate In assisting the developer to
icorrectly delay or avoid pa\
paying taxes on any
Incorrectly
BDttal gains resulting from the sale.
As a matter o f fact, Klrchhoff la so incensed
he's threatened to send a letter to Internal
Revenue Service pointing out the CAunty
never Intended to use Its power o f eminent
domain In condemning a site for a new
library.
Apparently IRS has a rule which allows a
landowner to either delay or avoid paying a
capital gains tax when he*a forced to aell
property to a governmental agency possess­
ing power o f eminent domain and he’s been
threatened with that process.
Has the developer been threatened with
that process simply because the county
Indicates In Its letter that It probably "would
discuss condem nation" If it falls In its
negotiations with him, and is ultimately
unable to buy a suitable site?
t, Commissioner Fred Streetman says he
doesn't think so, and adds he himself would
vote sgalnat using condemnation to acquire a
site for a new library if the matter eventually
comes up.
■Streetman also says the only reason the
County Is including the reference to con­
demnation in Its letter is because the
developers' representative himself asked If
the county would consider such action If an
agreement to buy the land cannot be
reached.
Commssloner Streetman points out he
doubts IR S w ould con stru e that as a
legitimate threat of condemnation, since the
developer himself raised the issue. Sounds
right. Still, was It necessary for the county to
Include that reference In Its letter? We think
not. tf the developer
Dper chose to raise the Issue
again at aome future date, fine. But the
county need not have addreaaed In Ita letter
one o f several possible avenues U can take to
acquire a library site before It reached the
point where that might have become necea-

sary.

Furthc
ter. County Engineer BUI Bush says In
hla opinion only about 2.5 acres of the tract
may be usable for development, with the
balance useless wetlands. He said the only
way to determine If the soil, even on the dry
portion, can support a building of more than
one story is through soil borings.
■The Casselberry library la to be designed to
accom m odate a second story In future
expansion. The county haa not yet received a
survey o f the property and probaby wtU not
until March 6, according to county officials.
When that infbrmatlon Is received, It will be
aent to Bush for hla evaluation.
But, the only way to know for certain if the
property can be used for a two-story building
is through soil borings to determine what's
under the surface. The architect o f the library
facility w ill need that Information, Bush says.
We can appreciate the county looking Into
possible sties as early as possible, but we
don't think It's necessary to imply to any
proposed buyer that It will make certain
concessions or take a particular action If a
meeting o f the minds can't be reached. At
Iqaat not until commissioners know for
certain a particular site la deemed suitable far
q new llberary building.

BERRY* WORLD

It Don't Reach The Crest Without Arrest
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The "in " thing for picketing too close to an embasaay. a misde­
certain celebrities and other VIPs to do these meanor. Alao a "photo opportunity" If ever
days is get arrested while demonstrating outside there was one.
It used to be said during some of the Mg
the South African embassy.
It Isn’t enough, apparently, simply to exhibit demonstrations In the I960* that the protesting
disapproval
ral of that country’s policies. The usually didn't really get started until the
as iarrived.
television cameras
Importent part Is being carted off by the cops.
I certainly wouldn't be so cynical sa to suggest
So what if the charges generally are dropped.
that publicity has anything to do with the South
It’s the symbolism that counts.
I was aware, of course, that many stars of the Africa protest movement. But how could the
political, sports, trade union, clerical and stage senator be so sure he eras going to be arrested?
worlds had been among the approximately 800 After all. only a minority of the demonstrators
demonstrations arrested at the site since become emmeshed in the tods of the law.
The news release would appear to be prims
organised picketing began in November.
But I didn’t really realize how structured the facie evidence that collusion of a sort with the
protesting had become until I saw a future-tense police department was afoot
If so. Imagine how embarrassing It must be to
press release from a senator’s ofllce.
It announced that the lawgiver "will be Join the protest movement and not be arrested,
‘he Implication Is that un arrested de­
arrested outside the South African embasaay" The
monstrators. regardless of how sincere their
and even gave the hour of the projected bustS u r e seint u
o u g h , the s e n a to r w a s duly feeling*, aren’t Important enough to make the
apprehended, handcuffed and hauled away to police blotter.
Second bananas, say. arrive at the embasaay
where he was booked for
ponce headquarters
hesdqt

ROBERT WALTERS

Search
For Tax
Shelters

Help
Minority
Pupils
The integration of American
public schools, decided by the U.3.
Supreme Court over three decadee
Suprenv
fa becoming an emotionally
ago- fa

charged
Despite the good that school
Integration has brought — Improved
achievement for minorities, in­
creased educational options for all
students, benefits to society as a
whole — the prospects for further
school Integration seem dim under
the Reagan administration.
Thus, im proving segregated
schools becomes an attractive pro­
spect.
A new report from the Joint
Center for Political Studies says that
the Justice Department fa now
employing "th e worst possible
strategy for achieving successful
dssegre gallon."
The report. Issued 30 years after
Brown vs. Board of Education, by
Dr. Jennifer L. Hochachlld. says
that supporters of better education
ck children
chlldre ought to examine
for black
"h igh quality, black-domtnated
schools ss an attractive alternative
to mandatory reassignm ent..."
Dr. Hochachlld, an assistant pro­
fessor of politics and public policy at
the Woodrow Wilson School of
International Affairs at Princeton,
says that much haa been ac­
complished since 1954: The p ro
portion of blacks In predominately
black school* dropped from 77
percent In 1966 to 63 percent
nt in
1900. The proportion or blacks In
racially Isolated schools (more lthan
90 percent minority enrollment)
dropped even more — from twothirds In 1966 to one-third In 1960.
Most of this drop occurred be­
tween 1966 and 1972. Since 1976.
there's been no noticeable lessening
of racial segregation.
The 8outh, where
icre se:
segregated
required by law,
witnessed the greatest reduction In
segregation. ...
________ _______
In northern
elates.
racial Isolation haa Increased and fa
even accelerating. Today, almost
one-half of northern black students
attend all-minority schools, com­
pared with one-quarter of black
children in the 8outh.
Black atudenta are alao dla&lt;
proportionately placed in classes for
the "educabfe mentally retarded"!
black and Hlapanic atudenta are
more Ukeiy to be plaeed In compenand are
i likely to be placed to rfasats for
gifted. talented or college-bound
children.

RUSTY BROW N

Maternity With Honor
Next week, a 28-year-old utilityfirm analyst named Nick! will re­
luctantly leave her 7-week-old baby
and return to work.
"I still reel trashed out physi­
cally./' she says. She applied for an
additional 30-day leave-wlthoutpay, but her supervisor had (o OK It
— and didn't. "It'a either go beck to
work or lose my Job." aaya the new
mother.
At a small law firm down the
street, one of the secretaries, who
also Just had a baby, thlnka Nlckl fa
lucky: "I only got two weeks paid
leave."
The difference in how these two
companies handle a worker's pre­
gnancy la typical.i Across the
country, maternity-leave policies
va ry w id e ly . T h ey are often
arbitrary or vague — and many
com panics have no policy at all.
It fa estimated that only 40
percent of employed women receive
a alx-week disability leave for
childbirth. That proviso fa the result
of the Pregnancy Disability Act of
1976, a measure requiring compa­
nies to treat pregnancy aa a disabili­
ty If disability benefits are provided
In other situations.
Payment varies, however, and la
usually a percentage based on
aenlorMy.
Unfortunately, the majority of
women work for smaller companies
that offer no fringe benefits, so their
pregnancies are not covered. Only
five states (California. Hawaii, New
Jersey. New York and Rhode Island)
have temporary-disability legistsUsability
lion giving short-term dli
payments to almost all working

women.
Social workers Shelia Kamerman
and Alfred Kahn o f Columbia Uni­
versity's School o f Social W ork
surveyed 250 companies and In a
comprehensive report noted: "Most
working women still have no — or
very little — Income protection at
childbirth."
Many women also face the worry
that If they take unpaid leave for
severe! months, they might not gel
their Jobe back.
What a contrast with moat Euro­
p e a n c o u n t r i e s , w h e r e th e
minimum fa 14 weeks paid leave. In
Sweden, mothers receive 90 percent
of their salaries for up to nine
months. Furthermore, the "parent
benefit" can be used by fathers, too.
Kamerman and Kahn think It'a
Ironic that the United States, one of
the richest countries tn the world,
fags In recognising the Importance
of ensuring new parents and their
Infants a decent period for recovery
and for launching
n ln g rtheir lives
together.
A survey by Catalyst — the
non-profit agency monitoring career
and family fan es — shows that a
handful o f U .8. companies are
le a d in g the w a y to a u p srio r
maternity benefits. CBS provides
paid maternity laava and allows
mothers or fathers to taka up to aix
months unpaid leave with Job rein­
statement guaranteed. American
Telephone fa Telegraph haa a policy
of eight weeks paid leave for the
mother, and couples working for the
company can take up to a year of
unpaid leave between them.

WASHINGTON - When the oU
potentate* overestimated the de­
mand far their product and brought
on a worldwide glut, prices tumbled
•g o t a break.
But whan U S. officials made
predictions for the nuclear
Industry, and a worldwide
g u t of enriched uranium followed
the taxpayer* who a n getting

on the import of foreign uranium.
Uranium from abroad poured in.
restriction* were retmpoaed. Today, only 30 percent of
roost power companies’ enriched
uranium f i t be imported, but than
is no limit to the amount of raw

former Capitot &gt;1111 expert on the
subject, X costs the government
6160 to produce each SW U it aeila
to Ms nietomara. This may be a
bargain far tha

and turn over to the Energy De­
partment for enrichment.

to total 9.9
SWU*. That would meat a
loaa of almoot .6450 oHlIloa.

The marketing Smeniriminl of
enrtckod uran ium Is called a
Separative Work Unit, or SW U.
Foreign producer* currently o s l
enriched uranium for anywhere

to

then-Rep. Richard OtUnger, D-N.Y.
orderedthe
“ General Account­
----------------ing Office to Investigate. In their
report, the Investigators n—if-hHM
that the government could not
break even on Its new 10-year
contract as the law requtass it to do.
The brveatigBtors found that the
i la shuffling; Ifigures to make
Ms uranium p ro y am appear
venL It plane to writ*
.
o f Ita debt aa plant and _
depreciation and to undervalue the
exceee enriched uranium it haa

from S00 to $117 per SWU.
John Longencckcr, the official in
charge o f the enrichment program.
to my
Warren that the agency hasn't met
Me coats in the peat, and does owe
the Treasury money. As for the
uating Office's critV
of H i accounting pw oduiM e
■aid the Energy De-

The Energy Deportment's price
varied from 6139 to 6100; aa a
result, H now ha* * oom 24 million
SW U* on It* hands. To get rid of
thfa. it hm offerid power rompanfea
a lOyaar cot

kanntia but
price of watched uraafum they buy
frw aP O E wfBi
6139per I

.

Hull, a

Li-*

a

Taxpayers Pay For Nuke Gamble

0 n a n c y mmrou,
if

WASHINGTON (NEA) - A Connectlcut firm offers potential In­
vestors a "tax write-off (of) 100
p ercent to 130 p e r c e n t .” A
California company advertises
"excellent lax advantages'' for
those whose money It manages.
An Oklahoma enterprise boasts
that Its financial backera have been
able to deduct almost 90 percent of
their Investment from their federal
Income taxes In the very first year of
their participation in oil and gaa
exploration ventures.
Those c o m p a n ie s — and
hundreds of others throughout the
country — are In the business of
providing tax shelters to people who
believe the
ley can legally evade their
tax IfablllUea by taking advantage of
loopholes in federal
cdei laws.
"The Idea behind a tax abetter fa
to pay one dollar for two dollars,
three dollars or more worth of
deduction*,'' explains a report Just
Issue d b y P u b l ic C ltlx e n , a
Washington organization founded
by public Interest activist Ralph
Nader.
"The secret of tax shelters fa that
they produce artificial or paper
losses that don't come from incur­
ring financial losses but which still
reduce taxes." adds the report.
To achieve that goal, tax shelters
are specifically structured to lake
maximum advantage of accelerated
depreciation schedules. Investment
tax credits, deductions for Interest
payments, depletion allowances and
mother arcane provisions burled In
the federal tax code.
The variety of Investments offered
by tax shelters fa truly astounding.
Most popular are oil and gaa explo­
ration ventures and real estate
Investments In office building*,
sh o p p in g centers, apartm en t
houses, factories, warehouses and
every other imaginable type or
structure.
Other tax shelters specialize in
leasing railroad boxcars, barge*,
commercial aircraft and oil tankers.
Agricultural ventures Include the
raising of cattle, horses, sheep,
ducks and even i
u
is the growing of such esoteric
crop# a# kiwi fruit and jojoba bean*.
Until the mid-1970*. tax shelters
were the almost exclusive province
o f the very wealthy. Now. however,
they have been "dem ocratized" and
Investors are aa likely to be forklift
operators as surgeons.
Novices, however, can encounter
unexpected problems. Some hapless
amateurs have lost all o f their
savings In fraudulent tax shelter
schemes while others have bec ome
Investors in "abusive" shelter*

JA CK ANDERSON

ago, tha
A t o m ic E n e r g y C o m m is s io n
forecast a rapid sad virtually limitIsm growth o f nurtm r power and
tha need for

I
!
M

with publicity agents In tow ready to give their
fingerprints for the cause. But officers on the
scene refuse to cooperate, possibly because they
don’t recognise the offenders.
Far be It from me to recommend that leaser
known public figures try bribery as a means of
getting themselves colfared. But If I vtew»*d my
arrest as being as newsworthy as the pinching of
a Senate committee chairman. I would certainly
want to make sure the skids were greased In
advance.
W e may never learn the truth unles# the FBI
steps tn with one of Its highly publicized scam
operations.
"How much would It be worth to you to be
arrested outside the embassy?" asks an FBI
agent posing as a local law enforement officer
before hidden cameras.
"Depends on the number of reporters and
cameramen present." replies a person of
would-be distinction.
A u p 1like that could be a tougher rap to beat
than picketing within 500 feet of an embassy.

JULIAN BOND

The federal government, caught
by Ms own mfacalcuiaUona,, Ifa losing
roughly 645 « unit on the millions
of units of enriched uranium that
thel H
each year for tha

! f

- - W: V*..
&gt;3

D IC K

(USPi *#1-7*0)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305 322-2611 or S31-9993
Sunday, February 17, 19*5 — JD

r r / , &gt; - ■**s** J

to

�t

OPINION
Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 11, 1 U 5 -J D

Growing

■OUR READERS WRITE

Older

Vote Out Those Stupid, Liberal Politicians
If you owe more money than you
can ever pay. by law you can file
bankruptcy. The federal government
owes more money than they can ever
pay off. so don't be surprised If you
wake up some morning to find they
have filed bankruptcy. It can happen.
I f you make $50,000 a year and lose
your Job and go to work for $25,000 a
year, you have to cut your standard of
living to match your new Income.
Federal, atate. county, and city gov­
ernments or private families that live
beyond their Income are In trouble.
W hy are all American governments,
from the city through the federal. In
such had financial trouble? Because
you the voter continue to elect stupid
liberal politicians. This type o f politi­
cian has created bureaucracies that
should never have existed.
Now that they have these programs
that are bankrupting the taxpayer,
they don't have enough guts to get rid
o f them.
Local government la going to have
to operate Just like the family that lost
fifty percent o f their Income. If you
want to save your country, vote these
liberals out o f office.
When did our trouble start? When
gas Jumped from 50 cents a gallon to
$1.25, hospital beds Jumped from $50
a day to over $100 a day. Government
employees salaries doubled, with a
raise every year, and everything In
America went out o f reach o f the
taxpayer and consumer.
I will give you one local example —
T h e Votran Bus Co. on Volusia
County's East Coast Is coating the
ta x p a y e r $ 4 ,4 0 0 ,0 0 0 a year to
operate. For every fare that cost 754

will coat the taxpayer at least $5. That
doesn't Include a few million the
taxpayer paid for the Votran Busses.
I remember when tf you were loo
old to drive for your groceries, your
son. daughter, or good neighbor gave
you a free ride, and that was the
economical and Christian way.
Vote out-the lame brain politician
that won't agree to cancel fifty percent
o f your bureaucracies, and fire the
welfare agents that meet our local
Illegal aliens at the border and tell
them "com e on In. welfare and food
stamps are waiting for y ou ."
That will save a few million. We are
going to go back to m aking a living by
te sweat o f your brow, if you like It or
not.
On m y way home from Orlando the
other day. I was listening to some
creep on the radio. The price of gas Is
dropping, and If the politicians don't
raise taxes Immediately, all o f our
roads wlU (all apart. The price per
gallon has nothing to do with how
much taxes Is collected. They collect
214 per gallon. I would like to tell the
cltlxens of Florida the truth about the
situation. Since Bob Graham was
elected governor he has raised the
stale budget by the help of our state
rep resen ta tives o v e r one billion
dollars a year. In moat counties he has
made It possible for our moneyhungry politicians to raise gas taxes
by 4 or 5 cents a gallon. Sales tax was
raised to five cents. With this kind of
Increase In taxes. If they can't build
and repair our roads, then let them
fall apart.
Grover Ashcraft
Pierson, Fla.

W iP STOCKMAN

"Wpeiteso
jRY.iveoNtfA,
T 1W l ' I ' - $$-■•_s ^ a iF

Elderly Need i

Balanced Diet

••

911: We're Being Sold A Bill Of Goods
T h is la an open letter to the
Seminole County Commission.
Gentlemen and ladles:
I am glad that we have good
newspapers In our area so we may be
Informed o f what Is going on. Unfor­
tunately. by the time we read It In the
newspaper It Is too late lo do anything
about II.
I learned from a recent story In the
Evening Herald that we. the taxpayers
and cltltens o f Seminole County.
Sanford and other cities, will soon
become recipients o f the much touted
911 emergency number system.
! regret that I do not have the exact
figures but If memory doesn't fall me
they are something like this:

Reunion Set
Forty or more years ago the 2nd
Armored "Hell on W heels" Division
helped make news for all the newspa­
pers through out the U.S.A.. and now
w e would like to use you paper In
some way to contact all 2nd Armored
and let them know about our reunion
May 20 — June 2 at the Holiday Inn
International Airport. Tampa. Many
live In your area.
Loren D. Oufe. SOS HI
B rooksvllle. FI. 33S
(9041006-6834.
Gabc Struggles
Waldron. AR

One Way .w
Solve Problem
Everyone will like the planters once
IsH ilrect Is made one way East
Bob Daehn
Sanford

Pieate Write

L A Rep

1. Installation: $430,000
2. Annual maintenance: $200,000
3. Services o f expert to supervise
Implementation: $32,000

telephone Installed. This 1s usually
regardlrsa of whether they purchase
or rent a home. People also sell their
h o m e s for v a rio u s and sundry
reasons. More often people will move
from one rental house or apartment lo
another. Obviously with the O il
system this will require a constant
upgrading of the system so that
police, firemen and rescue sauads
won't be going to the wrong address.
Furthermore, the dispatcher has to be
there to take the call. The dispatcher
w ill have lo be at a cenlrallied
location so that the calls can be
funneled to the proper units, (police,
lire or rescue.) I presume that thfa
would Involve feeding the Information
Into another computer to be picked up
either at a police station or (Ire station.

tl lakes me three seconds lo dial
O il. It takes me six seconds to dial
322-4141 or any o f the other seven
In round figures we are talking
digit, numbers. In the case o f an
about $750,000 and o f course the
emergency three orconda fa not going
annual maintenance coat thereafter.
to make that much difference. Besides
Knowing how estimates Invariably go
our present system docs not require
Into overruns this system could coat
any updating whatsoever. IT fa a
Ii
lis t * proven efficient system that has been
In use for years and years and fa by no
means obsolete. Besides, i f Ihe com­
telephone directory there are two lists
puterised 011 system broke down the]
oTemergency numbers. fbFUll cities In
existing phone system would have to
Seminole County and unincorporated
be retained as a backup unit. Thus we
areas. The first list If for Flre/Rescue
would have a dual system and an
or Medlcsl Emergency. The other list
expensive duplication o f effort.
Is for various police departments. For
Volusia and Orange County It says
Although thfa fa no Joking matter. If
Dial O il.
I may. I will Indulge In a bit of
O ff hand I would say that, "w e are
facetiousness. Thfa reminds me of an
trying to keep up with the Joneses,"
old Joke that went aomethlng like thfa:
Th e question Is. can we afford 11 or
A you n g farm tra cto r salesman
better still fa It practical?
approached an old farmer and tried lo
I must confess m y lack o f knowl­ sell him a new tractor lo replace hfa
edge about the 011 system. All I know
team o f mules. The older farmer
fa that if you dial the 911 emergency
looked at the colorful brochures re­
number the address flashes on the
spectfully then said, "son If you can
computer screen. Great!!!
prove lo me that thfa new fangled
I know that we are living In the
contraption can plow my land and
computer age. I've often wondered
produce fifty ions o f manure a year I'll
how we ever survived before they
buy one of them."
were perfected. I'm not knocking
I would like lo hear It from the
computers, they do amastng things.
Seminole County Commission and be
They also cost a lot o f money and
convinced that w e need Ihe O il
even more so to maintain. They also
system. As Ihe old farmer aald. we
break down sometimes.
don't need this new fangled contrap­
The State of Florida fa growing by
tion nor d o we need to be saddled with
leaps and bounds, aa are Seminole
Ihe additional expense. I think we are
County. Sanford and other cities In
being aold a bill o f goods.
the county. People move In and
people move out. One of the first
Antonio T. Console*
things new residents do fa have a
Sanford

0- M y h s s b s s d d ie d last yea r a a i
to b « boasat, I d o a l rs a lly s a t
wsU-balaacsd aaaaia D m w ay I d id
whan ha w as a ll vs . M y asaatlaw 1st
H o w important la d ls t If I w a a t to
load a la ag s a d h e a lth y UfoT
A. Thfa question comes up often and
Ihe answer always bears repeating.
We have often been told to eat a
well-balanced diet. Thfa notion fa rein­
forced by experts at ihe Health Institute
on Aging, a division o f Ihe National
Institute of Health.
Eating loo much or loo little fa Jussi as
detrimental aa not eating the right
kinds of food. Eal a well-balanced diet
In moderate amounts and complement
your diet with a structured physical
program.
Perhaps you will want to purchase
one of the new "cooking for one" books
now In bookstores. Thfa could help you
to return to your old eating patterns.
Several years ago, the House A gin g
Committee heard from people over 100
years of age at a congressional hearing.
Each had basically attributed their
longevity lo physical activity and pro­
per diet.
Diet fa particularly Important lo the
elderly because many o f their health
problems are the result of poor nutri­
tion.
Vitamins and minerals found In
fruits, vegetables, meal, dairy products
and cereals are very Important. Many
older people do not get enough calcium,
which fa responsible for maintaining
strong bones and teeth. Calcium can be
found In milk, cheese, nufa and dark
leafy vegetables such as collards,
turnips, mustard greens and kale.
Protein fa also needed on a dally
basis. Examples o f one serving of
protein (two servings are recommended
dally) Include 2 to 3 ounces of red meat,
chicken or fish, 4 tablespoons of peanut
butter or one-half cup of nuts.
Because we get energy from fata and
carbohydrates, it fa Important that we
Include them dally. It fa best lo eat
c a rb o h y d ra te s th at also c o n ta in
vitamins, minerals or protein such aa
fruits, vegetables and whole-grain or
such enriched flour products aa beans,
rice and rolled oats.
0- r a 71 y e a rs aid, retired , and
da aoma k n ittin g fa r a era ft sh ay to
a iy spare tla ia . 1 re a lly d e a l aaaks
are eh m ossy. D a I have to Ilia a ta x
reta ra ?
A. Not everyone who earned Income
In 1984 has to file a return. But tf you
think the government owes you a
refund, file a return, even though
you're not legally required to do so.
If your filing status fa single, 65 or.
older, you must (lie a return If your
Income was al least $4,300.
If you are married, filing a joint
return and both 65 or older, you must
file a return If your Income fa at least
$7,400. For a married couple In which
both are under 05, the amount Ur
$5,400, and for a married couple Iff
which one partner fa 65 or older. the
amount fa $6,400.
If married, filing separately, o r mar*
rted but not living With your spouse al
the end o f 1984, you must file I f you
made at least $1,000.
Rep. Claude Pepper la the chairman
of the health aubcommlttce o f the
I louse Select Committee on Aging.

What Newspapers Across The Nation A re Saying

Create Tough National Test For Teachers
portray doughty heroines of the soil. Sissy
Speech, Jessica Lange and Sally Field all battle
outside forces to save the family farm.
Teachers believes every teacher should have to
paas a tough national examination before being
allowed In the classroom .

To which we say. ament
Albert Shanker. leader of the union o f 600.000
teachers, said he believes current teacherlicensing tests are a joke. All they do. he said, is
teat for minimum competency In an effort to weed
out only tbs very worst teaching candidates.
... Shanker now Is among the most outspoken
for restoring high standards to the classroom....
Shanker wants leaders in tbs education field to
create a touch national examination that would

"T h e R iver." "Country" and "Places In the
Heart” are almost documentary portrayals of the
human drama unfolding In the farm slates of
America. Dectlnlna farm orlcea and a weak esport

tradition In the military
leges. But when such a

plctcly realistic picture ol what America's future
can be like, If we all try lo make U ao.
With simple eloquence, the president made
points that bear repealing if we are lo realistically
confront and conquer the problems o f ihe decades
ahead.
"National security to government's first respon­
It Is a point often conveniently forgotten by
critics In New Hampshire and around the country
who attempt to separate social and welfare
problems from those of defense, so If to say
national security applies only to the well-off.
Some, in fad. any exactly that.
"You know," the president told the Congress
and the nation, "w e only have a military
Industrial complex until a time of dangers then It
becomes the arcanal of democracy. Spending for
defense la Investing In things that are priceless:
peace and freedom."
s e been
under government orders to convert to the metric
system of weights and measures. ... The other
day the government threw In the *owet. Metric
retneins the official goal, but no longer wUI those
who do buatneee In pounds inches and gallons be
W hy this tnetatencc on being out of step with
most of the world? It eeeme that two-thirds of
Canade's exports go to the United States.
Our own nattmTg policy on metric conversion,
o f course, fa a model of wtehy-weehlneae.

Congress In 1075 proclaimed that conversion to
the metric system would be national policy. But u;
added. Inconsistently, that the change would be
voluntary.
... industry In this country has made some
progress In adopting the new system, mainly*
because It wants to sell goods abroad, and $
majority of nation* measure things m etrically....
Canada's retreat on metric policy wtd lessen Ihq
pressure for U.S. companies to fail In line.

The Raws sad Ohesrvae af RalehM. R.C.
Serial marriages may very well bear out Dr.
Johnson's unsentimental judgment of two cen­
turies ago. "S ir, lo m arry a second time
represents the triumph of hope over experience.'‘
Jcroll R. SUverberg of the American Academy
of Matrimonial Lawyers describes a not-eouncommon sequence In marriagt today. There'*
a first marriage, usually during or aooo after
college and usually short-lived. A second mar­
riage follows $6 percent of the Ume, usually
longer lasting and usually enured to rear
children.
Mid-life often sees atlU anothst
usually abort and often Involving a
much younger woman. Finally
women eech the see /nature
enectaitoU somewhat hoocfullv call 1L
Serial marriages may very well ref
repeated tripe to the altar
of the viewpoint Johnson

�IT

4D—Evening HtraM, SeiHsrd, FI.

fondly, F*b. IT, 1HI

...Petree: If There Must Be G row th, Let There Be Elbow Room
Con tinned from p t| t 10
Insistence on clear and strict
zoning ordinances gives him
hope the city won't become "a
parking lot from one end to the
other."
*'l think we have a good city
government. They (the commis­
sioners) really care. They truly
take their office and responsibili­
ty seriously." Petree said.
Rut If the commission doesn't
come up with a solution to slow
the growth, he Is "working on
one o f my own." he Jests.
"I'm looking desperately for
some type of endangered species
that Inhabits the city so we can
stop all the development."
One of his more serious efforts
to preserve Lake Mary’s rural
culture Is his work with the Lake
Mary Historical Commission. He
meets regularly wflh members
to research the history o f the
area. He pushed for the publica­
tion o f a book explaining the
history o f the area where the city
now stands. The book Is at the
printers and Is expected to be

distributed In the spring.
Petree said stories about Indi­
ans and egrets "m ay not Interest
someone living up In Heathrow,
but th at's Important to the
history o f this area and It should
not be lost."
Petree Is not Just concerned
with the urbanization o f Lake
Mary. He is disturbed that the
symbols o f "m odem livin g" are
encroaching the whole world.
"It's not Just In Lake Mary. It's
everywhere you go In the world.
When I've been In the Amazon
trading cigars for ceremonial
rain cups, the Indians pull out
Tupperware to put their cigars
In!"
Petree thinks the Amazon In­
dians shouldn't have to taint
their culture with the plastic
tools o f Industrialized men. The
Indians as well as other "a n ti­
qu a ted " peoples have proud
civilizations o f their own. he
said. And he travels often Into
the bush. Jungles and deserts o f
the world to tell them.
P e tr e e 's ex p ed itio n s h a ve

taken him to Centra] and South
America, as well as Asia and
Africa, where he has chased
exotic butterflies and hunted
rare orchids.
His stories o f his travels read
like the script for an Indiana
Jones sequel. He said he has
been chased through Jungles by
knife-wielding "lunatic women."
treed by millions o f army ants
and flown In rattle-trap airplanes
held together by ropes. Also, as
an aside, he said he almost fell In
a volcano once In Guatemala.
Petree has a particular fascina­
tion for the Middle East and
ancient M ayan culture. His
home Is decorated with Mayan
sculptures that are hundreds o f
years old; relics he collected on
trtps to Central America. He Is
also working on a book about
Mayan civilization.
His Interest In the Middle East
Is sparked by his fear that the
area, being civilization's cradle,
may also become Its grave. He Is
fearful the area, rich with oil and
history, will erupt Into full-scale
war.

" I ’d like to know a little more
about where w e've been before
w e blow It all up." he said.
Petree also loves classical
music, an affection he shares
with hts wife. Grace, who Is a
flutist for the Florida Symphony
Orchestra. Petree himself Is a
pianist.
When he Isn't trotting the
globe or playing Mozart. Petree
Is busy handling cases at his
Orlando law office or working as
Lake Mary's city attorney.
Petree became the city at­
torney two years ago after a
friend told him about the open­
ing. The six-foot, cigar-chomping
attorney said his main Job Is
keeping the city out o f court,
thus avoiding costly litigation
and keeping city officials work­
ing on city business. But If the
city has to go to court, he said he
Is there to make sure the city Is
fighting on sound legal ground
and can win before a Judge. The
Job pays about $29,000 a year.
W h ile he enjoys being an
attorney, he quickly adds It's not
his "reason for livin g."

" I f you get totally absorbed In
your profession you miss a lot o f
what's going on in the world. It
doesn't dominate my life. I'm
through with It at 9 p.m. when I
get on the Interstate." Petree
u ld .
He said he has tried to dis­
courage his two children —
Jeffery. 21. and Kimberley. 18.
— from becoming lawyers.
" I su ggested .plum bing or
orthodontics. I figured these are
people w ho never get sued,
make enorm ous am ounts o f
money and keep regular office
hours."

up quickly to become a leader In
the movement. He was on the
Meet the Press television show at
14. A vehement opponent of
racism and anti-Semitism, he
said he spent the 1990s making
speeches against the Ku Klux
Klan and the John Birch Society.
He also campaigned for presi­
dential cand ida te s Adla l
Stevenson and Hubert Hum ­
phrey. His political passions
eventually thrust him Into law
school.

G r o w i n g up In t h e
Washington. D.C. area, under
the watchful eye of his laborlte
father. Petree caught the bug in
his e a r ly teen s. He Joined
"Young Democrats" and moved

"T h e only regret I had when I
turned 50." said the spectacled
Petree. "la that I didn't become
an e n t o m o lo g is t . I a l w a y s
wanted ... to study bugs when I
was a b o y."

Petree said his Interest in
politics, as well as his Idealism,
has cooled since those fiery days
But apparently his warnings of marches and speeches: al­
went unheeded. Jeffery Is a law though he still fights bigotry at
student at the University o f every turn. But If he had it to do
Florida.
all over again, he said he would
Petree's Interest in law stems, have chosen a different career,
from an Infection he acquired aa one more congruent with his
naturalist inclinations.
a youngster — politics.

-*1

From Big Ben To
Statue Of Liberty,
Author Combines Racism Power, All Under Repair

pooj|p|

,

Capitalism In Controversial Book
The Black Pow er Im perative! M edal
In e q u a lit y a i d the P o litic s o f
N o n v i o l e n c e , b y T h e o d o r e C ro s s .
(Faulkner Books. 905 pp., $10.99).
This book has two apparent drawbacks
which would force some to doubt Its
credibility. First. It Is written about a
subject that many think dated (circa late
1960s). and second, the author Is white.
However. If anyone bases their decision
to read this book on either one o f these
Ideas, they will miss the moat Important
discussion on black Americans during
the past decade.
Theodore Cross has been a consistent
spokesperson for black economic devel­
opment. With the publication of "Black
Capitalism" In 1969. he has backed his
w ords on paper w ith deeds In the
community. He has lectured on black
economics and law at Harvard. Cornell
and the University o f Virginia.
Cross begins this book with a socialhistorical analysis o f power — its origins,
who has It. and how It la acquired. This
discussion leads the reader Into an
analysis o f how the system of "fre e "
enterprise was only free If you were white
and male. As Cross states It "... we have
seen that most em ployers, workers,
traders, and capitalists abhorred com ­
petition ... '*
Cross argues that racism prevented the
emergence of truly competitive market
places In the United States. The system­
atic oppression o f blacks during slavery,
and tlie most recent form o f racist hiring
practices In the Job market, allow the
author to dismiss arguments often used
by whites to "understand" the position o f
blacks In America.
The latter third o f this masalve book
presents an agenda for the acquisition o f
black power In America. It Is perhaps the
most controversial, yet the moat logical
conclusion to well-mounted arguments
made throughout the book.
This book offers the most Incisive
discussion on the relationship of power,
capitalism, and racism since Frants
Fanon's "Wretched of the Barth." It will
disturb many, including
of Its forthright criticism of traditional
methods of dealing with politics of
racism.

Many liberal whites will question Cross*
motives, which at first seem an Indict­
ment o f traditional free enterprise. It Is.
however, a celcbratk n o f orthodox capi­
talism a la Adam Smith, and provides the
reader with an honest appraisal o f how
free enterprise In America was perverted
by racism.
During the past 10 years, there has not
been a more honest analysis of racism In
America. This book should not only be
read, but studied by anyone Interested In
formulating a strategy for treating the
disease of racism.

----------- - by C.L. Skelton.
(Crown. 466 pp.. $17.96).
This third volume of Skelton's Regi­
ment Quartet continues the sags of the
Intertwined Scottish clans of Mclaren and
Bruce. The older members, looking
forward to retirement from the Army and
--------------*
In the Highlands, are

anked back to reality by the outbreak of
forld War I.
It is their duty to lead their men onto
the Continent to do battle with the Hun.
Their wives and daughters have a duty,
also: to recruit human fodder for the
King's war machine, and to nurse and
sometimes bury the mangled husbands
and sons sent home from the front.

t

This Is a story of battles, and loves, won
and lost. Skelton's descriptions of the
trench fighting of the Oreat W ar are so
vivid we can nearly taste the mud in our
teeth. But 11 also Is a story of social
change. Centuries-old boundaries be­
tween well-born and commoner, officer
and ranker are stretched and then break.
Skelton weaves an engrossing tale and
tells It well. As Tenny Mclaren was fond
of saying. "Up the Mdarens!" We echo
that sentiment. Bring on the fourth
volume.
c
—C harles J .l

Boat Sellers
My Ualtsd Frees International
1. If Tom orrow Comes — Sidney
Sheldon
2. So Long. And Thanks For All The
Fish — Douglas Adam s
3. The Life and Hard Times of Heidi
Abromowltx — Joan Rivers
m 4 ."... And Ladies of the Club" — Helen
Hooven Santmcyr
6. Lincoln: A Novel — Gore Vidal
0. Family Album — Danielle Steel
7. The Sicilian — Mario Puzo
0. The Finishing School — Oail Godwin
9. See You Later. Alllgater - William F.
Buckley
10. White Noise — Don DelUlo

1. lacocca: An Autobiography -

Lee

2. Citizen Hughes — Michael Droanln
3. Hey Watt a Minute. 1Wrote a Book John Madden
4. Son of the Morning Star — Evan 8.

6. Weight Watchers Quick Start Pro­
gram Cookbook — Jean Nldetsch
6. Woman Coming of Age — Jane
Fonda
7. Loving Each Other — Leo Buscagtla
8. The Frugal Gourmet — Jeff Smith
9. The One Minute Salesperson —
Spencer Johnson A Larry Wilson
10 The Bridge Across Forever — Richard
Bach

1. Almost Paradise — Susan Isaacs
2. Dune Messiah — Frank Herbert
3. The Thorn birds — Colleen Mc­
Cullough
4. Brotherhood of W ar V: The Berets W.E.B. Orlfltn
6. Savage Conquest — Jane lie Taylor
0- The Brotherhood of the Rose —
David Morrell

7. The Tiger Uly — Shiricc Busbee
$. The RgJ Quartet VoL 1; The Jewel
and the Crown — Paul Scott
9. Bat to Win — Robert Haas
10. Crewel Lye— Piers Anthonv
-

60-Second Novelist Dan Hurley
Has Skyscraper-High Ambitions
UPl
NEW YORK (UP!) - The next project of
Dan Hurley. America’s most unusual nov­
elist. Is to write his 60-second novels from
the top of a Manhattan skyscraper.
"It's under consideration for a $9,000
grant from the Public Art Fund of New
York." said Hurley, who describes himself
as a former Yuppie and looked like one
when he appeared for an Interview In a
tweed Jacket, gabardine slacks, shirt, and
tie. The shirt had a button-down collar, of
course.
Asked to explain his skyscraper venture,
ha said there would be a two-way audio­
video hookup so he can apeak to people on
the street from the top of the building. Just
aa he does when he works on the sidewalk.
Hurley began working on the street
almost two years ago In Chicago, where he
was an edltor-at-large with the American
Bar Association. For a fee of $2. he would
type out a minute-long "n ovel" In the form
of a romance, mystery, biography, essay or
any other literary form his passerby clients
requested after a brief conversation with
Hurley.
The conversation, with Hurley often
asking questions, gives him an Insight into
the character and lives of his subjects on
which be can base a meaningful composi­
tion. He says be tries "to find something
people really value and put It Into the
'It was a crazy Idea I had In mind for a

f
jm

year before 1decided to do IL“ said Hurley, a
27-year-old with a gift of gab to match his
facile writing talent. "You only need a
typewriter and a chair. I had no intention of
making money. It was going to be Just fun.
like streaking.
"The (lrst time I did It was on Michigan
Avenue and It worked. People related to me.
They poured out thetr hearts to me. told me
their hopes, their problems. I felt like an
*n den l Greek oracle. Uke a cross between a
psychologist and a priest. And I earned as
much as $100 a day.
Hurley has since given up his ABA Job.
moved to Brooklyn and upped his fee to $6.
He has written more than 3,000 0O*ccond
novels and Is making a collection of an
hour's worth of them for publication. He has
written novels for former Chicago Mayor
Jane Byrne, entertainers Alice Cooper and
Whoopi Goldberg. MASH producer Larry
Gelbart, and Mike Love of the Beach Boys.
His own first novel, a full length one titled
"Johnny Hero: A Comic Book Tragedy."
remains unpublished.
"U 's been said 1 turned to 60-eecood
first novel, but that Isn't true, he
adding that he is working on another novel
and screenplay. "B ut F am addicted to
making a living off Action aa a writer and a
performer. I wtU reach mots people with my
writing than 1 would aa a
He has written 00 second novels In a
window of the Carson Ptrte Scott depart-

men! store In Chicago and been a visiting
artist at the Chicago Art Institute. In New
York he has appeared In Macy’s cellar and
at B. Altman s store and entertained at
parties at Reglne's. Danccterla and Tavern
on the Oreen. He alao has performed at
parties at Caesar's Palace In Atlantic City.
"I get $100 an hour for parties and often
work with Le Clique, a group of professional
party entertainers." he said. "I want to work
more with corporations and would like to be
the spokesperson for a typewriter or word
processor company. I have made a basic
commitment to survive on my creative
work, and right now I'm doing It”
Here Is an example of a Hurley novel.
‘Once upon a time, there was a man who
was an utter failure at everything, because
he kept trying to succeed. He v a not at
heart a success. At heart, he was a failure,
and because ha kept trying to succeed, he
kept falling worse and worse.
"Finally he gave up and decided to
express his sense of failure and outrage at
the world. He opened up a bar called 'w arm
Beer and Lousy Food*. The public Hipped
out. They loved the audadouaoeaa of It. the
sheer absurdity and straight-forwardness of
It- Plus It was so damn afferent. So damn
unique. They realised It was the ,perfect
_____
expression of one man. Yea. this one man
had Anally done It. He had Anally
perfectly his
----a peat

B y O rsgsry J ss ssa
U P l d ealer Editor
LONDON (UPl) - Any traveler
setting out this year to see
famous landmarks and monu­
ments may wind up thinking the
whole world Is covered In scaf­
folding.
P l a n n i n g to p h o t o g r a p h
London's Big Ben? Forget It. The
Parthenon o f Athens? Can't see
II for steel tubes.
From the Statue of Liberty to
the Slatlne Chapel, from the
Kremlin to the U.S. Capitol and
the Great Wall of China, a United
P re ss I nt e r na t i o na l s u r v e y
shows a remarkable duster of
tourist monuments under repair
all at once.
The courtyard of the Louvre
museum In Paris la one vast wall
of grafllttl-covercd wood. Rome's
Forum Is a forest of scaffolding.
London's Big Ben Is cloaked to
Its very Up. with only the clock
races allowing, and will stay that
way for another year.
There are as many reasons for
restoration as there are monu­
ments under repair — the rav­
ages of time, modem pollution,
simple weathering or merely a
need to expand. The malevolent
coincidence la that It's all hap­
pening at the same time.
Probably the saddest sight
among basket-case monuments
la the Acropolis o f Athens. It's a
mess.
Its most renowned building,
the Parthenon. Is entirely en­
folded with scaffolding, and will
be until at least 1991. Next door
another steel shroud wraps the
Erechtheum. famous for the
porch su pported by m arb le
maidens. Those 2.400-year-old
ladles, h o w ev er, h sve been
moved Indoors to preserve them
from pollution and replaced by
replicas.
On both buildings, restorers
are not only coping with the
biting add s of today s pollution
— which a United Nations report
says has caused more damage In
40 years than in the previous
400. They are also replacing
rusted iron dam ps holding the
m a rb le b lo c k s to geth er,
misguldedly inserted at the turn
of the century.
The Statue of Liberty Is totally
encased In more than 300 tons
o f scaffolding as part o f a
yearlong renovation. Inside a
screen of thin metal slats,
workmen are replacing 1,000
rusted braces bolding Mias Lib­
erty's paper-thick copper akin In
place.
Paris's Louvre Is expanding
Into new underground galleries
and a wing now occupied by the
ministry of finance. The twoyear rebuilding, heralded by the
wood walla In the courtyard, will
include erecting architect I.M.
Pel's controversial glass pyramid
structures. But the museum will
•fay open throughout
Many landmarks now
repaired will remain '
•heady- Uks tbs great Church of
O u r L a d y In P r a g u s ,
Czechoslovakia. It's been cov­
ered by scaffolding for 14 yean
ro far. and will stay that way
until at least 1990.
Or like the Vatican's Slatlne
Chapel. For four years IU upper
walls were hidden to dean and

freacoea h£Tan?tare‘£ ,^2tt
four years, a view blocking cra­
d le c o v e r s h a l f o f
Mlchaelangclo'a ''Creation'
be spent on "T he Uwt JudgHero Is a

of other

—I
the plethora of

folding In Rome, an ugly barrier
screens the central portico o f St.
Mark's Cathedral In Venice. The
mosaic richness o f Its Interior
can be seen, but the view o f Its
facade from the glorious piazza
stays flawed until at least next
year.
Alao in Venice, the 500-yearold wooden bridge leading to the
Academia museum could col­
lapse at any moment and Is
closed. A temporary bridge car­
ries walkers, but boats must
detour Into sldecanals.
If Big Ben la cloaked In canvas,
another symbol o f London — the
statue o f Eroa In Piccadilly
Circus — has disappeared. A
circle o f wood walla surrounds
Its empty apace. Eros Is being
restored while Piccadilly Circus
Is rebuilt to form a pedestrian
peninsula and a new traffic

UIL'U I

11

PERSPECTIVE
pattern.
The great Gothic church o f
York Minster In York. England,
la still a cripple from the fire that
destroyed Its south transept last
summer. Estate owners have
donated mature oak trees to
replace roof beams, but repairing
the cathedral's mutilated wing
and Its 1 6 t h - c e n t u r y rose
window could take five years.
—United Mtates
Like the Statue o f Liberty, (he
west central front o f the U.S.
Capitol building In Washington.
D.C.. is concealed by scaffolding
and will be until 1988. The $49
million project is restoring the
only external wall remaining
from the original 1793 building.
One 450-yard section of the
Great W all of China In the
tourist area near Peking is closed
for repairs, with no Indication
how long they'll take. Repairing
the Great Wall has been a
continual problem since the
Manchu dynasty.
Moscow's State Armory in the
Kremlin, favored by tourists for
Its fabulous collection of Faberge
eggs, state Jewels. Peter the
O rest's Jewel-studded throne,
arms and armor. Is closed for
ire until 1900.
he h u g e f i v e - d o m e d
Smolensky cathedral at the
N o v o d e v l c h y c o n v e n t In
Moscow, dating from 1525, Is
alao closed. Soviets are used to
signs reading "rem ont" (repairs)
on pre-revolutionary buildings
and old churches.

T

Besides Prague's Church of
O ur Lady, the 360-year-old
Ptnkas Synogogue. whose walls
list 77,297 Jewish victims of the
the early 1970a. No reopening
to have
under scaffolding I
ons resident, and with
restorers.

.V jw n a 's Royal Treasury In the
Hofburg Palace is closed for
renovation
_________'to
make the promises friendlier."
Its renowned crowns. Jewels and
relics of the Holy Roman Empire
have been crammed Into ike Art
History museum until 19$$.
Brightening thls^catafogue of
repair.
T h e^C ej d 'O ro , the most
In Venice. Is
Tsars of re-

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                    <text>77th Year, No. 151— Friday, February 15, 1*85— Sanford. Florida

Evening

Herald

—

(USPS

481-280)

—

Price

25 Cqrts

Flu Outbreak
Seminole Hospitals Crowded; School Attendance Down
By J i m Casaslbarry
Herald S ta ff W riter
Florida ta one o f 14 elates with regional flu
outbreaks as the nation Is tn the midst o f the
worst flu epidemic In four years, according to the
national Centers for Disease Control.
In Seminole County schools have had an
Increase In absenteeism and hospitals are
crowded as a result o f Illness caused by the flu or
flu-llke symptoms o f chills, fever, headaches,
upset stomachs, sore throats and coughs.
Although blood testing for Influenza Is being
done In several counties. Seminole Is not one of
them.
“ Upper respiratory Infections have almost
doubled the number o f kids absent from school,
and hospitals are treating a fairly large number of
patients with flu-llke symptoms, but I know of no
cases in the county o f confirmed Influenza A .”

said Dr. Jorge Deju. Seminole County director of
Health and Human Services.
“ There have been 8 or 0 cases of the A type
found tn other counties. In Seminole two cases
tested were found to be adenovirus, not flu ." Deju
said.
There are many viruses that can cause the
upper respiratory Infections, such as adenovirus
and rhino virus, he added.
Federal health officials say the nation la In the
grip o f the worst flu epidemic since 52.000 people
died In an outbreak In the winter o f 1080-81.
The national Centers for Disease Control
reported Thursday the proportion o f deaths
associated with Influenza and pneumonia In 121
major cities Jumped from about 5 percent In early
January to 6.0 percent for week ending Feb. 0.
"Pneumonia and Influenza deaths most re­

cently exceeded 8 percent In 1980-81, when
many type AIH3N2) virus outbreaks occurred and
pneumonia and Influenza deaths peaked at 6.0
percent." said Dr. Karl Kappus.
“ The impact o f this winter's outbreaks In terms
of pneumonia and Influenza deaths Is right up
there with the peak of the 1980-81 epidemic."
Kappussaid.
For the week ending Feb. 0. the CDC reported
010 pneumonia and flu deaths In 121 major
cities. That compares with 517 deaths the last
week o f 1084.
The flu sweeping the nation Is caused by the
AIH3N2) Philippines virus, the same type virus,
but with a different antigenic makeup, that
touched o ff most o f the w orld 's previous
epidemics.
“ The H3N2 virus affects people of all age
groups and w e're Just beginning to see the effects

o f Infection In older age groups who are relatively
vulnerable." Kappussaid.
Kay Bartholomew, spokesman for Central
Florida Regional Hospital In Sanford, said the
Increase In patient occupancy the hospital has
been experiencing since Dec. 1 has continued to
build.
Th e hospital has had an 80-90 percent
occupancy rate, mainly due to the flu s y m p t o m s
people are experiencing, she said.
Dr. Deju said hospitals In the south end of the
county are also experiencing Increased patient
load. He added It Is not too late to be Immunized
against the Influenza A. There were 1.255
persons Immunized last year by the Seminole
County Health Department clinic. Immunization
might not only help prevent a flu this season, but
next summer and fall as well. He said It takes
Rsa FLU. page 3 A

Panel
M ediate
Iron Bridge H assle
transmission authority, said the panel
voted unanimously Wednesday to re­
commend Orlando follow the terms of
Its existing agreement with Seminole
County, and placed the problem of
capacity allocation back In the hands of
Seminole County commissioners and
the city o f Orlando.
Seminole County maintains the ca­
pacity belongs to It by terms o f the
agreement that permitted the Iron
Bridge Plant to be built in Seminole.
near Oviedo.
Last w eek . O rlando M ayor B ill
Frederick sent a letter to Seminole
sa y in g th e sta te D ep a rtm en t o f

Environmental Regulation la preparing
to permit Orlando to release 1.5 million
gallons o f capacity at the plant and he
would release that capacity to the
transmission authority for It to de­
term ine which governm ental body
should get It.
S em in ole County com m issioners
greeted Frederick's letter with a threat
to go to court If the capacity Is not
released to Seminole under conditions
of the original agreement.
New connections to the sewer plant
have been halted since last spring by
DER. and the U.S. Department of
Environmental Regulation, acting In
concert, because the Orlando plant la
polluting the Econlockhatchee River
with Its sewer effluent.
The taro agencies said the effluent
contains high nitrates — a major
_
_
Orlando removing nitrates from the
sewer plant effluent within three years.
Seminole County Administrator Ken
Hooper said the original agreement

called for a daily capacity o f 2.245
m illion gallons to be allocated to
Seminole. Of that, the county has 1.4
million gallons unused. T h e Iron Bridge
plant has a total capacity of 24 million
gallons per day.
West said the transmission authority
Is not empowered to do anything about
sewer capacity allocations. “ That Is not
our bailiwick." he said.
Meanwhile. Tom Lothrop. project
manager o f the Iron Bridge plant, auld
there really Isn't any dispute between
Orlando and Seminole County. Hr said
Orlando doesn't disagree with Seminole
County's feeling that It Is entitled tn
1.407 million gallons o f capacity.
In any event. Lothrop said It will be
three to four m onths before new
capacity at the plant la available to
anyone.
PsT»isjw m n‘ in southeast Seminole
has been brought nearly to a standstill
while the state and federal agencies had
a stop order on new connections since
M a y .1084.

City Paves Way For Shopping Center
G rim m And Bear It
R tid in g fairy talas and gattlng a big grizzly hug from A baar ham
Lincoln, ara Tom m la Thompson, 7, and Ca|aa Cox# also 7, at
Hamilton Elam antarv School In Sanford. Tha kids a ra calibratin g
Fe-bear-ary though tnay can baar-ly ba saan In tha-plle of bruins.
A n d yas, Goldie Locks and tha T h r u B ears ara on their raid in g list.

Reporter After Bold Escape
'I Ran As Fast As I Could'
victims still being held by the extrem ­
ists.
“ For the whole time. I was chained to
a wall and radiator. 1 was not allowed to
aee anyone. The Syrian soldiers were
the first people I saw since March 7 last
year."

Harold Staff W riter
Lake Mary City commissioners paved
the way Thursday for a shopping
center to be constructed off Lake Mary
Boulevard.
The board reclassified 15 lota Into
one large lot and then gave preliminary
approval to rezonlng of the large lot so
a shopping center could be built — but
only If the developer agrees with
several stipulations.
The property Is located between 4th
and 5th streets along Lake Mary
Boulevard and Seminole Avenue.
The regrouping and rezonlng was
requested by James Moreland, attorney
for Gloria Padawer. ow ner o f the
property.
Nine o f the lota between 4th and 5th
streets border on Lake Mary Boulevard.
They were already zoned for commer­
cial development by previous com-

Mrs. Padawer. border Seminole Avenue
parallel to Lake Mary Boulevard and

two seta o f lots ran a city-owned alley.
At a 5-hour long commission meeting
Thursday, starting 7:30 p.m. at Lake
Mary City Hall. 158 N. Country Club
Road, the commission voted by resolu­
tion to vacate the city’s ownership of
the alley. The action, done by resolu­
tion does not have to be advertised,
according to City Manager Kathy Rice.
After grouping the lots Into one. the
commission voted to change by ordi­
nance the zoning of the new large lot.
which then Included land coned resi­
dential and commercial, to all commer­
cial.
Th e zoning change will not be final,
however, until the commission votes a
second time on the matter after It has
been advertised for at least two weeks.
Colin Keogh. In making the motion to
regroup the property, did so with the
stipulation that there be no exits from
the shopping center onto Seminole
Avenue and that the border o f the
6 M U U M M T ,p s | S S A

TODAY

Detailing hla getaway. Levin said:
“ When I had the best chance to escape,
then t had to be able to get the chain
off. They were careless that day. 1 got
the chain off. I was on the second floor.
“ I tied three blankets to the railing
and slipped down.

Action Reports....
Bridge................
Calendar............
Classified*.......... ... 10A.11A
Comics...............
Crossword..........
Doer Abby......... .......... .8A
Death*................
Dr. Lamb........... ........... 9A
Editorial............
Florida............... .......... 2A

“ It was a starry night. I ran bat. aa
b a t aa I could down the hill where the
house was located. In b e t. I ran down
the mountain ... then I walked to the
highway and later found the Syrians."
Kjsanlrl azirann ilsia ■! las Ih ■■■ ••

Hospital'............ ........... 3A
Marian................ .......... 1A

Stockman'» Mom Haa Different Vlow
W A S H IN G T O N (U P I ) D avid
Stockman's mother took him to the
woodshed, saying he’s wrong to think
American farmers only want a federal
ball-out and he doesn't realise many of
them — including his parents — are
going under.
Carol Stockman told an lows radio
station Thursday that recent comments
by the budget director, who grew up on
the family farm tn St. Jaaepb. Mich., do
not "set too well with m e."
Stockman told a group of reporters
Wednesday that many farmers will be
farced out of business because “that la
the way a dynamic economy works"

or past crisis far their pro^sm .”
The Stockmans have about 45 acre
of grape vineyards and 150 acres o
com and soybeans on their brat alon|
Lake Michigan near the Indiana border,
Mrs. Stockman said her son does not
seem to realize that not many youzifl
poople are getting Into agricultun
anymore because they cannoiaflbfd It.
In an Interview with WHO In Pet
Moines, she said her huahand hat
thought about quitting faming.
“We've had an abu ndance of cropt
and we're Juat not getting any mooey ai
«H far our cropa.'r she aaM. “When I
kiohed at our books teat wash ant

t a a r iv ..............
Television.......... LEISURE
y « , ■|a

.......... 1A

• Fads crack adoption
scam, page 2A.

•

• Doctors chooso third
artificial hoart recipient,

Rollover
Medical Cantor with a probable
T T B C T U n Q H fC R D Q n f • r K l f K M H r ^ i W f l y

Patrol Trooper Bob Lowering said a
wltnoas rsported a car In front oI Ms.
Syrians rr lexer o raa eo causing nor n

�l A - l v o w l w H*r*M, lowNrd, FI,

Friday, Fab. I I , 1W5

NATION

Feds Crack Adoption Scamj
Would-Be Parents Paid $500 To $6,000 For Babies They Never Cot
United Press International
A 15-month federal probe that covered 40
states, produced Indictments of five people
In an alleged adoption scam Involving
scores o f Mexican babies never delivered to
the American couples who paid for them.
The scheme first came to light In late
1983 when Police Chief John Grubb of
Chase. Kans.. a one-man police force,
started Investigating complaints by a local
couple. His work eventually expanded Into a
nationwide Investigation by the FBI and
Treasury Department.
FBI Special Agent David Kohl said the
baby-adoption scheme has been under
Investigation for 15 months and more than
1,000 people were Interviewed In 40 states
and Mexico.
This week federal grand Juries In Boston
and Salt Lake City Indicted three men and
tw o women on mall and wire fraud charges
Involving their contacts with prospective
parents.
The Salt Lake City U.S. Attorney. Brent
Ward, said Thursday that would-be parents
In Utah paid between 0500 and $1,000 to
adopt Mexican babies but many never
received them.

IN B R IEF'
Decrease In Food Prices
Keeps Price Index Steady
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Wholesale prices started out
1985 without an Increase, remaining the same In January
as In December despite big Increases In the cost o f autos
and cigarettes, the Labor Department said today.
Energy prices for dealers dropped a substantial amount,
offsetting January's 2.2 percent Increase In car prices and
A percent Jump In the cost o f tobacco products. Pood prices
also helped the Index by dropping 0.0 percent tn January.
Over the past 12 months they have gone up*only 0.7
perrent.
The price pressure on produce, resulting from last
month's freeze m Florida's citrus belt, will show up In the
February report. " If It shows up at all." a department
analyst said. Lqst supplies o f orange Juice concentrate have
largely been made up by Brazil while Mexico has shipped a
lot o f additional fruits and vegetables, he said.

Production Jumps Slightly
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Factory production rose another
0.4 percent In January, a modest overall Increase —
despite a big Jump In auto production — similar to that In
November and December, the Federal Reserve said today.
The production Index has been weak since July, with Its
biggest Jump a 0.5 percent gain In December, half the
acceleration o f June.
The resumption of hill production In auto plants took the
annual assembly rate up more than 0 percent, to 8.0
million units from December's 8.1 million units.
Without auto production Included the January improvemrnl would have been 0.1 percent to 0.2 percent
leas, a Fed economist said.

Third Heart Recipient Chosen
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (UPI) — A 58-year-old Louisville man
suffering from chronic heart failure will receive the world's
third permanent artificial heart Sunday. Humana Hospital
Audubon announced today.
Dr. William C. DeVries, who performed the first two
Implants, will Implant the plastic and metal Jarvlk-7 heart
In Murray P. Ilaydon. who will Join Bill Schroeder as the
hospital's artificial heart patients.
Hospital officials said Haydon was selected because
"there Is no surgical treatment" for his type o f congentlal
heart disease.
Haydon’s background Is similar to William Schroeder's,
the second artificial heart recipient. Both had long records
o f military service, have been married for over 30 years and
are grandfathers. The common family background reflects
a key guideline for selecting a mechanical heart patient —
a stable personal life and family support.

FLORIDA
IN BR IEF
Pilot Delays Bailout;
Spares Housing Area
PENSACOLA (UFI) — A Marine pilot who delayed
ejecting from his disabled Jet so he could svotd slamming
Into any homes In a heavily populated neighborhood said
he nearly waited too long, but was glad nobody was hurt.
With the crash site as a backdrop and close-flying Jets
Interrupting him several times, Capt. Richard Packard, 33,
o f Portland, Ore., told reporters that his Mi-year-old TA-4J
Skyhawk "quit responding" at about BOO feet. He guided It
on a path with the fewest houses and It came to rest
between two homes.
Packard, who said his "prim ary concern" wsa avoiding
houses, said he had hoped to reach the bayou beyond the
neighborhood, but did not have enough altitude so tried for
a vacant lot. He said he balled out at the "last possible
m om ent" at 150 feet. He landed on the roof of a house and
hla parachute hung up In the chimney.

Lawrence Leigh, assistant U.S. attorney
for Utah, said the five people Indicted
Wednesday allegedly contacted about 150
Utahns about adopting the babies. "About
32 paid for kids and got them and about 40
made down payments or full payments and
got nothing." he said.
The Indictments listed only 25 Utah
families who paid for adoptions but never
got children.
But Leigh said. " T h e r e have been
numerous similar cases In at least 40 states,
and we believe those 40 states would have
more or less the same numbers as In Utah."

O rlando Man Held In Stabbing Case
A 28-year-old Orlando man Is
being held without bond In the
Orange County Jail, charged
with murder In the stabbing
d eath o f a L o n g w o o d man
Monday.
Orlando police report James
Edward Osborn was arrested
Wednesday In connection with
the theft of a van. He had been
reportedly linked through a tele­
phone tip to both the theft o f the
van from an Orlando church
parking lot and the killing of
Paul David Switzer. 4D, o f 101
Butternut Lane. Longwood.
Th e body of Switzer, a hospital
consultant, was found nude and
with fatal stab wounds In hls
torso Monday night In a firstfloor room of the Parliament
House, a reputed homosexual
hangout on Orange Blossom
T f a i l In O r la n d o , p o l i c e
spokesman Jeff Peck said.
Sw itzer died around 11:30
p.m. Monday and witnesses, one
of whom spotted a bloody sheet
through the open door o f the
room and saw a man going
through a wallet, described the
suspect, who reportedly fled
partially clad from the scene.
Peck said.
When Initially arrested W ed­
nesday. Osborn was charged In
connection with the theft o f the
van and with aggravated assault
for a Jan. 24 Incident In Orlando,
P e ck sa id . Bond on th o s e
charges ts $ 101.000.
He was questioned about the
killing and charged in that case
Thursday. He was also charged
with robbery. Police report he
had Switzer's wallet and other
Items belonging to him.
HOM EGROW N

An Altamonte Sprtngs woman
has been charged with cultiva­
tion o f marijuana and possession
o f pot and drug paraphernalia
after Seminole County drug task
force agents reportedly found
five pot plants growing in her
apartment.
An agent reported receiving a
telephone tip the marijuana was
being grown In an apartment at

Action Reports
★ Flf$
★ Courtt
* Pollct Btat
Tiffany Oaks. 395 North Lake
Boulevard. Altamonte Springs.
The agent Investigated and from
outside apartment *2043 he
reported on Sunday seeing a
2-lo-3 fo o l m arijuana plant
through a window.
With a warrant agents entered
and searched the second floor
apartment Tuesday. They re­
ported finding five pot plants
growing In pots, and what ap­
peared to be marijuana seeds,
two partially smoked pot ciga­
rettes and a smoking pipe.
Following the search, Helen
Ann Zimmerman. 32. was ar­
rested at her home at 1:23 p.m.
Tuesday. She has been released
on $8,000 bond and Is scheduled
to appear In court March 4.
P A W N E D HAUL
A 21-year-old Orlando man
has been charged with grand
theft, burglary to a dwelling and
dealing In stolen property after
sheriffs Investigatory reportedly
linked him to a fingerprint on a
pawn ticket, a sheriffs report
said.
Jewelry taken In a Feb. 5
burglary o f a home at 158
Carol wood Drive In Seminole
County, was pawned for $2,000
at Connie's Pawn Shop. Fem
Pork that afternoon, a sheriffs
report said.
A suspect's fingerprint was
reportedly lifted from a pawn
ticket and helped lead to the
arrest, the report said.
Alvin Lee Fitzgerald Jr. was
arrested at the Seminole County
Jail at 2 p.m. Tuesday. Bond was
set at $8,000.
CONSPIRACY CHILD ABUSE
A 20- year-old Sanford man has
been charged
rged with conspiracy,
child abuse,
ise, petty theft and
grand theft after allegedly letting

AREA DEATHS
Mrs. Josephine Marie Arey, 68.
of 500 Longwood Road, Winter
Springs, died Wednesday at
South Seminole Community
Hospital, Longwood. Bom Oct.
20. 1910 tn Long Island, N.Y..
she moved to Winter Springs
from West Babylon. N.Y.. In
1 9 7 2 . S h e w a s a re tire d
electrical technician and a
Catholic.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e h er
husband, Edward H. Sr.: two
sons, Edward H. Jr.. Longwood.
Robert F., Long Island: daugh­
ter. Susan M. Kellm. Longwood:
nine grandchildren: one great­
grandchild.
B ald w in -Palrch lld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, la in
charge of arrangements.
B A R B A R A DsOOGTA
Mrs. Barbara Frank DeCoeta.
43. of 449 E.E. Williamson Road.
Longwood. died Tuesday at
South Seminole Community
Hospital. Longwood. Bom March
IB. 1941 In Fall River, Maas.,
she moved to Longwood from
there in 1974. She was a book­
keeper and a Catholic.
S u r v iv o r s I n c lu d e her
husband, Daniel: son. Daniel Jr..
tughters.
Longw ood: tw o dau
gh ters.
Sandra J. and Denise,
e, both of
Longwood: brother, Joe Frank.
Fall River: sister. Phyllis Souza.
Casselberry: father, Manuel
Frank, Casselberry.
Coa-Parkcr Guardian Funeral
Home. Winter Park, ts In charge
afarranaementa.
bis L. '
•0 0 W . state

Garri434.
vhile

Last March a Justice Department offlcUI
said the government seized records In­
dicating over 300 people in 36 states mdy
have been bilked during the previous fovlr
years by two men and a woman who offered
Mexican orphans for fees up to $10,000 bill
never delivered.
-J
Indicted Wednesday In Salt Lake Clfjy
were Deborah Tanner. 35. and her hunhand
Terry. 38. o f Wilcox. Arlz.; Bryan Hall, 3$.
of El Paso. Texas: and Lorenzo Prwipero
Arzola. 37. a Juarez. Mexico, lawyer.
Ward said a separate Indictment In Boston
charged Mrs. Tanner. Hall. Arzola and
Rebecca Kelly. 32. o f Newmarket. Iowa.
Ward said he did not believe any o f the
Utah couples were In danger o f losing their
children although some o f the adoption
papers were not proper.
Kohl said the FBI Investigation centered In
Boston: Phoenix: Omaha. Neb.; Albuquer­
que. N.M.: and Salt Lake City.
In Masaachuaetu. U.S. Attorney William
Weld said about 65 couples were required to
pay from $1,500 to $6,000 and more. He
estimated In excess o f $750,000 was paid by
prospective parents nationally between
1981 and 1984.

working In an orange grove In Oa.. and she came to Sanford
Orange County. Bom In Double from Winter Springs in 1972.
Sprtngs. Ala.. Feb 17. 1932, he She was a retired legal secretary.
She la survived by her sister.
moved to Chuluola In 1904. He
was a grove caretaker and a Mrs. William C. Eva Watson of
DeLand; brother. Warren Horst.
Baptist.
Survivors Include hla wife. Amherst. N.H.
G ram k ow Funeral Hom e.
Violet: two sons. Richard LHudson, Holland Hudson: two Sanford. Is In charge of ar­
daughters, Denise Lyle and Terri rangements.
M A R T S , H ALL
LaFotlctte, both o f Chuluota:
Mrs. Mary Emma Hall. 70. of
three sisters, Lucille Lancaster.
Fort Lauderdale. Marie Winkle 2300 Oak Ave.. Sanford, died
and Mary Osrrlson. both of Wednesday at Emory Hospital,
Double Springs: four brothers, Atlanta. Bom May 27. 1914 In
Joe. Fort Lauderdale. Faye. Alexander City, Ala., she moved
Chuluota. Glen and Hershel. to S a n fo rd In 1930s from
both o f Double Springs; parents, Alabama. She and her late
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Garrison. h u s b a n d w e re o w n e r s o f
YowcU's Department Store. She
Double Springs.
Brlsson O surdlan Funeral was a member of First Pre­
Home. Sanford. In charge of sbyterian Church. Sanford.
Survivors include two sons.
its.
Dr. James R. Hall Jr. and John
Mr. Francis C. Harwood Sr., Alan Hall, both of Atlanta; three
79. of 702 Woodllng Place. s l a t e r s , R u t h J o h n s o n ,
N o t a s u lg a . A la .. V i r g i n ia
A lt a m o n t e S p r i n g s , d ie d
Thursday in Winter Springs. Bronson, Alexander City, and
Bom May 22. 1900 in Maryland, Beatrice Kinard. Baton Rouge.
he moved to Altamonte Springi La.: four grandchildren.
Brlsson Guardian Funeral
from there in 1972. He eras a
retired printing executive.
Home. Sanford. Is tn charge of
Survivors Include hls wife, a r r a n g e m e n u
LRBLXST.
Angela: two sons. Francis C. Jr,.
Mr. Leslie T. Sheppard. 84. of
Engltshtown. N.J.. and J. Glenn.
1800 Park Ave.. Sanford, died
Upper Marlboro. Md.i sister. Mrs.
Philip Platt Smith Sr., St. Louts: Wednesday at Life Care Center,
Altamonte Sprtngs. Bom Oct.
four grandchildren.
25. 1900 In W auchula. he
Baldw in-Falrchtld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is in moved to Sanford in 1908. He
wss a retired reilroad ticket
charm of arrangements.
agent and a member of First
U O U Ilft E B U IL T
Presbyterian Church. Sanford
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Hckniy. 7$,
Rotary Club. 40 years, past
of dram Towers, Sanford, died
master of the Sanford Masonic
Thursday at Fish Manorial How
Lodge 02. member of the York
pual. DeLand. She was bom
Rite, the Commandery. past
August 21. 1900 tn Savannah.

\

patron of the Seminole Chapter
2.0ES.
Survivors Include hls wife.
Mae; two sisters. Mabel Morton.
W a g n e r , a n d M ae S to r e y .
Nahunta. Ga.: brother, W. Hardy
Sheppard. Fcmandlna Beach.
Brlsson Funeral Home. San­
ford. Is In charge of arrange­
ments.

two Juvenile purse snatchers out
o f a stolen c a r to gra b a
handbag, a Sanford police report
aald.
The purse which was snatched
in the parking lot o f Pantry
Pride. Sanford, contained $310
and the three suspects were
traveling In s car that had been
rep o rted s to le n . T h e adu lt
charged and the two boys had
allegedly conspired to grab the
purse, the report said. A Sanford
police report did not say if the
boys were caught.
Willie Lee Williams. 20. of 55
William Clark Court was ar­
rested st his home si B a m.
Tuesday. He w ss being held In
lieu of $5,500 bond.
After an Oviedo woman com­
plained to Oviedo police that her
husband who was driving a
wrecker forced her car off an
Oviedo roadway the suspect was
charged with aggravated bat­
tery, a police report said.
Shortly a fter the Incident
Tuesday. Bonnie Jo Slayton. 33.
o f 933 Vicki Court, (lagged down
a policeman and reported the
alleged assault which occurred
betwoen Lake Charm and Staley
drives, the report said
Harvey Joe Slayton Jr.. 24. of

■ w W l H i IwwPWlwtwM

GROSSE PO IN TE WOODS.
Mich. (UPI) — T w o shots were
fired In a dentist's office when a
13-year-old boy tried to force the
doctor at gunpoint to remove hla
braces, the Groaae Polntc Newt
reported.
Police aald the youth entered a
dentist'a office In Groaae Polntc
Woods last Friday armed with a
.45-callber automatic pistol and
aakrd to ace a dentist to have hla
braces removed, the newspaper
aald Thursday.
The denllat refused because
the boy did not have proof of
parental permission, ao the boy
cocked the pistol and aimed It at
the doctor. He was immediately
taken to a dental chair.
A nunc called police who had
her page the doctor lo have him

m

am. Swisl a H I U S A l l
alary. Oramhaat Fwnarai ham* In
Cam*:

Jack Patterson. Groaae Polntc
Woods director of Public Safety,
spoke to the boy and when the
youth turned to look, the officer*
rushed him.
During the ensuing scuffle the
boy allegedly fired one shot
which hit the door, then grabbed
an o f f i c e r 's p is to l c a u s in g
another shot to be fired Into the
floor.
Patterson said the boy spent a
few hours at a psychiatric center
and waa released to hla parents.
Police aald the suspect had
selected the dentist at random .•*

*r tcaffy'a-

..t**

*r

"jiii

at* Safe

Bataan Sana........... .... - .....a *

lU M M

leave the room on a pretext.
Police then entered the room
where they found the suspect
leaning over, spitting Into a sink,
holdings handgun.

STOCKS

Altanttc Sana.----------------- It s

LIMONIR. CATNISIHS B.
-F w aral Mm * tar CaWaHwa IMSwr. M, at
II* Cltra* Ortva, laoN rS a * « on* TuaaZay.
■rill a* h*M latvrOay at naan at Si* Cfcwrc* at
Ms
Laha Mary wIM M# Say FaMar
Faaraa. C UB. aMkUSna FrianOa

A 20-year-old Apopka man has
been charged with dealing in
stolen property and grand theft
after allegedly cashing four trav­
elers checks, reportedly stolen
by another man In a Georgia
holdup on Nov. 24.
S e m in o le C ou nty s h e r iff s
d e p u tie s rep orted th e m an
cashed three stolen checks In
Seminole County and one in
Orange County on Jan. 0. Tne
checks were worth $100 each
and were among 127 with values
o f $100 and $250 taken In an
armed robbery tn Cordele, Ga., a
sheriff's report aald.
The suspect charged had re­
portedly teamed up with the
holdup auapect to cash the
checks. The alleged robber waa
not arrested with the suspect,
the report said.
Larry D. Suggs, o f 138 S.
Thompson Road, wsa arrested at
the Seminole County ja il at
11:30 a.m. Tuesday. He waa
released without posting bond
and la achedulcd to appear In
court Mar. 4.

Dentist Doesn't A rgue
With Gun*Toting Teen

toefcasrstatfiwrtiywM S M .
Rflflismrirsl 'M n t l r m
i■

Sunnyvtew Drive. Oviedo, was
arrested at 9:34 p.m. Tuesday at
933 Vicki Court. Oviedo. He was
being held in Ueu o f $8,000
bond.

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.autusisu

Evening Herald

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tu rn * ii

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Friday, February IS, )f$S
Vol. 77. No. 1*1
Daily an* Iw M ay. i i c t r l

fey Tka l aaNri MaraM.
lac. MS X Praacb A w .

PIS. &gt;1771.
nm

—Sanaral aarvlca* tar Mr Balmsi* L
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miuaaava.
—Fiawrai wralaw N r Mary ■ Mas. H . *&lt;

( M l M l M il.

WMMM Z^M UM Sar M s SmS sSTS

•FULL SERVICE AT ONE LOCATION1
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•I IM l Far* A w ., tantar*.
an a n a n , anr* ksM at ■ s a c taOar a*
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ann u a l . I M $r i n n ir ii l o o m m
FaaarM N s a h S i H l in s iq w iiH .

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-Fm aral aarytam Mr Jack D. AwrM. *4 at

0AKUWN FUNERAL HOME / CEMETERY
• CONVCttlCNCI — ALLFUNgRAL $ BURIAL
ARRANOiMCMTS AT ONI LOCATION
• SAVINGS — WITH (VtRVTHttO UMMAOMK LOCAL
MANAOCMCNTCOm AMI L0W8R
• CASKET BCLICTION S fTEMlZBO FNCtMG
• TOTAL M B AW UMQP ISMT

•flo w s r s h o p
u a S M i

3 2 S -4 R 6 3

�arc wearing surgical masks to
avoid exposing others.
A school board spokesman
C oatiaaed from page I A
said, after a check with some of
though
about two weeks to build the county schools.
up the Immunity after receiving school attendance was down
below normal tn mid and late
the shot.
Deju said anltblotics are not January. It Is beginning to get
very helpful In combating flu- back to normal this week. She
like Illnesses except for Infec­ said chlckcnpox had also been
tions accom panying the flu. going through the schools.
Flu has shown up In 42 states.
"Take It easy and drink lots of
14
with regional outbreaks and
fluids. Older persons should go
10 r e p o r t i n g w id e s p r e a d
to a physician to make sure what
they have la not the flu. In the epidem ics, according to the
MOSCOW (UP!) — The head o f the International Chess
case of an actual case of Influen­ CDC.
Federation today declared the Incomplete world champion­
za. there Is a medication they
The 1980-81 epidemic, which
ship match between Anatoly Karpov and Cary Kasparov
ran from mid-December Into
can prescribe.
was over and said a new one would be held In September.
Because more people under 25 March, was characterized by a
But both grandmasters Insisted the contest must go on.
are coming down with the Illness high toll among the elderly, the
At a highly charged news conference, federation
than usual. Deju said he had group most vulnerable to the
President Florenclo Campomanes declared an end to the
notified hospitals to take pre­ Influenza virus.
mentally and physically exhausting match that began
cautions to restrict visits to try to
The 1980-81 death toll or
Sept. 9 betw een defending cham pion Karpov and
prevent the virus from being 52.000 was the highest since the
challenger Kasparov.
spread from patient to visitors Aslan flu epidemic of 1957-58.
The grueling contest was thrown Into turmoil Wednes­
and vice versa.
which prompted federal health
day when officials declared an unprecedented timeout and
Mrs. Bartholomew said that officials to conclude the vaccine
postponed the 49th game, with the score at 5-3 In Karpov's
although the hospital has 200 In use at the time ofTorded less
favor. There have been 40 draws.
beds, not all the beds are than 50 percent protection.
In the past taro weeks. Kasparov, who at 21 Is the
available to this type or case
youngest man to ever challenge for the title, scored two
because some must be set aside
successive victories that appeared to put Karpov on the
for such things as pediatrics,
defensive.
obstetrics, emergencies and In­
tensive care.
She pointed out that Inflluenza
Coatiaaed from page 1A
Is particularly dangerous for the
elderly with cardiac and respira­ p r o p e r ty
on
S e m in o le
tory problems.
Avenue have a 45 foot-wide
NATIONAL REPORT: Blind­ mostly cloudy and cold with a 20
She said the flu-like epidemic berm with trees. The berm Is to
ing snow and blowing snow, percent chance of rain becoming has also struck the stafT m em ­ act as a buffer between the
preserved today In the Midwest's partly cloudy this afternoon. bers and their families causing a commerlcal property and nearby
"Ice box." crushed roofs and High In mid to upper 50s. Wind shortage o f nurses.
residential land.
c lo s e d roads, as s tra n d e d northwest 10 to 15 mph. T o­
"Things are tight." she said,
The shopping center. If built,
motorists slept In shelters and night partly cloudy and cold "when we call on the nursing will be situated tn the front, or
isolated residents waited for food with low In mid to upper 30a. pool the number o f nurses avail­ on the south, portion of the
deliveries from the National W in d n orth 5 to 10 m ph. able to fill In Is down because of property In the middle with
Saturday partly cloudy and cold Illness and the fact that other
/ Guard.
parking on the east, west and
with high tn upper 50s to low hospitals arc hiring extra nurses
A R E A READINOS fr a.m.):
north side.
60s
temperature: 47: overnight low:
to care for their additional pa­
Not all the commissioners
4 6 ; T h u r s d a y 's h ig h : 6 1 :
B O A T IN G FORECAST: St. tients and fill In staff shortages."
were eager to allow a shopping
barometric pressure: 30.15: rela­ Auguallne to Jupiter Inlet out 50
Mrs. Bartholomew said staff center on Lake Mary Boulevard.
t iv e h u m id ity: 96 p ercen t:
miles — Wind northwest 15 members have been given flu
"W e voted, not too long ago.
winds: west-northwest at 6 mph:
knots today becoming northerly shots and those with symptoms not to vacate the alley. Now they
rain: .08 Inch: sunrise: 7:04
tonight then northeast 15 to 20
(the owner and counsel) come tn
a.m.. sunset 6:16 p.m.
knots Saturday. Sea 2 to 4 feet
with a plan to vacate the alley. It
I A T U R D A T TIDES:
near shore and 3 to 5 feet
is an attempt to get around our
D aytaaa Baach: highs. 4:45 offshore. Mostly cloudy with
dental."
said
Commissioner
a.m.. 5:07 p.m.: lows. 10:24 some light rain today then partly
Harry Terry.
a . m . , 1 0 :2 3 p . m . : P e r t
cloudy tonight and Saturday.
Moreland, however, argued
Canaveral: highs. 5:37 a.m..
EX TENDED FORECAST: Fair
that
a rrclasalflcatlon of the
FRID AY. FEB. 15
5:49 p.m.: lows. 11:16 a.m., S u n d a y th r o u g h T u e s d a y .
property would not only give the
Weklva
AA
(no
smoking).
8
11:36 p.m.: B ayp ert: highs.
R a th er co ld except a little
city more power to say how the
12:13 a.m.. — p.m.; lows. 5:39 wanner Tuesday. Lows In the p.m . W e k lv a P r e s b y t e r ia n land was used, but would also
a.m.. 5:20 p.m.
mid 30s. Highs mid 50s to near Church. SR 434. ul W eklva promote a suitable use of the
Springs Road. Closed.
A R E A F O R E C A ST: Today
60 Sunday through Tuesday.
property.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m., Rolling Commissioner Russ Megonegal.
Hills Moravian Church. SR 434. who eventually did approve the
Longwood. Alanon. same time changes after demanding certain
stipulations, said he objected to
and place.
the "spreading commercialism"
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m., St. o f land In Lake Mary.
" I don’t want to see strip
Richard's Episcopal Church.
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same sh o p p in g a lo n g L a k e Mary
Boulevard." he said Indicating
time and place.
th a t he d id n o t w an t the
Sanford AA Step. 8 p.m.. 1201 roadway developed as state Road
434 In Casselberry h a s 'been
W. First St., closed.

Evsflina Herald. Sanford.

...Flu

W O RLD

IN B R IEF

Chess Championship Halted
After 5 Months O f Play

...Loke Mary

WEATHER

CALENDAR

HOSPITAL NOTES

MwoMShoA
Franklin Wicks, 52, of 240 S. Short St., Lake M ary, w as cited
for reckless driving shortly after his 1982 Oldsmoblle. left,
reportedly hit the 1977 M ercury of M a ry Chable, 72, of 1900
Sanford Ave., Sanford. The accident occurred around 2:lfc
p.m. Wednesday. M s. Chable
w a s treated for minor
ln|uries at Central Florida Regional Hospital, Sanford, and
released. Wicks w asn't Injured. The combined d am age tb
both cars w as estimated at 85,000. according to the Florldfc
H ighw ay Patrol.
developed with shopping cen­
ters.
Keogh argued that the land is
going to be used and the com­
mission had a choice of how that
land was going to be developed.
"W e have a chance with this
particular piece (of property) of
setting some guideline o f doing It
properly the first tim e," he said.
Megonegal wanted assurances
that the shopping center would
have a buffer which led to Keogh
making the berm request tn the
resolution regrouping the lots.
" T h e planning and zoning
board pasaed on this 5 to 0 . 1 feel
those people have a good handle
on what Is hsppenlng In the city
he said."
While the regroup add rezon-.
Ing passed. Tcnry voted nay,
saying the shopping center con­
stituted spot zoning which Is
contrary to the comprehensive
plan.
The commission also balked
on approval of a final site plan
for a 7-Eleven store at the comer
o f Lake Mary Boulevard and
Country Club Road.
One major objection to the
final plan, according to Keogh,
was whether the convenience
atore was designed properly to
handle the expected volume of
traffic at the location. Megonegal
also said he did not want to see
an unaesthetlc building con­
structed at the site, something
"shot out o f the gun." or "boiler
plate." he said.
The final approval o f the site
plan was tabled so the questions
about traffic flow and width of
entrances and exits could be

studied. The Issue Is scheduled
to be reconsidered March 7.
Speaking against the (Inal ap­
proval were Felicia Spertl. presi­
dent o f the Lake Mary PTA and
Sandy Robinson, the groups
corresponding secretary.
Mrs. Robinson presented p
petition with 403 signatures
objecting to the construction qf
the store. She said the future
store, which would be sltuatrfl
diagonally across from Laky
Mary Elementary School, would
be the third convenience story
within a 1.000 feet of the school.
She said the store threatened thy
health, safety and welfare o f thy
children.
2
Mrs. Spertl. speaking agulmp
final approval, said the chain qf
7-Eleven stores Is the natton’ p
third largest seller o f pornqgraphlc material, though she did
add the material was so situated
In the stores as to limit access tb
kids.
:
In other commission action, ap
engineering consultant reconv
mended the city not accept anjr
o f the bids for the city's proposed
water treatment plant becausy
they were all too high.
Jim Bible of Conklin. PortcV
and Holm es Engineering, re­
commended the city enter negqnation with the lowest blddcy
and try to get the estimated
c o n s t r u c tio n c o s ts d o w n
880,000. The lowest bidder was
Wharton Smith Co.. LongwootJ.
with a bid o f 81.090.340. Hlbly
said the cost could be lowered by
cutUng down on -Storage and
"bfTIce spaVe.
_________________ I

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�Evening Herald
lu m w -M )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Friday, February is, 19SS-4A

Ways* D. Deyls, Publlthsr
Thsmat Olordsno, Managing Editor
Molvln Adklm, Advartltlng Director
Home Drlivrry Week, SI. 10. Month. *4.75. 3 Montlio.
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_______

No Reason To
Pay For Diatribes
Bias in federally sponsored educational
research?
T h a t's the charge leveled against the
National Institute of Education by the N a ­
tional institute of Educational Research, a
Reagan-appointed board of educators and
business people that sets policy for NIE.
The council's new report concludes that,
during the first years o f the Reagan a d ­
ministration. government m oney w as being
funneled to “ projects w hose aim w as a
•weeping reconstruction o f family and other
social relations." undertaken by "critics of
Judeo-Chrlatian morality, o f capitalism and of
traditional social constraints."
T h a t's a weighty accusation, and
evidence ju st Isn't there to back It up.

the

On the contrary, studies cited by the
council suggest that NIE, far from showing Its
leftist biases, w as doing what it is obliged by
law to do, namely, "prom oting the reform and
renewal o f American education."
N IE 's re se arch on d e s e g re g a tio n , the
council says, Is offensive because It promotes
forced busing.
But, In fact, the studies sponsored by NIE
aim at determ ining w hen Integration works,
and w h y — key Issues In understanding how
the law o f the land Is being Implemented.
The council report assails a study of sex
and race differences In math comprehension,
claim ing that such research can only lead to
the conclusion that students' attitudes have
to change before learning can take place.
W h a t’s w ro n g with changing attitudes Isn't
spelled out: more Important, the research Is
more likely to Identify w ays o f tailoring
teaching strategies In o rd e r to Improve
classroom performance.
Even studying "T h e Federal Role in Parent
In volvem en t" In ch ild ren 's education Is
objectionable to the council, which asserts
that merely to pose such a question Invites
W ashington Into America' households.
Th^re are, of coUirse, legitimate questions to ‘
be posed about studies or desegregation or the
ivem m ent's role In helping parents, but
ey're not the questions that the council Is
asking.

S

Its report Is troubling because It reveals
that those charged with monitoring federal
educational research have little apparent
evidence on the conditions o f effective
teaching and learning — Indeed, have little
Interest In research at all.
Instead, they want researchers to confirm
what the council members already believe:
That government shouldn't promote Inte­
gration or blllnqual education, that quality Is
a m isguided goal, that the family needs nc
help In raising Am erica's next generation.
But that kind of report-writing — don't
dignify It b y labeling It research — doesn't
deserve a penny from Congress.
T h ere's no reason to p ay scholars to
produce diatribes.

F lo a t s

W

r its

Letters to the editor are welcome for
bllcatloa. A ll letters m ust b * signed sad
iludo a m elllag address sa d . If possible, a
telephone number. The Evening Herald
reserves the right to edit letters to avoid
libel end to accommodate space.

K

HELEN THOMAS

Fahd Visit Brings Glitter To White House
WASHINGTON (UPI&gt; - Nancy Reagan re­
ceived a beautiful gold evening bag with her
Initials In diamonds from Saudi Arabian King
Fahd on his state visit to Washington.
Linder Ihe rules, she can use the bag but when
her White House days are over the gift, which Is
registered with the White House gift office, will
go to Ihe National Archives or Ihe presidential
library to be built on Ihe grounds o f Stanford
University.
She also was given a small enameled egg on a
stand. The egg opens to reveal a small clock
behind two hinged doors. On either door are the
Saudi Seal and the U.S. presidential seal
surrounded by diamonds. The face o f the clock
is rectangular with tiny flowers painted on It.
Fahd wanted the state dinner toasts to be as
Informal as possible. As a result. Reagan threw
away a prepared text, and Indulged In a few

ANTHONY

friendly quips before turning the microphone
over to the Arab monarch.
‘ T d like to take this opportunity. Your
Majesty, to thank you for a piece of cutlery, said
Reagan. "It's a fine Jeweled saber that 1 received
as a gift from the Saudi Boy Scouts who visited
the White House last year. And with the budget
battle about to commence In Washington. It’s
going to come In handy.”
Although women do not have a prominent
place In Saudi society, the White House Invited
actresses and socialites to the state dinner for
Fahd. Nancy Reagan wore a black high- necked
dress, but actress Slgnourey Weaver wore a
dccolletage that would stop the show anywhere.
Fahd’s toast brought down the house since It
focused mainly on the achievements o f the
Saudi Soccer Team that took part in the
Olympics and now has dates to play In Moscow
and China.

"W hat Is Important is that we are going to
have matches In China and In Moscow." he said.
“ I f this proves anything. It proves that there Is a
level or sports — the level o f sports In Saudi
A r a b i a Is r a t h e r g o o d . ’ ’
Like most state visitors, he extended an
Invitation for President and Mrs. Reagan to visit
Saudi Arabia.
Asked If he would be going. Reagan basically
said that trips are arranged for him and he goes
where he Is told. But the president does not
relish world travel as did one predecessor.
Richard Nixon, who loved to palace hop.
Reagan has two trips abroad this spring. He
w ill visit Canadian Prime M inister Brian
Mulroney In Quebec City next month and will
nd eight days in West Germany, attending
Bonn Economic Summit, and making a state
visit In May. Other stops on his Itinerary Include
Spain and Portugal.

E

HA

D O N GRAFF

Aid Has
Corrosive
Effect
Well-intentioned groups, such as
the Bread For Th e World organiza­
tion. continue to press for what they
regard as compassionate action In
sending food to hungry people
around the globe, Apparently It
doesn't occur to them that they are
encouraging a dependency that
locks people Into destitution.
Bread For The W orld lobbies for
Increased U.8. food aid to foreign
countries Irrespective o f their politi­
cal systems. For example, It favors
expanded food assistance to the
People's Republic o f Mozambique.
Those ctUzens who belong to the
Dread For The World group would
profit from reading what prominent
liberal publications are saying In
regard to the worsening famine
conditions In Ihe world today.
On December 17. The New Republic said In an editorial "that
politics Is at Ihe heart o f Ihe misery
besetting nation after Third World
nation." It criticized the prevalance
o f the "one-party state 'socialist'
governmental m odel." The People's
Republic o f Mozambique, with Its
Marxist regime, fits that description.
On December 3, The Waahtngton
/‘oat published a detailed article on
the effect of foreign aid on Tanzania,
which was supposed to be a model
for the Third World to follow. More
than 92 billion In assistance has
been given lo Tanzania since 1970.
" A country that once had been able
lo feed Itself." said Host writer
Olenn Frenkel, "and whose fanners
had produced su rp lu ses large
enough to sell overseas collapsed
In to c h ro n ic d e p e n d e n c y on
Western grain and emergency food
shipments."
Mr. Frankel said that "Food aid
programs provided cheap Western
grain that depressed the prices paid
to local farmers for their grain and
allowed the government to postpone
necessary agricultural reforms."
Aid has had a corrosive effect on
T a n zan ian s, p re c is e ly as food
stamps have created dependency in
the United States. Roger Young of
the North-South Institute In Canada
saya that there exists in Tanzania
today " a deep-seated psychological
dependence."
These, as I say. are comments
from liberal Journals and hence
should be heeded b y liberallyoriented groups such as Bread For
The World.
Americans are a charitable peo­
ple. but their charity will be wasted
If they don't insist that the nations
that receive food assistance reform
their systems. Without reforms,
dependency will Increase. Organiza­
tions such as Bread For The World
should realize that they have much
to leant.

:!

Back To
The Evil
Empire

JEFFREY HART

Praise For An Editor
In periodical Journalism the three
m ost p ow erfu l e d ito r s In the
country are Martin Peretz of The
New Republic. William Buckley of
N atio n a l R eview and Norm an
Podhoretz of Commentary. Some
would argue that recently Podhoretz
has been the most Influential of the
three.
It Is Podhoretz' genius as an editor
that he manages to Identify the
Issues that are about to rise lo the
surface — Central America, say. or
Star Wars, or the budget cuts. He
then commissions an article by the
very best authority he can And on
Ihe subject. The result Is that Just as
the editorial writers and columnists
and congressmen and ordinary citi­
zens are discussing and arguing
about the Issue, there is Commen­
tary with the best piece on the
subject, shaping the discussion and
molding opinion.
A s everyone knows. Reagan's Star
W a rs proposal Is now at the
forefront of discussion. And there
was Commentary last month with
physicist Robert Jaalrow and a
decisive article on the subject. After
Jaatrow's piece, the discussion can
never be what II was before It.
Jastrow showed, for example,
that In their analysis the Union of
Concerned Scientists — they oppose
Star Wars — actually erred In their
calculations by a factor of 10. A
factor o f 10: That means that In a
given calculation, where the correct
answer was 20. the Concerned
Scientists came up with 200. Dis­
tinguished men like Hans Bcthe. the
physicist who worked on the Bomb,
were flunking freshman math.
J u s t as s t r ik in g ly . J a a lro w
pointed out that. In essence, when
errors are being made, they tend to
be randomly distributed. That Is,
some errors point In one direction,
other errors point In another direc­
tion. All of the Concerned Scientists'
errors pointed In one direction:
toward disarmament.
Jaatrow's conclusion was kind. A
Nobel Prize laureate In one field of

science might not know what he
was talking about in another field.
Most readers probably drew another
conclusion: that Ihe Concerned Sci­
entists are Ideologues, and that their
errors and the direction o f those
errors Is not accident.
_.
,
,
The Intellectual development of
Norman Podhoretz has been like a
road map of the culture o f the last
j u years.
,
He grew up in Brooklyn. New I
The
S

K

u

h

S

. g a L r a

point out that the blacks, who are
adept at playing the peraecutee role,
w ere In fact the neighborhood
persecutors.
He went on to Columbia, and
honed hia skills as a literary critic as
a student of the late and great
Lionel Trilling. He later studied at
Cambridge. He m ay be our best
living literary critic, and there are
times when I regret that editing and
politics have distracted him, If that
Is the right word, from literary
criticism.
But. taking over at Commentary
In Ihe late IBSOs. Podhoretz moved
It sharply to the political left. The
1960s were coming, and Podhoretz
wanted lo let ills readers know what
was going on. He published Psul
Q o o d m a n 's y o u t h m a n ife s t o
" O r o w l n g U p A b s u r d . " He
published the anti-nuclear articles
afC.P. Snow.
A ll o f this changed in the late
1960s. If Podhoretz changed, he
changed with the nation, to adapt
Samuel Johnson. He despised the
counter culture. He saw what “ local
con trol" — meaning black control
— was doing to some neighborhood
schools. The Six Day W ar Im­
pressed him with the bottom-line
n ecessity o f m ilita ry strength.
Commentary became the leading
neo-conservative magazine, and In
I960 as well as 1964 Podhoretz.
throwing In the towel as a Demo­
cratic voter, supported Reagan.

M
- i

It can't be that we have suddenly'
run short of enemies.
j
I mean, the evil empire Is still
malevolently there, revived armsi.
talks or not. And the Nicaraguans,
at least as the CIA sees It. rem ain.
poised for a surgical strike at,:
Arizona.
So why was Washington's-Ire so
abruptly and publicly unleashed
against a loyal ally?
I am referring to the overreaction ’
to New Zealand's decision not ini
permit a port call o f a U.S. warship
without assurance that It was not
nuclear-armed. WSahlngton does i
not provide such Information as a
matter o f policy.
•,
For a few days, the Incident was i
treated like a major foreign-policy t
crisis. A Joint naval exercise was
canceled, and there were warnings :
o f possible economic retaliation.
A N 2 U S — the Australia-N ew ,
Zealand-U.S, pact — has been thcH
least fractious and onerous alliance
o f ihe many to which the United
states la a party
™ :
ft can be said that ANZUS is o n e }
commitment the United States gets
more out of than It puts In. Through
m o r e t h a n th r7 e d e c a d e s .
W «^ u n «u m l u » b e o . . b y u» coyn y
b e n , and Wellington
elllngton as
as possibly
possibly
from no other allied capitals.
The New Zealand rebuff on the:
p o rt c a ll w as the prod u ct i f
dom estic politics. T h e present
p rim e m in ister. D avid Lange,
campaigned last year on a p le d * ,
w h ich could be read as m ild;
U .S .- b a it in g , to b a r n u c le a r,
weapons.
Hardly an unprecedented devel-,
opmenl. A display o f Independent*
or Very Big Brother has often been:
considered good politics elsewhere.
In our very closest — literally -*•
ally, Pierre Trudeau kept It up for;
two decades and the alliance our-,
vlved.
■ ■Then why the gang-busters Job on:
New Zealand?
Because, according to the most,
frequently advanced Justification:,
letting N ew . Zealand off without
retaliation would set a bad,
precedent.
t»{
More likely, this was another
Instance of this administration's;
hard-nosed Impulsiveness tripping
over faulty Internal communication?;
The warnings of rough stuff ftomi
•ome quarters were no sooner!
delivered than other quarters were
saying that there were no such
intentions.
F o r t u n a t e ly , b e c a u s e NeWt
Zealand’s fidelity has been sod
•hould be permitted to continue Co t
be the least ofour global concerns. ;&gt;:i
And now. back to the evil empire. :j

JACK ANDERSON

UREY'S WORLD

Pentagon Flew In Friendly M X Votes;

“No mss Non ooukt got ME to go on ths
Rvprsm Court - msy hsndto 8,000cases A

&lt;f

a3

►»«

WASHINGTON - Defense Secre­
tary Caspar Weinberger and his
mulll-stsrred associates s i the Pen­
tagon are reacting with their annual
stentorian outbursts to suggestions
that the military budget can be cut
by so much sa a 97,000 coffeemaker or s 9400 hammer.
T a k in g the la s t re fu g e o f
scoundrels, they have the effrontery
to question the patriotism of those
who think ths mllllsry brass should
Call In line like good soldiers and
•wallow s few budget cuts along
with the poor, ths elderly sad the
disabled.
The generals and admirals seem
to think that what's good lor the
Pentagon Is good for the country.
My associate Tony Canaccto has
dug up an example of this selfserving attitude.
The amount of money Involved
wasn't that great In the context of
Pentagon budgets. It amounted to
only 127,760, or the combined
annual federal Income tax paid by
(bur or five middle-income families.
But **** expenditure was of quea*
ucmbte le g fty . accordingto the
cold-eyed eudltore of the General

j.

Accounting Office — and It wee an
exercise in futility. Here's what
happened]
On May 31, the House was
scheduled for s midnight vote on
the MX missile program. The Dem­
ocrats wanted to be sure that
Congress retained strict control over
the controversial weapons program:
the Pentagon opposed this move, of
So Weinberger’s wastrels put Ihe
Air Foret's special airlift unit to
work honing out over the country
to bring back six loyal Republicans
who would vote tor the adminletretlon. As authority for this political
shuttle service, they claimed the
nights
u s were "In connection with
official
Though the Defense Department
traditionally haa some leeway in

vote count on Capitol HiU. The vote
wasn't even dose: 296 to 96 against
the Pentagon. So the ala House
m e m b ers who w ere flow n to
Washington for the midnight vote
could have stayed In bed.
As for the three members who
already in Washington and
flown home by the Air Force
tha vote, one can only con­
clude that the Pentagon waa hoping
teelf w fth a freestone
to the G AO auditors.
the fllghti
w
il coat the government
r.760o
937.760
could have been made on
commercial airlines tor about onetenth as much: 92,796.
The biggest shore — 911.990 waa ussd to ferry Rep. PhO Gramm,
H - T o a a s . fro m M i d l a n d to
Washington and back to Wsco.
Gramm waa the only round-tripper.
The Air Faroe taxi tore t v Rep.
John McCain. R-Arts. - paid by the
taxpayers, not Ihe congressmen was 94,472 to fly him Made to

William Daiutemeycr. R-CaliT.. from
a sneaking engagement In Sc* PaUl
and flew him back for the futile vote
at a cost of 92.194. The GAO said a-;
com mercial flight would have case'
$249.
u*;
It cost 93.271 to fly Rep. W e t *Franklin. R-Mlaa.. to Waahkigtali't
from Greenville. Instead of the 9325
4 commercial flight would
oast: 91,976 far Rep. Ouy
Jagt. E-Mich., to be flown In
Grand Rapids, instead of 91
rnmmsrrtoh 92.506 to ti
Don flyndquist. R-Tenn.. home hf*
NsahetBe. Instead of 9304; and 97ID,
to (to Rep. Carroll Campbell. R -B .C .;
toImrrileBench,Insteadof9398. ;'*{
Several of tha cook
— including Dannemcyer
- Instated that,
1 were not. avail-;

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Friday. Fab. M. 1H J - J A

Gardening

B r ie f ly

Don't Be In A Hurry To Prune
Plants Damaged From Freeze

Artists'Member's Show
And Tea Set Sunday In Sanford
•The Sanford-Semlnole Art Association will hold lt*a 26lh
inual Member"* Show and Tea on Feb. 17 at the Sanford
Ivlc Center from noon until 5 p.m.
The show Is dedicated to the memory of Mrs. Beth Gregory, a
charter member o f the association who served as Its president
Ip 1961 and 1962.
• Approximately 30 artists will display a variety o f art work
and guests are asked to vote on their favorite. Past presidents
o f the association will pour at the lea. Each year several
‘iers donate works of art for drawings at the show. Artists
Ing work this year are Ginger Aumlller. Charles Dudley.
Gentry. Helen Hickey. Ashby Jones, Robert Garcia.
Govern Powell, Faye Slier. E.B. Stowe and Marie Richter.

3

E

4-H Hone Judging Team Places
The Seminole County 4-H Horse Judging Team participated
in the Slate Horse Judging contest held at the Florida Stale
Fair at Tampa on Feb. 0. Twenty* three 4-H members from the
state competed for top Judging awards.
The Seminole County Team placed fifth In overall team
standings. Team placlngs arc determined by the points earned
by individual team members In judging horses and giving ora)
reasons for those placlngs.
Winning an Individual award was Jennifer Duda. Oviedo.
Jennifer placed ninth In oral reasons. Other member* o f the
Seminole County Team are: Barbara Ann Buccino. Long wood.
Deborah Sargent. Sanford, and TKTany Wallace, Sanford.

Senlon1Awareness Day
The Orange County Alum ni Association o f BethuneCookman College ts sponsoring Us annual "Awareness Day
for high school seniors. This event will be held Feb. 23. I f '
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at St. John's Episcopal Church. 1000
Bethune Drive. Orlando (Washington Shores Shopping Center).
Contact persons are: Dr. Shelia Smalley. 694*0012. or Joe V.
Choice. 423-7362.

Genealogical Group To Meet
The Genealogical Group In Seminole County will hold Its
February meeting at the Seminole County Historical Museum
on Feb. 20. The program will be about Family Newsletters.
Group members will discuss all sixes, shapes and colors of
Family Newsletters. The program will begin at 7 p.m. and will
conclude at 9 p.m. The public 1s Invited.
The Seminole County Museum Is located on Highway 17/92
In.the Five Points area Just north o f the lire station. For
additional Information call 339-3557.

Williams Sliver Anniversary
Th e Rev. and Mrs. Frank (Deloris) Williams will celebrate
their 25th wedding anniversary by repeating thetr vows at 1
p.m.. Saturday. Feb. 16. at Mt. Zkrn Missionary Baptist
Church. Sipes Avenue. Sanford. All relatives and friends are
Invited.

What can you do to help your
plants recover from freeze dam ­
age? This question Is on the
minds o f all home gardeners. As
you can tell Just by looking, the
January freeze left many plants
severely damaged. It's too early
to e s tim a te fre e c e d a m age
caused this week.
One o f the first things you may
think o f Is taking out the prun­
ing shears and cutting oul the
dead or dying leaves and bran­
ches. Don't be in a big hurry.
Pruning right now Isn't a good
Idea. W ith many of our or­
namental plants, you can't tell
how much damage has been
done until the plant starts new
growth In the spring.
With some o f the more tender
landscape plants, you'll find that
the cold has killed everything
above the sol) line. But, many of
these plants may surprise you
by sending up new shoots come
springtime. Don't give up on
them until warm weather ar­
rives.
The freeze certainly damaged
the flower buds and stems of
azaleas. You'll notice the bud
damage for sure at blooming
time when your plant produces
few or no flower*. Tlie stem
damage will usually show up
later In the spring and early
sum m er when some o f the
branches will die.
On most of your ornamentals
and home citrus trees, dead
w ood w ill be easily d is tin ­
guishable from live wood when
new growth begins In the spring.
This will be the time to bring out
the pruning shears and cut dead
branches as y9u find them.
Don't be In a big hurry, though.
It will take longer this spring for
new growth to appear.
When you do prune, make
clean cuts back to living wood.

age. If the plant ts still alive.
Continue to provide moisture to
the roots, too. as needed. Do not
let the noil dry completely.
Urban
Fainting the pruning wounds
H orticu ltrlst
with tree-wound dressing has
323-2500
•become a controversial practice.
Ext. 181
The standard recommendation
has been to paint all wounds
over one Inch In diameter with a
This means the cut should have quality tree-wound dressing.
a smooth surface, not a rough Supposedly, this protected the
one that looks as tf (he tissue has cut surface from wood-rotllng
been tom or pulled oft. Care organism and "ch e ck in g" or
should be taken not to Injure the radial cracking upon drying.
plant around the cut. or rip or
Now, research has shown that
tear the bark above or below the upon exposure to the sun and
cut. The layer o f cells Just below weathering, the protective coat­
the bark, which la Important in ing often falls and moisture
wound healing. Is easily Injured. e n te rs the c r a c k s and a c ­
Do not twist or turn the shears cumulates In pockets that may
as you cut because you will occur between the wood and the
injure the plant as well as your wound dressing. This situation
shear*.
Is even more tnvtttng to woodIf you want to try to save your
citrus trees. If still alive. It would
be better to wait — there Is no
hurry to get this done. Suckers
that appear on the tree should be
left for a while until the extent of
the damage Is really known. Any
suckers appearing below the bud
union or graft should be re­
moved as they will be sprouting
from the understock which may
be sour orange or some other
variety grown strictly for root
stock.
When palm fronds turn com­
pletely brown, they can be cut
off. If any green Is showing on
them, leave them on the plant as
long as possible as the green
portion ts still functioning and
producing food for the tree. A
little common sense Is what
should be pruned out o f any
plant Is the rule o f the day.
A light feeding of a balanced
fertilizer, such as a 6-6-6- or
8-8-8, will certainly help any
plant recover from freeze dam­

Alfred
Bessesen

W o m a n C a n 't Confess Sin
To Th e Priest O n H er M ind
: ABBYi I loved this boy
(now a man) with all m y heart all
through school. "J o h n " loved
me, too. but w e never went all
the way. I would have, but John
was stronger than I was. and he
never let It happen.
He was an altar boy and
dedicated to his religion. I'm also
Catholic and thought that one
day we could marry. Instead.
John went to the seminary to
become a priest. He was or­
dained and assigned to a parish
out o f town. In the meantime. I
got married and had a family.
S ix te e n y ea rs la ter. John
moved back to town, and now he
Is my parish priest!
) 1 still have strong feelings for
him and 1 think Tie feels the
same about me. too. although he
hardly ever looks me In the eye.
He took my confession twice, but
I never confessed the sin that
was really In m y heart (my
desire for him).
The temptation I* terrible, and
the guilt about my feelings Is
weighing heavily on m y con­
science. I cannot deny my feel­
ings. I don't want to hurt John,
m yself or m y family. Please help
me.
a M in im h i m t u ju r r
Reduce the
tem p ta tio n b y c h a n g in g to
anpther parish. It would be a
kindness to John, and a favor to
yourself.
____
Tt 1 have some
advice that could save a lot of
people a lot of heartbreak. Re­
cently my father died. He was an
attorney and moat people would
consider him a wealthy man. I
have one sister who has a
history of emotional problems
sod la marginally employed. My
father left her enough money to
buy a house and be assured that
sh e w o u ld n e v e r h a v e to
He left my mother the

knew this. I'm sura they would
be shocked bccauae I had always
been the “apple of his eye.”
I am ao hurt and humiliated. I
can't see straight. My buaba
M e a decent Job. but we’re

Dear
A bby
to exclude one o f your children
from your will on the grounds
that he or she Is apparently

self-sulltalent, at least say som e­
thing nice about the person in
your will — not that "so-and-so
Is already well-provided for."
And please leave the ch ild
something — even if It's only
something o f sentimental value.
It will make a lot of difference In
the way you are remembered.
S H U TO U T
D E A R S H U T O U T t G ood
advice. Thanks for a valuable
item.

If a pruning wound Is to be .
protected, allow the cut surface
to dry for several days before
applying I he dressing. This will &gt;
Improve the chance of a good bond. Examine the coaling sev­
eral limes the first year. And,
r e t r e a t i f the c o a t in g has
cracked.
If you lose one or two o f your
landscape plants, don't give up.
Just think, now you have the
chance to add something new'
and exciting to your landscape
plant collection. With hundreds
o f plants from which to choose,
and with mild weather all year,
most years, who can complain?
Happy gardening!

e* * H r

k

s£

t f

SATURDAY t SUNDAY
(FEDRUARY U -17 ONLY)
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at

A A A STO SA O a
ON AIRPORT UVD. JUST SOUTH OF NRV. 40
Bring your msswramsnt*. All pises* cash and carry.
Sublsct to prior tala. Good selection of artificial turf,
vinyl rsmnanti. room ilia rug runner*, sic.
Everything goes - nothing held beck. Dealers welcome.
Henry. Henry, Herry.

12x17 M Y RUMEN

BACK HEAVY DUTY
12xl5’3” LIME

RUFFLE
AZALEAS
FlarMQsaMy

• t • « t

i 2x i n r
S TR IP E NYI

12x15 MOTTLED
H M . 0 .........................
.

llx lD ’S” DROWN

31 3" * $10° °

S N A Q .........................

SALE* * .

11x25 MOWN

i m o .......................

NOW IS THE TIME
J O PLANT. . .

12x15 CNEEN

PIDSN .......
12x li OMEN
PLUSH ...........
12x22 M E N

12x15
*2 9 ”

. »3 * "

SMALLER SIZES
PRICED EVEN
LOSER. HURRY

[t il V. ULMAHVRU9- m iw m
taMMVT. 17-M
LA K E MARY RMOfURMMl U-t RAAfTLAMO 1
L
H M IM
H 44M J
A n yw ay, please tell your
coders this: If y
LV'i-v t

U

rotting organisms than one with
no wound cover. Where aesthet­
ics are Important, though, the
practice may be Justified.

v J&gt;i '-L*. * .. .......

.
fc'v1

�*

I

SPORTS

&gt;

•A-Evening HtraM, Ssnfor*, FI.

FrMsy, Feb. IS, IW

Footloose Rams Stun Lake Howell

By Chris F itte r
Herald Sports W rite r
It wee the kind o f atmosphere
top-ranked teams dread.
, Lake Howell's Silver Hawks,
ranked first In (he 4A Stale Poll.
■and the top seed In the 4A-9
. District Tournament, expected
•to be battling Lake Drantley In
the district final on Saturday
night.
But along came Lake Mary's
■Kama. Although they weren't
1 one of the top aeeda In the
, tournam ent, the Kama were
•. loaded with talent and seemed to
, relish the role o f underdog.
Freshman Ernie Broennle's
goal with 12:30 remaining In the
match Thursday night lined the
Rama to a 1-0 victory over Lake
H ow ell In the district semifinals
. at Lake Howell High.
,i;i Lake Mary will go up against
Lake Brantley’s Patriots Satur­
day night at 7 at Lake Brantley
for the district title. The Patriots
s u r v iv e d a m a ra th o n w ith
,, Lym an's Oreyhounds Thursday

night, winning 3-2 after the
teams went Into sudden death
penalty kicks.
“ I knew going In that we were
ng to win," Lake Mary coach
rry M cCorkle said. " T h e
whole team felt It. We went In as
loose as can be. We played to*
win the match while It looked
like Lake Howell was playing not
to lose."
Lake Mary had lost twice to
Lake Howell before Thursday's
match and McCorkle said the
Ram s co m b in ed w hat th ey
teamed from the two losses to
pull off the upset.
W hile Broennle’s goal pro­
vided the winning margin. It was
an outrageous Lake Mary de­
fense and 6-4 goalkeeper Greg
OrlfTIng that kept the highp o w e r e d H a w k a o f f th e
scoreboard.
Orifflng came up with 12 saves
In recording his 13th ahutout of
the season. The tougher de­
fensive aaalgnmenta o f the night
were handed to freshman Scott

K

Soccer
'I know going In wo woro
going to win. Tho wholo
loom loll It. Wo wont In
at looso ot wo can bo.
Wo ployod to win tho
match whllo it lookod
Ilka Lako Hawaii ployod
not to loto/

— Larry McCorkle
Schmitt and Juniors Louis Rosen
and Vlnay Jotwanl.
"Schm itt was on Jeff Schlcker
the entire gam e," McCorkle said.
"Schlcker haa always been a
thorn In our side and Scott did
an outstanding Job containing
him. He kept Schlcker from
turning the com er and that's
when he's really dangerous.
" L o u is (Rosen) and Vlnay

(Jotwanl) split marking Lake
H ow ell’s leading scorer Eric
Recaem an." added McCorkle.
"H e’s their most dangerous at­
tacker and a threat any time he
gets the ball. Rosen and Jotwanl
did a good Job keeping Resaeman scoreless."
Lake H ow ell had Its beat
chances to score In the first half
as the Hawks had six comer
kicks. But Lake Mary stopped
every one o f them and the match
remained scoreless at halftime.
"O ne of our goals waa to hold
them (Lake Howell) scoreless at
halftim e," McCorkle said. "We
knew we'd be In good shape If
we did that. Lake Howell had six
comer kicks In the first half and
that worried me. but we had
someone there to stop them
every tim e."
Lake Mary's defense tightened
up even more In the second half
to give the offense a chance to
break the scoreless tie. The
chance finally came with 12.-30'
left when the Rams had a comer

kick.
Paul Holmes took the comer
and crossed the ball to Broennle
and the freshman stanout fired It
into the goal. Broennle. who was
m oved up from the Junior
varsity for the district tourney,
has scored one goal In each of
Lake Mary’s district victories.
Another Lake Mary offensive
player who turned In a strong
performance was senior Andre
Sanders.
"Although he didn't score,
Andre had a real good gam e."
McCorkle said. "H e kept Lake
Howell's defense playing defense
and didn't let them contribute to
their offense. When the defense
contributes, that’s when Lake
Howell la most effective."
L a k e H o w e ll h a d a fe w
chances to tie the score In the
last 12 minutes but Lake Mary
pushed some more people back
on defense to aew up the victory.
“ When we took the lead the
team Jumped back and played
more defense." McCorkle said.

Brick s Kick
Lifts Lions
Past 'Vorde
•;
'

'
,

Harold Sporta Editor
MONTVERDE - Greg Brick’s
goal with five minutes remaining
In t h e s e c o n d 1 0 - m ln u tc
overtime period lifted Ovledo’a
Lions to a 2-1 victory over No. 8
ranked Montvcrde In the 3A-7
D istrict Soccer Tou rn a m en t
semifinals at Montvcrde.
" I really thought they'd be a
lo t t o u g h e r b e c a u s e t h e y
throughl It was a fluke that we
beat them (8-0) the Drat lim e,"
said Oviedo coach Chris Hall
about his 8-8 squad. "Brick
made a great move. He took It
and went through about three
le and went right by the
e ."
Montvcrde outshot (he Lions,
17-7, and 3-1 In corner kicks but
a stellar effort by keeper Oordon
King (17 saves) held (he opposi­
tion In check.
Mike Cheater, Mike AmRheln
and Pat Sweeney were the Lions'
atandouts defensively. "T h ey
were Just all over the field," said
Hall. "Am Rheln was Just super.
He waa at the right place at the
light time. He knowa how to get
to the ball and do something
with It when he gets there."

S w e e n e y tu r n e d In tw o
game-saving plays during regu■ ■ 1st Ion. On one occasion, keeper
Oordon King came out to block a
kick and It hit a bump, deflect­
ing off King. Sweeney moved In
and kicked II out of the way.
Oviedo will go up against
powerful Bishop Moore, a 8-0
winner over Orlando Jones, In
Saturday's finals at 2 p.m. at
Montvcrde.
The Horneta beat Oviedo, 8-0,
during the regular season. Tim
Fall, a Sanford resident, pumped
In six goals In the victory over
Jones and five against Luther.
Fall has scored an Incredible 89
goals In 28 games.
"1 really don't know right now
what we will do agalnal Fall,"
said Hall. " I really hate to aet
one man on him because It
messes up my defense. But we
might have to do something with
him ."
Oviedo had taken a 1-0 lead In
the first half on a goal by Jeremy
, Mason but Montvcrde came back
to lie It In the second on Ronl
1 Montanart'a goal. Neither team
‘-‘‘ ‘ could score In the first overtime
and Brick finally broke (he lie In
the second to give the Lions the
— win.
Montvcrde took 17 shots on
goal Thursday compared to Just
■even for the Lions, but Oviedo
k e e p e r O o rd o n K in g ca m e
through with 17 saves.
Oviedo will have a tough taak
Saturday In stopping Bishop
M oore's Horncla w ho have
■cored 26 goals In their two
district wins. The Hornets de­
stroyed Orlando Luther, 164). on
Tuesday before rolling Jones.
"W e've come s long way since
Ume we played Bishop
■aid Hall. "Offensively
and defensively, U 's been a
complete turnaround. W e're
passing a lot better."
Hall said a switch to midfield
from fbllback for Don Palmer
Dave Cook haa made a
"It haa heloed ua
offensively and defensively."
M id Hall. "They're two pretty
Mg toys, They've got to
that hae really helped ua.'

"L ak e Howell got the ball In the
penalty area a few times but we
always bsd 8 or 6 guys there to
stop them."

Lake Brantley
Outlasts Lyman
In 5 Overtimes

a

'

Loko M a ry goalie G ro g G r il ­
lin g shut out tho state's No. 1
team Th u rsd a y night when
t h e R a m s n ip p e d L a k e
H ow ell, 14).

Big Man, Little Chair
Bonny G abbard, m iddle, says his little chair has been
w orth over 200 victories, but It w asn't lucky Wednesday
night as Seminole C o m m u n ity College pulled out an 81-79
victo ry over Central Flo rida . G a bb a rd , Central Flo rid a 's
colorful 8-8 coach, d id n 't spend m uch tim e on his favorite
ch a ir, though, as the fast-paced action had G abbard and

SCC coach B ill Payne up and down all night. W ednesday's
victory w as a big one for P ayne, his 20th of the season. It
also put the Raiders In a Saturday night showdown
against Daytona Beach. T h e w in n e r of S aturday's gam e
at Daytona w ill host the post-season tournam ent. T h e
w inner receives a berth In the state tournam ent.

Michigan Trims Iowa, Holds Big 10 Lead
U sited Frees la te rsa U e a a l
The longer the Big Ten erseon goes, the
better Michigan looks.
"Michigan Is very versatile." Iowa coach
George Raveling said. " I haven’t seen many
teams In the country with so much balance.
They are a better defensive team than they
ever get credit for."
The Wolverines, ranked No. 7 In the
country, defeated No. 11 Iowa 86-82
Thursday night at Iowa City to win their
10th straight game and retain first place In
the Big Ten.
"It was a great defensive gam e." said
Michigan Coach BUI Frlcdcr. "Fine defense,
fierce rebounding. I’m proud o f my kids for
hanging In there."
Roy Tarpley had 22 points and 10
rebounda and sank a pair of free throws
with 11 seconds remaining to cany the
Wolverines.
Iowa decomposed down stretch, leading
49-44 with 4:63 left. Michigan then clamped
the Hawkcyca and held them to 3 points the

Basketball
last 3 VS minutes.
The Wolverines are 19-3 overall and 10-2
In the Big Ten. The Hawkeyes. 19-8 and
second In the league at 8-3. were led by
Greg Stokes with 18 points and Gerry
Wright with 14 and 11 rebounds.
"H e has probably one o f the more difficult
couching Jobs around." Raveling said o f the
Michigan coach. "Difficult because he has a
team with so much talent. A lot o f times
when you have that much talent you can
■crew It up. but he gives them a wide range
to utilise their individual abilities.”
Elsewhere In the Top 20. No. 8 Syracuse
ripped Scion Hall 94-62; No. 13 Louisiana
Tech beat Southwestern Louisiana 83-76 In
o v e r t i m e ; N o . 18 I l l i n o i s d u m p e d
Northwestern 64-42; and No. 17 Oregon
State downed Waahlngton State 6949.

At Syracuse. N.Y.. Wendell Alexis scored
17 points as Syracuse gave Coach Jim
Bocheim his 200th victory. The Orangemen.
184. settled Ibe issue with a 20-2 first-half
run. Scion Hall Is 0-13 In Ihe Big East.
At Lafayette. La.. Willie Simmons scored
16 points and Karl Malone 14 to lift
Louisiana Tech. 21-2. Southwestern's
Cedric Hill, whose 16-footer with 16 seconds
left forced overtime, finished with 20 points.
At Champaign. 111.. Bruce Douglas scored
17 points and made 7 steals as Illinois. 19-7,
broke a three-game losing streak In the Big
Ten. Northwestern did not score Its first
field goal until more than nine minutes
elapsed.
At Corvallis. Ore.. A.C. Green bit for 29
points and Oregon State shot 64 percent In
the Beavers' Pac-10 victory. Steve Woodside
added 17 points for Oregon State, 164. Otto
Jennings had I t points for Washington
State.

Mainland Invadas For Crucial District Encounter
While DeLand and Seabrecxe
battle for the Five Star Confer­
ence lead tonight at DeLand, two
other conference team s —
Seminole and Mainland — will
have district seeding as their
goal.
With Seabrecie departing to
the 3A district after the close of
the Five Star season In two
weeks, DeLand haa pretty much
been conceded the top seed with
Ms 12-2 record.
The No. 2. No. 3 and No. 4
apotaar* wide open, though, and
Mainland and Seminole would

Basketball
both like to be No. 2 or No. 3 and
In the opposite bracket sa DeLand.
Seminole and Mainland each
have 9 4 records while Apopka
and Spruce Creek are 6-8. Lake
Mary la aUIl an outside threat
with a 7-6 mark but the Rams
would have to win the rest of
their games.
"Tonight's game Is real Im­
portant. *a!o Seminole roach

Chris Mariclle. "There's no way
Mainland will beat us as badly as
they did last time. We are a
much better team."
Marletle will starts seniors
James Rouse and Ken Gordon
along with Junior Matt Maxwell,
sophomore Rod Henderson and
freshman Andre Whitney. Craig
W a l k e r , th e T r i b e 's 6^6
freshman, Joins Michel Wright as
the top reserves. "Craig wtU play
a lot more than be d U against
"W e H
on (Mike) Polltr

Polite, a 6 6 sophomore, has
been the hottest thing going in
the Five Star Conference over
the past three weeks. He to
•versing 20 points and 18 re­
bounds per game over that
stretch for coach Dick Totk'a
In other action tonight. ,Loito
Mary travels to Spruce Creek.
Lyman hosts Lake Brantley,

A L T A M O N T E SPR IN G S Lake Brantley coach Jim Brody
said he knowa Lyman la a
"tournament team," but the
O re y h o u n d s w e n t a little
overboard proving It Thursday
night.
Lyman, a 34) loser to the
Patriots during the regular
reason, battled through a 40mlnute regulation game, two
10-m lnutes overtim es, two
flve-mlnule overtimes and a
sudden-death penalty kick be­
fore the Patriots finally pulled
out a 3-2 district semifinal victo­
ry at Lake Brantley High School.
“1 knew they would be tough.
They have gotten a lot better
since we beat them." said Brody.
The Patriots will host Lake
Mary, a stunning ,1-0 upset
winner .over No. J tanked .Lake
Howell. In Saturday's 7 p.m.
championship game.
Two strong defensive plays
marked the first half action as
Lyman keeper Todd Hamilton
■topped a kick kick by Steve
DeLong at ihe 84)0 mark and
Lake Brantley keeper Aaron
Kindle turned back a penalty
kick by Brian Ocaaek with a
diving deflection.
Lake Brantley, the state's No.
4 ranked team, and Lyman
battled on even terms for the
first 30 minutes. The Pats took
at 14) lead at the 314)0 mark,
though, when Ricky Williams
scored on an Indirect kick.
Williams received a pass from
Mo M o g h a d d a m a n d beat
Lyman's wall for Ihe score.
Just two minutes before In­
termission, Lake Brantley scored
again. Chris McManus attacked
from the left wing but his shot
waa deflected by Lyman keeper
Hamilton. Moghaddam followed
up, though, and booted in the
rebound for a 24) lead.
Aa It turned out. It waa far
from over. Seven mlnutea Into
the second half, Lyman scored
Its first goal when Carter Maya
boomed home a shot from 18
yards a way. "W e didn't clear
the box very well and Carter
made a good shot." said Brody.
F o u rtee n m ln u tea la te r,
hotshot Ocaaek finally abed hto
defender and tied the game from
20 y ard a out. Ocaaek box
chested the ball up In the air and
then used a three-quarter volley
to beat keeper Kindle.
"That waa one beautiful goal."
•aid Brody. "U 's got my vote for
goal of the year."
The goal of the year stood up
for a long Ume aa the teams
battled through the final 19
mlnutea and 30 minutes of
overtimes before the sudden
death. "W e bed two or three
opporunltlea to score,'* said
Brody. "But we Juet couldn't
finish them."
Lyman ewttchad to keeper
far the sudden
•hot to Chapman's left for the
first score. Lyman hit attempto
to tie U, but the ball hit the poet
Cory 6hfffl*Mi eras next up far
Lake Brantley and he beat
rhapm aa to the right corner.
Lyman's Stealer Dowers than
beat Kindle to hto left to putt UN
Oreyhounds wtUUn one gooL
Charts Pledger then eotoaed
over the top far the M s hut
Klodfa blocked Lyman’s
to hasp Um Patriots' eh
Patriot .Stoic
■cored to the Keeper's
L:

�1 1 1

»

*

I v f i i m M ifiK i IrnfiN * FI,

Vri4*y, N l . IS, 1HS— 7A

Lady Patriots Face Must-Win Situation
from the line. Alexander hit 9 o f
14 from the floor.

Seminoles
Blast Bucs
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports W riter
ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS - A l­
though snubbed by the 4A Stete
Poll In one o f the quickest
d is a p p e a ra n c e s e v e r. L a k e
Brantley's Lady Patriots have
b o u n ced b a c k to w in tw o
straight after a tough loss to
Seminole to run their record to
23-4 overall and 15-2 In the Five
Star Conference.
The Patriots used a balanced
attack and strong board work
Thursday night to cjalm a 54-32
v ic to ry o v e r L y m a n ‘ s Lady
Greyhounds before 250 Ians at
Lake Brantley High.
Lake Brantley now must wtn
Monday against Lake Mary's
Lady Rams to force a tie for the
conference title with Seminole. If
there la a tie, Brantley and
Seminole would flip a coin to
decide the top seed In the 4A-B
D istrict T o u rn a m e n t w hich
starts Thursday (Feb. 21). If
L a k e M a ry w in s M o n d a y .
Seminole wins the conference
ou tright (u n les s It loses to
Apopka) and Lake Mary la sec­
ond In the district seeding.
"Our main goal tonight was to
. start getting It together for Lake
M ary." Lake Brantley coach
Renny Betria said. "T h e boards
will be the key for us Monday
night."
Lake Brantley, which was
ranked fifth In the state but
dropped out o f the poll after
losing to S em in ole, hit the
f. boards hard Thursday aa It
outrebounded Lym an. 40-24.
Kirsten Dellinger's pulled down
a game-high 10 rebounds to go
along with 10 points. Michelle
Jt Brown pumped In a game-high
a
10 points. Including 5 of 5 free
•O
throws, and added five boards,
tT« two assists and two steals. Caml
m Twaddell contributed six points
i; and eight rebounds.
*&gt; Sherry " Ic e " Asplen. a junior
point guard, had a nice floor
gam e w ith fou r points, six
assists, four rebounds and three
it
steals. Sophomore guard Ashley
w
Thomas came o ff the bench to
(
add four points, three assists and
•i) two steals.
♦o
Lyman s leading scorer. Kim
•&gt;).
Forsyth, was held to four points
if
In the first half, but wound up
with 16 points and seven re­
bounds. Denise Steve na led the
Lady Greyhounds underneath
with six points and nine boards.
Lyman took a 2-0 lead In the
early going on Kelly Carman's
a t1
layup&gt;but th
that
was the only time
the Greyhounds led as Brantley
came back with six straight

Catherine "K itty " Anderson
had another strong game Inside
aa the Junior forward contrib­
uted 12 points. 12 rebounds, two
assists and a season-high nine
steals. "S h e played a great'
all-around gam e," Merthle said
of Anderson.
"Mainland played pretty well
the first half but we kept playing
aggressively and things began to
open u p." added Merthle. "W e
were a little sluggish In beginn­
ing but came on and played
well."
M AINLAND 1181 - R*kortt*n 11 Hawk In*
A tttckWy A Irv in A Wrlfkt A Kommor A
Rorryt Totals 1*1811
t lM I H O L t 1*11 - lantan IA Amtarwn IA
AttianSw IA A Imltk A 8. Vnllh A Wkitac*
A C o tk A M Ik k M Il.M M IU
Hotttlm* — lamina** I I . Mainland N
Foul* — Mainland IA Mm Inala » Foutodout
— nana. Toctmkal — new. A — 11

A p ril Peterson, fa r left, discusses some strategy with
Catherine 'Kitty* Anderson d u rin g a slow tim e In the gam e as

K im *Blg Wheel* Johnson towels off. Seminole w h ip p 'd
M a in la n d Th u rsd a y night to stay In first placa.

points.
A fter taking a 10-6 firstquarter lead, the Lady Patriots
outscored Lyman. IB-6. In the
second to lake a 26-12 halftime
lead. Brown exploded for 12 o f
her 19 points In the second
quarter.
The Lady Patriots look a 44-19
lead after three quartets and the
starters gave way to the sub­
stitutes In the fourth quarter.
T h e play o f Thom as and Junior
forward Kim Wain, highlighted
the fourth period for the Patriots.
Thomas came up with a steal
and fed Wain for a layup to atari
out the quarter. On one of (he
moat exciting playa or the night.
Thomas lipped a brilliant pass
to Wain for a layup that gave
Brantley a 51-24 lead. Wain
ended up with five polnla, three

LYM AN m i - Soy* I. Carman 1. Fanyth
l». John ten L LaDwka a Millar 1. Rotent 1.
Havana A Total*: 11* II n .
L A X t B tA N T L IV (M l - A*»t*n 4. Srown
I*. Ot&lt;M«w*r lAG orO m A H*«an A Lukonow
1. May 1. Thomat *. twaSSall A Wain A
Total*: i l l itM
Haltttma — Laka 8 rantlay 1*. Lyman Tl.
Fault — Lyman IX laka Sr annoy IS. FouM
out - nano Toctmkal -n a no. A - US.

rebounds and one steal.
"W e're really starting to come
together." Betria said. " I f one
person doesn't do It. somebody
else does.
In Ju n ior v a r s i t y a c tio n
Thursday, Thelec Bouey poured
In 20 points as Lym an's JV Lady
Greyhounds upended the JV
Lady Patriots. 48-29.
Lyman boiled to a 14-3 lead
after one quarter and main­
tained an U-polnt lead. 16-7, at
halftime. .Brantley pulled within
nine. 30-21.'after three quarters
but could get no closer.
Behind Bouey fo r Lym an.
Joanle Richardson and Mona
Richardson added 10 points
each.
AUlaon LeJeune was high for
Lake Brantley with 10 points
and Carin Lldke tossed In eight.

to a 6 3 -3 8 v ic t o r y o v e r
Mainland’s Lady Bucs.
Sem inole Improved to 22-5
overall with Its ninth straight
victory and the Tribe remained
Ued with Lake Brantley Tor Aral
place In the conference at 15-2.
Seminole concludes the regular
LYM AN JV IN I - M Hlchordaon W. season Monday at Apopka.
Brook* A J RlcttarSwn IS. Bouoy W.
The Lady Seminoles got oft to
William* 1. Patit, ton i Tatalt: I I A ll It.
s rather sluggish start according
L A K I S S A N T L fV JV ( I I I - Ham loti L
LoJouno M. aioort A LWka A FlaySX Rotor* to coach Ron Merthle but still
1 Tout* 11 M il *
managed to take a 16-6 lead
HaHttmo — Lyman M. Laka Sw ntUy t. after one quarter. Seminole led
Foul* — Lyman I I Laka Srantloy IA Foul
by 11, 31-20, at halftime then
out — nano Tackntaal — nano.
sealed the victory In the third
quarter by outacoring the Bucs,
In Five Star Conference action 17-6, to lake a 48-26 lead after
at Seminole High. Junior guard three quarters.
Tem lka Alexander and senior
Benton added six rebounds,
guard-forw ard Mona Benton two aaaista and one steal lo her
pumped In 18 points apiece aa 18 points and she also hit 7 of 14
Sanford's Lady Seminoles rolled shots from the floor and 4 of 6

Laka H aw aii 62. Apopka 49
Erin Hanklna and Ta m m y
Lewis combined for six free
throws In the final minute to lift
the Lake Howell Lady Hawks lo
a 62-59 victory over Apopka at
L a k e H o w e ll H ig h S c h o o l
Thursday night.
The free throws erased a 49-46
Apopka lead and completed a
Lake Howell come back which
atarted when the Hawks trailed
by seven entering the (Inal eight
minutes.
"W e didn't turn II around until
the fourth quarter,” said Lake
Howell coach Dennis Codrey.
"W e finally made some free
throws when we needed them.
Lewis and Hanklna played their
best games o f the year."
Hanklna. a s o p h o m o r e , tossed
In four o f the free throws lo
finish with a career-high 18
tnta and four assists. Lewis, a
ishman. totaled 12 points
along with he (wo clutch free
throws and picked up five steals.
A lo n g w ith L e w is a n d
Hankins. Jolec Johnson picked
the Lady Blue Darters apart
u n d e r n e a t h to I g n i t e th e
fo u r th - p e r io d c o m e b a c k .
Johnson hit all seven o f her
points In the final period.
Gina Schmidt and Caroline
Kuhl dominated the backboard
for the Hawks. Schmidt pulled
down 11 rebounds and Kuhl
added eight.
Lake Howell. 4-20 and 2-14,
playa a nu
makeup game at DeLand
plays

K

SaturdayA FORK A (W| — Rorramar* IA Damp 1*.
McKinney 1, Jahnian 1 , BurkhaaS I,
RaMnaanl. Total*: m i l *
L A I ■ MONTI LL t i l l - Caw A Hank tat IA
J Jatmaan A K. Jakntan I. L**U I t Ro# IA
ScMiMI A Scknltkar A Kukt t, Jana* A
Total* M W M t l
HaHllma — Apopka H. Laka Hawaii M
Font* - Apopka !A Laka Hawaii IA Paata*
- Damp. Toctmkal - Apopka honck 1,
i (PtactaS). IckMikor ( *lactaS |,

\Elliott, Yarborough Fords
'P a s s Tests; Checker Next
v
*&lt;
I*
'■
s

U FI A n te R a d a | W rlta r
DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) - The Fords of BUI
Elliot! and Cale Yarborough have passed their
taste with flying colors ana now they turn their
attention to the checkered flag.
ElUot and Yarborough will enter the Daytona
500 undefeated after victories Thursday in the
Twin 125-mller previews to Sunday's race. The
125-tnlle triumphs came after the two act the
fastest qualifying speeds earlier last weekend.
EUtott'o car continued to dominate as he won
Thursday's first 125-mile qualifying race by 37
seconds over Darrell Wahrip and Yarborough
captured the second by two seconds over Dsvtd
Pearson In the run to fUl the grid for Sunday's

victory, "but 1 don't think Sunday will be the
same thing. It would have been a close race with
Terry Labonte involved, because he and Nell
Bonnet! would have gotten together and given me
trouble.
“When Terry dropped out 19th lap engine
problem), that took Neil's chance out. the way I
was running. I ran the ear aa hard aa I could all
day — we wanted to see what we could do."
Bonnet!, who led the eighth lap. ran second to

Auto Racing
Elliott from the ninth through 37th laps when s
cut rear right tire on his C hevy put the
Hueytown. Ala. driver out of contention.
T h ree G eneral Motors cars w ere second
through fourth with Darrell Waltrip and Benny
Parsons finishing two-three In Chevys and Buddy
Baker fourth in an Olds. Ricky Rudd was fifth In s
Ford.
Elliott set s record speed of 179.764 mph In
easily winning his division. There were four lead
changes among three drivers (Elliott. Labonte
and BonnettHa a race that was slowed for three
laps by ooe caution flag. EUiott hit a speed of
200.3 mph on the third lap, one of the fastest
recorded tn Daytona competlton.
Yarborough, who fashioned a second fastest
qualifying speed of 203.814 on Feb. 10 lo
guarantee a slot on the front row Sunday, said he
felt fortunate to beat Pearson's Chevy.
"David was awfully strong." acknowledged
Yarborough, who has been racing sgalnst the Old
Gray Fox for three decades. "He was stronger

Seminoles Falter, 7-0

i

R a n d y La|ole, left, spins out d u rin g a
flv a -c a r collision T h u r s d a y at D a yto n a
Baach. T h a crash, w h ich In v o lv 'd La|ole,

C la rk 0
T ra v o r
iniurlas.

Browns Fair Well At Double-Header
Over the past weekend, some
of Seminole county's better
riders ventured down to HomeMead and Miami for the NBL
National Daubis-header. Day one
of the rtmtbtohaadtr was spent
competing at Homestead N I L
BMXtrack.
Brothers Darby and Colby
Brown did quite well.
Darby, who races 7-expert,
placed sixth after qualifying (or
hie main.
O lder brother Colby, who
lOwxpert placed eighth at

Lake Brantley and Lyman

•od i n n in three runt m
L aks Branflay pounded
Buttle Thursday.

D arby and C olby's Staley
Hactog Products
jm
Staley was aho on band for the
competition. Jay did not i
the main event In Me S O
, Ha made up far II
nam e h

eighth btrthday.
In Bicycle
B
Connection raring
results, tha brother atotcr team
of Mark and Susan K f H sack
won a Ant place at tha DeLand
NPSA competition two weeka
ago. Mark is a 17-cruiser and
Busan Isa 12-glil.
Jason Hefllngton also won the
14-expert Friday and cams back
On the next day of race action, with the 14-expert and 14-open
the boys were headed off to Utka on Saturday at Barnett
compete In Miami.
M
In Pine Hills. Mark Each
Darby and Colby, both placed
th 17-cruiser on I
fourth in the 7-expert and 10-

Christy

Davis

expert mai
Jay did
end day
day of

raring. In hla S-9
open. Jay placed
d seventh,
seventh. la
In tha
the
c U . Jay
J
putted to a
Incidentally, this was Jay's
Brat Matfoend aa an SexperL On
Jan. 27. Jay celebrated hla

Prtday raring. David
ran ascend in the
ash to tha 1tt-n aw iccjO ^ L tu rark. J.P. A d an a
la t h e 13-novtca and
third to tha IS-

�Friday, Fab. It. ins

IA—Evenlitf Htraid, Sanford, FI.

Ready, Wrestle

Open Draws Champ
B y Chris Plater
H ersld Sports W riter
Ten teams will be on hand.
Including defending 4A state
rhnmplon Orlando Evans and
defending 1A Slate Champion
Trinity Prep, at the tak e Howell
Open track meet Saturday at
ta k e Howell High.
Field events begin at 10 a.m.
fo llow ed by running even ts
heats at 12 noon. The teams that
w ill tie on hand include Sanford
Seminole, take Howell, Lyman.
Lake Brantley. Trinity Prep,
E M iis . Winter Park. Colonial.
West Orange and Apopka.
IQnnford's Lady Sem lnolea
frjifure sprinters Kalrlna Walker
aM) Glenda Bass and middle and
U m distance runners Shownda
Mr,

■

■

Lake Brantley's Joe
Waresak, top, gives L y m a n 's
Randall M athis a m outhful of
his left hand during w restling
a ctio n e a r lie r this y e a r .
W a r e s a k , a o n c e -b e a te n
159 pounder. Is expected to
meet Seminole's T ro y T u r n e r
for the district championship
Saturday night at Lake M a r y
H ig h School. Lake M a r y ,
which posted a 12-1 dual meet
record, Is the heavy favorite.
The R a m s easily won the
Five Star Conference. T h e
district field Is made up of
th e s a m e te a m s m i n u s
Seabreeze. Wrestling action
begins w ith the first round at
4 :3 0 p .m .

All but one Seminole County
team will be at the Lake Howell
Open Saturday, ta k e Mary's
Lady Rams will be competing In
the Astronaut Open In Titusville.
Marlin, Dorchelle Webster. Detake Mary's top performers
bble Coleman and Jennifer Rob­ Include seniors Fran Gordon
erta.
f 100 meters. 440 yard dash. 660
Leading the way for ta k e run) and Sonya Walker (100.
Howell are distance runners Lisa 440, 220). The Lady Rams have
Samockl, Am y Ertel. Martha a pair o f promising hurdlers In
Fonseca and Mary Fonseca and Junior Jodie McCurdy and soph­
high Jumpers Cheryl Brinkley omore Lisa Shelby while leading
and Kim Hammontree. ta k e distance runners are senior Jill
Brantley features one of the top B u d d e n h a g e n . fr e s h m a n
high Jumpers In the state In Heather Hetkklla and Junior
Taleena Smith, who was third In Nikki Hays.
the state (4A| a year ago. Lead­
Seminole County's boys teams
ing the way for Lyman are will compete In the prestigious
distance runners Tracy Fisher W ild c a t O p en S a tu rd a y at
and Julie Greenberg.
Showalter Field In Winter Park.

Track/Pield

■—

ISPORTS
IIN B R IEF
r -

•*

M cGraw Hangs Up Hit Splkot
PHILADELPHIA (UPI| - Tug McGraw, whose little boy
enthusiasm kept him In baseball for three decades, has
finally decided It's time to loin the adult world.
"T h e bottom line was that I’d be much happier with life
* ’ us a retired player and staying In Philadelphia and getting
’ * on with living than being away from m y family for almost a
whole yrur." said McGraw.
McGraw. 40; said good-bye to baseball Thursday,
announcing his retirement to venture out Into a business
world where he has become well-established In recent
years.
He might he leaving the baseball world behind, but the
memnrlrs will remain.
There will be the memories o f the brash "You Gotta
Believe" kid who helped pitch the New York Mets to the
world championship In 1009 and Into another World Series
In 1073.

Cummlngt Loadt Bucks’- Victory
U a l t a d P re s s In t e r n a t io n a l

Whatever professional basketball legacy Is left for
Milwaukee next season, 1085 will be remembered there as
the year Terry Cummings came to the Bucks.
With the franchise for sale and the possibility of Coach
Don Nelson leaving. Cummins
tings has been an Island In the
rods) night he lifted Milwaukee
Bucks’ sea o f troubles. Thursday
; _ t o a 132-128 overtime victory over the Indiana Pacers In
' ‘ the Hoosler Dome.
Cummings, acquired In a trade that sent Marques
— Johnson to the Loa Angelea Clippers, sent the gsme Into
overtime with a driving layup, then scored 6 points In the
extra period to pull out the victory.
&gt; At the time o f the deal. Bucks fans were loathe to see
'Johnson, long a local hero, depart. The way Cummings has
(. . turned what waa supposed to have been a rebuilding year
Into another of leading the Central Division. Bucks fans are
,beginning to say, "Marques W ho?"
s
In other games Thursday night, Houston defeated New
York 11.1-105: San Antonio defes
defeated Phoenix 131-102;
. Denver defeated Kansas City 130-123; and Boston defeated
• Seattle 110-04.

hi

/fin

M o w -P a r Rounds A t La Jolla

LA JOLLA, Calif. (UPI) — The way the 157 golfers raced
through the opening round of the San Diego Open you
.‘ •.would think they needed the clubhouse for a wedding,
i .r. An avalanche of bclow-par rounds Thursday marked a
vifast start In the tournament, which offers a $72,000 first
V prize,
•;c, Four golfers carded 8-under par 04’s. good for a 1-stroke
leud over five players and two ahead of 11 others.
The cut will be made after today’s round.
"It was a perfect day for scoring," said Howard Twttty,
who shared the lead with Oary Hallberg. Don Pooley and
• the appropriately named Tommy Valentine.
When asked why the pack waa so tight, Twttty credited
the course and a chamber-of-commerce day In San Dtego’a
. nceanfmnt La Jolla district.
I*
-„
‘
rt-t

;l Martina, Chris To Brook Tto
DELRAY BEACH (UPI) - Martina Navratilova and Chris
Evert Lloyd are about to break the deadlock. The two stars
r^ o f women's tennis. who are 31-31 In head-to-head matches,
will meet Saturday in the (Inals of the $1.8 million
International Players tennis championship,
j Evert Lloyd, seeded second, rallied Thursday to beat
&gt;unsecded Steffi Oraf of West Germany. 6-4. 0-2. Evert
f Lloyd traded 1-4 In the first set but won the next eight
Top-seeded Navratilova won her semifinal match in
ImUar fashion, rallying in each set to atop Carting Bassett
(Canada, the No. looted, $-3.63.
Saturday's winner will collect $ 112.500.
I'm not afraid to play Martina anymore, since I beat her
our last meeting/' said Evert Lloyd. “She's No. I and
i taking anything away from her. But when I had the
of toeing to her over the last couple of years, I
1It. I'm looking forward to It now/'

FREE

SCOREBOARD

ItrtrsSsclary Cs s t m t" S IK K C IF IMO. H O M tY tsS PO LLEN P R O ­
D U C TIO N . PIm m o i l

I’ M

TU B E

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fcwnnipr*
as r&gt; -IlM L C a m T M tO tw c .

MnW

Mocom Refects Chicago Off or,
Saints' Futura Still Uncertain
NEW ORLEANS |UPI) — The future o f the New Orleana
- - Saints remains uncertain today after Houston owner John
Mecom, In a surprise move, rejected a second offer from the
i f Chicago-baaed A.N. PrlUker family, majority owners of the
[j Hyatt Corp.
Just hours after Gov. Edwin Edwards had told city
councllmen the purchase o f the NFL team was near
completion Mecom representatives shocked state and city
officials Thursday afternoon with an announcement that
the deal was off.
Saints President Ed Janes said the second offer
presented by the Prltzkrrs In conjunction with state and
city promises o f exemptions from taxes for use of the
Superdome actually was below the original offer of $40
million.
"T h e proposal that we were presented with this morning
Is In effecl lower thsn the first ofTer ... and after
&amp; 'iconstdrralion we rejected It." said Tom m y Thompson, a
&gt;“ Mrcom spokesman In Houston.
Mecom has been asking $05 million for his NFL
franchise, and Thompson said Salnta negotiators had
resumed talks with a local buslnrssman who wished to
remain anonymous but wanted the team to remain In New
Orleana.

MsrsM P M * Sr T w» * T Vises*

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W T ju o n . m d . s a m p i i
PLAY TIC EXCfTMQ A HIGH
PAYING "PICK 8" 4 “BIG O'*

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Sorry No Minors

Bowl America's Youth
Dominates Area Teams
Bowl America Sanford’s youth
bowlers dominated the Seminole
County Youth tournament again
this year as they garnered 41 of
the coveted trophies. They
competed against youth bowlers
from tangwood. Altamonte and
Indian Hills. The highest scratch
game bowled by our young
bowlers was a 244 rolled by 14
year old Mike Isom.
Our young bowlers not only
showed they were champions on
the lanes; they, (heir parents and
the youth coaches at Bowl
A m e ric a d is p la y e d tru e
sportsmanship and patience
over a scheduling error by the
tournament director and the
h ost c e n te r. F a lr la n e s .
tangwood.
Due to the error, 14 doubles
and singles teams had to re­
schedule for the follow ing
weekend, after arriving at the
lanes raring to go. The coopera­
tion shown by the Sanford
youth, coaches and parents
makes us very proud, and we
offer congratulations on the fine
bowling and sportsmanship.
Winners from our Bantam
Division, ages 8-8. were aa
follows; All Events Scratch Boys
Mike tall; All Events Handicap
Girts Kathy Murphy; All Events
Handicap Boys John Martin;
Singles atria first Kathy Murphy;
Singles Eloys first John Martin;
Singles Boys second Craig Key;
Doubles first Valrt Stacy and
Jennifer Stacy; Doubles second
Kathy M urph y and J lllla n
Shoemaker; Team event first

Roger
Quick
Herald
Bowling W riter

Kathy Murphy; Valrl Stacy.
Jennifer Staey and Jllllan
Shoemaker; Team event second
Charles Isom, Chad Strop. John
Martin and Chris Eckwahl.
W in n e r s fro m o u r P rep
Division, ages 9-11, were as
bvems acraicn
follows; All Events
Scratch urn*
Olrls
imood; Singles Girls
Lisa Llndamood;
Llndamood; Singles
first L
Boys first Mike Selg; Doubles
second Stephen Templeton and
Chris Allman; Team Event first
Jason Everiy. Melissa Butt. De­
rek Drake and Llaa Llndamood.
W inners from our Junior
Division, ages 12-14. were as
follows: All Events Scratch Boys
Michael loom; AU Events Handi­
cap Boys Andre Collins; Singles
Boys second Michael Isom;
Doubles first Mark Davis and U s
Chesser; Doubles second Steve
and Chris Elland; Team Event
first Mark Davis, Steve Elland.
Chris Elland and U s Chesser.
W in ners from our Senior
Division, ages 15-18. were as
follows: All Events Scratch Olrls
Cindy Hogan; Doubles second
Bryan Fraley and Ray Honakcr.
Trophy presentation will be at
tangwood Lanes this weekend.

Marketability Down For Moses
NEW Y O R K (U PI ) Authorities on the marketability
of athletes — the agents who
hammer out those lucrative
contracts — pondered Olympic
alar Edwin Mooes' economic
future In Ught &lt;&gt;f hka ongoing trial
for soliciting sex from an under­
cover cop.
While they supported him
verbally, there waa significant
doubt about whether Moaee
would gamer any commercial
endorsements that would help
him financially — regardless of
whether or not he's convicted.
According to
agent. If
oses la round
the
of Just
the accusation may warrant'his

T ra c k

THE ADVANTAGE WA
RAISE YOUR STANDARDS OF
RIDE AND PERFORMANCE.
a your lutury mdant ridm and
pmriwmanca atm Important to
you, mo aigysN you conoids/
m Advantage T/A • radial ft
Offsn oU -asan a caarw U sncv,
camhriabk ridb and sjtcsJ W

mtikago. Badtmd by from
Raplacmmmnt Warranty
Cormrogm
,
M T/A

AT&amp; T

WTOKTUNn
C a l l in g '

y m w T E C fT z

\RAUALS
WEMAKE CARS PERFORM

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Tm

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WE
BUY
MORTGAGES
W t a lto m a k t 1s t a n d 3m l m o rtg a o a loans
o n R o tld a n tla l o r C o m m tr d a l R o a l E s ta te
u p to $100*000.
P a n o n a l lo a n s a r t a v a ila b le
R e v o lv in g C r e d it L in a .

Initiation o ft lawsuit.
Dave Ftahof, who
New York Giants' quarterback
Phil Simms among others, was
emphatic when asked if Hoses'
arrest and subsequent trial will
damage his marketability.
"A bsolutely," said Flshoff.
"Corporations look for no n e g a ­
tive publicity from a client.
There's enough athletes out
there who donT have any situa­
tions brought up against them. If
Ifn
fiui | was proven not
guilty. I'd sue the city.

In c lu d in g

831-3400
*

i , «

*

b

ft

*

�/ «

*

I

NOW THAT'S
O «j«c n o n !

BEETLE BAILEY
R E M E M B E R W H E N \ T H E N M EM
EVER YON E T H O U G H T S T A R T E D
T H E B E A T L E S 'H a i r / G R O W I N G
W A S T O O LO N G * / H A IR T O

^

,____

V

YOU PON’T
S E E IT THAT
LONG ANYMORE

THANK GOOPNESSTHINGS
ARE GETTING BACK
J
c o n c e rn
T O NORMAL
y l

THEIR

1 WAJSTfi/

AH 1 0

^ Cr A

I FIXED YOUR
TWUMMI8SIOM,
A R C H R r ___v

REMARKABLE1I'D

REVER HAVE &lt;
(

DEAR DR. LAMM
Two years thiough the skin Whether one
ago 1 was seeing a psychiatrist feels hot or rold depends on the
for depression. She gave me nerve fibers In the skin, not on
Elavil, which I took for 18 the body's internal temperature.
months. I complained to her that The skin controls body heat.
I was gaining a lot o f weight, but When a person has a hot flash. lt(
she Insisted that Elavil cannot Indicates that the body Is at
produce weight gain.
tempting to lower Us temperaNow I have read that other lute: It does so by Increasing the
people have the same problem circulation through the skin In
with Elavil. I no longer take lose heat. Therefore, the person
Elavil, but am unable to lose the feels hot even though the body Is
weight I gained. Otherwise. I am cooling down.
In good health and walk more
than two miles a day. Nothing
seems to bring off one pound.
ACROSS
What can I do to help bring my
weight down without going on a
I Name (Fi.|
4 Cvn/sr plat*
crash diet? Is this weight gain
• Tarry
still due to the effects of the
E la v il. I'm 47 a n d had a I I N l « laa'and
hysterectomy etghl years ago.
DEAR READER - Elavil will
Increase a person's appetite,
particularly for carbohydrates,
and In that way cause weight
gain. Elavil Is not affecting your
weight now. But your stage of
life may be. Many women expe­
rience difficulty In controlling
their weight after the meno­
pause. I do not know If you had
your ovaries removed when you
hod your h y s te re c to m y , or
whether you are taking
hormones, but those are Impor­
tant factors.

THE BORN LOSER

..AMDI'LL HAAS ItX)
KNOWTHAT ALL THE
JHDRRAPaeS HAVE

Keeping Weight Down
Hard After Menopause

believed it ...

cf

1501 .

More and more Information
shows that while calories don't
change, the w ay your body
eliminates or uses culortrs does.
I suspect It has something to do
with selling your thermostat In
the brain. Less energy may be
converted to heat and lost as
heat, while more food calories
are converted to fat.

TO SHOW MV
&gt;
APPMOATIOM, I'LL
TREAT YOU TO
.
v
D IN N E R S

Considering the lack of In­
formation available on how to
Influence the body to eliminate
calories, thr best you ran do Is to
follow a sensible, balanced diet
and a good, regular exercise
program.

EVWr'BOCh'S RREOOIIUG
TWWDSfDR'SS...

WHrTLSOK ARE. IKLBGKER
SHORTS AJ5.CUT... LOWS
HAIR IS BACK...DRWWKX3
OMCREOriS IU...

TRDOCft

ARE. OUT!

DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 am
always cold: when most people
are comfortable. I am [reeling. It
does no good to go to the doctors
nround here, since they act as If
this a Joke. What Is wrong, and
can something cun be donr to
help?
DEAR READER - Thr pro­
blem Is related to the circulation

R ep ra trd light exercise or
physical activity may help. In
severe rases, medicines that
dilate the skin's blood vessels
may be tried.

Send your questions to Or.
Lamb. P.O. Box 1531, Radio City
Station. Sew Vorfc. N.Y., 10019.'

Antww to Envious Puula

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IB EVaril&lt;an

4B
47
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At what tlma
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DOWN
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WIN AT BRIDGE
by H argtM VM A Sslltrs

HO

HAVE Tt&gt;U AND
A\H9S BOGST BEEN

G ET OUT
FFVhMJNDOt
THAT £ £ T A !

K ID P iN G ?!
W H A T DID
€FHE S A Y P

&lt; 3 U A R *eL lN G

AGAIN, MR.SMALL ?

by W am ar Brothan

■ U O S BUNNY

IBTS LANDAND TAKE

'THE W HITE T O N S IS ROC L O A D IN G A N D Y
JNLOMD i /S© O m &gt; .

a close look .

The unusual theme o f today's
deal Is preventing the defenders
fro m s h o r te n in g d u m m y ’ s
trump holding when the last
trump msy be needed as an
entry.
Since five diamonds would
have been down only one, ll was
right for North to bid on to five
spades. In fact, six spades would
make If trumps were divided 3-2.
Today's declarer might have
done better had he remembered
that he was In five spades, not
six.
East won the king of diamonds
and continued with the ace.
Declarer ruffed in dummy and
played the A-K o f spades. When
West showed out. South realised
that the contract waa In danger.

He cashed hla A-K o f hearla. Had
East ruffed the second heart,
declarer's problems would have
been over, but East simply
discarded a diamond.
South picked up the Iasi
trump and led a club lo the
queen, hoping that West had Ihe
king. No such luck. He had lo go
down a trick.
Declarer has a simple play to
allow Ihe contract to make.
When East plays the second
high diamond. South should
simply play a low club from
d u m m y. W h a tever happens
next, he will be able to play
A-K-Q o f spades and the A-K of
hearta. and be able lo reach
dummy by overtaking his spade
five with dummy's seven to
make (he contract.

NORTH
) ISIS
♦ Till
V q j 1074
♦J
4qi4
WKST
KAXT
#1
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v m n
*t
4 1112
4 A K 10 7 4 1
4*1J
4 KJ I 0
sotrrti
4 AKQ0 1
oak

4Q4
♦ A74J
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer; East
Wrtl
Sank Kail
14
34
W
4#
l*a*a
Pau
&amp;4
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14
Pai*
Pau
Opening lead: 42

Aaslfe
D6I
44
Pita
Paw

HOROSCOPE
What Tha Day
Will Bring...
...A N *

T H tN

rS J ttU A A Y IB , 1 M B

STfiOtWL, TURNOVERS,
c in n a m o n

pow py-

•••

i tmma

-Lxnn

m i

ir

tt-jsS’H 'Es
“KCt“'uly*■"wl,h

cavp,

fo p o V S R f,

Pa n

do what needs to be done.

AOUABIUB [Jan. 20-Peb. IB)
laBIONI (May 21-June 20) Be
B C O U I O (Qcl.‘ 24-Nov. 22)
The way to gain the support of willing to work hard today, not Your poaalbllitiea for personal
others today la to undrrplay only for yourself, but also for achievement are excellent today
your inicntlona. Let than tnlnk
people to whom you have an because you ate both a dreamer
that what you want to do ta obligation. You'll take pride In and a realist. It's a winning
really their Idea. Major changes your accomplishments.
combination,
am In sum for Aquarians in the
C A R C SS (June 21-July 22)
B A O tT T A U V B (Nov. 23-Dec.
coming year. Send for your
Your Image will be substantially 21) A reliable friend will be
Aatro-Oraph predictions today,
enhanced today tf you live up to waiting In the wings today to
Mad SI lo Aatro-Oraph. Box 439. the promises and commitment* help you If needed. He can gel
Radio City Station. New York, you've made lo other*. Bend you out of a Mod that you are
NY 100IB. Be sum to state your over backward to be reliable.
unable to resolve.
aodMCBjfi,
U O (July 23-Aug. 22) This la
C A P U C O A N (Dec. 22-Jan.
H B C M (Feb. 20-March 20) a good day to tackle tasks you've IB) Try to arrange a reunion
Two avenues will open today to been reluctant to do lately. You today with an old friend you
bring about something you've might even amaze yourself as to haven't seen much of lately. U
b e c n jM p ln g ^ rJ &amp; U h e ro n i^ irtU ^ lio a M n a n iH ^ ^

•IMattNaSgt

s o , w o rn
m COUOHT

oh

g rm m tm
m n to u rw
w * o * m

tmptnou*
m U tW U H
■ O K f l HHL

�»

I
IIA -E v e f lln g Harold, Sanford, Ft.______F rid a y , Fob. 15, IMS

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

•ho creditor or hl» agent or
attorney. end Ih* amount
claimed II th* claim I* hot yet
duo, Ih* dal* whan It will
become du* lhall ba tfalad It
th* claim li contingent or unit
quidaiad. th* nature of Ih*
uncertainty than ba ttatad It
the claim I* lacurad. Iha tacurl
ly thou be daecrlbad. Th*
claimant lhall daltvar Mrtflclanl
copMl at ih* claim t* th* Clark
I* anabta th* Clark lq moll on*
a r to each Partonol Raprt
•live.
All par lent Interatfad In th*
attat* to wham a copy ot thi*
Nolle* el Admlnlilratlan ha*
bean mailed *r* required,
WI T H I N THRE E M ONTHS
FROM THE DATE OF THE
F I R S T PUBL I C AT I ON OF
THIS NOTICE, la III* any oN
factlem they may have that
challenge the validity at th*
decadanr* will, th* qualified
IMn* at Ih* Partonal Hapra
•anlallva, or th* vanu* *r
|ur Iidle tlon *1 Ih* Court.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS.
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED
Data ot th* llrtl publication at
thl* Notice at AdmlnlilratlanFebruary 11. INI
/»/ Sherwood Arthur Jocobaon
/»/ Arlan* M. Tefanbeum
A* Partonal Rapraaanlallvaa
of Ih* Bilal**1 •
HANNAH JACOBSON.
GEO. A S P U R . JR.
Of SPEERBSPEIR. PA
P.O. Be* I M
Sontard. FlarIda a m
(M il 7710*41
AHurnay hr
Partonal R«pr»i*nt*tlv*l
Publlth February I I 11. I**i
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SIMINOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number U **f CP
IN RE ESTATE OF
HARRY WILLIAM SILBAUOH
Docaatad
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* admlnlilrallon *1 ih*
••tola at Harry Wlllal m
Slibaugh, d*c*ai*d. F l i t
Number U Oat CP, I* pending In
Ih* Circuit Court lor SamineM
County, Florid* Probata
Divitian. ih* iddrtt* at which it
P .O Or*w*r C, Sanlord.
Florida. W tt
Tha noma* and addrttaot *1
Ih* partonal rapratanlollv* and
Ih* partonol r*pr*Mnl*Hv*’t
ottorrwy art tat torth batew
Alt intaraitad parton* are
required I* til* with Nil* court.
W I T H I N THREE MONTHS
FROM THE OATS OF THE
F I R S T PUBL I C AT I ON OF
THIS NOTICE I) *11 callmt
____ . . I* and t) any
oblacllont by on Interested
parson 1* whom nolle* wot
mailed lhat rhalMngti th* valid
lly ot lha will. Ih* quel Ifleal tarn
at Hia perianal representative,
or the vanu* at |url*dktlan at
th* court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication *1 HU* Notice ho*
begun an February I. IN I
Partonol Raprataniallv*
Floyd M Panel I
P.O. Boa till, Orlando, PL

Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS

JAMES E SMITH, RUTH M
SMITH. UNITED STATES OF
A M E R I C A . S T A T E OF
FLORIOA. and FINANCE ONE
CREDIT OF FLORIDA, INC,
Defendant*
NOTICE OP SUIT
TO JAMESE. SMITH.
RUTHM SMITH
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that an action t*
torocMao mortgogo covering Ih*
lallawlng real and partanal
proparty In SEMINOLE Cauity.
■*Im IAm Wi lmHI
Lot U. AVACAOO TERRACE,
according to tho plat thoroot at
recorded In Plot Booh 1 Page
11. Public Rocarda at SamlnaN
Caunty, Florida AND; Th*
South v* *« itto Waal 1* m Nat at
Lot I. Black Z. FLORIDA LAND
ANO COLONIZATION COM
PANY limited Mo* at th* St
Gertrud* Addition t* tho Town
at Sontard. according to th* plat
lharoot a* recorded In Plot Btok
t. Pag** t il and ill. Public
Record* ot l aminate Caunty.
FNrlda

1:30 A.M. •5:10 P.M.
MONDAY tfcni FV10AV
SATURDAY 0 - Mo m

RATES

Sales Counselor

7 !

73— Employment

j
*

W

D E A D L IN E S
N o o n T h e D a y B e fo re P ublication
Sunday • N o o n F rid a y
M o n d a y *11: 00 A . M . Sa turd ay

93— Rooms for Rent
AccoptlRf application! tor
Mwiagm*nl. and Crow. Only

23— Special Notices

Acrylic Apptkatvt

323-5171

97— Apart m«nts
Fum lsfwd / Rant

Bwtlnoi* Capital Uf.PM I*
11*00.*00 and ever. P. 0. Bat
U ll. WVHarPk.Fla UTN
Port ttm* t* alar* Na aaparl
one* nacatlory Will tram,
need etarleal/typing tkliit.
Attractive appearance lor
pr*f*Ml*n*l attic* u i 4111
lor Interview. Downtown

am angogid In bminot* al SMI
M agnolia Av*., Sontard,
Seminole County. Florida under
th* Helltlout noma at TOOCO.
and that I Inland t* regular tald
name with th* CMrt at th*
Clr cull Court. SarmnoN Caunty,
FlarMo In accordance with th*
pravltlant at ih* Flcllllaut
Nam* Statute*, (awtt: Section
M l ** Florid* Statute* ins.
/*/William RuMatlTadd II
Publish February IS, 11 A
March I. AIMS
DEC M4

WANTI D
Wallr*** with aiparlanca
Phan* m 1174

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
StuMtOLi C cut it Plttwwi* Am Zoning C c m m k j n

MARCH 6,190!^ 200PM.

RoomW-izo

To List Your Business..

StuttOLi C ou n ty S n i v e l s B l o g , 54uwowo, F i.o* « a

Accounting A
Tax Sarvica
computer Itad financial ilal
lament Quarterly return*
M P 4 Alttar Front III

'KAJ4L7Y L G K I C b S
Miron* A- IIAtaicuiiuu I
N HHIIk ii h m iu i
\ Pm i i i i i i m i )

TAT Kill THOMAS
Riant R-1Ittitwtktut I
B O -2 I H u m

E le c t r ic a l

L a n d c io a r in g

R B J BLECTRIC
Tired ot high price** Call R B J
Electric. No Jab Mo large or
imoll. Fra*. Estimate* 14 Hr.
larvka 1natal lad ** paddla
lam. Head lighting, burglar
alarm*, tarvk* chinga. r*
modeling. addition*, or now
homo* " m ltd

CARUTHIRSTRUCKING
Fill dirt and land tlaarlng
IN NIB
ORNCVA LANDCLIA BING
tat and Land clearing,
nil dirt, and hauling
Call 14* SONar 14* PH
LANOCLEARING
FILL DIRT, RUSHOGOING
CLAY A SHALE. U S 411

F ir e w o o d / F u e l

OawN(PCiu)

TREE SBRVICR 4 PlBEWOOO
FOB MLB. CALL AFTER 4
p m . n&gt;*«a*

CONSTRUCTION W O R K IR V
Skillodandhaipori All
pn***« Coil Future* arkawa

G e n e r a l S o r v ic o *
EB B ! ESTIMATES
W/pretauMnal aiparlanca an

H andyM an

s

4j
1 hiiTp|
Q

I * . Noad yta* ft*t BallokM
Fro# 1st. moat any Mb. Baal
Rata*. N ld lii. Call Anytime
RELIABLE RAY-1m Ml type*

E
aaronv

Coll 111-mt-

RvaadaBMI ttkMM.

m

WILLIE l« J M I » « e a
R C »M H I IR itm tlM I
I* Ca (Conn**** I n n

H a a lffi A B e a u ty
FORMERLY Harrtotr* Baauty
N**fc.lt*B. lilS l.m iJ M

nputw *t________

HMMI 1
a w r iM n | ia M M |
m m rm tm rn

Cargtntry

6n

lb M *1 KfiwtMi Mviinm
IZii* EEU1CHEWW NOt

v

(

py

R t L ik lL !

m m iw

CIm nlng Sorvico

XB^aimiiu ■ ia. 4. 1.
Carpantry Oan't Sa* lit Aak Bal
Myra E m .......... BALNIBMI

M am a R o p a lr t

wm rtln oOMkRNTf F U *
hint

CARPENTER
Repair* and
remedying Na |a» lap small
Call NT Stag
Am1* N w a Ragp In- cMppMry.
i(Afi giv^^RiaA, ggigllnA,
Hf « i dawi ppg IMPR NbNII.
MaMiananco at afl typaa
Carpodry. ppMlna, pbpiNMg
md m urk. R H B S

with

uinAoca wkl m convoc

M t m TIN FUSUQ HRAPMd «RJ
MMPNS Mar Bt GONfWUtO F

rcM*0 ntcuumr

D o o n e sb u ry

BY G A R R Y TR U O EA U

Hew Or Used Car?

. * w . A *k • 1 '

w V 4 t

V • * 0 *

% *

• p • * 4« ? f
i*

• ■
w-

* t * t * *»
*

*■

• * * ’ '

*

i

A •
* # -

r.

r1

L a w n S a rv ic a
BAS SOD SALES Came*. Ba*.
St. AugvtHn* A Bahia
MBBS SantardAv* Hl *in
1M
niPb^BW
II m
iM*4~ianrd
W
Pu**TI
Rla
pTP^vN
PrmN
Land*capingBu*n Hag Mowing
MPNH
OmstiMlrgg.

O

Cbrw M b L«w« C*rt
N V llB N lX flllR
X # E _ 3» 4H 1
ToyMr BroWiar* Lawn Sorvtc*
and rat* tilling M garden*.
01*711 Rue* Taylar
M a son ry
BEAL Cana ato 1 man quality
•psritiin Fitliti Wtviwivs.
O m n i m i i m . W ISH.
0 N BaByCawaraN
“ r ~

i r 1 ---------- jBkiiN
N v r tin g C a rt

Fam N f u n s CaRfarta N
C n a M t i . Pair prlia*.

MULTI m m CC6

(7 ) ja w act scr man
t l 'f f l A ■IMmuUunc )

^ d, .

privlitgat Family atmoiphara

H U Franck Are

NOT MAO IC

Caunty. Florid* under Ih*
fktitMut noma of ORAPBIIS
PLUS, and that w* Inland M
raglitar told name with th*
Clark at th* Circuit Court,
Sam inala Caunly. Florid* In
accordance with th* prevltMnt
ot th* Fktltloua Nam* Statuta*.
1* wit SocHgn Ml ** Florid*
Statuta* IN I
It/Mkhaal • W*o*iay
t v JokaD WoaoJav
Publlih Fibruafy IS. &gt;1 B
March 1.1. INL
O IC tM

file d

Friday.

you or* required t* tarv* a copy
at your written defam e*. It any,
to It an C. VtCTOR BUTLER,
JR , ESQ. t ill Eatt RaMnaan
ftreat. Orlando, Florid* 1MI,
and Ilia ih* original with th*
Clark at th* above itytad Court
an or before th* Nth day at
March, t f l l , otharwlaa, a
Judgment may b* pntarad
again11 you tor Ih* raIMt da
minded In th* Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and aaal
ot tad Court an th* 11th day at
February,1*01
(SEAL)
0AVI0N. BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
By: /*/Cheryl R. Franklin
Deputy Clerk
Publlth February IJ, 17 March

th* undartlgnad. purtuant to the
"Ficlltiaw* Nam* Statuta",
Chapter MSP*. Flar Ida Statuta*.
will raglilar with Ih* Clark at
Ih* Circuit Court, Seminal*
County, upon rocaipl of praot at
publication at thl* natlca. the
Helltlout name, to wtt: HEROD
PROPERTIES under which Ih*
talMwIng portla* ora ingagad m
buiinaii at P.O. Boa MM.
Longwatd. Florida IIFFP j
J A M B S B. H E R O D and
WILLIAM RAYMOND HEROO
DATED al Longwood, Orange
County, Florid*, thl* *th day ot
January, INS.
/*/ Jama* E . Horod
Publl*h February I, 1. IS. n .
IN I
DICM

j

»1— Apartments/
House to Share

4

H A N N A H JA C O B S O N , d*
c*Mod, FIN Number •» lb* CP,
N pending In flw Circuit Court
•or SominoM County, Florid*.
PreboN Dlvklen, Nn oddrot* ot
which li Seminal* County
Courthouse. Sonlord. Florid*,
JI71I. The Portonol Rtpr*
Mnlollvot Of Ih* pilot* or*
SHE RW OOD A R TH U R
JACOBSON, nhow addraa* I* J*
S*»*nth Ar*nu*. Now York,
N m York IN1I. ond A R LE N E
M . T I T E N B A U M , w h a t*
addTOM N M Spring Run Clr
do, Longwood. Fieri do MIJ*
Tho nomo and oddrot* ot th*
Portonot Rapratantoflvat' at
tor nay art tat forth below
All portont hiring claim* or
demand* ogolnil Ih* Mlato or*
required, W IT H IN T H R E E
MONTHS FROM TH E D A TE
OF TH E FIRST PUBLICATIO N
OP THIS NOTICE, »* tIN with
ttw Clark of Ih* obey* Court *
written »t*t*m*nt of any claim
or demand they may have Each
claim mutt ba In writing and
mull Indkott Ih* bad* lor tho

CLASSIFIED ADS

I

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR ((M lN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
P R O M T! DIVISION
FIN Humber M lttC P
IN RE ESTATE OF
HANNAH JACOBSON.
DxHud
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
AGAINST THE ABOVE
ESTATE AND ALL OTHER
PERSONS INTERESTED IN
THE ESTATE
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that Ih* od
mlnlitntlen ot IP* n la N of

LPN prill Mt wHtl your 1 Marty ar
dttaGtad rwlollva la yaur ham*
kdafedaya. Hour, day Cap
Bafaraneaa. Ot UN
OUB RATES ARB LOWER
Labavtao Nunlng Cantor
t It ESacand SI. Sontard
MtdN7
F a in tin g

j*H H yUM W Vr
M w iN lC n lM fM n
Serving Contral Pip. Mr II yr»
• M M --_ .U lL . -n.1— A

tm *

_M_~
.”S*

�r
E v t n ln g H erald, Sanford. F I.

F rid a y . F r t . U » IM S — 11A

H I — Homes For Salt

c m i, B u t
I'P W &amp; z M TUloW
IT S

B

C
AKDIINJALg
¥ ' • a •» «
h

0

pi

C
ARDIINJAl
Nfh S'lH ta * 7'* l * » :

H i I - % 7 (&gt;

,

315— Boots and
Accessories

235— Tru cks /
B usts/V an s

l/ObT B .f fK1 N&lt;*e'

8 .1 1-51.71.
KI NOJWOOD MANOR Convo
nlont to overthlngi Sotttod
neighborhood
NEW J
bdrm . | both Cordlnol
Homo Only 100 WO tar thll

Security

ItaO Ford S'4 tan pick up dump
truck Now pointing, uphot
star*. tune tip and front ond
alignment Apple pie condl
for Vourt lo&lt; UMO Dump
truck Noturo otono tt worth

217— Garage Salts

UkOCkdQY MH74l7n

&amp;
rorv oft. I choir* ond mony
houtohoid Homs Erorything
mult go Saturday 1 Sunday.
lit Wilkin* Clrcto U1 IPS
O I * N'T 1 F A M IL Y ~ V A R O
SALS. TOSS Palmetto A*o
Saturday ond Sunday I tot
Moving Soto. Antigua Ration 0
pc tot. mint condition. 1M0 or

Nko gutot tfrool Lawn A Pott
Coro Inc I M S mo ADULTS
O N LY. n id W I__________

D IS C O U N T

W *

It Dodge Von 0*1. standard

SALES

WE FINANCE
tH I French Are............m i l

'83 F O R D V A N
I ia aoo or bttt ottor m MIO

241— R tcrtallonal
Vehicles / Campers

221-0759 E v e 322-7442

0 C NKDIMNI
Mi l IBS— DuplexTrip lex / Rent

ItU Sky lino SO I 14, I bdrm . )
both, spilt plan ia ■ te ihod.
H i M Kroon porch Adult
JoelIon Ol Pork Poking
H M B B ...................Coll H I »l«l

0 1 AHDIINIAI

reduct u tility b lllt. only
m m Far mare Informal Ion
coil: taao an p i t , e x t « 7

H 11 - '&gt;(»”’!»

NOT MAGIC
BUT PACT
WANT ADS WOR K WONDE RS

Faying CASH tor
Aluminum. Cant. Copper.
Brett. Load. Newtpopor.
Clow. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool, ttaw lit

Hwy 17 W...
Ifaa M u lling 0 cyllndtr.
automatic, many now parti.
good body 11.1)0 771 MM
IF77 Toyota Corolla I door, o

IN I Ford Von. Foty Con
version. For tael condition, to
trlgorotar. sink. 0 caplalnt
cholrv coach that convortt to
bad. It mliot lo gallon. 07 000
miles Owned by protoutanoi
family «/no chiidron Book
Value U.saa. Quick Salt
tr.sao Day i l l t i n e*o
a issit
U Impolo Trival Traitor, 10'.
air. control hoot. 7 cu It
rtltlg . hill site bod. tloopt 0

sano ui toot

i sat Sot t i n s i too

*71Manta Carta PS t PB a AUTO
Law Down I.......... Wo F Inaneof
O K Canal Cats.____ 323-1921

Catling Divorced tronttarrod.
tarctoture. need gulck total
Coii Data sii oral_____

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
F rom |I0 to SM or maro
Call m m o m o m

canal la rlrar. tl.w e i
aerp/tormt Call today 11

111— Appliances
/ Furniture

STENSTROM
0 c ARDIINJAl

REALTY*REALTOR

I I 1 1 ■■ )(.-(.

Sufstd*! Salts Laadtf

0 c ARDIINJAl
H l I - Tit?It

127-Office Rentals

OffICES

a RENT TO OWN a
i
Color TVs. startot. watherd
drytrs. rt fr Igoratar. treeierJ
lurnlturo. video rocorders
I
Special lit weeks rant fta |
Altamatlvo TV A Aapt Rentals
Iayros Ibspplng Contar
__________m-saaa_________

DIVORCE LIQUIDATION ■ t
71 mobile homo |7H. John
Doero oo Tractor, buth hog.
grader Race Weak Condo, yr
round boach homo attumt
Fab baianco Rich Plan, naw
I I ft trooior attumt Fob
balance Doyt 171 lota, oil
H I. nights n itto o __________

ELECTROLYSIS EOUIPMINT

NEW CAR TRADE-INS
au
ra n p -

ssU m si

T H B U S IO S T O R E
Wo Buy Soil
Appilancot Furniture
Wo Finance Anyone
a l i t E. Tad Shoo! H I sail a

NEW SHOP PI NO CENTER ta
; I . ORLANDO- SR 04 at
i I i s t Wost tipary. * Lake
; UadarRMI. Baal VWMRiy A
• AccaaalMWtyl Mgbwl TraNtc
: Caootl PtgataWlggfT Anchor.
■ TBRM ii gas iiaa Anytime.

0 C ARDIINJAl
till

potIt/linings taa H I i t n
4 BR. 1 bath, formal dining

r, f , 7 t ,

room, anctaaad parch. Family
raom w/FNepiaca U 1 .M
Coll altar L H7 1177________

COLOR TILBVIIION
RCA » " Cantota color tatavl
stan Original prlca aver 1000

0 1 ARDINAI
M il

"s l.7 lt

117—Sporting Goods

199— Pets A Supplies
149— Commercial
Proparty / Salt

MCrtditl

NsCradtl

71 F l l t l l I l i a Dn
&gt;1 Caugar 111* On
74 Cordoba USB On

WtnNMCf
NATIONALAUTOSALES
11201 SwrisrE321-4075

153— AcreageLots/Sale

gdwaM adt tar boil bu n

Friday Ni|kts.....7 PM
5 N SaefarKAbb.

0i

323*6593

n k d im a i

DAYTONAAl/TOs

c a d il u O

R

jpe

DEVILLE

LOADCD, ONI OWNER

COURTESY
PONTIAC
123-2121
42V SOM

NOBODY
WAIKSAWAY

J21» HMfY. 17-12

:

SANTORO

323-5774

J im L a s h ’s sB.i
B lu e B o o k C a rs

spotlbu i

Hrnlnn Ontral Florida 4Krr 30 Y ean
1474

I

IORD

s^6995/oio$
/ Regency

100 R A N U H

t i

1995
U CHI APO
19 7 7 I MP AI A

321-07411

HORPA

�T

laA~ gv*w**f Ht »M , tentord, ft.

Friday, Fab. 15. IMS

County Contfnuog Job Search
S e m in o le C o u n ty
A d m in is t r a t o r K en
Hooper Is searching for
new applicants for the
Job o f environmental
services director — the
post he held prior to his
appoin tm en t as a d ­
ministrator.
Hooper told county
commissioners earlier
this week his choice for
the Job. Tom Lothrop.
Orlando's wastewater
facility project manag­
er. turned down the
offer and he would like
lo advertise for new
applicants. The com ­
mission approved.
W hile the director
poet has a salary range
o f $28,777 to $40,661,
a new salary range,
proposed by consultant
Carolyn Long, o f Long
A s s o c ia te s . F o rt
Lauderdale, sets It at
$30,540 to $55,200.
The consultant's pro­
posal must go to the
county commission for
approval.
H o o p e r w as p a id
$44,000 as en viron ­
mental services
director prior to his
prom otion to county
administrator.
H oop er and a

legol Notice

Hetke It hereby (Iren met I
nm ensstsS M business el US
H lfh b e y IF-Vt, Lena bees,
WmMele Cmmty. FlerMe unSer
Me flctltlewt name el Sam
Sbdfy el Central FlerMe. Inc ,
nns Met I Miens te register u M
"•me nils Clerk el Me Circuit
Court, l ent Male Ceunty, FlerMe
vttient at the FktRtout Name
Stetutoc Tesvtt. Secttan B U M
F Nr Me Statute* HU.
Frank AW em er III
PtMHsh: February 1, 4 IS. a .

itts
DEC It

Netke it hereby given Riel I
am angigae In busMata at SIS
H ighw ay 17*1. Langwaae.
Sam Inala Ceunty. FlarMa under
Me Iktlttoua name at Q M I .
Inc., and that I intend to register
teM name with Clerk el Me
Circuit Court. Semlneto Ceunty.
Florida M accordance wtM Ma
prevlttont at the Flctlttoua
Heme Stetutoc Tewtt: Section
Ski at Pier Me Statute* it u
Mery S. Weiner
Publish February t. 4 14 IS.
IttS
OEC IB

Uflal Notice
FICTITIO US HAMS
Nsfte* it hereby given Met I
See n t . Geneve. Seminal*
Ceunty. FlerlSe unSer Ihe
llc tille e t name el A M IT V
CHIMNCV SW ISS. erM Mel I
•"tend Is re**eter teM nemo
»«M Me Clerk el Me Circuit
Court. SemMeH County. FlerMe
M accordance with Rg pr*
vtelene el Me Fktttleue Name
Statutes. Merit: Secttan asset
FlerMe Statute* HS7.
/*/Gearg* Parkfiurtt
Publish February 1 IS. n S
March I, IMS
D IC st
Notice It hereby liven Mel I
‘ M business el I II
W . Bay A v # ., Lengw eod.
SentIneN Ceunty, FlerMe urtaar
Me Iktmeua name el WATKINS
S H B E T M B T A L CON
TRACTOR, and Mel I Inland to
Ctorb el the Circuit Ceurt.
Semlneto Ceunty. Florida In
scctrSanu *&gt;M Me protlilwn
•* Me Fkttttoua Name Sietvtos.
tosHt: Section MS.e* FlerMe
Statutes 1*0.
/*/ Robert 0. Watkins
Fublith February is. n 4
March 1. 4 IMS
D E C to*
FICTITIOUS NAM E
It hereby given Mel I
_ ..fe d In business at P.O.
Rea a n . IOO Spalding Rd .
W inter Springs. Seminole
County. FlerMe SUM under Me
•ktlttou* nemo el BULLSBYS
CHEMICALS, and Met I Intend
to register teM name wtm Me
Clem el the Circuit Court.
Semlneto Ceunty. FlerMe In
accordance wtm the provisions
el Me Fkttttoua Name Stetutoc
to wit Secttan IkSee Fiends
Statutes H U .
/k/Jeanette Rest
Publish February is. t l A
March 1.4 HtS.
DEC MS

FICTITIOUS NAMB
Netke It hereby given Mel I
am engaged In eustoeot at i l l
W. Bey A v e .. Lengw eod.
Semlneto Ceunty. FlerMe imder
Me Iktlttow* name el W ATKINS
WINDOW TIN TIN O . and Mel I
Inland to register teM name
wtm Me Clem al Me Circuit
Court. Semlneto County, FlerMe
In accordance with Me prw
visions el Me Fkllltout Name
siahdec towll: Secttan MSM
Florida Sletutee H U .
/*/Robert D Watkins
Fublith February If. a 4
March 1. 4 IMS
DEC MI

NOTICE
OF PUBLIC
HEARING
StMMWii C a n ty I\
A
Z
C
—»
n m m

IM T N I CIB C U rr COUNT.
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLOSIDA
c a s i n o .: sseobCA-es-a
IN S I TM t MASS IACE OF
W ILLIAM W MecMILLAN.

eowAHDaootFoao.
Pettttansr/Husband,
and
M ASILV N aOCNFOAD.
A M IN 0 I0

NOTICI OF ACTION
FOa DISSOLUTION

oFMAaauaa

TO . M ANILVN KOCHFONO
a iS IO E N C i UNKNOWN
YOU ANC H IN IIV
N O T IF lID Met e Petition lev
Dissolution el Marriage hat
M
*• More e copy el yew written
detente*. II any, te It on
CARMINE m BRAVO. IS O el
C A N M IN I M BRAVO. P.A..
IASS State Reed 04. Suite 4
Langoead Spring* Freleialeiiel
Center. Len«weed. Florida
n m . and Me Me anginal wtM
Me cterh el Me above ktyted
cmwt an/er betere March IS
HRS. elhenelee a deleuN will be
entered afelntt you ler the
rellel preyed ler In Me PetttMi
TM t Netke iheil be pubilri-d
ence each weak ler lour lei
consecutive weeks In Ihe
SANFORD M I RALD.
WITNESS my hand and Me
eeel el taM Court el Santord.
FlerMe. an this em day el
(C IR C U IT COURT SEALI
DAVID N. B IR R IE N .
Aa Clerk. ClrcuN Court
SentMete County. FlerMe
By: Sueen E. Taber
£ W »lh : February I. IS. »
March I. IMS
0 IC S 4

B

f ic t it io u s n a m e

FIC TITIO US MAMS
NW k» I* hereby given the! I
•nt engaged In business el m i
0 OrlsnSe Drive. Senterd.
Semmele Ceunty. FlerMe unbar
Ih e f l c t l t l e w i n a m e e l
N A T U B B S ANNS*, and mel I
Miens In rentier tdM name
Me Clark at Me Ckcull
Court. Sentinels County. FlerMe
In eccerbonce ertlh the ere
vlelant e&lt; Me Fkttttou* Nome
Statutes. Merit. Secttan SUSS
Flense Statute* 1*0 .
/*/ Donne B Smith
MMIIi I i February A IS. I I A
Merest. HSS.
D ic e s

Flrmtin Wame

three-member screen­
ing c o m m itte e nar­
rowed the 27 applica­
tions for the Job to five
last week. Hooper In­
t e r v ie w e d a ll fiv e .
T h o s e In t e r v ie w e d
w ere L o th ro p , Pam
H a s t in g s , b u d g e t
a n a ly s t and u tility
ma n a g e r : Tim
Claubaugh. en viron ­
mental control manag­
er. Hoyt Owens. Winter
Park utility director,
a n d D r. P h a u p o f
Titusville.
Hooper said the sala­
ry for the Job was
n e g o t ia b le a n d he
would not reveal the
amount of the offer to
Lothrop.

Legal Notice
Legal Notice

m

MWCH M.ISB5.700RM.

oom

omm

RaotiwiEO

•N THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
TN IEIO N TEEN TN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA
C I V I L A C T I O N NO.!
saesaecAekE
C IT IZ E N S M O R TO A O E
CORPORATION, etc.
f’A f '^ L A K B INVESTMENTS.
NOTICE O F ACTION
TO t PAR K LA K E IN VESTM E N T 4 IN C .
R ESIDENCE: UNKNOWN
YOU ARB N O TIFIE D Mel an
aetton to tometoee a mortgage
•" M* Nltoeing property In
SEMINOLE County.'f Z Z u .
l a k e HOWELL
A R M S C O N D O M IN IU M , a
Cendsmlnlum according to Me
Oeclerellen el Cendemlnlum
end EaMbltt annaied Ihertto.
rtcerdad In OHktol Recards
teak isn. Fege Mac el Me
Fubllc Records el Semlneto
Camrty. Florida, togsMar with
an undivided mtorvst in Me
to ld O e c le re lle n al C e n ­
d e m ln lu m te be an ep
purtenance to Me above Can
Unit.

[• '.! r p ’ o r a c e a n T K
enw ns
F A , Plelntttra attorney,
mailing addrese to I I I ____
Central Boulevard. Suita MSA
F.O. Bee *40. Or lend*. Ptortda
------- -- "W awtn
day et February is m and Me ttw
arlgtnal wIM the Clem el Mis
Ceswt either betere service an
Plaintiffs attorney ar Immedl
•Nty Ihereefter; oMerwtse a
datautt will be anferad agnlnal
you tor Ma relief " r i n d t in
too Complaint *r Petition
WITNESS my hand and tael
W Ml* Cmirt an Me Ord day el

ELSIE P MecMILLAN. Wile
N O T IC I OF ACTION
TO ILS IE P .M e cM ILLA N
M l Brmania Avenue
Bradford. Ontario.
Caneda l u i a o
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D Met an
action ler Ditaehmen el Mar
rtags hat been tiled against you
end you are rebuked M serve a
copy al your written detente a. if
any, te It an Jed Berman.
Petltlener't attorney, whose
address Is P O . Drawer a .
Winter Park. FlerMe HMD on or
betore March H. lets, and tile
the original wIM Me Clark al Mis
court silhar betere service an
win
Me Complaint or Potmen
DATE Dan February 1|. tees
(SEAL)
O AVIO N BERRIEN
aa Clerk el Me Court
§ T Virginia Jackson
Deputy berk
Publish February is. a March
1.4 is m
D E C III

IN TNE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TN I ■IGNTBINTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA.
IN AND FOR
IKM INOLI COUNTY
CASING SMeabCAdbO
O IN IR AL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
F B O IR A L NATIONAL
M ORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.
PieMtm.
vk.
RICHARD W ENDELL
STB WART, a tingle man. el al..
NOTICE OF ACTION
Censkuctlve Service-Property
T O R Ichard Wendell Stowert
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
YOU ARB H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D Mel an action hat
been commenced to tors Haas a
mar1»«ga an Ma tattoo ing real
Fmperty. lying and being and
sllueto In Semlneto Ceunty.
F torIda. mam partkulerty da
scr Medea Saltoes:
That certain Cendemlnlum
parcel known a* Unit No 71,
O e s tln y S p rin g s , a Can

tspentot appurtenant to teM
Unit, all In accordance wtta and
siMtect to Me covenants, condl
ttone. restriction*, terms and
r prevlttont el Me Declare
'ton et Condominium *1 Dettlnt
Springs, a Cendemlnlum as re­
tarded M O R . Beak 107. at
P#Be ltS4 aa amended In O R.
Beak IMA Pag* 1*0 . ell et Me
Public record* et Seminole
Ceunty. FlerMe. mere cam
manly known a* SlkB Lake
D estiny Reed. Alternant#
Springs. FtorM*.
end you are regulred to serve e
-----------. ------------S.H
»a II an W I E N I R .
SHAPIRO A ROSE. Attorneys
tor PtoMtirt. whoa* address it
MM Cypress Center Drive. Suita
Tempo, F tor Id*. DM*, an ar
betore March 14 NBA and Me
Me anginal wtm Me Clem el
Ml* Ceurt etmor betere service
an Plaintiffs attorneys er im
m*W*Nlr Mereeftor, eMerwtoe
e dsfeuft will be entered egelntl
you tor Me relief dsmsnatd in
WITNESS my hand and seel
et Mis Ceurt an Ml* IIM day et
February. ItaS
(SEAL!
DAV ID N . BERRIEN
C L IR K O F THE
C IR C U IT COURT
•y :/*/ OavM M. McCollum
Deputy Clem
Publish: February 14 t l 4
March 1,4 Has

OfCttt

le g ol Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASI NG M-fUS-CA-O* E
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION

IN TN E C IR C U IT COURT
PON SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
PRO Now! irM b M C P
IN RE : ES TA TE OF
LOUISE LEACH MAZZOCCHI
N O TICR O F
ADM INISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C L A IM S OR O E M A N D S
a o a . n s t TH E ABOVE
E S TA TE AND A L L O TH ER
PERSONS IN T E R E S TE D IN
TH E E S TA TE:
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D I h e l Ih e a d ­
ministration at the vstate el
LOUISE LEACH MAZZOCCHI.
d e c e a ta d . F i l e M e m b e r
•SMRCF. Is* pending In Me
Circuit Court ter Seminole
C eunty. F lo rid a . Probate
Otvision. Me adWeta el whkh it
Harm Park Avenue. Santord.
FlerMe. J t m
The personal rapreasntattve at
Ma attatt it SJbyl Herbal whose
addrese It tee Crestweod Lane.
Alternant# Springs Florida,
a n i The name end addrese at
Me personal representative's
attorney ere set term below
All persona having claims or
dtmendb agalnel Me estate art
regulred. W IT H IN T H B K I
m o n t h s f r o m T H I OATS
OF TH E FIRST PUBLICATION
OF THIS N O T K E . te UN wtth
the clerk el the above ceurt a
wvlllan SteWinant el any clebn
•• dwnand May may have. Each
claim muat be In writing ana
must indicate Me basis ler Ms
claim. Me name and siM m i el
. . ----------- -- ------------- ^_jt _
attorney, ana the amount
claimed It the claim It m l yet
due. the data When it will
became two than be stated. If
Me claim It cenllngwil or anil
outdated, the nature at

ptekittn.

N OTICE OF ACTION
Cenetrucllve Servlre Propart,
TO A R T T SIVERSEN
tail Peachtree Street. N.E. #SN
Atlanta. Georgia JUW
YOU ARC H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D Mat an action hat
been commenced te torecMoo a
mortgage an the tetNwlng reel
situate In Semlneto Ceunty.
Florida, mere partkulerty dr
scribed bttoltowt:
That certain Condominium
parcel known aa Unit No IS .
O e it t h y S p r in t * , e Con
dtmlnlum. and an undtv'dsd
Ms 1 0 Intorest in Me land.

-------- prwvltlwe ef Me Declare
•ton a* Cento minium tl O t
S T I N Y S F R IN O S . a Can
* ' tom ae recorded in O.R.
110. at Page IBM. a*
----------tod In G R . Beak IM .
Pea# M d . ill el Me Public
reewds al Semlneto Ceunty.
Ftortda.
and yeu am reguked to serve a
espy al your written datanee. If
a n y . ta It an W I I N K R ,
SHAPIRO 4 ROSE. Attorneys
tor Plaintiff, whet* adtoett It
MM Cypres* Center Drive. Suit*
M l Tampa. Ftortda. SMBS, an ar
betore March a. MBA and file
M* original with Me Clark at
Mis Caurt either betore service
«n Plaintiff * attorneys ar Im

Me claim it secured. Me tecurt
ty shall be described The
caplet et Me claim to Me clerk
to enable Me clem to mall ana
copy to each personal repre

a default trill be entered again*!
yeu tor M* relief demanded In
Me CamplaInl
W ITNESS my hand and teal
ef IM* Caurt an tht* tlth dey at
February. ISPS
(SEALI
O AVID N . BERRIEN
C L IR K O F T H I
C IR C U IT COURT
•y:/*/Chary1R. Franklin
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 14 M A
March 1.4 HtS
DEC H I

, .......- I" toresled in Me
estate to whom a copy at mis
Netke ot Administration hat
been mallad ere regulred.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
FROM THE D ATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
THIS NOTICE, to Ilia any ato
(aetton* May may have Mel
challenge Me velMIty el Me
decedent's will. Me qualified
Hen* at Me personal ‘ repre
tentative, or the venue or
lurtidktton et Me ceurt.
A L L CLAIMS. DEM ANDS.
AND O B JECTIO N S N O T SO
F IL E D W ILL BE FOREVER
BARREO
OeN el Me first puMkatton el
Mis Netke et Administration

N O T IC I OF IN TEN TIO N
T O REGISTER
FIC TITIO U S NAME
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
Mat In compliance triM Section
SUSSef Mo Florida Statutes, at
smsndtA Ma under sip wd will
regular trim the Clerk ef Me
C irc u it C eurt *1 Semlnel*
Ceunty. F torIda. upon receipt *1
Proof of Publication ef
Netke. Me lei towmg

SIbylL. Hartel.
At Pertanal Rapretentetlv*
el me Estateef
LOUISE LEACH
MAZZOCCHI.
ATTO R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
R EP R ES EN TATIVE:
JOSEPHM MURASKO.
Pest Off ke Drawer 744
Fam Pam. Ftortda U Tia
Telephone (3091 MIBIM
Publish: February 4 14 ISki
DEC ■

FICTITIOUS NAMB
Notice to hereby Mean M a lt
am enaepad M buainaaa at m
N. Highway 17*4 1 Trgniaa*
' ' County. Ftortda W »
Me fkftttou* name ef
Z IM M IR / V O U N O IN V E S T
M I N T 4 and Mat I Intond to
Clerk ef th* Circuit Ceurt.
Semlneto Ceunty. F torMe in
al Me Fictitious Heme Statutes,
towtf: Section BkSft FlerMe
Statute* ItU
/*/Welter Yeung
F t * ish January IS 4 February
1.4 14 IMS
01 B IN

"Heltyweed'
wMch Me undersigned
will engage to Me business *1
salat ana rental ef vtdte tapes.
Items, in Seminal* County.
F lo rid a , ana Iba l the unAwUeftod todtvMuel(s) ar* Me
FWttaa totorestod In taM
O A T I O this lis t Bay al
Janeary. IM S. al Oeytena
Beach. FlerMe
HOLLYWOOO
CONNECTION. INC
■y: Ella* Fa

Legal Notice

IN T N E CIRCUIT COURT. IN
A N D FO R S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
CASE NO SeltaeCAGa K
IN RE: TH E M ARRIAGE OF
O L V A M BRACE W ELL.
Petitioner/WHe.

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT.
IN AND FOR
SEM INOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
case n o . ta-m-CA-et-o
McLEAN SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
PleMtllt

LARRY G BRACEWCLL.

f e d e r a l n a t io n a l
m o r t g a g e a s s o c ia t io n .

A R T T E SI VER SEN. a tingle
men. N A N E TTE SILL, e tingle

Legol Notice

NOTICE OF ACTION
T O Larry O. Brace—ell
nos Avenue D
Entity. Alabama
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIFIE D Mat a Petition tar
Dissolution of Marriage hat
been tiled against yeu. and Mat
yeu ar* regulred to serve a copy
of your response er pleading to
th* Petition upon the p*t|.
•toner's otter nay. Themes C.
Greene. Pest Office Bee M l
Senterd. Florida *011. and Me
m* original respans* ar plead
Mg M Me office ef Me Clerk ef
the Circuit Court. Semlneto
Ceunty Courthouse. Senterd.
Ftortda 0771, an ar betore the
MM dey ef February, lets If
you fell to do so. a default
Judgment will be taken against
yeu tor Me relief Oemartoed M
D A TE D et Senterd. Semlneto
County. Florida. Mis nnd day et
January. Itts
(S EALI
O AVIO N BERRIEN
CLER K OF TN E C IR C U IT
COURT
By:/*/CherylR Franklta
Deputy Clem
Pitollah: January iS February I.
A &lt;4 HIS
D C B U I _____________________
A F FID A V IT UNDER
F IC TITIO U S NAME S TA TU TE
S TA TE OF FLORIDA I SS
CO U N TY OF ORANGE I
The imdersigned, under oeta.
I. This Instrument Is being
saecutod tor th* purpose ot
complying with Secttan tu g *
Florid* Statutes
4 It It Me Intention ef ta*
undersigned to engage In a
fktlttout name ef TOMORROW
R E A L T Y A N D A U C T IO N
COMPANY. INC located #1 us
Forettweed Lena, in Me City of
M a itla n d . F le rld e m i l .
Semlneto County. FlerMe
4 Attached hereto and mad* a
part hereof It Ihe nowiaaptr
Proof *f Publication et regulred
by said Statute
4 Thee* Interested In said
sntorprlt*. and M* aatont ef th*
interest ef each. U at tottows
NAM E OF OWNER
Tamer tew Realty
4 Auction Company
IN TER ES T
SIGNATURE OF OWNER
Glenn A. Block mors.
ADDRESS OF OWNER
Pott Office BealfM
Maitland. F tor Ma 0711
Swam M and subscribed be
tore me at Orlando. Orange
County. FlerMe. Ml* 27M day ef
February. Hi*.
(S E A L)
/*/ Pafrkto A. Smith
Notary Pubik.
Stole *1 FlerMe ef Large
My Cemmtsaien E &gt;pk*s
January n . Its/
A* retarrod M to Paragraph 1
abeve. Proof el Publication *1
Mis intention to register If filed
here— IM pursuant to It— pr*
visions of Secttan SklPf Ftortda
ATTACH PROOF
OF PUBLICATION
Publish January is 4 February
1.4 14 ties
M B 147

JAMES E. SM ITH. RUTH M
SMITH. U N IT E D STATES OF
A M E R I C A . S T A T E OF
FLORIOA. end FINANCE ONE
C R EO ITO F FLORIOA. INC..
N O T IC I OF SUIT
TO : JAMES E. SMITH.
RUTH M. SM ITH
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
N O TIFIED that an actim to
tarn toe* mortgeg* covering the
tallowing real and pertanal
property M SEMINOLE Ceimty.
FlerMe. toWIt:
Let SI. AC A D EM Y MANOR.
U N IT O N I. according to Me
plat thereof at r t cerw a In Flat
Bask 14 Pag* n . Public Re
cords t f Seminal* Ceunty.
he* been Med egslntf yeu and
yeu are regulred to aant* e capy
to II an C. VICTOR BUTLER.
JR „ ESQ. Ilia East Rabbwen
Street. Orlande. F torMe U (tl.
and flto Me original with Me
Clark ef Ma abeve styled Caurt
an er betore th* tem dey ef
M arch. IS M , e lh e rw lte . a
Judgment m ay he entered
____ In to* Camp la Inl
WITNESS my hand and seel
ef saM Court an Me tlM day ef
February. tttS
(SEAL)
OAVION. B ER R IEN
CLERK OF TH E CIRCUIT
COURT
By:/t/OMn*K.Oakley
Deputy Clerk
Pt*HA: February 14 « March
1.4 ISM
D E C -IN
IN TN E C IR C U IT COURT.
IN A N D F O R
SEMINOLR COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE N G tM tie-CA-es-s
IN RE. TH E M ARRIAGE OF
W ESLEY SCO TTM AH N KEN .
KAREN SUE M AHNKEN.
NOTICE O F ACTION
TO Karen Sue Mehnken
MM Wyrmrweed Drive
Sentord. Florida 0771
YOU ARB H E R E B Y
N O T IF lID Mel a Petition Nr
Dissolution ef Marriage has
been tiled agatost yew. and Mat
yeu are regulred M serve a capy
of your raspansa ar ptoaBtog to
Ihe Petition upon th* Pell
Honor's attorney. Thames C
Green*. Pest Office Bea **L
Senterd. Ftortda 0771. and nit
tog to M* ettk* ef Me Clerk ef
th* Circuit Ceurl, Seminal*
County Courthouse. Senterd.
FlerMd 1071. an or betore Me
taM day el February. IMS. 11
yeu tail to de te. a
tment will be taken agatost
tor Me relief demanded to
O A T ID at I
Ceunty, FlerMe. Mis 0nd Bey tf
(SEALI
OAVIDN. BERR IEN
CLERK OF TH E
CIRCUIT COURT
By: /*/Cheryl R. Franklin
Deputy Clerk
Publish January 0 4 February
1.414 IMS
D I B 141

H. CHARLES
WOERNER. JR ., F J L
N i l South Rldpa.aad Avenue
South Daytona. FlerMe M IS
(MS) 7*7 N i l
Attorneys tor Registrant
F i* U h January M 4 February
I . 4 1 4 HB4
DEBIdS

OAVION. BERR IEN
C L IR K O F TH E COURT
By: Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clem
Ft*H A : January IS Ftbruery |,
4 14 ISM

M B -in

v b S w X c tir * ol tha world..,*ome In

ScMNOtt Countr QlHVCCB LkDC., Sawrono, F ion **

Sentord

ottwra In the eoM

STORE
3 D AYS O NLY

^•ntfurtnt

H O Q . t! V i , 0 .1 i.tfigvf.io.
E — 'o r S s v s t swiicn

ONLY

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INCLUDED
m rn

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E v e n i n g lk * r u J d

LEISURE
Compl«t» W««k's TV Listings

Sanford, Florida — Friday, Fabrwary IS, i n j

�1— gvwlwf Hers Id, Sanlsrd, FI.__

Friday, Feb. IS. 1*M

All Dolled Up
Collectors Disagree Over How To Give A Doll The Best Makeover
There’s no doubt Ihey’re beautiful
babies In their Victorian finery of silks,
satins and lace, but some purist doll
collectors would be at odds with their
owner, an Altamonte Springs doll
doctor who sees no reason to leave any
of her 50 bisque-head dollies In rags If
their original costuming hasn't sur­
vived over the years.
“ If you have the original clothes that
adds a lot That's the ultimate." doll
doctor Betty Davla of Altamonte
Springs aaid. “But that's ran. After all.
these dolls are 125 to ISO years old
and their clothes are usually tn tatters.

I've spent a month repairing a single
dress."
But Harriett Kocsis. 63. with her
bisque dolls on display In Maitland and
others In a private collection at home
aaid, "No recostumlng. If I find a doll
that pleases me I keep It, but I don't
touch It In any way, because then you
don't have 100 percent antique. In fact
after too much was changed It would
no longer be considered an antique. It
would really be devalued."
Mrs. Kocsis' theory holds true for
any type of antique: the more original
and tne better the condition, the

greater the value.
However. Mrs. Davis said, recondi­
tioning and recostumlng an antique
doll can Increase Its value by four to
five times as much because some
collectors who are willing to pay
thousands of dollars for an antique doll
want her to be dressed In authentictype. If not original finery. "But you
can't do that with every doll," she said.
"Fashion dolls," used by Victorian
dress designers to show samples of
their work and collected by well-to-do
clients, are sought after today and are
good candidates for restoration. Mrs.

Davis said.
In evaluating a doll slated for recon­
ditioning Mrs. Davis first removes Its
wig and looks at Its facial features.

Shatner To Crnnk Up The Enterprise
if 1* Is I t *
m h n m in m
I I * M L IS I I *

FttMV MB MtVI
I t * M L IS I *

Plzzerla^Klstoraptc

M ANAGER TR AIN EE
W ANTED
A P P LY IN PERSON
K mart Plata 31M S. Orlando Dr. ft Airport

1H 4 I N

HOLLYWOOD (UP1) - Both
W illiam Shatner. u Adm .
James T. Kirk, and Leonard
Nlmoy. as the Vulcan Mr.
Spock, will report once again to
the bridge of the USB En­
terprise for another tour of
space In "Star Trek IV."
t
For the second lime Nlmoy
will direct the Earth's space
ship In Its travels through outer
■pace, with Oene Roddcnberry
serving as executive consultant
for producer Harve Bennett.
The first three "Star Trek"
films have earned Paramount
Pictures more than 5350 mil­
lion In the United Stales and
Canada.
Also returning for the lateat
voyage are DeForest Kelly as
Dr, McCoy. James Doohan as
chief engineer Scott, Walter
Koen Com m ander Chehov,
George Take! aa Commander

1
W EDNESDAY
FA M ILY S P E C IA L
Th u s Ptoes Chicken
^
Olnnw

i

The CBS-TV taro-hour movie
co-stars Doug McKeon In the
title ro le w ith S y lv e s t e r
Stallone, who is executive
producer, choreographing the
boxing sequences.
Blake will play Lenny Manclni. father of young Ray Manclnl who fulfilled hla father’s
dream of winning a world title
In the ring.
Speaking of world-class ac­
com plishm ents. next year
marks the 60th anniversary of
the first collaboration on screen
of Stan Laurel and Oliver
Hardy, a milestone that will not
pass unnoticed.
Larrv Hannon, aka Boxo the

— - s&amp;SSgoat

In other Hollywood news. live, film, video — and use of
i n -------likenesses.
Robert Blake will star In' Doom their
Harmon has announced a
a working title party will be held next year to
for a drama baaed on the Uic of observe the 60th anniversary of
former World Boxing Associa­
the team. He also hopes to
tion Ughtsrelght champion Ray produce a TV entertainment
Manclnl.
special.

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SATURDAY SPECIAL

8hriM ttetoi* •

�Iveelsf WifiK, SantofS, FI.

TELEVISION

G O GUIDE

February 15 Thru February 21
ta w *

ca.

Cawa CN
Indrgrnetnl
Oftandd

(D O

IABCI OManda

(D O
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(8) ®

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lnd*p*ne*nl
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Isadditton Is ma chartMli I n **S. cakla.m e n tk fc u rito rt may tuna in to umH"d*nl channal aa,
SI. afters t a f f . ta toNieg tochaimtiI . tuning ta tkaNwl 11. ahics&lt;arnat tgartiaaS IM Ckm lta*
•rgaecsaim g Nttwark (CBN 1
.

Specials O f The Week
SATURDAY

MONDAY

■ |M| NUCHAS NATIONAL
MW Nod UcKuan nankin « took
Mtoonation• toMNgB'toita n«to-

2 *0
to UUM CanyonMndt Nation* ■ (10|JtAMNfTTl
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WOMANWHOVOTIONOAproldt
ol m* Nil woman towtod to too
4*0
own ol Ratotaanlatoiaa. kntoan
• (101 NATIONAL QCOMAMC M
ltd Hotorook narratoa too iwry ol tor kor oggoktlion toUS anlryinto
tow Amoncananowkmng« CMto WorldWar* I and!
a khJdant a (ownakal. a Ounoota
manandatoadtar g

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Mua Swtoh Vtok 10 «a«o ImN
horn too ik y w i ol too toekod
•MenSaturn* |Fkrt1Ol *)|N)g

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Hal Hotorook narratoa too awry ol
tow Amantana nowNog n Ctono
a HiKtoni, a (ownakai. a (
manandatoactor g

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•aacomaa guaati Nano Aubarfondto
and Mm Oynar. arming lapaa ol
Malaga el

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HOLLTWOOO WIVU Nod

(Antoont Hopkmal par» dakrty tor
too I'y.i min Qw* (Swann*
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nawnaa a pto* to wuan Boat lSta*a
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proraaartoUmg (PartlaO)g

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Ninth Annual Central Florida Farris, Maitland Art Center.
Regional Scholastic Arts Exhib­ Saturday through March 17.
it io n , th ro u g h F eb . 24.
Bach Festival. Rollins Col­
Robinson's A ltam on te Mall lege. Winter Park. Feb. 21 and
store. Altamonte Springs, dur­ 22. 4 to 6:30 p.m. Call 847ing store hours. Includes award 6171 for ticket Information.
winning work by Seminole
Sem inole Community Col­
County middle and senior high
lege
film aeries. 7:30 p.m..
school students as well as
students from Brevard. Orange Wednesday, SCC Concert Hall,
featuring 77ie Lion in Winier
and Osceola counties.
Valentine Dance for senior ■tarring Peter O 'T oole and
citizens. 7:30-10:30 p.m.. Sat­ Katharine Hepburn. Also Hide
u rd ay. C a s se lb erry S en ior Mod Shriek with the L ittle
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Rascals. Free to the public.
Drive, Casselberry.
North Central Florida Friends
Do Da Day sponsored by will present the Carter Taber­
Men's Fellowship drat United nacle Maaa Choir in concert.
M e t h o d is t C h u r c h . P a r k Friday. Feb. 22. 7:30 pm ..
Avenue at Fifth Street, San­ Sanford Civic Center. Tickets
ford. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. available al the door.
Feb. 16. Food, crafts, games,
Sem inole Chapter Florida
flea market, silent auction,
balloons, and clow n faces. Audubon field trip to Florida
S h e r iff’ s D e p a rtm e n t w ill Power and Light Co. reservoir.
fin gerp rin t ch ildren . V ideo Feb. 21. Meet si gsle st 8 a.m..
tapes will also be made of Fort Florida Road. DcBary. For
ch ildren to file in church Inform ation call 668-4812.
Guests welcome.
library In case o f emergency.
C o w b o y a a n d I n d ia n s ;
The Swinging Knights. Sw­
Common Ground art exhibition ing Choir from St. Norbert's
through Sunday, Loch Haven C ollege. DePere. W Is.. w ill
Art Center, 2416 N. Mills Ave.,
“sent musical review. We're
O r la n d o . H o u r s T u e s d a y
tertalnment, 7:30 p.m.. Loch
through Friday. 10 a.m. to 9 Haven Art Center. 2416 N.
p.m.: Saturday noon to 5 p.m.: Mills. Orlando. Alao Feb. 22.
Sunday 2 to 0 p.m. Free to the noon, luncheon and en ter­
public.
tainment, Ms Ison et Jardln.
O eneral Sanford Museum Altamonte Springs.
and Library. Fort Mellon Park.
90lh annual Florida Strew920 E. First St.. Sanford. 2-6
p.m ., Sunday. W ednesday, b e r r y F e s t l l v a l a n d
Hillsborough County Fair. Feb.
Thursday, and Friday.
Seminole County Museum, 28-March 9. Plant City. Enter­
U.S. Highway 17-92 at Bush ta in m e n t In clu d e s L o u is e
B o u l e v a r d . In o ld A g r l - M a n d re ll, R o n n ie M ila a p ,
Ccnter/Couflty Home building. T a m m y W y n e tt c . L o r e t t a
Lynn. The Southern Knights
2*4 p.m. each Sunday.
Central Florida Zoological and Fury and Lee Oreenwood.
Park. U.S. Highway 17-92.
Paul W hitem an's Historic
Lake Monroe, open every day 9
Aeolian Hall Concert recreated
a.m. to 9 p.m. Picnic faclilUea.
_____to benefit The Orlando Opera
Longwood W om an's Club
111 s p o n s o r • c h ic k e n
®
Saturday.
inlay Feb. 23. ? ° b C , r r P e rfo rm in g A rts
11:30a.m. to6|p.m. st the chib Centre. Orlando. Patron tickets
l y--«ay
d * Party."
£ Q &gt;t. :For
l ° ntickets
c .&lt; irt
190 W
U .. Church SI.. ?.gc
--------1

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Nature hike each Saturday.
10 am .. Wektwa Springs Stale
Park. Extended day Mbs. 12*0
p .a .. every (hud Saturday of
the month. Two-hour animal
trip,
1 2 *0 pm .
Call1809*1
of Arts h
Hour" far art
e v ery M on d ay. S-S p .m ..
Townsend's Flab bouse. OrUndo. For hdorm arton on re*

Ftea Market and Arts
C rafts F air s p o n s o red
id by
Lyman High Sehooi Band.
jfcgch S. Lyman
-county Road 427,
Ireland's Premiere Variety
Show. March 9. S p m , Jai Alai
Fronton. U A Highway 17-92,
Fern Park, to benefit the
M o rn in g S ta r S e h o o i for
“ **£ ««■ *

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th a t b e in g a h o s t
armchair Job.
Graves* show la "Discover:
The World o f Science,'* a once-sm onth science magsxlne
hour that premiered In Febru­
a ry on PBS and w ill run
through May, and possibly
beyond.
" I have found out a lot
stufT that would be
la ." Graves said I
tervlew. "It's fun am
la a worthwhile pro&gt;
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another PUS science show, the
viewer must know something
about the subject being dis­
cussed. while "D iscover." like
the m agaslne o f the same
name, uses layman's language.
"S o you don't have to be a
ph ysicist or biochem ist or
something to understand what
we are Uuklng about," he said.
"A n d the m agaitne format
treata four or five subjects per
show, so you don't get hung up
with the attention span pro­

blem. I think It Is good stuff,
good family stuff, good for kids,
Informative."
Graves Is happy to be back at
work, after a frightening acci­
dent early last year when he
slipped on the Ice at the
family's Lake Tahoe vacation
home and broke his Jaw In
several places.

l l THAT

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anything you do will enhance
value." she said.
OPLtAMMLPIHIWtAton*Mrs. Dsvls has been collect­
M bpnaM urtm
MiA a Si m i i
ing and repairing Victorian
| MLTrtpfi id |H
dolls for shout eight years and
t« m hsna s* it wnm mt oc*
Depending on the facial
said she added about 10 to her
vtnPMMn
structure she will decide if the
collection last year.
doll la to be a Uttie girl, a young
When she spots one she
wA...___ a/--------- 1-woman, or with an appropriate
mmmwn n n o c a i
new wig and clothing it auy wants, she said, "1 go out of my
mind. If I have to go horns and
tr* " forTO*3 tato • think It over I don't sleep that
O r l a n d o n a t i v e * g n , Dayfe a farmer interior night. I go to my bank account
and figure out how I can
ftiddy Bbaen says be decorator and Coral Gables doB
aqueese out t 1,000."
.____
_ _ *®
shop owner, said the key to
She supports her doll habit
u n Tin Man In rrrnaiiinilfitf a to m e old n aif*
with her earnings as a doll
-The Wleant of Oa" rtsls andaulhentle designs,
but ha couldn't handle ghe adwehm thrift shooa/snthe makeup. "I waatba uoue chops and shows and
Tin Man lor 10 days,"
for
stlka,
Ebaen. who currently
lacaa aa well aa tor
c o -a la r a on A B C 'a dotlatoaddtohercollectian.
■rna Ho u m m r
mu
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WCTS-TVtn New York. S
iH t e X
' ' T h • y W a r a it-s from so she can ded
eaparlm an tlng with m ■ suitable
to give a tin. u *
•c a b e t and so oer

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Friday, Fad. IS, INS- 7

Forsythe Tries To Shed Ruthless Im age
By V srn o n Scott
UPI Bollywood Reporter
H O LLYW O O D (U P I) - John
Forsythe has becom e ■ universal
patriarch after playing paternal roles
for 13 years In three different TV
series. "Bachelor Father.” ” T o Rome
With Love" and now "D ynasty."
He extends his family-man Image
next week as the host o f NBC-TV’s
"Disneyland's 30th Anniversary Cele­
bration." His co-star, appropriately, la
Drew Barrymore, 9.
Forsythe, debonalre and urbane,
accepted the Job In his continuing
struggle to remind "D ynasty" diehards that be. Forsythe, and Blake
C arrin gton , the b illion a ire
entrepreneur he plays In the series, are
not the same man.
He postulates th cTe is an enormous
difference In fathers.
The actor characterises his roles in
-Bachelor Father" (1937-02) and "T o
Rome With L o v e" (1969-71) as Smiling
Ja ck , the e a s y -g o in g , concerned
parent.
Carrington Is another kettle o f fish, a
ruthless business tycoon who can't
stand the eight o f his gay son.
H appily, and a lth o u g h he has
become a tycoon himself with his

W ED N ES D A Y

enormous TV salaries and thorough­
bred race horse atable, Forsythe is
more Smiling Jack than Carrington.
If he's a con vin cin g father It's
because he's played the role In real life
for three decades. And like Carrington,
he's surrounded by attractive females
— his wife of 41 years, two daughters,
two female dogs and a pair o f female
parakeets.
"1 think the similarities between
Blake and me end there." Forsythe
said easily.
"This Disney special appealed to me
because It's a good change o f pace. It
shows me In a different light from
Blake. Like good baseball pitchers,
actors need a change o f pace.
"You'd be amazed how many people
relate to me as Blake, which la
essential to success on TV . But 1 have
trouble w alk in g dow n the street
without someone hailing me as Car­
rington."
He ran a hand through his silver
mane and laughed (adding that even
seemingly Intelligent and educated
people make no distinction between
actor and character).
"Actually. Carrington and I have
little In common. I'm much softer. I'm
not as determined a businessman. My

February 20

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February 21

l***r* al Na

or urg Tha gats ■ &lt;D LATl ISSkfT WITH D A V O ____________

|F*t]oU)Q

"Blake Is an authority figure and a
decent man. You forgive him being
ruthless In the market place because
he has other virtues. And It helps thst
he Just happens to look like s good
guy,"

8:08

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Forsyths, far rig h t, tskss s fun.
fith a rly rols on "D isn e yla n d 's 30th
A n niversa ry C a lib ra tio n ” w hich s ir s
M onday night on W E S H Channel
Nina. S tarring w ith h im w ill be D ra w
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11:00

attitudes are different. For Instance I
would be more tolerant of a gay son.
Hell. I've worked In Hollywood with
gays for decades."
Forsythe said he understands why
Carrington overshadows the actor who
plays him. noting that this Is an era for
the universal paterfamilias.
Thanks to "D yn asty's" No. 1 Nielsen
ratings, Forsythe has become one of
th e m o st I n - d e m a n d a c t o r s In
Hollywood for T V host appearances,
social and Industry events and other
public affairs.
He said the success o f the series has
put him In the same category with Bill
C osby. L a rry H a gm an and T o m
Selleck. all In great demand, all playing
self-confident, successful men of the
world.
"T h e y are all pow er sym bols,"
Forsythe said. "In these uncertain
times with a high crime rate. Blake.
J.R. Ewing. Magnum and Cosby's
characters are accepted and admired
as strong-minded Individuals. They are
worthwhile men.
" It ’s the mood o f the nation to look to
Individualists. President Reagan Is a
self-m ade man who espouses
wholesome things and who can be
tough when he has to be.

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Friday, Fsb. IS,

1Double
Jean and Ltx Sagal are the
twin daughters o7 the late
director Boris Sagal. They are
Identical. But tnelr parents
deliberately sent them to dif­
ferent schools and dressed
them differently, so they would
develop their own personalities.
So, one became Interested In
dancing, and went to New
York: and the other. In acting,
and stayed in Los Angeles. The
show that has reunited them Is
made in Los Angeles.

• • • » s a d hla lllsgitiasats
graad d aagh tsr, A a a s i a .
New. la ltsTsaabsr, w s have
Braadoa, atlvs la Barbados
w ith a w h ale a s w sto ry
bshlad bias. A a y sxalaaatlsa fa r thalr asors? O lvs a s
a little credit la the a e a a r y
d s p a r t a s s a t . C .S .J .. O a k

ms

Trouble'Was Reunion For Sagal Twins
Aa one o f the staff people on
" T h e Guiding L ig h t" aald.
"Soap opera* do this tort o f
thing all the time. And If the
viewer* can’t accept that, they
ahouldn't w atch." The on-air
explanation for the reaurrection
o f Brandon Spaulding waa that
he had faked hla own death ao
he could go to Barbados with
Borgnlne).
hla mlatreas. The real explana­
tion waa that the writers
thought It would be fun to have
a story line about him "turning
up a g a i n a n d a u r pr l a l n g
everybody."
M A R DICK — la the T V
aeriee " A ir w e lf" what ratet le a a k la d e a a A re k a a g a l
t a w w ith tha halicaptsr,
A irw erld. a a d with Hawk
eadjB aatlal? J A , Haaataa.
The background story o f
"A lrw olf" which all sup­
posedly happened before the
events of the first episode — la
that Hawk'a (Jan-Mlchael Vin­
cent) brother waa missing In
action during the Vietnam War.
A government agency, headed
by A rch a n gel ( Al ex Cord),
promises to help Hawk find hla
b r o t h e r I f H a w k wi ll . In
exchange, use hla helicopter
(Alrwolf) from time to time to
help them*tn their cases. But
there la no fam ily relationship
between Archangel and either
H a w k or S a n t l n l ( Ernest

D E A R D IC E — I a a* a
IS-year-old girl who w o o l*
Uka to haow If thoro Is a
C h ristoph er Reeve fa a d o b

doesn't know of a fan club.
which la surprising. He say* he
has an address - P.O. Box 461.
New York. N Y 10024 - where

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you to a fan club. If one exists.

Social Security Disability
W e Specialize In:

• NEW CLAIMS
• RECONSIDERATIONS • UNFITS CUT OFF
• MARINOS STORE THE JUDGE

WARD WHITK A ASSOCIATES

It The science fiction
"ft love story, a?

TA R M A N i
ERSTUJOOO
RCVNCXDS

HURTING? LONESOME? DEPRESSED?
C A N T FIND PEACE IN YOUR LIFE?
G od Loves You A nd la Concerned About Every
Facet O f Your Life A nd Wanta To Minister To
Your Need. We Love You And Welcome You To

EDDIE MURPHY

Ison vocation

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                    <text>Evening

77th Year, No. 150—Thursday. February 14, 19*5—Sanford, Florida

Herald

-

(USPS

481 -2* 0 )

-

Price

25 Cent*

Bomb Scare:
Courthouse Evacuated, Searched
The Seminole County Courthouse. Sanford, was evacuated
and a S h e riff's D epartm ent
bomb expert began to search the
building for explosives Just before 11 a m. today.
S a n fo r d p o l i c e L t . B i l l
Bernosky said Sanford police
received an anonymous call at
about 10:45 a.m. today from a
man who said there was a bomb
In the courthouse and advised
that everyone be evacuated before a certain time. Bernosky
would not say what that time
was.
In his 15 years on the Sanford
police force Bernosky said he

couldn't recall a bomb scare at
the courthouse. "But In this day
and time when somebody says
'b o m b ' w e 'v e g o t t o g e t
everybody o u t "
It eras reported that at least
one Judge with court In session
asked to be allowed to finish
givin g Instructions to a Jury
before leaving the building. Securlty officers said that was
completed In Just a couple of
minutes, then the courtroom
evacuated with the rest o f the
building's occupants,
Security personnel said even
at that time the bomb wasn't
supposed to go off until an hour

later. according to the threat.
After leaving the courthouse
the Judge escorted the Jurors to a
room at Sanford city hall, across
from the courthouse, so they
could begin deliberating.
S h e r iffs bom b exp ert Lt.
Marty LaBmactano. searched for
the bomb. Bemoaky said. A p­
parently, no bomb was found
b eca u se a t noon B ern osk y
advised the building would be
reopen at 12:50 p.m.
Police and rescue workers had
blocked off the area surrounding
the courthouse.

Another One

Victim And
Accused
Pass Lie
Detector

A child molestation trial has
taken an unusual twist with
experts testifying that both the
victim and the accused passed
lie detector tests.
On trial Is David Alonzo An­
derson. 33. o f 5 Ruby St. He la
charged with the sexual battey
o f a 14-year-old girl. The case
may go to the Jury today.
Different p o l y g r a p h experts
t e s t if ie d W e d n e s d a y th a t
nelghter the victim nor A n ­
derson Is lying about the Inci­
dent.
According to court records.
Anderson, who la flee on bond,
w as a rre sted A u g . 13 and
charged w ith sexual battery
after the girl and her mother
reported the "fo rce d " sex acta to
a F lo r id a H e a lt h an d R e ­
habilitative Services counselor.
T h e cou n selor reported the
allegations to Seminole County
Sheriff's investigators on Aug.

10.

P olice maintain se cu rity outside the Seminole County Courthouse follow ing bomb scare

Shopping Center Plans Revealed
H era ld S t a ff W r ite r
A 55 million, 100,000-squarefoot shopping center la slated for
construction on the 10 acre tract
across the street from Sanford
Middle School.
The property Is east o f French
Avenue between Central Street
and High Street.
The Seminole County School
Board W ednesday granted a
00-day option to Donald Huber
o f Huber Construction. Orlando,
to buy the site composed of 67
city lota, for 1600.000.
Huber said today he Is a
spokesman for a group planning
to develop the shopping center

School Board m em bers P at Telson, laft, and Jo# W illia m *

Lot M o Call You Sw oothoarf
Six-year-old Zachary M illar, laft, and Jessica Stewart,
4, right, em brace their kindergarten teacher, Linda

*

An examination of the girl at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal. Sanford.- supported the gin's
allegation, a sheriff's report said.

Newsman Escapes After Y ear Captive
WASHINGTON |UPI) - The family
of kidnapped reporter Jeremy Levin
ubilantly Identified a photograph o f
ilm today that confirmed reports he
had escaped from hla captors In
Lebanon.
"Th at’s him. There’s no doubt
about It." Levin 's step-daughter.
Clare Moss. 22. said. "H e's got gray
In his beard. A longer beard than I'm
ever used to. (But) It's trim.
He's O K." she added. "H e looks
at to met W e've been waiting for
it pkture for one year."
"M y mother Is looking at It with a

{

E

big smile on her face." Maas said.
Moss said Mrs. Levin, at the
family's home In Washington, was
clutching the picture o f her husband.
It was taken by a French News
Agency reporter who had seen Levin
after his escape.
Levin. Mideast bureau chief for
Cable News Network, was kidnapped
last March from Beirut where he had
hla headquarters. Reports from
Lebanon said he escaped In hla
pajamas and took refuge with Syrian
troops In the Bekaa Valley.
"It's not coming as a shock." said

Mrs. Levin, all smiles in one o f a
series of television Interviews. "W e
expected It all along. We are very,
very grateful and very thankful. But
we trusted God for hla release. And
we are still trusting Ood for the
release of the others." a reference to
four other Americans being held
captive In Lebanon.
Asked If Levin would take great
risks In escaping hla captors. Mrs.
Levin said, " I don't think that Is what
happened. 1 think this la a message
from the Mideast, a desire for peace
and we should answer It artth our

prayers and careful concentration on
peace with them.
"It srould be asrfully strange for
him to escape after being held for a
r. But these things have happened
ore and It may be their way of
making a gesture. And that's Just my
heart reaction."
Aa to the validity o f the reports.
Mrs. Levin said. "I'm believing. I'm
really believing."
She — m she would take her cue
from the government aa to whether
she would go to the Mideast to see her
husband but she would like to.

B

who was nabbed with a stolen van and charged
with theft and aggravated battery Wednesday,
b u t no charges have been filed In the killing.
Police spokesman Jett Peck said today he
couldn't rrltiasr information that might link the
theft suspect to the killing, but lawmen were
acting on a telephone Up that linked the
suspected van thin to the stabbing o f Paul David
Swltxer. 48. The suspect was nabbed by Orange
Countv sheriff's deputies when he ran from the
van which was reportedly stolen from an Orange
County church parking lot early Wednesday. He
was arrested on Old Winter Garden Road. In
Orange County.
Switzer's body eras found about 11:30 a m .

TODAY

Motorists Ignore Bleeding Victim

Thh Meant You, Chubby

Just 20% Overweight
Considered
Obese
' ' C ' •» i . .
.*
.
. .
•
WASHINGTON (UP1) - How fst you are SI
• h e re that 1st Is on your body Can I

�l * - i w i i l i n Herald,

FI.

Thvodey, F»b. M, IfM

Couple's Spat Ends In Stabbing

NATION

A squabble between a Lake
Mary husband and wife ended
with the man hospitalized with
knife wounds and jailed for
spouse abuse and a warrant for
aggravated battery ordered on
the woman. Lake Mary police
reported.
Lake Mary police report being
called to 123B W. Grand bend
Ave.. Lake Mary, early Wed­
nesday.
They were met by a woman
who reportedly told them. " I
stabbed that...," a police report
said.
The officers saw the male
suspect and reported he ap­
peared to have a stab wound In
his chest, the report said.
A rescue unit was called to
treat the man and he was
transported to Central Florida
Regional Hospital, Sanford, the
report said.
The woman reportedly told
police the man had choked her
and hit her In the face. Police
reported seeing bruises around
her mouth and knota on her
head. She alleged the man had
threatened to kill her and her
sons who were In bed at the
house. She said she fled to the
kitchen, got a knife and subbed
her husband and he continued
to choke her. the report said.
A reason for the fight was not
given In the report.
Police determined that the
man who was transported to the
hoaplUl had refused treatment
and left. He was arrested and
charged with spouse abuse at
10:00 a.m. Wednesday after he
relumed to his home. Before
being transported to Jail he was
uken to CFR where his wounds
were treated, the report said.
Bill Cassels. 20. has been
charged In the case. He was
released on $500 bond and Is
scheduled to appear In court
Feb. 2.
A warrant charging Roxanne
Marie Cassels. 32, with a g ­
gravated battery has been or­
dered by police, the report said.

IN BRIEF
Crim e Spree Ends In
Shootout On Kansas Farm
COLBY. Kan. (UP!) — A carload of bandits on a bloody
rampage across snowy northwest Kansas killed a restau­
rant manager during a robbery, executed two hostages and
tried to hold off police In a final gun battle at a remote
farmhouse. One suspect was killed.
The Wednesday afternoon crime spree that covered
about 125 miles through tiny farm communities left four
people wounded. Including a state trooper who confronted
the gunmen on a lonely country road and the operator o f a
grain elevator struck by bullets fired from the suspects'
speeding car.
Police officers caught up with the suspects and a
gunflght erupted In a snowy farm yard, killing a man
tentatively Identified as Mark Anthony Walter o f Sutton
Bay, Mich., and wounding Daniel Eugene Remeta and Lisa
J. Dunn, ages and hometowns unknown. The fourth
suspect. James C. Hunter o f Amoret. Mo., was chased
down and arrested as his three cohorts lay bleeding In the
snow.

Court Reverses Castration Ruling
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPII — South Carolina's Supreme
Court has reversed a Judge who offered three confessed
rapists the option of castration or 30 years In prison, ruling
the surgery would be unlawful mutilation.
Circuit Judge C. Victor Pyle of Anderson, who drew
national attention with his controversial sentence option,
was ordered Wednesday lo resenlence Roscoe Brown. 28.
o f Pendleton, Mark Vaughn. 22. o f Clemson. and Michael
Braxton, 20, o f Sarasota.
Brown. Vaughn and Braxton pleaded guilty In 1083 to
repeatedly raping and torturing an Anderson woman for
six hours. The 80-pound victim lost sbout hair of her blood
during the ordeal.
The justices voted unanimously lo strike down the
castration option. But two Justices, siding with the state,
said that while the castration option must be disallowed,
the 30-year prison sentence should stand.

W O RLD

tr o u ts ABUM
In

unrelated

Incidents two

with a total value o f $250 were
stolen from a construction site at
lo t 8. 5 4 3 E s ta t e s P la c e .
Long wood, between Feb. 8 and
Monday, according to a report
carpenter William D. Taylor, of
Apopka, filed with deputies.

Action Reports
•k F / r * »

* Courtt

* Police Beat

A $ 1.500 microwave oven and
a $50 range hood are missing
from a house being built at lot
81. Albany Place. Governors
Point, b etw een Feb. 8 and
Monday. Lou ScagtU. o f Florida
Residential Com m unities, of
Altamonte Springs, reported the
theft to deputies.

C asselberry m en have been
charged with spouse abuse.
S h e r iffs deputies reported
responding lo a call at 1000
Center Drive, at about 0 a.m.
Monday where Joan Stokers. 33.
r e p o r t e d l y t o ld th e m h e r
husband had beaten her. taken a
loaded shotgun from her and
thrown her out o f their house.
D ep u ties rep orted se ein g a
"kn ot” on Mrs. Suker's head
and she said the suspect had
thrown her to the ground, kicked
and choked her. a sheriffs report

James R. Partin. 74. of 111
O r le n t a A v e . , A l t a m o n t e
Springs, reported to deputies a
$200 chainsaw was stolen from
his garage between Jan 24 and
Monday.
Lumber and plywood with a
combined value o f $140 was
stolen from a construction site at
216 Marjorie Blvd.. Longwood.
according to a report owner
Dennis D. Kraarewskl. of Alta­
monte Springs, filed with depu­
ties.

Robert Quinn Suker. 33. was
arrested at his home at 0 a.m.
Monday. He was released on
$500 bond.
In the other Incident, deputies
responded to a call at 200F
Georgetown Drive. Casselberry,
and Pamela J. Mattelnl. 32. told
them her husband had beaten
her. She had red marks and
bruises on her upper chest and
neck, a sheriffs report said.
Robert John Mattelnl. 32, was
arrested at his home at 11:10
p.m. Monday. He was being held
In lieu o f $500 bond.
Robert Each. 25. o f 5269 Red
Brand Lane. Winter Park, re­
p orted to dep u ties a $200
chainsaw and a $16 worth o f
spray paint were stolen from the
bed of hla pickup truck while the
vehicle was parked at his home
Monday.
Jewelry, a computer, printer
and to o ls w ere a m o n g the
$5,545 worth o f Items a thief
took from the home of David A.
Mays. 52. o f 445 Wllford Ave..
Long wood, on Monday, deputies
reported.

A 1985 D odge van worth
$15,000 was stolen from Bob
D a n c e D o d g e . 5 1 5 2 U .S .Hlghway 17-92. Sanford, be­
tween Jan. 27 and Monday.
Soles manager Jay Blankenship.
39. filed a report with deputies
and said the keys to the vehicle
are still at the dealership.
A thief took four rifles and two
handguns w ith a com bined
value of $ 1.520 from the home of
Robert Fuller. 38. of 3621 E.
Lina Lane. Apopka. Saturday or
Sunday, a sh eriffs report said.

A thief took tw o louvered
windows with a combined value
o f $200 from the car o f Brandon
Lewis, 54. o f 7551 Bent Row
Trail. Winter Park, while the
v e h ic le was p arked at the
C e n tr a l F lo r id a Z o o . U .S.
Highway 17-92, Sanford, around
4 p.m. Saturday, a sheriff's
report said.
An air compressor, a belt
sander and a compressor hose
with a combined value or $615
were stolen between Feb. 6 and
Saturday from a shed at 836
state Road 46A. Lake Mary,
according to a report owner
Tim othy Gurtla, 32. o f that
address, filed with deputies.
A tool box and tools with a
combined value o f $500 were
stolen from the front porch of
B r ia n J o n e s . 2 4 . o f 2 3 2
L o n g w o o d H ills R o a d .
Longwood. by a thief who ripped
open a screen between Feb. 3
and Saturday, deputies reported.
John A. Lankaltls. 37, o f 157
E. New England A v e v Winter
Park, reported to deputies that a $550 time clock, a $200 sander
and various locks worth $300
were stolen from a construction
site at lot 11 Fountain Head.
Longwood. between 12:30 and 1
p.m. Sunday.
DU1ABBBBT
The following person has been
arrested In Seminole County on
a charge o f driving under the
Influence*.
—Jimmy Owen Flllman. 27. of
214 Barrow St.. Apopka, was
arrested at 1:11 a.m. Tuesday
after his car was clocked travel-1
Ing 70 mph In a 45 mph zone on
state Road 436 at Balmy Beach
Drive. Forest City.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C m if tf F I$ rM $ Itapitu#! MMpNflJ

AD M ISSION !
SMitarS Eva H a rr is Svtty JeckMn and
N K d u t WWtwrv* DetMna: J M Craeeil

A box of locks and hardware

LonyvMd QM dnCeHer.
0ISC H A S S E S
Ovltww A m S w i H lnelou and Sfwon
C rv n lty and M y (lrt DvSnry tori Odry
•ndbdfcy boy

IN BRIEF
W EATHER

Hotel Fire Blamed On Arsonists;
Am erican Death Toll Climbing
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) — Police said today arsonists
simultaneously set fires on two floors of the luxury Regent
o f Manila Hotel, engulfing the resort In flames that killed at
least 23 people. Including five Americans. Only two
Americans, part o f an entourage of Interna) Revenue
Service personnel, were reported dead Wednesday.
"A ll Indications are that ll was the lob o f arsonists." Brig.
Oen. Victor Nallvldad. the metropolitan police command
chief, lold the official Philippine News Agency.
The French news : gency AFP said today It received a
note signed by a called the "A ngela" saying (he fire was a
"protest against the U.9,-Japan support to the Marcosi
dictatorship." The note warned "other forma of sabotage"
would follow.
Officials said that rescuers so far have retrieved the
bodies o f 23 people from the smoking hotel and were
searching Tor an unspecified number of victims believed
trapped Inside and feared dead, officials said.

...Center
Cm I U

i

M from page I A

make them aware of develop­
ment plans.
The school board agreed to sell
the property as surplus because
Sanford Middle School already
has an adequate campus and
because the tract Is difficult to
use since students must cross
busy French Avenue to reach It.
said Benny Arnold, assistant
superintendent for facilities.
Arnold also pointed out that
the m oney rerelved for the
10-acre tract will be used to
Improve the middle school.
Am ong projects lo be under­
taken with the funds are devel­
opment of physical education
facilities, drainage, paved park­
ing and re-roofing or part o f the
school.
Meanwhile, the school board
rejected a bid of 1135.000 for the
purchase of 10 acres off Mc­
Cracken Road, near the former
Crooms High School, submitted
by Owen Lowell Clements Jr. of
Orlando.
Clements had planned to build
low-income rental housing at the
site and lo finance the project
through tax-free bonds, t h e
board rejected his proposal for
an option because tt had no time
limit on closing (he sale, Arnold
But Clements said today he
withdrew hla offer prior to the

school bourd meeting In a tele­
phone call lo Arnold's office.
Arnold said he found Clements'
message after the board meet­
ing.
Clements said today he is still
Interested in buying the pro­
perty, hut first he must de­
termine the feasibility of his
planned project. He said he ha*
built simitar housing for the past
15 years In Orlando.
In other action, the board
approved the expenditure of $10
million to revamp and expand
Oviedo High School. Arnold said
120,000 square feet o f new
co n stru c tio n Is planned at
Oviedo High School In addition
lo renovation o f 110,000 square
feet of existing facilities.
At Its Feb. 27 meeting, the
board plans to name Its Middle
School " X " . under construction
behind the Lake Mary High
School on property bought from
the developers of the Crossings.
T h e b o a r d Is a c c e p t in g
nominations for a name for the
facility. Nancy Warren, school
boaid chairman, said since there
Is already an elementary and a
high school bearing the name of
Lake Mary, that name will not be
considered.
N a m e s w h ic h h a ve b een
submitted for consideration so
far are: Frank Evans, a founder
o f the Lake Mary community:
William P. Layer, former school
superintendent, and Qreenwood.
Nominations for the name will
be accepted at the school office
until Feb. 27.

Popart Charnanko 'Incurably III'
MOSCOW (UPI) - New reports
surfaced today concerning Sovi­
e t P r e a ld e n t K o n a t a n tln
C hcrnenko'a 42-day absence
fr o m p u b lic v ie w , fu e lin g
speculation about hla health and
Kremlin power struggles over a
:

In B o n n , t h e B o n n e r
Rundschau newspaper reported
ly the 73-year-old Chernenko
Incurably alch with "chronic
" and will live

N A T IO N A L R E P O R T t A
storm that delayed Valentine's
Day mall deliveries with 15-foot
snow drifts In the Great Lakes
and Ohio V a lley crept Into
Canada, b u t, wind-blown snow
kept countless roads blocked
tod a y, c lo s in g sc h o o ls and
stranding travelers. National
Guardsmen used bulldozers to
bring supplies o f food and medi­
cine lo people Isolated by the
snow In Ohio, while marooned
motorists spent the night In
Indiana armories, Tennessee
truck stops and Kentucky civic
c e n t e r s . " W e ' r e Just n ot
equipped to handle this kind of
disaster." said Deputy Sheriff
Bob H arvey o f M ontgom ery
County. Ky. "W e Just hope and
pray no one Is left out there In
their cars freezing to death." At
least 41 death s h a ve been
blamed on bad weather since
Saturday. Snow from the On­
tario storm dusted the Ohio
Valley and Great Lakes, with the
h e a v ie s t a c c u m u la t io n s
ex p e c te d in W est V irg in ia .
A B B A BEADD106 ( • a.m.)i
temperature: 43: overnight low:
36: W e d n e sd a y 's h igh : 56:
barometric pressure: 30.26: rela­
tiv e h u m id ity: 42 p ercen t:
winds: north al 12 mph: sunrise:
7:05 a.m.. sunset 6:15 p.m.
P B ID A T T ID E S : D ay t e a a
Baaak: highs. 4:45 a.m.. 5:07
p.m.: lows. 10:24 a.m.. 10:23
p.m.; Part C an aesrali highs.
4:37 a.m., 4:59 p.m.; Iowa. 10:45
a.m ., 10:45 p.m .j B a y p a r ti
highs, 11-.34 a.m.. 9:56 p.m.:
lows. 4:45 a.m., 4:11 p.m.
A B B A F O R E C A S T : Today
sunny and cold with high near
60. Wind northwest 10 mph.
Tonight partly cloudy and cold
with a slight chance o f rain. Low
In mid to upper 30a. Wind
northwest 5 lo 10 mph. Rain
chance 30 percent. Friday partly
cloudy and continued cold. High
In upper SOs. Wind northwest 10
mph.
BOATIM O PO B B C AB T: St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
m iles — Sm all craft should
exercise caution. Wind west lo
northwest 15 to occasionally 20
knota today and tonight becom­
ing northerly Friday. Sea 2 to 4
feet near shore and 4 to 6 feel

offshore. Fair today then partly
cloudy with a few showers to­
night.
EXTEND ED FO RECAST: Fair
Saturday through Monday. Cold
Saturday then a slow warming
trend through Monday. Lows
Saturday In mid 30», warming
Monday to Ihe 40s. Highs Satur­
day mid 50s warming by Mon­
day to mid 60s

1100 FRENCH AVE. SANFORD, FLA.

STERCHI’S COLD WEATHER

SA STEll SALE!

The recent cold weather has stymied business!
out to recoup with THE BIGGEST PRICE CUTS OF THE YEAR,

EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE IS ON SALE!

•m

Evrning Henild
turn

mi

m i

Thursday. February l i tMI

The newspaper gave no source
for Its Bonn-dateUned dispatch
but indicated It waa baaed on
rep o rta r e a c h in g the W est
G e r m a n g o v e r n m e n t fro m
Moscow.
"Doctors give the most power­
ful man In the Kremlin, who has
not been seen In public for some
time, only 'three lo four weeks,'"
Ihe newspaper said, adding the
West Ocrman government waa
baaing Its Soviet policy on the
information.

Vol. 77. No. ISO
(Wilw
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In . m N. Erases A m .,

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�Longwood Commission To Exam
Code Enforcement Board Rules
By J a w Casselberry
Herald S ta ff W riter
Longwood police jyj- cracking
down on businesses that are In
violation of the city code, but In
at least one case the city com­
mission has learned the city
does not have the means to
follow upon enforcement.
In the case o f Bobby Clark
Used Cars, cited by the city for a
set-back violation, the commis­
sioners found that the Incident
was not covered under the
chapter outlining responsibilities
of the city's code enforcement
board.
Clark was told by city officials
he was violating an ordinance
requiring a 25-foot setback from
the power pole for cars on
display: pavement and drainage
for surface water: and a perma­
nent guard rail that would pre­

vent vehicles from accidentally
rolling Into the street.
S a n ford A ttorn ey T h om as
Speer. Clark's attorney, told the
commission Monday night it
would be "unconscionable” for
the city to require his client to
comply with present city codes
since he has been In business
at 425 S. Easl Lake St., since
1978 and should be "grandfa­
thered In."
Speer, who also represents Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Jean, owners
o f the property for the past 40
years, said the business met city
codes existing In 1978. but has
lost property to the state road
department for road rights-ofway three times as the street
(county Road 427) was widened.
This makes It more difficult to
comply with the more recent
restrictions.

African Relief Line Set Up
Southern Bell has Installed a
toll-free telephone number In
Florida for the Red Cross to
speed fund-raising efforts for
drought-stricken Africa.
People calling 1-800488-GIVE
will reach a recording telling
them of the urgent need for
funds and where to send con­
tribution* to the American Red
Cross African Fam ine Relief
Campaign. Callers desiring more
Information also will be able to
leave a message so that they can
be contacted by representatives
of local Red Cross chapters.
The African Fam ine Relief
Campaign was launched by the
Red Cross to help some of the
180 million people In 27 African
countries who are In danger of
dying of malnutrition or starva­

tion. Red Cross chapters have
pledged to raise as much as
possible toward the worldwide
goal o f $70 million sought by the
International league o f Red Cross
and Red Crescent Societies.
S ou th ern Bell sp ok esm a n
Larry Sliickler said that the use
o f the 800 INWATS service will
help local Red Cross chapters
battle their biggest enemy —
time. "T h e Red Cross needs
money and It needs It quickly to
p r o v id e r e l i e f fo r fa m in e
v i c t i m s . " he s a id . " T h e
establishment of toll-free num­
bers throughout Southern Bell's
four-state area allows the Red
Cross to provide specific In­
formation to contributors and
volunteers In the most efficient
manner possible."

Gerald W. Msysr
Account Representative

The second time they took
property up to the steps of the
building and the third time It
took the steps. Speer said.
"1 sym p a th ize with y o u ."
Commissioner Larry Goldberg
said. " If you compiled with the
25-foot setback, you would only
have room for two or three rows
of cars.”
"It's very elem entary." Speer
said, "the old comes under the
old and the new comes under
the new. I ask you not to cite my
client as an Individual.*'
City A t t o r n e y Frank
Kruppcnbacher told the com­
mission there Is "a great deal o f
litigation over whether some­
thing (In cxlstance when new
requirements are passed) Is ac­
tually 'grandfathered In.*"

Evutm Htrald. Ssnlord, FI.

Thursday, Fsb, 14,1HS—)A

" A concern I've had Is that If
you move off requirements on
one Item this week then be
prepared nexl week for persons
demanding to be treated the
sam e w a y ." K ru pp en b ach er
said. "I'm not sure you have the
tight to grant a variance without
an ordinance. You would be
acting hastily If you approved
anything tonight."
H e said th e c o m m is s io n
should consider changes in the
code enforcement ordinance to
bring this type o f violation under
Its Jurisdiction. " T h e r e are
hidden problem s h e r e ," he
added, "you need to look at the
overall situation."
The commission agreed to
discuss the problem further at a
workshop before Its first meeting
In March.

Dazzling M oves
The Dazzlers, the dance troupe of Seminole High School, take
to the lloor for a practice session In preparation for district
com petition next week. Oft the floor the group Is raising
money to buy new uniforms. For more Information about
their fundraising efforts call 322-4352. Front row, lett to right,
are: Heather Bowes, April Sharp, Michele D raper, Bonnie
Richardson, Sherry Hoffman and Christine Davis. Back
Row, left to right: K ellie Chaput, Lisa Thomas, Sarah
Loomis, V era Ramassar, Lynne Dickey and Janet Sawezuk.

CALEN DAR
TH U R S D A Y , FSB. 14
Alzheimer's Support Group o f
Seminole Area, 7 p.m., Seminole
C om m u n ity M en tal H ealth.
Cranes Roost Office Park. Suite
377. Pelican Building. Altamonte Springs. Sharing and
s u p p o rt fo r f a m i l i e s o f
Alzheim er's Disease victims.
Free. Call 323-2036 or 831-2411.
Humanc Society of Seminole
County Board of Directors. 7:30
p.m. at the animal shelter. 2800
County Home Road. Sanford.
Sanford Jaycees, 7:30 p.m..
J a y c e e b u ild in g . 5th and
French. Sanford.
C e n tr a l F lo r id a C h a p te r
Florida P s y c h o lo g ic a l Assn.
workshop on Women’s Issues
featuring Dr. Penny Lukin on
stress management. Dr. Emmy
Freeman, pte-menstrual stress
syndrom e, and Dr. M arilyn
Barsky on ages und stages of
womanhood.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St..
5:30. closed discussion, and 8
p.m.. open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m., closed.
First United Methodist Church.
Ovcrealers Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m. Community United
Methodist C hurch. H ighw ay
17-92, Casselberry.
F R l D A Y . r u . 18
C e n tr a l F lo r id a R e g io n a l
Scholastic Art Awards Exhib­
ition featuring art and photo­
graphy by middle and senior
n ig h s c h o o l s t u d e n t s o f
Seminole, Brevard. Orange and
Osceola counties. Robinson's.
Altamonte Mall, through Feb.
24. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.. weekdays
and noon to 5:30 p.m. Sundays.
Central Florida Klwanta Club,
7:30 a .m ., F lo r id a Federal
Savings and Loan, state Road
436 at 434. Altamonte Springs.
Sem in ole Su nrise Klw anls
Club. 7 a.m.. Airport Restaurant.

Sanford.
O p t im is t C lu b o f S o u th
Seminole, 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road. Altamonte
Springs.
Central Florida Blook Bank
F lo r id a H o s p lta l-A lta m o n te
Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Avc..
9 a.m. to5p.m .
Free Income tax help for rcHrees. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Sanford
Chamber of Commerce. 400 E.
First St.. Sanford. Through April
15. Bring copies o f last tax
return, forms for the current
year and other relevant niaterials.
Gentle Exercise for seniors.
|0:30 a.m., Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry,
T a x help w ith A A R P/IR S
trained volunteers. 12:30 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200

Manatee ( f
Awareness
Workshop
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21
FPL OFFICE
301N. MYRTLE AVE., SANFORD
7:00-8:30PM
ADMISSION F R E E
C om e hear m o re about this fascinating endangered
species and Die efforts bein g made to saw it from
extinction. Workshop includes film s and lectures.
Inform ation and handout m aterial w ill be available.
Fbr m ore information, contact Alice Ttislo at
321-5620
IHvsentcd as a public service by

SHOEMAKER
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�Evening Herald

MICHAEL K. EVANS

(uses mi-imi

Reagan Skirts Tough Budget Issues

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305 322-2611 or R3I-9993
Thursday, February 14, 1995—4A

Wayne D. Ooyl*. Publlthar
Theme* Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkirft, Advartlting Director
Homr Delivery: Week. $ 1. 10; Month. $4 .75 ; 3 Month*.
$14 25; 6 Month*. $27 00 : Year. $51 00 Ity Mall Week.
$ I 50; Month, $4100; 3 Month*. $ 18.00:41 Month*. $32.50 :
Year. $4H&gt;00

Fostering Reform
In Phillipines
If policy-m akers In W ashington have a
nightmare about the Philippines. It no doubt
goes like this: T h e decaying dictatorship of
ailing strongman Ferdinand Marcos gives
w ay to som ething even worse — a military
coup and subsequent dictator In uniform or a
com munist regim e brought to pow er by
eriHa Insurgents o f the Maoist New People's
my.
Neither o f these extrem e outcomes, and
most especially a communist takeover In
Manila, seems very likely. But Am erican
Interests In the Philippines are far too
Im portan t to run a n y risk at a ll that
Washington might
migni misread
m laread the
m e situation and.
th erefore, fall
ill to a p p ly the ap p ropriate
treasures on Its troubled Aslan ally. Accordngly. administration officials spent' the latter
half o f last year carefully review ing trends In
the Philippines and formulating policy rec­
ommendations.
The result was a national security directive
signed In January by President Reagan. It
calls for continued U.S, pressure on President
Marcos to effect political, econom ic and
m ilitary reforms.
T h e desired political reform s would expand
and accelerate the current process o f restor­
ing the Philippines to the multi-party dem oc­
racy that Mr. Marcos dismantled during the
1070a. The econom ic reform s would center
on replacing the Marcos regim e's corrupt
"cro n y capitalism " with free markets for such
basic Philippines Industries as coconuts. Th e
m ilitary reforms would reserve the politiciza­
tion o f the Philippine officer corps, tighten
discipline In the ranks and curtail m ilitary
*1abuses
akuasa ofclvlllana.
nfnliilllnna
T his la an am bitious agenda to be pressed
on a Marcos regim e already steadily. If still
gradually, losing Its grip. And there are risks.
In the short run, liberalization probably will
produce more rather than le u turmoil In the
Philippines as a resurgent political opposition
tests Its new limits.
Th en too, there ts the danger that e x c e u lv e
p rcu u re against the Marcos governm ent at a
tim e o f economic crista and political uncer­
tainty could precipitate Ita collape. That, in
‘ turn, could produce Just the sort o f chaos that
would Invite a m ilitary coup, and no doubt
perm it dramatic gains In the countryside by
com m unist guerillas.
But the Reagan administration’s policy
review must have left no doubt that potential
disaster looms In the Philippines absent any
reform at all. Inflation and a slum ping
econom y are shrinking living standards; most
painfully for the m illions o f urban poor who
w ere barely subsisting during the grow th
years o f the 1070s. In rural areas, the New
People's Arm v (m ilitary arm o f the C om m u­
nist Party of the Philippines) has roughly
doubled Its ranks and activity during the last
few years. The ch ief grievances o f many
P lllp ln o s s y m p a th e tic to th e N P A arc
• pervasive governm ent corruption and abuses
•o f power by the Philippine army and the
paramilitary Philippine Constabulary.
T h e political situation la similarly critical as
the 67-year-old Mr. Marcoa. who reportedly
suffers from kidney disease, grow s visibly
m ore 111. Mr. Marcos m ay be authoritarian but
,he la shrewd enough to recognize that
•continued liberalization la Inevitable if a
political explosion Is to be avoided. T h e aamc
cannot be said for som e o f those around him,
Including his am bitious wife, lmelda. and
som e senior military officers.
Clearly, then, the Reagan administration is
w alking som ething or a diplomatic tightrope
tn trying to Influence events In the Philip­
pines. But Am erican Interests there — a
decades-old alliance, the last U.S. air and
naval bases In Southeast Asia, and $1 billion
In economic Investments — are too Important
not to try.
More to the point, the policy priorities
approved by President Reagan seem the right
ones given the circumstances In the Philip­
pines. And, aa both C ongress and the
administration know full well, the econom ic
and m ilitary aid requested by the Marcoa
government give W ashington a huge lever to
use In fostering reform. Now to uae It.

K

J

' BERRY'S WORLD

The Stale of the Union may be as good as Mr.
Reagan says It Is. but the state of the bond
market Isn't.
With all the hoopla about how the Reagan
Administration Is — or Isn't — going to cut the
fiscal year 1080 budget, most commentators
Ignored the fact that the estimate for FY 1985
has quietly been raised from 9185 billion to
9222 billion.
Paul Volcker testified a few days ago that In
hia opinion, a 950 billion cut In the deficit next
year would reduce Interest rates by about 1
percent. This Is an em inently reasonable
estimate, and one with which we would fully
concur.
However, deficits and Interest rates are not a
one-way street. If a 950 billion deficit reduction
will reduce Interest rates by 1 percent. It
loglctdly follows that a 937 billion Increase
would raise them by about H percentage point.
In fact. It seems likely that Interest rates will rise
this year In any case, although the Increase la
expected to be between 1 percent and IVY
percent Instead of 44 point because o f the
generally strong nature o f the economy.
Th e Administration cannot reallstlcaly expect
to get away with the game o f proposing large

WASHINGTON WORLD
.
\ /

,
■ r

lame explanation that a proposal on tax reform
would be forthcoming "later" and did not need
to be broached "at this tim e" because It would
be revenue neutral In any case and hence did
not affect the budget totals.
This sort o f mealy-mouthed approach la not
the kind of leadership that Congress requires in
order to begin to chop the budget deficit down to
size. A s a result, the true deficit figure for FY
1986 will not be 9180 billion, as proposed by the
Administration, but well over 9200 billion. Only
a concerted action In terms o f both a freeze and
revenue-raising tax reform can bring the deficit
figures to heel. Otherwise. It will be more o f the
same: promises of a reduced deficit, but an
actual Increase that has averaged over 937
billion per year during the tenure o f the Reagan
Administration.
Baaed on the facts, as opposed to the forecasts,
the outlook for Interest rates Is up. While the
Fed stands willing to become more accom­
modative upon the evidence o f sharp cuts In the
deficit, we believe they will remain disap­
pointed, and will eventually have to lum to
tightening measures later thla year to offset
what would otherwise be Inflationary growth In
the money and credit aggregates.

SCIENCE WORLD
8T e /h

w

Better
Insulin
Delivery

I T

V IO I

At Any
Cost
B y H a iti
UPI! W h it
its H o s ts R sp ortar
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The White
House apparently wants a state visit
In April from South Korean Presi­
dent Chun Doo Hwan — at any
price.
G o v e r n m e n t s e c u rity fo r c e s
roughed up an American delegation
Including two congressmen and Pal
Dcrtan. former assistant secretary ol
slate for human rights, when they
escorted South Korean dissident
Klin Dae Jung back to Seoul.
Instead o f defending a ctivist
Americana who seek to promote
democratic rights, the administra­
tion from President Reagan on down
blamed both aides, and appeared to
be heavily weighted against the
Americana.
Elliot Abrams, who holds the
position once held by Dertan. called
the American entourage a "tra vel­
ing circus" and U.B. Ambassador to
Korea Richard Walker, a political
appointee, more or less Indicated
that the Americans had Instigated
the turmoil at Klmpo airport.
Administration spokesmen said
repeatedly after the Incident that
there w ere no plans to cancel
Chun’s visit.
And ao It haa been with the
United Stales and South Korea for
more than 30 years. Americans
have poured billions and billions
Into that country, which haa re­
mained a military dictatorship.
For all that the United States haa
been able to extract little In the way
of democracy with changes o f gov­
ernment coming only from military
coups when one leader Is cut down
by an assassin'a bullet to be re­
placed by another.
It la the president himself In his
State or the Union address who
•p ok e o f s u p p o r tin g fr e e d o m
fighters everywhere, but apparently
he only m eant freedom fighters
against S o v ie t tyranny. O th er
dictatorships go by the board or are
relegated to what the administra­
tion likes to call "quiet diplomacy"
The Reagan administration haa
yet to show one major foreign ptdlcy
triumph compared to the Carter
administration. President Jim m y
Carter peacefully negotiated the
future o f the Panama Canal, the
Cam p D avid accord s and the
Strategic Arm s Limitation Treaty.
S A LT 2. which so far the ad­
ministration has abided by although
It was never ratified. Not to mention
the Carter drive for human rights
throughout the world.

Liberals' Last Chance
NEW YORK INEAI - It doesn’t
require any very advanced degree In
political prophecy lo foresee that,
for American liberals. 1085 Is going
lo be one long open season on South
Africa.
The white regime at the southern
tip or the African continent provides
liberals with very nearly their last
remaining chance to claim moral
superiority over their adversaries.
Having m aneuvered them selves
Into well-nigh Impossible positions
on everything from Mr. Reagan's
Star Wars' ("W h a t's wrong wllh
Mutual Assured Destruction?"I lo
abortion ( " T h e fetus does not
scream"), liberals In search o f a
quick moral fix can always arrange
to be arrested In front of some South
African consulate.
Beyond that, there Is sure to be a
big effort to push antl-Soulh African
legislation through Congress — the
more pu nitive, the better. For
starters, there will be an attempt to
ban the sale o f gold Krugerrands In
this country. That won’t hurt South
Africa In the slightest, since It can
easily sell the coins elsewhere, but
the gesture w ill play well In any
congressional district where black
voters outnumber the citizens of
while South African ancestry (and
that's Jusl about all o f them).
But the liberals will almost cer­
tainly call for madder music and
stronger wine. Whst they really
want la U.S. withdrawal from all
econom ic relation s w ith South
Africa —1
|not only a pullout o f all
American businesses there, bui
economic sanctlotta against trade as

well.
That would Indeed hurt South
Africa, though by no means fatally.
II would also hurt a great many
Important businesses tn the United
States and Imperil our supply o f
some strategically vital minerals, so
you can safely bet that Congress
will (lnd some way lo avoid going
that far. Bui (he liberals will de­
mand It anyway, and their reason
far doing so deserves closer exami­
nation.
The point not understood by most
Americans who think about the
matter at all la that effective U.S.
economic sanctions against South
A fr ic a w o u ld h arm firs t and
foremost the very people It Is
allegedly designed to help: South
Africa’s blacks. Large numbers o f
blacks are employed by U.S. busi­
nesses operating In Soulh Africa,
and many others by South African
firms doing business with the Unit­
ed States. They will be the first lo
lose their Jobs If sanctions are
Imposed, and will be the hardest hit
by any constriction o f the economy
that results.
But the lib era ls w ll( not be
deterred — partly because their
hidden agenda for South Africa calls
precisely for Increasing unrest
among Its blacks, leading to acta o f
violence and (ultimately) open re­
bellion. Even m ore compelling,
however, la Ihetr own desperate
need for a new moral Issue on which
to confront and combat the Reagan
administration. Compared to that,
how Important la the interim well­
being of South Africa's blacks?

’ L id ia W aasw ics
I ScI sdcs W rite r
SALT LAKE C ITY (UPI) - Re
searchers report encouraging pre­
liminary results In the experimental
use o f a new device that allows
diabetics to Inject Insulin directly
Into the abdominal cavity.
Doctors said studies show this to
be a more efficient technique than
the Insulin-administering methods
currently available to the 1.5 mil­
lion American Insulin-dependent
diabetics.
The new device, called a "aubcutaneoua peritoneal access device"
(BPAD). was developed at the Uni­
versity of Utah Health Sciences
Center and College o f Engineering.
The Injections are virtually pain­
less. researchers sold, and the time
It takes the Insulin to reach the
liver, the body's major chemical
processing organ. Is known.
"Thla allows patients to better
Judge when lo take the Insulin and
how much they need, which la
related to when, what and how
much they ea t." said Dr. Robert
Stephen, principal Investigator and
research associate professor o f sur­
geryStephen sold preliminary studies
Indicate In some patients suffering
kidney disease caused by diabetes,
damage to the organs can be slowed
or arrested, possibly because or
better Insulin control.
The device — about 2 Inches
across — Is made o f silicone rubber,
polyurethane and p olyeth ylen e
glycol. Implanted Just below the
akin In the patient's abdomen, the
SPAD haa a small opening Into the
peritoneal or abdominal cavity.
"It la used In an attempt to
Imitate both the normal pattern and
normal pathway o f Insulin release
by the pancreas." Stephen said.
Patients push a small needle
through the akin Into the container
and Injecl insulin, which flows
through the opening into the ab­
dominal cavity, where It Is drained
rapidly and directly to the liver.
There, the Insulin m etabolites,
controls glucose and Influences at
least 20 other body chemicals.
In diabetics, unlike healthy peo­
ple. the pancreas produces almost
no Insulin, leading to serious chem­
ical Imbalances In the body. The
patients must administer the In­
s u lin t h e m s e lv e s e v e r y d a y .
Without IL starvation and death
could result.

JACK ANDERSON

IRS Blushes Over Birthday Surprises
W ASH ING TO N - The federal
government, which has regulations
forbidding Jusl about anything,
appears to have been caught w ith
Its " c a n ts " down in a touchy area
of employee decorum. The question,
stripped to its bore essentials, las
Should governm ent workers be
permitted to have strip-leasers en­
tertain at the office?
The answer seems to be: Nobody
knows- At least no one has been
able to dig up a regulation that
might cover the situation.
The most fascinating feature of
this titillating tempest la the teapot
where It originated: the grim, an­
tiseptic regional headquarters of the
In t e r n a l R a v e n u a S e r v ic e in
d o w n to w n W a s h in g to n . D C.,
k n ow n to lo c a l t a x p a y e r s aa
Dracuta’s Castle. Behind IU clinical,
glam anil r n o r m s (heads lurks a
aptrit o f merriment ft**1 W m the
SO.

• i

budget cuts "n e x t " year while surreptitiously
allowing outsize gains to occur "th is " year. This
procedure has been going on for four years, and
la one of the reasons — although obviously not
the only one — why we have a projected deficit
o f 9222 billion this year compared to a 973
billion deficit when Mr. Reagan first took the
oath of highest office.
Under this w ith erin g assault from the
Treasury, combined with an expected robust
Increase o f 4.7 percent In real GNP this year, we
do not see how interest rates can do anything
but rise In 1985. The (act that the Fed found It
necessary to Increase the federal funds rate from
8 percent to B-Vfc percent even before the year
properly got underway serves as a d e a r notice
that the monetary authorities are not Inclined to
alt Idly back and let the Treasury unload
ever-increasing amounts o f debt without having
some negative effects on Interest rates. Volcker
Is In effect saying to Congress: If you want lower
Interest rates, we need serious action on cutting
the deficit — both In terms o f lower spending
and higher taxes.
Yet Mr. Reagan's State o f the Union message
addressed this Issue In only the most peripheral
manner. The Administration offered only the

at 9 p-m.. a
‘ rclad in an evening

end carrying a violin
showed up unannounced tn
office o f a supervisor on hia bmnday. The young woman first sang a
congratulatory mesaage and played
a tune on her fiddle. Then, in the
course o f a little dance number, the
young woman stripped down to a
revealing sw im suit. T h e Whole
birthday surprise lasted no v —
than seven or eight minutes.
The repercussions lasted
longer. An IR S spokesman
scribed the birthday boy aa
married man and a “ shy hind of guy
Whom you can make turn red pretty
easily.' Sure enough, the supervtaor
was so discomfited he reported the
’ ’ Strtp-A-O rsro" to hia boss, a

The IRS. perhaps wary o f the
Supreme Court's ruling that slesp.
tag In the park " r p w t lbs White
m lon
b y tha
A*
to ban si

e n y iro n m e n ta l research

no great Cu m

over her

I area visited by a young
ma In a Santa Claua outfit,
pfoprite Jollity. St. Nick
'everything.
t Klein, director o f the
tenter, said he bad been
f u n a w a r e * ' th a t th e

�SPORTS

Ev m Ih9 Herald, Sanford, FI.

SCC's Sandwich
Attack Eats Up
Central Florida

Thursday, Ftb. 14. IMS—SA

Lady Rams
Seniors
Rip DeLand

v7

By Chris Fister
Herald Sports W riter

* J L ----------Herald S pirts Editor
Call It a perfect sandwich. A
mouth watering offensive night
from Linny Grace on top. a
ddlcous game-winning Kenny
Edwards' Jumper In the middle
and a tasty game-preserving Rob
Brantley block on the bottom.
All three Ingredients added up
to a dlgestable 81-79 Seminole
Community College victory over
C en tral F lo r id a W edn esday
night before 111 fans at the SCC
Health Center.
"T h e bench wouldn't let them
quit." said SCC coach BIU Payne
about his third straight 20victory season. "You could just
see the whole bench pick us up."
For CFCC coach Benny Gab­
bard. It was just another tough
loss. The Knight* fell to 14-10
and 4-9 In the Mid-Florida Con­
ference. SCC kept Its hopes of
h o s tin g th e p o s t-s e a s o n
tournament by improving to 9-4
in the MFC and 20-10 overall.
A la o W e d n e s d a y , F lo rid a
Junior clinched the conference
title and an automatic berth in
the state tournament by beating
Lake City, 99-91. Daytona Beach
used 12 points from Fred Miller
and 10 from W illie Mitchell to
sq u ash S a n ta Fe. 100-04.
Daytona Improved to 24-6 and
9-4.
Which means, the DaytonaSeminole battle Saturday night
at Daytona Beach will determine
(he host school for the post­
season to u rn a m e n t. SCC
whipped Daytona earlier this
year at home. The winner of
Saiurday’a gam e will receive a
bye until the semifinal round In
addition to hosting the game.
The Raiders, who were put tn
In
a muat-wln situation
in by losing
two games last week,
respond
(. responded
to the call Wednesday. Central
; Florida built a 12-point lead just
before halfUme. another 12-point
lead four minutes Into the sec­
ond half and an 11-polnt lead
with 10 minutes to play.
CFCC. w h ich received 28
points fro m forw ard K re gg
Overton and 18 from Darrton
Mlxson. traded baskets and free
throws with Grace during the

B a s k e t b a ll
first 10 minutes. Crace. who
finished with 27 points, five
rebounds and six assist*, con­
nected on all seven free throw*
and four buckets for IS first-half
points.
"L in n y was reslly playing
hard." said Payne about his 0-3
forward. "Our team 's been tn a
hell o f s shooting slump but are
came out o f It tonight (34 o f 59
for 58 percent)."
The Knights used two Overton
jumpers to take a 29-23 lead
with five minutes left In the first
half but guard Mike Landed
came back with an 18-footer and
a free throw to Ignite an SCC
surge. Greg " S lim " Johnson
■cored on a rebound and Oreg
Bates stole the ball and dunked
to pull the Raiders within 33-30.
Central Florida, though, went
to a spread offense which pro­
duced six free throw* and a
41 *34 halftime lead.
Payne said he used the In­
termission to politely remind 6-4
guard Edwards that he was the
team's beat shooter. "W e're go­
ing to lose with you not shooting
the ball." Payne said to Edwards
who took just one shot In the
first 20 minutes. "Pu t that damn
thing up."
Hoping to Instil) some life,
Payne made two key substitu­
tions to open the second half. He
started 8-7 W illie Strother at
center and 8-1 Calvin "K ik i"
Bryant at forward. Both paid off.
Strother stole the ball Immedi­
ately and Bryant grabbed his
missed shot and put It tn.
Edwards fired away the next
time and hit from the wing. It
waa Bryant'* turn the next time
around and he drilled a 25footer. The form er Seminole
High standout then broke loose
underneath and Grace sipped a
perfect pass as the Raider*
pulled within 50-47.
Lendell. who earned a start
after several strong showings off
“ iand
ndi
the bench, stole the ball
fouled a* he drove for the hoop.
He hit one free throw to hoist the
Raider* within one.

r

£
MwsM Mels *y Orsasrf SsSni

SCC's Kennv Edwards rips
91 a
• rebound aw ay
fro m D arrlon M ixon . E dw ards hit the
"SC C I* a physical team ." said
Gabbard, who cMed the perfor­
mance o f the Raiders' defensive
backs. "T h ey did a nice Job of
playing within the bump-artdrun that the refs allowed."
A fter Landcll'a free throw,
however. Central Florida outscored the hosts, 11-2, over the
next four minutes for a 61-50
lead. Overton hit three straight
shots to fuel the surge.
But as quickly ss the Raiders
faded, they bounced back. Bates

gama-wlnnlng
a m e wlnnlng shot with 11 seconds left to
hoist the Raldei n t o a n 51-79 victory.

scored on a slam, B rantley
tallied on a goal tend and Bates
dropped In one from the baseline
to pull SCC within five.
Overton hit another d u tch
bucket to stem the roll som e­
what. but Grace came back with
a three-point play at the 8:53
mark to cloee the gap. The
blade-Uke sophomore used the
baseline to pull SCC within
65-61 before turning control
over to Edwards.
The Paris, Ky. native drilled

home two straight wing Jumpers
and then followed up with a
rebound basket to produce a
67-87 Ue with 5:41 to play.
Orace then cam e up with
steel and fed Brantley who. 1 3
the ball for a 89-87 lead w ith
5:27 logo.
SCC edged Its lead to four
points. 71-87, on a pair o f
Brantley free throws but Overton
came back with four free tosses
7A

Florida State's Loss Is UCF's Gain
Florida Stale's loss la DCF's gain. That's the way the
Donald Grayson situation was resolved Wednesday.
i j k e Mary's versatile football player signed with the
Fighting Knights after FSU backed off.
It's hard to fathom that Grayson, a solid 6-2.

Mary i
much better.
Having known the young man for the past six years.
I've watched him come up with clutch play after clutch
play in football, baseball and basketball. Orayaon made
the diving catch, hit the home run and dropped the
pressure free throws whenver he was called on.
But the big reboot* had questions about his speed as
a wide receiver and else for a tight end. Florida State,
where Grayson preferred to go early In the recruiting
process, only signed two wide receivers and already
has a quality tight end bigger than Orayaon.

But with shoulders from Sanford to Lake Mary and a
body which waan't built by weights one has to wonder
how Mg and strong the 17-year-old coaches' dream will
become. At least 30 pounds heavier.
With Grayson's versatility, he wouldn't be limited to
offense either. Whenever coach Harry Nelson felt his
defensive secondary m ay be weakening, he called on
Grayson to shore up the gap.
One story com es to mind when an assistant waa

hesitant to use Grayson on defense “ because he didn't
know the plays," according to Nelson. Harry went Into
one of his tirades and fired ofT, "H e's an athlete, get
him In there."
Grayson, o f course. Intercepted the next pass thrown
and Nelson reportedly asked (he assistant where he
waa going to work next year?
"U C F la growing. It's going to be a blg-tlme place.;'
said Orayaon Thursday morning. " I ’m going to get lo
play tight end and they're going to throw the ball a lot.
"Anyw ay, the education la the same at both places."
Florida Stats, o f course,. had one o f tta biggest
recruiting bonaiuaa ever aa It signed everybody's
A ll-A m erica Sam m le Smith from Apopka.
Lake Howell's Jeran tvs/w became a happy young
man thia week when he signed with Vanderbilt. Evans,
a close friend o f Vandy All-America and former Lake
Howell grad Chuck Scott, hopes to follow in his hero's
footsteps at wide receiver.

Lake Mary's Homers Pound Wildcats
Lake Howell Bounces Back From 8-0 Deficit To Drop Hons — SCC Wins
Tournament. Lake Howell Improved lo

B awsye b a■ll
■

Letter* and Rod
Meta each cracked home run* while Ron
Natberson sin k s three hit* m the Lake
Mary Rama pounded Winter Park. 7-1. IQ
prep baactaaflWsdMeday at Winter Farit
Hum School.
The victory equaled the Lake Mary
Ham a g o to

—

sign in center Odd for a solo tater.
The Rams added (bur inourancs runs
to Ik* seventh ae L etter* roped hie
second homer of ihe year over the left
field fence. With one out. Schmtt drew e
walk end lie u hammered a Meat down
the left fW d tin* for a two-run *
Lake Mary picked up Its “
‘
....
_
__ _________________a
J S u S J T *4 "

j « . l ° t « « « !■ «; lo »«r
w r . 7 &lt; r

SU » ly
to * *

rapped a togar nuds dnidi i ptoyhaBtq
‘ Q ^tatop w hotoseed to tbe sacend
ham to fare* aehndt to aeoand. H *

l-i.
Sophomore Mark Merchant rapped
four hits including two doubles for
Oviedo. He aleo drove In two rune,
Sophomore Qknn Relchle had an RBI
double whUe Dave Wood and Lee
Walaco singled home one run each and
John Lowrie accounted for a pair.
Waieon ripped a s o * homer In the
fourth., v- Ti
For the Hawks. Scott "Thurman"
Munson ripped a single and a homer.

“r “

surgery which he* sidelined him far two
to

Wednesday. Oviedo's
to sn *4 ) lead over Lake
H— stthutlben fed m art defensively as
the 8d rtr Hawks manned bach far *13-9

« sss-lateKE

’S w j i i M
t
today, letotaoie. 2-0, opens tU torita*

su&amp;BSRm&amp;'es

munlty Cnltsfrat 3:46p,m.
At longwood. host Lyman meet*
Euet* at 7 pan. and Lake Brantley
battles Leesbuggal * 3 0 pajsT

It was Senior Night at Lake
Mary High Wednesday aa many
o f the players who have been
with the program since It started
four year* ago played their last
regular season home game.
And. In a fitting finale, every
one o f the seniors on the Lady
Ram s' roster contributed ss
Lake Mary rolled lo a 58-38
vic to ry over D eLand's Lady
Bulldogs In Five Star Conference
action.
The Lady Rams Improved lo
18-7 overall and 13-3 In the Five
Star with the win. Lake Mary,
which la two wlna away from Ita
fourth straight 2 0 win season,
travels to Spruce Creek Friday
for a 4:45 p.m. game and closes
out the season Monday In a key
c o n fe r e n c e c la s h at L a k e
Brantley.
DeLand now stands at 16-8
overall and lOG In the Five Star.
Senior forward A lleen Pat­
terson. who played on the Junior
varsity aa a freshman In the
school's first year o f existence,
led the way Wednesday with a
game-high 22 points and 13
rebounds.
Courtney Hall, who has been
on the varsity roster for four
years, tossed in six points and
pulled down seven rebounds and
Liz Stone, also on the varsity for
four years, added six points, four
assists and two steals.
Kim Avertll, a four-year starter
for the Lady Rama, chipped In
with two points, five rebounds,
five assists and three steals.
Senior forward Andrea Fennlng,
a JV player aa a freshman, hit
four points and handed out three
assists. Fennlng la attll being
slowed by a knee Injury that has
kept her out moat o f the season.
Larra Hall, who started on the
Junior varsity aa a freshman,
con trib u ted six points, tw o
assists and two stews In her final
regular season home appearance
for the Lady Rams.
Senior forward Terri Reynolds,
who has been with the Lady
Rama for three years, turned In a
strong performance Inside with
two points and six rebounds.
A n d s e n io r fo rw a rd S lo a n
Stewart, a traafer atudent from
Michigan, added four points.
Stone and Larra Hall were Ihe
key figures early In Ihe game as
Lake Mary ran off the first 18
points. Stone, a 5-1 guard,
scored two points, handed out
two assists and came up with
two steals In the Rams' first
quarter rally. Hall, a 5-4 guard,
pumped In six points, had one
assist and one steal.
DeLand finally got on the
scoreboard with 2:11 left in Ihe
first quarter on a layup by
Robyn Swarix. Lake Mary look a
22-4 lea d In to the secon d
quarter.
The Lady Rama went on to
outscore the Bulldogs, 15-10. In
the second quarter to take a
37-14 halftime lead.
Shawn Lane's 16 points and
seven rebounds were high for
DeLand. B w irti added 12 points
while Kathy Wychc contributed
four points and tlx rebound*.
While Lake Mary w ill lose
eight seniors ofT this year's team,
the future looks bright aa the
L a d y R am s re tu rn v a r s it y
players such as Karen DeShetler,
Heather Leckie and Anqucnctte
Whack and a number o f Its
Junior varsity players w ill be
m oving up next t
Lake Mary's junior varsity ran
tta record to 13-0 for the i
with a 48-32 victory over DeLand Wednesday night. Th e JV
Lady Rams dose out the season
M o n d a y a t 8 t l 5 at L a k e
Brantley.
Lake Mary raced to a 7-0 lead
after the first quarter and bulh a
28-10 halftime lead. Lake Mary
went up by as much aa 21 In the
fourth quarter before DeLand
rallied within 13 but the JV
Lady Bulldoda could c o n * no
Terri Whyte, a 0-3 freshman
center, led Lake M a n wtth a
g a m *-h ig h 13 point* while
Vtameae Chapman and Tonya
Lawson tossed In. 11 each and
M a rc* Dale lei added eight.
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Tlwrsdsy, Fab. 14, i n s

Private Club Prices Will Hold Up Sportsmen
Farmton Association Pushes For Members; Discourages Vandalism On State Property
(M ite r * * M t i i U r n

WlUUuna Is a
life-long Sanford resident y h o la active
In (h e P a r m to n H u n t e r s ' and
Sportsmen*’ Association. If you have
any Information concerning fishing or
hunting activities, call him at 321*
0720. His column will appear every
Thursday In the Evening Herald.)
Every year there are more an more
hunters and fishermen using Florida's
limited resources. State ofiictals say
the trend Is more toward private dubs
and fewer state-owned or leased re­
sources.
What does this mean? This means a
cost o f 9200, 9300, 9500 or more to
hunt on a private lease — If one can be
found — Instead o f 910 for a wildlife
management permit which allows the
hunter to use state-owned or stateleased land.
Som e o f the large land owners are
going to private dubs because of the
way the public Is using — or rather
misusing — their land. Vandalism.

Including gates tom down or run over,
fences cut and Improper disposal of
trash and garbage, are some o f the
reasons that the public Is losing these
lands.
What can we do about It? One group
o f hunters and sportsmen formed the
Farmton Hunters' and Sportsmen's
Asaocatlon. Inc. This association's
main goal la Its motto: “ Protect your
privilege to hunt."
T h e F a rm to n H u n te r s ’ and
Sportsmen's Association works with
the land owner o f Farmton Wildlife
Management area to help preserve our
privilege to hunt on this 53,000 acre
tree farm.
Farmton Hunters’ and Sportsmen's
association now has a membership of
over 500 members. This association
helps by building cattle gaps, food
plot*, repairs fences and replaces gates
destroyed by vandals.
It has placed many trash barrels
th ro u g h o u t F arm ton and has a
cleanup day the weekend following the

Larry
Williams
FISU D fO /H U N TU VO

321-0720

■j o a m t k a l b
U P I A ats Rseiag W rltsr
DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) - A
pair o f 126-mile qualifying races
today, with Bill Elliott and Cale
Yarborough on the poles, mark
the final prep for Grand National
drivers before Sunday's Daytona
500 stock car classic.
A crowd of over 65,000 la
expected for the 250 miles o f
Grand National racing.
The red-haired Elliott, a fast
rising NASCAR alar, earned hU
right to the pole In today's
opener by establishing the alltime speed record for a NASCAR
lap, a remarkable 205.114 mph
In last Saturday's qualifying for
the Daytona 500 front row.
“ W e 're hoping to win our
125-mlle race tomorrow, but a
lot can happen In 50 laps and

probably will at the speeds we're
running." said Elliott, who like
Yarborough la driving a Ford.
"T h e biggest thing we've got
to do U stay out of trouble. There
are a lot o f fast care out there
with drivers In them who are not
used to running race speeds at
195.’’
Bill Elliott It
• r for
Yarborough, seeking a third on# of today'i
straight Daytona 500 victory,
alao broke his old track record morning session the motor ran
with a apeed o f 203.814 to at 150 degrees with no problem,
but we have a little problem still
automatically enter the classic.
The three-time Grand National In that we are losing Just a
champion aald that "It's finally trickle o f water.
"Our crew pulled an engine
show and tell time for ua. We
thought we had our overheating and are working to correct that
problem fixed and we do. In a sltu talon."

SYSA Cagers Brace For Frantic Finish
The Seminole Youth Sports AsaocUtlon (SYSA)
la entering IU final weekend of regular season
play wtlh Ilea for first place In four of the six
divisions and one game separating the leaders in
one other divUSon.
In the 8th grade boys standings, Lakevlew and
Sanford Middle are tied with 8-1 records. The two
leaders will square off Saturday at 3:30 p.m. at
Seminole High to decide first place In the
division.
In the 8th grade girls dlvUlon. Lakevlew leads
with a 9-0 mark but Sanford la right behind at
8-1. The two teams will meet Saturday at 2 p.m.
as Lakevlew looks lo aew up the division title
while Sanford goes for the tie. The game will
feature two o f the moat talented young players In
Seminole County In Sanford's Leticia Strickland
and l.nkcvlcw's Aretha Riggins. Doth will attend
Seminole High next season.
In the 7tn grade boys division, Mllwee and
Sanford are tied for the lead at 7-1 while
Lakevlew la one game back at 6-2. Lakevlew and
Sanford meet Saturday at 12:30 p.m. at Seminole

B a s k e t b a ll
High while Mllwee gosa up against Tuakawtlla
Saturday at I p.m. at Lake Howell High.
In the 7th grade girls division. Lakevlew and
Mllwee are alone at the top as both stand at 8-1
with the next closest team at 4-5. Lakevlew goes
up against Sanford Saturday at I I a.m. at
Seminole High while Mllwee lakes on Tuskawllla
Saturday at 11:30 a.m. at Lake Howell High.
In the 6th grade boys division. Rock Lake and
Teague are locked up In a first-place tie at 7-2
with Lakevlew one game back at 6-3. Rock Lake
goea up against Jackson Heights Sunday at 4
p.m. at Mllwee Middle School: Teague battles
South Seminole Sunday at 5:15 at Mllwee and
Lakevlew takes on Mllwee Sunday night at 8:30
at Mllwee.
The lone division that has already been decided
la the sixth grade girls. Lakevlew, 8-1, sewed up
first place this past weekend with a 27-18 victory
over Rock Lake behind the 14-polnt performance
o f Lakoacia Kennon.

SY SA BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

FTsTurn Back B

D AYTO N A BEACH Mainland's Dues hit 14 of 19 free
throws In the fourth quarter
Wednesday night en route to a
6 2 -5 1 v i c t o r y o v e r L a k e
Brantley's Patriots In Five Star
Conference action at Mainland
High.
Wednesday's matchup was a
makeup o f an earlier game that
was cancelled because o f cold
weather. The Buca Improved to
18-5 overall and 10-5 In the
conference with the win while
the Patriots fell to 3-18 overall
and 1*14 In the Five Star.
A fter a close first quarter
(Mainland led. 15-11), the Bucs
built a seven-point cushion.
30-23, at halftime and went on
to take a 14-polnt lead. 45-31,
after three quarters.
Lake B ran tley cam e back
within eight and had the ball
with Just o v er two m lnutea

B a s k e t b a ll
rem a in in g but the Patriots
missed a layup and Mainland got
a three-point play on the other
end and went on to hit Its free
throws down the stretch to sew
up the win.
“ We showed good patience on
offense and hit the boards pretty
well.” Lake Brantley coach Bob
Peterson said. “ I hope we can
start peaking now for the last
week of the regular season and
the districts."
Greg Courtney led the Patriots
Wednesday with 13 points and
the 6-8 senior also blocked four
shots. Mark Moser tossed In nine
points for Brantley while Wade
Wlttlg added seven points and
nine boards.
George McCloud fired In a

Legal Notice

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FICTITIO U S NAM I
Hoi lea t« hereby given Rial «*
era any aged In Sutlnaaa at IS!
N. Lakavtaw D r.. Langwaa*.
lamlnata County. Ftartaa SMS
undar Ma ftctltlau* name of
C H ILO R B N t STUDIOS, an*

FICTITIO U S NAMB
Hotke l* heresy given mat
Day I* Jana* an* Ltata* Mack
are engage* In SuUne** at IU I
Spring Contra South. Suita A.
AHamenta Iptiage, lamlnata
County. Ftartaa. under tho
Hctllleu* name el DOROTHY
M O RRIS AD M IN ISTRATIVE
SBRVICB an* mat am Intan* to

name trim ma Clark ef m*
Circuit Ceurt. tcmlncta County.
Ftartaa In accordance arlth ma
areylileak ef lit* Flctltleut
Name Statute*, taurlt Section
NS Sf Ftartaa Statute* in i
/» / (* w ar*M McGwire
/»/ Denna S McOwire
FufcHiA January U I I A Fabrw
ary M A MSS
D IB III
FICTITIO U S NAMB
Hence I* hereby given that I
am engage* In bualneu at Ilia
C la lrm a n t A y * .. S a n fa r*.
Seminole County. Ftartaa mil
undar the flctttlout name ef
FOUR H A S IMPORTS, an*
mol I Intan* to regltler ta d
name wlta m* Clerk at No
Circuit Court. Seminole County.
Ftartaa in accordance »im Mo
provlilon* af tko F lclllle u t
prevll
Ski SI Ftartaa Slatwtaa MSI.
/%/ Karen A Ratliff
PuMItfi January II A FaOrwery
I. IA It. MSS
D fS -llS

game-high 24 points to lead the
way for the Bucs while Mike
Polite contributed 12 points.
In Junior varsity action. Lake
Brantley hit an Impressive 19 o f
21 from the free throw line (90
percent) as the J V Patriots
pulled out a 63-59 victory over
the JV Bucs.
Lake Brantley will host Lyman
Friday. Mainland Journeys to
Seminole. Lake Mary goes to
Spruce Creek. Apopka travels to
Lake Howell and Seabreeze goes
to DeLand In other Five Star
games.
— C h ris F ls ts r
L A R I B R A N T IIY ( t il - Stark S. Storey
*. Maaar f. Wittty t. Hedge* J. M arrlt j.
Orstactaaa A Black A Ceurtney l). Tetaii If

t»II»1.

MAINLAND M il - Haney ( . Macarvy I.
Manning A Hall A M arrlt A McClau* U.
Jgnni j. P allia II. Tafata: i l l * M a i
Halfttana - Mainland M. Laka Brantley n
Vault — Laka Sranttay M. Maiman* is.
Feuto* eut — Slack. Caurtnay. Maaar.
Tacfmkai - McClau* A - MS

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAMJ
Nolle* I* heresy given that I
am en|ige* In bualneu at MB
Hwy. If *1. Suita A. Fern Park.
Seminal* County. Ftartaa JIMS
under tao Ikllltau* name ef
Inf^ng ™ r^gfewV egfv Rgma
wtlh m* Clark ef Iho Circuit
Court, lemmata County. Ftartaa
In accordance with mo are
vltlont el m* Fktlllout Nam*
Statute*, to «it Sectlen H I 0*
F Hr Ida Statute* MSf
/*/ Swtan DiGwvanm
PuMIth February IA II . IS A
March f. ItSS
DSC St___________ ;_____________
IN THB CIRCUIT COURT
OFTN RISTN
JUDICIAL CIRCU IT
IN AND FOR
SBM INOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASB NO C ia ttrtJ CA*V P
T H I FIR ST. F A .
tam er ly FIRST FCD BRAL
SAVINGS A LOAN
ASSOCIATION OF ORLANDO.
0 corporation.
Plalntllt.

Clark af the Circuit Court.
Saminolo County. Ftartaa In
Of the Flctttlout Nam* Statute,
to wit: Section Ski St. F.S MSI
IXI Devta Jane*
/*/Linda Mock
PuMIth January IA II A FeSruary I. IA MSS
O f B-MS

L m w i l . lamlnata County.
Mortals a m ur«*»r Wo Iktlttou*
nomo of APOAB S AROAR
CONSTRUCTION, on* mot «*
«- *—
- -o i*-f r t y is
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nojuA
in
ivim
with Mm Clock of tho C)rtolt
Court. Somlnolo County, F lorMo
In occorSonco with tho provtttant of tho PktttloM Homo
Stotvtot. tow ll Soctton NSW
Ftartaa llotvtot 1W
t\t Chortoo Apr or
Zt/OrooApRor
PuMIth PoSrvory 10. t l. M *
Morch t. IRS

oecss

Plalntllt
Rataert 0 . lovlngtaa*
an* LI ta Laving tea*.

This weekend the solumnar tables
forecast good fishing. B arom eter
readings are essential to your success
during the tim e you are fishing.
During a steady or falling barometer,
and an abrupt seasonal change In the
weather, fish wUl seek deeper water.
During normal weather situations with
a high or rising barometer, fish will be
more easily found.
Whether you are hunting, fishing, or
Just enjoying the great outdoors, good
luck!

Don Smith, owner of the Seminole
Sporting Goods, says that shad are
doing very well. Fishermen are cat*
chlng from 8*15 per boot. Specks are
being caught In shallow water between
1-1 Vb ft. deep using Jigs, especially

Mainland

A u t o R a c in g

By Chris Flstsr
Herald Sports W riter

Seminole County Gun A Archerv
Association. Inc. Is having a work
party Sunday. Feb. 17at the range at 8
a.m. Bring your tools, such as ham­
mers. post hole diggers, saws. etc.
Next club meeting w lll.be on Thurs­
day, March 21.

close of hunting season each year.
Since the founding of the Farmton
Hunters' and Sportsmen's Association
Inc., vandalism has taken a sharp
decline. The trash barrels are also
helping to keep the woods free from
litter.
But to be more successful, the
sssoclatlon needs help. A yearly
membership costs only 95. Interested
parties may send your name, address,
and phone number with your mem­
bership fee to: Farmton Hunters* and
Sportsmen's Association Inc., P.O. Box

Twin 125s Mark Final
Prep For Daytona 500

around the Illy pads. Bass are fair,
being caught mostly on shiner.
Dale Abemethy. owner of the Osteen
Bridge Fish Camp, reports fishermen
are still slaying the specks out hla way.
Bream and blue gill are good and bass
are fair.
------The ninth annual Gene Gllmartln
Memorial Fishing Tournament for the
blind, sponsored by the Sanford Lions
Club will be held Saturday. March 9.
from 8:15 a.m. to £ 3 0 p.m.

288. Lake Monroe. FL 32747.
Farmton Hunters' and Sportsmen's
Assoc. Inc. Is having a work day
Saturday, March 2. It Is planning to
Install five new cattle gaps and work
on the food plots for the game. The
membership and public Is Invited to
participate. Those Interested should
meet at Bellrldgc camps at 8 a.m. on
Mar. 2.

v*.

P IT !R C H A R L E S
SU LLI. J R .

PICT IT tOUt M AM
Mottoo it horoSy pi von Ihot I
ant m s ip * In fcJnoM of m
M llly lo w O r ., A ltsm o n to
S p rin t* . Somlnolo County,
r tarISO MTU wtaar tan hctlttauo
nomo Of PLORIDA P IR I IX
TIN OUISM IRS. on* Wot I Inton* to rottatar tot* nomo wHh
m s O o rt of ms Circuit Court.
Somtnota County, P tarMo In

M T K I O F M ia t P r S S A L!
n o t ic i is N ta a a v o iv in
Rtsl a* ytrtao of mot cortotn
Utatl of laocuftan taoun* out of
on* un*w ms wot of mo County
Court of Somlnolo County,

£

NOTICI OP IA L I
PURSUANT TO
CM APTIROI
N OTICI It H R R IB V O IV IN
purtuont to on OrOor of Ptaiol
JuSpmoM of tarotloturo Soto*
January II. IMS. on* ontaro* In
Com it s C is tirw C A o o P of
tho Circuit Court of tho Itth
Ju Slclo l Circuit In on* tor
lo n tln o lo County, P lo rlS o
whoroln C IT Y C O N tU M IR
1 S R V IC IS OP P L O R ID A ,

�Iwtilwr Herald, tzntowl. FI.

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4A -9 W restling
B egin s Friday
t-akr Mary’s Five Star Con­
ference wrestling champions
will try to make It two
tournaments In a row Friday
and Saturday when they host
the District 4A-9 wrestling
tournament at Lake Mary
High School.
Coach Frank Schwartz'
gnipplers. who posted a 12-1
regular season record, expect
to receive their stKTest com­
petition from Lake Brantley.
' We d like to win the
d i s t r i c t a g a i n . ” said
Schwartz, who posted an
easy victory last year In the
Rams' first attempt at 4A
competition. The tournament
al so I n c l u d e s L y m a n ,
Seminole. DeLand. Spruce
Creek. Mainland. Apopka and
Lake Howell.
T h e fo u r top w in n e r s
advance to the Feb. 22 sec­
tional at Lyman High School.
Wrestling will get underway
with the first and second
rounds Friday, beginning at
6:30 p.m.

Tkvrtdzy. Fab. U. IHS—7A

THE ADVANTAGE TA
RAISE YOUR STANDARDS O F
RIDE AND PERFORMANCE.

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Comtinned front BA
around a Jumper for a 73-71
CFCC advantage with 3:23 to
play.
O ra c e fo llo w e d an SCC
timeout with a pair o f buckets
and when Edwards heaved In
another bomb, the Raiders had a
77-77 deadlock with 2:10 to
play. Orace then rebounded one
o f Overton'a few misses and hit
Scott Hughes at halfcourt.
Hughes didn't have to wait
long as the Raiders went Into
their 1-4 offense. "T h e y split out
and Rob'a man picked me up. ao
I Just passed It off," said the
Apopka freshman.
Brantley powered up, scored
and drew the foul. "R ob alwaya
makes something happen." said
Payne about his 6-3 freshman
from the Bronx. "W e Just hope
It's good."
Brantley's bucket gave the
Raiders a 79-77 lead with 1:33 to
iy. But on his free throw.
wards stepped into the lane
loo soon, giving CFCC the ball.
Mixon Immediately turned It
over by traveling but Hughes
was called for five seconds with
59 seconds to go to give the
Knights another chance.
Eddie Ray, who finished with
17 points, popped In the gametying bucket. SCC then ran the
clock down to 30 seconds and
called a timeout. Payne set up
the spread offense and Hughes
moved the ball as the seconds
ticked away. With 15 seconds to
play, he found Edwards on the
left baseline. The 6-4 sophomore
atone for his violation when took
tw o d rib b les fo r h oop and
swished the Jumper for an 81-79
lead with 11 seconds to play.
"T h e guy (3-10 JefT Foreman]
was too short." said Edwards. "I
had to take advantage of him ."
Central Florida still had plenty
o f lime and ll rushed the ball up
court to Overton. The 6-5 Cleve­
land. Ohio native watched as his
layup rimmed out with four
seconds to play. He grabbed the
rebound and put up a fadeaway
Jumper with taro seconds left.
B ra n tle y tim e d his Jump
perfectly and deflected the ball.
A scramble ensued and another
Central Florida attempt went up
and mlaaed after the buzzer as
I he Raiders pulled out one of
their moat exciting wins o f the
year.

B

Bill Payno allow s a tight
sm ile for his third straight
20-game season In a t many
years at SCC.
" I knew I couldn't let him
score because we didn't want to
go Into overtim e." said Brantley,
w ho said he had an extra
Incentive for this game since his
girlfriend had come from New
York to watch him play. "I'm no
shot blocker but l guess I was
this time.''

RESERVE YOUR COPY NOW

-

MAIL ONE TO A FRIEND

This fact filled edition covers the exciting
growth In Seminole County. It's a great sec­
tion to save. Sand a copy to your frionds
located elsewhere in the United States. W e'll
be happy to m all It for you for only $1.50.

P.0. BOX 1657
SANFORD, FLORIDA 32771
PH. 322-2611

w

i

t

s

C

i t

a

i

regular price

W agner
B rak e D rum s
&amp; R o to rs

reg. price 59.95

u

&gt;ta

�*A —tesalbg Herald. Sanford, PI.

Commission Holts
Garage Construction

Thursday, Feb. 14,1W

FLORIDA

By Jane Cassslbsrry
Herald S taff W riter
Just when It seemed a truce
h a d b e e n w o r k e d o u t In
L on gw ood residen t S p en cer
Whitehead's ongoing battle with
the Longwood City Commission,
he was ordered by the com*
mission to halt construction on
the garage tic Is building on a lot
behind his house.

IN BRIEF
Hawkins, M lckoy A ppeal For
U vor On Dying Boy's Bohalf
GAINESVILLE (UP!) — Doctors for 1-year-old Ryan
Ostertlom. a victim o f a terminal liver disease, said a
nationwide search for a liver donor, launched by Sen.
Paula Hawkins and Disney World's Mickey Mouse, could
give the infant his only chance o f survival.
“ While he looks much better than he did when he first
here. he can't survive without the transplant," said Dr.
I Andres, Ryan's pediatrician.
Hawkins stood at
Ryan's bedside Wednesday and made a televised plea to
parents nationwide to help Ryan and children like him.
She also called for the establishment o f a national organ
bank.

The latest twist came Monday
night when an astonished city
c o m m is s io n le a r n e d t h a t
Whitehead, who lives at 229 E.
Maine A ve., w as building a
much larger structure than they
had visualised when they told
him It would not be necessary to
have his two lots rexoned from
R*2 (residential, single famlly/duplex) to C*2 (commercialoffice) In order to have a garage
for his private use.
T h e y d is c o v e r e d that

K

Education G a ts Third O f Budgot
TA LLAH ASSEE (U P!) - Gov. Bob Oraham today
proposed a 114.3 billion state budget that calls for a higher
state tax on cigarettes and numerous Increased fees.
Including stale university tuition and driver's license
charges.
Th e spending plan represents an Increase o f 8.2 percent
— or g o to million — in general revenues, an Increase
Oraham's budgetwriters called “ modest."
Total state spending. Including construction, would
climb SI billion over the current fiscal year.
Oraham said his plan emphasises education and 36.8
percent of his budget would go toward Increasing teachers*
salaries, expanding the controversial master teachers
program, bolstering university programs and making other
educational Improvements.

Whitehead, after being Issued
h is lo n g - a w a it e d b u ild in g
permit, hired a contractor to
begin construction on a 43-by
24-foot four-bay garage with
grease pit. roughed*ln plumbing
and a 688 square-foot second
story for storage. They had been
told by Whitehead that he only
wanted a garage for his car and
boat with a workshop for hla
tools and had no plans for
commercial use. But the build­
ing permit he was given referred
to his building as "com m ercial"
and eras for 1.740 square feet.
The building department had
written on the permit that It was
issued by order o f the city
commission.

A R E YOU PAYING

TOO MUCH
FOR HOSPITALIZATION AND
HEALTH INSURANCE?
If you have an idea your answ er to this
question Is "y e s” It may be worth your time
to contact u s now.
RON HALL RHU
3646 Lake Diana Dr.
Deltona, FL 32736

“ That's In error." responded
Whitehead. “ I was not trying to
pull something off on the com­
mission. I was not aware o f the
errors In the permit.”

Mutual ST'S
efQmaha.&gt;L/
MMf

323-5584

STOCKS

A R EA DEATHS
JACKD. AVERILL
b ro th e r. J o sep h M anetaka,
Mr. Jack D. Avertll. 64, o f 223 W ebster Oroves, Mo.s. sister.
J u stin e W ay. Sanford, died Mary Ferguson, Labadie, Mo.;
W ednesday at his residence. nine grandchildren; 11 great­
Born Jan. 0. 1021 In Indianapo­ grandchildren.
lis, Ind., he moved to Sanford
B a ld w ln -F a lrch lld Fu n eral
from Fort Lauderdale In 1078. Home, Altamonte Springs, Is In
He was a retired UB. Navy chief charge o f arrangements.
petty officer and was a television
repairman In Fort Lauderdale.
Mr. Paul David Swltser. 40, of
Survivors Include his wife,
101 Butternut Lane, Longwood,
M a ry; six sons, Ja ck , Fort died Monday In Orlando. Bom
Lauderdale, John Lauderhill, July 16, 1039 In New York, he
Jan, Pompano Beach. Joseph. m o v e d to L o n g w o o d fr o m
James, and Jerry, all o f Sanford: Scaradale. N Y., in 1060. He waa
brother. Wynne, Indlantown; a hospital consultant and at­
s is t e r , D o r o th y H u b m a n n , ten d ed C o n g r e g a tio n O h e v
T a lla h a s s e e ; e ig h t g r a n d ­ Shalom.
children.
Survivors Include his wife,
Q ra m k o w F u n eral H o m e, Marcia; son, Adam, Longwood:
Sanford, Is in charge o f ar­ mother, Mildred, Lauc
iderhUI.
rangements.
Beth Shalom-Goldateln Memo­
rial Chapel, Orlando, la In charge
Mrs. Margot Reed, 63, o f 604 of arrangements.
JOSEPH T.MeOAR VET
W. Plantation Blvd.. Lake Mary,
Mr. Joseph T, McOarvey. 70,
died Wednesday at Americana
Health Care Center, Orlando. o f 201 Fairmont Drive, Sunland
Bom Dec. 23, 1021 In Eureka. Estates, Sanford, died Wednes­
Mo., she moved to Lake Mary day at Central Florida Regional
from Des Plaines, 111., In 1071. Hospital. Bom Nov. 18, 1914 In
She was a homemaker and a Baltimore, Md., he moved to
8anford 13 y ea rs ago from
Methodist.
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e h e r Library, Pa. He was a retired
husband. Robert Q.t two sons, Iron worker and member o f
David, Englewood, and Gerald. Pittsburgh Local Union No. 3. He
Los Angeles; daughter. Shirley waa a U.S. A rm y veteran of
R u s s e ll. R iv e r s id e . C a lif .; World War II and a member of

the Church o f Nativity. Lake
Mary.
Survivors Include hla wife,
Mary; two sons, John Joseph,
Sanford, and Edward Joseph ol
Destln: two daughters. Mary 1
Brown. Norcrosa. Qa., and Gloria
Jean Bulck, Xenia. Ohio.
Oaklawn Funeral Home, Lake
Mary, la In charge o f arrange­
ments.
Mr. Johnnie L. Walters. 79. ol
220 Avocado Ave.. Sanford, died
Tuesday In the Veterans Hospltal, Gainesville.
“
“Bom April
sett 31.
1000 In Hartwell, Oa.. he moved
to Sanford In 1026 from there.
He was a staff sergeant with the
U.S. Air Force servtng in World
War II. He was a home builder
and a Protestant. He was a
member o f the Disabled Ameri­
can Veterans.
,,
Survivors Include hla son.
H ugh W a lters. M iam i; fou r
brothers, Clarence. Tallahssse.
Edward A., o f Tam ps. Reece o f
Melbourne and E.C.. o f Sanford,
two slaters. Mrs. Blanche Har­
riett. Sanford, and Audrey Prit­
chett. Jacksonville; five grandchildren; two greatgrandchildren.
O ra m k o w F u n e ra l H om e,
Sanford. Is In charge o f ar­
rangements.

w m

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¥ NaNvtty, U k s Mary, &lt;rHh Sw S*v FaNwr
Jam ** laM art am ciatia* VUHatta* l*r
W ally M S HUMS* wtH S* M * Friday frwn
H pm . MS) a raaary aarvk* ¥ t ; » pm.
~,M *r*l H*m*. Mamartai Sark,
&gt;— a M la a rric* M a rti M n * at

•Mcfcarf*

WALT IM , JOMNMIS L
—r w w t l aarvtcaa H r Mr. Ja M il* L.
WaHan, 71 M il b* M S Friday I pm.
Oramkaar Funaral Ham* Ctia#*4 MS) Sw
Sav. F ria r Caarla* amclattof- ia rrira r*
induS* a *an. Hu*ft WaHw*. Miami; t*vr

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Funaral Hama In ch a n t.

DAVIS. JM

—Funaral aarvk* lar Mr. Jaa Davta. 71 ¥
U ll QtaanSar A **., ta rta r*. stw M
tatw aay. a ril Sa M S ta la r**, at few am .
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YOUR HOME MAY NEED
A LITTLE H .E .LP

QMlna
m

* CREMATION EXPLAINED*

»&gt;■ * * V *»

• M aI tM S SWwSty at M a m . ¥

~S (M rU U H n g In Eurw rm / C a ^ n T "

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SEND FOR F R E E BOOKLET PUBLISHED
B Y THE CREMATION ASSOCIATION
OF NOB TH AMERICA
T O

•MS* M l «t
Fsssrsl
JaaaaA T1awiay Mcfliro r, it. ¥ tantar*

The B u te Migrant Plan. a
g u id e lin e fo r th e S e m in o le
County school system's migrant
program in the schools end
regulations, will be available for
public review Friday S a.m. to
4;30 p.m. at the migrant office at
th e V elm a M itc h e ll A n n ex
(formerly South Side School) at
1401S. Magnolia Ave., Sanford.

Retired bridge builder Paul
A. Prcndcrgast died Monday
at hla home on Wilson Place.
Paola. Hla firm. Industrial
Contracting Co., butll the
Interstate 4 bridge over Lake
Monroe and waa a m ajor
bridge building contractor In
the state from 1060-1969. **
built 12 major water crossings
and 13 bridges on the original
Florida Turnpike, Pendergasi,
70. moved to Paola In 1074
from Fori Lauderdale.

A N S W IR S

S M 4 X V X V , J0SSSM T.

Schools' Migrant
Plan Available

Builder Of 1-4
Bridge D ead A t

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% isfe'igM pH W H SSfc*.

H O M E E N E R G Y L O S S P R E V E N T IO N ,
get th e w o rir don e fo r you. A n d pay h a lf th e coat'
Most homes need H.E.L.R
this winter. Because 9 out of K)
homes leak enerfr-around
windows, doors, heating ducts
and other places.
That* why so many homeowners hawecalled for H.E.LR in
the last few weeki
K E X .P with caulking and

gaskets, and energy-saving inserts
for jalousie windows,
touwontjust save on energy
costs, *FPL will pay you up to
$75 or one-half the cost (most
H.ELLRpac
than $100)1
W II even arrange to get the
work done fc* you. Vbuwon’t have
to lift a finger, except to call us.
feaky [gating ducts. H.E.LR with
So&gt;get
getaalittle
littleH.E.LR
H.E.1 for your
low-flow showerheads,water heater home. FVom FPL
blanket^ wall outlet insulation
rill ti ill fm 1 f|jg O T lT T N l

l

�Evwlwg Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thunday, Fad. M. 1 W - IB

HURTING? LONESOME? DEPRESSED?
CAN’T FIND PEACE IN YOUR LIFE?
Caladium
Bulb Sale
Ron Oycus. chairm an of the
Baord of Dlrlectors of the
G reater Sanford Cham ber of
Com m erce, and Chal Horell
exam ine caladium bulbs be­
ing sold by the cham ber's
B eau tificatio n C o m m ittee.
Four varieties o f bulbs are
being offered with four bulbs
to the package at a discount
p r ic e . The bulbs can be
started Indoors now. They
a re on sale at the cham ber of
com m erce, 400 E. First St.,
Sanford, or through M rs.
H orrell, chairman o f the bulb
com m ittee, 322-4507.

God Loves You And Is Concerned About Every
Facet Or Your Life And Wants To Minister To
Your Need. We Love You And Welcome You To

FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
P H . 322-9222
304 W. 27TM SHEET

SANFORD, FLA.

W H E R E J E S U S IS L O R D A N D W E
B E L IE V E IN M IR A C L E S

Make Your Best
Impression
in HaHer fir

'Twenty Questions' Is A Serious
G am e For G am blers Anonymous
DEAR A B B Y i I've been mar
rted (o Al (not hla real name) for
16 years. I love him and I know
he loves me. but I cannot stay In
this marriage unless he quits
gam bling. Al owns his own
business and we live well, but hr
owes money oil over. He bets on
football, basketball, baseball,
boxing, horses and dogs. He
even bets on elections, and he
bets big?
I know lie's won a lot ot

B
^

-

UBQf
, ,

AD DV
'

money, but hr never tells me
how much he loses,
Please help me to help him.
Abby. Gambling Is like a disease

DRESS FOR SUCCESS IN
HUSH PUPPIES* SHOES
All your appointments are
filtingly accented by venuitUc
Hush Puppies* career styles.
From morning to evening they
take you around the town In
around the clock comfort.

,

Noble s

W INTER C L E A R A N C E
O ur Entire
Winter Stock
is Already
Reduced

D E A R W IF E i C om pu lsive
gambling Is a disease: It's never
"cu red." but II can be con­
trolled. Gamblers Anonymous
(fa s h io n e d a fte r A lc o h o lic s
Anonymous) offers this ques­
tionnaire:
1. Do you ever lose lime from
work due to gambling'?
2. Is gambling making your
home life unhappy?
3. Is gambling uiTcvtlng your
reputation?
4. Have you ever felt remorse
after gambling?
, «5. Dp you ever p m W M o get*
money with which to pay dcbU
or otherwise solve flnanelal pro­
blems?
6. Does gambling decrease
your ambition? Efficiency?
7. After losing, do you feel you
must return us soon as possible
and win bark your losses?
H. Alter you win. do you have a
strong urge to return and win
more?
9. Do you often gamble your
last dollar?
10. Do you ever borrow to
finance your gambling?
11. Have you ever sold any­
thing to finance gambling'?
12. Are you reluctant to use
"gam bling m oney" for normal
expenditures?
13. Does gambling make you
careless of Ihc welfare of your
family?
14. Do you ever gamble longer
than you had planned?
15. Have you ever gambled to
escape worry or trouble?
16. Have you ever committed
or considered committing, an
Illegal act to finance gambling?
17. Does gambling cause you
to have difficulty In sleeping?
18. Do argu m ents, disap­
pointments or frustrations create
in yo*t an urge to gamble?
19. Do you ever have an urge
to celebrate any good fortune by
' a few hours o f gambling?
20. Have you ever considered
self-destruction as the result of
your gambling?

50 “* And More!
Now Take An
Additional

Encourage your husband to go
to a meeting and learn firsthand
how he can overcome the die-

the Ticketed
Price!
Limited
Time Only!
•VOGUE

E .pfeu

In Plaet.
Qlvti Vow
A Flattw
Tummy Front.
Como Try And

o f course.)
Go through your closets and
pul all those clothes you hsven'l
worn In a year In a box tot
Goodwill or your favorite chart
ty. Take some flowers to some
one in a nursing home and offei
to take him or her for a little
ride. Forgive an enemy. Pray for
your friends. Donate some blood.
Pay your doctor bill. Listen to
your teen-ager. Tip the cook In
addition to the waller — or
waltreaa. Invite a lonelylady (or
gentleman) to lunch. Tell your
parents you think they're won­
derful. Drive carefully. I f you're
walking, watch where you're
wait until next year
thean again

SANFORD - 2004 ORLANBO DR. SALE
ZAYRE PLAZA AT AIRPORT RLV0.
STARTS THURSDAY
CQUPONS G ood thru Saturday
■ si

INTIM STOCK Of
• SIMPLICITY
• M cC a l l 'S

I

R

on

RBI

MB

Y O U R C H O IC E I
ONI HUG! TABUL.

Specially Salad ad Fabric*

PATTIRNt
1/1 O ff r* C IS

Ask your husband to answer
these questions honestly, and If
he answers yes to seven or more
questions, he Is a compulsive
gam bler, and I strongly re­
commend that he get In touch
with Gamblers Anonymous (It's
In your phone book).
It Is a non-profit fellowship of
men and women who admit that
gambling Is not a game or a
sport — It s a disease they must
learn to control.

2 0 * Off

Ptaltl Lying

-Hr«3s9&gt;

For more Information about
Gamblers Anonymous, write lo
the national office: P.O. Box
17173. L os A n g e le s . C a lif.
90017. Please enclose a long,
s ta m p e d , s e lf-a d d r e s s e d
envelope.

VALENTINE

PRINTS

COMFIOCRT1AL TO YOUi
Don’t tell me It’s St. Valentine's
Day again! Well. It is. so be a
sweetheart, and call someone
you love and say, *T love you ."
(Make tw o or three calls. Who
■aid you can't love more than
one person — tn different ways.

* * * * * *

RW

ow

m

I

�tt-E vw int Hwitd, Sanford, FI.

BLONDIE

Tharsdsy, Fab. 14, t»M

by ChlC YOllll |

by Mori Walkar

BEETLE BAILEY
O 0 H , LO O K AT T H E
N IC E , N EW TA N K . IT fe A
B iG .B lG TAN K/ A N P LO O K
WHAT IT C O S T . LO TS
.
A H P LO TS ANP L O T S .-. A

I ' m N O T REAPING
TO M YSELF

S A R S E , PON T
R E A P OUT LO U P
T O Y O U R S ELF

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

WOftlE LAWW&amp;R

PHCWl 010 H W A ^ A N D A U N SONS K3MEOY WO
CCU56 'EM I) I 5 t m &gt;
\ ’'PW A ^ I X W W

H A rH A .Iim W D S E A R E N ^

W ektimeS?

ffigRJMfi ?/&amp; £ss w xy^-—

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE

- IT TAW 8C ME
WMOLfi
TO
7 7 4 S * r K IN P C W /MONEY.

by Howl* Bchnaldar

EEK A MEEK

JUST O K E .K R 33 E THE
BAU GAME ISCVER..

IW A DIET COLA

1 WOULD LIKE TD
EXPERIENCE LIFE.

C O M M E R C IA L

x

H em e Iro n : A N e e d e d
M in era l F o r W om en
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 don't
think I am absorbing the Iron I
get In my food. For the past year
I have been going to the blood
center to sell m y plasma. Many
times I have not been accepted
because my Iron level was too
low. Often the test was 36 or 37.
and they don't accept anything
less than 36.
I am Including a list of Iron
pills I have taken. None of these
has worked. Most days I rat a lot
of spinach and I often eat liver or
Denver steak for lunch, but I still
can't get my test abvove 36 or
37. I am a 36-year-old female. 3
feet tall and weigh 126. I have
always been healthy.
Where do I find heme Iron?
Nobody has heard o f It In any
stores.
DEAR READER — First, as a
w om an In her ch ildbearin g
years, you will have an increased
need for Iron, because o f men­
struation and the peralatenl Iron
loss that It causes. It la very
difficult to correct an actual Iron
deficiency with diet alone. If you
do gel your Iron up lo higher
levels. I still would not consider
you to be a likely candidate to be
giving blood, at least until after
the menopause.
The Iron In many vegetables
a n d c e r e a ls Is r e a l l y not
absorbed, so it doesn't do you
much good. This Is called ele­
mental Iron, and It combines
with substances In the cereals
and vegetables to form an Insol­
uble compound that cannot be
absorbed.
In contrast, hem e Iron Is
absorbed d ir e c tly from the
stomach. If Is found In animal
meat, and liver la a good source
o f It.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What Is
your opinion of llpolysls. the new
surgical technique for the re­
moval of ImpoMlble-lo-move fat?
I understand that the fat Is
turned Into a liquid and the
liquid Is sucked out o f the body
by a small tube. Only a small
Incision Is required. Is this a safe
prorrsa? What happens lo the
excess skin, or Is there any?
DEAR READER - No. the fat
Is not converted to a liquid. It is
simply sucked out through a
hollow probe inscried under the
skin, which makes tunnels In

Dr.
Lam b

the fat deposits. This can leave a
waffled surface o f ridges and
valleys. The excess skin will not
go away, which Is one reason the
technique should only be used
with women under 40.
i
The technique Is o f little value
In correcting much generalized
obesity. It can only safely re­
move about 6.5 pounds at a
time, and even removing that
much fat can produce shock and
may be dangerous
If the technique has any re­
ACROSS
1 Fibbing
• Onto of
whs las
10 Of Mi artory
12 Loss appia
14 Hindu dMty
15 Crook
14 Japan*** com
17 Actraat Balm
15 Mint flat)
20 Unt*r*d
23 Franch school
25 Nagrito at
27 lanwfwtd cap
lira |abbr |
30 Ratakalo tar
32 Canadian
capital
34 Frsma tor

Send your questions lo Dr.

La mb. P.O. Box 1551. Radio City
Station. Sew York. S.Y.. 10019.
Antw sr to Previoua Puzzle

3 Oil aaponar
4 Ordinal ending
5 Whai* school
• Cava sound
7 Enclota
Appandagst
Summara |Fr.)
11 Hiding ptaca
12 Aanagada
13 Minaral
11 Daprasaion in*
hat*
20 lig top
21 Am Minor taa
22 Omar
23 Tardy
24 Actor Montand
25 Fanny
27 livid
25 Was indabtad

non non
□ n o

n n n e

n o n

n n n n n

non n o n
□non non q g d g
non n n n n n n
nnnnnn
nnnnn
□nnnn
nnnnnn
nnnnnn non
□GO n n n n
non n o n nnn
nnnnn n n n n n n n
□nnn nnn nn n
□ n o nnn n n n
d o d

33
30
40
41
42

Swarm
f t mala daar
Auipicta
Lout# aggt
Accountant
labbr |
43 Watar bird
44 Shabby clothing

to

20 Laary
31 Coastal area ot
Stretching
Ethiopia
35 Thread winding
machine
4
1
t
1
35 Superlative sul10
fu
37 back
U

deeming feature. It Is that It can
be used to remove small areas of
fat. such as over the small o f thr
back. Even then. It should be
done by a professional — and I
mean a surgeon, not in the
beauty parlor.

40 Unampioyad
47 Additions to
housat
40 Remainder
50 Fatria Quaana
lady
52 Choosa
53 Cuba

t

39 Thin and
vibrant

IB

40 Oppotit* m
meaning
42 Waa
45 Ponugueia
SSM

40 Noun luffn

41 Czech
capital
51 Tottar
54 Spawn
55 Ovarturnt

50 Formar waathar
bureau
57 Smel anvil

DOWN
1 Rtaaarch
cantari
3 Antiquity

am

ic)ioas t&gt;, h i * i «

WIN A T BRIDGE
■ y J u M iJ w o b t

VALENTINE CARDS

THERES A
« A CKPUL
OF AVAIL FOK
y o u f&amp; R A Y ,
A\R.GKErpr/

by Wamar Brother*
COMg 3AC&lt; HEBE/'OU
C A W W O T -S T E A L IN'
0U VM J

The lute Adam Meredith
an eccentric bidder, but a card
player of auch consummate skill
that he w u a key factor In the
B ritish tea m 's w in n in g the
World Championship In 105S.
He later lived for many years In
the United Slates, where he was
a feared rubber bridge competi­
tor at the Cavendish Club In New
York.
Today's deal, although charac­
terised by prim itive bidding
(three no-trump would have
been the preferred contract),
shows Meredith at his best.
The opening lead waa the
d ia m o n d k in g , d u ck ed a ll
around. On the diamond contin­
uation. East discarded a heart
and Meredith won the trick. Had
East ruffed (his trick, declarer
could make the contract by
playing four rounds o f spades,
which would squecse East be­

tween hearts and clubs.
A fter winning the diamond
ace. declarer led a heart to the
king. He then played three
rounds o f trumps, played a club
to the queen, another club back
to the king and then played a
third club toward dummy's ace.
West, who could not gain by
trumping this trick, discarded a
diamond.
Now dummy's fourth club was
played and Meredith threw his
last diamond. East had to return
a heart, and again West was
stymied. If he ruffed, declarer
would play low from dummy.
W h en W est d is ca rd ed s till
anot her diamond, A d a m
Meredith won the trick, played
d u m m y's last diam ond and
trumped It.
Declarer had 10 tricks, while
poor West had to play hia high
trump on hla partner's high
heart at trick 13.

NOftTII

n t it

♦ A C
*AKT
♦ 7S1
♦ A Q 71

WEST

EAST

♦ lo s e
y »

* J |

♦ KQJ I OM

vqiioci
SI

♦ 101

♦ J» C

SOUTH
♦ KQTI
♦ ■■I
♦ A C
♦ K C

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer: North
Wrtl
1*
Pan

Norik
&gt;♦
&gt;♦
Pan

Eatl
Pan
Pan
I'au

to il*
!♦
«♦

Opening lead: #K

H O RO SCO PE
Whot Tha Day
WillBring...
-

^

,

,H0TT» IS "PO IT
now!* that? why r v f
PfdDEP THfFfT No TIMS
Ul|e6 THf PFFJENT FoF
pc*TpoNiNS WHAT X
Po n t w a n t t o £*&gt;.
2 • &gt;*

by Jim Davla

GARFIELD

W O KNOW THi
te KINP* OF C

TM£ft£*a THE KINP Tl
PlfiAFpEARQ INTO T

TOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUARY 18. I N I
You may be called upon this
coming year to make a few
sacrifices on behalf of someone
close to you. Do so cheerfully
because your deeds will be
rewarded.
AQUARIUB (Jan. 20-Feb 18)
Be cartful not to overreact today
when confronted with problems.
A failure to keep a cool bead will
only make matters worse. The
Matchmaker wheel reveals your
compatibility to all algna. as well
aa showing you what algna you
are best suited to romantically.
To get yours mall 83 to AstroGraph. Box 489. Radio City
Station. New York. NY 10019.
naCRR (Feb. 30-March 30)
This la a good day to alt down
and seriously analyse your
expenditures. A number of leaks
In your budget should be

ANNIE

a m

TUMBLEWEEDS
W

* * M M IC * *

t H R jr p r ;

ip iw u t t j f w w

.

F lW C lff ^

•■y

1

F

p.u jgdu p.
(March 31-Aprll 19) Be
kind when dealing with sub­
ordinates today. If you use
threats or Intimidation to try to
bend them to your will. It'll be a
•ertoui mistake
TAURUS (April 30-May 30) If
a friend does something that
bugs you today, don’t stew
about It In silence. The matter
can be resolved only If brought
out Into the open.
OBMDII (May 31-June 30)
This la not a good day to mix
business with pleasure. Refrain
from talking business with peo­
ple you're socially involved with.
CAMCSR IJune 3lhJuly 33)
When making decisions today
that affect others as well as
yourself, it may be wise to let
your heart rule your head. Don't
be otlf-trrvlnfl.
LBO (July 33-Aug. 33) Coworkers may not be aa Induauioua aa you think they should be
today. The reason Cor this could
be the example you'll be setting.

VISOO (Aug. 33-Sept. 33) bo
not take chances speculating on
the unknown today. It'a beat you
trust only what you can grasp In
your mind or in your hand.
LIBRA (Sept. 33-Oct. 33) To­
day your spirit may be willing
but your flesh could be
You might not exercise the
necessary resolve to finish what
you atari.
•OORPIO (Oct. 34-Nov. 33)
Others might find It difficult to
live up to your expectations
today. Try not to demand things
of associates Dial they are In­
capable of doing.
•AOITTARIUB (N o v . 33-Dec.
31) Self-dlacipllne will be re­
quired today In managing your
resources. If you lei your guard
down, you may dissipate your
funds foolishly.
C AR R IC O ** (Dec. 33-Jan.
19) Don't look to place the blame
on others If there's friction In
your household today. It could
be your Input that is stirring
things up.

�Evanlng Haratd, Sinfprd, FI.

ThurtAay, Fab. It, 1HS—3B

TONIGHT'S TV
•

O dm •cvtm.t mubaues

N IM A Y M tW rlLF D .

1:00

1030
■ ( E sa le o f th e cen tu ry

O lJ io a y s o f o u a u v is

iT O FAAIA.Y FtUO

( T O ALL MY CHILDREN
,n (JJ) D C * VAN D Y X I
i p (10| rvO H O A H O M t ONOWN
0 (1 ) M OV*

• (Nl M&gt;1 CONTACTm&gt;g
(R (f) r e a l m c c o y s

11.00
w h eel o f fo rtu n e

8

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■ CD MOWGITS BROTHERS

legol Notice
N O TIC I O f SH ER IFF'S M LR
MOTICR IS H ER EB Y GIVEN
that by Ylrtv* *1 that certain
Writ t* E n c v Hw Ittuad aut oi
and imAar th* aaal at th* Cawtty
C a u rl *1 Stm lnalt Caunty,

notart ta d lv d . Oan* Hackman

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• (C L A T l MONT WITH DA WO
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AJtafl BfOOki
ID (M | I LOVE LUCY

100
CD ■ M O V* tka Ratet i toga
( ISA T| T prana Fsa a r. Dana T urrw y

(*t LEAVE(TTOBEAVER
(*) THEAVENGERS

8

1:10

am tneagaa In bualnata al 111
Dubl i n O r . , L a b a Ma r y ,
iamlnaia Caunty, Florida m U
und»r Ita nctlltaut nam* at
SEMINOLE EQUIPMENT
LEASING C O . and that I Inland
t* rvglttar told nam* trim th*
Clark at th* C ircu it Caurl,
iam lnaia Caunty, Florida In

O
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PH. 322*9720

Brings back the oldies but goodies to Sanford and Cen­
tral Florida with the best o f SO’s-60's music perform­
ed by the best In live entertainment such as D avid

Clayton-Thom ss, Gary Lew is And The Playboys

GORMET COOKING WITH
LUNCH A DINNER
SPECIALS DAILY
LUNCH*S .3 * UF-DNRM *4.99 U
Try O ur 32 Oz. N.Y. Sirloin . ’ l l . t s
For Two or One If You Dare
SA T U R D A Y S P E C IA L
Fried Shrim p And Spaghetti ..
From It Noon Til 4 :X PM .

N.N. Tamm. Jr.
City Clark
S y : Raaa M. Rotunda
Daputy City d ark
FuWHh: Fairuary 14 I
and March t, taw

am anpapad In butlnaa* at IN
I . Nary. AM. Cattal barry,

AN ORDINANCE O F THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D .
FLO RID A. AMENDING OR01
NANCE NO. WtT OF SAID
C I T Y ) SA ID O R D IN A N C I
B d N O A ZONING F L A N j
SAID AMR NOME NT CMAMOINO TMR ZONINO O F A FOR
TION O F THAT C E R T A I N
FN O FR ETY LYIN G AT TMS
SO UTH W SST C O R N IR O F
TM« INTERSECTION O F U .t.

O K GOO I

A

�71—Help Wanted

Legal Notice
IN Trt3 C IR C U IT CO U R T OF
T H E C IO H TIR N TM JU D IC IA L
C I R C U I T . IN A N D F O R
11 MI N0 L I C O U N T Y ,
FLO R ID A
CA SE NO M T JM C A O tP
D A V ID C . C O V E Y an d
C A R O LY N S C O VEY.M aW lte.
Pietotifft.

IN T H E C IR C U I T C O U R T.
E IO H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C I R C U I T . IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA
CASE N UM BER BS1I&gt;CA be K
IN R E TH E M A R R IA G E OF
C IL E S A L F R E D W E S T .
Peltttener/Huebend.

M I C H A E L A. W E L L S ^ e n d
K A T H Y O R R IC H T B N . ra ti
d a n lt a l Sem inole Co unty,
Florida.

C A T H R Y N N E W IL L IA M S
WEST.
Ratpondani/wila
NOTICE OF ACTION
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D mat a
Complaint tor Dlvorca hat boon
Iliad against you and a prayer
contained *iih ln mo Complaint,
rogues'! the Court to ewerd to
the Ftiiltener. a Dissolution ot
Marriape A Vinculo ageinst in*
Ratpondanl. and you are ra
Ou&lt;rad la toevo a copy ot your
antarer or pleedlngt to the
Complaint, an the Fetlttoner't
Attorney. ARRO TT M H ER
RING. F .A .. 1101 Wait Flrtl
Street. Sanford. Florida 11771.
and tile the original Answer or
plead!ngi in the Office at the
Clark at the Circuit Court, an ar
betor* mo 17th day of February.
IMS. II you lo ll la do to.
judgment by default will be

The Watt I d toot of Ihe South
to of Lot I f al M cNeill Orange
Villa, at recar Jed in Flat Book
1. Paget » . 1M and Ml. of the
Public Record! of Seminole
County. Florida, lata the Wetl IS
toet thereat tor Boor Lake Road
at recorded In Plot Boob 14.
Paget I I , » and H of the Public
Hocordt at Sam inala County,
Florida, and lata Ihe South IS
toot tor Bennie Drive,
together with all Itructwret.
Improvement!, f li lures. appll
ancat. and appurtenance! on
told land ar uted In cdn|undton
^____ _ i tn.
ItW
TfWIWt
The a tereteId tala orlll be
m ade p urtvo nl t# a F in a l
IS IMS CA ot P new pending In
the Circuit Court a l the Eigh
toanm Judicial Circuit to and ier
Seminole County. Florida
OATBD mi! smday al Fabru
(COURT S EA LI
DAVIDN B E R R IE N
C L E R K OF TH E C IR C U IT
COURT
B Y i Diana K. Oakley
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: February 7,14. IMS
O EC47

NOTICROP
ADMINISTRATION
The edm lnltlrallan a l the
aetata al CH A R LES E L M E R
H IN R Y . d ic t a t e d . F ile
Number ts o n CP. I* pending In
tha Circuit Court Iar Sam tea It
C a u n ly , F lo r id a , P r o b a ta
Dtvlston, the eddrete at which Is
Sam Inala County Caurthauaa. N

e b it c llt n by an In la ra s la d
parson la wham notice was
matted that challenge* the valid
Ity el tha will. Iha Ruellflcattona
a( Iha partanal representative,
venue, ar lurlsdtcttan al Iha

"

a l l claim s a n d objbc

TIONS NOT SO F IL B D W ILL
1 P O R IV IA BARRED .
Data at Iha first publkoften at
HMt nerice al edmteleirettani
Fob. 14. IMS.

?

fwoowel RsprasaMaHvai

: DOUGLAS STENSTROM
•• P O Boa ISM
; Santord. P L 1177111M
Attorney tor Personal
Rapre eantallve:

OOUOLAS STENSTROM.
• ISOUIRIal
fTENSTROM. MCINTOSH.
JULIAN. COLBERT
AWHIOHAM. PA.
P .0 . Baa 1111
santord. F L MT71 I M
Telephone: n i/ lM 1171
PvMISh February IS. I I , I M l

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Scml private bAlti

Orlando - Winter Park
831-9993

C L A S S IF IE D DEPT
H O U RS
1:30 A.M. • 5:30 tM.
MONDAY tfcm FRIDAY
SATURDAY • - Kaon

eifice Tam pa/ary a
potman aaaaisa

Sales Counselor
O r a a in t N a tio n a l W aipM .
S m o k in g . N u t r i t i o n a l
Counseling Camp any It opan
ln( cantert In Florida ) no*

RA TES

\\

%\
,«

ceeahii tinea t*Ta. If you are
aggressive and and taka

DEADLINES
N o o n The Day B e fo re Publication
Sunday • N o o n Friday
M o n d a y -1 1:00 A .M . Saturday

Sea Obt tor Into 14 hry
Front detk d a rk . F riend ly,
noot. peraonakla Apply in
porean M an Frl ig a m to I

77—Apartments
Furnished/ Rtnl

you to tram tor Attaciato
M a n a g e r w ith M a n a g e r
potential t i t D irect Satet
background helpful Call no*
tor pertenol interview Mr
Sfrato. Director, M* m JOSS

25— S p *d «l Notices
O IN Ik A L O P P IC B P R O P LR
W ANTED Goad pay Im

par, Santord. Florida
DATED THIS » n d day al
January. IMS
OAVED B E R R IE N .
Clark al Ihe Circuit Court
By: Elga Wallace
Deputy Clerk
Pubtlth: January 14. I I
February 7.14. IMS
D EBU S

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT, Ift
AND FO R S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. F LO R ID A .
C IV IL A C T IO N
NO.
14 ISM CA a t E
F IR S T F R D C R A L SAVINOS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
SEM INOLE CO UN TY, a car
par alien ergenlted and ealtllng
under mo Law ! at The United
Slate! at Am arka.
Plaintiff.

NOTICE O F M L B
NOTICE IS H E R E R Y G IV EN
•hat purtuent la Final Judgment
el Faroetoturo rendered on the
IJrd day of January, IPOS. In
that certain ceute ponding in the
C ir c u it C o u rt In and Ia r
Sem inole C o un ty, F lo rid a ,
wherein F I R S T F E D E R A L
SA V IN O S AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION O F SEM IN O LE
COUNTY, a corporation arge
nlied and tuttin g under tha
Laws at Tha Untied State! ot
Am arka. It Plaintiff, and F R E O
FA U LK N ER l i Defendant. Civil
Action No U lS S O C A O t E . I,
OAVIO M. B E R R IE N . Clark al
the a tereteId Circuit Court, will
al li:M a m., an the nth day at
March. INS. after tor tele and
Iha Courthouse In Seminole
Caunly. Florida. In Santord.
Florida, tea lei towteg described
property, situated and being In
Seminole County. Florida, to
wtti
L e t! 177 and S7t. A LT A
M O N T I LA N O . H O T I L A
NAVIGATION C O . pccordtog to
Iha plal thereof at ra carded In
Plat Beak I. Page I t at Iha
P u b lk Rocerda at Seminole
County. Florida, leas right at
way tor Slate Read 414
Said ta la w ill be m ade
pursuant la and In ardor to
satisfy Iha terms at said Final
Judgment
(S E A L I
OAVIDM B E R R IE N
CLER KO FTH E
CIR CU IT COURT
l y : IM Diana K. Oak toy
Deputy Clerk
Publish February 1 ,14. IMS
D ECS*

occn

NOTICE Is hereby given that
Mwye Is pending te Iha Clrcull
C a p ri In and Iar Sem inole
Caunly. Florida, an action en
tilted In re the marriage al
Henry L. Partin. Husband, and
Char me tea H. Partin. Wile.

Plal Beak 14. Pages 7* and M.
Public Recerde at Soml note
County. Florida.
Street Address:
1711 A I v a r a d a C a u r l
L m g u n it Florida
at publk sate to Iha highest and
bast bidder li t cash at too West
Irani Mar al Iha Caurthauaa In
Sem inole C a u n ly . S an lard .

n —Apart moots
Unfurnished / R*nt

73— Employment
Wanted

C L E R K 'S N OTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
that purtuent to a Summary
Final Judgment al Forectomre
entered In the above entitled
ceute In the Circuit Court el the
Eighteenth Judklel Circuit, m
and fa r S e m in o le County,
Florida. I will tall al public
auction to the hlghoit bidder lor
ceth al the Weal front door al
the Courthouse In the City of
S a n la rd . Sem inole County,
Florida, al the hour al 11:00
A M on March 4. IMS. tttet
certain parcel al real property
dew r Ibed a l tot low!:
Lot SO. SP R IN G OAKS, ec
carding la the Plat ihereol at
recorded In P la l Book it. Page!
04 and OS. Publk Record! el
Seminole County, Florida
IS E A L I
OAVIO B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F C IR C U IT COURT
By /!/ Cheryl R Franklln
Deputy Clark
Publish: February 7.14. IMS
OEC-4B

are ambtlteut enough to go tor
me geld. And gal ill You'll be
backed by eur tleH, glut the
an going training the Century
I I Syttem prevtdet

Tiftitttwnn

tup

Local company It leaking tor
warkhauM ponon wim that!
malal and light carpentry
work Plenty e lO . T.

B u sin e ss Cap ital SM.0M la
S 1.000.000 and ever P O Boi
1411, Winter Pk Fla HIM.
HOME A FO R EC LO SU R E A
mortgage ca won’t accept
your paym ents! Call
McTeggart tor seMton SM
♦MB.
__________________

323-5171
lS U French Ave.

Nkaly remodeled, etectrk heel.
SSS week ptut tecurlty
______________MIOOM
F u rn lsh a d Room W orking
person Washer and klkhan
prlviliget Fam ily atmosphere
maid service S40 week er pey
by month M l SOSO
_________

Santord Brand new 1 bdrm/J
bath an Oak Ave. al Park Dr.
S cre e n e d p a rc h , w asherdryer, mint blind! From S4M
a m o B r it is h A m e ric a n

71—Htlp Wanted
Acrylic Appiketort needed to
apply protective coaling an
cork, boat! and plana! SI to
S ll par hour Wa hate For

la r d . Lak e M a ry and
Longwood area.
No lea
Ablest Temporary Service
M l IMS__________________________

|

Mary Kay Cat matin
AVON■■AUTTCOMPANY
Fvtl/pert llm a / ltrn SS llt b r
Call Immad. m i l l s , MS IMS
AN O R D IN A N C E AMEND
INO ORDIN ANCE 77 I I WHICH
A M SN O S T H E O B T A I L E O
L A ND U S E E L E M E N T OF
T H E S E M I N O L E CO U N T Y
C O M P R E H E N S I V E PLAN
FROM LOW D E N S IT Y RESI
D IN T IA L TO IN D U S TR IA L
FOR THR PU R P O SE OF RE
I O N I N O
F R O M A l
A O R I C U L T U R R TO C - S
O R N E R A L COMMERCIAL
ANO W H O LESA LE DISTRICT,
Iha lallowing described pro
party
The W te of the NE te ot the
SW is (toss iha I i n M N at ihe
N tel and Iha I to at Iha NW k
at Iha SW to at Sect ten n SIS
1*E, Semlneto County. F ter tea
(O U T .H a n d S4|
Further dewrtoad aa I t acre!
located an tha south side al
Hlllvlew D rive, a l Mathews
Read
A PPLICA TIO N HAS B E E N
SU BM ITTED B Y BOB HAT
TAWAV IN V B S TM IN TS (14)
Additional tetormolten may
be obtained by contacting Iha
Itomm
A ^ ivwTBffmvni
IBAJSAddSto^l HW1NVT
**------- o|
U I IIM. E a t ASI.

Recruiting, skin care classes.
reorder! MS-OMI.
Medical Records TecbnkIan

Country Olrt, Friend
O f Mint.
I Will Lorn You
All Our Tlmt.
Won't You Ot My
Velenllne??

I

(/(&gt; yv lo o c tA te

!

,/ e f m e co tt/tf t A t u k
- B R O W N IN G

Fu ll lima Haepll*! Medical
kecoras Oepl IC O * C M cad
teg eap regul/ed Good salary

Kenny,
I love you.
Dodfe
Part Tima Secretary 0 inoral
alflca duties with llaaib le
hour,I Santord Area Call
S ally ................................. HS-sBTt

Brenda

Doan
Olve our love
a chancel
Be Mine Forever.
I Love You,
Kel

hearing wtw w ldi to cam men!
en Iha prp w l actions may
eubmil written statements to iha
Land M anagem ent C iv ilia n
prior to the scheduled public
hearing Persons appearing al
Iha hearings may submit writ
Im iletom o nli ar be heard
orally
COCKTAI L W A I T * l l t l i

To my Valentines
Btmby, Jennifer
I Love you. to very
much
Steve

E

Steven,
I Love you honey,
you moke my life

for ^
D-’&gt;

sui

Shopping For A
How Or Used

-me*

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

1

Valentine’s

i

Doonesbury

. .

fpe*—mryv
v -v v -

�KIT ‘N* CARLYLE ‘ by Larry Wright
H I —Homes For Solo
241— Recreational
Vehicle* / Comport

235—Trucks /
Buses / Vans

W» havO tha Cura I90&gt; monay
back
guarantee Tu ckart
Farm I Cardan Cantar. San
lord, and Datand
__________

321-0750 Eve 322-7443

m i r o t a V an. F * « y Can
version. Period co n * I ion. rwfrigoralor, link, a captain*
chant, coach that convert* to
bad. ta mil** la gallon. 47 00*
mil** Owned by proteMWnel
family w no children look
V alu a I I . M t . Q u ick S a l*
■MM Day m i n i E v a
Ml MI T____________

Q cardinai

I too Ferd V I Ion pick up dump
truck Nan painting, uphot
alary, tuna up and front and
Satatuta TV lyttam t
omplat* Alt you naad. I0ON
Financing No monay damn
I I J d l l Unluaraal 111 1744
TOP Dollar PatdterJimk A
llatd car*, truck* 4 heavy
apufpmant M l WO*_________

153—Acres geUts/Sole

215— Boots end
Accessories

1*4 Credit?

NeCre4HT

7S M int* l i l t
M

On.
C o u g a r I I I ! On
74 Cordoba U fa On

REFINANCE
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1170 S. SaaferS 321-4075
Only US* mo with

217—Coroge Soles

* MYT0NAAUKU
O N I A C R t pint, eaataa w/IMa
battar la country I Privacy,

nt.N*.

* ru tllC AUTO AUCTtOH *
• v a n Wad. NIW alTiM P M

* W here Anybody *
*C o n Buy or Sell! *
Far mar* datailt
ItH U IU II
Dabary Auto A Marino Salat
Ac rata tha rivar. top ol hill
itaH w y if f i Oabary aaaataa

Moving Sala A n tiqu e Rattan a
pc aat. mint condition, two or
bott offor. Antlguo wood
dove m 0 0 ar bail ottor
Utility Trallar SMOO Call

323-5774

AUCTION ★

H w y * l,,.„ ™ ...... Daytana baack

N IW SMYRNA SKACH
In fra c a a t la l w a ta rlra n l 1
O d r m . , tty b a t h Con
dominium, tumlihad. Includa*
boat dock Financing 174.000
BaadwMa Raalty, R SA LTO A S
N H D I I I l . Opaa 1 P a w l

CA LL MALL......... ........ .m in t

bodroam, I
ralrlgarator

★

155—Condominiums
Co-Op/Sole

m l»a t ______________

bath
lllnd t.
U f.FM . U.000

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

BELO W appraltal H H M I

Nalgkborhoad C a ra g a S alt
Lang mood Markham Rd i n
mlWSoufhef W.44
Saturday Only

a

a

UVfc

DISCOUNT
AU TO
SALES

WE FINANCE

01 ARDIIMAl

1111 branch Aaa.............. m i l

lll l -ili'li

SI c L b lL u ft ffilK K V I U i
Faying CASH tori
Aluminum. Cent. Copper
Brat*. Laad. Nawtpapar.
Glatt. Cold. Sliver
Kakamo Toet. 1IIW Itl
• I 00 Sal 11 M l 1100

COURTESY

0 ( MiDIMM
l i t ! par manlh. Owner It
noticing. A d ult*, ne pait

i2 jnUandjjM*ir

1 M I Mu s t a ng * cy l i n de r ,
automalic. many new pari*.
laadbady f i .l w M l » i l
Itrr Toyota Corolla 1 door. 4
Ipaod . air ueoo Ml m i

321-2121
NQBQPT
429-9090 W AIKST wAY i
3219 HHY. 17-92 SANFORD

CONSULT OUR

0 ( AUDINAI
111—Appllonces
/ Furniture

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

0 ( IROIIYM

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

( \HI)I\ M
01 Mi’DIWI

»m -*in

E le c t r ic a l

H a m a R e p a ir s

n ejiLicte ic
TkPd aOUghprlcMT Coil R A J
EWctrlc. No fab la* largo ar
m a ll. Fra# lallmaWa Id Hr,
MfVlCV- inilWeM
pM W
lana. head lighting, burglar
alarm*. aervka change, r e

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m
Idm
blN
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j*ll* 4wdMBfA
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win
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W t l K t r l c 331 BOB

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L a n d d a a r lit f
U lU T U IIlf s U U iw i
Fill dirt and land clearing

j

*w m aa'1]Ml t m
F lr e w e s d / F u e i
r e a l is a v ic a a n e tw o o o
p e a S A LK . C A L L A P T S a *
p jt a iw a

e S M S V A L A N D C L IA tlN e
L«f and Land (Waring.
fill Pf1| IN I NRWlN|i
Call Sat IF ia a r lap u n
LA N O C LIA R IN O
F I L L O U T , SUSHOGOING
C L A V L S H A L I M l I4M

;

O e n e r a l S e r v ic e s
E H Ml MU Gary, AIM Odut*.

L iw n M fV IC f

’/R1ALTOR.
“ iS iw w ir 'c M t m a t e .
*4.----- A-* A i n »

l MdllWI

a A S s e e S A L tS Caawm-Aaa.
SI Auguatina A Bahia
MM S. laniard Ay* M I4 ID
Lawn Mamwntnca
LandicapIng^SuiNUWgMaadnd

F ra * B tf. m ad any lab. Saat
C M U m Bn a

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f a a j i m l m aJB p » u
RBpHMd|ik4 Nj Am

01 \l(lil\ M

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H aaM t A B e a u ty

» i m

4 i i

•
F O f U U R L Y Harr t a rn la a d y
Hank l i e s . H i It . M l
1

injina LiA I^AjaH

Tartar Iradw r* Lawn la rv k a
and raw lining ad garddne.
SI1 W it Butt TdyWr.
M a sa w ry

■ Td aeftaSaM B
I I I Sudan Lane, SanWrd
■etAAbA ‘

l- M M O h U fti

iJ U ia e W

f a a t n Pm
U f e M Is
Cp m m H u . B e tr p r lt a i.

Carpwdry Don't la * WfAaABal
W w *. a * . — .........BA L M IAMI
H a m a R e p a ir s

C aR M M M L
lf*
a ^ S ^ M M R e r i iiig iiB y .
M MpdaWl MR N *dB M b io il.

U A L CantraW 1 man gudllty
r eilNNi
limMays
Ogy»Ml n M l v d t - M J I S I
» N Baby Cl ii n H i
U ^ U ^ O L m m a a lt t U l
N a ra ta fl C a r a
wOl *11 wffb yaur atdwfy ar
dWWMdraltiivg In yaur hama
natbday* H aw . day. la g .
BaM raam Ml 111*
O U B BA TS S A B I LOWS a

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V*4

a i L U a t a B A Y - ■ *» M M yen

�»

0 0 9 0 0'0 0 0

«B — E v n ln g H r&gt; M . Sawlwd, FI.

00 0 9 0 9 09

T h u n d iy, Fab. 14,1WS

MIRRORTILES
i 2' * i r .

■

Sold in p»ok o*8 only.

ROACH AND
ANT K ILLER
11 oz. aerosol.
No. 4415.

D U ST
Kills fleas
and garden
pests. 1 lb.

Safe around
animals.
No. 920.

Kenco*

I

Gallon

%

CONCSNTRATID!

6 .8 8

AU M B 1

a s h a

*

BEST WEED Scotin

O WEED
AND FEED

Contains slow
release nitrogen that
develops thick green
lawn. Covers 5,000 i
sq. ft. 18 lbs.

42" Scottsmoor

Reg. 6.59

m

F o u M M k fin M M d M

w d h o in e ln e w ls .B ^ w

S P E C IA L FER TILIZ ER S

ceiioral light Wt)

• Palm
5 lb. bag.
• Rose
• Azalea, gardenia
Your Choice
and rhododendron
• Tomato and
A
vegetable
fl
• Citrus
1

• Full to part circle
• Fine mist to |*t spray
• Waters up to 88*
I
• Sled base
• No. 9570.
^

Sprayetta-4, 4 fliltons,
No. 06320 or Lawn
Sprayer, 15 gallons.
No. 00310.

Your Choice:

!

30V'0FF

IH

A il STOAit HAY NOT HAVt AU m m

AHMOR^Att

O PEN

mm an

uitm n sreass

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�</text>
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                    <text>77th Year, No,

Evening

14? - Wednesday, February 13. lm -S a n f o r d , Florida

Herald

Christensen Will
B y Donna Bates
H erald S ta ff W rite r
Seminole C o u n ty Com m issioner
Barbara Christensen said she'll write to
Gov. Bob Graham “ seeking Justice"
after the Florida Real Estate Com ­
mission slapped her with a SI,OOO fine
and public reprimand.
Her alternative: take the case to the
5th Dtstrict Court of Appeal in Daytona
Beach.
“ I was railroaded.” Mrs. Christensen
said Tuesday, claiming an attorney for
the state agency assured her that she
would get only a reprimand tf she

(USP S

4*1 380)

Price

35 Cents

'J From

'■Seek

signed a statement admitting she had
"technically'' violated the law by falling
to place a 81.000 deposit In an escrow
trust account as part of a real estate
buy.
She said the attorney for the com­
mission (that she couldn't Identify,
saying he Is no longer with the state
agency) told her it would be unlikely
that she would receive a One on a first
ofTense If she signed a “ statement of
fact” about the case. She said she
signed the statement and wound up
with a l l . 000 fine.
Mrs. Christensen said the action o(

1

was railroaded'
-Barbara Christenson
Seminole County commissioner

'She was treated Fairly.'
-Frederick H. Wilton
B o o l f i f s f s Co m m lttlo a attom oy
the real estate commission toward her
reflected the “ double standard” used
when an elected official Is charged with
an Infraction versus how a regular

Christensen at the hearing of the state
, citizen Is treated.
She said she thought her ex-husband, board on Jan. 8 In Orlando.
"Actually there were four charges
form er Casselberry M ayor Gerald
Christensen, had deposited the • 1.000 against her. all stemming from the
check in an escrow account only to find original failure to deposit the 81.000 In
later Christensen's check attached to an escrow trust account.” WUsen said.
the sales contract. The •1,000 was “ And the commission could have fined
"earnest m o n e y" on a proposed her 81.000 on each charge for a total of
purchase by Mrs. Christensen and her 84.000 and could have suspended her
ex-husband of a aix-’unlt apartment real esUte license for 10 years. She was
treated fairly." he said.
building in Clermont.
While Mrs. Christensen said she was
Meanwhile. Frederick H . WUsen.
chief attorney for the real estate ’ acting as a private Individual in the
commission, denied that any bias or purchase, she was wearing two
Bee J U S T IC E , page SA
favoritism was shown toward Mrs.

Chickens S p u r Charges

Heathrow Condos
Too High: County

Propped on charrad p ilings above the
W eklva R iv e r, a 47-foot trestle felled by
separate fires In Decem ber and Ja n u a ry
fire Is scheduled to b e«rem o ve d by thd
end of this w eek, according to a Seaboard
S y s te m R a ilr o a d s p o k e s m a n O w e n
Pride. He said R.W. S u m m e r Construc­
tion C o m p a n y of Bartow has been hired

!o rem ove the span. T h e trestle, west of
Sanford and unused b y the railroad for

because of the trestle's precarious state,
are to resume after Its rem oval.

B y D o o m Bates
H e ra ld BtafY W rite r
Builders w ill not be con­
structing two planned 7-story
c o n d o m i n i u m t o w e r s at
H e a t h r o w o ff L a k e M a r y
Boulevard near Markham Woods
Road, at least for the time being.
With 40 to 50 homeowners
from Markham Woods Road and
Banana Lake Road In the au­
dience protesting what Bruce
Anderson of Heathrow Land and
Development Corp. called the
proposed "mldrtses." the county
commission voted unanimously
to deny the request without
prejudice.
T h e planned 05-foot high
towers exceed the co u n ty's
building height limit by 60 feet.
Commissioner BUI KtrchhofT.
who made the motion to deny
without prejudice, said this will
give Anderson and hla associates
time to reconsider their proposal
and come back before the board
with another request within the
5rtQeneral county policy Is that
once a rexontng or a change tn a
development Is requested and
turned down. It cannot be con­
sidered again for a year. The use

of the term “ without prejudice"
waives that policy.
Barller In public hearings
which lasted until midnight, tne
commissioners not only voted
unanimously to turn down a
change of toning requested by a
Long wood man. but also In­
structed county staff to file
charges against him with the
county code enforcement board
for violating the county's zoning
ordinance and other county
laws.
John WUaon. whose .7 acre
property fronts on county Road
427 and Lake Ruth Drive, asked
the c o m m is s io n to' g ra n t
Longwood the light, after It
concludes annexation of his
parcel, to change the toning
from agriculture to commercial.
Wilson's neighbors on Lake
Ruth Drive told the commission­
ers that WUaon Is operating a
produce stand on the property
and dumps ftult from the stand
at the side of the road to rot.
creating a health hazard.
They also said Wilson allowed
trucks from his stand to exit
onto Lake Ruth Drive In vio­
lation of a restriction set by the
county's board of adjustment

and set up the produce stand In
violation of the county's toning
ordinance.
Herb Harden of the county
toning atalT agreed with the
charges, saying while Wilson
was granted a special exception
by the county board of adjust­
ment to operate a retail plant
nursery at the site, that opera­
tion ceased some time ago. Then
WUaon. without approval from
anyone set up a produce stand.
Harden said. In violation or the
county zoning ordinance.
The neighbors said Wilson has
also bought chickens and Is
keeping them on his property.
Richard Gray, whose home Is
east of Wilson’s green house,
said he doesn't object to WUaon
keeping the chickens on his
agriculturally coned property,
but he does object to those
chickens running loose.
Harden said It to also against
th e c o u n ty c o d e In Jt» r||
chickens without havimt p ro trr
housing for the fowl.
Commissioner Pied Streetman
urged Harden to file charges
against WUaon with the code
enforcement board and Harden
Bse CO N D O *, page 9 A

Final DER Hearing Postponed 2 Months
The final of three hearings before a state
officer to determine whether Sanford may
continue to dum p treated effluent Into Lake
Monroe was postponed to April 16 lust as
Sanford was tipping the evidence scale In Its
favor.
The decision was made to move the final
hearing after testimony was given by expert
witnesses on Sanford's behalf asserting that
the city's effluent la not materially adding to
the pollution of the lake. The decision also
came after C ity Manager W .E. “ Pete"
Knowles produced letters from state officials
recommending Sanford appeal the state's
ban on the dumping.
In the second day of hearings. Sanford s
expert witnesses - knowlcdguble after DER
testimony Monday of what tne state agency
said were shortcomings in Sanford's argu­
ments — continued working on compiling
additional material late Monday, according
to City Attorney WUIlam Colbert. Their

presentations Tuesday look DER offlclals by
surprise.
Additionally, when state Hearing Exam­
iner DUne Ktesting found that DER attorney
B .J . Ow ens had not aeen e xhib its,
particularly those about which one expert.
To m Gallagher of llvdroQ ual Inc., of
Mahwah. N.J. was testifying, ahe urged the
final hearing be held In Tallahassee.
In the meantime, Colbert said he would
make available to DER all the additional
materials Sanford had accumulated to back
up Its request for a waiver of the elate rules.
Th e postponement was due In part
because Sanford. In asking for a waiver of
the state rule banning the dumping of
effluent Into a body of water, usually would
have presented Its testimony first. Colbert
said. But. he explained, he and Mias Owens,
agreed In advance of the hearings that the
s«ate would present its case first for refusing
•!"«
to grant Sanford a waiver and thus altitrtfl

the usual presentation of evidence and
exhlblta.
Monday. DER witnesses, with prehearing
Information supplied by the city of Sanford,
cited deficiencies In IU studies. Colbert said.
The testimony apparently gave the Sanford
experts clues on w hy the DER turned down
Sanford's request for the waiver and what
Information the agency wanted — thus the
unexpected presentations Tuesday.
DER employees Monday said much of the
evaluation of applications for waivers like
Sanford's was done subjectively by various
DER personnel and applications were con­
sidered based on a set of Internal memos of
rules which have not been published or
made available to petit!tioners like Sanford.
Among Sanford's witnesses Tuesday were
Dr. Hugh Putnam, a biologist, with Water ft
A ir Research Inc., consulting environmental
engineers and scientists from Oalncsvtlle; Al

Jernigan Goal: Infect 'New Life' Into Games Po//ceSo/vestrong-Arm
Oolden Age Osmes General
Chairman J im Jernigan hopes to
Inject some new life In the
11-year-old event with some
changes designed to combat
what he said was last year's
n u m b e r o n e p ro b le m —
"apathy."
The Oames will be held Nov.
4-B In Sanford for men and
women 55 and older. Last year's
event attracted about 3.200
entrants from across the nation.
For Instance, he told the
Oames Executive Committee at

TODAY

Its first meeting of the year
Wednesday, he hopes to sub­
s titu te a C o u n try -W e s te rn
Barbecue for the Wednesday
night buffet dinner-dance at
Sanford Civic Center, which he
felt was not as well attended last
year. Jernigan said the Over 50
Club would continue to sponsor
the social.
He said the catered buffet and
dance, usually attended by
about 400 local and visiting
Oames participants, had been a
major Improvement over the

first year when Chamber secre­
tary Virginia Longwell brought
in some fast food hamburgers for
the group and next year pre­
pared spaghetti. But after so
m a n y years a change was
needed to revive Interest.
Jem lgsn slso announced a
new competitive golfing event
this year will be the long drive.
Jernigan said that General
Foods Post Cereal has confirmed
Its continued sponsorship of the
Keltner. executive
director of the American Red

Cross Central Florida and a
member of the Uft. Olympic
Committee, said several national
firms have expressed interest In
sponsoring events in the Oames.
adding that they are not "beer or
cigarette companies.”
The organizations sponsoring
Individual events are to fiave
their rule changes ready by the
next meeting, March 13, at
which time the schedule will be
for the first time. The
forms will be completed by

The arrest of two Sanford men
and three male Juveniles by
Sanford police will dear up moot
of the strong-arm robberies and
purse snatching* that have oc­
curred In Sanford during the
past four months, police said
today.
The arrests were made follow­
ing Investigations by Deta. Ttno
Fontana and Darrell Brewer.
According to Police Chief Ben
Butler, the arrests will clear up
at least 15 felonies and police

have confiscated a stolen 1060
Camaro and a second vehicle
that may have been used In the
Arrested were Ronnie Horn.
18. of 47 Castle Brewer Court,
and WlUia Williams. 20. of 55
Clark Court.
The Juveniles were turned over
to Juvenile authorities and arrest
o f a f o u r th J u v e n ile w as
expected, Butter said.

Child Killer Loses Bid For New Trial
An Altamonte Springs man con­
victed of torturing and killing a
5-year-old girl has lost an appeal of
hla conviction.
The ftth District Court of Appeal
turned down without comment the
appeal of Donald Glenn McDougall.
28.
McDougall was sentenced Nov. 4.
IB83, to 34 year* for the Sept.. 1982.
death of Ursula Sunshine AsaakL Her
remains were found by police Dec. 1.
1082. tn a a weighted sack at the
bottom of an Altamonte Springs
girl'i
Aaaaid. was sentenced to 15 veara for

girl's deal
c u s to d y

of his Involvement in previous child
admitted as evidence
that Mrs. Aaaaid was not
to undergo
id lin g : and, the sack
stuffed into recked
admitted Into evidence in the court­
room Indicating that could have
Influenced the Jury,-------- — A c c o rd in g to c o u r t reco rd s.
McDougall beat and tortured the girl,
sat her naked In a sink filled with ice.
forced her to cat soap and made her
walk nude about their home reciting
tfea alphabet and counting. If she
made a mistake, he hit her.

The girl's body was recovered after
Mrs. Aaaaid, who hod moved to
Riverside. Calif., w ith MeOsugall.
argued with him then went to the
local pehee and reported the incident.
Because the prosecution could not
prove the girl's murder was pre­
meditated. McDougall was charged
«iy t subsequently convicted of see*
a od-de gm murder. Th e legM inabili­
ty of prosecutors to charge and
convict McDougal of first-degree
murder, punishable by death, pro­
s state legislature to include
child ___ resulting in death aa a
crim e punishable by the *

�M — lytntaB H f » M , t u tor* . FI. Widan day, F*k. » L l * »

'C h eers' Star C o lasan to
D ead O f H eart A ttack

NATION
IN BRIEF
Chemical Plant Fire
KIIIb I; Injures 8
M IDDLESEX. N J . (UP!) — A t least one person died and
eight other* were injured Tuesday in a aeries of explosions
and fire at a paint manufacturing firm that was put out
with the help of hundreds of firefighters from nearby
towns.
Police said they found one body Tuesday evening In the
burned rubble of one of several Chemray Coatings Corp.
building* damaged by the fire. The Middlesex medical
examiner was trying to Identify the badly burned body.
One worker and a salesman were not accounted for. but
It was assumed they were not Inside the Chemray plant
when It exploded, Middlesex County Prosecutor Alan
Rockoff said.
Rockoff said the injury toll would have been worse If the
plant's other 15 workers had not been outside getting
coffee and food from a canteen truck.
Inspectors said the lire may have begun In a mixing area,
where chemicals are brought up from underground tanka.
The cause has not been determined.

Farmers Rally For Support
PIERRE. S.D. (UPI) - More than 5.000 frightened
farmers ahtverlng outside the state capttol cheered wtldly
when they heard all 105 members of the state Legislature
will troop to Washington seeking help for agriculture —
South Dakota's No. 1 Industry.
The farmers, some of whom trekked hundreds of miles In
school buses and pickup trucks to Join the Farm Alliance
Day. packed the gymnasium at Riggs High School to listen
to speakers urging action to ease the nation's farm debt
crisis.
Farming Is the No. I Industry In South Dakota, but 25
percent or the state's 9,000 growers are considered to be In
weak financial condition because of high Interest rates,
tight money and low crop prices. Many farmers say
homesteads that have been In their families for generations
are on the verge of collapse.
Farm leaders say current economic conditions for
farmers are the worst since the Depression of the 1930s,
and they are asking for higher prices and more agricultural
support from the federal government.

L O S A N G E L E S (U P I) Nicholas Colasanto, the loveable
but dlmwltted bartender tn the
N B C series " C h e e rs ." died
Tuesday at his home of a heart
attack, a network spokeswoman
said. He was 61.
Spokeswoman Pat Schultz
said the stocky character actor,
who portrayed Ernie Pantuaao, a
former Boston Red Sox coach
who had a warm heart but often
struggled to mske sense of
conversations and drink orders
In the Boston bar, was recov­
ering from a heart ailment when
he suddenly died while watching
television.
Heart problems had caused
him to miss the filming of the
last five episodes of "Cheers."
Schultz said, but he had told
friends he was recovering and
expected to be back In front of
the camera again.
C o la s a n t o w a s t w ic e
nominated for Emmys for best
supporting actor In the show,
which began In 1961.

An episode was being taped
Tuesday afternoon when word of
the death was received. The
taping was canceled.

...DER

Contrary to DER testimony
Monday that the accuracy of
state testing of the degree of
pollution of Lake Monroe In the
summer of 1981 when the level
of the lake was at Its lowest level
In 70 years was not affected.
Robertson challenged that tes­
timony. A water resource con­
sultant. Robertson Insisted the
tests were skewed by the low
water level.
Gallagher's testimony was ap­
parently unexpected by the DER
officers. Several times Monday.
D E R w itn e s s e s m e n tio n e d
com p uter m odeling as one
method to prove that Sanford
was not polluting the lake. In
some fashion, an expert ran
program a computer so that It
can mathematically eliminate
pollutants from some sources
while computing othen.
Miss Owens and other DER
representatives apparently con­
fused by Gallagher's explanation
of how he conducted his model­
ing were at a loss to ask him
questions.
Knowles also surprised DER
with copies of letters he received
from Alex Alexander, &lt;B*trtcl
director of the DER In Orlando,
and from DER Secretary Victoria

1A
Robertson, a hydrologist from
Seabum A Robertson Inc. of
Tampa, water resource consul­
tants: Gallagher and Paul Porter
and Robert Deverall. engineers
w ith the c ity ’ s c o n s u ltin g
engineering firm of Conklin.
Porter A Holmes.
Putnam . In his testimony,
challenged the D E R ru lin g
which says the water* of Class 3
lakes in Florida, which Includes
Lake Monroe, must be pure
enough to maintain Ufe of the
hlghly-aenaltlve rainbow trout
and salmon.
Putnam pointed out that not
only do rainbow trout and salm­
on not exist in Lake Monroe, but
these particular species of fish
do not exist in any waterway In
Florida.
DER officials earlier In the
hearings explained that the
classification given a lake Is not
on the baala of its purity, but
rather on what the state consid­
ers Its highest use. Th e DER
considers Lake Monroe and
other Class 3 lakes as recre­
ational bodies of water.

Officer: Moses Made Offer
LOS A N G E LE S (UPI) - Olympic gold medalist Edwin
Moses, who stands to lose millions of dollars in potential
Income If convicted of soliciting sex from an undercover
policewoman, offered 9100 for two specific acts, the officer
testified Tuesday.
Rookie oflicer Susan Oonxales testified under sometimes
heated cross examination by Moses' attorney that she was
not made up like a prostitute while working a so-called
"trick task force" last month, but was dressed like "an
ordinary citlien."
She also said she had a microphone attached to her
purse, but that the conversation was not tape recorded.
Defense attorney Ed Medvene. In his opening statement
■yi&gt; uiUklzed police for nsi taping the
aayttu that “tapanacurdtng would have
eliminated any possibility of error."

AREA DEATHS

"A s Sam Malone (the role
Danson plays). I feel as If I've lost
my dad. As Ted Danson. I loved
him very much and he will be
missed a lot."
"We feel as if someone from
our own family had been loot."
producers Glen and Lea Charles
.tMrsM PhaAeby Tamaty Vtacaat

Colasanto. born In Providence.
R.I., studied to be an accountant
but gave up his Job with an oil
company to pursue an acting
career 30 years ago.
Colasanto was never married
and had no children. NBC said
he would be burled In Pro­
vidence, but funeral plana were
Incomplete.

i&lt; M r*’Em ily Skinner Moyer. 57,
of Erie, Pa., died Saturday In
that city. Bom March 5. 1927 in
Tampa, she came to Sanford aa a
child. She attended Seminole
C ounty Schools and was a
member of All Souls Catholic
Church. She moved to Erie In
1947.
S u r v i v o r s I n c lu d e h e r
husband. Milton: two sons,
George Dovlchak and J o h n
Moyer; daughter. Nancy Moyer,
and granddaughter, Sherrie
Dovlchak. all of Erie; brother,
Jo h n Skinner. Jacksonville;
three sisters, Mary Youmana,
Prattville. Ala., Helen Scott,
Hilton Head Island. S.C., and
Viola Frank, Sanford.
Funeral services and burial
were held Tuesday In Erie.

She said Moses then asked her. "How much for an
hour?"
"Well, what do you want?" she aald she replied.
Moses then named two specific sex acta and olTered her
9100. Oonxales testified.
She said she replied, "Oh, sure. Just make a right and I'll
meet you."
The track star, who did not make the turn as Instructed,
was arrested two blocks away by other officers.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Antl'Castro Terrorist Convicted
On Weapons, Conspiracy Charges

r

MIAMI (UPI) — Eduardo Arocena, 41. the reputed
of
the anti-Castro
group Omega 1
been
convicted of 23 Illegal weapon* and conspiracy charges
that could net him another 115 years behind oars.
A federal court Jury of six men and six women. Including
three Hispanic*, deliberated only 2 Vk hours Tuesday after
the 12-day trial bribes returning thetr verdict.
U.S. District Judge William Hoevelcr ordered presentence Investigation* but set no date for sentencing.
Arocena was sentenced In New York in October to Ufe
plus 35 years In prison for the 1990 murder of Cuban
diplomatic attache Felix Oarcla and for masterminding 25
bombings In a 10-year terrorist campaign by Omega 7.

Educator: Taochar TotH
TA L L A H A S S E E (UPI) — Black colleges' “ benign neglect"
of teacher training program* has contributed to poor scores
on teacher certification tests by minority students,
according to a prominent black educator.
"In moot historically black tnaUtutiona teacher education
Is a step-child," Florida A S M University education
profrMor Walter Mercer aald during a news conference
Tuesday.
said that neglect has contributed to the 66
percent fkllure rate by mtoortty students on the examina­
tion aspiring teachers must peas to win state certification.
Mercer repeated earlier complaints that the test Is biased
against blacks and other mlnorites. But he added; "A s a
strategy for survival, let us now concentrate an
this test."

Dorothy Anna Peterson. 88,
919 E . Second S t , Sanford, dted
Monday at Lakevlew Nursing
Center. Burn Ju ly 4. 1906 In
Czechoslovakia. She was a regis­
tered nurse.
Q ra m k o w Fu n eral H o m e ,
Sanford, is in charge of ar-

STOCKS

is
ISH
Wta

Mr. Orrtn D. Rice. 84, of M B
O r le n t a A v e . , A lt a m o n t e
at
Care i

Bridging The Past
Gerald Gross inspects a bridge between the old Courthouse
Annex left, and the Garrett Departm ent Store, rig h t, on First
Street in Sanford. The w a lk w a y Is part of the 9500,000
conversion of the storefront section into the Rand M a ll. When
completed A p ril 1, Gross, whose firm owns and Is developing
the m a ll, said It w ill b e a 19, 000-s q u a r e -f o o t consortium o f
shops and offices.

Tschlnkel. recommending that
Sanford appeal the DER ruling
stopping the city from dumping
effluent Into the lake based on
the lake survey done by the DER
In the summer of 1981.
Knowles produced the letters
when Miss Owens asked why the
city appealed the ruling.
Miss Owens also appeared
surprised when It was revealed
that Knowles Is an engineer as
well as the city's manager of
nearly 32 years.
Knowles testified that Sanford
la willing to update Its sewer
plant to provide a higher degree
of treatment of Its effluent, called
advanced wastewater treatment,
before It la dumped Into the lake.
Deverall and Porter presented
the Sanford City Commission
with Its study and cost estimates
for converting to the state pre­
ferred land spreading technique
Monday night and those docu­
ments were also presented
Tuesday to the DER.
Colbert said that at the April
16 hearing at the state capital.
Miss Owen will be given the
opportunity to cross-examine
Gallagher.
— Dpnna Estas

WEATHER
N A T IO N A L R E P O R T ! Up to
20 Inches of snow whipped Into
blinding clouds and 10-foot
drifts by winds gustlng to 50
mph paralyzed the nation today
A R E A R K A D IN O * (9 a.m.)i
temperature: 40: overnight low:
3 7 ; T u e s d a y 's h lg t r : 57:
barometric pressure: 30.21: rela­
tive h u m id ity : 4 6 percent.
T H U R S D A Y TID ES ]
Daytona Beacht highs. 3:41
a m.. 4:03 p.m.; lows. 9:54 a.m.,
9:53 p.m.: P o rt C a na ve ra l:
highs, 3:33 a.m.. 3:55 p.m.:
lows. 9:45 a.m.. 9:44 p.m.:
A R E A F O R E C A S T ! Today
mostly sunny, breezy and cold.
High lower 50s. Northwest wind
around 15 mph. Tonight fair and
cold. Low In lower 30s. Wind
northwest 5 to 10 mph. Thurs­
day sunny and cold with high In
upper 50s. Wind northwest 10
mph.
B O A T IN G F O R E C A S T ] St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles - - Small craft advisory In
effect. Wind west to northwest
20 to 25 knots today becoming
northwest 15 to 20 knots tonight
and Thursday.

.i.

Bom April 11. 1900 In New
York, he moved to Altamonte
Springs from Connecticut In
1969. He waa a retired salesman
and was a Catholic.
He Is survived by his brother.
Vincent. Connecticut.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, Is in
charge of arrangements.
B E V E R L Y N. T E X C E L L
Mrs. Beverly Nicholson Texcell, 63. of 378 E. Notre Dame
Drive. Altamonte Springs, died
Monday at her home. Born
March 6, 1921 tn Edgewood. she
moved to Orlando from Miami In
1980. She waa a homemaker
and a Protestant. She was a
member of the Audubon Society.
Survivor* Include her two
sons. David Maserang. Orlando.
James Maserang. Illinois: daugh­
ter, Terri Celeron. Altamonte
Mr. Michael L. Doherty. 40. of Springs: m other. Bessie K.
2036 White Oak Lane. Zellwood, Nicholson. Ortando; sister, Mar­
died Monday at his residence. A jorie Abercrombie. Los Angeles;
native of Montpelier. Vt.. he wax seven grandchildren.
Carey Hand Guardian Chapel,
bom March 17. 1944 and he
moved to Zellwood three month* Orlando, Is In charge of ar­
ago from Maynard, Mas*. He was rangements.
LT. COL. THOM AS C AW LEY
a supervisor for Digital Equip­
L t. C o l. T h o m a s F ra n c is
ment Co.. Maynard, and was a
Cawley. 64. of 5819 Bear Lake
Protestant.
Survivors Include hia parents. Circle. Apopka, died Saturday at
Phillip and Esther, Zellwood: Flo rida H o sp ita l-A lta m o n tc.
brother. Jam es. Tallahassee: Born Ju ly 13.1920 In Cleveland,
he moved to Apopka from Seat­
s is t e r , J a n e H o lb r o o k .
tle In 1964. He was retired from
Montgomery. Ala.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake the Air Force and a member of
Mary, la in charge of arrange­ St. diaries Catholic Church. He
waa a life member of VFW Post
ment*.
2093, Ufe member of the ExMrs. Catherine Rita Lindner. POWs and a life member of the
96, of 216 Citrus Drive. Sanford, Disabled American Veterans.
Survivors Include his wife,
died Tuesday at her home. Bom
Oct. 28. 1689 In Brooklyn. N.Y., Mary 8.: three aona. Terrance 9.,
Apopka. Tim othy X..
she moved to Sanford from
Norfolk. Va.. In 1971. She waa a Springfield. UL. and Thomas.
homemaker and a member of All Spokane. W a s h .: d aughter.
Patricia L. Serdahl, Spokane:
Souls Catholic Church.
Survivors Include her three s la t e r . O e r t r u d e M o o r e .
sons, Robert W.. Lehigh Acres, Cshfcvnia: three grandchildren.
Maid w in -F a irc h ild Fun eral
William A.. Virginia Beach. Va..
and Ralph E.. Sanford: daughter. Home. Forest City, Is In charge
of
J o a n Z ln n . S a n fo rd : e ig h t
g ra n d c h ild r e n : fo u r g re a t­
Mrs. Florie Vann Graham. SO,
grandchildren.
Q ra m k o w F u n e ra l H o m e , of 1000 W . Eighth St.. Sanford.
Sanford. Is In charge of ar-

Oonsalc* testified she was standing on a street corner on
Sunset Boulevard before dawn last Jan. 13 when Moses
pulled up In hia Mercedes Bens and told her, "Nice night."

•1SW
XH

"As an actor I'm going to mis*
Nick very m u ch ." said Ted
Danson. one of the show's stars.

died Saturday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Bom Nov. 8.
1904 in Quitman, Ga.. she was a
resident of Sanford since 1926.
She was a homemaker and a
member of New Mt. Calvary
Missionary Baptist Church. She
waa also a m em ber of the
Rebecca Chapter 83. Order of
the Eastern Star.
Survivors Include her son,
Clarence Noble, Sanford; Iwo
slaters, Mrs. A lberta Burke
Cleveland and Mrs. Ida Vann.
Sanford; one brother. Eugene
Vann. Sanford; four grand­
children: three great­
grandchildren.
Wilson Elchelberger Mortuary.
Sanford, la In charge of ar­
rangements.
A T L A S M c C U L LO U Q H SB.
Mr. Atlas McCullough Sr., 75.
of 2S43 E. Main St.. Mima, died
Saturday at Jea* Parrish Memo­
rial Hospital. Titusville. Bom
Ju ly 8. 1909 in Deerland. he
moved to Mima 42 years ago. He
was a retired truck driver and a
Baptist.
Survivors Include hia wife.
Screlha; four aona, Earl. Tampa.
Willie J .. Mima. Charles and
A tlas J r . . T itu s v ille : three
daughters. Dorothy Hatfield.
M im a . E lo t a e C a m p b e l l.
Titusville and Luvada Culver.
Cocoa: three sisters, Rosa Harris
. Zells Blue and Leona Johnson,
all of Pensacola; brother. Willie
D .. Loa Angeles; 29 grandc h i l d r e n ] 12 g r e a t grandchildren.
Wllaon-Elchelberger Mortuary
la In charge of arrangement*.
Mr. Ernest White. 58. of 1003
Cypress Ave.. Sanford, died
Sunday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Born Feb. 19,
1926 tn Sanford, he moved lo
Orlando and then returned to
Sanford three year* ago. He waa
a road construction worker and a
Baptist.
Survivors include his aon.
Lenwood While. Orlando; slater.
Ernestine Price. Sanford; two
grandchildren.

THE BIST protection
ttAMST INTRROERSM!

imamii

F.ABRICATiING

Wilson-Elchelberger Mortuary
Is In charge of arrangements.

Funsrol Notices
D O H IS T Y , M ICHAEL L.
-M am o rlal saevke* tor Michael L. Doherty.
Whit# Oek Lana. Zellwood. will S*
held si ISo convenience of the family. In Hau
ot llowor*. contribution* may ba mad* la If*
Wintor Sark Homkt. P O So, M l, Winter
Sark, an® or the Amor loan Cencer Society
Oaklawn Funeral Horn*. Memorial Park.
Planar Via* a full service funeral home at
ana fetation— in chars*

W HIT I , Cd M ItT
-F u n e ra l services tar Mr. Ernest While. M.
of MSI Cypres* Are . Sanford, who died
Sunday, w ill ba hafd a t« p m Saturday at M i
Trinity United Methodist Church. US 1.
Sanford A m with Factor Troy Safd III M
chary# Burial fa tallow in Resllawn Came
font Calling haurt lar friend# w ill ba tram &gt;«
P m . P rld a y at tha ch a p e l W id en

Elchelberger Mortuary inchary*

McCullough , atlas i s .

-F u n e ra l service, ter Mr Alla* McCullough
*r .»*. *f &gt;S*1 E Main S I. Mime, wha dad
Fab «. w ill ba a l I g m Saturday at Sts M.
Mary-e Missionary Ragtut Church. Wttoy
Aronue. Mims, with Paster “ m m f f OrdMf
bi chart* Burial w ill W bw In Sfyarytsw
Memorial Garden*. Coco* Calling haws IX
frtends w ill ba hetd from M g.m Friday at
the chagot Wilton Ekhalberger Mortuary *
OSAMAM. FLO SIE V.
-F u n e ra l tarries* tar Mas. Flo rid V .
Graham. M. at MM W Eighth S t. laM
who d ad Saturday, w ill ba held a l 1 1
Saturday at Haw Mt Calvary MM®
SagtHI Church. MIS W. W h SI. wtdt I
George w Warren In charge. B urial Is tsMsv
M SasMown Cemetery. Calling hours Mr
i ba tram } « g m . Friday el *M
chagel W illed IicheM erggr Mortuary In

Earning llrvuld
tu s p s e iim :
W # * w s d * y . F e b ru a ry w . lf * j

Vol. 77. No let
______ Deity an_________ _
Saturday by The l eotard ______

&gt;■*&lt; MS M. French A va,. lan iard
F la . » l l l
Close Patte n Fat* St
t Wash. SI.Mr

K i l l S M eath,. tM .U i A
S ir M r Y ea r. III.® *. B y M eH i

It .M i Month. U .M i I
I l k M i « Maafh*. U l . N i
IMS) m - M U .

Tear.

�H

Evening HsraM, tastsrd, FI. Wednesday, Feb. H, 1

But Hwan Retains Power

WORLD
N BREF
Fire
RacesThrough Hotel,
Killing 26; Toll Could Rise
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) — Fire raced through a reaort
hotel today, killing at least 26 people Including two
Americans. Authorities Investigated a link between the
blase and an escaped arson suspect In a another fatal fire
last October.
Terrified guests screamed "help me. help m e" from
smoke-filled rooms and Jumped from window ledges as
flames spread quickly and destroyed the second and third
floor* of the nine-story 470-room Regent of Manila Hotel.
It was the fourth hotel (Ire In the Philippines since last
Oct. 23. when a blaze set by arsonists gutted Baguio City's
Pines Hotel and killed 25 people. Including eight
Americans. Th e principal suspect escaped last week.
Firefighters worked Into the evening to douse the fire but
strong winds off Manila Bay Ignited new fires In the hotel
and flames could be seen raging from some rooms.
The bodies of 16 people. Including at least two
Americans, a British couple, a Sri Lankan, a Japanese and
three Filipinos, had been recovered and a U.S. Embassy
spokesman said there might be more American fatalities.
Regent officials declined lo comment on the origin of the
fire or how many people remained unaccounted for but
Fire Department officials said 10 more bodies had been
sighted Inside charred rooms.

Ill Chernenko Conceit Meeting
MOSCOW (UPIJ — President Konstantin Chernenko, who
took over the Soviet leadership one year ago today, Is 111
and apparently being treated somewhere outside Moscow.
The ailing 73-year-old Soviet leader, who has not been
seen publicly for almost seven weeks, canceled a meeting
Tuesday with visiting Greek Prime Minister Andreas
Papandreou.
A Politburo member said on national television Tuesday
night he had met with Chernenko Monday. Implying the
Soviet president was working, at least on a limited scale.
Dm Itrios Mouladas. a Greek spokesman, told a news
conference Tuesday. "The planned meeting between Prime
Minister Papandreou and General Secretary Chernenko
could not take place because of the Illness of Mr.
Chernenko."

...Justice
Coatiaasd from page 1A
hats In the proposed transaction
— one as a buyer and the other
as a real estate broker.WUsen said
In addition lo the charge of
failure lo place a deposit In a
brokerage trust account. Mrs.
Christensen was also charged
with breach of trust, failure to
count and deliver funds and
failure to keep money In a trust
account. Wllsen said. She was
also found guilty of "failure to
erect and maintain a brokerage
sign at her real estate office." he
Wllsen said Mrs. Christensen
did sign a document admitting
the allegations.
The state (fled the charges
against Mrs. Christensen on Nov.
6. 1964 after Wayne Dean Jr.,
an Orlando attorney, "Initially
brought the matter to our atten­
tion on behalf of the seller,"
Wllsen said.
He said one of the reasons the
real estate commission was “ so
lenient" In Mrs. Christensen's
p u n is h m e n t Is because of
m itig a t in g c irc u m s ta n c e s .
Wllsen explained the mitigating
circumstances were that Mrs.
Christensen was the buyer In the
transaction and falling to deposit
the money In an escrow account
was an oversight.
Wllsen said Mrs. Christensen
can appeal the administrative
fine and reprimand by going to
the district court of appeal In
Daytona Beach.
"But. I see no grounds to
appeal. The penalties are within
the range permit ted by law and
m y office will defend against the
appeal If she Ales one."
Mrs. Christensen said a de­
fense before the appellate court
could cost between $4,000 and
$10,000 and Instead she will
seek the governor's help. "We
need someone to crusade.” she
Noting she had hoped to ask
for a new hearing before the real
estate commission, but denied
that recourse, she said. "A n
appeal to the district appellate
court Is no appeal at all. One has
Jo have an attorney repre­
sentative there."
After the decision of the real
estate co m m issio n became
p u b lic k n o w le d g e , M rs .
Christensen said she would not
seek re-election In 100$ and that
she did not really want to run for
election to a second four-year
'M

W

* ! * * * ..

Kim's Party Grabs 50 Seats
SEO UL. South Korea (UPIJ A new political party allied with
dissident Kim Dae Ju n g cap­
tured SO seats In the National
Assembly, final election returns
showed today, becoming South
Korea's major opposition force
and dealing a blow to President
Chun Doo Hwan's government.
Kim 's New Korea Democratic
Party all but swept the other
opposition parties off the slate In
Tuesday's elections.
"1 consider the outcome of the
elections as a great success for

democratic forces (In South
Korea)." Kim said, adding that It
has given him "courage and
hope" for the future.
The elections were considered
a blow to Chun's government,
which once condemned Kim to
death. They were not. however,
expected to seriously affect
Chun’s hold on power because
his ruling Democratic Justice
Party easily retained a majority
of seats In the 276-member
National Assembly.
Election rules had virtually

guaranteed Chun's party a ma­
jority In the assembly.
Chun's D JP party won 87
scats In the elections, the Kimaffiliated party captured 50. and
the government-sanctioned op­
position — the Korea Democratic
Party — won only 26. final
election results showed today.
Thus, when the proportional
seats are added. Chun's ruling
party will have a majority of 148
seats In the new National
Assembly and the Kim-affiliated
party will have 67.

...Condos

Anderson offered lo contribute
$300,000 to the county for the
purchase of fire safety equip­
ment. possibly an aerial (ire
track. In exchange. But he said
he would prefer that the truck
purchased be stationed near or
in Heathrow.
He said the developers raised a
95-foot tall balloon at the pro­
posed site of the mid-rises and
determined It could not be seen
In residential areas outside
Heathrow and could be seen
only at a few sites w ithin
Heathrow.
Anderson said the planned
mid-rises would not add any
more units to Heathrow than
originally planned. He said while
35 units were being added to
Tract eight to bring the total

units there to 100. up from 65.
the number of units planned on
two other tracts were being
reduced by 35.
Tom DeWolf. president of the
Markham Woods Homeowners
Association and an attorney,
said the residents In hts area
have maintained a high quality,
lo w -d e n s ity , s e m l-ru ra l a t­
mosphere, building no more
than one house per acre.
Klrchholf said approval would
have a far-reaching effect upon
the county. "W e must look at
what the full Impact will be." he
said.
" I think we are all happy with
the way Heathrow has devel­
oped. It is a credit lo the area
and I hope It will be a credit to
the tax collector of Seminole

C oatloaed frost pags 1A
said the charges would be filed
within the week.
On the Heathrow development
request. Anderson proposed that
the county commission approve
a change In the development
plan for the project to permit
construction of two eight-story
buildings, containing 50 con­
dominiums each.
He said the first floor of each
building would be used for
parking garages for the facilities
and the other seven floors would
have apartments ranging in
price from $250,000 to $1 mil­
lion each.

County. We have to make up our
minds whether we can set a
precedent or n ot." Klrchhoff
said.
Commissioner Sandra Glenn,
who seconded KlrchhofTs mo­
tion. warned the opponents that
the Florida Legislature last year
adopted law designating a group
to write a state development
plan. She said according to the
proposed plan Florida will be
recommending that construction
of mid-rises and high-rises be
allowed all over the state and
will mandate that low-income
housing be built In every zoning
classification In a county. "It's
frightening." she said.
She urged those present to
contact their legislators with
opposition to the proposal.

The Saving Place •
Safe w # d .-k it .
M b. is m -u r n

private life Is recorded In the
newspaper for all to read. She
also stated that In private life she
could devote her energies to
earning a living and make more
money.
Noting that she is very angry
at the turn of events, Mrs.
Christensen said she will not get
out of politics, but ytay prefer to
stay behind the scenes. “1 don't
want to be on the front firing
line. That doesn't mean I won't
be Involved, but I'U be Involved
only to the extent that I'm
confortable."
M rs. Christensen said the
prospective purchase of the
apartment house In Clermont
came up early last year. She said
she and Christensen found out
about the property, owned by
R icha rd D. Roane, through
R ichard Fess. an officer of
Freedom Bank. Fess Is also
mayor of Lake Mary.
Th e purchase price totaled
$142,000 which $118,000 In
refinanced mortgages, which
could not be assumed, through
the Freedom Mortgage Co. and
$24,000 for Roane's equity.
Roane's equity was lo be bought
for a $12,000 cash payment and
a first mortgage to Roane of
$12,000 at 12 percent for one
year.
She said she was contacted by
Dean, who Identified himself as
Roane's lawyer. Mrs.
Christensen said there were
nothing but problems about the
transaction after Dean came
onto the scene, from his com­
plaints that they were not pay­
ing enough money for the pro­
perty. to his contention that he
had another buyer, to his In­
sistence that he wanted to set as
closing agent on the sale and
purchase.
She said the title insurance
s e a r c h e h o w e d n in e e n ­
cumbrances and Uens
the property and
that Dean clear them from the
title.
Mis. Christensen said Dean set
up a closing without correci
the title and that i
the Intention of b uyin g the

$ 3

1

9

RCA

P*kfeanwhlle, Greg Plngston.
v ic e p re side n t of Freedom
Co., which Plngston
the mortgages on the
six apartment units, said the
mortgages w en ready to go Into
poftckiiurc when Fess brought
the Christensens' Interest In
buying the property to his at-

•

2 4 9

“ f *Two
S S other borrowers at ours
also ran Into tbs asms attuattao
who wanted to act as
_
in

1

* •

" T h s mfeortty of cocnmtaato*DsanasXh*
n o p t f e g r t o u t o f ofltosaftsra. not show up for tbs v—
term." she sow, e ass^tbe Roane property a n tf he

I
v

HOSPITAL NOTES

* *

C

a

�Even in g Herald

DICK WEST

IU IN MMN)
300 N. FRENCH A V E.. SANFORD. FLA . 32771
Are* Code 309-322-2811 or 831-0993
Wednesday, February 13, 19I5-4A
Wayne D. Doyls, PwblUhtr
Tfwmat OtarSans, Managing Editor
Malvin Adkint, Advert! ting Dir actor
Home Drllvrry: Week, SI 10: Month. *4.75; 3 Month*.
814.2ft*. 0 Month*. *27.00: Year. *51 00. Hy Mall: Wrek.
•I 50. Month. Sfl &lt;»; 3 Month*. *18 00:8 Month*. *32 50;
Yror. SfiO 00

Galloping
Trado Gap
11 cam e a* no surprise w hen the Com m erce
Departm ent announced recently that the U .S .
trade deficit for 1984 added up to $123.3
billion, nearly double the $69 billion gap In
1983 and roughly triple the levels In several
previous years. Th o se num bers had been
falling into place for m onths, and n o thin g has
occurred, either In term s of governm ent
policy o r global trade patterns, to change the
forbidding trend. W h a t's mos d ism ayin g Is
that, barring action to reduce dram atically
..............................
u d f j d f t 'deficit, no com bination of
the
federal budget
11
other actions Is 1
likely
to do m uch to arrest the
deterioration.
T h e budget deficit creates excessive de­
m a n d for borrow ed funds, m a in ly from
governm ent; that keeps Interest rates u n a c­
ceptably high, a nd those rates attract foreign
funds to this co u n try, w h ich has the effect of
k e e p i n g th e d o l l a r o v e r v a l u e d . T h e
overvalued dollar prices a huge segm ent of
U.S.-produced goods out of w orld m arkets,
resulting not o n ly In the staggering trade
deficit but in forcing U .S . corporations to lay
fa
off workers In the face
of com petition from
cheaper foreign
[n goods and , in
In m a n y cases, to
transfer produ
uctlon operations abroad. T h e
com bined result for w o rk in g A m ericans la the
loss of hundreds of thousands of Jobs, w ith
the prospect of worse to come.
Most of those Involved In the form ulation of
U .S . trade policy are In general agreement on
these cause-and-effect relationships, but the
adm inistration’s Intransigence over budget
priorities Is. In effect, holding the nation's
e co n o m ic health hostage to the age-old
political debate over g u n s and butter. If this
im passe isn't resolved soon, the dam age
caused by an ever-grow ing foreign trade
im balance — w h ich already has transformed
this co u n try from a creditor to a debtor nation
— could be far greater In the long ru n than,
say, holding the gro w th In defense spending
to a m ore modest level than the W hite House
a n d the Pentagon are dem anding.
More can be done beyond budget-cutting.
T h e adm inistration and Congress together
can develop a m ore coherent trade policy to
replace the existing charade w hereby Up
service is routinely paid o free trade even as
one Industry after another wins some form of
protection from the adm inistration. Som e­
tim es Interim protection Is called for, but
w h e n it's been granted It rarely has been tied,
as It should be. to specific requirem ents that
the Industry in question modernize.
A fundamental problem Is that Interna­
tional trade tru ly la International, whereas
econom ic policies of national governm ents
are made too often w ith little allowance for
that fact. No satisfactory solution can be
re a c h e d w ith o u t a n o th e r p o u n d of
m ultilateral negotiations. Most pressing for
this country, how ever, is the need to narrow
the deficit gap. T h e Reagan adm inistration
could spare this co u n try a great deal of
dam age — to Us econom y and to the social
cohesion on w hich so m u ch else depends —
b y w o rk in g w ith Congress to begin doing that
Im m ediately. T h a t w ould buy far m ore time
and create far leas International III than any
a m o u n t of patchwork protectionism.

«

P le a s e W rite
Le tte rs to tbs editor are welcome for
publication. A ll le tte rs m ust bo signed and
Include a m ailing address and, if possible, a
telephone num ber. T h e Evening H erald
reserves the rig h t to edit letters to avoid
libel sod to accommodate space.

Vacuuming 405 Might Be Career-W ise
W A SH IN G TO N (UPI) — A couple of university
economists have predicted that the occupational
skills most in demand at about the time of
commencement exercises this spring will be at
the Janitorial level.
Computer programming and other high-tech
Jobs aren't even a distant second, they say.
Behind Janitors come cashiers, secretaries, office
clerks and sales personnel.
I can't predict how accurate this forecast,
published In Omni magazine, might be but I
assume our educational Institutions already are
adjusting their curricula accordingly.
Here are a few courses that might be added to
the new college catalogs that will be coming out
this year:
Sweeping 203 — A class in sophomoric floor
cleaning for which freshman sweeping or two
years of high school sweeping are prerequisites.
Mopping 314 — Recommended to follow at

AN THON Y HARRIGAN

Britain
Called
Obsolete
LONDON — The most Important
message to be received by the
British public In many years was
voiced here recently by a 90-yearold member of the House of Lords.
Harold Macm illan, the E srl of
Stockton who served as prime
minister of Britain In the early
1960s.
In an address on the first day
during which their lordships were
on television, the Earl summoned
his countrymen to take a leadership
role in the third Industrial revolu­
tion — the revolution based on
computers and robots. He said that
Britain today Is an "obsolete"
country that Is attractive to tourists.
In an amazingly candid statement,
he said "You can see more modem
forms of industrial production In
Taiwan and South Korea than you
see In England." He called on
Britons to make the right decisions,
saying that there is a real danger
that it will "sink slowly and majes­
tically like a great ship."
It's true, of course, that as prime
minister, Harold Macmillan made
many mistakes. But that should not
be allowed to obscure the wisdom of
his remarks In 1985.
That the British are .unwilling to
face up to the danger of the country
becoming obsolete la evidence of
Ingrained social altitudes that are
holding them back. The truth is that
they have a way of life which is cozy
and comfortable, albeit somewhat
threadbare, but they don't want to
change. They don't want lo move
away from a largely static society.
The reluctance to change la not
limited to militant union miners
who Insist on permanent working of
uneconomic coal pits. The Intellec­
tual supporters of Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher have equally
rigid attitudes. They are Inclined to
see the problems of Britain as
lim ite d to fa u lty go vern m en t
pollclca In the socialist past. They
neglect basic societal problems,
which Include a reluctance to work
as hard aa Americans and Japanese.
The Thatcherttes. moreover, place
excessive reliance on monetarist
theory and don't seem lo appreciate
the neceaalty of rebuilding national
unity and forging new national
goals.
Mr*. Thatcher has done some
very good things. Her moat impor­
tant achievement has been to stand
up to the arrogant union leaders.
Her vision needs to be widened now.
however. Unemployment In Britain
remains a festering sore. It must be
addressed by a Conservative gov­
ernment. not with more handouts,
however.
If the British people and their
leaders were only to listen to and act
on the Earl of Stockton's advice,
they would begin tp get their
country moving again and restored
to the high place which U occupied
In the world In the past. It's not too
late for Britain. Very soon, it may
be, however.

BERRY* WORLD

least one semester of sweeping. If mopping Is
completed before sweeping, there could be a lot
of unnecessary dust baits.
Dusting 404 — Available only to seniors who
have completed courses In sweeping and
mopping and need the credits to graduate.
Includes instruction In distinguishing between
oily rags and feather dusters.
Vacuuming 405 — For advanced students
only. Enrollees will study proper uses of electric
vacuum cleaners and other power appliances.
Bathroom Scrubbing 117 — A complete
course in the rudiments of bathroom cleaning.
Including on-the-job training in gymnasium rest
rooms after basketball games. Beginners will be
taught the best way to clean shower stalls, wash
basins and toilet bowls.
Money-Changing 313 — Required of all
accounting majors and recommended for any­
one Intending to make a career of cashiering.

How PIP
TOU GOT

iNHeRe?

Course Includes practice on new digital cash
registers, plus Instruction in the operation of
credit card machines.
Lost-and-Found 210 — Not required but
highly recommended as an-elective for students
planning to apply for post-graduate Jobs In
department stores.
Filing 215 — Although each Individual
company has Its own filing system, this course
will familiarize students with various types of
file cabinets and drawers and acquaint them
with alphabetical folders.
Exchanges 309 — Recommended for students
who have completed Lost-and-Found 210 and
must master art of post-holiday gift exchanges.
Trash-Bagging 711 — For post-graduate
students desiring a refresher course In disposing
of trash In plastic bags, particularly alumni
employed in cleanup crews at large outdoor
municipal stadiums.

I wag JugT W^NPeRiNG aROMP
aNP SoMe Guv ON VoUR traFP
T k a o e p d o e s w it h M e-

WILLIAM RUSHER

Call It Networking
NEW YORK INEA) - The current - pleading Its causes; and slowly but
steadily young conservative (ournalnear-total moral and political col­
Isis and academicians. In growing
lapse of liberalism has presented
numbers that cannot be resisted
c o n s e rv a tiv e s w ith m ore o p ­
forever, are entering and rising
portunities than they are quite
through those long-hostile ranks."
prepared to handle. It's a little like
entering the si Ill-smoking ruins of
Oncological next step for Ameri­
the capital city *of a tenacious
can conservatives IS to look*abroad;
adversary who has at last buckled
to find and cement alliances with
and fled.
their counterparts In Europe. Asia.
There is, for one thing, plenty of
Latin America and elsewhere. The
mopplng-up to do. That handsome
liberals preceded us at this game by
Greek-revlval building over there,
at least 35 years, and It shows. The
for example, with the words "Equal
New Y o r k b u re a u of A a u h l
Justice U nder L a w " over the
Shlmbun. Japan's largest liberal
portico. Is still largely held by
dally newspaper, la In the West 43rd
snipers who will have lo be rooted
Street office building of The New
out one by one. And of course the
York T im e s ; and. with fitting
whole southern wing of the Capitol
symmetry,
the Tokyo bureau of the
Is still under enemy control.
Tlmea Is located In Asahi'a shiny
Moreover, all over the country the
new office building near the Olnza.
foe has pulled back his forces Into
That, my friends, la what la called
previously prepared fortresses —
"networking."
notably the mrdla. the universities
and the foundations — and Is ready
Happily, steps ore underway to
to withstand a long siege. At 8:30 on
introduce the world's numerous
the m o r n in g after P re sid e n t
conservatives to one another at lost,
Reagan's Stale of the Union address
and to give the m o v e m e n t's
to Congress, the lead item on the
spokesmen In other countries the
news program of W QXR ("the radio
benefit of the very considerable
station of Th e New York Timea")
experience of the American sub­
was what T ip O'Neill had to say
species In everything from freeabout it. Clearly, the liberals are in
market theory lo direct-mall tech­
no mood to surrender.
niques and television campaigning.
But the conservative movement In
the United States It muscular,
T h e H erita ge Foundation has
self-aware and positively bursting
established close contacts with Brit­
with energy and new ideas, and It Is
ish con se rvatives: the n e w ly possible to feel rationally optimistic
founded International Policy Forum,
about its chances of assuming full
headed by Morion Blackwell, re­
national leadership. Aa I wrote in
cently Invited a number of Euro­
my book "Th e Rise of the Right"
pean and Latin American con­
(published by Morrow last May):
servative activists to Us first
"ft has numerous candidates for
Washington meeting; and there ore
office eager to expound Its views; it
oilier promising Initiatives afoot sa
has seasoned political managers
well.
ready to manage their campaigns; it
has formidable research Institutions
From here on out. our liberal
developing U s . analyses of every
f r J c n d a w i l l d is c o v e r t h a t
conceivable Issue; It has 'public
"networking" is a game at which
Interest' lawyers testing Its conten­
two can play. The Implications or
tions In the courts; It has colum­
that for such Issues as Mr. Reagan's
nists. radio and television commen­ S.D.I. I “Star Ware") are highly
tators. and authors of all sorts.
encouraging.

ROBERT WALTERS

There
He Goes
-Again
W ASHINGTON (NEAJ - There he
goes again.
On four separate occasions In
recent weeks — his Inaugural
address, his economic message, his
budget message and his State of the
Union address — President Reagan
has sought lo euchre the citizenry
Into believing that:
— A rhetorical appeal for s
' balanced budget" amendment to
the Constitution is an adequate
substitute for actually crafting a
balanced budget.
— He has. as he has repeatedly
promlaed. reduced governm ent
spending.
— Economic growth somehow
will allow the nation to spend Its
way out of chronic federal deficits.
Some facts: Before Reagan wsa
elected president In 1980. the feder­
al government's budget had never
exceeded 8580 billion. Since he haa
been In office, that budget has never
been leas than I860 billion.
During every year of Reagan's
leadership, the budget has grown.
When Reagan moved Into the
White Houae. the government was
spending an average of 81.8 billion
every day of the year. Including
weekends and holidays. When he
moves out, those average dally
outlays will be 8 3 .1 billion
When Reagan took office, the
national debt — the accumulated
total of more than 200 years of
relatively manageable annua) defi­
cits — was Just under 81 trillion.
When he leaves office, the national
debt will total 82.8 trillion.
Next year, the debt will pass the
82 trillton mark, giving Reagan the
dubious distinction of having ac­
complished In only five years what
all previous presidents required two
centuries to achieve — adding $1
trillion to federal government's out­
standing debt.
The president prefers to blame
Congress, especially the Democratlc-controlled House, for profligate
spending, fiscal irresponsibility and
escalating annual deficits.
But every year, he has an oppor­
tunity to fashion a budget and
resent it to Congress before any
•glslator has an opportunity to
meddle In the process — and he has
consistently failed to come even
close to s balanced budget.

E

Finally, there's the bizarre idea
that economic growth will resolve
all of the problems associated with
the government's structural debt
This quaint notion Is embraced only
by s dwindling band of "supply
side" fanatics and not supported by
any of the White House's economic
projections.
Notwithstanding his misleading
rhetoric, Reagan may Indeed un­
derstand precisely what he Is doing;
By burdening the government with
massive long-term debt, be la virtu­
ally aaeurlng that spending on the
domestic social programs he abhors
will continue to shrivel long after he
leaves office.

JACK ANDERSON

Colombia Tougher O n Dope Traffic

“...Hey, was the guy who painted this sucker s
weirdo or whstt..."

its

*# /•

W A S H IN G TO N - Th e United
States haa had UUle success enlist­
ing the govern m enu of nareoticsproduclng countries In the fight
against die International dope traf­
fic. These countries are terrified
their economies might collapse if
the drug dealers are stopped.
Now there's a faint glimmer of
hope that ons of the worst offenders
In this hemisphere — Colombia — la
beginning to realize that the eco­
nomic benefits of the dope trade
may not be worth the political
instability. Th is possible change of
attitude le reported In confidential
State Department cables seen by
m y associate Donald Goldberg.
ambia to the source of a large
of the cocaine that to smugfftod into this country. For years. the
United States haa been trying to get

J

the Colombian government to crack
down on growers, processors and
shippers, who have been operating
with virtual Impunity In Colombia.
As recently aa tost year, the
Colombians were clearly not en­
thusiastic about the anti-drug war.
Drug Enforcement Administration
officials p rivately told several
members of Congress that D S A ’s
offices In Bogota were actually being
bugged by the government.
But the ugly turn of events In the
year haa apparently been an
the government of
it Beltoario Bctancur. Not
only have U.S. diplomats and drug
agents been threatened, causing the
Stats Department to recall aoasa for

the d ru g dealers. B c ta n c u r's
minister of Justice was one of (he
victims.
But perhaps most important was
Bctancur's realization that Col­
ombia realty doesn't reap much
economic benefit from the dope
traffic. The big money to made after
the dope leaves Colombia.
‘Trcsid cn t Bctancur dismissed
the theory of some people that drug
money to beneficial to Colombia
because of Its external debt." one
cable reports on a conversation with
Bctancur. "Moat of the drug money,
he said, does not come to Colombia,
but rem ains In the U .S . O n ly
funds are returned to
ibta by the traffickers. "

.

, s m 's .S S Z J S S L t l

of assassins believed to be

group of such supposed probity that

It has escaped attention In U.S. law
enforcement circles: big banka.
"The government of Colombia, said
Bctancur. to seeking ways to detect
this money and to seize It." the
cable stated, "but he added that
International banks in the
U.S. and Europe stood at the margin
of the la w in a c c e p tin g the
enormous profits of the drug trade."
The clincher for Bctancur, appar­
ently. was the discovery of dose ties
between drug dealers and left-wing
guerrilla groups.
Bctancur has asked the Reagan
administration for mure patre
helicopters and for i
from U.S.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Fob. II. lf tl— SA

Deputies Derail Sale Of Stolen Track Ties
A 20-year-old Apopka man has
b « n charged wiih grand theft in
connection with the theft of
railroad ties from an abandoned
S e a b o a rd R a ilro a d bed In
Seminole County.
Sem inole C ounty sh e riffs
deputies report arresting the
suspect w ho allegedly took
about 70 ties, some of which
were reportedly sold to A A A
N ursery, county Road 427,
Longwood. a sheriffs report
said.
The ties are valued at 910
each and the suspect had 12 In
his truck when he was arrested
on county Road 427 at Marvin
Avenue. Longwood at 12:20
p.m. Monday, the report said.
Larry Dee Suggs. 20. of 138 S.
Thompson Road was charged In
the case and released on 83.000
bond. He is scheduled to appear
in court Mar. 4.
T R A F F IC (STOP P O T
A Sanford couple stopped by
A lta m o n te S p rin g s p o lice
because the temporary tag for
their vehicle was not visible has
been charged with possession of
under 20 grams of marijuana
after police reportedly found
small quantities of what ap­
peared, to be pot In their car.
Th e male driver agreed to a
police search of the car after
police had spotted a marijuana
cigarette on the floor of the
vehicle, a police report said.
In the search, an additional
small quantity of the substance
was reportedly found. The two
occupants of the vehicle were
charged at 3:12 a.m. Saturday,
at the Hotline Bottle Club, state
Road 436, Altamonte Springs.
Charged and released without
posting bond were Ray S. Littles.
20. and Denise Marsell Howard.
18. both of 1810 Summerlin
Ave. Both are scheduled to
appear In court Feb. 21.
C O N S T R U C T IO N P R O W L E R
A man nabbed by a sheriffs
deputy at a construction site
frequently hit by burglars has
been charged with prowling,
obstruction by false Information
and possession of marijuana and
drug paraphernalia.
S h e r if f s S g t. M a rty L in nenkugel reported spotting the
man enter Springs Landing at
about 8 p .m . S u n d a y and
approach a house under con­
struction.
The man told Ltnnenkugel he
was Just walking and when
asked for Identification produced
none, but reportedly gave the
officer whal he later determined
to be a false name, a sheriff's
report said.
The man reportedly said he
worked In the area as a bricklay­
er. but could not name hls
employer. Ltnnenkugel reported
charging the man with prowling
In the area which Is a frequent
target for thieves.
W h e n th e s u s p e c t w as
searched, a bag of what ap­
peared to be pot. a pipe and 12
blue capaules were found in hls
possession. When the suspect
was booked Into Jail It was
delermlned he had Inllally given
a false name, a sheriff's report
said.
Donald Scott Jordan. 22. listed
as a transient on his arrest
report, was arrested at 8:24 p.m.
Sunday. He was being held In
Ueu of 8500 bond.
A 21-year-old Plymouth man
charged w ith posaeaalon of
m a riju a n a and drug
paraphanalla has been released
on 8300 bond.
A sheriff's deputy reported
arresting the man after noticing
a bulge In hls pants pocket while
questioning him and two other
men who were on state Road 46
at the Weklve Bridge in Pools,
around 9 p.m. Saturday.
Th e deputy asked the man to
em pty hta pockets and de­
lermlned they held a brass pipe
full of pot and a plastic bag of
what appeared to be marijuana,
a sheriff's report said.
Joe Oaria. waa charged In the
M ILT

A n ll« y e a r * o ld S o u th
rmlnole County girl reported to
teriffs Investigators
“
sheriff's
she waa
sexually assaulted by a boy
called "Ronnie'* at about 7:45
p.m. Sunday.
The Winter Park gtrl said she
answered her front door and waa
told by a boy there that a friend
across the street wanted to aee
her. When she stepped outside
hoy and ''Rooixls'' began
chasing her and pulled her tolhe
ground! a sheriff's report said.
The boy who lured her out of
her home stepped aside and
"Koruue” forced her to perform
oral sea. the report m kL He told
her not to tell anyone then
released her. She ran borne, the
report said.

Airport Boulevard, was arrested
at 12:35 a.m. Sunday. He has
been released on 913.000 bond
and Is scheduled to appear In
court Feb. 25

A ction Roports
★Fires
A Courfs
* Police Be a l
stopped In the parking lot of
Carlo's Restaurant. 1008 French
Ave.. Sanford, by Michael D.
Yales. 25. of Deltona. Yates, who
was "shakey” and had cuts and
bruises from falls he took as he
reportedly ran from the suspect
who eras pursuing him from The
Bam, 1200 S. French Ave., told
police the man was going to
shoot him w ith a shotgun.
Assistant Sanford Police Chief
Herb Shea said.
A police report did not say
what started the dispute be­
tween the two men.
An officer who heard a police
broadcast describing the sus­
pect's car spotted the car on
Airport Boulevard and followed
the vehicle to 3402 Hibiscus
Ave.. where the suspect stopped.
The officer reported finding a
12-gauge, pump shotgun with
five shells in Its magazine in the
suspect’s car, a police report
said.
Jeffrey Lynn Lackey, of 107

NO R ID E L E A D S T O J A I L
A St. Cloud woman who re­
portedly created a disturbance
b y r e f u s i n g to le t h e r
wheelchair-bound husband Into
their car for a return trip from an
Altamonte Springs bar has been
charged with disorderly conduct
and resisting arrest with vio­
lence.
Altamonte Springs police re­
port responding to a domestic
dispute call at the Hotline Bottle
Club, state Road 436, Altamonte
Springs, at about 5:30 a.m.
Sunday.
They reported finding Scott
Morrell of St. Cloud In a dispute
with his wife who would not let
the handicapped man Into their
car. Police were unable to calm
the woman and Morrell refused
to take a cab home.
After several attempts to get
the suspect to stop cursing and
let Morrell Into the vehicle,
police said the woman began
flailing her arms and continued
to curse.
She was charged with disor­
derly conduct and the resisting
arrest with violence charge eras

added after she allegedly tried to
kick a window out of a police car
and struggled with officers as
they transported her to Jail, a
police report said.
Susan Clemons Morrell. 40.
was arrested at 5:54 a.m. Sun­
day. She has been released on
85.000 bond and Is scheduled to
appear In court Feb. 21.

-J e a n F. Vogle. 25. of 1477
state Road 427. Longwood. at
2:03 a.m. Saturday, after he was
spotted driving a vehicle with an
expired license tag on U.S.
Highway 17-92. Casselberry.

The Haircutting Station

DU1 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:
— Eric James Bradley. 21. of
223B Sharon Drive. Altamonte
Springs, was arrested at 10 a.m.
Saturday by Altamonte Springs
police on Interstate 4. Altamonte
Springs.
— Richard Darrell Stokes. 29. of
1013 Marebella Drive. Winter
Park, at 4:20 a.m. Saturday at
O r le n t a P la z a . A lta m o n te
Springs, after police found him
asleep In hls parked car. with
engine running and headlights
shining Into a store.
— John Patrick CarToll, 19. of
1287 Laura St.. Casselberry, at
2:37 a.m. Saturday on state
Road 436. after an Altamonte
Springs policeman signaled him
to dtm hls car's headlights and
he did n 't

— James Kenyon Reamer. 43, of
1500 French Ave.. Sanford, at
2:47 a.m. Monday after he was
seen d riv in g south In the
n o r t h b o u n d la n e of U .S .
Highway 17-92. Lake Mary.

W ELCO M ES

★ BARBARA PRIBISH ★
INTRODUCTION SPECIAL
•S.tB SHAMPOO/SET or BLOWDRY
WHS Barters ONLY

THE HAIRCUTTING
STATION
323-7212

fc'rplm 2 23H3
ir -f t I IA K I MARY SI VO.
SANfORD. FI
(Cloia I s Winn Dial*)

HOUR}
Thurt.-Frl.-Sol.
S •S

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY 8 A.M. • 5 P.M.

M .P .O .
321-2398
mas eooo
8 . iT
i T 8O
n aR
.it E
C H E E__________
S E nS
In Rear O t Village Flee Merkel

321-2398

1800 F R E N C H AVE.
CMJY-CHUNK ONLY

LONGHORN

CHEESE

______ S A N F O R D F L A .
M FM TU - CNUW ONLY

BIG EYE
SWISS
CHEESE

$2 l9

Presidents’ Day Sale
S ale 3.38
to 10.49

Lei them play the blues In Plain
Fochets* and Big Mac* jeans of pure
cotton or cotton/polyester denim. Plus
solid end striped Superwear* tops of
Decron* polyeiter/cotton or cotton/
poiyeeter. TWIN pants of polyester/
cotton.
Clockwise from lop left:
Dirts' Super wear* top. Reg. $9 Sale 8.78
Mesh tank top. Reg. 4.50 Sate ) . U
Plain Pockets* Capri.
n*g. 13.99 tat# 10.41
Boy*' Superwsar* shirt.
R*g. 7.50 Sal* $8
Plain Pocket** Jeans, Reg. $13 Sale 8.78
Little girts' Superwsar* top,
R*g. $7 Sale B.1S
Superwear* twill pants,
Reg. $11 tele 828
Little boys' Superwear* top,
Beg 7.90 S*4e $8
Big Mac* cotton/polyester jeans,
Only 6.99

Sale 12.99 and 1799

Motion* and moral Pretty polyastar blouses and pints.
Misses' Motione blouse. Reg. S24 Sole 1188
Misses' Motion* pint, Reg. $16 Sale 12.88
Misses' career blouse. Reg. $21 Sale 17.18
Misses' tulip-neck blouse. Reg. $22 Sale 17.88
Misses' luck-front or tie blouse. Orlg. $29 8alo 17.88
Additional stylse in pelile and large sizes at aimltar savings.

Save on all tops, bottoms and PJs lor
your lima onaa. Shown hara. 2-placa
mash PJ sat of polyaatar knit. And a
short slaava top and twill pants ol
polyaatar/cotton. Infants' and toddlars'
alias.
Pag. 8*M
PJ sat
fiK
Short slaava top ................. . . I S 4.M
Twill pants...............................IS %M
11” plush clown with cloth body. I M S

Sportswear
Saving For Men
Royal A ir

M en’s Denim Days
Plain Pocket®
Denim

Polyester Cotton
Shirt
Reg. *16 S a le 1 1 "

S a le 1 2 **

Lee*

Belted Slack

Prewashed
R e g .'24

Choice of Colors
Reg. *24

Sale
17”

Sale 18”

C o n tin e n ta ls
J . T . B o e k e tt
In vlsa bo lt™
Reg. *35

Sale *28

f ^

Sava now on all Ms casual and dress
hosiery. Find classy srgyles. heathers
and solids. Mostol Orion escrytic/nylon
blends.
Mens sizes
Reg. Sate
Wool blend argyle............ .4.75 188
Acrylic blend argyle.........
2.99
Stoguard* cushion sole. . . .2.00 1.88

tor* Hours
Mon. *8at

«&lt;■ ^ / . ‘f

�V*S»►% **•-*•**'4

*»

6A—Iv u to j HorsM, SowtocB, FI. WsdnosNsy, Fab. II, in i

V IL L A G E 3235454
FLEA M ARKET

323-5454

G reen Cuisine

SANFORD’S FIR ST AND ONLY

Iguanas Studied A s Significant Food Source
■ y Matfalalaa Jacobs
Sm ithsonian New s Sanrlca
In ihe highlands of Peru.
Bolivia. Colombia and Ecuador,
thousands of campeslnos nit
down every night to a tasty
dinner of deep-fried, home­
grown guinea pig.
In parts of Venezuela, the
natives often enjoy a traditional
dish of black beans, rice, plainta in s and m e a t fro m the
capybara — a huge (up to 100
poundsl, water-dwelling rodent
raised on ranches and harvested
like cattle.
And, In Panama, peasants and
farmers sometimes make a meal
of Iguana stew — that Is, when
they can find this large leafeating lizard.
Iguanaa, for centuries sought
after for their meat and eggs,
have dwindled drastically In
number or disappeared In many
parts of Central and South
Amelrca. Hunger la at the root of
their demlae. T o supply food to
an ever-growing population, the
n a t i v e s ha ve not o nl y
overhunted Ihe animals but
have destroyed much of the
Iguana’s habitat — irreplaceable
tropical forest — to make way for
farms and rangeland.
Now, however, thanks to an
Innovative research and man­
agement project underway In
Panama, Iguanaa may soon be
rejoining the smorgasbord of
unconventional animals pro­
viding nutritious food for mil­
lions of protein-starved people in
Latin America.
Th e project la aimed al In­
creasing wild Iguana populations
and establishing methods to
raise Iguanaa on "ranches" or
farms, either on a small or large
scale. In both cases, a percent­
age of the animals would be
"harvested" each year for food.
Commercial production and
use of Iguanaa are still a decade
away, says Dr. Dagmar Werner,
a biologist and project leader at
the Smithsonian Tropical Re­
search Institute In Panama. But
for the first time ever, re­
searchers there have developed a
method of artificially Incubating
and hatching Iguana eggs with
virtually 100 percent success. In
the process, hundreds of Iguana
eggs have been hatched — "a
definite breakthrough In Iguana
management,"
says^

In the past year, Werner and
her assistants also have raised
hundreds of wild-bom iguana
hatchlings In captivity. With
little more than half a square
yard of living space per animal,
the Iguanas have grown as fast
or faster than their wild coun­
terparts. Unlike their wild kin,
w h ich suffer a 90 percent
mortality rate in their first year
of life from birds, carnivorous
lizards and other creatures, the
captive-raised Iguanas — pro­
tected from predators — have
had nearly a 100 perrenl surviv­
al rate. This lends further sup­
port to the feasibility of ranching
and repopulation plans.
Iguanaa. specifically the green
iguana scientifically known as
Iguana iguana, may very well be
Ideal animals for such foodproducing schemes. An Impor­
ta n t food source In L a tin
America since prehistoric time.
Iguanas are still prized as game
animals by the campesinos who
typically cook the meat — It
tastes somewhat like chicken —
In a heavily spiced stew. Also
considered delicacies are Iguana
eggs; boiled In sail water for
preservation, the eggs are re­
putedly an aphrodisiac and cure
for various ailments.
O n e of the Ig u a n a 's u n ­
disputed virtues Is found In its
choice of diet. The reptiles are
herbivorous, preferring leaves In
the treetops that other animals
cannot readily reach and digest.
A special digestive system
enables Iguanas to convert this
vegetation Into h igh -qu ality
protein with an efficiency com­
parable to that of cattle.
Iguanas also hrerd prnllflrally
during their average 10-year
lifespan. After reaching sexual
maturity at about three years of
age. females lay one large clutch
of eggs each year — 30 to 40
eggs on the average. Moreover,
the lizards, which do not carry
human diseases, are especially
suited to captive management:
Although iguanas are often uggresalve In Ihe wild, they have
been kept In capltlvlty in high
densities without problems.
"Less than 20 years ago. very
little was known about the grren
iguana." says Dr. A. Stanley
R a n d , a b io lo g is t at Ih e
Smithsonian Tropical Research

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The green Iguana, known scientifically as Iguana Iguana, has
been sought for centuries In Latin Am erica for Its meat and
Institute. About 16 years ago,
Rand and a series of visiting
scientists and students began
studying the social system, re­
productive and mating haibts
and ecology of Iguanas.
They have focused their at­
tention on a nesting site, Slothln
Island, a tiny islet adjacent to
Barro Colorado Island, the
Smithsonian's 3.600-acre nature
preserve In the Panama Canal.,
Kuril February, about u hundred
female Iguanas swim across I hr
narrow channel linking Slothla
and Harro Colorado Islands,
slaying only long enough to dig
complex burrows and lay their
c|W»
Rand was Initially drawn to
Iguanas because of their com­
plicated and Interesti ng
lifestyles. "But wc were ulso
aware that their numbers were
decreasing at nil alarming rate."
he recalls. "If wc were ever to
work out an Intelligent man­
agement plan, a conservation
plan, wr needed lo know how
fast these animals grow, how
long they live and so forth,
before w r could think about
ranching them or 'cropping'
them,"

Are You Thinking of Upgrodlng
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Out of the wealth of data on
Iguanas grew the current man­
agement effort. If Is also a
conservation project: One of Its
major goals Is restoring Iguanas
lo arras were I hey have been
depleted. The project Is p u l of u
larger Sm ithsonian activity
a im e d at In c re a s in g food
supplies In L u tln A m e rica
without destroying Ihe tropica*
forests to provide farmland or
rangeland. T h e program Is
supported by Ihe W. Allon Jones
Foundation In collaboration with
Panamanian Institutions.

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Snafu Brings Card Tables To Pennsylvania

Loophole In Law Is Gamblers' Ace In The Hole
HARRISBURG. Pa. (UPI) - Poker
and blackjack tables have been pop­
ping up In ban. restaurants and hotels
across Pennsylvania — to the embar­
rassment of legislators who. In rub­
ber-stamping a bill last year, unknow.
Ingly paved the way for casino-type
gambling.
Now. they have Irled to undo their
handiwork.
The Senate on Jan. 30 approved
legislation repealing the law and
forwarded the bill to the House. Some
form of the legislation could be on Gov.
Dick Thornburgh's desk before the end

of the wetk.
But some people feel lawmakers
should rethink the whole business.
Including Ron Lynch, owner of the
VIP. a favorite watering-hole for state
government workers across the street
from the Capitol.
His ts one of many bars across the
state that now features green-felt card
tables for poker and blackjack.
"I don't want to hurt anybody's
feelings over there." says Lynch. "I
Just want them to come over and take
a look at what they have done before
shutting It down. The whole thing

could work."
Jesse Reltenbach. a real-estate
broker who plays In blackjack-card
tournaments at the nightclub adds: "I
think It's great. What do you want to
play? Trivia?"
At the VIP. players pay entry fees
ranging from s io to *100 for a
blackjack tournament and receive a
specific number of chips. The person
with the most chips after ten hands
wins.
The law allowing liquor licensees to
sponsor and host the tournaments was
passed by the Legislature and signed

Attorney Says
Cordless Phones
Damage Hearing
LOS A N G E L E S (UPI) - The
maker of certain types of cord­
less telephones has
been
slapped with a S50 million class
action suit claim ing phones
which ring through the earpiece
caused permanent hearing lo u
to thousands of people.
"W e don’t even know the
entire scope of the problem ...
how many people have been
Injured. A Judge la going to have
to determine that." attorney
Steven G. Schumaier of St. Louis
said during a ncw i conference
Monday.
Schumaier said the suit was
filed In U.S. District Court In St.
Louts, but he announced It In
Los Angeles because the city has
the largest concentration of cor­
dless phones In the country.
The suit was filed against
Unlden Corp. of America, the
Huntington Beach, Calif., parent
of Unlden of Japan and Unlden
of Taiw an, which make the
phones. It charges the sharp
sound produced In the earpiece
of cordless phones can "cut Into
the ear like a machete.”
He said the unite produced a

by Thornburgh last spring.
But the Impact of the law wasn't
publicly known unill Jan. 2 when
Philadelphia District Attorney Edward
Rendell. a Democratic gubernatorial
hopeful, called a news conference to
announce his discovery of the law.
The law reads that a liquor licensee
can hold "a dart, billiard, bowling.
ahulTleboard. rings or card tournament
or contest without having to obtain
any permits therefor."
The law is a small section of a bill
that originally was designed only to
extend the hours for Sunday liquor

In

IJ Z J a J k jX jtze scd .
The
Shopper^
Center

140-declble sound "equal to a Jet
engine two feet away from you
or a firecracker going o(T In your
ear."
The suit asks for unspecified
medical damages for anyone
ever Injured by the phones, and
•50 million In punitive damages.
Schumaier said the suit only
names Unlden because It Is one
of the largest manufacturers and
marketers of the devices, which
have the ringing mechanism In
the earpiece rather than tn the
base. The suit, however, could
be expanded later to Include
other Arms.
Schumaier won a similar case
last October In federal court
against Unlden.
Moat cordless phones. Includ­
in g U n l d e n ’ s. h a v e been
modified to tone down the sound
of the ringing. Schumaier ad­
mitted. "But much damage has
already been done.”
He also said even the modified
tone can also cause Injury.
No Unlden spokesman was
available Monday to respond to
the suit.

Orbital Outhouse
Costs $1 Million
tins* also spesyed-dried waste
Into the cabin.
"O n a number of missions
after a couple of days the
spreaders and spinners slowed
down or little things went
wrong," spokesman Dave Alter
said Monday.
Astronauts still use the same
commode, which forces waate to
the bottom with air. but they
now place a bag Inside for each
use.
"When It's over with, (the
astronaut) seals the bog ... puts
It In another bag and stores It,"
Alter said.
"Th e complexity la no longer
necessary for answering one of
” nature's calls.” he said.

HOUSTON (UPI) - Going to
the bathroom In space is no
simple matter, but scientists
have found a way to fix some of
the technical problems encoun­
tered on earlier shuttle missions.
Orbiting bathroom facilities
were oAcn out of order on earlier
flights.
"We tried to get loo fancy."
shuttle official Dan Germany
said of the original toilet, a $12
million design that includes a
commode and a small lavatory
buUl Into the side of the galley.
Each toilet unit cost I I million.
In the original system, a motor
and prongs broke up the waate
and sprayed It around the sides
of the bowl. Unfortunately, the

sales so resorts In the Pocono Moun­
tains could have champagne brunches.
The tournament section was added
at the request of lobbyists seeking to
sponsor darts, beer and billiards con­
tests on the premises of liq u o r
licensees.
Sen. Frank O'Connell. R -Lu ie m r.
the sponsor of the bill, said he also
Included cards in the law because he
wanted to legalize games such as
bridge and pitch.
W ith o u t a n y m e n tio n of the
tournament section, the legislation
sailed through the Senate.

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SPORTS
Tribe Harasses
Brooks, Howell

Hm«M H M I | Tmhmv VtacaM

Seminole's Craig Walker (54) draws light coverage from
Lake Howell's Terry Gammons (35) as Jam es Rouse, left,

tries to break the Hawk prats. House tired to the ball to a
breaking Rod Alexander, right, who moved the ball up court.

B v S im Cook
Herald Sp o rts editor
When four Seminole players
Individually o u lic o rc Efrem
Brooks, there’s no need to glance
at the scoreboard. Just chalk up
another one for the Fighting
Semlnoles over the Lake Howell
Silver Hawks.
The Tribe put four players In
double figures Tuesday night
and Brooks, the county’s leading
scorer, m anaged Just eight
points as Seminole blew away
the Hawks in the second half cn
route to a 62-47 victory before
150 fans In Five Star Conference
basketball at Seminole High
School.
"W e shot as cold as the
weather." said Lake Howell
coach and former Crooms High
standout Greg Robinson. “ Efrem
Just has a tough time against
Seminole. (James) Rouse and
(Kenny) Gordon are bigger than
Brooks and they play him a lot
more aggressively.
"They harass him .”
The harrassment started early
as Brooks could hit Just 1 of 7
first-half shout. Usually a good
foul shooter. Brooks also missed
his only two free throw attempts
and went Into halftime with Just
one bucket.
Despite Brooks’ slow start, the
Tribe was worse, missing five

Basketball
shots In a row during the Bret
quarter as Lake Howell Jumped
to a 6-2 lead behind buckets
from 6-3 Fred Hicks, point guard
Scott Anderton and Brooks.
But the four ’Notes In double
figures — Gordon 113}. Rod
Henderson (13J. Mall Maxwell
( 1) 1 and fre s h m a n A n d re
Whitney (101 - started to get
wanned up midway through the
quarter.
Each tossed In a bucket and
when Gordon stole the ball and
slammed It home with 36 sec­
onds left. Seminole moved on
top. 11-8. Rouse added a free
throw with 10 seconds left for a
12-8 first quarter edge.
Three Lake Howell turnovers
opened the gate In the second
quarter as Gordon. Whitney and
Maxwell tossed In hoops as
Seminole took an 18-8 lead.
Terry Gammons Interrupted the
string with a tlp-ln for Howell
but Henderson hit a bucket and
freshman Craig Walker dropped
In a nice turnaround on the
baseline for a 22-12 lead.
Seminole coach Chris Marlnte
summoned his third team to
See T R IB E . Page IO A

Lady Greyhounds March Into Section
Defense Stops Vero Beach Cold, 6-0
B y Chrle Plater
H erald Sports W rite r
For Vera Beach Tuesday night, going up
against Lyman's tough midfielders and defenders
was like running Into a brick wall.
Whenver the Lady Plrutrs manugrd to grt the
ball away from Lyman's ofTensc. they had a heck
of a lime gelling past midfielders Stacey Roy.
Diana Uayescn. Alynon Barnes and Allison
Wright.
Once they got-by the midfielders, the Lady
Pirates then had to contend with the likes of
defenders Karen Abernelhy and Kellie Straw.
And once past the defenders? There was
goalkeeper Lisa Chatman. Bui Vero Beach never
' got a chance to lest her.
Lyman'a tenacious midfield and defensive play
was too much for Vero Beach to handle as the
Lady Qreyhounds rolled la a 6-0 whitewashing of
the Lady Pirates In (he Region 2 playoff at Lyman
High.
The Lady Greyhounds, who have won 21
straight, advance In the Section 1 championship
Friday nlghl. Lym an will play the Orange
Park-Oalnrsvllle Buehholz winner at cither Or­
ange Park or Onlncivlllc.
"T h e whole midfield and defense did an
excellent Job." Lyman conch Tom Barnes said.
"Th e v didn't allow Vero Bench any real threats."
Although the game was played In chilly
temperatures In the ntld 40s. made worse by a
vicious wind. It didn't take long for the Lady
Grey hounds (o warm up.
Barnes, a Junior, put llte Lady Greyhounds
ahead lo slay when she fired In a short shot past
Vero keeper Suzanne Burkett Just two minutes
and 30 aeconds Into the match for a 1-0 Lyman
lead.
"Th e girls accmed lo have winning on their
mlnda right from (he lime we walked on the
field," Barnes said.
Sheila Mandy, who sal oul die district champi­
onship game with an Injury, returned lo the
lineup Tuesday
got right
buck. Into
.
.and
. . . ----------------------. . . —the. .thick
....
of things by scoring two» first-half
goals to give
ni
Lyman a 3-0 lead. The first came on a breakaway
where Mandy, ■ Junior, drew the kecj&gt;er out and
put it past her and the second was on n short
shot. "It's good to have Sheila (Mamlyl back."

Soccer
Barnes said. “ She's a threat any lime she gels the
ball."
Kim Mitchell added a pair of goals within a
nlne-mlnulc span In the second half that pushed
die Lady Greyhounds' lead to 5-0, The sopho­
more forward's first goal come when she gathered
In a deflection after a free kick and put It past
Barked with 20:58 left In the match. Mitchell
scored her second goal, on an assist from Allison
Wright, with 20:06 left to play.
The sixth goal came with 5:35 left and was
scored on a rebound by Junior Dawn Boyrsrn.
who had a goal taken away In the first half
because of an offsides call.
Lyman's domination at midfield and on defense
was reflected In the shots on goal. The Lady
Greyhounds bombarded Barkctt with 40 shots
while Vero Beach managed Just two.
Lyman didn't have any trouble getting up far
Tuesday's game, even though they had already
beaten Vero twice.
*'l try lo gel psyched up before every game."
Abernelhy. a good-looking sophomore said. “ I try
to get m y head right and Just think shout the
game."
Abernelhy tried lo combat the cold In the Oral
half by wearing sweat pants but found she had
more authority on her kicks without the joints so
she discarded them for (he second.
“ I was weighted down with the pants on." she
said. "I look them off because I needed to move
around belter."
Most of the action Chatman got In goal rume
when Abernelhy played the ball back to her. The
Junior keeper had to make Just two saves.
"We Just don't get overconfident." Chatman
■aid about playing Vero for the third time. "W e
take 11one game at a time."
"The second lime w : played Orange Park (4-1
win) (hey didn't have Laura Koppcll." Barnes
■old. "She gave us problem s____________
the first time we
played them. But we're looking forward lo
playing either team ’’

At the left, Lym an's Kim Mitchell dribbles
toward one of her two g o a ls.' Above,
teammate Sheila Mandy, left, tussles with
Vero Beach's Kristen Greto.

Cox Kicks Oviedo Past Trinity Prep, 2*0
By Chris Pieter
Herald B p e m Writer
Trevor Cox was In the right
place et the right lime twice
Tuesday night — and the result
wen a 2-0 victory for Oviedo's
Lions over Trin ity Prep's Saints
In the 3A-7 District Soccer
Tournament at Oviedo High.
Cox scored both goals for the
Lions who advance to Thurs­
d a y 's s e m if in a ls a g a in s t
M o n t v c r d c ( 4 p . m . at
M o n t v e r d e ). M o n tv c rd c

Soccer
advanced with a 7-0 blanking of
Lake Highland Tuesday nlghl.
Oviedo took a 1-0 lead 27
minutes Into the match Tues­
day. The ball was batted around
dose to the goal and It came out
to Cox who left-footed It In.
The Lions' 1-0 lead stood up at
halftime. Oviedo made It 2-0
with just 38 seconds gone tn the

second half. T h is lime. Greg
Brick blasted a shot that hit off
the crossbar and bounced back
right to Cox who booted II in.
"Most or Trin ity Prep’s shots
were from pretty far off." Oviedo
coach Chris Hall said.
Hail said the defensive leaders
included Pat Sweeney and Mike
Amrhetn. "The y (Sweeney and
Amrheinl were ail over field."
Hall said. "Th e y made tome
unbelievable plays."

Bucs 'Politely' Dunk Rams
Jo h n Nelson
Harold •ports W riter
The Lake Mary Rams, coming
off an upset over No. I ranked
(A A A ) Seabreeze, c o u ld n 't
duplicate Friday's stellar effort
and loal to ( h r Mainland Bucs,
78-65. In Five Star basketball
action Tuesday night at Lake
Mary High
lb.
tary saw Its three game
Lake Mi
winning streak snapped as It lost
to the Bucs In a fast-paced
offensive battle. Mainland Im­
proves to 9*5 In the conference
a n d u*4 In th e d i s t r i c t .
Meanwhile, the Rama fall lo 8-7
In the Five Star and T-ff in the
district and 12-lOoveral).
"W e came out flat." aald Willie
Richardson, the Rama' coach.
"Th e y beat ua on the boards."
Mainland coach Dick To th
agreed with Richardson and aald
"W e'ni playing a lot better uow
that lOcorgr) McCloud la off Uw
ry list."
seemed the Lake Mary was
an its was to another upset early
In U m b u m aa the Rama ran out

Basketball

dominate as the next period had
a frenzy of scoring for both sides.
The biggest lead of the game
came with 4:21 left when 6-6
senior McCloud banked In two
points for a 46-32 bulge.

Hurtsfleld. Merthle led the Rama
with 16 points while Hartafleld
MAINLAND IN) - Htnnr I. MMhw*, a
had one lesa.
Manna* A Hall A MarrH 1 McCNuS U.
Jatott
l. taw A Anawwi A Pail* H. T»Ul»
Mainland was able to ef­
fectively stop Lake M a ry'a MU-MIS.
LARI MARY U il - MwVWa IA MarHHaM
Donald Grayson, who has been IA NaaAy A S ii nUSi It, Orayian A WOO* A
averaging 18 points per game Jackian I. Tatait: UIMI4S.
HaMMma - Matnlana U. Lata Mar, □
ove r the past two w eeks. PaW*
- Massing m Laha Mary IS. Pa
Grayson managed Just eight M - nana. TscMcal - 1
points against
it the Mike Polite*
McCloud duo.
But the Bucs soon took con­
In the girls game Tuesday. ■Jiff R eyno ld s scored 11
trol. With five minutes remain­ Lake Mary's Lady Rams used an points but it w#sn*f enough.to
ing Mainland streaked to six outstanding game by AUeen stop Mainland from ending
straight baskets, concluded by Patterson to post a 81-48 victory La k a M a ry 's three-gam e
the Aral of Polite's four dunks over the visiting Lady Bucs.
winning streak.
"AUeen got on UM boards."
e n d in g the q u a rte r. 15-12
said Lake Mary coach BUI Moore.
Mainland.
From there the Bucs built a Patterson grabbed nine re­
c o m m a n d in g a d v a n t a g e , bounds and four steals and led
widening the gap to 13 131-18) ait scoring with 22 points.
The Lady Rams controled the
midway through the second
period. Mainland maintained the lead tn every quarter by strong
lead going Into the locker rooms defensive play by guard Kim
by a 35*22 count.
AvsrIU
Thoughout the rest of the
to a fM k a d behind the scoring
the Bucs continued to
of D a rry l Merthle and Rav

T

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SPORTS
IN BRIEF
SCC Hosts Unpredictable CFCC;
Playoff Berth Is On Line Tonight
Coach Benny Gabbard and hta unpredictable Central
Florida eager Invade Seminole Community College tonight
at 7:30 for a key Mid-Florida Conference game with the
Raiders. There la no charge for admission.
Seminole. 19- 10 overall and 8-4 In the MFC. are fighting
for second place In the conference along with Daytona
Beach and Lake City, who have similar records. Florida
Junior has almost assured itself of an automatic berth at
the state tournament with a 10-2 mark.

Horsey's Arm Balls Out Tribe
OR LANDO — Darkness Interrupted the Semlnolc-Evans
baseball game In the fourth Inning Tuesday, but the way
James Kersey was throwing for the Tribe, 24 hours of
sunlight might not have helped Evans.
"He waa throwing seeds," said Seminole pitching coach
Mike Powers after Hersey fanned Jim Humphries to
preserve an 8-8 Seminole victory at Evans High School.
"Hersey came In and put out the lire. He was really
smoking them."
Mersey's relief job saved Brian Sheffield's second victory
In as many outing for the surprising Seminole*. The game
was called by the umpires after the fourth inning because
of darkness. Seminole returns to action against Titusville
Astronaut In the first round of the Seminole Invitational
Thursday at Seminole Community College. Game time Is
3:45 p.m.
"If Hersey can do stuff like that, he can really help us
out." said Seminole coach Mike Ferrell.

West Orange Trips Lake Howell
Todd Miller gave Lake Howell's wrestlers the early lead
Tuesday, but West Orange erased It In a hurry as It won
the neat six matches and the Warrior* went on to claim a
47-21 victory at Lake Howell High.
Miller quickly pul the Stiver Hawks ahead as he pinned
John Pasaarelll In 35 seconds at 102 pounds.
But Lake Howell didn't get another victory until Greg
Buckley edged Steve Allen. 14-13. at 140 pounds. By that
lime, though. West Orange had built a commanding 30-6
lead.
t n - Millar (LH I s P ttu rtlll. U IM - AutMnt (WO) t Clna. *4 1 1 4 Park* (WO) *. Horvath, 4 47 111 - Ravotl (WO) A F ls tr. 1»A IM - Vaiquoi
(WO) A Hotklnt. It I II* - Grady (W O) p fetmkdart. i J* 141 - Clayton (WO)
* Mirlito. 1:17. |«t - Buck lay (L H ) A Allan. 1*11 It* - Halm (L H ) p Watch.
1:1*. 171 - Iwatkmahl IWO I p. Sandbar*. 1:17. W - Slmpton (WO) p. OShaa.
I P . IM - Braakt (WO) p Crowlay. 4 :0 I M - Lacan (L H ) wan by tortai) JV
Kara — Watt Oranya f. La*a Hawaii 4.

Scott Gets Olympic Tryout
Maitland's Christy Scott, a 1984 graduate of Lake Howell
High, has been Invited to the Olympic Volleyball tryouts
which started Tuesday and will run through Sunday at the
O lym p ic training center In Colorado Springs.
Scott, who la currently playing for Valencia Community
College, la one of the youngest players to be Invited to the
tryouts according to her former high school coach, Jo
Luciano.
"It will be great experience for Christy." Luciano said.
"She'll get an Idea of Just how good the players around the
country are. There will be a few player* there (Colorado
Springs) who played on the 1984 Olympic team.
This week's tryouts arc for the 1988 Olym pic Games
which are scheduled to be held In Seoul. South Korea.

W s d m * 4 a y . Ftfc. n , m

i-t A

Fiorentino's Clutch Play Lifts Rams
B y C h ris Flater
H erald Sports W rite r
DELAND — Tony Ftorentlno may not
have gotten Into the scoring column Tues­
day night, but his clutch offensive play
made a difference for Lake Mary's Rams.
Ftorentlno kept Lake Mary In control
Tuesday night as the Rams hung on to a 1-0
lead most of the match. And Andre Sanders
sealed (he victory with a penalty kick with
12 minutes left enabling Lake Mary to claim
a 2-0 victory over third-seeded DeLand In
first round action of the 4A-9 District
Tournament at Speck Martin Stadium.
Lake Mary w ill now go up against
top-seeded Lake Howell In Thursday night's
semifinal at 7 at Lake Howell High.
"FTorentino had really good second half."
Lake Mary coach Larry McCorkle said. "He
kept possession of the ball and allowed us to
keep attacking. Whenever got the ball, he
made something happen. DeLand come at
us hard early In the second half but
Flroentlno started making things happen
and we took over on offense."
Lake Mary look a 1-0 lead 24 minutes Into
the match on a goal by Emle Broennlc. who
was moved up at the end of the Junior
varsity season. Broennlc scored when a

"For the most part, the defense was
super." added McCorkle. "Vlnay Jotwanl
played really well and Eric Zimmerman had
a fine game at swrcpcrback. Rosen market!
DeLand's fastest player and Scott Schmitt
marked their leading scorer (Mark Bazenas).
He (Bazenas) gave us problems the first time
they beat us 2-0."

Soccer
DeLand defender failed to clear a long
crossing ball and Instead kicked It to
Broennle who blasted It Into the goal.
The Rams clung to their 1-0 lead until
Sanders fired in the penalty kick with 12
minutes remaining In the second half. It was
the 29th goal of the season for the senior
standout.
The penalty kick was set up when Jerry
Meyers gathered In a deflected shot and
drew the keeper out. To prevent the goal, a
Deland defender caught the ball Kir an
Intentional hand ball and a penalty kick.
Lake Mary took 18 shots on goal Tuesday
compared to DeLand * 15. Goalkeeper Greg
Grifflng had 12 saves but DeLand had only n
few major threats according to McCorkle.
"DeLand only had one decent opportuni­
ty." said McCorkle. "There waa a loose ball
In penalty area and Greg (Grilling) elected to
go for it but didn't get there tn time. We had
two defenders on the goal line and Louis
Rosen chested the ball down and cleared It
out.

Lady Patriots
Break Crabs
To Keep Pace

L A K E H O W ELL CR USHES APOPKA
Top-seeded and top-ranked (4A) Lake
Howell erupted for seven first half goals and
cruised to a 11-0 rout of Apopka's Blur
Darters Tuesday night In first round action
of the 4A-9 District Soccer Tournament at
Lake Howell High.
The Silver Hawks now advance to the
semifinals Thursday at 7 at Lake Howell
against Lake Mary's Rams.
Jerry Philips and Eric Recseman led (he
way for Lake Howell with three goals each.
Mike Serino kicked In two while J im
Morrissey, Darren Stock and Jeff Sharkey
added one each.
Lake Howell took 32 shots on goal
Tuesday compared to Just two for Apopka.
"It waa Just a one-sided game," Lake Howell
coach Norm Wight said. "W e didn't really
do anything spectacular."

DeLong Boots Brantley
Past Spruce Creek, 6-2

B y Sam Cook
H erald Sports E d ito r
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S W i t h a n a m e l i k e Mo
Moghaddam. there's no place to
hide on the soccer field. Being
one of the best all-a rou nd
players In the state also gathers
m u ch a tte n tio n . T h e Lake
Brantley senior draws more de­
fenders than Wayne Gretzky.
“ Mo usually gels n lot of
coverage." said Lake Brantley
hipped In tlx coach Jim Brody. "But we've got
to help Lake some other guys who can do the
back Into a Job. They did It for us tonight."
nrai piaw ns with Seminole
Steve DeLong la one of (hose
by beating Seabreeze.
other guys. He kicked tn Iwo
goals and assisted on two more
os the Lake Brantley Patriots
four assist*.
manhandled Spruce Creek. 8-1,
Lake Brantley held on to a In the first round of the Dtslricl
Dellinger, a 8-1 senior center, f o u r-p o in t lead, 2 6 -2 2 , al 4 A - 9 S o c c e r T o u r n a m e n t
poured In a game-high 2 1 points halftime but the Sand Crabs Tuesday night at Lake Brantley
and ripped down 14 rebounds. came back to take a 39-38 lead High School.
Senior forward Michelle Brown after three qua rte rs. Lake
Lake Brantley, ranked fourth
tossed In 14 points. Including 8 Brantley came right back to lake tn the state 4A poll, Improved to
of I I from the line, and senior the lead early In the -fourth
18-2-1 for the season. The Patri­
forward Caml Twaddell added quarter and led by as much as ots will take on Lyman at 7 p.ni.
six.
seven points and 10 rebounds.
Thursday at Lake Brantley In
Twaddell also hit 3 of 3 free
the sem ifinal round gam e.
throws while Kim Wain added 2
Lyman topped Mainland. 4-1.
of 3 from the line and live
Tuesday night.
rebounds.
DeLong bided hla first-half
time by playing the role of
Senior guard Kim Lubenow
helper. After Spruce Creek's
added six paints while Junior
John Hurtman put the Hawks
point guard Sherry "Ice " Asplcn
ahead. 1-0. with a penalty kick
contributed seven rebounds and

By C h ris Flste r
Herald Sports W rite r
D A YTO N A B EA C H Lake
Brantley's Lady Patriots re­
ceived a strong Inside game from
Kirsten Dellinger and shot Im­
pressively from the free throw
line Tuesday nlghl en route lo a
58-52 victory over Seabreeze's
Lady Sand Crabs in a key Five
S t a r C o n fe re n c e c la s h at
Seabreeze High.
Lake Brantley. 22-4 overall,
moved back Into a tie with
Seminole for the top spot In the
conference at 14-2. 'Hie Lady
Patriots finish the regular season
at home as they host Lyman
Thursday night and close out
with Lake Mary Monday.

Soccer
12 minutes Into the game, the
Patriots started to roll.
Six minutes later. DeLong
spotted Fred Rash In front of the
goal and crossed him the bait.
Rash controlled It and banged In
a left-footed effort for the 1-1
deadlock.
Just seven minutes later, at
the 25:00 mark. DeLong played
pinball w ith Spruce Creek
keeper Jtm Ellis. DeLong** shot
bounced off Ellis right to Chad
Marten. Marten nudged It tn for a
2-1 lead.
Marten waa In the right place
at the right time six minutes
later. "There were a bunch of
rebounds and It popped out to
Chad." said Brody. "He Just
poked It In."
The goal was Marten’s ninth of
the year and gave the Pats a
commanding 3-1 lead. Just four
minutes before the halftime.
Moghaddam finally slipped his
mark and Just missed a score os
the hall hit the crossbar. Joe
Pledger picked oft (he carom and
headed It home Tor k 4-1 Lake
Hranlley bulge at halftime.

Castle 'Strains' To Understand Duran Duran
There are four million, six hundred
thousand and alxty-slx pebbles on the
celling of m y bedroom, and there are
seventy-two thousand little pieces of glitter
mixed In with the little plaster pebbles.
1 can now recognize the sweet sound of 19
different birds and 4 very shrill sounds of
what I supposed were birds. (Probably from
up north somewhere.)
I have read everything In the house, all
m y old World Tennis magazines, several
Issues of Runners World, two or three dozen
Issues of Readers Digest, a bicycling maga­
zine. Better Homes and Gardena, some of
m y daughter's teen magazines. (What’s s
Duran Duran?) and some stuff sent to me
from Kentucky that 1 found very Interesting
like, "Shift Mining for Fun and Profit" and
"You, Too Can Grow Popcorn".
1 watched a lot of T V but It doesn't look
the same when you have to look through
your toes, and I could probably win the
national "Name That Tune" contest from
having listened to LOV 95 all day.
All this started several days ago when,
while playing a little tennis, I started to get
all these funny feelings in m y bones and
lnta. I Just shrugged It off, though, because
am always getting funny feelings In m y
bones and Joints.
When I got home and took a shower and

r

lorry
Castle
tried to rest a bit, I really started feeling bad.
aches and pains all over and chilling. After
about an hout of this I decided to ask m y
wife to take my temperature. Well. It waa
102 degrees and going up. I went over to the
Orlando Drive Medical Center and saw Dr.
Smith (who. by the way, has helped keep
many local tennis player* on the courts for
many years).
It seems that I had come down with some
exotic strain of Far Eastern flu. Anyway. I
was told to go home, stay In bed, drink lot*
of fluids and get plenty of rest.
1 stayed tn bed three or four days. Well,
actually. I did get up a lot. like to answer the
phone from friends and co-workers. I would
stagger to the phone and they would say
"Just called to check on you. now you sleep
slot, rest."
Some good neighbors came to the front
which Is at least a mile from m y

bedroom lo say "heard you were sick, now
get back to bed and rest." Resting like that
can really wear you out.
What does all this have to do with tennis
and a column on tennis? Well, a couple of
things actually. If you love tennis like I do.
you really hate to be away from It. You want
to be out there hitting that ball. You miss
the exercise and the friend* but you really
Just miss the game more. I found myself
playing matches over In my mind. Hitting
shot* in curclal situations for winners,
putting myself In certain situations and
playing the point out to perfection.
It dawned on me that this mental Imagery
la the same thing that Arthur Ashe did and
now teaches. BUT Russell, that great Celtic,
now gives seminars on It. Many experts
agree that if we go over and over something
In our mind when the situation cornea up we
are more likely to do It.
Oet the picture? First serve In lo the
backhand, come In and hit the approach
volley down the line, close and put the
volley away to the open court. Th e y say
going over and over this In your mind or any
play tn any sport can. Indeed, enhance your
performance.
Well, I'll get to see soon If It works because
I sure bad a lot of Ume to think about U.

1*407 Ffflff IN S TA L L A TIO N
CUSTOM PIPE BENOINQ • DUALS • QLASS PACKS
CHROME STACKS • TURBO S • RESONATORS

—

m

M

TW O S TO R K S
SANFORD

ORANQI CITY
) I . V S tV tU A W .

■wrir-n

J U i
U M

Kniebbe, Edwards Lead
Seminole
J V Past Hawks
Basketball

™ M UFFLER • BRAKES

BUY
M ORTGAGES^

W t alto mate 1st and 2nd mortgage
on Ratldanttai or Commercial Real I
up to tlOOJOO.
Including

1400

WAR

O ff

�Tribe Harasses
Brooks, Howell

treax me now* press. House llred to the ball to a
Rod Alexander, right, who moved the ball up court.

Seminole's Craig Walker
-------. . . . . . --------- . .
Lake Howell's T erry Gammons (35) as Jam es Rouse,

By Sam Cook
Herald Bporta Ed ito r
When four Seminole player*
Individually outacore Efrem
Drooka. there'a no need to glance
at the acoreboard. Just chalk up
another one for the Fighting
Srmlnolea over the Lake Howell
Silver Hawks.
The Tribe put four players in
double figures Tuesday night
and Brooks, the county's leading
scorer, managed Just eight
points as Seminole blew away
the Hawks in the second half en
route to a 62-47 victory before
ISO fans In Five Star Conference
basketball at Seminole High
School.
"W e shot as cold as the
w eather." said Lake Howell
coach and former Crooma High
standout Greg Robinson. "Efrem
Just has a tough time against
Seminole. (James) Rouse and
(Kenny) Gordon are bigger than
Brooka and they play him a lot
more aggressively.
"The y harass him ."
The harnusment started early
as Brooka could hit Just I of 7
first-half shots. Usually a good
foul shooter. Brooka also missed
his only two free throw attempts
and went Into halftime with Just
one bucket.
Despite Brooks' alow start, the
Tribe was worse, missing five

Basketball
shots In a row during the first
quarter as Lake Howell Jumped
to a 6-2 lead behind buckets
from 6-3 Fred Hicks, point guard
Scott Anderton and Brooks.
But the four Noles tn double
figures — Gordon (13). Rod
Henderson (13). Matt Maxwell
( I I ) and fre sh m a n A n d re
Whitney (10) - started to get
warmed up midway through the
quarter.
Each tossed In a bucket and
when Gordon stole the ball and
slammed It home with 36 sec­
onds left. Seminole moved on
top. 11-8. Rouse added a free
throw with 10 seconds left for a
12-8 first-quarter edge.
Three Lake Howell turnovers
opened the gale In the second
quarter as Gordon. Whitney and
Maxwell tossed In hoops as
Seminole took an 18-8 lead.
Terry Gammons Interrupted the
string with a tlp-ln for Howell
but Henderson hit a bucket and
freshman Craig Walker dropped
In a nice turnaround on the
baseline for a 22-12 lead.
Seminole roach Chits Marletle
summoned hts third team to
Sea T R IB E , Pag* 10A

Lady Greyhounds March Into Section
Defense Stops Vero Beach Cold, 6-0
B y C h ris Flstsr
H erald Bperta W rite r
For Vero Beach Tuesday night, going up
against Lyman’s tough midfielders and defenders
was like running Into a brick wall.
Whenver the l^idy Pirates manugrd to get the
ball away from Lyman's offense, they hud u heck
of a time getting post midfielders Stacey Roy,
Diana Uoycscn. Alyson Barnes and Allison
Wright.
One* they got-b y the midfielders, the l&lt;ady&gt;
Pirates then had to contend with the likes of
defenders Karen Abemethy and Kellie Straw.
And onre past the defenders? There was
goalkeeper Lisa Chatman. But Vrro Beach never
' got a chance to test her.
Lyman's tenacious midfield and defensive play
wua loo much for Vrro Beach to handle ns the
Lady Greyhounds rolled to a 6-0 whitewashing of
the Lady Pirates In the Region 2 playoff at Lyman
High.
The Lady Greyhounds, who have won 21
straight, advance to the Section 1 championship
Friday night. Lym an will play the Orange
Park-Galncsvllle Bitch hoti winner at either O r­
ange Park or Oalnrsvlllc.
“ Th e whole midfield und defense did an
excellent Job,” Lyman coach Tom Barnes said.
"T h e y didn't allow Vero Beach any real threats."
Although the game was played In chilly
temperatures In the mid 40s. made worse by a
vicious wind. It didn't take long for the Lady
Greyhounds to warm up.
Barnes, a Junior, put the Ludy Greyhounds
ahead to stay when she fired In a short shot |iast
Vero keeper Suranne Burkett Just two minutes
and 30 seconds Into the match for a 1-0 Lyman
lead.
‘T h e girls seemed to have winning on their
minds right from the time we walked on the
field." Barnes said.
Sheila Mandy. who sat out the district ctuun^P
onshlp game with an Injury, relumed to
lineup Tuesday and got right back Into the thick
of things by scoring two first-half goals to give
Lym an a 3-0 lead. Th e first came on a breakaway
where Mandy, a Junior, drew the keeper out and
put It past her and the second was on a short
shot. "It's good to have Sheila (Mandy) back."

Soccer
Barnes said. "She's a threat any time she gets the
ball."
Kim Mitchell added a pair of goals within a
nine-minute span In the second half that pushed
the Lady Greyhounds' lead to 6-0. The sopho­
more forward's first goal came when she gathered
In a deflection after a free kick and pul It past
Barkett with 20:58 left In the match. Mitchell
scored her second goal, on an assist from Allison
Wright, with 20:00 left to play.
The sixth goal came with 5:35 left and was
scored on a rebound by Junior Dawn Boyesen,
who had u goal taken away In the first half
because of an offsides call.
Lymun's domination at midfield and on defense
was reflected In the shots on goal. The Lady
Greyhounds bombarded Barkett with 40 shots
while Vero Beach managed Just two.
Lym an didn't have any trouble getting up for
Tuesday's game, even though they had already
beaten Vero twice.
"I try to get psyched up before every game."
Abemethy. a good-looking sophomore said. "I try
to get m y head right and Just think about the
game."
Abemethy tried to combat the cold In the first
half by wearing sweat pants but found she had
more authority on her kicks without the pants so
she discarded them for the second.
"I was weighted down with the pants on.” she
said. " I took them off because I needed to move
around better."
Most of the action Chatman got In goal came
when Abemethy played the ball back to her. The
Junior keeper had to make Just two saves.
"We Just don't get overconfident." Chatman
said about playing Vero for the third time. "W e
take It one game at a time."
"Th e second time w ; played Orange Park (4-1
win) they didn't have Laura Koppell." Barnes
said. "She gave us problems the first lime we
played them. But we're looking forward to
playing either team."

At th« left, Lym an's Kim Mitchell dribbles
tow ard one ot her two g o a ls.' Above,
teammate Shelia Mandy. left, tussles with
Varo Beach's Kristan Greto.

Cox Kicks Oviedo Past Trinity Prep, 2*0
Ey Chris F it tar
Herald Sports W riter
Trevor Cox was In the right
place at the right time twice
Tuesday night — and Ihe result
was a 2-0 victory for Oviedo's
Lions over Trin ity Prep's Saints
In the 3A-7 District Soccer
Tournament at Oviedo High.
Cox scored both goals for Ihe
Lions who advance lo Thurs­
d a y ' s s e m if in a ls a g a in s t
M o n t v e r d e 14 p . m . at
M o n t v e r d e ) . M o n tv e rd e

8occer
advanced with a 7-0 blanking of
Lake Highland Tuesday night.
Oviedo took a 1-0 lead 27
minutes Into Ihe match Tues­
day. The ball waa batted around
cloae lo the goal and It came out
lo Cox who left-footed It In.
The Lions' l O lead stood up at
halftime. Oviedo made It 2-0

second half. This time. Ore,
Brick blasted a shot that hit
the crossbar and bounced back
right to Cox who booted It In.

3

"Moat of Trinity Prrp'a shots
were from pretty far off." Oviedo
coach Chris Hall said.
Hall said the defensive leaders
Included Pat Sweeney and Mike
Amrhetn. "They (Sweeney and
Amrhelnl were all over field."
Hail said. ‘T h e y made some
unbelievable plays."

Bucs 'Politely' Dunk Rams
Js k a Nslsoa
H erald Bperta W rite r
The Lake Mary Hams, coming
off an upset over No. I rnnkrd
( A A A ) S cabreesc. c o u ld n 't
duplicate Friday's stellar effort
and lost to the Mainland Burs.
78-65. In Five Star basketball
action Tuesday night at Lake
Mary High.
Lake Mary saw Its three-game
winning streak snapped as It lost
to the Hues In a fast-paced
offensive battle. Mainland Im­
proves to 9-5 In the conference
a n d 8 -4 In th e d l a t r l c t .
Meanwhile. Ihe Kama Tall to 8-7
In the Five Star and 7-6 In the
dlatrlct and I2-I0overall.
"W e cant*m l flat." m m wmte
Richardson, the Rams' coach.
"T h e y beat us on the boards."
Mainland coach Dick Toth
with Richardson and said
"We're, slaying a lot bettrr now
that tOearge) McCloud la off the
bdury list.
It seemed the Lake Mary was
on Ns was to another upset early
tn the dame aa the Rama ran oui
lo a
lead behind the crating
of D a rry l Merthle and Rav

Basketball
Hart afield. Merthle led the Rams
wlih IB points while Hartsficld
had one Iras.
M ainland waa able to ef­
fectively atop Lake M a ry's
Donald Grayson, who has been
averaging 18 points per game
ove r the past two w eeks.
Grayson managed Just eight
points against the Mike PoliteMcCloud duo.
But the Bucs soon took con­
trol. With five minutes remain­
ing Mainland streaked to ala
straight baskets, concluded by
Ihe first of Polite's four dunks
e n d in g the q ua rte r. 15-12
Mainland.
From there the Bucs built a
c o m m a n d in g a d v a n ta g e .
widening the gap to 13 (31-18)
m idway through
rtod. Mainland maintained the
td going Into ihe locker rooms
by a 35-22 count.
Thoughout the rest of the
game, the Bucs continued to

G

omlnate aa the next perlc '
frensy of scoring for both
The
he biggest lead of thr
the game
came with 4:21 left when 8 8
senior McCloud banked In
points for a 48-32 bulge.
MAINLAND IN ) - Htnry I. M*ck*r*v A
Maw** A Hail A Marti* A McCtauS »
M w U M a r L M a r w L M M U Tala*:
Nll-M fA
LANS MABV tall - Marita* M. HAritltaM
IL NasSy A Naywalla It, P ra y s A WHIN A
I m Amm I. Total* D M m i

HiHHma —

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lavt* - MsMiaws M. Lass M ar tA ra
awt-wawa. TacMteat-i

In the girls game Tuesday.
Lake Mary's Lady Rams used an
outstanding game by Alleen
victory
Patterson to post a 81*48 •
over the visiting L ly Bucs.
on tht boards.'
coach Bill Moore.
Patleraon grabbed nine re­
bounds and four steals and led
all scoring with 22 points.
The Lady Rams cootroled the
lead In every quarter by strong
defensive play by guard Kim
AvwtU and Patterson as well qs
tfng by Karen
precision
DeShcller.

&amp;

J« ff R eynold* scored II
points but It wasn't enough to
stop Mainland from ending

Lake Mary's three gams

H xansH P

winning streak.

u a s MABV SISLt UO - AtariN A
OtWOw li N miMi «, C HMA LMMI A
U«A1* A A. StatarM* a. C. NMOTNI S
•n«*M* A H»*w1 A Uws A modi A

W*ss» T*tal* M*ta«l

MAINLAND S itu (Ml - MtakNv U
Wr«a*l L BsSwtMM u, H—AM* A Kamatar

Nut* - USA Mary SI.
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WEH AKE CABSPEBPCmt

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E r e a l m HeraM, tanfard, F I.

WedoMday, F t » . r i , I W - t A

Fiorentino's Clutch Play Lifts Rams

SPORTS

B y C h ris Flster
Herald Sports W rite r
DELAN D — To n y Florentlno may not
have gotten Into the scoring column Tues­
day night, but his clutch offensive play
made a difference for Lake Mary’s Rams.
Florentlno kept Lake Mary in control
Tuesday night as the Rams hung on to a 1-0
lead most of the match. And Andre Sanders
sealed the victory with a penalty kick with
12 minutes left enabling Lake Mary to claim
a 2-0 victory over third-seeded DeLand In
first round action of the 4A-9 District
Tournament at Speck Martin Stadium.
Lake Mary will now go up against
top-seeded Lake Howell In Thursday night's
semifinal at 7 at Lake Howell High.
"Florentlno had really good second half."
Lake Mary coach Larry McCorkle said. “ He
kept possession of the ball and allowed ua to
keep attacking. Whenever got the ball, he
made something happen. DeLand come at
us hard early in the second half but
Flroentlno started making things happen
and we took over on offense."
Lake Mary took a 1-0 lead 24 minutes Into
the match on a goal by Emle Broennle. who
was moved up at the end of the Junior
varsity season. Broennle scored when a

IN BRIEF
SCC Hosts UnpredictableCFCC;
Playoff Barth Is On Una Tonight
Coach Benny Gabbard and his unpredictable Central
Florida eager Invade Seminole Community College tonight
at 7:30 for a key Mid-Florida Conference game with the
Raiders. There la no charge for admission.
Seminole. 19-10 overall and 8-4 In the MFC. are fighting
for second place In the conference along with Daytona
Beach and Lake City, who have similar records. Florida
Junior has almost assured Itself of an automatic berth at
the state tournament with a 10-2 mark.

W trity'i Arm Balls Out Trlba
ORLANDO — Darkness Interrupted the Semlnole-Evana
baseball game In the fourth Inning Tuesday, but the way
James Heraey was throwing for the Tribe. 24 hours of
sunlight might not have helped Evano.
"He was throwing seeds." said Seminole pitching coach
Mike Power* after Heraey fanned Jim Humphries to
preserve an 8-6 Seminole victory at Evans High School.
"Heraey came in and put out the lire. He was really
smoking them ."
Heraey’a relief Job saved Brian Sheffield's second victory
In as many outing for the surprising Seminole*. The game
was called by the umpires after the fourth Inning because
of darkness. Seminole returns to action against Titusville
Astronaut In the first round of the Seminole Invitational
Thursday at Seminole Community College. Game time Is
3:45 p.m.
"If Heraey can do slufT like that, he can really help us
out." said Seminole coach Mike Ferrell.

Soccer
DeLand defender failed to clear a long
crossing ball and Instead kicked it to
Broennle who blasted It Into the goal.
The Rams clung to their 1-0 lead until
Sanders fired In the penalty kick with 12
minutes remaining In the second half. It was
the 29th goal of tlie season for the senior
standout.
The penalty kick was set up when Jerry
Meyers gathered In a deflected shot and
drew the keeper out. T o prevent the goal, a
Deland defender caught the ball for an
Intentional hand ball and a penalty kick.
Lake Mary took 18 shots on goal Tuesday
compared to DeLand's 15. Goalkeeper Greg
Grilling had 12 saves but DeLand had only a
few major threats according to McCorkle.
"DeLand only had one decent opportuni­
ty." said McCorkle. "There was a loose ball
In penalty area and Greg (Grilling) elected to
go for It but didn't get there tn time. We had
two defenders on the goal line and Louts
Rosen chested the ball down and cleared It
out.

Lady Patriots
Break Crabs
To Keep Pace
B y C h ris P tstsr
Herald Sport* W rite r
D A YTO N A BEACH - U k e
Brantley's Lady Patriots re­
ceived a strong Inside game from
Kirsten Dellinger and shot Im­
pressively from the free throw
line Tuesday night en route to a
56-52 victory over Seabreeze's
Lady Sand Crabs In a key Five
S t a r C o n fe re n c e c la s h al
Seabreeze High.
Lake Brantley, 22-4 overall,
moved back Into a tie with
Seminole for the top spot In the
conference at 14-2. The Lady
Patriots finish the regular season
at home as they boat Lyman
Thursday night and close out
with Lake Mary Monday.

West Orange Trips Lake Howell
Todd Miller gave Lake Howell's wrestler* the early lead
Tuesday, but West Orange erased It In a hurry as It won
the next six matches and the Warriors went on to claim a
47-21 victory at Lake Howell High.
Miller quickly put the Silver Hawk* ahead as he pinned
John Paaaarelll In 35 seconds at 102 pounds.
But Lake Howell didn't get another victory until Greg
Buckley edged Steve Allen. 14-13, at 149 pounds. By that
time, though. West Orange had built a commanding 30-6
M l - Milltr (L H ) a- PM Urtfll. IS 1W - A u tu rt (WO) « . On* *4 11* Parts (WO) p. Hamath, ( d l » - atrail (W O) d Fl«lar, 1&gt;» i n - Vaiquat
I WO) d HastlfW. IS t I St - Grady (WO) p. M w i M m . J M 141 - Clarion (WO)
p. MirttM. M l . Mt - Buckley (L H ) d Allan. MIS. tit - Halm (L H ) p. Wakh,
1:S4. i n - Sw*M— tfel (WO) » Sandbars-1 » &gt;•» - Slmptan (WO) » O'Shaa.
I it m - S m a ll (W O) p. Cmartay. 4:11 ( M - Lacam (LH ) awn by tortill JV
team - Watt Oran*a *. Lola Hoatll 4

Dellinger, a 6-1 senior center,
poured In a game-high 21 points
and ripped down 14 rebounds.
Senior forward Michelle Brown
toaaed In 14 points. Including 8
of I I from the line, and senior
forward Cam I Twaddell added
seven point* and 10 rebounds.
Twaddell also hit 3 of 3 free
thtow* while Kim Wain added 2
of 3 from the line and five
rebounds.

Scott Gets Olympic Tryout
Maitland's Christy Scott, a 1984 graduate of Lake Howell
High, has beep Invited to the Olympic Volleyball tryouts
which started Tuesday and will run through Sunday al the
Olympic training center In Colorado Springs.
Scott, who Is currently playing for Valencia Community
College, la one of the youngest player* to be invited to the
tryouts according to her former high school coach. Jo
Luciano.
"It will be great experience for Christy." Luciano said.
"She'll get an Idea of Just how good the players around the
country are. There will be a rev, player* there (Colorado
Springs) who played on the 1964 Olympic team.
This week's tryouts are for the 1968 Olympic Games
which are scheduled to be held In Seoul. South Korea.

Senior guard Kim Lubcnow
added six points while Junior
point guard Sherry "Ice" Aaplen
contributed seven rebounds and

"For the most part, the defense was
super." added McCorkle. "Vlnay Jotwanl
played really well and Eric Zimmerman had
a fine game at swecpcrback. Rosen marked
DeLand's fastest player and Scott Schmitt
marked their leading scorer (Mark Barenas).
He (Bazenas) gave us problems the first time
they beat us 2-0."
LA R K H O W ELL CRUSHES APOPKA
Top-seeded and top-ranked (4A) Lake
Howell erupted for seven first half goals and
cruised to a 11-0 rout of Apopka's Blue
Darters Tuesday night In first round action
of the 4A-9 District Soccer Tournament at
Lake Howell High.
The Silver Hawks now advance to the
semifinals Thursday at 7 at Lake Howell
against Lake Mary's Rams.
Jerry Philips and Eric Reeseman led the
way for Lake Howell with three goals each.
Mike Sertno kicked In two while Jtm
Morrissey. Darren Stock and Jeff Sharkey
added one each.
Lake Howell took 32 shots on goal
Tuesday compared to Just two for Apopka.
"It was Just a one-sided game." Lake Howell
coach Norm Wight said. "We didn't really
do anything spectacular."

DeLong Boots Brantley
Past Spruce Creek. A-°
Harald Sports Ed ito r
A L T A M O N T E SP R IN G S
W ith a name like M
Moghaddam. there's no place lo
hide on the soccer field. Iking 12 minutes Into the game, the
one of the beat all-around Patriots started to roll.
players In the stole also gathers
Six m ln ute i later. DeLong
m u ch a tte n tio n . T h e Lake spotted Fred Rash In front of the
Brantley senior draws more de­
[oat and crossed him the ball,
fenders than Wayne Grelzky.
asti controlled It and banged In
"Mo uaually gels a lot of n left-footed elTort for the 1-1
coverage." aald Lake Brantley
Kim Lubcnow chipped In six coach Jim Brody. "But we've got deadlock.
Just seven minutes later, at
points Tuesday to help Lake some other guys who can do the
the 25:00 mark. DeLong played
Brantley move back into a Job. They did It for us tonight."
Inb a ll w ith Sp ruce Creek
first place tie with Seminole
Steve DeLong Is one of those
reper
Jim Ellis. DeLong's shot
by beating Seabreeze.
other guys. He kicked In two
goals and assisted on two more bounced off Ellis right to Chad
as the Lake Brantley Patriots Marten. Marien nudged It tn for a
four assists.
manhandled Spruce Creek. 6-1, 2-1 lead.
Lake Brantley held on to a In the first round of the District
Marten was in me rignt place
f o u r-p o in t lead. 2 6 -2 2 , at 4 A -9 S o c c e r T o u r n a m e n t
halfllme but the Sand Crabs Tuesday night at Lake Brantley at the right lime six minutes
later. "There were a bunch ol
came back to Uke a 39-38 lead
High School.
rebounds and It popped out to
after three qua rte rs. Lake
Lake Brantley, ranked fourth Chad." said Brody. "He Just
Brantley came right back lo Uke In the slate 4A poll, improved lu
the lead early In the -fourth 18-2-1 for the season. The Patri­ poked It in."
quarter and led by as much aa ots will Uke on Lyman al 7 p.m.
The goal was Marten's ninth or
six.
Thursday at Lake Brantley In the year and gave the Pats a
the sem ifinal round game. commanding 3-1 lead. Just four
minutes before the halftime.
Lyman topped Mainland, 4-1,
Moghaddam finally slipped his
Tuesday night.
DeLong bided his first-half mark and just missed a score os
lime by playing the role of the ball hit the crossbar. Joe
helper. After Spruce Creek's Pledger picked off the carom and
John Hurtman put the Hawks hradrd It home Tor n 4-1 Lake
ahead. 1-0. with a penalty kick Brantley bulge al halfllme.

£

C

Castle 'Strains' To Understand Duran Duran
There are four million, six hundred
thousand and sixty-six pebbles on the
ceiling of m y bedroom, and there are
seventy-two thousand little pieces of glitter
mixed tn with the little plaster pebbles.
I can now recognise the sweet sound of 19
different birds and 4 very shrill sounds of
what I supposed were birds. (Probably from
up north somewhere.)
I have read everything In the house, *11
m y old World Tennis magazines, several
issues of Runners World, two or three dozen
Issues of Readers Digest, a bicycling maga­
zine, Better Homes and Oardena, some or
m y daughter's teen magazines, (What's a
Duran Duran?) and some stuff sent to me
from Kentucky that I found very interesting
like. "Shaft Mining for Fun and Profit" ana
"You, Too Can Grow Popcorn".
I watched a lot of T V but It doesn't look
the same when you have to look through
your toe*, and I could probably win the
national “ Name Th a t Tu n e " contest from
having listened to LO V 96 all day.
All this started several days ago when,
while playing a little tennis. 1 started to get
all these ftinny feelings In my bones and
lotnts. I Just shrugged It oft. though, because
I am ahraya getting funny feeling* In m y
bones and tolnts.
When 1 got home and took a shower an I

Larry
Castle
tried to rest a bit, t really started feeling bad.
aches and pains all over and chilling. After
about an b o u t of this I decided to aak my
wife to take m y temperature. Well, tt waa
102 degrees and going up. 1 went over to the
Orlando Drive Medical Center and saw Dr.
Smith (who. by the way. has helped keep
many local tennis player* on the courts for
many years).
It aeema that I had come down with some
exotic strain of Far Eastern flu. Anyway, I
was told to go home, stay In bed. drink lots
of fluids and get plenty of rest.
I stayed tn bed three or four days. Well,
actually, I did get up a lot, like to answer the
phon* from friends and co-worker*. I would
•tagger to the phone and they would say
called ito check a
on you. now you sleep
"just Cl
slot, rest.'
re
good neighbors came to the front
which Is at least a mile from my

bedroom lo say “ heard you were sick, now
get back to bed and real." Resting like that
can really wear you out.
What doe* all this have to do with tennis
and a column on tennis? Well, a couple of
things actually. If you love tennis like I do,
you really hate to be away from tt. You want
to be out there hitting that ball. You miss
the exercise and the friends but you really
Just miss the game more. 1 found myself
playing matches over in my mind. Hitting
shots tn curclal situations for winners,
putting myself tn certain situations and
playing the point out to perfection.
It dawned on me that this mental Imagery
la the same thing that Arthur Ashe did and
now teaches.
BUT Ru
Russell, that great Celtic,
s. BUI
now give* seminars on I t Many expert*
agree that If we go over and over something
tn our mind when the situation cornea up we
are more likely to do tt.
Get the picture? First serve In to the
backhand, come In and hit the approach
volley down the tine, close and put the
voUcy away to the open court. They say
going over and over this In your mind or any
play In any sport can. Indeed, enhance your
performance.
Well. H I get to see soon if It works because
I sure had a tot of time lo think about It.

Kniebbe, Edwards Lead
Seminole
J V Past. Hawks
T o d d K n ie b b e a n d Mike
Edwards proved In be a pretty
good co m b in a tio n Tue sd ay
n ig ht Too good for Lake Howell.

20
12 points and handed out 10
assists aa Scmiaoh
Lake HoweU. 71-57. tn
varsity basketball al
" f t - *
was the I4tk fbr
the Tribe ^ a ln e t five lasses.
"W e atm have a chance to mahs
the d is tric t playo ff,'* said
Seminole coach T o m Smith,
"Friday's g u m with
may determine who goes.'
T b s district J V playoff Is held
before the district chi
game on March 2

Basketball
the ffrat halt” aald South.

with 16
P M d a rk , who added 12. led
the
Bamkmle extended Ms lend to
10-IS petals eevenl times in the
third quartr r as Je rry Parker.
who ftnhhad with 17 potato, hit

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...Trib e

Scaletta's 25
C a n t Drop
Blue Darters

Rouse then dropped in a Jumper
from the wing before Whitney
located Henderson again for a
30-2 Head.
Next, the 5-7 guard whipped a
pass to Maxwell on the baseline
and the 6-2 leaper took one step
and dunked It for a nine-point
lead. "Matt sure got up In a
hu rry," said Marlette about hts
Junior transfer from Ohio. "He
and W alker both had good
games again Inside."
Walker blocked three shots
and again opened the lane for
Henderson who turned In two
determined drives for baskets In
the f o u r th q u a rte r w h ic h
ballooned the Seminole lead to
43-29.
Midway through the fourth
quarter. Whitney hit two free
throws and Henderson located
Gordon on a three-quarter court
pass to push the Tribe's advan­
tage to 52-33.
John Lowe, a backup guard.

Coatlnosd from I A
apply some defensive pressure In
the last two minutes of the half,
but It didn't pan out. “ It's tough
to press when you csn't score."
quipped Marlette.
AP O P K A L y m a n ’s T . J .
Anderton hit s free throw and
Scaletta tossed In a season-high
Keith Wooldridge scored from
25 points Tuesday night but he
underneath to pare the halftime
couldn't keep the Greyhounds
deficit to 24-15.
from dropping a 56-56 Five Star
Whitney, who hit all four of his
Conference basketball game to
floor shots and two free throws
A p o p k a 's B lu e D a rte rs at*
for a career-high 10 points,
Apopka High School.
pushed Lake Howell out of the
gym In the fourth quarter. The
“ He hit from all over,'* said
Lyman coach To m Lawrence q u a rte r by o u ts c o rln g the swift frosh Ignited four straight
'Hounds. 22-12. to take a 47-39 fastbreaks as Seminole surged to
about his Junior guard. “ He got
lead Into the final eight minutes.
a 39-27 lead heading Into the
some from the baseline and
Lyman, though, fought back fourth quarter.
other from out front."
on 10 fourth-quarter points by
Bui the Oreyhounds didn't get
After Brooks hit two Jumpers
Scaletta. The Greyhounds pulled to open the auarter. Whitney
enough as Apopka handed them
within one at 56-55 but Apopka found Rouse for a layup and
their 10th loss In 21 games.
held off the surge to claim the Henderaon for another one.
Lyman Is 2-13 In the Five Star
Conference and 2*11 In the
victory.
Th e Greyhounds once again
district. Apopka Improved to
played without starling forward
14-0,0-6 and 8-5.
Brett Marshall, who Is averaging
The Blue Darters Jumped to a
almost I I points per game.
10-12 first-quarter lead but
Lawrence said Marshall, who
Lyman found the range In the
lias a chipped bone In his leg,
second quarter, outscorlng the
may be back for Friday's game
Darters, 15-10, as Scaletta and
01 . ftM 0VL
against Lake Brantley.
Ralph Phllpott combined for 12
"W
e
need
him
.
that's
for
points. Phllpott finished with 16.
sure." said Lawrence.
"We Just used good man-loman pressure defense the whole
LYMAN (Ml - Thama* t. kstotto «•
game," said Lawrence. "It really
William I. Kadiak I. PhllpaM U. Imlto *.
paid off when we fell behind
MawtonX Tatalt: II 141*1*.
after the third quarter."
APOPKA (Ml - Maria* II. Mmaan II.
IS 000 Mil l WARRANTY
74 000 Mi l l WARRANTY
Lawman M. Umars 4. Plarcs *, Clayton I. K.
Apopka, which received eight
Hardwick
t.
K
Hardwick
I.
Tala
Ik:
144
HU
points from Keith Johnson and
Hallllma - Lyman If, Apopka 11. Pauli six from Ralph Shuler, turned
Lyman *, Apopka II. Fautod out — nana.
Tactoilcal-ncna
A — 1)0
(he game around in the third

tossed In eight of his season-high
10 points to pull the Hawks back
to respectability at the end.
Lowe waa the only Silver Hawk
In double figures. Anderson
finished with nine.
Seminole Improved to 14-6
overall. The Tribe Is 9-6 in the
conference and 9-4 in the dis­
trict. The 'Nolea host Mainland
Friday. Lake Howell fell to

11-13. 3-12 and 3-11. Lake
Howell hosts Apopka Friday.
LAKI HOWILL 141) - Andarton *.
IkMkV X Woaldrldga 4. Brook* X Hlcki 4L
Ltonard I. SctotifMr 1. Law. 14. Common* X
TatoH: MI-447.
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Seabreeze Trims Patriots
■ rC h rlfe P la to r
Hsrald Sp o rts W rite r
DA YTO N A B E A C H - Terry
Johnson pumped in a game-high
29 points and T e r r y White
poured In 21 aa Seabreeze's
S a n d Crabs upended Lake
B ra n tle y 's P a trio ts , 76-55,
Tuesday night In Five Star
Conference action at Seabreeze
High.
Seabreeze Improved to 20-4
overall and kept Its one-game
lead In the conference with a
13-2 mark. Lake Brantley now
atanda at 3-18 overall and M S
In the Five Star.
Seabreeze Jumped out to a
13-fl lead after one quarter but
Lake Brantley trimmed It to one,
21-20. midway through the sec­
ond. Brantley hung within six,
31-25, before Seabreeze took a
35-25 halftime lead on a fourpoint play.
The Patriots stayed within 11
late In the third quarter but
John Parka hit a free throw and
Johnaon threw In a shot from
Just over halfcourt for a 52-30
Seabreeze lead at the end of the
third quarter.
Oreg Courtney, a 6 8 senior
center, paced Lake Brantley with
17 points on 7 of 9 shooting from
the floor and he also pulled down
11 rebounds and blocked five
shots. Mark Moser added 12
points on 5 of 10 ahnotlng while
Wade WllUg hit 5 or 10 shots for
12 points.
Pat Johnson did not play for
Seabreeze and Lake Brantley
caoch Bob Peterson said he did
not know the reason.

Basketball
L a i d BIANHSV 111) - Slant I. Uwray
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Evening HsraM, Sanford, Fl. Wednesday. Feb. II, t w —IB

Cook O f The W eek
'If You Come From The Mountains, You've Got To Be A Good Cook

started with making biscuits and gravy for
breakfast, and learning to fry salt pork. 1 don't
measure a lot. because that's the way m y Mom
cooked, so I have a hard time breaking down
recipes. Sometimes I start off with one recipe and
by the time I’m finished It’s not much like the
original."
After a busy day. sometimes 12 hours long. In
her beauty shop. Betty comes home to her
husband Bob, son Bill, and three dogs, two cats,
and an "overweight” guinea pig. The newest
addition to the Norwood family ts Chi Chi, an
adorable chihuahua who gets super royal treat­
ment. complete wtth her own miniature bed.
Betty and Bob. who will celebrate their 19th
wedding anniversary on Valentine's Day. have
lived In Sanford for 16 years. While Bob plays golf
and Bill Is busy with church activities, Betty
eqJoys oil painting. She la especially fond of
painting animals and a very regal-looking tiger Is
her favorite among many others which grace the
walls of her home and shop.
A very active person. Betty says she "can't sit
still one minute. I can't Imagine anyone ever
getting bored. There's too many things In life out
there. I've always said that when I take my
vacation I'm going to go to be bored, so I can find
out what It's like. I love to read. I love to write. I
love kids and always have a houseful."
Betty recalls that when she left home to get
married. “ It was like going back home, because I
already knew how to clean house, cook, wash
dishes, and Iron clothes.” Her only problem was
learning to cook the way Bob was used to eating,
mainly southern Louisiana Cajun type food.
"Tha t's when my mother-in-law took me aside
several times and showed me how to prepare
something. She's Just about m y best friend In the
world, besides being m y mother-in-law. She
always remembers me with cards and flowers any
time of the year, not Just on special occasions."
Because her work days are long. Betty relies a
great deal on her microwave oven. She says. "If
my house ever caught fire. I'd grab my kid, my
purse and tny microwave. I use It religiously. and
have &lt; W n e of mlcaowavc cookbooks. . Moat
recipes are bland to me. so If 1find one that I like.
I'll mesa It up real good u n til! get It the way 1 like

It. I like to taste the food I’m eating.”
Before she even bought the oven, Betty took a
complete course In m icrowave cooking at
Seminole Community College, "simply because I
was afraid It would go the way of the blender,
food processor, and other kitchen gadgets that 1
never use. So I completed the course, then made
up m y mind to buy one. knowing It would be
something that I would use to Its full advantage.”
Betty remembers always wanting to be a
hairdresser, but her career araa detoured because
of marriage and a child. She explains. ”1 wanted
to bring m y son up to an age where I felt
comfortable about leaving him . so I waited until
he was about 11 years old, then he had baby
sitters until he was so old. he was embarrassed
because the baby sitters were the same age he
was.”
Her greatest pleasure at work ta when a
customer comes In and says. "D o something with
my hair!" Betty likes to start from scratch and the
first thing she does Is talk to them to find out
their likes and dislikes. "W hat I like, they may
hate. I show them books of hair styles and find
out If they are good at managing their own hair. A
lot of things have to be taken Into consideration,
whether It's a total change In styling or Just a
subtle highlighting of the color. I'm very cautious
and take It very slowly so that the customer Is
pleased and satisfied. A drastic change
somestlmescan be horrible.*'
Back In the kitchen, she sometimes prepares
favorite meals In large quantities so portions can
be frosen for future use. especially after a long,
busy day. One advantage Betty enjoys with her
microwave oven Is being able to defrost meats
quickly when she gets home from work late, as
any working wife and mother can appreciate.
A variety of taste-tempting dishes are given
below for those with a hearty appetite and a sweet
tooth:
H AM AND P O TA TO CASSER OLE
PON M IC R O W A V E
4 cups cubed potatoes, uncooked
•
1 cup fresh carrots, sliced thin
1 cup chopped celery
V4 cup water
3 cups cooked ham. cubed
2 tablespoons green pepper, chopped
2 tablespoons chopped onions
3 tablespoons butler or margarine
Set aaide:
U cup margarine
3 tablespoons flour
11* cups milk
1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese

plastic wrap and microwave on high for 7-S

MwsM H nIs by T msmt Vlsmit

Betty Norwood slices up one of her favorite recipes
minutes until tender, stirring once. Drain and act
“ I*1'
.
In another bowl combine ham. green pepper.
onion and 3 tblsp. margarine. Microwave on high
3-4 minutes until green peppers are tender.
Combine both mixtures In a 2 quart casserole
d,“h *
In a 4 cup gloss measure, w e ll W cup
margarine on high, about 88 seconds. Add three
tablespoons flour, stirring until smooth. Gradually add IV* cups milk. Cook on high power 3-8
minutes until thick and bubbly, stirring once
every minute. Add cheddar cheese and stir until
melted. Pour over ham and vegetables I n .
cooking lime. Serves 6-8.,
C LA M A N D CHEESE CH O W D ER

\ package uu gratln potatoes
2 cups water
IV* cups clam Juice or chicken broth
| Cup milk
\ H p*. ran minced clams
j tSp naked parsley
2 tablespoons margarine
Combine potatoes and seasoning mix from
package with clam Juice and water In a large
saucepan. Cover and simmer 18-20 minutes. Stir
ln mJik. undralned clams and margarine. Heat
gently five minutes. Sprinkle with parsley flakes,
Serves 5-6.
___

!? ■ * -..................
2 cups self rising com meal
tea B E T T Y , paga 2 6

Girlfriend's Figure Prevents Marriage
D E A N A B B T i Several months
ago I met a fantastic woman I’ll
c a ll C la r a . S h e 's 3 8 and
divorced. I'm 42 and divorced.
She's Intelligent, has a won­
derful sense of humor. Is fun to
be with, and she's great ln bed. I
really care for her and she says
she loves me, and she shows It. I
guess I'm lucky to have found

^

You're probably wondering. So
what's the problem? Clara has a

E V S E Y n FLOW ID A

a friend who I played bridge
with, went shopping with. etc.
Jm
V7

»

D e a r
A L L y
****** W

a—

.
* } ? ArC *ou ,“
Jerk? Yes. But since you can't
see yourself married to her.
before you get further involved
- or heaven forbid, gel carried
away In bed and propore marriage - say goodbye to this
fantastic woman.
I'm sure you know that your
chances for finding soancone
artth all Clara's attributes plus a
terrific figure are very slight. But
keep looking. A perfect man
should have a perfect woman.

What Is your impression of
thla situation? And what would
the Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals have to soy
about this?

A fcw y w
ago her dog's
health started to deteriorate and
she began devoting all her time
to the care of thla animal. She
L O S T A F R IE N D T O A DOO
dropped out of all social circles
and other activities. The last
D E A R L O S T ) Some people
time site had the card club at her love their pets as they would
house, there were newspapers love a child. Would you have
on the floor In every room, and told her to put her sick child to
we girls were upaet over how sleep? In her mind, that la the
rick the dog appeared to be. It way she perceived your sugges­
w u whlnlng pathetically and tion.
obviously In palm We all politely
The Soclely for the Prevention
w i g e * * ! that she put her dog
m “ « r a n d s h V ^ tVpokcS of Cruelty to Animals would say
that a rational pet owner who Is
to a r ^ us since
^
X
truly devoted to a pet Is selfish to
I know she has neglected lo allow it lo suffer when It could be
visit her aging widowed mother easily pul out of its misery. Your
because there la no one available friend la Irrational. Don't Judge
to alt with her dog.
her.

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'P a rty F a re ' F o o d s M a d e E a sy W ith M ic r o w a v e
Thursday. Valentine's Day, la
a flood time to make a special
dinner for your family. By ualnfl
your microwave oven you can
prepare "party fare” foods In
little lime. For the entree pre­
pare C h ick e n and B roccoli
Supreme, serve It with Rice
Pllaf, your favorite congealed
salad (red of course), French
Bread and Raspberry Party De­
ssert.
CHICKEN BROCCOLI
3 whole chicken breasts, split
Vi cup dry bread crumbs
Vi cup Parmesan cheese
Vi teaspoon paprika
1 egg. beaten
Vi cup dry sherry *1
3 packages (10 ounces each)
'frozen broccoli spears
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
2 tablespoons flour
Vi teaspoon salt
Vi cup milk
Vi cup shredded Cheddar

Cheese
Remove skin and bone from
c h i c k e n . C o m b in e b re a d
crumbs, Parmesan cheese and
paprika on wax paper. Moisten
chicken breasts with the beaten
egg, then roll In crumbs, coating
well. Roll the chicken breasts.
Place in a 10x6" microwave safe
d is h . P o ur s h e r r y a ro u n d
chicken. Sprinkle with any re­
maining crumb mixture. Cover
with wax paper. Microwave at
100% power 16-18 minutes, or
until chicken Is tender. Set
aside. Microwave broccoli In
packages 10-12 m&gt;nules. or until
just about tender. Set aside.
Microwave butter in .a 2 cup
glass measure 4-5 seconds.
Blend In flour and salt. Gradu­
ally stir In milk and cooking
Juices from chicken. Microwave
at 100% power lVi-2V4 minutes,
or u n til m ix tu re bolls and
thickens, stirring several times.
Stir In cheese until melted. Set

1 tablespoon butter or marga­
rine
1 tablespoon Instant chicken
bouillon
I tablespoon parsley flakes
1 tablespoon instant minced
Home Economist
onions
Seminole
Vi teaspoon salt
Community College
Vi teaspoon celery salt
Vi teaapoon garlic powder
3 cups water
Vi cup almonds
aside. Arrange chicken and
broccoli In a large serving plat­
Combine all Ingredients except
ter. *2 Pour cheese sauce over almonds In a 2-quart microwave
all. Microwave at 100% power safe casserole. Cover with caaae2-3 minutes, or until heated role lid. Microwave at 100%
through.
power 8-10 minutes, or until
* 1 Apple Juice or white grape boiling. Reduce power to 50%.
Juice can be substituted for the microwave for 15-17 minutes, or
sherry.
until lice la tender and has
*2 Be sure serving platter is absorbed the liquid. Let stand
microwave safe.
five minutes. Stir In almonds
This rice pllaf Is Just about as
Just before serving.
easy to prepare as using a
package mix.
T h e party dessert can be
R IC K P ILA R
prepared early In the day or
1 Vi cups uncooked lo n g- some of the preparation done the
grained white rice
day before.

Midge
Mycoff

RASPBERRY P A R TY
1 package (9 ounces) yellow
cake mix (Jiffy)
1 package (10 ounces) froxen
sweetened raspberries
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
Vi cup butter or margarine
I Vi cups unsifted powdered
sugar
Vi teaapoon almond extract
1 cup whipping cream
2 tablespoons sugar
Vi teaspoon vanilla
Vi cup sliced almonds
Prepare cake mix as directed
on package. Grease bottom only
of an B" square microwave safe
baking dish. Pour batter Into
pan, spreadi ng e ve nl y.
Microwave at 50% power, 7
minutes, then microwave at
100% power lVi-2 minutes, or
until no longer doughy. Be sure
to rotate the cake if y o u r
microwave la not equipped with
a carousel. Cool completely.

Microwave at 100% power the
raspberries for 2-3 mlnutea, or
until thawed. Mix sugar and
cornstarch together In a two-cup
glass measure. Drain raspberry
Juice Into measure and blend
well. Microwave at 100% power
3-3V4 minutes, or until mixture
bolls and thickens, stirring once
or twice. Cool. Stir In raspber­
ries. Microwave at 100% power
butter In a small glass bowl
20-30 seconds, or until softened.
Beat u n t i l c r e a m y . A d d
powdered sugar and beat until
smooth. Beat In almond extract.
Spoon onto the cooled cake;
spread evenly. Spoon raspber­
ries onto the filling, spreading
evenly. Beat cream until slightly
thickened, beat In sugar and
vanilla until thickened. Spoon
onto berry layer: sprinkle with
almonds. Cover and refrigerate
at least four hours. Cut Into
squares for serving.
Happy Valentine's Day!

Valentine's Roses: The High Price Of Love
B y M ark Sehwtd
United Press International
This year more than ever It
will take a lot of green cash to
send red roses to a favorite
Valentine, with a doxen longstemmed beauties averaging M 5
to 160 nationwide — unless one
shops ut the posh WaldorfAstoria In New York where roses
are a • 100 sign of affection.
There are some bargains,
however.
In Loveland. Colo., which resi­
dents fondly call the "Valentine
Capital of the W orld," roses can
be had for 813.99 a doxen, cash
and carry, at (he Flower Shack.

town sell them for upwards of
840.
Generally speaking, lovers
looking for any kind or flower to
send for Thursd a y will find,
themselves spending more than
In 1984 — primarily because of
last month's freeze across the
South that killed daisies, carna­
tions, pom pons, sweetheart
roses, babies' breath and ferns.
Many roses, however, come from
California and South America
and were unaffected.
At least by the weather.
Flower retailers do have their
own Valentine's Day tradition —
Jacking up the prices — a
tradition they say they are Just

passing on from wholesalers.
"W e are at their mercy," said
Sandra Turner, co-owner of A
Green Scene In Miami where 12
red roses sell for 845. "The y
a l w a y s raise t h e ir p ric e s
tremendously for Valentine's
Day and Mot her 's Day.
Wholesale prices triple."
G le n n H a rp e r, o w n e r of
Harper’s Flowers In Atlanta, said
the price of his roses are 860 a

dozen now, but will Increase to
867.50 by Valentine's Day.
"In 10 years It has only gone
up about 820." he said.
Harper said there are several
reasons why prices go up on
Valentine's Day. First, hr said,
there Is high demand during
Christmas that depletes supply
and roses lust don't grow bark
fast enough by Feb. 14. There
also Is high demand before

Valentine's Day, which helps
drive up the price. He also said
shipping costs add some to the
overall cost.
Dial A Rose manager Peter
Pappas In Miami said he Is able
lo keep prices down because he
handles only roses. Neverthe­
less. last year the 821.95 normal
price Jum ped to 829.95 for
Valentine's Day and he expects
the same this year.

For those for whom money la
no object, the Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel flower shop In Manhattan
Is selling a doxen roses for 870 to
8100. depending on the length of
the stem.
Uptown from the Waldorf, at
South Flower Market, buyer J|ll
Knopf said long-stemmed red
roses sell for 844.99 per dozen
d u rin g V a le n tin e 's season
compared to the normal 824.99.

PEPSI COLA
P R O D U CTS

I:\ \ 7 M

8-18 OZ.
BOTTLES
.....................

DIET PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW

;i n n J U U U L r m i

lig h t

2600 S. ORLANDO DR., SANFORD, FL

LOCALLY OWNED A OPERATED 8Y DENNIS 8 KATHY OMNSTEAD

323*4960
PStCU M THU *0 0000 FSOM THUSi, r tl 14THOU wto. r u x u a

OPEN: 7 DAYS A WEEK 6 A.M. TO 10 P.M

"A m

/ SmiU %

AUU "

WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS.

■M

CHUCK ROAST

SHOULDER
STEAK

O ff

LA i l l

BATHROOM
TISSUE

CHEER
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

Betty Norwood
jCoatlnued from page IB
vi cup self rising flour
' Vi cup finely chopped onions
' 1 egg. slightly beaten
'■ 1 can creamed com
■ Vi lap. cayenne pepper (hot)
. Vi cup chopped bell pepper
I Vi cup finely chopped hot
green peppers
. Vi cup cooking oil
! Vi cup milk
i Combine all ingredients and
pour Into well greaaed cast iron
skillet, loaf pan. or muffin Un.
Bake ai 350* for 35-45 mlnutea.
Serves 8.
! FAVORITE BOTCBIL!
2 lbs. ground beef
I lb. stew beef
I cup chopped onions
1 cup chopped bell pepper
4 cana(15oa.| hot chill beans
4 cans slewed tomatoes
2 an (15 o i.) tomato sauce
1 tablespoon garlic flakes
5*8 tablespoons chill powder,
according to taste
In a huge pot. brown meats
together. Drain. Add onions, bell
p e p p e r a n d s im m e r tw o
minutes. Add remaining Ingre­
dients and enough water to
bring liquid to about three In­
ches above cooking level. Sim ­
mer 3-4 hours, or until stew beef
la tender, adding water if neces­
sary. Serves a whole bunch.
and sliced lengthwise
•alt and pepper
flour
Salt and pepper the potatoes
well. Place In a brown paper bag
with enough flour to coal them
and ahake well.
Cook In hot fet in deep fryer
until galden brown. Serves 4.
I Vi cupa auger
I cup evaporated milk

etltutea)
1 tablespoon butter
2 egg yolks (reserve whites)
1 tsp. vanilla
In large bowl, m ix sugar,
cocoa and cornstarch. Add milk,
egg yolks and vanilla, mixing
well. Pour Into 0 Inch unbaked
pic shell. Dot with butter and
bake at 400* for 30 mlnutea.
While pic Is baking, make your
favortte meringue with reserved
egg whites, when pie la done,
lop with meringue and return lo
oven (or a few minutes until
meringue la golden. A rich pie.
Serves 8.

(180000 years eld)
1 stick butter (Vi cup)
H c u p sugar
4 eggs
2 cups chocolate syrup
2 cupa cake flour
1 tsp. baking powder
In Urge bowl, cream butter
and sugar. Beat eggs In well,
then add chocolate syrup. Sift
f lo u r a n d b a k in g p o w d e r
together and add to chocolate
m ixture, blending Juat until
moistened. Don't over-mix. Tu rn
Into greaaed and floured 13x9
Inch baking pan. Bake at 350*
35-40 mlnutea. or until wooden
pick cornea out clean.
IC O N I
2 ox. unsweetened chocolate
3 tablespoons butter
I tap. vanilla
About Vi cup milk
About 2 cupa confectioners
sugar
In saucepan, melt butter and
add chocolate, blending till
smooth. Transfer to m ixing
bowl. Add vanilla and Vi of milk.
Beat in confectioner's sugar.

U.S.DA Choice Besf Bonofeis S t lO U ld t r R O B S t * » 1 . S B
U .f.D A Choice B aef.l Lbe. Or More B t t f S tB W

u M .1 9

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SAVE ON THIS W E E K ’S D O U B L E D I S C O U N T SPECIALS

GROCERY SPECIALS

| FROZEN DAIRY
T.Q. Lb# Fruit Drink
4 d k g T.flL Lea

« ^

W
^ &amp;

Choc*0*Laa Drink *1 ( 4 0
E35Mtx Chtny Mb * 1 .1 •

DELI B A K E R Y

�Enthusiasm for Osh cookery Is 2 fish steaks (12 ounces each)
one of the noteworthy trends In (halibut, tlleflsh. salmon)
American cuisine In the past five
3 tablespoons Hour
years. Restaurants report that
Vs tesapoon salt
many more patrons are ordering
Vi teaspoon pepper
fish dishes, large food markets
4 tablespoons butter or marganow oiler a greater variety of fish rlne. divided
and the fishmonger has never
Vi pound red seedless grapes
been so busy. Doctors laud the
44 cup grapefruit Juice from
importance of fish In the diet Florida
because of Its low cholesterol
2 medium grapefruit from
and calorie counts, while nutri- Florida, sectioned
ttontsls hail Its healthful and
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
nourishing qualities. But for
C o m b in e flo u r, sa lt and
home cooks, the best part of this pepper; coat fish steaks with
sudden surge of Interest In fish flour mixture. Reserve unused
and seafood Is how easily one flour mixture. In large skillet
can make delicious company melt two tablespoons butter;
meals with all the fish that's saute steaks until brown on one
readily available.
side, three to four minutes. Tu rn
Fish Steaks Verontque uses and brown other side. Fish tests
the enlivening taste of grapefruit done when It flakes easily with a
Juice to enhance and vivify the fork. Remove to serving platter,
natural aroma and flavor of the keep warm. Add more butter. If
fish. Lightly sauteed red grapes
and sections of grapefruit from
______________________________
Florida surround the steaks.
adding succulence to the dish

?’• If you've gone Into yqur diet
&gt; with a bang, you may suffer
i from a headache. Headache la a
Ccommon reason people go off a
&lt;; diet, but understanding diet

Fish steaks Veronlque are delicious yet easy to prepara
Make them a once-a-week treat for the fam ily. Good eating I

O lda Smithfiald

Sliced
Bacon
1*lb. pkg.

Publix offers you a wide variety of tasty
meats. Beef, lamb, pork, poultry —
conveniently packaged in all different sizes
And if you need a special cut — just ask,
we’ll be glad to help. Flavorful
meats from Publix, you can
taste the quality.
i
Publix Beef Gov’t.-Inspected

»»•**»
Will* Os« S*H
C*» titles**
PrtCS H ’ * !

Sunnyland

Boneless
\ Ham

Itb the little things that
make the difference
t
at Publix. vv

B la d e

.3

per lb.

Chuck
R o a st

Publix Beef G o v t In s p e c te d
( R o u n d Bone)

Shoulder
Roast
per lb

Publix Beef - G ov’t.-Inspected Fresh Lean

Ground Chuck.....
TR Y

Chcctc // Htoia Cuwcnft

Oscar Mayar Tha Big Ona or

A N D G E T $1.00 R E F U N D

Swift Premium U.S.D.A. Grade A
Oov’t.-lnepected, Shipped DAD,
Quick Frozen

FROM PILUSBURY A N D K R A F T
S a v a 2 6 c , PUtsbury C ra te ant

Dinner R o lls......... S

M

Baking H ans......... ?

Kraft Sliced Chaaea

6!

Swift Premium Mild or Garlic

Deluxe

Corned B e e f........ ■?.' *2
(See Details on
•1°°MaJMn Refund
Offer at Store)

Swift Premium or Lazy Maple

aaU ji

r«* 14

P o rk
S te a k
per lb.

B u te ry rich breads, creamy chocolate eclairs,
flaky pastries and pies, sweet cookies and cakes.
Publix' Danish Bakery — irresistibly good.

Topped With An
Abundance of
Cherry FlWng
Great Tasting!

Plain Bagels.....0 *» I

Decorated For VMenUne'* Day

C tw rry le e R o S ... V

I "

Beef F ra n k s .........

M”

Oscar Mayar Original, Nacho Style
or Bacon 6 Cheddar

Cheese
Hot Dogs...............

*1av

Ball Park Beat, Meat or
Knockwurst

Pranks...................&amp;

Fresh

r*
CM

\ O ur source la "T h e Headache
^ King," Dr. Seymour Diamond,
(w h o runs a headache clinic In
j Chicago and was president of the
J American Association for the
J Study of Headache, and of the
v National Migraine Foundation.
Dr. Diamond explains that
l dieters can suffer from three
(k in d s of headache: tenalon
' h e a d a c h e , ca u se d b y the
'nervousness of having to live
( without constantly nibbling: low
; blood sugar, which comes from
•limiting your Intake of food,
(especially carbohydrates; caf•felne withdrawal, caused by
•dropping chocolate, coffee, and
£|uch from your menu.
y Tenalon headaches are the
•Ssnly psychological headaches.
-A lle y are caused purely by
•jRrvcs. by emotional reaction to
f p e fear that you won't be able to
; paUafy your cravings for food.
•• T o get over a tension headache
*brought on by dieting, realize
•{hat even on a diet you will be
fable to conquer bad nibbling
J (labile and atlu not Starve.
; : In tension headaches, the
emuoclco of your neck tighten.
\ Fight thin by learning to take out
•the kinks and knots. Once In a
t while, drop your head so your
tchln la on your cheat, then ralae
* M all the way up. Next, rotate
•your bead from shoulder to
•shoulder tn exaggerated swings.
{T a k e a hot shower a rubdown
J will help too.
{ Excrete Is a good way to
J relieve tension headaches. Regu;'lar exercise, performed long
enough to make you sweat {30 to
SaO r r 1^ 1**— or more), can do

steaks, about 12 ounces each)*
Salt and pepper
*4 cup grapefruit Juice from
Florida
1 large fresh tomato, sliced
2 medium grapefruit from
Florida, sectioned
In medium skillet melt butter,
saute onion and mushrooms
until tender. Stir In spinach,
nutmeg and salt. Spoon spinach
mixture Into a 2 -quart, shallow
baking dish. Sprinkle fish steaks
with salt and pepper to tastr.
Arrange fish on spinach. Pour
grapefruit Juice over all. Bake In
a 350* oven 20 minutes. Place
tomato slices on fish and arrange
grapefruit sections around fish.
Bake five minutes longer or until
tomato and grapefruit are heated
through. YIELD : Four servings.
•Note: Use tlleflsh, halibut,
swordfish or salmon.

\

Elegant yet simply to prepare,
this la a perfect entree for
entertaining that Im portant
guest.
Florida Fish Bake takes fish
steaks and gives them a more
robust flavor w ith sauteed
mushrooms and onions com­
bined with spinach. The vegeta­
bles are placed In a baking dish,
topped with the steaks and
baked. Tomato slices and grapefhilt sections arc added Just at
the end. The dish Is a marvelous
combination of taates. textures
knd colors that makes It as
dye-appealing as It la appetising.
-Experiment with fish — it adds
a new dimension to your cook­
ing. And remember that grape­
fruit complements the natural
f l a v o r of fi sh w i t h o u t
'bverwhelmtng It.
FIM B T E A K S
VKRON1QUK
4 fish steaks (6 ounces each) or

ijAvold
|rhe Diet
SHoodoche

necessary. Fry remaining fish
steaks. Remove to serving plat­
ter. In same skillet, melt re­
maining two tablespoons butter.
Stir In grapes; cook one minute.
Stir In reserved flour mixture.
Gradually add grapefruit Juice.
Cook, stirring constantly, until
mixture bolls and thickens. Add
grapefruit sections and parsley:
heat through. Pour over fish
steaks. YIELD : Four servings.
F L O R ID A FIS H B AR B
3 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
1 medium onion, chopped (Vi
cup)
1 cup sliced mushrooms
2 packages (10 ounces each)
fro s e n , c h o p p e d s p in a c h ,
thawed, drained
Vi teaspoon ground nutmeg
Vi teaspoon salt
IVi pounds fish steaks (2

Freeh
1 (Either End
or Whole)
Loin
[ Pork
per lb.

$ ^5 7
H S e a fo o d B

SunnylendMild or Hot

Danish
Cherry
Strip
each for

W hy Bother TaB ak*!

*6* M * *
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With Delectable Foods

Create Some Irish Charm For St. Patrick's Day
1 tablespoon water
brush on braid. Bake at 350* K. until mixture begins to harden.
Create the fresh charm of an
Combine all Ingredients except 30 to 40 minutes or until bread T u rn partially frozen mixture
Irish country cottage with de­
lectable foods geared to that bread mix, egg and water: mix sounds hollow when tapped. Into chilled mixer bowl; beat
until smooth, light and airy.
most Irish of holidays. S t. well. Propare bread mix accord­ Makes 1 loaf.
K1W IFRUIT G ELA TO
ing to package directions. After
Freeze about 2 hours longer or
Patrick's Day.
V» cup sugar
until firm enough to scoop.
St. Patrick's BufTet Salad takes first rising, punch down dough
1 cup water
Serve Immediately. Makes 6
a gentle cue from the traditional and divide Into 3 equal portions.
4 to 8 klwlfrult. pared and servings.
holiday fare. New potatoes, Roll each Into 12x3-lnch strips.
m a rin a te d In a s p r ig h t ly Spread pistachio mixture down halved
L E TTU C E — W KAFFED
14 cup brandy
CHICKEN
vinaigrette dressing, are com­ center and length of dough
Combine sugar and water.
H cup Julienne-sliced leek
bined with tender slivers of leaving about Vb-lnch border
Vb cup sliced mushrooms
artichokes and served up with around edges. Pinch edges Bring to boll over high heat; boll
I small clove garlic, minced
crisp wedges of Iceberg lettuce. together along the length of 5 m in u te s . C o o t. Process
1 tablespoon oil
Rolls of thinly sliced corned beef dough lo form 3 "ropes." Place klwlfrult In food processor or
1 c u p s h re d d e d co o k e d
complete this attractive main- on greased baking sheet; braid blender to equal 1-Vb cups. Ad
"ropes." Tu ck ends under. Let sugar syrup and brandy to pulp. chicken
dish salad.
Vb cup diced tomato
A fragrant bread Is the Ideal rise, covered, as package directs. Pour Into 8-inch square baking
2 tablespoonsdry sherry
accompaniment to the salad and Combine egg and water; and pan: freeze about 3 hours or
California Pistachio Bread Twist
Is an especially appealing choice.
A yeast dough rich with egg. this
bread has a filling of California
pistachios which add pleasant
crunch, distinctive nutty flavor
and holiday-festive color.
Klwlfrult Gelato puts the final
polish on the classically simple
holiday menu. Beat of all, It Is
totally prepared In advance.
Each of the foods In this
foursome — artichokes. Iceberg
lettuce, pistachios and klwtfrult
— are "n a tu ra ls" for menu
usage throughout the spring
months. Care In selection and
preparation will help ensure
Publix people have a special way of making a trip to our store
success with any recipe.
enjoyable. Sim ply because we want our customers to be well
All sizes of artichokes In the
satisfied. We oflTertthe best quality food, in great variety
marketplace are mature and
- |whatever
j
’
and at the most reasonable
prices. And u tell
i l do
asonable pr
ready to use whole, stuffed,
it takes to make you feel welcome.
halved, or sliced, as In the St.
Patrick's Buffet Salad. Look for
artichokes that are heavy for
their size. Occasionally the
artichokes have been "winterkiaaed" by frost which enhances
their mellow flavor.
Iceberg lettuce adds crisp
flavor to salads and sandwiches
all year long. Select heads that
have a springy "give" for mild,
With This Coupon ONLY
aweet flavor, to core Iceberg
Herihey
lettuce, whack the core against
the edge of the counter, then
Reese’s Pieces
simply twist the core out. Or. cut
8-oz. b ig
out core with a stainless steel
(f IfMttM Y»b. 14-10. 19S»C
knife. Wash and thoroughly
All Purpose
drain the head of lettuce and
place In a plastic bag or crisper
THIS AD
In the refrigerator for storage.
Pistachios are available yearEFFEC TIV E:
round and are marketed In
THURS.,
natural or red-dyed shells, salted
FEB . 14
or unsalted. Th e shells of quality
THRU
pistachios are Urge and slightly
W ED..
spill-at one end, making them
eaay to open and remove the nut
FEB . 20.
meat.
1 0 8 5 ...

14 teaspoon salt
Vb teaspoon thyme, crushed
Dash pepper
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1 tablespoon water
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
15 to 18 large Iceberg lettuce
leaves
Saute leek, mushrooms and
garlic In oil until barely tender.
Add chicken, tomato, sherry and
seasonings; heat thoroughly.
Dissolve cornstarch In water;
add to chicken mixture with
parsley. Cook and stir until
thickened. Serve chicken m ix­
ture with large lettuce leaves.
Each appetizer Is prepared at the

table by w rapping about %2
tablespoona chicken mixture in
each lettuce leaf. Makes about
16 appetizers.

EKEW EKEO K I WIFKUI r
AND EHBIM F
1 pound (about 32 ) raw
medium shrimp
2 cups water
1 cup dry white wine
1 teaspoon bottled hot pepper.:
sauce
4 large cloves garlic, crushed
3 lemon slices
2 sprigs parsley
10 peppercorns
2 teaspoons salt

PublxMsr

FOK U SOUS CONVtMMCC
TOUCAN SANS O N :

Friendly
It's the little things that
make the difference at Publix,

Publix

30* OFF

Florida Fresh, Crisp

Iceberg
Lettuce

White
Potatoes

■T. PATRICK** BUFFET
BALAD

1-V4 pounds small boiling
potatoes
Salt
Water
Mustard Vlnalgarette Dressing
2 a rtic h o k e s , sliced and
cooked*
V* cup frozen peas, thawed
and drained
2 tablespoons minced parsley
12 (1 os. each) thin sliced
cooked corned beef
8 Iceberg lettuce wedge*
Cook potatoes In boiling salted
water and cover, simmer about
25 minutes or until tender.
Drain: cool allghtly. Cut Into
M -lneh slices. Pour half of
Muatard Vinaigrette Dressing
over warm potatoes; refrigerate
u n til cold. O e n tly combine
artichoke slices, peas, parsley
and potatoes. Roil up corned
beef slices. Arrange on platter
with potato mixture and lettuce
wedges. Paas remaining Muatard
Vlnugretla Dressing. Makes 0
servings.

Mustard Vlaalgretts Dress­
ing: Combine Vb cup oil, W cup
white wine vinegar, 2 teaspoons
D^fon mustard. H teaspoon salt
and U teaspoon each pepper and
augan mix well. Makes about H
cup.

*Te Prepara ArMebakeai
Bend back o u te r petals of
artichokes until they snap off
easily near base. Edible portion
of petal sh o uld rem ain on
artichoke heart. Continue to
snap off and discard thick petals
until central core of pale green
ala la reached. Cut off top 2
hce of artichoke: discard. Cut
off stem: reserve. T rim off outer
dark green layer form artichoke
bottom and stem: rub all sur­
faces with lemon Juice to prevent
z s m i im iiffn, Quarter artichokes
le n g th w is e . R em o ve sm a ll
prickly-lipped petals and frizzy
centers: rub again with lemon.
Cut artichoke and stem Into thin
lengthwise slices. Add 2 tablespoona water and dash salt; cook,
covered, over m edium heat
about 5 minutes or until water
has evaporated am

E

large head

(Produce

$•439

Publix 100% Pura (Ail Florida)

Oranga Ju te* .......

ST » 1 «

For Snacks or s«i«ds, Tasty Rad

Seedless
C ran es .................

‘‘Virginia" Crisp, Juicy

W ln «M p or
Rome A pp le s.... 3

Fraah Crisp Qraan

80°

S a *^ P*rf*ct! (M*dium Siza)
Florid*

i r » i« t
s*rv * with Chee*e S a iic*. Tandar
Te sty Tom atoes... »T
Freeh BroceoN.....00* Excellent $t*am*d, Frash Tandar
Rip*, Juicy DeUctou* Frash
Zucchini

All Natural, European

49*

N ectarines........... IT SO* Squash................... 7 40*

ICandyl

Cucumbers and
se
ll Peppers
Boll
P«
Cafe Geneva
Dressing...............
Fraah Cut Flower* in An Attractive

Medium
Mixed Bouquet.....2S3,*8,#

HBWines
Rosso. Blanco or Bianco Sacco Wine

Kraft

Polo Brindisi..........*3"

Marshmallows...... 70*
Red

Dentyne G u m ........f t 70*

IDairyl

PWsbury Cinnamon, Blueberry,
Raspberry or Strawberry .

Dei Monte Reg. or Lite SSced or Helved
VeSowCNne

Toaster Strudel.... *SSP#1W

Pillsbury

Crescent
Dinner Rolls.............. E i 00*
Publix

Citrus Punch........... &amp; 80*
Lactaid

Lowfat Milk.............. ?.r 70*
Kraft Sliced Cheese

Deluxe American...

Frozen Food

*1M

Sargento Halfmoon Longhorn
Cheese Colby or

Cheddar.................. *7 #1M
Kraft Chunk Style

Swiss Cheese.......*24*
Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sliced
Natural Cheese Swiss. Provolon* or

Moxxerella............ ./ S t •I09
Fisher

Sandwich M a la .......’i t *1°*

Peaches....................... '£ 69*

Florida Gold Valencia Concentrate

Orange Juice.......772? &gt;1”

In Unsweetened Pineapple Juice,Del Monte Sliced,
Crushed or Chunk

Stoutfer's A'L’Orange

Pineapple...................59*

Lean Cuialna.......27 * 2 «
PiMsbury

0*1 Mont* 17-0*. Reg. or 16*oz. Lite

Microwava
Pancakes.......................*1”

Fruit Cocktail.............r 79*
Del Monte Reg. or No Sett Golden Sw eet Whole

Chef Sahito 32.25-0x. Deluxe or
29.25-oz. Pepperoni

Party Pizza............*3“
Banquet Turkey or Sakabury Steak

Buffat Supper....... *1**
Serve with ice Cream,Publix

Cherry Pie.........,T7l
Mrs. Paul's Crunchy Light Batter

Fish Fillets.....
Mr*. Paul's Light S Natural

Cod FlZatt............. 'tS *2M

Housewares
Ekco (17.25 x 11.6 Inches

Cookie Sheet........
Ekco (8.5 x 4.5 Inches)

na n ............... ;
Pillsbury

cuo fine tv chooocd.
natural pistachios
M cup butter, softened
I tablespoon each finely
chopped a
s h a llo
ts ,. chop
chopped
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15-ot. box

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Continued from page 4B
1 large bay leaf
4 klwifrult. pared
Shell shrimp: reserve shells.
Bring reserved shells and all
Ingredients except shrimp and
klwifrult to boll; simmer 15
minutes. Add shrimp: boll 1-V4
to 2 minutes or until shrimp are
barely cooked. Remove shrimp
from liquid. Strain and reserve
liquid; cool to room temperature.
Return shrimp to cooled stock;
refrigerate about 2 hours or until
served. Cut each klwifrult Into
16 chunks. Skewer I chunk
klwifrult. 1 shrimp and another
chunk klwifrult on each skewer.
Makes about 32 appetisers. Rec­
ipe can be halved.
ARTICHOKES WITH OREEN
O ARDEN DIP
Vfc cup each mayonnaise and
dairy sour cream

W

^ F rtsh M o m o g e n I« ^ \

par dozan

Reg. or Light Beer

Sentinel# I Osenala Co.

1 package (8 ox.) Neufchatel o r,
cream cheese, softened
4 ounces M on tere y J a c k
cheese, softened
,,
3 tablespoons chopped green ,
onion
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
,
Dash garlic powder
Vi teaspoon bottled hot pepper
sauce
Vi cu p co a rs e ly chopped
shelled natural pistachios
Blend cheeses, green onion,
lemon Juice and gantc powder In .
blender or food processor until
smooth. Fold In pistachios. Pack,
mixture Into crock or serving
bowl; cover and chill. Remove
from refrigerator at least 30.
minutes before serving. Makes
about 1-4k cups.
Bsrvlmg Tip: Serve with sliced
French bread, crackers or fresh
vegetables.

(Plus Tax &amp; Deposit)
Tab, Sprite, Mr. Pibb,
Mello Yello, Reg. or Diet

Coca Cola

WrtsO**

ritci *•'

16-oz. bots., 0-pk.

Cwirtw*1*

Dal Monts

Tomato
Catsup
32-ox. bot.
Publix Spaclal Rscipa Honey

F IR S T

W heat Bread....
Tatum's

Buttarm ilk
R la jt .d la

1&gt;-ct

ss*

K asblsr Rag. or Unsattad Zasta

Oranaa, Laks.
Diamond Shallad

W alnut*...........
Sun-Maid

CaNmyrna Figs
Sun-Maid

Fruit Bite......

Hits Cracker*........
w isa Brights (Light)

Potato Chip*........ 'pm. QQ*
V U

R B

3-liter bot.
JM U ■ # %

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M

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Lagar or Light, In 12-ox. Cana

O fd T a p B * * r......... ^

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(4c Off Labal)
Liquid Blaach

Clorox
04-01. bot.

Assortad Papar

Gala
Towals
larga roll

Natura Vallay Chewy Assortad

Granola Bar*........ S?; » 1 «

; B

ADC, Rag. or D ac. Park Coffaa

1

Maxwell Nous*....

'£ •2**

Enrlchad Pra-cookad Bag

Sun-Maid

Apricots

Baltin**................. W •1°*

■U siisa o ss—isC s. Nabisco

Sprit*.
Diet Coke or

Success R ice....... u T M 11

M il...........

Sunswoat Plttad (cannisler)

Prune*.................. 'S2
Sun-Maid Seedless

Gotdan Griddla

/ M IL

S y ru p ...................... *£?

M

Pillabury Assort ad
(14.2 to 16.6-oz.)

H

n S T T il

Quick Bread M ix ..

V* cup minced fresh spinach
leaves
«
U cup minced parsley
1 tablespoon minced greenonion
2 teaspoons lemon Juice
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
U teaspoon oregano, crushed
Dash cayenne pepper or bot­
tled hot pepper sauce
2 artichokes*
Combine all Ingredients except
■trichokes; mix well. Remove
and reserve outer petals of
artichokes. Discard small Inner
petals and fussy centers. Cut
bottoms Into blte-slxe pieces and,
arrange In center of serving
plate: ring with reserved outer
petals. Serve w ith m a y o n ­
naise -sour crea m m ix tu re .
Makes about 1-H cups dip.
•To Cook Artichokes: Pull off
lower, outer petals of artichokes:;
snip ofT Ups of remaining petals. .
Cut off lop third of artichokes;.,
discard. Cut stems to 1 Inch or
less. Stand prepared artichokes ,
In pot with 3 Inches of boiling,
salted water. If desired, o il.,
lemon Juice and seasonings can.,
be added to cooking w a te r.,
Cover and boll gently, about 3 0 ,
minutes or until petal n e a r.
center pulls out easily. Drain.
,,
CALIFORNIT PISTACHIO

U ilH H

09*

Quiche
Tops In
Cooking
Contest
Quiche has gone south of the i
border thanks to Joyce Downs
who won first prise In the Adult •
Division of the National Egg &gt;
Cooking Contest with her lively
Taco Quiche recipe. Th e Ameri­
can Egg Board w ill present
Jo yce with tS.OOO In prise
m o n e y w hen she and her
husband attend the Interna­
tional Poultry Trade Show In
Atlanta this month. In awardwinning Taco Quiche, the egg
custard filling la spiced up with
sestUy flavored meat and cheese,
then poured Into a com tortilla
“ crust" for a unique twist to
Mexican fare.
Recipe creator, housewife and
grandmother. Joyce Downs en­
ters cooking contests.
*

Taco Quiche is chock-full ofi
nutritious Ingredients with the
high-quality protein of eggsleading the way. Sour cream,
■ b r e a d e d l e t t u c e , s lic e d
tomatoes and cut olives vividly
g a rn is h the the m a in -d is h
custard pie. This dish Is virtually
a meal In Itself, so consider
serving It as the entree at your
next dinner party to add an
International flair to your menu..
Oiet

(30* Off Label)
Laundry Datargant

Mayonnaise

'rune Juke
tomstock 21-ox. Rag.

Iherry Pie r

owaaTtdy Cat 3
(4S« O R Labal) Liquid
rED nc e o n sfw

LONQWOOD
VILLAGE C TR .,
LONQWOOD
where shopping is op
7doysoweek

&lt;30* Off Label) Heavy
Outy Laundry Detergent

8 soft com tortillas
1 pound lean ground beef
1 cup chopped onion
I clove garlic, minced
1 teaspoon chill powder
|
VS teaspoon salt
Vt teaspoon oregano leaves.,
crushed
U teaspoon thym e leaves,,
crushed
M teaspoon ground cumin
2 cups (8 os.) shreddsd Mon-,
teiey Jack cheese

�%

»v#nlnf H tfild, SaiHfd# Ft. WidutdAYa F«to. u , it**

Granny Sm iths...
Old Fashion Apple Goodness
Tart, green apples have long
been the choice of many experi­
enced cooks for baking. They
know that tart apples accent
sweet flavors of cakes, pies and
breads, creating m em orable
taste sensations.
T h e a p p le s in c r e a s in g ly
selected as the tan baking apple
of choice are Granny Smiths
from Washington State. The ir
rich green skin, often with a
blush of pink along Ihc shoulder.
Is one easy way to Identify
Grannies, as they are familiarly
known. The creamy white, crisp
and Juicy flesh and tart, dis­
tinctive flavor are other charac­
teristics.
In little over five years. Granny
Smith apples have grown to be
the number three apple In pro­
duction (behind Red and Golden
Delicious) In Washington, the
stste most noted for quality and
quantity of apples. The 1984
W ashington harvest yielded
about 1.2 million boxes or about
48 million pounds of Grannies.
Reach for a Granny when you
are looking for a refreshing
snack that's relatively low In
calories — about 80 for a medi­
um-steed apple — and also In Tat.
As with all apples, their high
water content gives a satisfying
sense of fullness.
And when it's time to pull out
the canisters of (lour and sugar
and the sweet spice of cinnamon
for a baking session that con­
jures up Images of home and
family, consider the G ranny
Smith Coffeecakc shown here. It
has old-fashioned goodness with
a touch of contemporary flair.
Cream cheese In the recipe
makes this cake particularly rich
and moist. Tart, Juicy slices of
Granny Smith apples contrast
appealingly with the tender cake
crumb. A sugar and cinnamon
coating on the apples provides
the spicy crowning touch. Best
of all, the recipe makes a large
cake; It freesesnnd reheats well,
Oranny Smith Coffeecake Is a
great choice for a special brunch,
but It Is equally suitable for
dessert served warm or cold with
whipped cream or a scoop of
your favorite vanilla Ice cream.
Other traditional apple dessert
favnrttes are at their belt when
Grannies ore used. Included are
recipes (not photographed) for
the simple pleasures of apple
crisp and hom em ade
applesauce. All are delightful
ways to complement the tart
flavor nr Granny Smiths and
Increase your cooking experi­
ence with this popular apple.
The combination of grower
attention and expertise, sail,
climate and number of daylight
hours are what make Granny
Smith apples from Washington
State consistently superior In
site, appearance and eating
quality.
GRANNY SMITH CRISP
8 cups Oranny Smith apples,
pared, cored and sliced
W H cup sugar
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Streuael topping
Toss apples with sugar and
cinnamon; spread In bottom of
8 a l l x 2 - l n c h b a k in g d is h .
Sprinkle with Streuael Topping.
Bake at 380* F. 38-40 minutes.
■ tro sssl Topptagi Combine
44 cup flour. Vi cup quick rolled
oats and M cup each packed
brown sugar and white sugar;
cut In Vi cup butter or margarine
until crumbly mixture la formed.
O R A N N Y S M ITH
APPLRRAUCB
8 cups Granny Smith apples,
pared, cored and chopped
V i-iicu p sugar
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
M teaspoon ground cinnamon
Vi cup apple Juice
Combine all Ingredients in
saucepan; bring to boll. Cover:
reduce heat and simmer 30-28
m in u te s: a tir o ccasionally.
Makes four cups.

VarMUwsai
Oramga A pplesaacei S u b ­
stitute Vi cup orange Juice and
one teaspoon gralcallme peel In
place of lemon Juice, cinnamon
and apple Juice.
C r u - A y f l a I s s n i Add one
cup fresh cranberries to recipe
and Increase sugar by Vi cup.
B ta a d is i Aaalssaaesi Add
Vi cup each golden raisins and
chopped toasted ha te ln u ls;
substitute Vi cup brandy for
apple Juke.
T ip i For an elegant appear­
ance, add Vi cup almond liqueur
to warm applesauce; mix well.
6ram nyi

■
A

4 cups apples, pared, cored
and sliced
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
I teaspoon ground cinnamon
Combine cream cheese, one
cup sugar, butter, eggs and
almond extract: mix well. Com ­
bine 14V cupa flour, baking
powder; baking soda and salt:
blend Into cheese m ix tu re
alternately with milk. Pour Into

;•

PAYS YO U

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SLICED O IR .

PORK LOIN
-MAY a

C A U F. STEA KS

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PURINA

MAINSTAY
DOG FOOD
25 LB
BAG

$ ^ 9 9

or ROASTS

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GRAPE JELLY
2 LB
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SOUR CREAM

1 .0 0

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8 9 c

MAHATMA MCE. .211.
DEEP BROWN

1 package (8 ox.) cream
cheese, softened
I Vi cups sugar, divided
Vi cup butter or margarine
2egg»
I teaspoon almond extract
Flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
Vi teaspoon baking soda
V4teaspoon salt
M cup milk

&lt;

greased and floured 9xl3x2-lnch
baking pan. Dip apples Into
lemon Juice; toss with two
tablespoons flour. Vi cup sugar
and cinnamon. Arrange apple
slices on cofTeecake. Bake at
350* F. 80-60 minutes or until
wooden p ick Inserted near
center comes out clean. Cool
slightly; serve warm. Makes
I2-I4servtngs.

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�Svnlng Herald, isnfort. FI. Wtdnssday, Ftb. 13. m i - ? B

Eating Out Is No Excuse For Pigging Out
Editor's Note: The following
excerpt Is from 363 DIET TIPS
(Ballantlne Books. $3.30). Its
author. Julie Davis, is a former
fattic who has written a number
of beatselllng books in the health
and beauty Held.
R e sta uran t eating is the
dieter's catch 22 — you want
(and need) a break from home
meal planning but face tempta­
tion every time you read a menu!
The following tips solve the
dilemma by teaching you how to
control your Intake, from how to
choose the right restaurant to

filling your plate at a buffet. dishes, too.
4. Vegetarian: Unusual salads
Some of the Ideas are u n ­
conventional. but that's what It and vegetable dishes are de­
licious.
takes to master eating out.
5. Scandanavian: Order with
• Pick a restaurant with a
an emphasis on fish and lean
low-cal cuisine.
meats.
T H E TO P FIV E CHOICES
T H E FIVE W O R ST CHOICES
1. Seafood: Have fish and
1. French: Caloric laden butter
shellfish broiled, steamed, or
sauces spell disaster.
poached, not fried or sauced.
2. Italian: Butter, cheese, and
2. Japanese: Sushi, sashimi,
and soy-basted terlyakl are good olive oil add up to overweight.
choices, not batter-fried tem­
3. Mexican: Sour cream and
pura.
guacamole toppings with beans
3. Chinese: Ask that the chef undo the value of tacos and
use a minim um of peanut oil on tamales.
4. American Southern cookstlr-frled dishes: try steamed

tng: Flour- and oil-based sauces
add calories.
5. Hungarian. Eastern Euro­
pean cuisines: Too many butter
and cream-based dishes mean
heavy meals...and a heavy you!
• Bowaro of aalad bars —
thoy art potentially highcalorie.
These have sprung up at
restaurants, fast-food chains,
even the supermarket, making
them very accessible to dieters,
But unless you are very careful,
the salad you make could pack a
wallop! Lettuce, green veggies.
and tomatoes are low-cal. but

took at this chart of the more
popular Ingredients:
chickpeas. 230 calories a cup!
bacon bits. 200 calories a 14
cup!
croutons. 125 calories an
ounce!
com kernels. 170 calories a
cupl
dressings. 125 calories a
spoonful!
Also to consider: Half the
nutrients of the vegetables are
lost within an hour of Ihetr being
sliced. Belly up to this bar with
caution!
• “H u la" your appetite be-

g |^ &amp; C H O O S E
THE
^ S sC A S H

:
:
:
:

SPECIALS
BELOW!

LOOK FOR THIS CIRCULAR IN YOUR MAIL!
V
ft TELLS HOW TO USE CASH DIVIDENDS TO SAVE
AND THERE'S A VALUABLE STARTER COUPON
ON TH E FRONT PAGE USE IT WITH A FEW CENTS
&amp; G ET YOUR FIRST CASH DIVIDEND SPECIAL
r

/AW

w -

-A

s'— - r

CHICKEN
O F THE SEA

TUNA

SLICED
BACON

&amp;5oa CAN

12k PKOl

• Laarn how to navigate a
bnffst table.
When faced with this kind of
choice, the average d ie ter
crumbles. But savvy dieters
have devised a strategy that
spells sa tisfa ctio n w ith o u t
straying from your weight-loss
plan. Follow these steps us
outlined:
1. Satisfy your eyes by tuklug
a slow, comprehensive tour of
the table. Take a few minutes to
absorb what you saw and to
draw up a plan of action.
2. Fill two-thirds of your plate
with vegetables, raw or cooked.
3. When you come upon a dish
you absolutely must try. use the
single-bite a pproach. L im it
yourself lo three choices.
4. Gravitate toward lean meats
sliced to order.
5. Stay away from anything
creamed or not readily Iden­
tifiable: too many unknown cal­
ories.

i i a u *,

ItH&gt;i. AH
ge»l4*«

PANTRY PRIDE
WHITE

KING SIZE

• W h a n t r a v e l i n g to a
foreign country, be prepared
to diet with a list of hay
phraaea to a n p la la y o u r
dietary naeda.
Yo u r c u lin a ry vocabulary
should Include:
"Please bring the sauce on the
side."
"Please b rin g me m ineral
water."
"Please cook my food without
oil or butter."
"Do you have any fresh flsltf
Fresh fruit?"

3/*l49

YELLOW
ONIONS

Chocolate
Sauerkraut
Cake Dessert

LARGE

BUNCH
STALK

Sauerkraut In desserts? Yes.
Indeed ... tt'i been done fur
decades. And when you consider
It, sauerkraut la no more tart or
unusual than green tomatoes or
cranberries or mincemeat, all of
which are used frequently In
desserts.

6 PACK
12-OZ CAN

NAVEL
ORANGES

• Include a aide dish of
lemon wedges with order.
A squeeze of lemon Juice perks
up all the dishes that usually
come with a htgh-cal dressing or
sauce.
Use the lemon throughout
your meal; here arc Just a lew of
the foods It enhances:
Club soda: A squeeze gives It
lemon-soda taste.
Salad; Combined with fresh
pepper. It replaces dressing.
Fish: Use Instead of cocktull
sauce or hollandalse.
Vegetables: A sprinkling re­
places a pal of butter — different
but delicious lust the same.
• May with your food!
Especially when you're on a
date with a new Interest or out
with a business acqualntunce
and don't want to bring up the
subject of your diet. It's the bet
way to pretend you're eating up
a storm when you don't wunt lo.
Cut you food Into pieces, move It
all over your plate — Just don't
raise your fork to your mouth
once you've eaten the quantity
you're allowed. And If your
partner catches on. sim p ly
explain you're loo Interested In
him or her and the conversation
to eat.

— — 7r Ctuh

Cosh \ —

fore going to n restaurant.
About 30-60 minutes before
your d i n n e r reservation,
purposely cut Into your appetite
with a 150-calorle snack « r
mlnl-mcal to put a dent In your
hunger. You will find that you
will order less at the restaurant,
have the control to wait for the
entree to arrive, and eat less of It
once It does.

HALF GALLON

Sauerkraut adds moisture and
flavor to cakes, and combines
particularly well with apples,
apricots, raisins and dates. All
sauerkraut used In dessert reefpea should be well-rinsed ana
drained.

S A V I M I &lt; ASH

20 O FF

I

■ £»

| | | |

a

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lU u f t &amp; r 9 9 %~ *

UMTMCOURDN HERitini
1. u iu m rn mrjH yurr.i
r o T W J W tn .
f flW g g ttu M D .
I
_IBM
M

PRICES &amp; COUPONS EFFECTIVE THUR&amp;,
FEB. 14 THRU WED.. FEB. 2 0 1 *6 .

j

{

214 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1Vi cups sugar
h cups shortening*

a eggs

.,

1M teaspoon vanilla
14teaspoon salt
Vfccup unsweetened cocoa
1 cup water
1 cup sauerkraut, rlnaed.
drained and chopped
* tor richer cake, butler may
be used.
Sift together flour, baking aodg
and baking powder: set aside.
Cream sugar and floured pan,

�To Lower Blood Pressure
Learn To Control Stress

Hi, BUNNY/
SARGE SEN T
M E T O TOWM
FOR SUPPLIES

bebtlb!

I THOUGHT
YOU WERE
OH
BIVOUAC i

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yeuK&amp;oAi

I'L L BE WITH YOU IN A
FEW MINUTES. r e m e m b e r ,
I PROMISED TO WRITE M
YOU EVERY BAY
P
YOU’RE OH BIVOUAC

6UDi*...|T%HER
. 0RTHBAY.

TWEW3C LIES

a®unwfwe

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BUADINOtm

MCA

DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 have
flu c tu a tin g blood pressure.
Sometimes It Is on the low side
o f normal and at other times It Is
on the high side of normal. Tw o
physicians have told me that it
can't be kept at a normal level
by medication or any other
means.
DEAR READER - There are a
lot of people like you. or who
have variations o f what you
have. T h e first question Is
whether you need any treatment
or not. Many o f Ihc medicines
used to control high blood pre­
ssure will aggravate your lownormal blood pressure.
The sudden pressure changes
are usually on a reflex or chemi­
cal basis. Th e arteries can con­
strict as rapidly as the pupil of
the eye can react to light. They
do this as a reflex.
~ ln addition. the heart can
speed up and pump an Increased
amount of blood, which will also
cause the pressure to rise. Both
reflexes and the sudden release
of adrenaline, as from stress or
anxiety, may induce these ef­
fects.
Often, people with this pattern
do better If stress can be re­
lieved. You might do well with a
v e r y sm all dose o f u beta
blocker, such as Inderal. which
neutralizes the adrenaline reac­
tion. It also helps lo minimize
the reactions to stress and anxi­
ety. However, even a small
amount might also makr your
pressure too low. It mlghl help If
you can learn how to control I he
stress reaction assoclalrd with
your sudden high blood pre­
ssure.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm bb
and have had a problem with
yeast Infections for the past 20
years. I have had u test for sugar,
and that was OK. The Infection
usually starts in the summer,
and I wonder If It's passed back
and forth from my husband. If
so. what ran be tlonr to treat
him? I have had vuglnal suppodliorirs. but nothing has been
prescribed for my husband.
DEAR READER - You are
absolutely right. About 15 per­
cent of the male partners ol
women with yeasl inlet lions also
develop a localized Involvement
called balanitis. When a woman

ha* recurrent yeast infections,
one of the important facets of
treatment Is to treat her male
partner.
The treatment must be local.
Vaginal suppositories are used
for you because the antl-fungal
preparations that eradicate yeast
are not absorbed from the
digestive tract.
Diabetes can be an underlying
factor In causing recurrent yeast
Infections, as can pregnancy and
antibiotics that suppress the

normal vaginal bacteria th a t'11
p re v e n t fungus g r o w t h . ’ ’
H orm one changes a fter t h e '
menopause that change the cells
may also contribute to suscepti­
bility to yeast Infections.

Send your queatlona to Ur
Lamb. P.O. Box 1551. Radio C ity ..
Station. New York. N.Y., 10019. ,&lt;

B K&gt;"9 (So 1
9 CsnMMing gold

1 Irritate
4 Tai agency
labbfl
7 Retirement plan
labbrl
10 Author Fleming
11 in i deed

12 tgs (*.)

14 Conceive of
I I European
mountain
district
i t Footlike pan
19 Period oi
historical time
21 Chemical luffia
22 French river
24 Wrath
29 light (comb
form)
26 Actrau Clair*
27 Halp
29 Public hail
31 Attu’l neighbor
39 Or hemeuai
36 Chtnoaa fruit
37 Praued
40 Noun suffn
41 Append*
44 Pop’a wifa
45 Sole
46 Marriege vow
(2 wd»)
47 Labor group
(abbr)
46 Public vehicle
49 HouMhoidgodi
51 Diugraaabi*

13 Typ* collection
19 Itelamation Of
■urpna*
17 Constellation
20 Portuguese

cadi
22 Unctuou*
23 California
county
24 Doctiin*
29 Of the cat
27 Ancient name
of Vich

t

*

to
14

It

HI

g o d enn non
□□□□ g o d n u n
n cno G n n n n n n n
nnn d g g d g g
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DOCIGOD ODD
□nemn
nenonn
nnnnnrj
onnnn
nnn d g g d g o
nrunci oon n n n n
□ n o ODD GOG
dgooodd nnnnn
0DO OOG ODOO
uno ODD ODD
42 Normendy
invasion day
(comp, wd )
43 Form of
architecture
45 Western hemi­
sphere orgenlution (sbbr)

47 Phrese of under,
standing (2
wds.)
48 Wei (Let)
90 Spire ornament
62 Aye
53 Free
54 Uncle (Scot)

11

It

tight

55 Cry of pain
56 Celtic m * deity
57 Steal
56 Company |Fr.
abbr)
66 Compel* point
60 Nathorlandi
commune

It
11

DOWN
1 3. Romen
2 Cram
2 *•»
4 Ourtt’ wife
6 Japanese

WIN A T BRIDGE
l y Jaznes Jacoby
by Hargraavaa A Salfars

Handmade
bridge table

BUGS 0UNNY
EH SO m a p 7 \MHY.
AT -TM Af
PgrruHIA?
SuS5 BUNNY J s tK J

by Wamor Broth#rs
HE P0CMS6D HEQ &amp; T
MY PICTURE IN THE
CENTERRXP OP AN
IMRORANTMAGAZINE.

AMP HE V OH,
WASNT \ Y E S
ABLE _\ H E,

*nsimmersalmanac

W e ' v e b e e n l o o k i n g at
examples of avoidance play thta
week. Here la an unusual varia­
tion on this theme, employed by
fellow bridge w rite r Albert
Dormer some years ago. Dormer,
declarer in a four-heart contract,
received the opening lead of the
ace of diamond!, followed by a
second diamond. That waa an
apparent doubleton lead and.
should East have the heart ace.
It was obvious that West would
obUln a diamond ruIT. Dormer
waa farsighted enough to negate
the effeettveneaa of thta defense.
Instead of Immediately at­
tacking trumps, he played (he
A-K of clubs and trumped a club

with the eight of hearts. Only
now did he play a heart to the
king. Just as he feared, East won
the heart ace and led back a
diamond, which West trumped.
Now what? With nothing left but
spades to play. West had to lead
away from the spade king to
present declarer with hla con­
tract.
Albert Dormer Is presently
editor of the World Bridge Fed­
eration News. As such, he has
the opportunity to comment on
bids and plays the world over.
He's lucky indeed If he can
occasionally describe plays as
expert as hla own In today's

n o r th

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B K J7

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B K 101741 O i l
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♦ yiO TI
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Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer North
W»*t

Paaa

Nertk Eaal
IB
Pass
1*
Pom

Seed
I*
4*

Pata Paaa Pat*
Opening len^BA

-boot? WAS,

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...
He PoffN’T C A R P
A»O U T MY IR A *N ,

He J u s t

ldvss m f

,Fop My GRAPHIC;/

A IM
(March 21-April 19)
Even (hough you may not be
aware of It, you will be closely
observed and admired today.
You'll make thla favorable Im­
pression by Just being yourself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You're destined to be a winner
today In situations where you
are atrongly motivated to
achieve. Be single-minded and
keep your eyes focused on the
trophy.
O B im n (May 21-June 20)
The secret to success today ta to
treat others aa you would like to
be treated yourself. Don't cut
any comers, even If you have the
chance to do so.
CAMCSS (June 21-July 22)
Do not settle for thtnM * » they
a re todayt you h a va the
wherewithal to Improve out­
moded products or systems. Use
your Ingenuity to bring about
C* u £ (July 23-Aug. 23) Be an
astute obaerver today and watch
how someone you admire
bandies a delicate problem.

his techniques.
it
VUtOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 23) You/;
won't be content today unless/*
you use your time In some&lt;’
productive, worthy m anner,’1
Being of service to others offers ,
definite fulfillment.
if
L I M A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Even! *
If you have to appoint yourself tefcy
the post of social chairman
today, do so. You're better a r "
organizing something fun thaa^'
your Mends are.
«t
M o m o (Oct. 24-Nov. 23H
Others will be Inspired to do;,,
things today that are materially *•
beneficial for you. Thla will be*-4
their way of repaying favors yot^’
did for them in the pm t
•
,*
B A O IT T A W B (Nov. 13-Dec?'

« l . ( O I . ( J u .w

u r S E n T -'J

maintain total control.
,o
C A P U G O M (Dec. 23&lt;Jan.v '
19) la buataaaa dealing today**
let the other guy make tlm ,
*4 ” * • • ■ ! * V ™ * Uo

until he haa played »U at h is L

�CALENDAR
Longwood Elementary School
Advisory Committee and ad­
ministration will hold a meeting
for parents to discuss rezoning of
itudents. 7:30 p.m ., school
auditorium.

p.m. at the animal shelter. 2800
County Home Road. Sanford.
Free b lo od p re s s u re
screenings. 10-11 a.m.. West
Volusia Medical Services buildIng. 1681 Providence Blvd.. DeItorus.
Free Income tax help for rettrecs. 9 a.m. to I p.m.. Hacienda
Village Mobile Home Park. 500
Longwood-Oviedo Road. Winter
Springs. Through April 15. BrIng copies o f last tax return.
forms for the current year and
other relevant materials.
South Seminole County
Klwanls Club. noon, ©ulncy's
Restaurant. U.S. Highway 17-92
and L i v e Oa ks B o u l e v a r d .

THUBADAY.FBB. 14
C e n t r a l F l o r id a R e gi on a l
Scholastic Art Awards Exhib­
ition featuring art and photo-

'

ONIGHT'S TV
todNJI

900

Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m . Florida HospitalAltamonte Branch. 601 E. AltamonteAve.. 11 a.m .to7p.m .
Sanford Jaycees. 7:30 p.m..
J a ycee b u ild in g . Fifth and
French. Sanford.
Central Florida Chapter
Florida Psychological Assoclatlon w orksh op on W om en ’ s
Issues featuring Dr. Penny Lukin
on stress m anagem ent. Dr.
Emmy Freeman, pre-mcnstrual
st ress s y n d r o m e , and D r.
Marilyn Barsky on ages and
stages of womanhood,
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St..
5:30, closed discussion, and 8
p.m.. open, speaker.
Oviedo A A . 8 p.m.. closed.
First United Methodist Church.
Overeaten Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m. Community United
Methodist Church. U.S. Highway
17-92. Casselberry.

10:30 a m., Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
T a x help w i th AARP/IRS
trained volunteers. 12:30 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N. Lake T r i p l e t D rive.
Casselberry.
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8
p . m, W e k l v a P r e s b y t e r i a n
Church. SR 434. at Weklva

Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 0 p.m.. Rolling
Hills Moravian Church. SR 434.
Longwood. Alanon. same time
and place.
Tanglcwood A A. 8 p.m., St.
R ichard's Episcopal Church.
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same
time and place.
Sanford A/. Step. 8 p.m.. 1201
W. First St., closed.

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY 8 AM. • 5 P.M.

M .P .O .

11-2398

L

321-2398

I
OYSTERS

FRIDAY. FSB. 15

it (WimvAurr
■ oo|tueme cowsAicr m
■ MtMVSffWV R P&amp;

10:30

m a A U O FTM IC tN TU O T

CfUnAnf Sw m mollw

•30

B GDn e tt OF UFI Ouivif tm

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BrsuavrauD

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10-35

BWOMMMATCMCMOI

1130

B ® « a « i of fortune
(IlBFW CiNNQHT
m #

trivia

nur

it r») ooht a IMOUQH
■ l u m m or oa r aamno

Centnl Florida Klwanls Club.
7:30 a. m. , Fl or i da F ed era l A
Savings and Loan, Slate Road „
436 at 434, Altamonte Springs.
*
Sem inole Sunrise Klw anls +
Club. 7 a.m.. Airport Restaunnt.
Sanford.
*
Optim ist Club of South
,
Seminole. 7:30 a.m., Holiday
/
Inn. Wym ore Road. Allamonte
A
Springs.
,j
Central Florida Blook Bank
/
Florida H o s p l t a l - A l t a m o n t e
/
Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave.,
/
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
y
Free Income tax help for retlrees, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.. Sanford r
Chamber o f Commerce. 400 E.
First St.. Sanford. Through April
15. Bring copies o f last tax
return, forma for the current
year and other relevant materi­
al!.
Gentle Exercise for seniors.

BUSINESS PERSON S
lunch
PRIME RIB, FLOUNDER
SEAFOOD SAMPLER
SMOTHERED CHICKEN
a w w t m n Ww m u m i *

SSCH Creates
Referral Service
A doctor referral service to
available through South
Seminole Community Hospital
In Longwood to help Seminole
County residents select -family
physicians and specialists.
The service, started Feb. 1.
refers callers to qualified physi­
cians who are located as conve­
niently as possible to the patient.
The service to made up of 250
professionals In 30 specialties
who are stafT members at South
Seminole Community Hospital.
For more Information, call the
hospital at 834-1200, ext. 145.

Chicken,
Spaghetti &amp;
Salad Buffet

EOOGEDun
'OH GOO!
YOUDCVH'

ALL YOU C A N EAT
O N LY

C IT Y . IA ID O RD IEAN CI
I ■ IN t T H E C O M F R IM IK IlV f tOW ISO ON
□IMAMCt OF THR CITY OF
I to— OOP. FIORICML IAI0
AM ENDM ENT CHANOIN0
THE ZONIMO OF CERTAIN
TEREITORV ASOM R I |R3V
10*NT LAI. SINOLI FAMILY)
TO N (HISTORICAL O ilT R IC T Ii FROVIDIN S AN
R F F I C T I V I O A TS i R l -

where the chaice Is years. | |
D A N I I L M A R L S • as*
DONOTTI J NIAS L i t . UN
n NSRRS ADVENTMT n o a l t h
tV IT IM / IU N R IL T . INC..
M « F lo r id a h o s p ita l , a

Pb. 3 2 3 - 9 3 1 2

2501 Preach Ave.

Sanford

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS
W EDNESDAY
F A M IL Y S P E C IA L
This# Place Chicken

Eight Piece
Thrift Pack

4

�Legal N o tic e
if it t li* t e*
» . *. air t i l l
ram * n i r
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rt T lt ii

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP TH E EIG H TEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
PLORIOA
CIVIL ACTION
NO MITTS-C A N
DIVISION E
AM ERIPIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
PlamtlH.

rt I I tit

DOUGLAS MARK
CARRITHERS. ttal

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at pentat appurtonant ta saM
unit, all In accordance wlM and
*ub|*ct ta Ma cavananlt. candi
•tana, restrictions, forms and
other provision* at Ma Declare
•ion of Condominium ot Destiny
Spring*, a Condominium at ra
carded in Official Records Book
1SJ7, Page l*tg. at amended in
Official Record* Rook lleo.
Pago 1**7. Public Records of
Seminole County. Florida
IN C L U D I N G S P E C IF IC
A L LY . B U T NOT RY WAY OF
LIM ITATIO N . THE FOLLOW
IN C E Q U I P M E N T
R AN G E/O V EN FAN/HOOD.
D IS P O S A L. D ISH W A SH ER .
R EFR IG ER ATO R . C EN TR AL
H E A T BAIR
Together with all the im
o o a a m o n ta , r i g h t s , ap
pur tananeat, ranlt, royal"**,
mineral, oil. and pot right! and
profit*, water, water rights, and
water stack, and a" natures now
or hereafter attached to the
preparty. Including replace
merits and additions thereto
This tala It made pursuant to
o Summary Final Judgment in
Faraclatura entered In C iv"
A ctio n Na 14 I7JS CA 0*
Division E now pending In Ma
C ir c u it C o u rt In and lo r
Somineta County. Florida
D A TE D Mil *M day ol Fobru
I SEAL I
D AV ID N BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE
C IR C U IT COURT
By /%/ Diane K Oakley
Deputy Clerk
Publish February IS. SO. H U
DEC 0,

9i nut

BeiB-i«•«■* rii
(BBBIB# B e l l i l|
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rtvat, u ttatlil a IK
stall a k i l l
at i tat ai- a
itatattt
n nna
la rt- 1 aaa.sat I
In lor mat Ion containing Iha
amount or d*tcrlp"an al Ma
proparty lurch At unclaimed
chacking accounts, aavlngt AC
counit. Villi hr Aapotllt. iNckl.
band*. Inauranco polk la*. u h

DAfandanta
NOTICE OP SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
•hat an th a ( t h d a y of
March.tats, at II 00 a m at Ma
Wdat Front Door ol Mo Courl
house ol Seminole County,
Florida, al SanNed Florida. Ma
undersigned Clark will oiler lor

m

91 99999

91 l l f e i

MC
91 I l f I*

U I U , M K I «•

I I I IB IM M fB
II* t t M f t e l C B M M
iB H s H I
90)| ‘ | * M * « M f

91 t i l l *

directed ta tha Comptroller ol
Florid*
O ERALO LEWIS
COMPTROLLER
OP FLORIDA
PuMIth February 1}. M. ItU
DEC 17

E M M AD IN O LE.
WIN
NOTICE OF ACTION
TH E STATE OF FLORIDA TO
E Z E K IE L OINOLE. whoa* rat
Idance Is unknown
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that E M M A
0 1N O L I hot Iliad a Pgtlttan In
Me Circuit Ceurt at Seminole
County. Florida, tor Oisaoivtton
of Marriage, and you era re
quirad ta serve a copy of your
written dafantot. It any, on
F R A N K C W HIOHAM. E t
q u i r e . *1 S T E N S T R O M .
M clN TO S M . JU L IA N . COL
B E R T B W HIG HAM . P A .
whose address It Post Office
Boa IMO, Sanlord Florida Jiff I.
and "Id the original wlM Ma
Clark al the above styled Court
on or before March IS. A D
H U . otherwise a default and
ultimata judgment will be an

71— H«lp W anltd
HOTICBOP
F U t llC H tA IIIN O
NOTICE IS H E R EB Y GIVEN
B Y T H E C I T Y O F
LONGWOOO. F LORIOA. TH A T
TH E C ITY COMMISSION WILL
HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING
TO CONSIDER EN A C TM E N T
OF ORDINANCE NO 474. EN
T IT L E D . AN ORDINANCE OP
THE C ITY OP LONGWOOO.
PLORIOA AMENDING ORDI
NANCE NO
AND ALL ITS
AM ENDMENTS OP TH E SAIO
C I T Y . S AID O R D IN A N C E
B E I N G T H E
C O M
P R EHENSIVE ZONING OR
OINANCE OP THE C IT Y OP
LONGWOOO PLORIOA. SAIO
A M E N D M E N T C H A N G IN G
THE ZONING OP C ER TAIN
T E R R IT O R Y P R O M [R 1)
RESIDENTIAL. SINGLE FAM
ILY DUPLEX TO 1C ]| GEN
ERAL. COMMERCIAL. PRO
V ID IN G A N E F F E C T I V E
O A T E j R E P E A L IN G ORDI
N A N C E S IN C O N F L I C T
HEREW ITH
LEGAL Lot* I, 1. II And I]
N il ta* Bait SOS Im I mar* or
tot*. of Enlimlngar Forma Ad
ditlan |l. Plat Boos S. P ar* I.
Public Records of SAfnlnolA
County. PlorldA N it rlfhlef
WAV lor U S Mwy 17*1
Baing more generally do
scribed At Mo property bounds
by LanydlN Avo on Itio North.
Mwy II *1 on Mo ( A*l; PlorldA
A r t on Mo South And Highland
SI onMoWttl
Sold OrdMonco wat placed on
llrtl reading on January 14.
IN I. and Ma City Commission
public hearing, which will bo
hold In Ma City Hall. ITS Watt
W a rre n A r e .. Lo ngw aod.
Florida, on Monday. Ma KM
day Of February. A D . IMS, Ol
7 *i pm . or ot toon fhorooftar
ot possible Al the mooting
interested portlet may appear
and be heard wlM respect ta Mo
proposed Ordinance. TM t hoar
ing may bo continued front time
to time until final action It token
by Mo City Commlttlon.
A copy of Mo prapoaod Ordi
nance It potted ol Ma City Hall,

C L A S S IF IE D A D S
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS
J*

OFFICE CLERK

831-9993

RATES
TEMP P£MI 774-1341

1:30 A M. • 5:30 TM.
Z)
MONDAY tkra FRIDAY , 1 1
SATURDAY • •Ndon

Parr Tima AudiN r Hoip Ap
proalmottly » haur* a amok.
Apply at Ma Mlowing Handy
Way Paad Store Jdi E SSM

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

71-Help W«nt*d

33—Lost A Found

REWARD!
Raaamend office Great sen
"mental heepaekel Ample
rewordCo" » U 1»

323-517S
HM Franc* Are.

37-Nursery A
Child Core

Sales Counselor
Data Mis January II. INS
D L Tarry. City Clark
City ot Lang wood
Publish February J. 11. t*U
DEC IS
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC H IA R IN O
NOTICE IS H E R EB Y GIVEN
B V T H I C I T V O F
LONGWOOO. FLORIDA. Mel
•ho City Commission will hold o
public hearing lo consider
enactment al Ordinance No *77.
entitled AN ORDINANCE OF
THE C ITY OF LONGWOOO.
FLORIDA AMENDING ORDI
NANCE NO m AND ALL ITS
AMENDMENTS OT .THE SAID
C I T Y . S A ID O R D IN A N C E
B E I N G T H E
C O MPR EH EN SIVE ZONlNO OR
OINANCE OF TH E C IT Y OF
LONGWOOO. FLORIDA. SAID
A M E N D M E N T C H A N G IN G
TH E ZONING OF CER TAIN
TER R ITO R Y FROM R I IRES
ID EN TIA L SINGLE F A M IL Y )
T O H (H IS T O R IC A L D IS
T R I C T I ; P R O V I D I N G AN
E F F E C T I V E O A T E , RE
P E A LIN G ORDINANCES IN
C O N FLIC TH ER EW ITH
LEGAL* Th* Eosl IS tool of
Lot Ml and all of Lott M4 and
Sd4. Town of Long wood. *c
cording ta M* Plal taoroaf at

G row ing Notional W algjtl,
S m o k in g , N u t r i t i o n a l
Counseling Company It open
Ing contort In Flartda. S new
open and 4 moro planned I
This I* o U. S. patented
program. Mat hee boon sue
cetatvi since IT74. II you art
oggrottlvo. and and lake
training, and git Mo lob dona
wa would Ilka ta Interview
you- ta train tar Ataecleta
M a na g e r w ith Managgcf

3 3 -Reel Estate
Courses

Al—Money to Lend
Bualnott Capital Sta te* la

Erporiancad Telephone
Solicitors. 4;J0tal:tap m

B f t jA J
Ptut benefits m u l l _______
Getting customers la sometime*
Ilka pulling taata.bvt not
whan you uea a wont ad

323-517A
M l French Avo.

S IC R U A IIU S 3 0 0 4

H through II, Public Record* ot
Somlnota County. Florida
■ting more generally da

c/o Pan American Airway
Lighten Togol IM Bdrlln IS
Gor many
YOU ARC HER EBY
N O TIFIE D Mai on action hot
boon commaneod ta taroctaa* *
istoclgdgo an th* tallowing real
property, lying and being and
•lluoto In Somlnota County,
Florida, moro particularly dp
Krtaodec tallow*
Lot SO. Block ” A "» CAR
R IA O I H IL L U N IT NO I,
according to Mo plat taoroaf a*
to car dad In Plot Book 14. Pag*
ft. Public Record* *f Semin*!*
County, Florid*, moro com
manly known a*. • Hitching Pool
Lone, C o tM ibo rry, Florida

(SEALI
DAVION BERRIEN
Clerk of Me Circuit Courl
Somlnota County, F tar Ida
By: t%&gt;Ootthy Norton
Deputy Clark
Publish February IS. SI. 17
March A IM S

public hearing, which will b*
held In ta* City Halt. ITS Watt
W a r r e n Ay*. , Langwoad,
Florida, an Monday, ta* KM
day of February, A O . ItU . al
7:SO p m.. or ot toon Ihorooltar
at pottlbl*. Al th* mooting
inter**tad portlet may appear
and b* hoard with rotpoct ta Ma
prapoaod Ordinance This hoar
ing may bo continued horn tlmo
ta lima until linol action la taken
by M* City Commission
A copy at th* p g i n d Ordi
nance I* pottad ol M* City Hail.
Long wood. Florid*, and caplac
era an III* wlM tha Clark *4 Ma
by Mo public
A iapod racer* of tala mooting
I* mods by ta* City tar It*
convenience TM* record may
net canalltvta an adtputN r*
card tar purpoaot of appopl bum
a decision mad* by ta* Com
mi talon with rotpoct ta th*
torageing matter Any partan
wishing to ensure tael an ad*
quota record ot Me proceedings
it maintained tor appall*,*
purposes It tdeltod ta mofc* th*
n*c**e*ry arrangement! at hi*
or her Own eipenee
Data tala January 11. I t U
D L Terry. City Clerk
City ol Longwood
PuMlih February J. IJ. IN I

Tempo

usM l US).

rory Sorvlco SSI I K . _______
W A N T E D - P BO PLB WHO
W ANT T O WORK T O R E­
P LA C E PBO PLB W NO

February N , IM S tar th*
purpata of conolderlng M l eat
tag upon taotaHoaylngmiftarn
H I ■ taction of Director*
111 Amantanonf ta Article III
of ta* Cortl fleet* of I ncarper *
lion Amend Article III I*
autaoriM ta* copHof pf « * bwdi
bo liter*load by H 7 M M M by
ta* sol* tar coah of s u m Ukaro*
ot now stack of S U M par value

AudrtSbnta^Flo imi

Doonesbury

B Y G A R R Y TRU D EA U
in u yofiw pjo
HUMfQONIU&amp;T
tm m r tm iu #

iset.ua.
semon

THANKiOU.

• f lw Y jo n ’
6ARN A W N
H VM M HOH
WOOS
way

ShoppingForh
howOr UsedCori

�9 «

n —Rooms for R*n!

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Ren!

141—Homes For Solo

KIT *H* CA RLYLE *by Larry WrtQht

335—Trucks/
Buses / Vans

111—Appliances
/ Furniture

1
YO)‘* £ fkJMCifeY.

)

Q cardinal
105—DuplexTriplex/ Rent

H il

W* hav* th* cur* 100% manay
back
guarani** Tuckari
Farm A Gardan Cantor. San
Sard, and Daland

Lar*a 1 bdrm . utility roam,
laundry room. apfMancai
MWaarma Call C T 119

badraem. t bath
ratrlgaralor. ( M . m

Blind*,
U.OM

341—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

153—AcreageLots/ Sale

l t d Ford Van Foay Can
varstorv Partoct cendmon. ra
triaaratar. link, a captain*
ch a in coach that canvorti to
bad. I* mil** to gallon. 47,000
mil** Oamad by yratotttonai
family w/na childron Book
Volu* IS.ISO. Quick Sal*
I7.M * Day m i l l ! E*0

Q lA R M N Al
RESIDENTIAL L IIT IN Q !

W—Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent

manjioatraa^ninja

Wby Raaff 0 « n Ihl* j bdrm
btock ham*, toco ora*, ua.aoo
Da*Iraki* Caoatry Mama an
troad toacra Oniyus.aoo
Baton Mortal &gt; bdrm/] balh
*pl't P&lt;an villa to* Quality in*
actum* |] Jt* mart* ... SS4.S00
Foal Mama F la rm, bar/palie. ]
bdrm /] bath ntca araa. ***.000

lt t —Pets A Supplies

155—Condominiums
Co-Op /Sale

OFFICES
NBW IH O FFIN O C t N T IR to
I . O R LAN D O - SR 4M at
■aat Waal la p vy. A Lake

Q ( ARDINAI

303—Livestock and
Poultry

341—Recreations I
Vehicles/ Campers

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★
d*if ft..— ........ Daytona Booth
* * * * * Holdiaaaaaa

PtllUC AUTOMICTION
■vary Wad. NttoottiMFM

Pip Fot Sole

e Where Anybody *
*C an Buy or Sell I *

m iiai

Far mar* datalla

______ Mat-moil_______

141—Homes For Sale

Friday NiftitJ— 7 PM
A

■ DISCOUNT
auto

SA LES

323-6593

WE FINANCE

US! FroacB Aaa........ m-n

CLEARANCE

331-0739 Eve 333-7443
BANK B I F O Raaato Saaclailit
LAKE MARY B IA L T Y

★ LIST F0 RLESSW
WC WILL LIST, ADVER TISE
SELL TOUR HOME F O R S V
WHY F A T MORES

( AKDINAl
AIRPORT ROAD. NEW highly
*nar*y allidani. •■pandatoto.
altordabto } bdrm Cardinal
Hama Only M i l l with lm
"todiato availability Mtg M
nanclng aaalttanc* C all
H B B t a 1P7. E X T tat.

FR EE COMPUTERISED
Markat Aaalyait at yaar
ham*. Call USA Tadayl

1**« M ualant. A cytlndar.

0 ( ARDINAt

1U3CONCORDMACON

jaaOkaPy *1110 P I H U

319—Wanted to Buy

SANFORD
M O T O R CO

Faytof CASH tor:
Aluminum, Cana, Cayyar
data, Oatd. Sllvar.
KakamaTaal, tllW . I*t
k lR W S IW IW

0&lt; MIHIN'M

w* Ftaaaca l„ ...... W* Bay Carat

AM C

JEEP

N Cm* Can___ .11*1111

CONSULT OUR

W U L IO IB

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

c u . it t

To List Your Business...
Dial 333-3611 or 831-9993

CALL HALL

323-5774
0 1 MiDINM
EAAUTUII1fllidUiled

01 TUIIIWI
v i e v RIIIABLO- toS-WMM*

Lewn Service

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W ALL I T . C O M F A N X -JIM m

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rvtoa-ktobW aCAdrg*.
fUdLAfMfl IM A M

SaSaSimiamm

nismBgaTgtor

R IU A O L £ J M J M t«

322-2420
OUR R A T II AAB LOWER

Ell m miOary, Bill Darla

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                    <text>Freeze Slashes Citrus Crop To 17-Year Low
WASHINGTON (UPIJ - A three-day
January freeze, the coldest and
longest o f this century, loaves Florida
with with the smallest Orange crop In
17 yeara. the U.S. Department of
Agriculture said Monday.
The freeze brings estim ates o f
Florida's 1084-65 citrus crop to 104
million boxes, almost 13 percent
lower than the 119 million boxes
forecast before the freeze, the gov­
ernment said.
The estimate was the baaed on the
first official Agriculture Department

survey of the crop following a Jan.
20-22 freeze that damaged the prime
source of Americans' orange Juice as
well as southern vegetable crops. The
freeze pushed the crop 11 percent
below last season.
From October to January, the de­
partment had estimated the Florida
orange crop would fill 110 million
boxes, a little more than the 1083-84
crop that was devastated by a freeze
at Chrtstmaa 1083.
At 104 million boxes the 1084-85
orange harvest will be the smallest

since 100.5 million boxes were picked
In the 1967-68 season.
The department estimated frozen
concentrated Juice yield from Florida
oranges at 1.33 gallons per box. down
from 1.46 gallons per box before the
freeze but still larger than last
season's poor yield o f 1.29 gallons per
box.
The freeze was yet another blow to a
beleaguered Industry, which has suf­
fered from four freezes In recent years
and from an outbreak of citrus canker,
a disease that harms both trees and

fruit. The Florida Industry saw Its
share of the domestic market slip
from about 90 percent lo 60 percent
before this latest freeze. Orange Juice
Imports from Brazil have filled the
g»PEarl Wells, vice president for public
relations of Florida Citrus Mutual, said
dollar losses from the freeze probably
fell short o f record levels because
losses In northern citrus areas were so
heavy In the December 1983 freeze.
“ But 1 think that It was at least the
worst freeze from the standpoint of

temperatures and duration since the
freeze of 1894-05. and 1 think It was
worse than that." he said.
Temperatures fell to 18 degrees
south o f Lake Okeechobee, he said,
adding. "That't the first lime I've ever
seen that down there.”
The department estimated that
F lo r id a 's e a rly and m id-season
varieties would total 56 million boxes.
5 percent less than last month. The
Valencia crop was estimated at 48
million boxes, down 20 percent from a
Baa C m iU S . page 3 A

Satellite Dish Ordinance Pastas

Tree Rule On Books;
Enforcement To Wait

John Wilton, takat a "to thare" pota In front
of tome of h it 1,000 baby roosters purchased
to "c ro w " the point home to his neighbors
that If he can legally have the fowl on his
agriculturally joned property at •county
Road 427 and Lake Ruth D riv e , near
Long wood, they shouldn't ob|ect, as they
have, to his produce stand. W ilton operatet

Uncle Johnnie't Cabbage Patch vegetable
stand and Is asking the county commission
at Its 7 p.m . hearings today to grant the city
of Longw ood the rig h t to rezone his
property, when annexed, from agricultural
to com mercial. County staff says com m er­
cial use would not be compatible with area
residences.

Longwood Seeks City Attorney
B y J u re C assslbsrry
H era ld S ta ff W rite r
Longwood has another vacancy to fill following
the Monday night surprise resignation o f City
Attorney Frank Kruppenbacher.
Kruppenbacher aald he la atepplng down for
"personal and professional reasons.”
The attorney, with the law firm o f Swann and
Haddock of Orlando, has been advising the city
for a year and a half.
He aald that he had been hired by the state
cabinet to defend the state In several legal actldns
and this will require much of his time. Knippenbacher has missed some meetlnxs because of

Illness In his family and he aald he dora not think
It la fair lo the city to send others lo fill In for him.
The commission set Feb. 28 as the deadline for
receiving applications from area law firms for the
city attorney post. Kruppenbacher aald he would
not leave until the city finds a replacement and
predicted commissioners would have plenty af
applicants to from which to choose once the word
got out.
The commission voted to accept his resignation
"w ith regret” after an unsuccessful effort to get
him to reconsider. The commission voted unani­
mously on the recommendation of Acting City
Baa A T T O R N E Y , page 8A

H erald S t a ff W r ite r
A new ordinance la on San­
ford’s books to protect city trees,
but It will be awhile before It Is
enforced.
A resolution aettlng the rules
fo r e n fo r c e m e n t m u st be
adopted by the Sanford Ctty
Commission before enforcement
can begin, said City Manager
W.E. "Pete" Knowles.
The commission also adopted
an ordinance aettlng standards
for the Installation o f television
satellite dishes.
The arbor ordinance stipulates
that a permit must be obtained
before a tree, alx Inches In
diameter and at least three feet
tall, can be cut down or de­
stroyed. The as yet unwritten
resolution must also stipulate
the fees to be charges for a
permit to remove a tree.
The city commission. Monday
night, adopted the ordinance on
a vote o f 4-1. Commissioner
David Farr voted against It for
the same reasons he has given
each time the m ailer has come
up. Farr said the ordinance
would take away private pro­
perty owners’ rights to do what
they want to with their own
property.
He said such an ordinance la
needed to slop land developers
from razing the land when new
su b d ivision s o r com m ercial
structures are built.
Also st M onday's meeting.
Larry S trick ler. m anager o f
corporate affairs for Southern
Bell Telephone Co., told the
commission the photo on the
cover of the Just-out 1965 San­
ford area telephone directory
was taken by Knowles. Strickler
presented copies o f the book to

Surprised to see his sunrise photograph of Lake Monroe and
the St. Johns River on the cover of area telephone books, City
Manager Pete Knowles, right, accepts congratulations from
Southern Bell.manager L a rry Strickler.
Knowles and members o f the
commission.
The photo, given at no charge
to the telephone company by
Knowles. Is called "Wetlands
Sunrise.” It was taken at sunrise
from the Osteen Bridge between
Seminole and Volusia counties.
Strickler said an Identical
cover will be used on the DeBary Deltona telephone book. He
said this Is the first time a local
cover Is different from those
used for the entire Southern Bell
territory. Strickler saw the pho­
tograph last fall and asked
Knowles for a copy. Knowles did
not know In advance the photo
would be used on a telephone
book cover.
Concerning the arbor ordi­
nance. Knowles said it will be at
least Oct. 1 before money can be
allocated for enforcement. He

estimates that It will cost sbout
•28.000 annually for an In­
spector. a vehicle and other
necessary equipment.
There Is not sufficient money
In the 1084-85 budget year's
contingency fund lo allocate
funds for that enforcement now.
Knowles has said.
He told the commission when
a city engineer Is hired sometime
In M ay. a m e m b e r o f th e
engineering staff can be assigned
the duties of an arbor Inspector
temporarily.
Knowles envisions the new
Inspector, hired after Oct. 1. can
also perform house Inspections
to provide relief for the building
department hit with addition^
work in the building boom.
Mary Tlllls. president o f the
Sanford Garden Club, and Pat
Baa SAN FO R D , page BA

Tells

W ater Near Record Low When Tested
An expert on the flow o f water
test tied today the level o f Lake
Monroe was Just one-hundredth
o f an Inch from Its low est
recorded level when the state
tested the water for pollutants,
saying the level waa average.
The expert. Alton Robertson,
of Tampa, said the low level,
which statistically should occur
only once every 65 to 75 years,
could have affected the results o f
the D epartm ent o f E n viron ­
mental Regulation test which
prompted the agency to tell the
city to stop dumping effluent
Into Lake Monroe.
His testimony came in the
second day o f a hearing In which
the city o f Sanford la trying to
demonstrate that the city la not
polluting the lake and does not
need to change from a aewage
disposal method that dumps
treated effluent Into the lake to a
m eth od that w ould req u ire

Vietnam To
BANGKOK. Thailand (UFt) - Vietnam has
agreed to tum over the remains o f five more
Americana killed during the Vietnam War. a U S.
Smbaaay official announced today.
• The embassy aald talks In Hanot laat week
pet ween the United States and Vietnam had
resulted In new Information on "several” e— f
involving American ^.Idlers who were hated as
jptieotng tnaction d u rtn lik e Vietnam War.
L t Col. Paul Mather, the M1A-POW aHker at the
Bangkok embassy, aald the Vietnamese agreed to

ipenalve landspreading,
th e&gt;ci
city maintains the treated
effluent It la pumping Into the
lake la of higher quality that the
water already In the lake.
Robertson said the mean dally
water flow o f the lake In cubic
feet waa extraodinarlly low dur­
ing the summer months o f 1061.
when the DER took Its sample.
He said analysis o f 25 yeara o f
records. 1050 to 1063, shows
the mean dally flow of the lake
over the 25 years to be about
411 cubic feet o f water per
second. The flow In the summer
If 1061 waa about 55 cubic feet a
second. He aald that low a flow la
statistically a once-In-65 year
average.
The lake, however, waa one'
hundredth o f an Inch lower In
1061. he said.
The flow analysis waa de­
termined by using U.S. Geologi­
cal data collected at different
atatlooa along the BL Johns

Meanwhile. DER officials who
testified against Sanford Monday
were not sympathetic to San­
ford's plight.
Tw o employees o f the agency.
Cynthia Hilly and Roxanne Dow.
Sanford's application for a
waiver o f the state ban against
dumping effluent Into a body of
w ater — In this case Lake
M o n roe — w aa n ot c o m ­
prehensive enough.
Mias HUly. an environmental
supervisor with the state agency,
aald the application did not show
what other sewer plants might
be adding pollution to Lake
Monroe by dumping sewer ef­
fluent Into the St. Johns River
Nor did the city show
lution might be com­
ing from "non point" sources

about pollution both non-point
and from point sources — other
sewer plants dumping Into water
ways and that pollution finding
Its way into Lake Monroe —
would be "tim e consuming and
expensive.” but. she insisted
such a study could be done.
At the same time, ahe aald
DER has not conducted such a
study Itself.
"W e have the capacity to do
the type o f analysis w e are
asking Sanford to do. but I doubt
the state would put the re­
sources into It” to conduct such
a study. Mias HUty aald.
an adequate study would In*
dude land uses In the 2.000
square miles to the south o f Lake
Monroe, the taking o f water
samples, water quality studies,
biological studies and other time

MMs HUly aald that gathering
all the Information from a 2.000
square mite area nearby and
south along the St. Johns River

And Diana Ktesling. hearing
officer, refused to permit City
Attorney BtU Colbert to question

n Remains Of Five GIs
tum over the remains o f five more Americana
kilted during the war. but no date had been set for
the transfer o f the remains.
The United States hopes to receive the bones
“ as soon as possible.” Mather said.
8!nce 1075. Vietnam has returned the remains
o f 73 U A servicemen. Tw o other sets o f remains
turned over to the United States have not been
U

tn Hanot laat week
o f meetings on MIAS

TODAY

�1A—Ewwlwf Ht

i

M, fairtTd, FI.

Trarday, Fab. n , m s

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan, Fahd: Starch For
Mldeact Poaco Mutt Continue
WASHINGTON |UP!| - President Reagan and Saudi
Arabian King Fahd agreed the search must go on for a
Middle East peace but differ on which laaue must be
resolved first: Israeli security or the Palestinians' demand
for a homeland.
Th e Saudi monarch, the first head o f stale to visit the
White House In Reagan's second term, was to end his talks
with the president today when the two leaders met for
breakfast.
Reagan recoiled from Fahd's prodding Monday that the
United Slates lake a more direct role In the Middle East.
A senior administration official said Fahd wanted the
United States to persuade Israel that conditions In the
region are moving toward a possible rise In tensions If the
peace process la not revived.
U.S. officials hoped to persuade Fahd to uae his Influence
In the Arab world to promote an arrangement under which
Jordan's King Hussein would enter the peace process on
behalf o f the Palestinians.

Report Says Aid Flguret Stilted
WASHINGTON (UP1) — The administration has provided
Congress “ Insufficient, misleading and In some cases false
information" about U.S. Involvement In El Salvador, says a
sharply worded report released today by three con­
gressmen.
William Blacklow, an aide to Rep. George Miller, D-Callf.,
said Miller and Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., and Rep. Jim
Leach, R-lowa, planned to release the report on U.S. policy
In El Salvador today.
The administration declined to comment on the report
Monday,
Among the report s accusations Is that the Pentagon
routinely has “ almost twice as many U.S. advisers'* in El
Salvador as the administration admits. There la supposed
to be a lim It of 99 military advisers.
It said military aid to El Salvador Is twice aa great aa
economic aid. despite administration claims that economic
help far outweighs the military.

Hecklerc Try To Reach Settlement
DEDHAM, Mass. (UPI| — If Health and Human Services
Secretary Margaret Heckler takes the witness stand, her
divorce trial will shift focus from money to the reasons her
3 1-year marriage waa a union "In name o n ly " since 1B63.
Because o f that likelihood, the trial waa recessed abruptly
Monday aa the Cabinet official and her husband, spurred
by the Judge, tried to reach a financial settlement.
A settlement would spare the highest-ranking woman In
the Reagan administration and her wealthy stockbroker
husband. John, from testifying about the reasons their
3 1-year marriage started falling apart In 1063.
When the trial began on Jan. 8, John Heckler's lawyer
lold the Judge that Mrs. Heckler. 93, had refused to rngage
In marital relations with her husband, 97, since 1063.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Klm'i Oppotltlon Party Hopeb To
Cripple Government In Election
SEOUL, South Korea (UPI) — South Koreans voted today
In legislative elections that a new opposition party allied
with dissident leader Kim Dae Jung hopes will demon­
strate a loss of confidence In President Chun Doo II wan.
Officials predicted a record voter turnout o f more than BO
percent due to mild weather and a feisty campaign that
attracted large crowds at pre-election rallies.
The elections for a 276-seat National Assembly are the
second since Chun took power five years ago but the first to
Include a bona tide, Independent opposition aligned with
South Korea's two most prominent dissidents — Kim Dae
Jung and Kim Young Sam.
Kim Dae Jung, once condemned to die, returned home
Friday from two years In exile In the United States and waa
placed under house arrest.

Arafat, H u b b o I o Sign Agreement
AMMAN, Jordan (UPI) — Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
today urged the Reagan administration to recognise the
rights or the Palestinian people to a homeland after
agreeing to work with Jordan on a Joint plan for Middle
East peace.
The agreement with Jordan's King Hussein Monday Is
aimed at reaching a "Just solution for the Middle East
crisis." the leader o f the Palestine Liberation Organisation
told reporters at Amman military airport before leaving
early today.
A senior Jordanian official Monday said the accord calls
for Jordan and the PLO to seek a settlement based on a
U.N. resolution urging Israel to give up occupied lands in
exchange for peace and recognition of Its right to exist.

WEATHER
(B a jB .li
temperature; 47i overnight low;
4 S t M o n d a y 's h i g h ; 7 4 ;
barometric pressure: 29.99; rela­
t iv e h u m id ity ! 73 p e rc e n t;
winds: west at 20 mph; rain: .37
Inch; sunrise: 7:06 a.m., sunset

6i 13 p.m.
V B D R IID A T TIDBBi
D s j i s a a Booth* high*, 2:32
a.m.. 2:57 p.m.i lows, 1:47 a m-.
8:50 p.m .; P a r t C a a a v a ra li
highs. 2:84 a.m.. 2:4B p.m.t
lows, 8:38 a.m., 8:41 p.m.;
Bnppaeti highs. 9; 15 a.m.. 6:21
p.m.t lows, 2:06 a.m.. 12; 16 p.m.
B O A TD K k r O M C A B T i St.
Aiuftmtlne to Jupiter Inlet out 50
m ik e — Small craft advisory is
In a f f e c t . W in d s w e s t to
n o r th w e s t 2 0 to 25 k n o ts
through Wednesday. Ben Ine rs io ta g to 3 l o 5 feet nearshore
and 8 to 12 feel well ofbhore.

«r *•m

;

Becoml.Ing partly cloudy.
(A F O R B C A S T i Today
m o s tly c lo u d y d u r in g th e
morning then partial clearing
windy and cold. High lower 50s.
Northwest to west wind 15 to 25
mph. Tonight fair breezy and
very cold with freezing temperslutes In upper 20e to low 30s.
Wind northwest near 15 mph.

STOCKS

Former Prosecutor Fined For DUI
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W riter
A former DUI prosecutor was
fined 8250 Monday and had his
driver license suspended for six
months after pleading no contest
to driving under the Influence.
Joe Flood, 27, o f 1B05-B Land­
ings Drive, Sanford, entered the
plea before County Judge Alan
Dickey who also ordered Flood to
complete 50 hours o f communi­
ty service, pay 827.50 In court
costs and serve one year proba­
tion, all keeping with the usual
sentence for first-lime DUI of­
fenders. Flood, like most firsttime DUI offenders, will be given
a driving permit to be used for
business purposes only while his
license Is suspended, according
to thejudge.
Flood was a prosecutor with
the Semlnole-Brevard State At­
torney’s Office until he resigned
In January because of the Inci­

dent. He had worked for the
office two years starting with
misdemeanor DUI prosecutions
and working his way up to
prosecuting felony i
Flood was arrested Dec. 22 on
charges o f DUI and leaving the
scene o f an accident with pro­
perty damage after his car was
reportedly Involved in a minor
parking lot accident outside the
B uccaneer Lou nge. C avalier
Motor Inn. 3200 S. Orlando
Drive. Sanford. The arrest was
made In the parking lot of ABC
Liquor. 2885 S. Orlando Drive.
Sanford, less than a mile from
the lounge.
According to the arrest report.
Flood refused to take a roadside
sobriety test.
The parking lot Incident and
subsequent arrest followed an
In c id e n t at th e B u cca n eer
Lounge In which a man who had
been drinking waa ejected twice

by bouncers alter he made
offensive comments to several
people and "to u c h e d " some
women.
As the man was leaving in his
car. a woman told the bouncers
he had hit two cars In the
parking lot and was "getting
aw ay." One bouncer stood at the
bar's door while the other called
the police.
Flood was stopped a short time
later.
Dickey dismissed the charge of
leaving the scene of an accident
with property damage reportedly
because there w ere no wltIn DUI cases, sccordlng to
usual sentencing practices. It Is
not uncommon for other charges
to be dismissed or not pro­
secuted when a person enters a
no contest or guilty plea to DUI.
Unlike a guilty plea, a no
contest plea — which can result

In an Identical sentence as a
guilty plea — cannot be used
against an Individual In civil
action resulting from an inci­
dent. according to legal sources.
It Is an agreement by a person to
a c c e p t p u n is h m e n t fo r an
alleged offense while not directly
admitting guilt, according to the
source.

R e sta u ra n t K n ife In cide n t Ends In A r r e s t
A man who was apparently
In to x ic a te d a n d re p o rte d ly
brandished a large knife at
Burger King, state Road 436,
Altamonte Springs, fled to a
nearby by Publlx where he was
sitting with his head lying on a
(able when he was nabbed by
Altam onte Sprin gs police, a
police report said.'
The suspect waa charged with
carrying a concealed weapon
after a K-Bar double blade knife
was reportedly found by police
In his boot, beneath his pants
leg. the report said.
Police were called to Burger
King at about 0 p.m. Monday
and witnesses said the suspect

Action Reports
★ Flrt*
★ Court*
* Pallet Boat
who had been reportedly creat­
ing a disturbance had bran­
dished the knife and fled, the
report said.
Police searched for the suspect
and found a man matching his
description at Publlx. Tw o wllneaseaa from Burger King re
portedly identified the suspect

after the man was caught and
the knife was confiscated, the
report said.
David W. Saunders. 18, o f 207
Colonial Lane. Longwood. was
arrested at 9:52 p.m. Monday.
He was being held In lieu of 8500
bond.
HIDDEN OUN
A man who was charged with
disorderly conduct after Sanford
police stopped him from driving
away from the Holiday Inn.
Sanford, after an Inn employee
alerted them that the man might
be a potential drunk driver, has
also been charged with carrying
a concealed firearm, a police

report said.
The officer reported the man
waa verbally abusive and that he
saw the handle o f a pistol
sticking from beneath the man's
belt and under his Jacket. The
i waa a .45-callber weapon
ding a magazine with 45 live
rounds, with one round In the
c h a m b e r. T h e w ea p on was
cocked and ready to (Ire, the
report said.
Richard Casey Beardsworth
Jr., 40, o f P.O. Box 202, Geneva,
waa arrested at 11 a.m. Saturday
In the parking lot o f Holiday Inn.
Sanford Marina. He was released
on 81.000 bond and la scheduled
to appear In court Feb. 25.

K

AREA DEATHS
Saturday at his residence. Bom
E L L A R . BOLTON
Miss Ella R. Bolton. 85. 2700 Sept. 13, 1909 In Albany. Ga..
Country Club Road. Sanford, he moved to Sanford 50 yean
died Sunday at South Seminole ago. He waa a retired laborer and
a m e m b e r o f M t. M o ria h
Com m unity Hospital.
Longwood. Bom Dec. 9. 1899 In Prim itive Baptist Church. He
Iowa, she moved to Sanford from was a veteran o f World War II.
S u rvlvo n Include his wife,
Springfield. Mo. In 1924. She
w a s a h o m e m a k e r a n d a S a llle: daughter. Mae Pearl
m em ber o f the First United Davis, Sanford; son, Joseph
D a v is J r. S a n fo r d : s la te r,
Methodist Church. Sanford.
Survivors Include her brother. Elizabeth Haynes. Jacksonville;
two grandchildren.
Robert Bolton. Winter Haven.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
O ram k ow F u n era l Hom e.
Sanford, Is In charge of ar­ ford. Is in charge o f arrange­
ments.
rangements.
EDW ARD J. C A P A R S L L A
Mrs. Mamie J. Warner. 89. of
Mr. Edward J. Cafarelta, 72. of
887 Osceola Trail. Caaselbeny. St. Petersburg, died Sunday in a
died Monday at South Seminole St. Petersburg nursing home.
Bom April 29, 1895 In Mentor.
Community Hospital.
Longwood. Bom Oct. 12. 1912 In O h i o , a h e m o v e d t o S t .
T r o y . N .Y ., h e m o v e d to Petersburg In 1972 from San­
Casselberry from Schenectady. ford. She waa the widow of Wurt
N.Y., In 1976. He was a retired W arn er, former m anager o f
Angebllt Hotel. Orlando, and the
tool and die maker. ‘
Survivors Include hla wife, Valdez and Seminole hotels In
Carol L.; daughter. Carol Jean Sanford. They lived In Sanford
Painter, Casselberry; sister, Rose from 1926 to 1972. She operated
Capen. Enclno, Calif.; brother. hotel dining rooms In Palatka,
Sanford. Brooksvllle,
Joseph, Denver.
B ald w ln -F a lrch lld Funeral Tallahassee, and Ashtabula,
Home. Altamonte Springs, la In Ohio. When In Sanford, she waa
a c tiv e In the G arden Club,
charge of arrangements.
Seminole Chapter OES, o f which
CELEBTIN O " M O L "
ahe was a 50-year member and
AU O UBTO
Mr. Cclestino "P h il" Augusto, worthy matron officer. She waa
80. of 614 Sarlta St., Sanford, also a member o f Holy Cross
died Sunday at Florida Hoapl- Episcopal Church, where she
tal-Altamonle. Bom July 9.1904 s e rv e d aa p residen t o f the
In Chao da Parada. Portugal, he Episcopal Church Women for
moved to Sanford from Hebron, tw o years. She waa a member of
Conn.. In 1969. He waa a retired St. Vincent's Episcopal Church.
school custodian and a Catholic. St. Petersburg.
Survivors include two sons.
He waa a member o f Knights of
Columbus, the Over 50 Club, Ralph W.. St. Petersburg, and
both o f Sanford, the Federation F ra n z . C hardon. O h io; one
of Senior Citizens for Seminole g r a n d d a u g h t e r ; s ix g r e a t ­
C ou n ty and w aa a ch arter grandchildren.
K en fleld Pasadena Avenue
member o f the Sanford Senior
Chapel. St. Petersburg, la In
Citizens Club.
Survivors include his wife, charge o f arrangements.
P A U L A . FB BN D 8RO ABT
Mary: daughter. Eileen Marie
Mr. Paul A Prendergaat. 70. o!
Cousins, Millbndge, Maine; three
ran d ch lld rcn i tw o slaters. Wilson Place. Paola. died Mon­
omaala and Carolina, both of day at hla home. Bom May 6,
1914 In Montana, he moved to
Portugal.
Oramkow Funeral Home la In Paola from Fort Lauderdale In
1974. He was a retired bridge
charge of arrangements.
builder and hla firm. Industrial
JOBDAVM
Mr. J oe D a vis. 75 . 1318 Contracting Co., waa a major
Oleander Ave., Sanford, died bridge building contractor In the
stale from 1950-1965. He build
12 major water crossings in­
cluding the 1-4 bridge over Lake
Monroe aa well aa 13 bridges on
the original Florida Turnpike. He
was a member o f A ll Souls
Catholic Church. Sanford, and a
Wednesday fair and cold with World W a rd veteran.
high In mid 50a. Wind west 15
Survivors include his wife,
mph.
Mary Katherine; two sons, Paul
BXTBRDBD VORBCABTi A,. Sanford, and Thom as A., St.
Partly cloudy Thursday and Paul, Mtnn.; tw o daughters.
Friday. Fair Saturday. Con­ Joan n e Ltsch ke.' M ilw aukee.
tinued cold Thursday and Friday WM.. and Jane Kemp. Sanford
then warmer Saturday. Lows
. Mary Lou Blckes. Atlanta;
averaging In the mid 30s. Highs nine grandchildren.
In the 90s Saturday.
Briaaon G uardian Funeral
Home. Sanford, la in charge of

f

L A B R Y J .P A L M 8 R
Mr. Larry James Palmer. 28.
o f Ftrst Street. Paola. died Sun­
day in Paola. Born March 27.
1958. in W inter H aven, he
m o v w to n o iA irocn uncrc tit
1971. He eras a carpenter and n
Baptist.
S u rvivo rs Include hla
i parents. I h r. i
Palmer. Snnfi
Theresa d a rk .

and L o rrle S c o tt. S a n fo rd ;
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. T.H. Rudd, Winter Haven.
Brlsson Guardian Funeral
Home. Sanford. Is In charge of
arrangements.
C LYD E S.R K D W IN B
Mr. Clyde S. Redwlne, 57. o f
736 Longdale Ave.. Longwood.
died Sunday at hla home. Bom
Feb. 12. 1927 In Virginia, he
moved to Longwood from South
Lebanon. Ohio, in 1962. He waa
an electronics engineer.
Survivors Include hla wife.
Emily J.; (wo sons. Gary W..
Winter Park, and James M..
C a s s e lb e r r y ; th r e e g r a n d ­
children.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch lld F u n eral
Home. Altamonte Springs, la In
charge o f arrangements.
FR B D IA SIMPSON
Mrs. F redla Sim pson. 84.
formerly of 79 William Clark
Court. Sanford, died Saturday at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal. Born Feb. 6. 1901 In Lake
City, ahe moved to Sanford 30
years ago.
She la survived by her brother.
Willie Comer. Alton. N.Y.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
ford, la In charge o f arrange­
ments.
JAM ELSHARER
M rs.. Jamel Shaker. 76. o f
2615 Palmetto Ave.. Sanford,
died Monday at South Seminole
Com m unity Hoapttal.
Longwood. Bom Dec. 20. 1908
In Al-Hadath, Lebanon, ahe
moved to Sanford from North
Adams. Mass., in 1961. She waa
a homemaker and a Roman
Catholic.
Survivors Include her daugh­
ter. Mrs. Rita Oazll. Sanford; one
brother. Farit Dlb. Al-Hadath;
slater, Emile Cherfen, Al-Hadath;
tw o g r a n d c h ild r e n ; th re e
great-grandchildren.
G ra m k o w -O a in e s F u n e ra l
Home, Longwood. la in charge of
arrangements.

B rlsson G u ardian Funeral
Home. Sanford, la In charge o f
arrangements.

FuntralNsNcM
AUaUtTO, MS. Cl LZITINO “SMIL"
-funeral Mm * *1 ChrUttan Burial Ur Mr.
Cen*an* - m r ansmu. m. *i t u u rn *
Wu*wt*uy *t M *.m *t All Wu* C iM k
Church with Pw Saw. Lyt* I
Buriat will he In Oatlawn Mamarlal Park.
M an * mar call at tha lunaral hama M ar
1-1 p.m. an* I t pm. with raaaryr at 1r pm.
am . m
d a thaptl. Oramfcaw funeral
it Hama u J
charp*.
SOLTOM, ZUA O.
la a.
-funeral Mrvtca* Ur MH* Ilia
I Saltan.
SaMarS. «h* 1
•S. at r m Cauntry CM Ree*. twiUr*.
M tunpar. Wtn a* haM at l » » am.
WaWwtSay at d a p t m d In Ivaryraan
Cemetery wtd d a Rev Oeorpe A. Bute
atttcUttns- Danattana mar ** m*e* U har
memary U d a P int Unite* MattMUt
Church, tenter* Oramhaw Funerel Ham* M
palSTsr , l a b b y j .
-funeral mrvtca* Ur Mr. terry Jama*
Palmar. M. at Pint Itraafc PaaU. uda *M
lun*ar. will ha at u a m U h u la r U d a
chap*! at Britten funeral Hem* wtd Or.
Praea* Smith atncletmp. VMtattan will ha
M pm . M ar. Burial aarvlcmwM b*at 1:1*
p.m. WTOtaiZaj at d a Church *1 Chrtet
Cemetery in ta«U laha Umar
Haven). Briaaan Pimaral Ham*, a t
Chaaat, Incharpe.
NAtaia,MAMISZ.
—funeral tarvlcat Ur Mra. MamU J.
odays
wHFnSri RTNHfly fl sR^Nvt tN**
&gt;u U. Peunaurs,* ~
at Mam . at M. Vincent"* I
*t. PaUnhurf. Burial wM ha UI
f il U U
"a Church Mamarlal Puna KaaWiU
An nua Chea t). It.

-P im

m

Maa* Ur Mr. Paul A. I

u, tfWAUm Piece. I

MB ha M * am . Tl

IS

_
H am. b m m ^

atjs-mN» X h o m

OMBTBTB Y. WILUAMB
M ra . O e n c v lc v e V t o le t
Williams. 76. o f 668 DMne Cir­
cle. Caearlbrrry. died Sunday at
her borne. Bom August 19.1906
in Brooklyn. N.Y.. she moved to
Caearlhriry from Long Island.
N.Y.. in 1976. She waa a

U tU y . M l S* at I p e a ThirM i aI Us

S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e h e r
husband. John; eon. Alfred.
Elmont. N.Y.j slater. Dorothy
Smith. New Jersey; three grand­
children; one great-grandchild.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch lld F u n eral

Winn. 71. o f
2400 Stevens Ave.,
at Central Florida
Regional Hoapttal. Bom April 2.
IS IS In Labe City, she moved to
S anford from Ktaelm m ce in
1925. She was a h i mama her
end a Protestant.
Survivors include a son. Gary.
Sanford; brother. r n « n « peaks,
Jacksonville: two grandchildren.

(fiaUtna

IMIPS W IHI

Tuesday Ptforoenru. ires
sp tb*
M . M U. Pi

Pis.mii.

PsMM
n

mm. n.tai m

u-nt i Muanu, t t o i l a an
■ M b Yaar, mas. t t xns&gt; \
•IJb Meats. M Jb »

�gyynlsf HseaM, Vawtocd, TI.

Tvstday, Feb. 11. H M - 1A

FLORIDA

M a n Pleads N o Contest In Fondling Case

IN BRIEF

A South Carolina man wax
being held without bond today
In other court action, a DeBary
after pleading no contest to lewd man who had marijuana on him
and lascivious assault on a w hen stopped for a routine
7-year-old gtri.
safety check has pleaded guilty
Arnold Wayne Frost, 30, of to posesslon o f more than 20
North Charleston, formerly of grams o f marijuana.
Casselberry, could receive up to
J oh n T h om as H agen. 32.
a year In the county Jail when could receive up-to a year tn the
sentenced March 15 by Circuit county Jail when sentenced April
Judge C. Vernon Mize.
4 by Circuit Judge Dominick J.
According to court records. Sain.

By Dsaas Jordan
Herald Staff Writer

Paul Off Critical List;
May Ba Horn# In 3 Wooks
United Press International
An 11-year-old boy Injured tn a Christmas day pipe-bomb
explosion near Orlando waa taken off the critical list st
Shrlner’s Bums Institute tn Cincinnati. Ohio.
Hospital spokeswoman Sandy Shackelford aald Paul
Jew ell's condition was upgraded to serious after his 12th
skin-graft operation Monday.
"W e estimate he might possibly be released In three to
four weeks." she said.
The youngster was Injured nn his 11th birthday while
trying to till a bicycle tire with air at a Lockhart
convenience store. The pipe bomb was attached to the air
pump. Jewell suffered second- and third-degree bums over
60 percent o f his body. In addition, doctors amputated one
o f hto legs.
Police have not determined who planted the bomb.

Taan Haro Savas Sacond Ufa
CRESTVIEW (UPIJ — An ailing teenager leaped over a
backyard fence and smothered a ball o f flames that had
engulfed a 10-year-old boy who tried to light a campfire
with gasoline — the teen’s second lifesaving rescue In a
year and a half.
Crestvlew firefighters credited Michael McClurd. 15. with
saving the life o f 10-ycar-old Bobby Strickland.
McClurd was dressed only In his bathrobe and
underwear Sunday and waa relaxing In hto back yard,
recovering from an Illness, while Strickland and severs]
other boys played In the next yard.
"McClurd Jumped over a chain-link fence." a fire
department spokesman aald. “ Hto bathrobe caught on the
fence. Dressed only In hto underwear, McClurd grabbed the
Strickland boy and rolled him around on the ground to
extinguish the flames."
Strickland waa rushed to a local hospital, then was
airlifted to Children’s Hospital In Birmingham. Ala., with
second and third degree bums over 80 percent o f hto body.
Strickland waa reported In "guarded" condition at
Childrens Hospital In Birmingham. Hospital officials said
"Guarded” means he was being watched around the clock.
It was the second lifesaving effort attributed to McClurd
In a year and a half, the spokesman aald. In 1003. McClurd
was credited with using the "Heimlich Maneuver" to
dislodge food from a Junior high school student's throat.

...Citrus

be 28 million boxes and the
Valencia crop was estimated at
26 million boxes.
Coatinaad from page 1A
The Arizona orange crop was
month ago.
estimated at 2.05 million boxes,
T h e d e p a r t m e n t c u t Its up 4 percent from last month
estimate o f the nation's entire and 47 percent more than last
orange crop, excluding Texas, t o , season.
101 million boxes, down 8 per­
The Texas crop Is expected to
cent from a January estimate be Insignificant because of dam­
, and 5 percent less than last age from the December 1083
freeze.
season.
The California orange crop la
The nation’s grapefruit crop
, expected to be 54 million boxes, estimate waa estimated at 49.8
unchanged from Jan. 1 but 12 million boxes, down 4 percent
percent more than last season.
from a month ago but I percent
The navel crop la expected to more than last season.

Frost while living In Casselberry
assaulted the gtrl several times
between Jan. 1. 1984 and June
15. The girl said in a taped
confession that Frost fondled
her. engaged in oral sex with her
and did other sexual acts.
Frost, a convenience store
clerk when he lived In Seminole
County, was arrested Nov. 16 at
Charleston International Airport.
Charleston. S.C. A Semtnole
County sheriffs deputy with a

Florida grapefruit production
was estimated at 42 million
boxes, down 0 percent from last
month bul 3 percent more than
last season.
The California desert crop was
estimated at 4.1 million boxes,
up 8 percent from a month ago
and 23 percent more than last
season.
The Texas grapefruit crop Is
also not being counted because
o f damage horn the 1063 freeze.
The lemon crop will be 25.8
million boxes, down 3 percent
from last month but 21 percent
m o r e t h a n la s t s e a s o n .

sources, not the DER.
Miss Dow said Sanford in IIs
application claimed Orlando’s
Iron Bridge Regional Sewer Plant
near Oviedo la adding to the
p o llu t io n o f L a k e M o n ro e
through Its dumping o f effluent
Into the Econlockhatehee River.
B u l. she a a ld ahe d o e s n 't
"honestly kn ow " whether this to

the c u e .
She aald ft DER m em o o f rules
prepared by the staff was u«ed to
determ ine w hether Sanford’s
application for a waiver con*
ta ln e d en ou gh e v id e n c e o f
pollution In Lake Monroe from
sources other than Sanford.
The hearing Is to conclude
Wednesday.

...Attorney

p.m. today at the etty hall to
review the recently completed
city audit with the city’s auditor
Harold Hartsock: discuss financ­
in g with Dave B o w en , vice
president or F reedom Bank
Longwood Branch Office, far the
•000.400 expansion project of
i h c w a i e r p l a n t a t E .E .
W illiam son and Range Line
roads, paving o f Range Line
Rood and pomlbly for improve­
ments at the Skylark and Col­
umbus Harbour sewage treatthe *2 5 0 0 0 0
already budgeted.
Also up far dtoc
at the
be
for the water plant con­
struction and a construction
engineer to do the final Inspec­
tion for Range U na Rood con­
struction.

1A
the women about whether a
section o f DER rules calling for
"eq u ita b le abatem ent—" the
fairness o f "applying standards
against Sanford to the exclusion
o f the whole w orld" — eras
c o n s id e re d w h en S a n fo rd ’ s
ition waa turned down.
apoUcat
Ibert suggested that the ban
Colbei
against dumping effluent Into
Lake Monroe waa being enforced
against Sanford, while It waa not
being enforced against other
governmental bodies.
” 1 will decide what Is equita­
ble." aald Mias Klcallng.
Colbert also pointed to the
state rule calling for consid­
eration o f economic Impact In
enforcing the ban on dumping
into bodies o f water. Sanford's
consulting engtneera have said U
wtU coat the city S M milUoa to

1A
Administrator Orcg Manning to
keep Kruppenbacher on as the
city’s labor relations attorney
o f bis expertise In that
The city Is also looking for a
c it y a d m in is tra to r and th e
deadline for applications to Fitday. Ftflyi

to tha
1

interviewing tbs topftnaUata.
He asked If this rule was
considered In turning Sanford
down Th e women were not
pe m dtt*** by Mias Klcallng to

Longwood City Commission
w ill bold a work arsalnn at 7

HOSPITAL NOTES

‘ grove

p o llu t

W h e n b e in g t a k e n In to
custody by a Florida Highway
Patrol trooper, the marijuana
arms discovered.
David Lester Barnes. 20. of

Barnes was arrested Aug. 23
by sheriffs deputies.
According to court records,
d e p u tie s s e a r c h e d B a rn e s
because he reportedly matched
the description o f a drug dealer
for whom the Investigators were
looking.
W hile searching him, they
found a loaded ,38-callber re­
volver In hls pants pockets,
records show.
No drug charges were filed
against him.
He was arrested as he stood In
front o f the Altamonte Men’s
Club. North Street. Altamonte
Springs.
A New Hampshire woman has
pleaded guilty to grand theft tn
connection with the theft o f

about S I.600 worth of money
orders.
According to Investigators, the
woman took eight American
Express money orders during a
9-dav period while she worked
for a 7-Eleven convenience store.
The woman walked off the Job.
did not return and was fired
before It was discovered the
money orders were mtaalng.
T h e m o n e y o r d e r s w ere
cashed st a Seminole County
Sun Bank with the suspect using
her name and Identification to
cash two of the orders. A man. a
codefendant, reportedly cashed
the remaining atx. according to
sheriffs records.
Leslie Jsne-Bechard. 18. could
receive up to a year In the
county Jail when sentenced April
8 by C ir c u it J u d g e V o lte
Williams.
Codefendant. Andreyr Leroy
Gllquest til. 22, awaits the dis­
position of hls case.

S e m in o le H ig h S c h o o l's
varsity cheerleaders shows
off • first place trophy they
w o n In t h e E a s t e r n
C h e e rle a d in g A sso cia tio n
Championships at U C F last
week. Left to right, front
row, are: Suzl Nye, Anita
Smith, Rle Slgtenton, cap­
tain, Kristin M e rrl field, Beth
Smith, Judy White, Angela
G a llo w a y , J e n n y C r a i g ,
L i n d a Cu sh in g, Sharon
Gaines, and Jo d ie Jones.
Back ro w , left to ri ght :
Debra Sensakovlc, Rebecca
Martinez and M argaret Hall.

ordinance. Sam Kobard of SR
Satellites in Sanford said he
w h o le h e a rte d s u p p o rts the
measure. "T h e Idea o f an ordi­
nance is excellent." he said.
He was concerned, however,
that the ordinance requires an
engineer, certified by the state of
Florida, (o approve Installations.
Knowles said Robard can get
an engineer to certified the
safety o f Installations and do
many installations according to
that certified plan.
While the annexation waa Flea
World waa also scheduled for
d is c u s s io n M o n d a y n ig h t ,
Knowles aald Syd Levy, the
owner la out o f town and asked
for a postponement.

...DER

After Hagen was stopped Oct.
14 on Orange Boulevard tn Lake
Monroe, he was tdentlfed as
being wanted on taro outstand­
in g w a rra n ts from V olu sia
County and a Seminole County
warrant for failure to appear In
court on DUI charges.

312 Teakwood Lane. Altamonte
Springs, was sentenced by Salfl
to 15 days In the Seminote
County Jstl and 2 years proba­
tion for carrying a concealed
weapon.

Chaarsl

contains the signatures o f 500
Sanford residents.
Tipple said as he talked to
Sanford residents gathering the
C s s t la s M fro m page 1A
f
signatures, only two percent
Sentell, acting president o f San­ favored an arbor ordinance.
ford’s Interested Sarahs to En­
Mayor Bettye Smith, however,
courage Rejuvenation, told the asked If had fully Informed those
commission their organizations who signed the petition o f all
endorse the law. Mrs. T lllls apsects of the law. Including the
noted that several 200-year old section where It says damaged
* oaks were "cu t down In the or Injured trees can be disposed
name of progress" In Lake Mary of.
recently to make way for a new
T ip p le aald w h en one la
shopping center. She said she circulating a petition there la not
doesn’t want to see that happen tim e to ex p la in everyth in g.
hcie.
"Just the fact that people would
Bruce Tipple o f Geneva pres­ have to get a permit to cut down
ented a petition opposing the a tree waa enough," he aald.
ordinance. He said the petition
nlng the sat
Concerning
itelllte dish

...Sanford

warrant Issued by the State
Attorney’s Office brought Frost
back to face the charge.

Here are Agriculture Depart­
ment citrus estimates o f the
1084-05 crop, on the basis of
Feb. 1 conditions, w ith the
1004-84 harvest In parentheses:
it Arlan* i x i ml Ilian baa* (IS
lnclu*n* (7 million at Vatanclaa(IX ! m Milan11 California U million baaat
la j minim), tocMtn# M million at Valm
(la* (I t mllllan); PlarMa Ito million ba m
(114.7 million). InchdMb d mllllan c: Valan
da* (tf mimanlt T o m nd aaataf (M l
mllllan).
Crapafruil; Arlan* J7 mllllan baa** (J.I
mlUlanli CaUlarWa (Saar! anty) 4.1 mllllan
ban** (IX* militant i PlarMa 0 mUHan b a m
(S t mllilanlj Ttaa* not tauntaC I U mil
Arlan* I t mllllan
mllllanli California M 4 million

Ti

i PlarMa 17 mllllan

(4
(17.11

Editor Tim Grffcr

(M

mlman)
T o n a a rln o ii A rlia n a 7 M .H 4 baaot
I h u s i i Camara* M aiHlan b a m |i u
mllllanli PlarMa 1.1 mllllan baa* (1 mil
Man).

Tomplaa: PlarMa 14 mllllan baaot (M

mMIUnl.

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�Evening Herald

DONALD LAMBRO

(U1PS 4I1-1M)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA 32771
A rc* Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

Reagan Sets The Budget Pace

Tuesday, February 12, 19*5-4A

Wayne 0. Otyle, Publithsr
Thoms* Olordano, Managing Editor
Mahrtn Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Week. SI. 10; Month. S4 79: 3 Months.
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Year. SOO 00

Duet O f
Despots
T h e U.S. S tate D ep artm en t actually has
a p o lo g is ed to the co m m u n ist Polish govern*
m en t, w h ich a llow s n o free elections, press o r
In depen den t labor u nions, fo r a Radio Free
E u rope broadcast that im p lied Polan d Is
sim ila r to N azi G erm an y and Prim e M inister
W o jclech Jaru zelsk l sim ila r to A d o lf H itler.
Polan d regu larly co m p la in s about R adio
F ree Europe, a U.S. govern m en t-fin an ced,
M unich-baaed station that b ea m s p rog ra m s to
E astern E u rope, bu t W a sh in gto n has brushed
such p rotests aside u n til now .
B o w in g to the Polish F oreign M in istry's
co m p lain t, the 8 tate D ep artm en t called the
broadcast offen sive and said It w as "In v e ry
poor ta s te ."
" T h e U.S. g o ve rn m en t reg rets any im p lica ­
tion o f sim ila rity betw een N a zi G erm an y and
present-day Poland and p a rticu larly betw een
A d o lf H itle r a n d G en . J a r u z e ls k l," th e
sta tem en t said.
T ru e, there are differences. For one, the
N a zles w ere h om egrow n tyran ts w h ereas
W a rsa w 's despotic g o ve rn m en t Is M oscowm an ipu lated.
L a st M ay. Jaru zelsk l. hat In hand, traveled
to M oscow w h ere he heard S o v ie t President
K onstan tin C hernenko w arn that the U SSR
w ould not tolerate a n y ch an ges In the S oviet
b lo c's (w h ich Includes P olan d ) com m u nist
system .
D u tifu lly ec h o in g hls K re m lin m asters.
J a ru zelsk l noted that " th e r e can be no
d eviation from C om m unist P a rty policies In
P o la n d ." H e then received the O rder o f Lenin,
an aw ard granted on ly to those w h o follow
K rem lin orders.
A n o th er difference: Ja ru zelsk l rules w ith an
Iron flat but professes d em ocra cy: H itler never
pretended to be dem ocratic.
H ow ever, settin g aside the N azi leader's
Independence from foreign con trol and hls
refusal to m ask his disdain fo r dem ocratic
rule, h e and M oscow 's satrap, Jaru zelskl. are
controlled a m o n g the lon g lin e o f political
despots w h o h ave plagued p eop le throughout
history.
T h e State D epartm ent o w e s an apology to
Radio F ree Europe.

WASHINGTON — Amid the storm o f criticism
swirling around President Reagan's proposed
budget cuts, one overriding reality la being
overlooked.- Reagan Is forcing Congress to deal
with the budget largely on hls terms.
A fter four years o f on-agaln. off-agaln
budgetary warfare, the president has once again
set the boundaries and the terms o f debate In
which this year's budget battle Is taking place.
And Congress — mindful that It Is dealing with a
president at the peak of hls popularity, who
carried 49 states last November — has clearly
shown a willingness to play by most o f Reagan's
rules.
Those rules are fairly simple: (1) Cut federal
spending: (2) Don't raise taxes; (3) Don't cut
defense beneath the &lt;277.5 billion Reagan has
requested, unless new economies and savings
can be found; 4) Don't reduce Social Security

S

P lea te W rite
L e tte r s to th e ed ito r a re w elcom e fo r
publication. A ll le tte r s m ust b e signed and
Include a m ailin g address and, I f possible, a
telep h o n e num ber. T h e E v e n in g H era ld
res erve s th e righ t to e d it le t t e r s to a void
lib e l and to accom m odate space.

The nation's overwhelming rejection of Walter
Mondale s campaign proposal to raise taxes has
stuffed the tax-hike genie In the bottle for the
lime being.

ROBERT WALTERS

Bhopal

Hawaiians
Fight For
Their Land

Studied
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Medical
researchers suspect the federal limit
for safe Industrial exposure to Iso­
cyanates Is too high and hope to
confirm that by examining tissue
from those killed In the Union
Carbide disaster In Bhopal. India.
Yves Alarle, chairman o f the
University o f Pittsburgh Graduate
School o f Public Health, said he
suspects the safe level o f Industrial
exposure to the highly toxic chemi­
cals should be three times lower
than the acceptable celling set by
the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration.
"Based on our research done with
animal models." said Alarle, “ we
predict the safe level of exposure
should be 0.006 parts per million, or
•bout three times below the federal
standard."
Scientists routinely use animal
experiments to gauge the impact of
substances on humans, and often
the animal models are accurate
predictors o f human reactions,
Alarle said.
“ The animal models for anates
are very good. We use mice for
sensory irritation (experiments) and
lnea pigs for allergic refactions.”
said.

K

'EmEat Mink

" I f you h ave to ask the p ric e ," J.P. M organ
once said In response to an Inquiry about the
cost o f hls yacht, "y o u can 't afford It."
A p p a ren tly tim es have changed, for a m o n g
the econ om ic Indices there's n ow an index
m easu rin g the cost o f lu xu ry Item s. A nd
those Item s got lota pricier In 1B84.
E ven as the general con su m er price Index
ro s e Just 4 p e rc e n t, th e lu x u r y In d e x
lncreaaed at double that rate. C hocolate
tru ffles w ere up 12 percent, belu ga ca via r and
m ink coats ev en more.
But b e fo re you shed a tear fo r the w ea lth y
a m o n g us. recall that their Incom es h ave
tately gon e up m ore rapidly than those o f the
nenu population. Besides, the scions o f J .P .
&gt;rgan can sip their D om Perlgn on — the
price o f w h ich rose not at all last yea r — and
console th em selves w ith the thought that. If
ev ery o n e could w ea r m ink and eat caviar,
there w o u ld n 't be m uch point In being rich In
the first place.

Regarding rule No. 2. both parties In Congress
agree that tax Increases are out o f the question.
Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole o f Kansas,
among other GOP congressional leader dead-set
against them, and few cries o f "raise Income
taxes" have been heard from the Democrats
since the election.

As for rule No. 3. White House strategists prly
acknowledge that Reagan's request for a 5.9
percent real defense-spending Increase will not
survive the budget-cutting appetites o f thto
Congress, no matter what Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger says.
The strategy now is to keep Congress from
cutting to o deeply Into R eagan's defense
buildup.
As for the rest o f Reagan's &lt;937.7 billion
budget: for the next six months. Congress will
be doing pretty much what Reagan believes he
was re-elected to do — cut spending.
The toughest word for a politician to utter "Is
a simple, flat 'N o .'" Reagan said In hls budget
message to Congress. "T h e patience o f the
American people has been stretched as far as It
will go. They want action; they have demanded
It."

SCIENCE WORLD

But the researchers want to
evaluate blood and tissue o f Indian
victims to confirm their predictions.

Let

cost-of-ltvlng Increases — that Is. unless Con­
gress Insists on doing so.
As for rule No. 1. most members o f Congress
— Democrats and Republicans — agree that
runaway federal spending must be cut If the
dangerously high deficits are to be placed on a
downward trajectory.

Alarle says he Is awaiting word
from Indian physicians and scien­
tists on how to proceed In the effort
to analyse blood samples from
people Injured and tlasue samples —
preferably corneas — from some
killed In the world's most deadly
chemical disaster. A ruptured valve
Dec. 3 caused a leak of methyl
Is o c y a n a te at U n io n C arb id e
pesticide plant In Bhopal, killing
2,500 people and Injuring more
than 100,000. Most killed were
children and old people crowded
Into nearby shanty towns. A variety
o f Isocyanate compounds — which
can cause death, lung and eye
damage and allergies, depending on
nature and exposure — is used In
c o m m o n p r o d u c t s s u c h as
polyurethane, bedding and Insula­
tion.
But Alarle called methyl Iso­
c y a n a te . u sem a k e p esticid es,
"probably the most toxic" of the
faintly of chemicals. "It Is the most
haaardous because it volatilises
very quickly," he said.
Alarle said the tissue samples
would provide a unique opportunity
to d e te rm in e h ow Isocya n a te
molecules attach them selves to
human tissues and cause damage.

FARMING WORLD

Debt Crisis Grows
B y Bonjs H lU grsn
U P lF a rm E d ito r
WASHINGTON fUPI) - Nell Harl.
an Iowa State University agricultur­
al economist, says a key factor In
the farm debt crisis was an October
1979 decision by the Federal Re­
serve Board to wring Inflation out of
the American economy.
The Federal Reserve responded to
policies that contributed to raging
Inflation o f the 1970s. That era nad
made It clear that an enormous
price was paid when people began
to believe that Inflation was perma­
nent.
Harl analyzed economic factors
that led to the current crisis for a
House Agriculture subcommittee,
which examined the Issue last
week.
In uddltlon to the Federal Re­
serve's decision to fight Inflation,
the second most significant factor
that brought on the debt crisis, he
said, was the 1981 tax cut that cut
federal revenues so sharply as to
assure massive budget deficits.
The result has been low Inflation
and record-setting real Interest rates
us strong demand for tight credit
boosted the cost o f borrow ing
money.
For agriculture, which la capital
Intensive and must export crops
produced on one-third o f cropland, a
strong dollar has stifled exports
w hile high Interest rates nave
boosted production costs.
Harl said policies to reduce Infla­
tion and cut taxes to Induce eco­
nomic activity have created gainers
and losers.
"It seems not Inappropriate for
the gainers to share a small part of
the gain with the losers." he said In
defense of federal help for the farm
community.
He said the financial position o f
roughly one-half o f the nation's
farmers Is deteriorating, with two-

thirds of the nation's total farm debt
o f &lt;212 billion held by borrowers
slipping toward Insolvency.
In general, farmers with &lt;40 In
debts for every &lt;100 In assets are
unable to make Interest payments.
By last December, 42.5 percent o f
farmers In the Central states had
debt loads that high.
For the entire country. 28.7 per­
cent o f farmers with about twothirds of farm debt were in that
category. As land values decline, all
farmers have less equity to back up
their debts.
"Unless something dramatic Is
done, or circumstances change,
nearly half o f the farmers will move
Into Insolvency, taking down their
lenders, their suppliers and their
merchants and Inflicting Incalcula­
ble damage upon the fabric o f rural
communities," Harl said.
Harl said he fears that 10 percent
to 15 percent of farm borrowers will
be unable to obtain credit this year,
forcing their land and equipment on
the market.
"W e appear to be on the verge o f
pushing four to five times as much
lan d on the m ark et as those
m arkets have handled In good
tim es," he said.
Harl said the administration pro­
gram to restructure debts, which
was modified last week, w ill provide
some buoyancy to land and ma­
chinery markets, but It is not
possible to predict Itq Impact with
certainty.
As a contingency, he suggested
Congress may have to create a
separate financing authority to
provide capital to keep an operation
going If bankers' reduction of Inter­
est or loan principal under the
existing program is Insufficient.
If no other solution works, he said
pressures will mount for farm debt
moratoriums.

KAHIKILANt. Hawaii (NEA) Leilanl Kalaeloa la a full-blooded
Hawaiian — one o f fewer than 1.000
still alive — and a direct descendant
o f Queen Lydia Ltltuokalanl. the last
member o f Hawaii's royal family to
rule the Islands.
T h at special status ought to
qualify Mrs. Kalaelos for one o f the
homesteads supposedly guaranteed
to native Hawaiians under the terms
o f a federal law passed In 1921.
That statute, the Hawaiian Homes
Commission Act. was specifically
enacted to provide restitution to the
aboriginal people o f the Hawaiian
Islands who were subjugated by —
and whose land was confiscated by
19th century white settlers.
More than three decades after
applying for her homestead, howev­
er. Mrs. Kalaeloa remains on a
walling list — along with almost
9,000 others deprtved o f their an­
cestral homelands.
The 1921 law designated slightly
more than 200,000 acres o f land on
five Hawaiian Islands to be set aside
for those with at least 50 percent
Hawaiian blood to use as home
sites, farms and ranches. Each
recipient must pay &lt;1 per year to
maintain a 99-year lease.
But fewer than 30,000 acres have
b e e n d is tr ib u t e d a s th e law
specifies, while much o f the land
has been leased to government
agencies and commercial users for
scandalously low rents o f 91 to &lt;5
per acre annually.
There has been no shortage of
rhetoric about the need to enforce
the law. In 1921, the chairman of a
House committee Insisted that the
statute was crucial because "the
Hawaiians were deprtved of their
lands without any say on their
part."
In 1938, a Joint congressional
committee criticized the fact that
"o n ly a email part o f the area has of
yet been used" and described the
native Hawaiians as " a landless
people In the country o f their
forefathers."
In 1959. the federal law granting
Hawaii statehood explicitly required
implementation o f the 1921 statute.
In 1900. Interior Secretary Cecil
D. Andrus said the Intent o f the law
had been "substantially frustrated"
by federal and state officials who
"h a ve either neglected or misin­
t e r p r e t e d m a n y o f t h e ir res­
in 1983. a Joint federal-state task
force reiterated both governments'
theoretical commitment to the law
and called for the establishment o f a.
sp ec ia l a d visory co m m itte e to
explore ways to finance develop­
ment o f the natives* land. But for'
the post 10 months. Hawaii Q ov;
George I t Artyoahl has refused to
the committee members.

JACK ANDtKSON
BERRY'S WORLD

U.S. Targets Soviet Spy Satellites
WASHING1 ON Long bclutc
President Resgsn brought up the
s u b je c t o f " S t a r W a r s ." the
militarization o f space had already
begun. Both the United Stales and
Soviet Union have been keeping a
military watch on one another for
y e a n through spy satellites high In

By the way, sort, how ’s the o i' search tor the
meening otyour e»t$fence coming elong?"

S I - a s* V &lt;5/
I
.i -n

But few Americans realize Just
what these orbiting Peeping Toms
are capable of. and now big a threat
they'd be In case o f a conflict. My
associate Dale Van Atta has ob­
tained a secret General Accounting
Office report that gives the Pen­
tagon experts' assessment o f the
threats posed by the Kremlin's
satellites.
I’ve already reported on ths lour
types o f spy &gt;016111108 considered
most Immediately dangerous to the
United States. But the Pentagon has
assigned a No. 2 priority to other
satctiltcs; these, too, are considered
a military threat.
The total number o f satellites in
the two top priorities la close to 40.
In case o f war. the planned "Star
vouid move
m
W are" defenses wt
from

Priority One targets to Priority Tw o
In a matter o f seconds.
A c c o r d in g to th e P e n ta g o n
e x p e r ts ' assessm en t. U .S. In ­
telligence-gathering satellites are
still superior to those made In
Moscow. More o f ours transmit their
Information Instantaneously, like a
live TV show o f Soviet military
movements and equipment. More o f
th e ir s o p e ra te on a d e la y e d broadcast system.

film in capsules by parachute from
low orbit. "T h e one assessed to be o f
primary concern." according to the
report, "is capable o f ejecting recov­
ery capsules — which minimizes
the time from when the photo­
graphs are taken to when the film la
available for analysis."

Here are the Priority Tw o targets
listed In the secret report:
— The Salyut aeries o f military
apace stations. The report says:
"T h e station possibly can provide
near real-time Intelligence-targeting
data to military forces and can
detect missile launches. Photoreconnaissance is believed to be Its
major activity; however, these sta­
tions can possibly be modified to do
reconnaissance such aa electronic
intelligence, communications In­
telligence and command and con­
trol."
— High-resolution
reconnaissance astel'

e e *
4

T h e report explains that the
photographs from these satellites
arc used to study troop positions
and for targetin g and dam age
assessment. "Resolution la capable
o f distinguishing automobiles." the
report states.
It adds: "A a the Soviet Union
projects Us forces further from its
borders or Into a dented i
aa China, tt become*
dependent on this type o f
Ute)."
— Navigational satellites. "These
satellites, deployed In regularlysituations, provide navigational Ax­
es with
average waiting time o f
90 minutes and 45 m tnuls s at the
, for NAVSAT-1
KAVSAT-3.'

"NAVSAT-1 Is accurate to 200
meters, and NAVSAT-2 Is possibly
accurate within 100 meters. They
are primarily used by Soviet naval
forces. Including ballistic missile
submarines."
Knocking out these navigational
aids would make It difficult for
Soviet missile subs to precisely
determine their location — and
prcctston Is critical far launching
nuclear mlssHri
s e c re t rep o rt s ta te s : " T h e
M o ln ty a -R a d u g a t y p e s a re o f
primary concern because they are
able to provide real time command
and control to naval, land and
strategic farces. A s Soviet forces
operate farther from the Soviet land
mass, they become more dependent
on these satellites for contra! of
Knocking them out. In other
would Jeavc Soviet field
— Mfere pretty much on their
— which la not the way the

�SPORTS
Tribe's P a tie n ce W ith W a lk e r
B ig E n d -O f -Y e a r R e w a rd

LEADERS

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A week ago. Seminole basketball coach Chris
Mariette went to freshman Craig Walker and told
him he was being promoted to the vanity.
A fte r leadin g the freshm an team to an
unbeaten season and performing above expecta­
tions at the Junior varsity level (S3 points and 30
rebounds), Mariette reasoned It was time for his
phenotn to "see what he could do with the big
boys."
Walker, a sincere youngster who he Is kind of
overwhelmed by all o f this, listened Intently to his
coach. Then he replied. "Coach, do you think I
can think about It tonight and give you an answer
tom orrow?"
Mariette. suppressing his surprise and laughter,
said he politely told the youngster that he didn't
have anything to think about. He was ready for
varsity basketball and that's where he was going
to play.
Craig, an easy going and likable young man.
can't be faulted for hla doubts about movli
novlng from
ninth grade to the top of the class Physically,
ally, he
th tools.
.....................
has all the
His has the .............
build of atyou
your
ng
Akeem and the shooting touch o f a young Ralph
Sampson. And he blocks shots like a young Pat
Ewing.
But the emphasis on all these bold comparisons
Is on the "yo u n g" and not the Akeem. Sampson
or Ewing. No m itter how devastating Walker
looked as a freshman, and dominating as a JV,
the contact and quickness are a different game at
the varsity level.
But Mariette thought Walker was ready — and
— right. The third year Seminole coach
prise froth Into the fire against the No.
team tn the state last Friday and he
came out without a bum.
Th e Semlnolea came out pretty well. too. They
upset DeLand. 57-65. at DeLand. which la quite
an accomplishment.
i
"1 didn't think I was ready for varsity,” said
Walker modestly. "Rut 1do now ."
W alker's (Inal stats had him with seven points
and seven rebounds. These stats, however, don't
tell the true story because he must have altered
five shots. Mariette. who played a sone defense
(2-3) for the whole game, said It was the first time
he's ever done that.
W alker's presence made that move possible. Of
course. It was also done to protect the young
phenom. Putting him one-on-one on all-stater
Randy Anderson or 0-4 brute Marcus Johnson
might have been disastrous.
But as the center o f the cone's bock line.
Walker was tn a position to do what he does best
SyTtaiaiy
— intimidate.
Mariette said Walker, who waa having (rouble
Kenny Gordon drive the baseline and lays up a shot against adjusting to Seminole's Intricate man-to-man
D a rry l M erthle. Gordon, Seminole's 6-2 forw ard, and defense, will not be In the starting lineup tonight
Merthle, Lake M a ry 's 6-1 swlngman, are listed among the but he will play a lot. Matt Maxwell, who also did
leaders In e ve ry county category except on*. Ss m l note hosts a Job Job Inside Friday, along with Whitney,
Lake Howell tonight and Lake M a ry entertains M ainland In Rouse. Kenny Gordon and Rod Henderson will
start tonight against the Lake Howell Silver
two big district 4A-9 basketball games.

Sports Editor

Hawks at home.
Henderson probably has been the one most
helped by Walker's maturation. He has tremen­
dous offensive skills. He's a great shooter with
good range, a determined driver, superb passer
and ferocious rebounder.
Bui the 6-3 sophomore was saddled with the
job of center since Seminole didn't have a
legitimate center until Walker’s emergence. And
he was doing a good Job at It. too. He was
averaging 11 points and eight rebounds a game.
But the real Henderson came oftve Friday
against DeLand. The versatile soph scored 27
points and pulled down 15 rebounds.
Walker and Henderson'Both played freshman
basketball before moving lo the varsity. And here
lies one of the keys to Seminole's basketball
success. While some schools change freshman
coaches with regularity, the Tribe has always had
strong basketball people st this position.
John McNamara. Mariette'* present assistant,
lost one game In two years at Crooms High. Bill
Klein, who has coached the froth at Seminole the
p u t two years. Is a mere 300. No one Is arguing
Seminole doesn't have great athletes, but those
horse need the correct Instruction and they're
getting It at Seminole.
famara, who played high school basketball
Mcrau
with Ruble Brown.' has Junior college coaching
experience and still plays the gam e pretty well for
all those years. Klein, still a great shooter,
attended Indiana IPa.) College on a basketball
scholarship.
Either of the two could handle a varsity
coaching Job and Seminole h u the benefit of both
on Its staff.
After Walker’s game. I heard a lot o f people say.
"1 would have had him up to the varsity all year."
Why? The trouble with high school sports Is
(hat loo often a young man la rushed Into action
before hla tim e. Craig W alker w as neither
physically or em otionally ready for varsity
basketball st the beginning o f thla year.
Even when he became ready physically, Craig
still didn't think he w u Jfaadsr.
ready emotionally. He
Just told you that. But by devu ta tln gly playing
freshman ball and dominailngly playing Junior
varsity boll. Craig developed the confidence he
needed to perform so well Friday night.
Sometimes It's not good enough to have the
beat players. You need to have good coaches, loo.
Seminole h u both and for the next three years.
Central Florida better run for cover when
Seminole comes to town.

Lady Seminoles Take Over 1st...Temporarily
By C h ris F ls te r
Herald S p o rts W r ite r
Mona Benton poured In 24
point* In Just over two quarters
o f play Monday night u San­
ford's Lady Seminoles took over
first place In the Five Star
Conference, at le u t temporarily,
with a 79-26 thrashing of Lake
Howell’s Lady Silver Hawks at
Seminole High.
Sem inole, w h ich has won
eight straight, now stands at
21-5 overall and 14-2 In the Five
Star, one-half game ahead of
L a k e B ran tley (1 3 -2 ). Lake
Brantley travels to Seabreexe for
a 4:45 game today u the Lady
Patriots look lo stayed Ued for
the top spot. Lake Howell now
elands at 3*19 overall and 1-15
In the conference.
Benton scored 12 o f her 24
prints In the first quarter u
Seminole ran o ff the first 20
ts o f the gam e before Lake
ell's Kclicc Johnson hit a
pair o f baskets to make It 20-4
altar one quarter. Seminole went
on to take a 42-10 halftime lead.
Benton, a senior awlngperaon
(guard-forward), also dished out

K

Grng C ou rtne y, Lnk#
Brantley's M can tar, toads
tha county In rabounding
with 9 4 boards per game.

Sam
Cook

six assists and collected three
steals. She w u Joined In double
figures by senior guard Andell
"S o u l" Smith with 13 points and
Junior forward Catherine "K itty "
Anderson with 12 and 10 re­
bounds. "Sou l" also handed out
four assists and cam e up with
four steals while Anderson doled
out three assists end collected
five steals.
Junior forward April Peterson
contributed eight prints, nine
rebounds and five steals while
Junior center-forward Kim "B ig
W h eel" Johnson chipped In with
six points and seven boards.
Sophomore point guard Erin
H ankins was high fo r Lake
Howell with nine points and
three steals. Patti Rac tossed in
seven prints and pulled down
eight rebounds w hile Regina
S c h m id t hauled d o w n nine
boards.
S e m in o le h osts M a in la n d
Thursday night before dosing
out the regular season Monday
at Apopka. Lake Howell hosts
Apopka Thursday and goes to
Seabreexe Monday.
" W e tried a tot o f different

more free tosses with 1:13 left to end o f a one and one and the
lie It at 47-47.
Lady Hawks had another chance
Both teams had thetr chances but missed a wide open layup
In (he lost minute of play but w ilh 38 seconds left.
The Lady Hawks still hung
things tonight and executed couldn't score and the game
pretty w ell," Seminole coach went Into overtim e knotted at tough though and battled back
w ithin two, 53-51. w ith 26
Ron Merthle said. "W e want to 47-47.
The two teams traded turn­ seconds left on a Jumper by
keep molding Into a better team.
I'm happy to have the success overs three lim es to open the Lewis. A Seminole turnover gave
we've enjoyed but we now we overtime period before Lewis It back to Lake Howell but (he
came through with a steal and Lady Hawks m issed another
can be better."
Monday's Junior van ity game raced downcuurt for a layup that layup with eight seconds left.
waa m u ch clo ser than the gave the JV Lady Hawks a 49-47 Lisa Hartman then grabbed the
. rebound with six seconds left
v a r s it y en c o u n te r as L a k e lead with 2:07 left to play.
Robinson dropped In ■ layup and held on to the ball until the
H o w e ll to o k S e m in o le In to
o v e r t i m e b e f o r e Y o l a n d a with 1:45 left to tie It at 49-49 bu sier sounded.
R obin son led the J V L a d y and Seminole got the ball back
after a Lake Howell turnover.
Seminoles to a 53-51 victory,
The Hawks then fouled Sharon
Because o f a mlxup in the
sc o reb o o k . S em in ole h ad a Manley who stepped to the line
three-point lead. 47*44, with and made the front end of the
1:35 rem aining Instead o f a o n e a n d o n e f o r a 5 0 -4 9
two-point lead. 49-47, as the Seminole lead with 1:36 re­
maining. Manley missed the
scoreboard read.
Seminole also had the ball out second shot, but Robinson waa
of bounds but Lake Howell's there for the rebound, made the
Tamara Lewis, the point guard fo llo w u p , a n d waa fo u le d .
for the varsity much o f the Robinson made the free throw to
season, came up with a steal and complete the four-point play as
waa fouled. Lewis made one o f Seminole took a 53-49 lead.
Lake Howell had a chance to
two free throws to make It 47-45
and she came back to sink tw o pull closer but mtaaed the front

Basketball

Tribe Stumbles Over Apopka In District Playoff
Sanford's Fighting Scmlnolet were look­
ing forward to a rematch with top-seeded
and top-ranked (4A ) Lake Howell In the 4A-9
District Tournament but the Seminole*
couldn't d e a r the Brat hurdle in thetr way —
Th ^'D arters built a 3 0 lead with 28
minutes left tn the t * 1*1*1Monday night and
held on for a 3-1 victory l a t h e opening
round o f 4 A -9 soccer tournam ent at

breakaway goal. Apopka hung on to a 1-0
lead at halftime, "ft took ua a while to get
wanned up." Fleck said. "Apopka lust
Jumped on the opportunity when they had
It."
Seminole had numerous opportunities In
the second half but couldn't tie the score
and Apopka scored again with 28 minutes
left tn the match to take a 3 0 lead.
Th e Tribe ftnally got on the hoard with 11
minutes remaining when the ball came off
an Apopka defender and Matt Albert fired it
Into the goal.
Seminole had a few more opportunities tn
the last 10 minutes o f play but again the
'Notes couldn't
t &gt; «« excellent

effort the kids put out all seaeon long."
The top two eeede in tonight'* district
tourney are expected to have easy paths
Into Thursday's semifinals but ths third and
fourth seeds will be tn far dogfights.
Howell and Lake Brantley were all
alone at the top o f the district during ths
regular mason as the Stiver Hawks compiled
a 7-0-1 district record compared to 6 - M for
Lake Brantley.
But. after Brantley, there la a four-team
logjam with Lym an, DcLand. Lake Mary
and if*inland. Lym an ertU try to avenge an
ca rter 3-1 torn to Mainland In tonlght'e
match at Lyman,
Lahe Mary win also try to avenge an
eariy-season loss as It trwvsts to DeLand
tonight. The gam e win be played at Spec
Martin Stadium at 7 p.m.
In the gtria Region 3 playoff tonfcbt a t « ,
L ym an 's Lady G reyhounds host V era

IBIFGoodrieh
M p r i o i ssfisMni hr ■
iMMlk life mi lssi n te p
Wmtw H U * wM M wsIl

*

G o&lt;

Lyman goes In with a 3 3 0 record and
41-1 in tha past two years. The Lady
OreyBounds have already beaten V eto
ten ch twice thla aaaawi Tha winner o f
tonlght’e match goes o o to the Section I

i

■*
It

»

�Evening Herald

DONALD

UISFS MI-ISS)

Reagan Sets The Budget Pace

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Codr 303-322-2611 or 831-0993

Tuesday, February 12. 1W5-4A
Warn* 0. Doyls, Publlthsr
The mat 0 lords no, Managing Editor
Malvln Adklnt, Advertising Diractor

Hornr Drllvrry Wrrli, E l. 10; Munih. M.75: 3 Month*.
• 14 25: 6 Month*. *27 00; Yrnr, *51.00 Ely Mall Week.
• I .50: Month. *6 OO; 3 Month*. *1H 00; 0 Month*. *32.50;
Yrar. SfiO OO___________________________________ __

Duet O f
Despots
T h e U .S. S U te D ep artm en t actually haa
a p o lo g is ed to the co m m u n ist Polish g o v e rn ­
m en t. w h ic h a llow s n o free elections, press or
In depen den t labor unions, fo r a Radio F ree
E u rope broadcast that Im plied Poland la
sim ila r to N asi G erm a n y and Prim e M in ister
W o jc lec h Jaru selskl sim ila r to A d o lf Hitler.
Polan d regu larly co m p la in s about R adio
Free E u rope, a U.S. govern m en t-fin an ced.
M unich-based station th at b eam s program s to
E astern Europe, but W a sh in gto n has brushed
such protests aside until now ,
B o w in g to the Polish F oreign M in istry's
co m p lain t, the State D ep artm en t called the
broadcast offen sive a n d said It w as " In v e r y
poor ta s te ."
“ T h e U .S. govern m en t regrets any Im p lica ­
tion o f sim ila rity b etw een N asi G erm an y and
present-day Poland and p a rticu larly b etw een
A d o lf H it le r and O e n . J a r u s e ls k l." th e
statem en t said.
T ru e, there are differen ces. For one. th e
N axles w e re h o m e g ro w n tyran ts w h ereas
W a rsa w 's despotic g o v e rn m e n t la M oscowm an ipu lated.
Last M ay. Jaruselskl, h at In hand, traveled
to M oscow w h ere he heard S o v ie t President
K on stan tin C h ern en ko w a rn that the U SSR
w ould not tolerate an y ch an ges in the S o v ie t
bloc’s (w h ic h Includes P o la n d ) com m u nist
system .
D u tifu lly ec h o in g h is K re m lin m asters,
J a ru selsk l n oted that " t h e r e can be no
d evia tio n from C om m u n ist P a rty policies In
P o la n d ." H e then received th e O rder o f L en in ,
an aw ard granted o n ly to those w h o follow
K rem lin orders.
A n o th e r difference: Ja ru selsk l rules w ith an
Iron fist but professes d e m o cra cy : H itler n e ver
pretended to be dem ocratic.
H o w ev er, settin g aside th e Nasi leader's
In d epen den ce from fo reign con trol and his
refusal to m ask his disdain fo r dem ocratic
rule, he and M oscow 's satrap, Jaruselskl, are
co n trolled a m o n g the lo n g lin e o f political
despota w h o h a ve plagued p eople throughout
history.
T h e S tate Departm ent o w e s an apology to
Radio F ree Europe.

Let 'Em Eat Mink
*'lf you h a ve to ask the p r ic e ." J.P. M organ
once said In response to an In qu iry about the
cost o f his yach t, "y o u c a n 't affo rd It."
A p p a ren tly tim es h ave ch an ged , for a m on g
the econ om ic indices th ere's now an Index
m easu ring the cost o f lu x u ry Item s. A n d
those Item s g o t lots pricier In 1B84.
E ven aa the general co n su m er price Index
ro se Just 4 p e r c e n t, th e lu x u r y In d e x
Increased at double th at rate. C hocolate
truffles w e re u p 12 percent, b elu ga caviar and
m ink coats even m ore.
But b efore you shed a tea r fo r the w ea lth y
a m o n g us. recall that th eir Incom es h ave
lately gon e u p m ore rapidly than those o f the
m enu population. Besides, th e scions o f J .P .
organ can alp their D om P erlgn on — the
price o f w h ich rose not at all last yea r — and
console th em se lve s w ith the thou gh t that, If
ev ery o n e cou ld w ear m in k a n d eat caviar,
there w o u ld n 't be m uch poin t In b ein g rich In
the first place.

K

Please W rite
L e tte r s t s th s ed ito r a r t w elcom e fo r
■ a b llca tlo a . A ll le tte rs m a s t be signed sad
Include a m ailin g address aad, I f possible, a
te lep h o n e nu m ber. Th s E v en in g H erald
res erve s th s rig h t to ed it le t t e r s to a void
lib s ! and to accom m odate space.

WASHINGTON — Amid the etorm of criticism
swirling around President Reagan's proposed
budget cuts, one overriding reality Is being
overlooked: Reagan Is forcing Congress to deal
with the budget largely on hts terms.
A fter fou r years o f on -sgsln . off-again
budgetary warfare, the president has once again
set the boundaries and the terms o f debate In
which this year's budget battle la taking place.
And Congress — mindful that It Is dealing with a
president at the peak o f his popularity, who
carried 49 states last November — has clearly
shown a willingness to play by most of Reagan's
rules.
Those rules are fairly simple: (1) Cut federal
spending; (2) Don't raise taxes; (3) Don't cut
defense beneath the 1277.9 billion Reagan has
requested, unless new economies and savings
can be found: 4) Don't reduce Social Security

cost-of-llving increases — that Is. unless Con­
gress Insists on doing so.
A s for rule No. 1. most members o f Congress
— Democrats and Republicans — agree that
runaway federal spending must be cut If the
dangerously high deficits are to be placed on a
downward trajectory.
Regarding rule No. 2. both parties In Congress
agree that tax Increases are out of the question.
Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole o f Kansas,
among other GOP congressional leader dead-set
against them, and few cries of ‘ ‘raise income
taxes'* have been heard from the Democrats
since the election.
The nation’s overwhelming rejection o f Walter
Mondale's campaign proposal to raise taxes has
stuffed the tax-hike genie In the bottle for the
time being.

As for rule No. 3. White House strategists prly
acknowledge that Reagan's request tor a 5.9
percent real defense-spending increase will not
survive the budget-cutting appetites of thls^
Congress, no matter what Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger says.
The strategy now is to keep Congress from
cutting too deeply Into Reagan's defense
buildup.
As for the rest of Reagan's S937.7 billion
budget: for the next six months. Congress w ill
be doing pretty much what Reagan believes he
i re-elected to do —- cut
&lt; spending.
The toughest word for a politician to utter "Is
a simple, flat 'No.**' Reagan said In his budget
message to Congress. "T h e patience of the
American people has been stretched as far as It
will go. They want action; they have demanded
It."

SCIENCE WORLD

ROBERT WALTERS

Bhopal
Victims
Studied

Hawaiians
Fight For
Their Land

PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Medical
researchers suspect the federal limit
for safe Industrial exposure to iso­
cyanates Is too high and hope to
confirm that by examining tissue
from those killed In the Union
Carbide disaster In Bhopal. India.
Yves Alarle, chairman o f the
University o f Pittsburgh Graduate
School of Public Heuth, said he
suspects the safe level o f Industrial
exposure to the highly toxic chemi­
cals should be three times lower
than the acceptable celling set by
the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration.
"Based on our research done with
animal m odels." said Alarle. "w e
predict the safe level o f exposure
should be 0.006 parts per million, or
about three times below the federal
standard."
Scientists routinely use animal
experiments to gauge the Impact of
substances on Humana, and often
the animal models are accurate
predictors o f human reactions.
Alarle said.
"T h e animal models for anates
* r r very good. W e use mice for
sensory Irritation (experiments) and
lnea pigs for allergic refactions."
said.

e

But the researchers want to
evaluate blood and tissue o f Indian
victims to confirm their predictions.
Alarle says he Is awaiting word
from Indian physicians and scien­
tists on how to proceed in the effort
to analyte blood samples from
people Injured and tissue samples —
preferably corneas — from some
killed In the world's moat deadly
chemical disaster. A ruptured valve
Dec. 3 caused a leak o f methyl
is o c y a n a te a t U n io n C a rb id e
ticlde plant In Bhopal, killing
00 people and Injuring more
than 100,000. Most killed were
children and old people crowded
Into nearby shanty towns. A variety
o f Isocyanate compounds — which
can cause death, lung and eye
damage and allergies, depending on
nature and exposure — Is used In
c o m m o n p r o d u c t s s u c h aa
polyurethane, bedding and insula­
tion.

B

But Alarle called methyl Iso­
c y a n a te , u sem a k e p e s tic id e s ,
"probably the moat toxic" of the
family of chemicals. "It is the most
hatardous because it volatlllies
very quickly,",he said.
Alarle said the tissue samples
would provide a unique opportunity
to d e te rm in e h ow iso cy a n a te
molecules attach themselves to
human tissues and cause damage.

FARMING WORLD

Debt

is Grows

B y Sonja H lllgren
UPI F arm E d ito r
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Neil Harl.
an Iowa Stale University agricultur­
al economist, says a key factor in
the farm debt crista was an October
1979 decision by the Federal Re­
serve Board to w ring Inflation out of
the American economy.
The Federal Reserve responded to
policies that contributed to raging
inflation of the 1970s. That era had
made it clear that an enormous
price was paid when people began
to believe that Inflation was perma­
nent.
Harl analysed economic factors
that led to the current crisis for a
House Agriculture subcommittee,
which exam ined the Issue last
week.
In addition to the Federal Re­
serve's decision to fight Inflation,
the second most significant factor
that brought on the debt crisis, he
said, was the 1981 lax cut that cut
federal revenues so sharply as to
assure massive budget deficits.
The result haa been low Inflation
and record-setting real Interest rates
us strong demand tor tight credit
boosted the cost o f borrowing
money.
For agriculture, which is capital
Intensive and must export crops
produced on one-third o f cropland, a
strong dollar has stifled exports
w hile high Interest rates have
boosted production costs.
Harl said policies to reduce Infla­
tion and cut taxes to Induce eco­
nomic activity have created gainers
and losers.
"It seems not Inappropriate for
the gainers to share a small part of
the gain with the losers." he said In
defense o f federal help for the farm
community.
He said the financial position of
roughly or.e-half o f the nation's
farmers Is deteriorating, with two-

thirds of the nation's total farm debt
o f 1212 billion held by borrowers
slipping toward Insolvency.
In general, farmers with MO In
debts tor every 9100 In assets are
unable to make Interest payments.
By last December. 42.5 percent o f
farmers In the Central states had
debt loads that high.
For the entire country, 28.7 per­
cent of farmers with about twothirds of farm debt were In that
category. As land values decline, all
farmers have less equity to back up
their debts.
"Unless something dramatic Is
done, or circumstances change,
nearly half o f the farmers will move
Into Insolvency, taking down their
lenders, their suppliers and their
merchants and inflicting Incalcula­
ble damage upon the fabric of rural
communities. Harl sold.
Harl said he fears that 10 percent
to 15 percent o f farm borrowers will
be unable to obtain credit this year,
forcing their land and equipment on
the market.
"W e appear to be on the verge o f
pushing four to five times as much
land on the m ark et aa those
markets have handled In good
times." he said.
Harl said the administration pro­
gram to restructure debts, which
was modified last week, will provide
some buoyancy to land and ma­
chinery markets, but It is not
possible to predict lt^ Impact with
certainly.
As a contingency, he suggested
Congress may have to create a
separate financing authority to
provide capital to keep an operation
going If bankers* reduction of Inter­
est or loan principal under the
existing program la Insufficient.
If no other solution works, he said
pressures will mount for farm debt
moratoriums.

KAHIKILANI, Hawaii (NEA) Letlanl Kalaeloa ts a full-blooded
Hawaiian — one o f fewer than 1,000
still alive — and a direct descendant
o f Queen Lydia Llliuokalanl, the last
member o f Hawaii's royal family to
rule the Islands.
That special status ought to
qualify Mrs. Kalaeloa for one o f the
homesteads supposedly guaranteed
to native Hawaiians under the terms
o f a federal law passed In 1921.
That statute, the Hawaiian Homes
Commission Act, was specifically
enacted to provide restitution to the
aboriginal people o f the Hawaiian
Islands who were subjugated by —
and whose land was confiscated by
19th century white settlers.
More than three decades after
applying tor her homestead, howev­
er, Mrs. Kalaeloa remains on a
waiting list — along with almost
9.000 othere deprived of their an­
cestral homelands.
The 1921 law designated slightly
more than 200.000 acres o f land on
five Hawaiian Islands to be set aside
for those with at least 50 percent
Hawaiian blood to use as home
sites, farms and ranches. Each
recipient must pay 91 per year to
maintain a 99-year lease.
But fewer than 30.000 acres have
b e e n d is t r ib u t e d as the la w
specifics, while much of the land
has been leased to government
agencies and commercial users for
scandalously low rents o f 91 to 95
per acre annually.
There has been no shortage of
rhetoric about the need to enforce
the law. In 1921. the chairman o f a
House committee Insisted that the
statute was crucial because "th e
Hawaiian* were deprived of their
lands without any say on their
part."
In 1938. a Joint congressional
committee criticised the fact that
"on ly a small part o f the area has of
yet been used" and described the
native Hawaiian* as "a landless
people In the country o f their
forefathers."
In 1959, the federal law granting
Hawaii statehood explicitly required
Implementation o f the 1921 statute.
In I960. Interior Secretary Cecil
D. Andrus said the Intent o f the law
had been "substantially frustrated"
by federal and state officials who
"n ave either neglected or misin­
t e r p r e t e d m a n y o f t h e ir re-*.
In 1993. a Joint federal-stole task
force reiterated both governments'
theoretical commitment to the law
and called for the establishment o f a.
sp ecial a d vis o ry com m ittee to
explore ways to finance develop­
ment of the natives' land. But for
the past 19 months, Hewsli Qov.
George R. Ariyoshi has reftised to
t the committee members.

JACK ANDERSON
BERRY'S WORLD

U.S. Targets Soviet Spy Satellites
W ASH IN G !O N Long bcfoic
President Resgsn brought up the
s u b je c t o f “ S ta r W a rs.*' th e
militarisation o f space had already
begun. Both the United States and
Soviet Union have been keeping a
military watch on one another for
year* through spy satellites high In

"fly the way, son, how's the o f search tor the
meaning of your existence coming along?''

.* *•

4

Bui few Americans reside Just
what these orbiting Peeping Toms
are capable of, and h ow big a threat
they'd be tn case o f a conflict. My
associate Dak Van Atto haa ob­
tained a secret General Accounting
Office report that gives (he Pen­
tagon experts' assessment of the
threats posed by the Kremlin's
satellites.
I've already reported on the four
types o f apy satellites considered
most Immediately dangerous to the
United States. But the Pentagon has
assigned • No. 2 priority to other
— teilitcs; these, too. are considered
a military threat.
The total number o f aateUUca In
the two top priorities Is close to 40.
In caar o f war. the planned "Star
Warm" defenses would move from

Priority One targets to Priority Tw o
In a matter o f seconds.
A c c o r d in g to th e P e n ta g o n
e x p e r ts ’ a sse ss m e n t. U.S. In ­
telligence-gathering satellites are
still superior to those made In
Moscow. More o f ours transmit their
Information Instantaneously, like a
live T V show o f Soviet military
movements and equipment. More o f
t h e ir s o p e ra te o n a d e la y ed broadcast system.
Here are the Priority Tw o targets
listed tn ths secret report:
— Th e Salyut scries o f military
space station*. T h e report says:
"T h e station possibly can provide
near real-time Intelligence-targeting
data to military forces and can
detect missile launebes. Photoreconnaissance Is believed to be Its
mqjor activity: however, these sto(ton* con possibly be modified to do
reconnaissance such as electronic
intelligence, communications In­
telligence and command and con­
trol."
— High-resolution photographic
reconnaissance satellite* that drop

(Urn tn capsules by parachute from
low orbtt. "T h e one assfssrrt to be o f
primary concern." according to the
report, "la capable o f ejecting recov­
ery capsules — which minimise*
the time from when the photo­
graphs s ir token to when ths him is
available for analysis."
The report explain s that the
photographs from these satellites
arc used to study troop positions
and for targetin g and dam age
assessment. " Resolution la
o f distinguishing automobiles." the
report states.
It adds: “ A s the Soviet Union
projects Us forces further from Its
border* or into a denied area, such
as China, U becom es Increasingly
dependent on this type o f (satel­
lite)."
— Navigational satellite*- "These
satellites, deployed tn regularlyspaced three- and sU-salrillU con­
stellations. provide navigational fix­
es with an sveram watting Urn* o f
90 minutes and 46 minutes at Ittc
equator, respectively, for NAVSAT-1
and NAVSAT-2.'

"NAVSAT-1 Is accurate to 200
meters, and NAVSAT-3 is poaaibly
accurate within 100 meters. They
are primarily used by Soviet naval
forces, including ballistic missile
submarines."
Knocking out these navigational
aids would make It difficult for
Soviet m ksik subs to precisely
determine their location — and
precision is critical for launching
— Communications satellites. The
s e c r e t r e p o r t s ta le s t " T h e
M o ln ly t- R s d u g o ty p e s are o f
primary concern because they are
able to provide real-lime command
and control to naval, land and
strategic forces. Aa Soviet fo r a *
operate farther from the Soviet land
they becom e more dependent
far control o f
Knocking them out. tn other
words, would J ca vc Soviet fteid
Banders pretty much on ibetr
— which la not ths way the

�SPORTS

Evming HsraM. Sastord. FI.

Tsezdsy. Fab. II. tftS-SA

Tribe's P atien ce W ith W a lk e r
Pays B ig E n d -O f -Y e a r R e w a rd

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K tnny Gordon drive the baseline and lays up a shot against
D a rryl M erthle. Gordon, Seminole's 4-2 forward, and
Merthle, Lake M ary's 6-1 swlngman, are listed among the
leaders In e ve ry county category except one. Seminole hosts
Lake Howell tonight and Lake M a ry entertains Mainland In
two big district 4A-f basketball games.

A week ago. Seminole basketball coach Chris
Marlette went to freshman Craig Walker and told
him he was being promoted to the varsity.
A fter lea d in g the freshm an team to an
unbeaten season and performing above expecta­
tions at the Junior varsity level (53 points and 30
rebounds). Marlette reasoned It was time for his
6-6 phenom to "see what he could do with the big
boys."
Walker, a sincere youngster who he Is kind of
overwhelmed by all of this, listened Intently to his
coach. Then he replied. "Coach, do you think 1
can think about It tonight and give you an answer
tomorrow?"
Marlette. suppressing his surprise and laughter,
said he politely told the youngster that he didn't
have anything to think about. He was ready for
varsity basketball and that's where he was going
toplay.
Craig, an easy going and likable young man.
can't be faulted for hts doubts about moving from
ninth grade to the top o f the class. Physically, he
has all the tools. Hts has the build o f a young
Akeem and the shooting touch o f a young Ralph
Sampson. And he blocks shota like a young Pst
Ewing.
But the emphasis on all these bold comparisons
Is on the "yo u n g " and not the Akeem. Sampson
or Ewing. No matter how devastating Walker
looked as a freshman, and dominating as a JV.
the contact and quickness are a dllTerent game at
the varsity level.
But Marlette thought Walker was ready — and
he was right. The third year Seminole coach
threw his prize frosh Into the Ore against the No.
6 ranked team In the state last ftld a y and he
came out without a bum.
The Semlnolea came out pretty well. too. They
upset DeLand. 57 63. at DeLond. which to quite
an accomplishment.
|
" I didn't think I was ready for varsity." said
Walker modestly. "But I do now."
Walker's final stats had him with seven potnta
and seven rebounds. These stats, however, don't
tell the true story because he must have altered
five shots. Marlette. who played a zone defense
(2-3) for the whole game, said It was the first time
he's ever done that.
Walker's presence made that move possible. Of
course. It was also done to protect the young
phenom. Putting him one-on-one on all-stater
Randy Anderson or 6-4 brute Marcus Johnson
might have been disastrous.
But aa the center o f the cone's back line.
Walker was In a position to do what he does best
— intimidate.
Marlette said Walker, who was having trouble
adjusting to Seminole's Intricate man-to-man
defense, will not be In the starting lineup tonight
but he will play a lot. Matt Maxwell, who also did
a Job Job Inside Friday, along with Whitney.
Rouse, Kenny Oordon and Rod Henderson will
start tonight against the Lake Howell Sliver

Sports Editor

Hawks at home.
Henderson probably has been the one most
helped by Walker's maturation. He has tremen­
dous offensive skills. He's a great shooter with
good range, a determined driver, superb passer
and ferocious rebounder.
But the 6-3 sophomore was saddled with the
Job o f center since Seminole didn't have a
legitimate center until Walker's emergence. And
he was doing a good Job at It. too. He was
averaging 11 points and eight rebounds a game.
But the real Henderson came ^ v e Friday
against DeLand. The versatile soph scored 27
points and pulled down 13 rebounds.
Walker and Henderson both played freshman
basketball before moving to the varsity. And here
lies one of the keys to Seminole's basketball
success. While some schools change freshman
coaches with regularity, the Tribe has always had
strong basketball people at this position.
John McNamara. Marlette's present assistant,
lost one game In two years at Crooma High. Bill
Klein, who has coached the frosh at Seminole the
past two years, to a mere 304). No one to arguing
Seminole doesn't have great athletes, but those
horse need the correct Instruction and they’re
getting It at Seminole.
McNamara, who played high school basketball
with Huble Brown, has Junior college coaching
experience and allll plays the game pretty well for
all those years. Klein, still a great shooter,
attended Indiana (Pa.) College on a basketball
scholarship.
Either of the two could handle a varsity
coaching Job and Seminole has the benefit o f both
on Its staff.
Arter Walker's game. I heard a lot of people say.
" I would have had him up to the varally all year."
W hy? The trouble with high school sports to
that too often a young man to rushed Into action
before hts time. Craig W alker was neither
physically or em otionally ready for varsity
basketball at the beginning o f this year.
Even when he became ready physically. Craig
still didn't think he was ready emotionally. He
Just told you that. But by devastatlngly playing
freshman ball and domlnatlngly playing Junior
varsity ball. Craig developed the confidence he
needed to perform so well Friday night.
Sometimes It's not good enough to have the
best players. You need to have good coaches, too.
Seminole has both and for the next three years.
Centra) Florida better run for rover when
Seminole comes to town.

Lady Seminoles Take Over 1st...Temporarily

Grag Co u rtne y, Lake
Brantley's H center, leads
the co u nty In rebounding

B y C h ris Plater
H erald S p orts W rite r
Mona Benton poured In 24
points in Just over two quarters
of play Monday night aa San­
ford's Lady Seminoles took over
first place In the Five Star
Conference, at least temporarily,
with a 70-26 thrashing o f Lake
Hoarell'e Lady Stiver Hawks at
Seminole High.
Sem inole, w hich has won
eight straight, now stands at
21-5 overall and 14-2 In the Five
Star, one-half game ahead o f
Lake B ra n tle y (13-2). La k e
Brantley travels to Seabreeze for
a 4:43 game today as the Lady
Patriots look to stayed tied for
;U now
the top spot. Lake
stands at 3-19 overall and 1-15
In the conference.
Benton scored 12 of her 24
potnta In the first quarter aa
Seminole ran off the first 20
potnta o f the gam e before Lake
Howell's Ketice Johnson hit a
pair o f baskets to make U 20-4
after one quarter. Seminole went
on to take a 42-10 halftime lead.
Benton, a senior swtngpereon
(guard-forward), also dished out

six assists and collected three
steals. She was Joined In double
figures by senior guard Andell
"S ou l" Smith with 13 points and
junior forward Catherine "K itty "
Anderson with 12 and 10 re­
bounds. "S ou l" also handed out
four assists and came up with
four steals while Anderson doled
out three assists and collected
five steals.
Junior forward April Peterson
contributed eight potnta. nine
rebounds and five steals while
Junior center-forward Kim "B ig
W heel" Johnson chipped In with
six potnta and seven boards.
Sophomore point guard Erin
Hankins w as high for Lake
Howell with nine potnta and
three steals, Patti Rae tossed In
seven points and pulled down
eight rebounds while Regina
S chm idt h a u led dow n nine
S e m in o le h o s ts M ain lan d
Thursday night before closing
out the regular season Monday
at Apopka. Lake Howell hosts
Apopka Thursday and goes to
Seabreeze Monday.
"W e tried a lot o f different

Tribe Stumbles Over Apopka In
breakaway goal. Apopka hung on to a 1*0
lead at halftime. “ U took us a white to get
wanned up." Fleck aald. "Apopka lust
Jumped on the opportunity when they had
It."
Seminole had numerous opportunities In
the second half but couldn't Us the score

Basketball
things tonight and executed couldnt score and the game
rtty well/' Seminole coach went Into overtime knotted at
n Merthle said. “ W e want to 47-47.
keep molding Into a better team.
Th e two teams traded turnI'm happy to have the success overs three limes to open the
we've enjoyed but we now we overtim e period before Lewis
can be better.”
came through with a steal and
Monday's Junior varsity game raced downcourt for a layup that
waa much c lo s e r than the gave the JV Lady Hawka a 49-47
v a r s it y e n c o u n te r as Lake lead with 24)7 leftto play.
H o w e ll took S e m in o le Into
Robinson dropped In a layup
o v e r t i m e b e f o r e Y o la n d a with 1:45 left to tie It at 4049
Robinson led th e J V Lady end Seminole got the ball back
Seminoles to a 33-51 victory.
after a Lake Howell turnover.
Because of a mlxup in the
Th e Hawka then fouled Sharon
acorebook. S e m in o le had a Manley who stepped to the line
three-point lead. 47-44. with »n d made the front end o f the
1:33 remaining Instead o f a o »‘ e End o n e fo r a 80 *49
two-point lead. 49-47. as the Seminole lead with 1:36 rescoreboard read.
m alnlng. Manley missed the
Seminole also had the ball out aecond shot, but Robinson waa
o f bounds but Lake Howell's there for the rebound, made the
Tamara Lewis, the point guard fo llo w u p , and w aa fo u le d ,
for the varsity much of the Robinson made the free throw to
season, came up with a steal and complete the four-point play aa
waa fouled. Lewis made one of Seminote took a 53-49 lead,
two free throws to make It 47-45
Lake Howell had a chance to
and she came back to
two pull closer but mlaaed the front

C

end of a one and one and the
Lady Hawks had another chance
but missed a wide open layup
with 38 seconds left.
The Lady Hawks still hung
tough though and battled back
w ithin tw o. 53-51. w ith 26
seconds left on a Jumper by
Lewis. A Seminole turnover gave
It back to Lake Howell but the
Lady Hawka missed another
layup with eight aeconda left.
Llaa Hartman then grabbed the
rebound with six seconds left
and held on to the ball until the
buzzer Bounded.
UUIS MOWSL i (Ml - HskSIm *. X.
JWMMN I S M ) . tcSmWt L tetawtow I.

TatofcHWIIM.

Playoff
effort the kids put out all season long."
The top two seeds In tonight's district
tourney are expected to have easy paths
Into Thursday's semifinals but the third and
fourth seeds will be In for dogfights.
Lake Howell and Lake Brantley were all
alone at the top o f the district during the
regular season m the Silver Hawka compflsd
a 7 0 1 district record compared to 6*1-1 for
Lake Brantley.
B ut after Brantley, there la a four-team
logjam with Lyman. DeLand. Lake Mary

tonight. Th e game will be played at Spec
Martin Stadium at 7 pjn.
In the girls Region 2 playoff todfcht at 6.
Lym an's Lady O reybounds host Vera

G o o d tic h

B Lyman goes in with a 2 0 0 record and
4 1 1 In the paet two years. The Lady
Greyhounds have already beaten Veto

i

*

�Evening Herald

DONALD LAMBRO

&lt;utPS4«t*n«)

Reagan Sets The Budget Pace

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9903

Tuesday, February 12, 19*5—4A

Way rtf D. Doyla, Publlihar
Thomai 0 tardano. Managing Editor
Molvln Adklm, AdvarlUIng Diractor
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Year. *80 00

Duet O f
Despots
T h e U .S. Slate D ep artm en t actually has
a p o lo g is ed to the co m m u n ist Polish g o v e r n ­
m en t. w h ich a llo w * no free elections, press o r
in d ep en d en t labor u nions, fo r a R adio F ree
E u rop e broadcast that Im plied Poland Is
s im ila r to N azi G erm a n y and Prim e M in ister
W o jc le c h Jaru zelskl sim ila r to A d o lf Hitler.
P o la n d regu larly co m p la in s about R a d io
F ree Europe, a U .S. govern m en t-fin an ced.
M u nich-based station that b eam s p rogram s to
E astern Europe, but W a sh in gto n has brushed
such p rotests aside until n ow .
B o w in g to the P o lish F oreign M in istry’s
co m p la in t, the S tate D ep artm en t called th e
broadcast offen sive a n d said It w as " In v e r y
p o or ta s te ."
" T h e U.S. go ve rn m en t regrets any Im p lica ­
tion o f sim ila rity b etw een N a zi G erm an y and
presen t-day Poland and particu larly b etw een
A d o l f H itle r and O e n . J a r u z e ls k l,” th e
sta te m e n t said.
T ru e , th ere are differen ces. F or one, th e
N a zies w ere h o m e g ro w n tyran ts w h ereas
W a rs a w ’s despotic g o v e rn m e n t Is M oscowm an ipu lated.
La st M ay, Jaru zelskl, hat In hand, traveled
to M o sco w w h ere he heard S o v ie t President
K o n stan tin C hernenko w a rn that the U S S R
w ou ld n ot tolerate a n y ch a n g e s In the S o v iet
b lo c ’s (w h ich Includes P o la n d ) com m u n ist
system .
D u tifu lly ech oin g h is K rem lin m asters,
J a ru zelsk l noted th at " th e r e can be n o
d evia tio n from C om m u n ist Pa rty policies In
P o la n d ," H e then received th e O rder o f L en in ,
an a w a rd granted o n ly to th ose w h o fo llo w
K re m lin orders.
A n o th e r difference: J a ru zelsk l rules w ith an
Iron fist bu t professes d e m o cra cy : H itler n ever
preten ded to be dem ocratic.
H o w e v e r, settin g asid e th e N azi leader’s
In d ep en d en ce from fo re ig n con trol and hla
refusal to m ask his disdain fo r d em ocratic
rule, h e an d M oscow ’s satrap. Jaruzelskl, a rc
co n trolled a m o n g the lo n g lin e o f political
d esp ots w h o have plagued p eop le throughout
history.
T h e S ta te D epartm ent o w e s an apology to
R adio F ree Europe.

WASHINGTON — Amid the storm o f criticism
swirling around President Reagan's proposed
budget cuts, one overriding reality Is being
overlooked: Reagan Is forcing Congress to deal
with the budget largely on his terms.
A fter four years o f on-agaln. off-agaln
budgetary warfare, the president has once again
set the boundaries and the terms o f debate in
which this year's budget battle Is taking place.
And Congress — mindful that It la dealing with a
president at the peak of hla popularity, who
carried 49 states last November — has clearly
shown a willingness to play by most o f Reagan's
rules.
Those rules are fairly simple: (1) Cut federal
spending: (2) Don't raise taxes: (3) Don't cut
defense beneath the *277.5 billion Reagan has
requested, unless new economies and savings
can be found; 4) Don't reduce Social Security

P loate W rite
L e t t e r s t s Ik s ed ito r a re w elcom e fo r
pu blication . A ll le tte rs m ust be signed aad
include a m ailin g address aad, I f possible, a
te le p h o n e num ber. T h e E v en in g H era ld
re s e rv e s th e righ t to e d it le t t e r s to avoid
lib e l and to accom m odate space.

The nation's overwhelming rejection o f Walter
Mondale's campaign proposal to raise taxes has
stuffed the tax-hike genie In the bottle for the
time being.

ROBERT WALTERS

Bhopal
Victims
Studied

Hawaiians
Fight For
Their Land

PITTSBURGH (UPI) Medical
researchers suspect the federal limit
for safe Industrial exposure to Iso­
cyanates is too high and hope to
confirm that by examining tissue
from those killed In the Union
Carbide disaster In Bhopal. India.
Yves Alarle, chairman o f the
University o f Pittsburgh Oraduate
School o f Public Health, said he
suspects the safe level o f Industrial
exposure to the highly toxic chemi­
cals should be three times lower
than the acceptable celling set by
the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration,
"Based on our research done with
animal m odels," aald Alarle. "w e
predict the safe level of exposure
should be 0.006 parts per million, or
about three times below the federal
standard."
Scientists routinely use animal
experiments to gauge the Impact of
substances on humans, and often
the animal models are accurate
predictors o f human reactions.
Alarle said.
"The animal models for anates
are very good. W e use mice for
sensory Irritation (experiments) and
lnea pigs for allergic refactions,"
said.

E

'EmEat Mink

" I f y o u h ave to ask the p ric e,” J .P. M organ
once said In response to an Inqu iry about th e
cost or hla yacht, “ you c a n 't a fford It."
A p p a ren tly tim es h ave ch an ged , for a m o n g
the econ om ic Indices th ere’s now an Index
m easu rin g the cost o f lu x u ry Items. A n d
those Item s got lots pricier In 1084.
E ven as the general co n su m er price Index
ro s e Just 4 p e r c e n t, th e lu x u r y In d e x
Increased at double th a t rate. C h ocolate
tru ffles w e re up 13 percen t, b elu ga caviar and
m in k coats e v e n m ore.
But b e fo re you shed a tear fo r the w ea lth y
a m o n g us, recall that th eir Incom es h a ve
lately gon e up m ore ra p id ly than those o f the
gen eral population. B esides, th e scions o f J .P .
M organ ca n sip their Dorn Perlgn on — th e
price o f w h ich rose not at all last y e a r — an d
con sole th em selves w ith th e thou gh t that. If
e v e r y o n e cou ld w ear m in k and eat caviar,
there w o u ld n ’t be m uch point In b ein g rich In
the first place.

Regarding rule No. 2, both parties In Congress
agree that tax Increases are out o f the question.
Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole of Kansas,
among other GOP congressional leader dead-set
against them, and few cries o f ''raise income
taxes'* have been heard from the Democrats
since the election.

As for rule No. 3. White House strategists prly
acknowledge that Reagan's request for a 5.9
percent real defense-spending increase artll not
survive the budget-cutting appetites o f thto
Congress, no matter what Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger says.
The strategy now Is to keep Congress from
cutting too deeply Into Reagan's defense
buildup.
As for the rest of Reagan's *937.7 billion
budget: for the next six months. Congress will
be doing pretty much what Reagan believes he
was re-elected to do — cut spending.
The toughest word for a politician to utter "Is
a simple, flat ‘ No.’ ” Reagan aald In his budget
message to Congress. "T h e patience of the
American people has been stretched aa far as It
will go. They want action; they have demanded
It."

SCIENCE WORLD

But the researchers want to
evaluate blood and tissue o f Indian
victims to confirm their predictions.

Let

cost-of-llvtng Increases — that Is. unless Con­
gress Insists on doing so.
A s for rule No. 1. moat members of Congress
— Democrats and Republicans — agree that
runaway federal spending must be cut If the
dangerously high deficits are to be placed cm a
downward trajectory.

Alarle says he la awaiting word
from Indian physicians and scien­
tists on how to proceed In (he effort
to analyte blood samples from
people Injured and tissue samples —
preferably corneas — from some
killed In the world's moat deadly
chemical disaster. A ruptured valve
Dec. 3 caused a leak of methyl
Is o c y a n a te at U n io n C a rb id e
pesticide plant In Bhopal, killing
2.500 people and Injuring more
than 100,000. Moat killed were
children and old people crowded
Into nearby shanty towns. A variety
o f Isocyanate compounds — which
can cause death, lung and eye
damage and allergies, depending on
nature and exposure — Is used in
c o m m o n p r o d u c t s s u c h aa
polyurethane, bedding and Insula­
tion.
But Alarle called methyl Iso­
c y a n a te . u a e m a k e p e s tic id e s ,
"probably the most toxic" o f the
family of chemicals. “ It is the moat
hasardous because It volatilise*
very quickly,*'Jie aald.
Alarle aald the tissue samples
would provide a unique opportunity
to d e te rm in e h ow Isocy a n a te
molecules attach themselves to
human tissues and cause damage,

FARMING WORLD

Debt Crisis Grows
By Oooja H illg re n
U P] F arm E d ito r
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Nell Karl,
an lows Stale University agricultur­
al economist, says a key factor In
the farm debt crisis was an October
1979 decision by the Federal Re­
serve Board to wring inflation out of
the American economy.
The Federal Reserve responded to
policies that contributed to raging
Inflation of the 1970s. That era had
made It clear that an enormous
price was paid when people began
to believe that Inflation was perma­
nent.
Harl analysed economic factors
that led to the current crisis for s
House Agriculture subcommittee,
which examined the Issue last
week.
In addition to the Federal Re­
serve's decision to fight Inflation,
the second moat significant factor
that brought on the debt crisis, he
said, was the 1981 tax cut that cut
federal revenues so sharply as to
assure massive budget deficits.
The result has been low inflation
and record-setting real Interest rates
aa strong demand for tight credit
boosted the cost o f borrow ing
money.
For agriculture, which Is capital
Intensive and must export crops
produced on one-third o f cropland, a
strong dollar has stilled exports
w h ile high Interest rates nave
boosted production costs.
Harl aald policies to reduce Infla­
tion and cut taxes to induce eco­
nomic activity have created gainers
and losers.
"It seems not Inappropriate for
the gainers to share a small part of
the gain with the lasers." he said In
defense of federal help for the farm
community.
He said the financial position of
roughly one-half o f the nation’s
farmers Is deteriorating, with two-

thirds of the nation's total farm debt
o f *212 billion held by borrowers
slipping toward Insolvency.
In grneral. farmers with *40 In
debts for every *10 0 In assets are
unable to make Interest payments.
By last December. 42.5 percent of
farmers In the Central states had
debt loads that high.
For the entire country. 28.7 per­
cent of farmer* with about twothirds o f farm debt were in that
category. Aa land value* decline, all
farmers have less equity to back up
their debts.
"Unless something dramatic la
done, or circumstances change,
nearly Italf of the farmers will move
Into Insolvency, taking down their
lenders, their suppliers and their
merchants and Inflicting Incalcula­
ble damage upon the fabric o f rural
communities." Harl said.
Harl said he fears that 10 percent
to 15 percent of farm borrower* will
be unable to obtain credit this year,
forcing their land and equipment on
the market.
"W e appear to be on the verge of
pushing four to five times aa much
lan d on the m ark et as those
m arkets have handled In good
lim es," he aald.
Harl said the administration pro­
gram to restructure debts, which
was modified last week, will provide
some buoyancy to 'and and ma­
chinery markets, but it is not
possible to predict Itq Impact with
certainly.
Aa a contingency, he suggested
Congress may have to create a
separate financing authority to
provide capital to keep an operation
going if bankers' reduction of inter­
est or loan principal under the
existing program la Insufficient.
If no other solution works, he said
pressures will mount for farm debt
moratoriums.

KAHIKILANI, Hawaii (NEA) Lellanl Kalaeloa la a full-blooded
Hawaiian — one o f fewer than 1,000
still alive — and a direct descendant
o f Queen Lydia Lllluokalanl, the last
member o f Hawaii's royal family to
rule the Islands.
Th at special status ought to
qualify Mrs. Kalaeloa for one of the
homesteads supposedly guaranteed
to native Hawaiian* under the terms
o f a federal law paaeed In 1921.
That statute, the Hawaiian Homes
Commission Act. was specifically
enacted to provide restitution to the
aboriginal people o f the Hawaiian
Islands who were subjugated by —
and whose land was confiscated by
19th century white settler*.
More than three decades after
applying for her homestead, howev­
er. Mrs. Kalaeloa remains on a
waiting list — along with almost
9,000 other* deprived o f their an­
cestral homelands.
The 1921 law designated slightly
more than 200,000 acres o f land on
five Hawaiian Islands to be set aside
for those with at least 50 percent
Hawaiian blood to use as home
sites, farms and ranches. Each
recipient must pay *1 per year to
maintain a 99-year lease.
But fewer than 30,000 acres have
b e e n d is t r ib u t e d as th e law
specifies, while much of the land
ha* been leased to government
agencies and commercial users for
scandalously low rents o f *1 to *5
per acre annually.
There has been no shortage of
rhetoric about the need to enforce
the law. In 1921. the chairman o f a
House committee Insisted that the
statute was crucial because "the
Hawaiians were deprived o f their
lands without any say on their
part."
In 1938, a Joint congressional
committee criticised the fact that
"on ly a small part o f the area has of
yet been used" and described the
native Hawaiian* as " a landless
people In the country o f their
forefathers."
In 1959. the federal law granting
Hawaii statehood explicitly required
implementation o f the 1921 statute.
In 1900. Interior Secretary Cecil
D. Andrus said the intent o f the law
had been "substantially frustrated"
by federal and state officials who
"h a ve either neglected or misin­
t e r p r e t e d m a n y o f t h e ir r e *
In 1983, a Joint federal-stale task
force reiterated both governments’
theoretical commitment to the law
and called for the establishment o f a.
sp ec ia l a d visory co m m ittee to
explore ways to finance develop­
ment o f the natives’ land. But for
the past IB month*. Hawaii Gov.
George R. Ariyoahl has refused to
designate the committee members.

JACK ANDERSON
im

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w o r ld

U.S. Targets Soviet Spy Satellites
W ASH ING IO N Long bcluic
President Reagan brought up the
s u b je c t o f " S t a r W a r s ." the
militarisation o f space had already
begun. Both the United State* and
Soviet Union have been keeping a
military watch on one another for
years through spy satellite* high in
But few Americana realise Just
what these orbiting Peeping Toms
are capable of, and how big a threat
they'd be In case o f a conflict. My
associate Dale Van Atta has ob­
tained a secret General Accounting
Office report that gives (he Pen­
tagon expert*’ assessment o f the
threats posed by the Kremlin’s

“By tie may, son, how’* the of’ search for the
mooning otyour existence coming along7”

9

**

\

'S i *

I've already reported on the four
types o f apy satellites considered
most Immediately dangerous to the
United State*. But the Pentagon has
assigned a No. 2 priority to other
■ateUites; these, too. are considered
a milttary threat.
The total r umber o f satellite* in
the two tap priorities Is close lo 40.
In case of wur. the planned "Star
W ars" defenses would move from

ai m m I m.

Priority One la/gels to Priority Two
in a matter of seconds.
A c c o r d in g to th e P e n ta g o n
e x p e r t s ' a ssessm en t. U .S. In ­
telligence-gathering satellites are
still superior to those made In
Moscow. More of our* transmit their
Information Instantaneously, like a
live T V show o f Soviet military
movements and equipment. Mote of
t h e ir s o p e ra te o n a d e la y e d broadcast system.
Here are the Priority T w o targets
listed In ths secret report:
— The Salyut series o f military
space stations. The report ssys:
'T h e station possibly can provide
near real-Ume Inlcliigence-targeting
data to military forces and can
detect missile launches. Photoreconnaissance la believed to be Its
mq)or activity; however, these sta­
tions can possibly be modified to do
reconnaissance such aa electronic
Intelligence, communications inand command and conIn i."
— Hlgh-m olullon
reconnaissance satellite*

dim In capsules by parachute from
low orbit. "T h e one assessed to be of
primary concern." according to the
report, "la capable o f ejecting recov­
ery capsules — which minimizes
the lim e from when the photo­
graph* are taken to when the Aim la
available for analysis."
T h e report explains that the
photographs from these satellite*
are used to study troop positions
and fo r targetin g and dam age
assessment. "Resolution la capable
o f distinguishing automobile*,*' the
report state*.
It adds: "A s the Soviet Union
projects IU forces further hum Its
borders or Into a denied area, such
aa China. U becomes Inrrraalngty
dependent on this type o f laateflltel.*’
— Navigational aatrllltra *'
satellites, deployed In regularlyspaced three- and ata-oateUUe con­
stellations. provide navigational fix­
es with an a ven gx watting Urn* o f
90 minutes and 4S minutes at the
equator, respectively, far NAVSAT-l
and NAVSAT-2." the report

"N A V S A T -l ts accurate to 200
meters, and NAVSAT-2 Is possibly
accurate within 100 meters. They
arc primarily used by Soviet naval
forces, including ballistic missile
submarine*.”
Knocking out these navigational
aids would make It difficult for
Soviet mlasUe auba to precisely
determine their tacattan — and
prectelon la critical for launching
—
satellites. The
s e c re t rep o rt s ta te s : "T h e
M a in ly t-R s d u g a t y p e s a re ol
primary concern because they err
able to provide real-time command
and control to naval, land and
strategic fares*. A s Soviet farcer
operate farther from the Soviet land
, they becom e more depcndrnl
far control oi
Knocking them out. tn other
pretty much on their
la not the way the

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Kenny Gordon drive the baseline and lay* up a shot against
D a rry l M erthle. Gordon, Seminole's 6*2 forward, and
Merthle. Lake M a ry 's 6-1 swlngman, are listed among the
leaders In every county category except one. Seminole hosts
Lake Howell tonight and Lake M a ry entertains M ainland In
two big district 4A-9 basketball games.
4

A week ago. Seminole basketball roach Chris
Marlette went to freshman Craig Walker and told
him he was being promoted to the varsity.
A fter leadin g the freshm an team to an
unbeaten aeaaon and performing above expecta­
tions at the Junior varsity level (53 points and 30
rebounds). Marlette reasoned It was time for his
6 4 phenom to "see what he could do with the big
Doya.
Walker, a sincere youngster who he Is kind of
overwhelmed by all o f this, listened Intently to hts
coach. Then he replied. “ Coach, do you think I
can think about It tonight and give you an answer
tomorrow?"
Marlette. suppressing his surprise and laughter,
said he politely told the youngster that he didn't
have anything to think about. He was ready for
varsity basketball and that's where he was going
to play.
Craig, an easy going and likable young man.
can't be faulted for his doubts about moving from
ninth grade to the top of the class. Physically, he
has all the tools. Hla has the build o f a young
Akeem and the shooting touch o f a young Ralph
Sampson. And he blocks shots like a young Pat
Ewirg.
But the emphasis on all these bold comparisons
Is on the “ you ng" and not the Akeem. Sampson
or Ewing. No matter how devastating Walker
looked as a freshman, and dominating as a JV.
the contact and quickness are a different game at
the varsity level.
But Marlette thought Walker was ready — and
he was right. The third year Seminole coach
threw hla prize fresh Into the Ore against the No.
6 ranked team In the slate laat Friday and he
came out without a bum.
The Semlnoles came out pretty well. too. They
upset DeLand. 57-55. at DeLand. which Is quite
an accomplishment.
|
" I didn't think I was ready for varsity.“ said
Walker modestly. "But I do now ."
Walker's final stats had him with seven points
and seven rebounds. These stats, however, don't
tell the true story because he must have altered
five shots. Marlette, who played a zone defense
(2-3) for the whole game, said It was the first time
he's ever done that.
Walker's presence made that move possible. Of
course. It was also done to protect the young
phenom. Putting him one-on-one on all-stater
Randy Anderson or 6-4 brute Marcus Johnson
might have been disastrous.
But aa the center of the zone's back line.
Walker was In a position to do what he does best
— Intimidate.
Marlette said Walker, who was having trouble
adjusting to Seminole's Intricate man-to-man
defense, will not be in the starting lineup tonight
but he will play a lot. Matt Maxwell, who also did
a Job Job Inside Friday, along with Whitney.
Rouse. Kenny Oordon and Rod Henderson will
start tonight against the Lake Howell Silver

Spsrts Editor

Hawks at home.
Henderson probably has been the one most
helped by Walker's maturation. He has tremen­
dous offensive skills. He's a great shooter with
good range, a determined driver, superb passer
and ferocious rebounder.
But the 6-3 sophomore was saddled with the
Job o f center since Seminole didn't have a
legitimate center until Walker's emergence. And
he was doing a good Job at It. too. He was
averaging 11 points and eight rebounds a game.
But the real Henderson came A v e Friday
against DeLand. The versatile soph scored 27
points and pulled down 15 rebounds.
Walker and Henderson* both played freshman
basketball before moving to the varsity. And here
Ilea one of the keys to Seminole's basketball
success. While some schools change freshman
roaches with regularity, the Tribe has always had
strong basketball people at this position.
John McNamara. Marlette'a present assistant,
lost one game In two years at Crooms High. BUI
Klein, who has coached the frosh at Seminole the
past taro years. Is a mere 304). No one la arguing
Seminole doesn't have great athletes, but those
horse need the correct Instruction and they're
getting It at Seminole.
McNamara, who played high school basketball
with Huble Brown, has Junior college coaching
experience and still plays the game pretty well for
all those years. Klein, still a great shooter.

Seminole has both and for the next three years.
Central Florida better run for cover when
ScmlnoJc comes to town.

Lady Seminoles Take Over 1st...Temporarily
B y C hris F ls ts r
H erald S p orts W r ite r
Mona Benton poured In 24
points In Just over two quarters
o f play Monday night aa San­
ford's Lady Semlnoles took over
first place In the Five Star
Conference, at least temporarily,
with a 79-26 thrashing o f Lake
Howell's Lady Silver Hawks at
Seminole High.
Sem in ole, w hich has won
eight straight, now stands at
21-5 overall and 14-2 in the Five
Star, one-half game ahead of
La k e B ran tley (1 3 -2 ). Lake
Brantley travels to Seabreeze for
a 4:45 game today as the Lady
Patriots look to stayed tied for
the lop spot. Lake Howell now
stands at 3-19 overall and 1-15
In the conference.
Benton scored 12 o f her 24
points In the first quarter as
Seminole ran off the first 20
nta o f the game before Lake
w ell's Kellee Johnson hit a
pair o f baakrts to make It 20-4
after one quarter. Seminole went
on to take a 42-10 halftime lead,
Benton, a senior swtngperaon
(guard-forward), also dished out

E

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Courtnay,

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tha c o u n ty

In

Lika

.
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rob o u tiding

with 9.5 boards par gamo.

six assists and collected three
steals. She was Joined In double
figures by senior guard Andell
"S ou l" Smith with 13 points and
|unlor forward Catherine "K itty "
Anderson with 12 and 10 re­
bounds. "S ou l" also handed out
four assists and came up with
four steals while Anderson doled
out three assists and collected
five steals.
Junior forward April Peterson
contributed eight points, nine
rebounds and five steals while
Junior center-forward Kim "B ig
W heel" Johnson chipped In with
six points and seven boards.
Sophomore point guard Erin
Hankins was high for Lake
Howell with nine points and
three steals. Patti Rae tossed In
seven points and pulled down
eight rebounds while Regina
S ch m id t hauled dow n nine
boards.
S e m in o le h osts M a in la n d
Thursday night before closing
out the regular season Monday
at Apopka. Lake Howell hosts
Apopka Thursday and goes to
Seabreeze Monday."*
"W e tried a lot o f different

things tonight and executed
pretty well.
Seminole coach
Ron Merthle said. "W e want to
keep molding Into a better team.
I'm happy to have the success
we've enjoyed but we now we
can be better."
Monday's Junior varsity game
w as m uch c lo s e r than the
v a r s it y e n c o u n te r as La k e
H o w ell to o k S e m in o le In to
o v e r t i m e b e f o r e Y o la n d a
R obinson led th e J V L a d y
Semlnoles to a 53-51 victory.
Because o f a mlxup In the
acorebook. S e m in o le had a
three-point lead. 47-44. with
1:35 rem aining Instead o f a
two-point lead. 49-47. aa the
acorcboard read.
Seminole also had the ball out
o f bound* but Lake Howell’s
Tamara Lewis, the point guard
for the varsity much or the
season, came up with a steal and
was fouled. Lewis made ooe o f
taro free throws to make It 47-45
and she came back to sink two

Playoff
Sanford's Fighting Semlnoles were look­
ing forward to a rematch with top-seeded
and top-ranked (4A ) Lake Howell In the 4A-9
District Tournament but the Semlnoles
couldn't d ear the first hurdle In their way —

Monday night

y In the opei

breakaway goal. Apopka hung on to a 1-0
lead at halftime. "It took ua a while to get
warmed up," Fleck said. "Apopka Just
Jumped on the opportunity when they had
It."
Seminole had numerous opportunities In
the second half but couldn't tie the score
and Apopka scored again with 28 minutes
left In the match to take a 2-0 lead.
The Tribe finally got on the hoard with 11
minutes remaining when the ball came off
an Apopka defender and Matt Albert fired It
Info the goal.
Seminole had s few more opportunities In
the laat 10 minutes o f play but again the
'Nates couldn't capitalize. O nt excellent
opportunity to tie the game came with six

effort the kids pul out all aeaaon long."
The top two seeds In tonight's district
tourney are expected to have easy paths
Into Thursday's semifinals but the third and
fourth seeds will be In for dogfights.
Lake Howell and Lake Brantley were all
atone at the lop o f the district during the
regular season aa the Silver Hawks compiled

Martin Stadium at 7 p m .
In the girls Region 2 playoff ton%ht at 6.
L y m a n 's Lady O rsyhounda host Vera
B Lyakan gosa in with a 204) record and
4 1 1 to the past two years. Ths Lady
Orsyhounda have already beaten Vcro

more free losses with 1:13 left to
tie It at 47-47.
Both learns had their chances
In the last minute o f play but
couldn't score and the game
went Into overtime knotted at
47-47.
The two teama traded turn­
overs three lim es to open the
overtim e period before Lewis
came through with a steal and
raced downcourt for a layup that
gave the JV Lady Hawks a 49-47
lead with 24)7 left to play.
Robinson dropped In a layup
with 1:45 left to tie It at 49-49
and Seminole got the ball back
after a Lake Howell turnover.
The Hawks then fouled Sharon
Manley who stepped to the line
and made the front end o f the
o n e a n d o n e fo r a 5 0 -4 9
Seminole lead with 1:36 re­
maining. Manley mlaacd the
second shot, but Robinson was
there for the rebound, made the
fo llo w u p , and w a s fo u le d .
Robinson made the free throw to
complete the four-point play aa
Seminole took a 53-49 lead.
Lake Howell had a chance to
pull closer but missed the front

end o f a one and one and the
Lady Hawks had another chance
but missed a wide open layup
with 38 seconds left.
The Lady Hawks still hung
tough though and battled back
w ith in two. 53-51. w ith 26
seconds left on a Jumper by
Lewis. A Seminole turnover gave
It back to Lake Howell but the
Lady Hawks missed another
layup with eight seconds left.
Lisa Hartman then grabbed the
rebound with six seconds left
and held on to the ball until the
buzzer sounded.

�♦A—lv u l i n

Ssstard, FI.

Tswday, FeS. 11, m i

Late Models
Run Tonight
A t Volusia

Waltrip: Fans
Remember 500
By OAKY K ALE
DPI A u to R a cin g W r ite r
DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) Even though he's a two-time
NASCAR Grand National cham­
pion. winner o f seven races last
year and Ihe leading money
winner on the stock car trail In
1985. Darrell Waltrip Is still
lacking the recognition he de­
sires.
The 38-year-old resident of
Franklin. Tenn.. won't feel he
has achieved the ultimate In his
craft until he wins the Daytona
500.
Waltrip has sufTered years of
frustration at the Daytona 500
and sometimes questions his
talent due to this failure. Last
year, he was leading on the final
lap when Calc Yarborough used
the slingshot technique to surge
past for Ihe checkered flag.
"People remember the guy
who won Daytona when they
don't know the guy who won
s e v e n races In a s e a s o n ."
Waltrip said o f his 1984 experi­
ence. Munching on a sandwich
after an early Monday practice
tap, W altrip added, " I t 's an
Important race to win. It's im­
portant to me because a victory
would make m e have more
credibility.

BARBERV1LLE - As Volusia
County Speedway goes Into Its
final week o f the 1985 "W orld
Series o f D ir t" racin g, the
STARS late models and the
modified* lake over.
The late model entry list,
which numbers 40. is repre­
sented by drivers from Florida to
Texas and from Minnesota to
Maryland. The modified drivers,
45 in count, are predominately
from New York. New Jersey.
Louisiana and Texas.
Modified* took over Monday,
late models tonight and the two
classes combine to finish off the
week. Wednesday through Sat­
urday. All racing starts at 7:30
p.m. every night.

A uto Racing
"It's a Jewel and you need It In
your crown.
"In 1981. I won every race I
entered but Ihe big one at
Daytona — the Busch Clash, a
125-mlle qualifying race and the
Sportsman 300. I came so close
to having a good week, until the
500. which I lost again. People
say m aybe you can 't drive
Daytona and after a while you
get to figure 'Maybe they're
right.'*'
Waltrip, on the circuit since
1972. has won 64 Winston Cup
races, 27 on Superspeedways.
Still, the Daytona 500 remains
an elu sive title for him to
capture.
"A t Daytona. I've been start­
in g o f f the year w ith that
a g o n is in g d e fe a t.” W a ltr ip
moans. "T h e track Is not like
Talla d ega , where there's so
much more downforce that cars
adhere to the track. They don't
skitter around like Daytona. You
don't have to lift off the throttle
except when somebody's In your
way.
"Here, as your running, the
track gets slick and the wind

D arre ll W a ltrip puts a victo ry in the
Daytona 500 above every other race. In 1983,
blows. You start leathering the
throttle In Ihe comers because
this is a narrow track."
Waltrip la not concerned over
the speed exhibited by the first
row Fords for this Sunday s 500
classic. BUI Elliott set an all-time
NASCAR qualifying record of
205 mph on Saturday and Cale
Yarborough's 203 also bettered

he crashed Into a wait to curtail his chances
for that year. W altrip tries again Sunday.
"Y o u 've got no strategy If
you're the first guy out of Ihe
race. The outcome is In the
hands of other people. No matter
how good a driver you are. if
there's a bit o f carelessness in
the motor shop or on the line,
then It's not your year again.
You can't come here behind in
your work and expect to w in ."

On that final Saturday the
feature event for each class will
pay $5,000 to win and a point
champion will be declared.
Sprint car feature winners this
past week were Bobby Allen,
Hanover. PA (Wednesday), rain
(Thursday). Sammy Swindell.
Bartlett. T N (Friday). S teve
KJnser. Bloomington, lnd (Sat­
urday) and Klnser again (Sun­
day) for the 820.000.
Volusia County Speedway Is'
located 14 miles west off t-9ft on
Route 40. Phone numbers are
904/985-4402 and 255-2243.
Street Slocks and cyclone cars
will also run on selected nights.

SCOREBOARD

Control Florida Going Rovongo;
Hatton Top B*CC; FSU Triumphs
Three of Florida's major college basketball teams picked
up victories Monday night as Central Florida, Stetson and
Florida State all won.
At Charleston. S.C., Julian Butler put UCF ahead. 52-51.
with a Utile over a minute to play and John Friday's basket
secured a 55-51 victory over Baptist College.
Sam Alexander tossed In 16 points for the Knights while
Butler finished with 12 and Stan Kimbrough added 11.
The victory for the 8-15 Knights avenged an earlier
one-point loss to Baptist at Orlando. UCF hosts Stetson
Saturday.
At DeLand. Stetson placed six players In double figures
as It routed Bethune-Cookman College. 100-83, before
3.571fans.
Jsy Daniel led the way with 20 points. Tim Shuler.
Rodney Williams and Gary Coachman each tallied 13
points while Tony Hemphill added 12 and Andrew
Woodward 10.
At Tallahassee, senior forward Maurice Myrlck scored 23
points to lead Florida State to a 91-79 Metro-Conference
victory over Southern Mississippi Monday.
Alton Lee Gipson had 22 points for Florida Stale, 9-12.
Randy Allen had 16 and Joe Ferrar. Dean Shaffer and
Jerome Fltchett had 10 each.

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Just Oft Hwy 17-92

Burko't 30 Load Sun Bank Win
Bernard Burke fired In a game-high 30 points Saturday
as Sun Bank upended Pamor. 54-28. In Sanford Recreation
Intermediate League basketball action Thursday.
Burke scored 20 o f hla 30 points In the second half to
help Sun Bank pull away. George Irwin contributed 10
points for Sun Bank while "Steady" Eddie Charles canned
six.
Reginald Lawrence was high for Pamar with 18 points
while Darius Orayson and Joe Murphy added four each.
In other action, seven players got Into the scoring
column as Sanford Electric edged McLaln-Plerce Insurance.
27-24.
Tony Braxton and James Cox had six points each for
Sanford Electric, Anthony Dcllany and Karl Carter had four
each, Adrian Rouse three and Paul Thomas and Oscar
Edwards two apiece.
Von Eric Small's game-high nine points led McLalnPlerce while Willie Walton and Ronald Cox had six each.
David Willis chipped In five and Mike Rumler contributed
four.

Loach Stung Wllandor 7-5, 6*2
DELRAY BEACH (UPI) — Unseeded and unknown Mike
Leach rolled to a straight-act victory over Mats Wilander,
the world's No. 4 player, to begin a series o f upsets In the
fourth round o f the 81.8 million International Player
Tennis Championships.
Leach, the 1982 singles champion from Ihe University of
Mlchlgim, shocked Sweden’s WHander Monday 7-5,8-2.
Tomas Srnid o f Csochoalovakla, seeded No. 11. defeated
fourth-seeded Anders Jarryd. WUander's teammate on the
winning Swedish Davis Cup team. 6-1.6-4.
In the women's division. Andrea Temeavarl of Hungary
downed third-seeded Wendy Turnbull o f Australia. 6-4,

6-3.
In other action. Stefan Ed berg won hla first set against
top-seeded Ivan Lendl and was serving In the second ael at
5-6 when rain postponed the match, which will be resumed
today.

NHL AllStm n Smith Tonight
CALOAJtY. Alberta (U PI) - He might be the reigning
king o f hockey, but when It comes to the NHL A U -M v
Qame Wayne Oretaky take* a democratic approach.

Napoli Shoots,
Rams Top Sues
O s c a r " B i g 0 " M e r th le
pumped in 17 points and Matt
Napoli popped In a season-high
15 as Lake Mary's JV Rams
came back from an early deficit
to claim a 74*70 victory over
Mainland's JV Sues Monday
night at Lake Mary High.
-Mainland Jumped out to a
20-10 lead after the first quarter
and to o k a 4 1 -3 3 lea d at
halftime.
“ We had a terrible gam e
against Seabreese (two point
loss) Friday." Lake Mary coach
Charles Steele said. "The stay
we played In the first quarter
tonight brough nightmares of
Seabreese right back tom e.”
Lake Mary, which improved to
14-3, came back In the third
irter to outacore the Buca,
11. as Ihe Rams took a 53-52
lead Into the fourth quarter.
Roosevelt G aines scored six
points In the fourth quarter to
keep the Rams in control.

*• *• ./

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Merthle also added nine re­
bounds to hla 17 points while
Napoli, who made 7 o f 8 sbota
from the floor, pulled down
seven boards. "I'v e been getting
on his (Napoll'a) case about
shooting the ball m ore." Steele
•aid. "H e has a good shot, he
Just needs to take It when he's
open. He shot really well from
the outside tonight and that took
the pressure off our big men."
Terry "T h e C at" Miller added
12 patnls and •even natal • for
the JV Ram s w h ile Jim m y
Stewart tossed In 12 points and
grabbed a team-high I I re-

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�PEOPLE
E v m Im

Miss UCF Pageant
On Campus Friday Night
More than a dozen women attending the University of
Central Florida will vie for thta year's Mias UCF crown and a
•1.000 scholarship at the 1985 campus pageant Friday.
The winner will m ove on to the Miss Florida pageant, held
each year In Orlando.
The UCF pageant will award a total o f 82.500 In scholarships
plus awards donated by area merchants, said Michelle Bowen.
UCF Student Center program coordinator.
The Friday evening pageant will begin at 7 p.m. at the
Student Center Auditorium. Admission ts 84 for adults. 82 for
children under 12. and free to UCF students with validated ID.

Betty Jean Gaut and William
Alton Dew were married Jan. 5.
at 3 p.m.. at St. Mary Magdalen
Church. Altamonte Springs. The
Rev. E. Tobin performed the
traditional Catholic ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter o f
Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Gaut of
Winter Springs. The bridegroom
Is the son o f Mr. and Mrs. Max
Dew o f Dade City.
G iven In marriage by her
parents, the bride wore her
mother's full-length. Ivory satin
g o w n w ith tra in , and h e r
grandmother's headpiece fash­
ioned o f rose point lace.
F lo w e r s a rra n g ed by th e
b r i d e 's g r a n d m o t h e r o f
margarettes. lilies of the valley.
Jasmine, roses, daisies and
baby’s breath were In colors o f
Ivory and white.
Jll D. Stout, o f Winter Springs,
was the matron of honor. She
wore a gown with a white eyelet
bodice over a blue flowered print
bouffant skirt, made from Key
West silk screened fabric. A
satin ribbon sash o f orchid
completed the gown. She carried
a spring bouquet, arranged by
the bride, with orchid and Ivory
ribbon streamers, entwined with
lilies o f the valley. Her headpiece
was a wreath o f matching (lowera.
Bridesmaids were Mary Neal
Tucker-Reynolda o f Sanford and
B i r m i n g h a m . A la ., K a r e n
J o h n so n , o f S a n fo rd , both
friends of the bride, and Susie

Sfata Writing Contast Opon
Entries for the 1965 Florida State W riting Competition are
now being accepted by Florida Freelance Writers Association,
the sponsoring organization. Deadline Is March 15. Categories
this year will be: Short Stories (leterary, mystery/suspense.
science fiction). Articles (open/generml. essay, humor). Poetry
(traditional, free-verse. Florida theme.).
Each entry must be accompanied by two copies o f the official
entry form. Complete contest guidelines and entry forms may
be obtained by sending a self addressed, stamped *10 business
envelope to : Competition Guidelines, FFW A. P. O. Bo* 9844.
Ft. Lauderdale. 33310.

Spring Into Fashion
Th e Central Florida Civic Theatre Guild's “ Spring Into
Fashion" Luncheon will be held at the Wyndam Hotel-Sea
World, on Thursday. Feb. 28.
Cocktails will be served at 11. luncheon at noon, followed by
Spring fashions by Gibbs Louis.
Tickets are 825 and 835. For Information call the Civic
Theatre at 896-7385 or Dorrte Peck at 788-3456.
This fundraiser will benefit all Civic Theatre Programs: Main
Static Productions.

GBD Tott Offered
The GED test leading to a Florida High School Diploma will
be ofTered at Seminole Community College on Feb. 25. 26 and
27. Eligibility for taking the test* must be completed by
February 15.
GED test orientation will be held on Feb. 21 at 4:00 p.m. and
5:00 p.m.

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pnncoia aha * pvaataned by kid.
nappara aa me irtveta to her aadatuwta own Musoee

Thp ma ot Wayna WSwia Nr kS*W lap adtdi masa art N H at
nearly U Mtema a draaaPMd
boat caret panaotpN Jaaon Aw
karat porkpt M head ot ma delarvaa team, and Ap lore ployt Pa
praaecu*n« OtkU attorney (Part
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OanaWMa. Margot Kiddar.

Flower girls were Shana Dew.
daughter o f the groom, and
Ashley Fisher o f Atlanta. Ga..
the bride's niece. Their dresses
were o f while eyelet with cum­
merbunds o f matching Key West
fabric o f the attendants' gowns.
The reception was held at the
Westmontc Civic Center. Alta­
monte Springs. Bridal assistants
at the reception were Melissa
O'Connor-Sovran of New York,
w ho was lector, and Sandy
Eallnger of Orlando, ceremony
coordinator and cake designer,
both friends o f the bride.
Following a camping trip to
the Florida Keys, the newlyweds
will make thetr home In Winter
Springs. The bride Is a registered
n u rs e . T h e b r id e g r o o m Is
employed as production manag­
er at Deep South Products.

D EAR A B B T i T o "Furious In
Dallas." who thinks It stinks that
parents would ask thetr child to
y room and board for living nt
me: ("Children don't ask to be
b om ." said "Furious.
. Their
parents brought them Into the
world, and they’re responsible
for feeding, clothing and housing
them until they decide (o leave
hom e.")
When I finished m y schooling
and entered the working world.
1. the child, was required to pay
m y parents room and board
every week. My family was fairly
well off, so at first I was angry,
but m y parents told me It was
for my own good— that It would
teach me responsibility and
prepare me for the "re a l" world.
Thcw were right. That'a how I
learned the value o f m o n e y how to spend It and how to save
It and how to live within my
means.
The day I went to buy my
wedding gown, m y wonderful
mother pulled out a Utile book
and gave It to me. Inside was a
savings account with all the
money I had paid for room and
board! She smiled and said, "It's
yours."
A c t u a l l y . I le a r n e d tw o
lessons: responsibility and love.

to have had such wise parents.
Read on for another example of
how responsibility is taught:
DRAM ABH Yt I know a couple
whose daughter got pregnant
when she was In high school.
She kept the baby and her
mother raised It while she (the
young mother) ran around and
got pregnant again.
pter will be
taught the
life aa soon as
she Is old enough to understand
them. If she decides to have sex

lorryl

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1 i*W Henryread*. Akca Sredy

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Mr. and Mrs. W illiam A. Dew

Kids Learn By Paying Rent

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am suNi

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Vasco W a tters served the
b r id e g r o o m a s b e s t m an .
Michael Dew o f Winter Springs,
the groom 's son. served as
usher. Groomsmen were Phil
Dew. the groom 's brother, o f San
Louis Obispo. Calif., Joe Gaut
and Jim Gaut o f Orlando, and
Tom Gaut o f Atlanta. Ga.. all
brothers o f the bride.

LEARNED IN
PENNSYLVANIA

12 *0
•

Blach-Woodmansee o f Chico.
Calif., the bride's cousin. Their
gowns were Identical to the
matron o f honor's In colors o f
blue. aqua, and sea green.

C

_____

• IWIMAFOWM

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Tim dsy, F«b. 11, I W - 1B

Betty Jean Gaut,
William A. Dew
Exchange Vows

Briefly

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before she's w illin g to take
responsibility for her actions,
she will have to pay (he coiucuences. In plain language, if
he gets pregnant, she will have
two choices: She will either have
to put the baby up for adoption
or she will have the baby, slay
home 24 hours a day. seven
days a week, and take care o f It
like any other mother!
If she wants a high school
diploma or a college education,
she will have to figure oul for
herself how lo do It.

2

OLD-FASHIONED MOTHER

BROTHER-IN-LAW
DEAR ABBTi My husband
and 1 are tn a heated discussion
over something that la so trivial
I'm almost ashamed to oak. but
I'm afraid if t don't find (he
answer, 11 could escalate Into
something serious.
We have a 9-month-old son
who has Just started to walk s
little. My husband says. “ Put
shoes on him right sw ay to help
him walk better, and hurry up or
the ktd will grow up with fist
feet."
I say. "H e lias 74.6 years to
wear shoes; what's the hurry?"
Please. Abby. help us.

FOOTLOOM MARY
DEAR MARTI Assuming the
boy's feet are normal, he doesn't
need shoes until he starts walk­
ing outside— then he'll need
them only for protection. And
tell your husband that walking
without shoes does not a flatfoot
make.

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CONFIDENTIAL TO LIKES
MONET IN SAVANNAH, OA.i
You have what Is known as a
"g e ld !" complex.

EORGE DURR?
OHGOOI
YOU DEVIL"

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS

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FAMILY SPECIAL

M

DEAR BROTHER-IN-LAW!
After this sppesra. you m ay not
have to.

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naga'a (TaNera MAmat MHraM bt

M

D E A R A B B T i For years I hnvr
watched m y brother-in-law pour
cheap liquor into empty liquor
b o ttles that once con tain ed
expensive brands. In order to
fool his guests.
1 am very careful o f what I
drink when I am a guest In Ills
home because after drinking
some o f Ihe rank booze in ihr
camouflaged bottles. I’ve had a
monumental hangover (he next
day.
W hen my wife and 1 arc
Invited to his home for dinner,
we always bring a gift o f some
high-quallly liquor or wine, but
It’s put away In a closet, and
that's Ihe last we see o f It.
For over a year now I have
drunk only beer at his house,
and I’m not particularly fond of
beer.
Should I tell him why I’ m not
drinking In hta home?

4-

•'
•

^

�IB — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

legal Notice
n o t ic e op

PUBLIC HBARItfO

lIMIHOLICOUMTr
IN D U tTR IA L
D EVELO PM ENT
AUTHO R ITY
Nonce I* hereby given Mel on
F*tru#ry » , IN I. e Regular
Maotlng el Rw Seminole County
In e w t t r le l D e v e lo p m e n t
Authority nrtn bo hoM at Mo
Altamonte terlne« City Holt. tU
Nowburyporl Arenuo. Alto
monte Sorlnfo. Florida Time oI
MO mootlna It t X A M The
Authority will Oct on Mo lotto*
Wg opo1'cotton and twcti other
bm intti at may bo brought
1. Meiimum aI IMOOOOO at
Indwttrlel revenue bond* lor
Orlando Poring Company, a
Florida corporation, lor ec
gultilkorf of certain land located
touth at Midway Commerce
Cantor and ana half mil# aatt at
Ma Inter tact ion of State Read
ft* and U S Highway 11*1 in
imincarporatod SamInala County
and canttrudion Maroon and
aaulpplng of an atphaltlc can
crate manufacturing plant, rt
lotod oitlcot, and cartoln
•torago Wto*. all of which will bo
awnod by Orlenda Paving
II a parten decMet to appeal
any decleltn made by the
Authority wtM ratpecf la any
matter centldwed at Ihit moot
I or flooring, ouch pertan will
a racord of u a proceed
Ingt. and. lor wch purpoto, may
need to Inture Mat a verbatim
rocard af the procoadlngo It
made, which rocard tncfwpa* Ma
•ottimony and ovldonca' upon
which Mo appoint lobe baaed
Pubilth February I}, I*. IfOV
dcc

n

Flartd* Stotvtotm.Mt
N O T IC I OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX 0 1 1 0
N O T IC I It H E R IR Y
GIVEN. Mai Janet L. Sharp Mo
holder of Mo leilowing certIfl­
eatot hat tiled laid certificate*
lor * lot dead la bo luuad
Iharoan Tho certificate num
bort and yoart af Itouanca, Ma
doocrlptlon af Ma property, and
the namat In which II wat
AHdLdWfaAIUMtN I f a MR I n f I n . l i O h
Rt^et^^w
PwB ES Hr*PwMRnP■
Certificate Na Ml.
Year of lotuanco IMS
Daocrlptlan of Property: LEO
SEC M TWP 111 ROE ItE S IM
P T OP N TP FT OF ! 4M F T
OF IB M OF IB M
Nome In which aaieteed
Bernardo Semmert Trutlaa
All af told property being In
Mo County of lomlnelo. Slate of
Florida
UnltM ouch certificate or car
liricetM tholl b* redeemed ac
carding to law Mo property
described In ouch certirtcele or
cartlflceleo will be told la the
highett bidder ol Mo court houta
door an Ma IIM day af March,
IMS at II H A M
Doled M il lot day ol Febru
ary. IMS.
ISEALI
David N. Berrien
CNrk of Circuit Court
*&lt; Somlnol* County. Florida
ThoraM Mac ok
Deputy Clerk
Pubilth February IM. IIM.
10M. MM. 10*1
DEC-41
Florida ItoM et Itf.Mt
NO TICE OF AFFLICATION
FO R TA X O SB D
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN. Ihal Robert G Schmitt
Mo holder at Mo I*lowing cortlt
leal** ha* Iliad teM corflllcotot
lor a •*■ Pood to b* Ittuod
thoroon The corll licit* num
fear* and yoart *f Ittuanca. the
dftcriplion of Ma property, and
tho namot In which It wot
••totted or* at follow!
Cartltketo Ho IUC
Year of Itauanc* It77
Dotcrlplton ol Proporty SEC
IS TWP m ROE H E S 17 FT
OF N 1170 F T OF E Iff O F T O F
SWtoOF NE *
Nam* In which a llotted
Shubort Comlructton C* , Inc
All ol Mid properly being In
ltd County el lomlnoio, SUM el
Florida
Uniett tuch cart IticaM or car
titleaMt thall bo redo*mad ac
cording I* law the proparty
dotcrlbad In ouch certificate or
LOrtlllcalH will b* told M the
hlghotl bidder *1 Ihe court houM
door on M* IIM day *1 March.
IMS at II M A M
Dol ed I h l t l l t l day ol
January, IMS
ISEALI
David N Roman
Clerk el Circuit Court
*1 Somlnol* County. F Mr Id*
Thar*ta Mecok
Deputy Clark
PuMIthi February IM . IIM,
l*M.MM. IMS
DEC II
FMrMaSMMM* Itf.M t
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
O I V E N . t h a t G r a d y M.
Tawnoand Iha holder *1 M*
Ml lawMg cartttlcaMt ha* IIMd
Mid cortlhcaMt Mr • Ma dead
la k* ittuod thereon The cartMcaM number* and yoart *1
ittuanca. Me RncriptMn of Ma
In
which II w*
Mi tarn
CorlllkaM No IB)
Yooraf Ittuanca 1*77.
OatcrtelMn af Proporty: LOT
• ELK II LOCKHARTS SUEO
PR IP O 71
Nam* In wblfh ooaotMd
Plarca Geargo F. Pierce Carrie
K.
All at Mid property being In
Ma County af Sam Male, SUM of
Florida
UM*m tuch certtfkaM or ter
titkaMo thall be redeimif ac
carding M law Me preparty
doter Ifeed M tuch cartitkato ar
carlllkaMt will fea told M Ma
hlghotl bidder *i Ma court hawea
dear an Ma fM day el March,
IMtOl I I P A M.
D oled i h i t u i h day al
January. IMS
ISEALI
David N Berrien
Clerk*!Circuit Court
of SemMoM County, Florida
Them e Macab
Deputy Clark
Pubilth January I*M. Febru­
ary Mb. IIM. A INh. IMS
DEBUS
FIC TITK M JI NAME
Nalka I* hereby given Rial I
am aapapad M feuemi t i al 1471
Labe Hawaii Read, lutta I ML
WMMr Part, SamMaM County,
Florida under the IlitlHuu*
n o m a a l S P EC IA LTY
MOTORCOACM TOURS, and
Mat I Inland to ragltMr taM
name with Ma CMrk aI Ma
Circuit Caurt. SemlnaM County.
Florid* in accordance with Me
K Hani al Ihe P ktitia vi
SiatvMt. ip wit SacWaw
Ifet *• Florida Slatutat tail.
T V EanMa 8. Pom oron
Pwblttb February I t I*. IS A
AAarchL NBA
DEC IS

*4b m

Tuetday, Feb. I t IIM

Business
Review

legal Notice
FMrtda Hotvtei Itl.Sto
NOTICE OP APPLICATION
FOR TAX D E ED
NOTICE II H E R E B Y
G IV E N . Mat Richard S. or
Leonard CoaeaMerry Me holder
ot Ma MiiewMg cartlfkatat ha*
filed Mid carfifkaMt Mr a U&gt;
dead M fee Iteuad Maroon The
carflfkaM number* and ybaroef
ittuanca. Me dotcrtpfMn af Me
In

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

E v e n in g H e ia k l

Cott 322-2611 Km«i

•m i root BitsiMiss oh thi mow •

Herald Advertiser

ADVERTISING

ADVERTISING

ADVERTISING

cenifkaM No tra
Year of Itauanc* IM).
Doocrtptlen of Proparty: LEG

SEC » TWP IIS RGE ItE S 44
FT OF W I4J FT OF E 441 FT
OF NE MOF SW M
Noma In which a tM tto d
Fiorina

VOLKSHOP

All af Mid property being in
Ma County af SemlnaM. SUM of
Florid*
Unlet* ouch carflfkaM or car
fifkaMt thall be redeemed ac­
cording u Uw M* pveperty
datcrlbad In ouch carflfkaM ar
certificate* will ba tokf M Ma
hlgheof bidder *1M* court heuM
door an M* d m day af Fobru
ary. ItPSal II M A M
OoMd MM Ird day af January.
IMS
ISEALI
Arthur H. BeckwIM, Jr.
CMrk af Circuit Caurt
af Sam InoU County. Florida
Cheryl Graar
DjEDutuf Clirh
Pubilth January Und. IfM .
IMS, February Hh, IIM. IMS
______________
QBE a*
Flartd* SfatvWt 117.let
NOTICE OP APPLICATION
POR TAX D E ED
N O T I C E IB H E R E B Y
GIVEN. Mat A G ar J.L . O t
LaftlbaaudMra Ma holder af Ma
tallowing carlllkaMt hat filed
Mid carlllkaMt for a Ian dead
M ba luuad Maraon The cartili
cat* numbart and yoart *1
Ittuanca, Ma datcrlpfMn el M*
property, and M# namat In
which If wai attattad ar* at
MiMwt
CartlllcaM Na 14*.
Vaaraf Ittuanca IM l
Deter Iyflen of Property: LEO

LOT * ASSESSORS MAP OF
LOTS 14 ♦ 41 IL K A ASM
SMITHS 1N0 SUEO D l IS7 PO
417
Nam* In which atoattad Alton
Yeung (Halnl
All of Mid proporty being In
the County af SemlnaM. SUM of
Florida
UnMtt tuch carflfkaM ar car
fifkaMt thall ba rodMmod ac
carding to law M* property
dotcrlbad In tuch carflflcato or
carllfkalot will ba t*M to Ma
hlphetl bidder of Mo caurt hawta
dear an th* IIM day af March.
IM SatllM AM
Da tod Mlt IIM day af Fabru
ary. IMS
ISEALI
David N Barrton
Clark *1 Circuit Caurt
el Seminal* County, Florida
Tham e Macak
Deputy Clark
Pubilth February II. I*. M.
March t, IMS
DEC S4
Florida ilafvtet IF7M4
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX OEBO
N O T I C E IS N B R E R Y
O IVEN. Mai E Lamar Sharp
M* holder of M* fallowing cartll
leal** hat IIMd Mid cartMcaiat
tor a loa dead to b* luuad
Maraan Th* carlllkato num
bart and yoart of ittuanca. Ma
daocrlptlan af M* proparty, and
th* namat In whkh II wat
attauad ar* m tollew*
Carflflcato Na 144
Vaaraf Ittuanca lMl
Oatcrlptlan *1 Property: LEO
SEC 0* TWP NS ROE » ■ W
447 U F T OF SE M OF SW 14 N
OF RD (LESS N 4*7 FT) 1 E
11*47 F T OF W 744* F T OF SB
14 OF SW la N O F RO I LESSN
*WMFTI
N a m t In which attattad
K I M., Inc at Central PI.
All *1 Mid property being In
M* County af SemlnaM, SUM af
Florida
UnMtt tuch carflfkaM ar car
11IleaMt Null ba
carding to law
rlbad In ouch certlfket* ar
cortlfkatot will be told to Me
hlghotl blddor of lho court haute
doer an Ma 4M day af March.
IMS *111 N A M
Dat ed Ih it D r d day *1

Socializing In Sarvlc# A Parts For
W.'s, Toyota and Oatsun
ICorner 2nd A Filmed*)
214 S . P a lm e tto

PHONE

321-0120
^ w ^ f k 't t e s b f N * ,
ha Valentin* A
f lM A L If ll

carding to law Ma property
dotcrlbad in tuch carlllkato ar
cartilkPtot will ba mU la M*
nifmiv HmSMT M INI fillrl mwm
dear an Ma U M day *1 Fabru
asm ilfB A JIA .
ary, U
H*ti
Dated 1 Ird day at January,
IMS
ISEALI
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
CtorkafCktull Court
at SemlnaM County F Mr Ida
Cheryl Oraar
Deputy Clarb

W

305/323-0400
W* Deliver Bouquet* af Balloons
"Sovan Days a Waak"
For Every Reason and Every Season ’

e

____

P.O. BOX 174 - SANFORD, PL J im

w&amp;v&amp;vrvw-*

IfM M U U W U .

u w w m m m m m w m w w

.

JSanford’s &amp; Lake Mary’i
\Newest Garden Canter
&gt;TREES

Happy Valentine's Day
From The Hair Now Staff

• MANQINO BASKETS

&gt;PATIO PUNTS • MULCH
&gt;SHRUBS
• BEDDING PLANTS
^ANDSCAPj^OtMNSTAUATlON

SUR-Mxod Cptera

AZALIAS

Dedicated lo helping you look your best from
top to tor all year long, the atafT at Hair Now
wishes you a Happy Valentine’s Day.
A unisex styling salon for the whole family.
Ilalr Now specializes In easy maintenance hair
styles, custom cuts, perms and colors. Located at
607 W. 25th St.. Sanford. Hair Now has a

(je n n h A H J IA r v n r ln A r tr ln n n lin n n in n

TV »a f jo u r meIf fa Juncb where the cook
eAepe d a llj.k a Jo j aid faahloo Oarer of

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THE RUNCIBLE SPOON
Tea Room al BROWSER’S BARN
150 W . JasBup A yr ., Longw ood, Florida
(Omo Block North o t P.O, on CM 4k 71
L u c k Served 11 A JE.-SiSO P.M.
Taasdav th ru Saturday

Glass A Paint
Company

8 3 1 -4 6 6 1

^ W IN T E R

FRANCE

%
UNLIMITED

2927 Hwy. 17-92
Ctntar Mall

lActoil I lorn U r * FUJI)

HOURS
MON.-FRI. 8 - 5:30
SAT. B •4 00

3 2 1 -0 3 5 1
3 2 1 -0 3 5 2

REG. PRICE

O L L OnlvL.U rillA lu

C

OFF

friendly, “ down home’’ atmosphere.
The staff Includes owner Mrrlc Reese. Terri
Baler and Diane Gillman. formerly with Cathy's
Hair Express. Sanford, who has been with Hair
Now since the first of January. The go to shows
and learn all the latest trends and styles Including
"New W ave." They do rainbow colors. Mohawks,
spikes, and rat tails.
They also do the more traditional styles ana
ofTcr a 20 percent senior citizen discount (by
appointment only) on Tuesday through Thurs­
day.
In addition lo halrstyllng they offer nail lips,
manicures, pedicures, hair removal, eyebrow
arching, eyebrow tints, ear piercing, and apply
artificial eyelashes.
Ilalr Now carries a good retail line of Redken
hair products for at home care.
The salon Is open from 9:30 a.m. lo 5 p in.
Tuesday through Saturday and lutrr by ap­
pointment. Call 322-8711for an appointment.

DAVE'S UPHOLSTERY!
• F U R N IT U R E • B O A T S • C A R S
L s r«a Stkctlan af M a la ria l
Ovality W o rk m im to p
F rta E itlm a ta a
Fraa Pickup
And Dallvory

490

N . 1 7 -9 2

N a il T a S o b ik 't Sub Shop

L O N G W O O D , FLA.

Si

(3 0 5 ) 8 6 2 -1 6 0 0

212 I . M

It.

D O W N T O W N SANFORD

Mon. ■ Frl. l-.tt A M •4:0* PM

Paul Blfllln

H r I W lla o n

We'll Bring The
Best In Decorating
Right To Your Homo

(Z iitd (fane (fa to i
1( 'rlrhrerfnd rfeiidfuM

INCOME TAX RETURNS

CUSTOM DRAPERIES • BEDSPREADS
WOVEN WOODS • MINI BLINDS • VERTICALS
1PET * VINYL - WALL COVERINGS

m i l ESTIMATE
NO OOUAATKM

030 RIvrtvIrw A y b ., Sanford
(lU v Accaat From 14-17 at

IBf

122-3315
322-7542

P h ilip s

323-2005

DCG0UTIR6

HR

In h w i m tom* lu ll

Non. Thru PrL
SAN tot PM C ,

Fraparad By Accountants

COLBERT &amp; 8HALETT
Suite 602

Atlantic National Hank Uldg.
Downtown Sanford
Call For Appointment:

322-5721
We Feature Complete In llouee Computer Srrvk-r

IIS W. I MB IT.

*1

Untou ouch cartifkait ar car

Lay It WIM
Balloon.'

-C A L L ANYTIME -

Florida SMM a t i»7M4
NO TICE OP APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
O I V S N . that R i c h a r d I .

11lieatot Null ba rodaomid ac

B

•«

Balloon Magic

ISEALI
David N Barrton
Clerk *1 Circuit Caurt
*( SemlnaM County. F MrIda
Th am e Macak
Deputy Clark
Pubilth: January INh, Fabru
a ry fM .IIM .A ltM . IMS
DEB MI

tollowing carlllkato* hat Iliad
Mid cartll
lifkolat b r a l u i
to ba luuad Maraan The cartili
cato numbart and year* al
luuanca. Ma doacrtplian at ih*
proparly, and M* namat In
whkh II w m attattad ar* at
foltmiri
Carlllkato No IlSa
Year of lu uanca )MI
Oaecrtphan of Property: SBC
I ) TWP 111 E O I I t ! N » PT
OF B U l l F T OF E MB P T OF
NEMOFIWM
Nam* In whkh atoaoaad War*
Laura A Darla.
All af Mid property being In
M* County al Sam InaN. State af
FtertU*.

Aye .

SAN FO RD

Hairstylists at
Hair Nowr from
lefty Terri Boler,
Merle Reese,
owner, and Diane
Gillman.

FOR YOUR
VALENTINE

T K
IIM

C«a Tfaeap I I Ti m Of ftp

BpacMMaad NMdargtnae FmowWory Fro*'am. Fie
K io rc u t M w ru iiii bow m aevuM
hem loed tchoeit Hut tpac
cum , era.
gram tot A l l y**&gt; wet

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES

FURNITURE HOUSE
I IP NORTH HISHWAV l i f t
SOUTH OP PLIA WORLD
PIRIT TRAFFIC LIB NT
NORTH OP NWMWAV 0 4 ACROSS PROM HANDYWAY.

NEW-USED FURNITURE
ANTIQUES
VUY OTTO ■AMUNjO!
LkYAWA T I BCUVU

PortOMl toaitt a rt bvs IIb Ms Including
Rtvolvlnt Credit Lina.

Pubilth: January Und. INh.
UBS. Fthruary MR, INh. MBS

I ROSE IN $AS0
A BUDVASE J * "
k a 1 UcaPhaa U tone fee
s i s cn ee

JZ Z O U b b

OPEN 7 DAYS A W I I K SI1-M4S

PAC
N’ SEND
304 (M t CtPPBfriBl SL
(JOS) 123-1117

!7 6 a w 4

Sanford

1 fa a S

S econd I mage

New Hour* To Sene You Heller
Profnaional Packaging And
Shipping Sendee

m .!5 L !S T lw

Vi

WINTIR BPRir b i
Ilka

®- Aanlofd An .

WI NOW HAVE
2 LOCATIONS TO HEW Y&lt;

\m
IB R B d l

W r sits maks 1st and 2nd mortgag* loans

on RoBldsntlAl or CommorcUl Root Kstato
up ta I I 00,OSS.

SKCIAL

*** sr. • it-*!
PN. tO Ptf

’ 7mm Flat I

O IB B 7
F IC TITIO U S HAMS

Nalka la hereby glepn Mat I
am anpagad to bualnaat af MBS
N . O rlande Av# . Bulla I .
Maitland. Sam India Caunly.
F Mr Ida a tm under Mo Iktlttoua
name al P R E ID O M RECOV

BRV, and lhal I Inland to
Ctofh al •ha circuit Court.
SomMato Caunly. Florid* m
occardtnca wIM «
df Hu FkWtou* I
to wit Section a u ta Ft

Fa m ily C r# d lt S a rr lc M .ln c

(OUWft Pm Ouptal

AJao

Ahdwaary O CM Oenr»a Crvponswxi

OffM OMd Til HarpR «, 1EBB

£t

Stohlto* 10(7

/U David A. Mai lloon
PuMI* January tt, 1*4 Febru­
ary L I t IfBL

fTOMWIM ttlM AM tt
WINDOW TINTING
10% to 40% OFF All
1ST
*54'* KK,. *39“
Inatock Merchandlae
sr
»59M SKS....»49M

ON BJL « M M 4 I I I P

Mthafewfetuu

DEBIB

1 *

131-3400

Professional Car Cart
Cwuar P M A1M93 laatod

323-7272

Sm Um Ib Sawing&amp; Vacuum
W 9 W . 1741

M O S M II

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

-BusinessReview

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser
AD VER TISIN G

Call 322-2611 Kuu!
• CUT ro
w*
BUSINISSTHE MOVE •

A D V E R T IS IN G

K zzzzzzzm z

Pioneer Eyes State Charter

SU CK'S
Formerly Molly Magee’s

The Shifters
TWS. TO. 12 Tin UT. TO I I
O p &lt; M «i la* 11 * m 1 p m
o f i r • p .m . ro e

larrM* lone* 4
noun

m ap f t

1544 PARK OR., SANFORD
m em

A D V E R T IS IN G

n m n m n

Slicks Brings Back
Happy Days O f 50-60s

» U « I MPtniNCt u « temnet n w v o r o . ttworou

D a n IM y e rs
glass i m m o r

county

mncif » «

turoeo ru
sSlre

um

iw iu n iu

BUY 1 MINER
ANO 6CT 1 DMNCR
it in n ib i

M.

w n iN

m aw

m m

■m u r e n

m it a s o a x t u

m

SSStDAY &amp; NIGHT GRILL
JU N E A T IN A I'ORZIU-Owner*
I M t Fraacb Ate. - Saefard

David Clayton
T h o m a s urtd Blood
Sweat A Tears. Cary
L e w i s a n d thr
P la y b o y s , a n d The
D r i f t e r s — If th ese
g ro u p n b r in g b a rk
p le asan t m em ories,
then Slicks Is the place
for you.
Slicks Is a new and
different 50s and 60s
club w h ich features
quality food, moderate
prices, cocktulls and
the very best In live
entertainment Includ­
ing
big name bunds
from that era still re­
membered fondly by
their fans.
S lic k s , fo r m e r ly
M o lly M a g e e 's . Is
located at 2544 Park
Drive. Sanford, and
ofTIclully opened under
Its new name on Jan.

FREE S P I N A L

15.
The new owner. Hill
Adums. is bringing the
same brand of fun and
n ostalglu that h ave
made " H e m e m b e r
W h e n " In Maitland, his
other good-lime
establishment, so pop­
ular.
If you missed David
Clayton Thomas and
Blood Sweat A Tears In
their one-night appear­
ance here Saturday,
you won't want to miss
G ary Lewis and the
P layboys when they
perform at SHcks on
Feb. 22 and 23. or The
Drifters who are com ­
ing here In March. Res­
e r v a t i o n s ar e s u g ­
gested. Call 321-4677.
On regular nlghls.
music; Tor entertain­
ment and dancing arc

EVALU ATIO N
Fraquant H u d i c M i
Low Bock of Hip Fain
Dirilnaaa or Lo «s of 8Im p
N u m b n a n ot Hand* of Pm I
Narvouanaaa
Neck Pain of Stlllnaaa
Arm and Shoulder Pain
Ptaa r « L Short U | TuL Start its ! « t
M M Mb

,H

mo

c 'H in w a

« o » « &gt; « • » ’ “ *•

Ml tMCfl MIWM «
M
cm&gt;«•»'■«•'
a n*town* *•*Ny*i o* **** '"•
m

u

m

m

n n w

iw w

m i m

» i&lt;

i

lu w u im

cm M

ro w * *

“ ^5*
“•

___

f w »'

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
OF CHIROPRACTIC INC
H S W t(i a i’ v
Milieu

u ..

.1 rt. . * it. . |11 .

1 t- i

provldrd by live bands
such as The Shifters.
T riv ia, nnd J o h n n y
Thunder and a disc
Jockey.
T h e S h i f t e r s ar c
p l a y i n g for this
Thursday night's Val­
entine Party. There will
he prties. Proper attire
la required.
T h e re Is a c o v e r
charge Tuesday
t hr ough S a t u r d a y ,
except those arriving
before 8 p.m. or order­
ing dinner, don’t have
to pay It.
Magic by Julr Is a
special feature on Frlduy and S a t u r d a y
nights with a half hour
s h o w f o l l o w e d by
magic tricks tableslde.
Ther e are ha p p y
hours all day from 11
u.m. to 7 p.m. with free
hors d'oerves served
beginning at 5 p.m.
There are drtnk
s p e c i a l s s u c h as
L a d l e s ' N i g h t on
Tuesday, and happy
hour all evening on
Monday. On Lad les'
Night the cover charge
Is 91 and drinks are 50
cents.
T h e house din n er
special 1s n 32 oz New
York Sirloin Steak for
two for only 915.05.

Seafood. Italian dishes
and appetizers are also
specialities.
S h r i m p
a n d
spaghetti lunch
specials on Saturday
ure only 93.89 from
11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
plus dnnk specials.

F h . 9 3 9 -9 T 2 9

ALAN’S
**J T *

AND BUGS

FLOORS: Vinyl KanlJta. Wall towall Carpal.
Araa And Sfaidad Ruga.
WALLS: WaMpapw, And S u d a n Sy Wavarty
TASKS. Cutam Nad* TtatactaOw And ~
Sola A Chau Slipcover* A Rauphdatary
Cut lam Uada Daearataf PVtawt

f i

Mtka fcwft n*w*t 44 On IN I I
I k M i b 5MW4(Uw4nwS&gt;&lt;W
i n t Hw, U H Canaan Paxta
Ir4*| tka a*tk a Cknanwa «ta I
lata catikak kt tka lutanP taa*|
44 Wan a* t* MKm pkm Mfa

4aw«a ak* 4m tianUt kaaa| a

n p « n t m ia n ik »fau n
•Ml It* M*4 Patkaaa t n » a k
k la a n kn a lat aaUMa tan

caaM M Mi
i tap art (U P tka

4 kaaafl laariaa
A C I 4 * 1 0

IABIATO II
w’ ^ o X

9*11 Mc C A U I Y - OWNER
T it FRENCH AYE. X U 0214

SANFORO

0FINM0N.THRUFRL94

A

m

lAT.S-tl

A l l WORK QUARANTIIO
1DAYSIRVICB

c'mspi 10*

DHCOUNT

120 S. H y. 17-92
1344771
/Vl

t4

% uuut

MEMO DISCOUNT

O PEN 24 HOURS

WILLIAMS &amp; SON AMOCO
3790 S. ORLANDO DFHVE
SANFORO. FLORIDA 32771

BLAIR AGENCY
SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
8R 22*9 FILED

2791 1 Ortas* Of.
121-5712

ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES

L * ' Ji

AMOCO M010S Cuts

STEVE WILLIAMS, OWNER

TELEPHONE 322 1290

SECRETARIAL SERVICES

N O W O P E N
WATCH I JEWELRY REPAIR
ind PAWN SHOP
. P k .li3 .iS 2 7

U M i naaca r a . uaaaa
• Special Design • Cuktom W ork
• Rralare Antique Jr w rtry d Rolra Hrpair
• Clock • W elch Hrpair

• Ring Sizing - Stone Selling

n ...m im e
1 3 2 3 -8 0 3 8

f

m i

IW O B F

W* FFM

tatlpalng carllllcalv* ha* Iliad
u Y carllikatat tar a la* daad
ta ba luuad maroon Tha cartlll
cala number* and yaart al
itwanca. Iha da«crtpttan al lha
praparty. and ma nama* In
whkh It wat auattad art a*
tullemi
Cartitkata No 10*
Yaar ¥ iMuanca 1*11.
Dttcrlptlen d Pi (party LOT
* SLK C A I STEVENS ADD TO
MIDWAY P I T PG M
Hama Pi which attat t*d Ann*
Jana Via.
All a&lt; ta* property balng In
lha Cermty at lamina*. Ita* d
F tar Ida
Untau wch cartitkata ar car
lllkata* *hall Pa r*d**m*d ac
carding la law lha praparty
datertaad In *wch cartincata ar
cartllkata* will ba laid ta lha
Mgha*t blddar al lha court hau*a
d n r on tha lllh day d March.
IWSalU M A M
Oal ad thI* 1 1i t day al
January. I tal
HEAL)
Da&lt;ld N Sarrlan
Clark ol Circuit Court
d WmlnotaCounty. Florida
Tharata 44acak
Daputy Clark
PwPlllh: Fabruary 1th. IJIh.

Florida Italvta* 1U.H*
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TA X D E ED
NOTICE II H E R E S Y
GIVEN, that Jand L. Sharp tha
haldtr d lha MtawPig cartlll
catat ha* IItad *ald carllikatat
tar a la i daad ta ba l*«uad
lharaan Tha cartitkata num
bar* and yadrt d lt*uanca. It*
daacrlptlan d lha praparty. and
lha nama* In which It •&gt;**
aatawad ar* a* tallaart:
Cartitkata Ha U )
Yaar d Itwanca lt d
Datcrlptkn d Praparty LEG
IE C I* TWP MS ROE ME BEG
IMt FT H A ft* F T ■ OF IW
COR RUN I ( I D EO 1» MIN M
SEC E l * l « F T I 1414 F T I *•
DEO M MIN ST SBC W AM II FT
N 14 DEG tt M IN 4* SEC W SM
FT TO EEC.
Nama In which attattad
Ralph A. hurt II, Marcia R
All d raid proparty btlng In
lha County d SamlnaM. Slata al

HEARIMGAIDCENTERS

.i■ I

I B IBM FUME I

burt

liapa* ik**4 law l ka*| M P
. Paa aaa •tap 4 Pwa a Mf ktakk
P ta Mans ckaV Ina aaaak aaa

illmsE

Ftartda I P M M i n H i
NOTICE OP APPLICATION
F 0 « TA X D EED
NOTICE II H E R ESY
G I V E N , that R i c h a r d I .

DEC M

Iktkpw tawvqIMIHk |W H*

lit kat tat)** pd *4 M (aaa Paa
Mi IP* I &gt;4ai tka aaat p tka
Cp h P i 'H attwi H f Piatfi p tka
laefcrC MPa* CM tka aaaka tafca
«4 Maw Pi aa weaW M I a Oaf
a i m taapaaaca

Legal Notice

itm. Mta. ItaS

3 2 2 -5 7 8 3

WINDOWS: Cutlom Mad* Dcapaa, Mint Of

HEARING TESTS
SET FOR SANFORD/
CASSELBERRY
AREA

CLEAR W ATER . Fla. (UPII - Pioneer Savings
Bank is planning a major dlvcrsllleatlon. Presi­
dent Blair Culpepper Mid. Currently awaiting
regulatory* approvals to switch from a federal to a
state charter so the thrift Institution can broaden
Its business, he said Pioneer hopes lo acquire
other companies. Including other banks If II goes
through.
Pioneer resulted from the January 1982 mrrgcr
of Clearwater Federal and Winter Park-based
Park Federal. It has 48 ofTIrcs In the Clearwater
nnd Orlando arras, but has no plans for statewide
expansion. Culpepper said.

Legal Notice

lJOY-321-21*0
iK*bJ

Has The Paint Products
For All Your Needs

Good food,
and live
entertainment
at Slicks

Tuesday. Feb. It, I W - 1 B

Storing Unhid tot 2T Yarns
OPEN MON. THRU FBI, 95

“CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE'1
3 2 3 -7 7 1 0 o r 3 2 3 -3 8 6 6

8B10A OAK AVI. SANFORD
Cornu p| 9. Part A«d. 9 Oak

0.0.91AM

U n * u wch cartincata ar car
lllkata* Ptail ba radtamad ac
carding la law tha praparty
daacrlbad ta tuch cartitkata ar
cartincata* will ba aaM ta lha
hlghatl blddtr al lha Cdurl hour*
daar an Itw lllh day d March.
ItalalllHAM.
Datad mi* 1*1 day d Fabru
ary. IMS
I SEAL I
David N. barrtan
Clark d Circuit Court
d SamInata County, Florida
Tharata Macak
Daeutv Clerk

Pupilth i February |th. ITttr.
ttm.sam.itas
DEC-41
Ftartd* Statu*** ItTM *
NOTICE OR APPLICATION
FOR TA X D E E D
N O TICl II HERESY
OIVSN. Ihal B. Lamar Sharp
lha hatdd d lha taitawPig cartil
kata* ha* Mad add cartincata*
tar a laa daad ta ba taauad
lharaan Tha cartitkata num
hart and yaart a* nauanca. me
daecrtptlen d tha prtparfy, and
“ in w hkh It wat
Cartincata Na. u s
Yaar o il
Ptapartr LEO
SEC Kt TWP M*
OI 1
Ml I
N R
ROE
4S4.II F T OF W Oil J t F T OF N
M S F T OF 1C ta OF IW 14
I L I IS I I014S F T O F I CFI FS
F T I.
Nama In which attattad
KamtaanOrltnm
A H P a M pr*pail| balng in
ma County d Seminal*. Slata d
Untau tuch cartincata ar car
nncata* Mail bo rataim id ac
ta taw lha property
In tuch cartincata ar
ill b* tata ta m*
. ------------------at Ma court haute
M ar an tap lllh day d March.
itM d lliM A JW .
O al ad I h l t S t t t day at
January. Itat.'
IS* A l l
David N. Sarrlan
Clark d C Y c d l Court
d SamMata County, Florida
W
*.--------AA----- *i n e re t# m b c b i
Dandy Ctarb

PwMIM FaOruary sm. lllh.
INK MM. HM.
DCOM
NOTICE OF IN TE N TIO N
T O I9 M 9 T IC
FICTITIOUS NAM E

* * Mptad^iNrJt ? I'aalMt
Me Dark ol ww C kcdt
Court of Sam Ino Ia Cauniy.
h* ttattttau* noma
"U S. TroM PlU rtad P t al Or

business.
D A T E D Ih lt tnd day ol
January. Ital
W O R LD TIM E SHARE
CONSULTANTS. INC
a Florida carper alien
By Thom** W Rsdnten
Pr*»ld*nt
Pudtah January n . 1* 4 Fabru
ary S. 11. Ital
D E B 11*
Florida Statata* 1f» *4*
NO TICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TA X D EED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , that R i c h a r d S
Catteibarry lha hahtar d lha
tal lowing ctrtllkata* ha* Iliad
tald cartitkata* tar a la* daad
ta ba luuad thaiaon Tha cartlll
cala num ban and yadrt al
luuanco. lha dttcrlpltan d lha
praparty. and lha nama* In
whkh II wet auattad ar* at

fellows*
Cartitkata Na ITM
Yaar d Inuanca IN I
DatcrIpttan d Praparty BEG
NE COR LOT I RUN NW ON
RDMMFTSM4MFTWMFT
S T O LAKE E ON LAKE TO SE
COR N TO BEG T AYLORS
BEAR LAKE S U B O P B T P G I T
Nama In whkh auattad Baer
Lake Manor C l«k Rattarnwnt
A»*oc Inc.
All d told praparty balng In
•ha County d SamPiota. Slata al
Ftartd*
Untau tuch ctrtllkata ar car
lllkata* thatl ba redeemed ac
carding lo law m* praparty
datcrlbad In tuch cartitkata or
carllikatat will b* told la lha
hlghatl blddtr at th* court hout*
daar an tha lllh day d Marth.
INlalllM AM
O a l a d I h l t l l t l day el
January. INS
(SEAL)
David N barrtan
Clark ol Circuit Court
d Seminal* County. Florida
Thereto Macak
Di d utu Clerk
Pvbttah: Fabruary Ith. 11th.
itm. Mm. ital
DEC It
Ftarta* Slahrtai Ifi.M*
NO TICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX D IE D
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
O IVEN . Ihal | Lamar k/or
Janai L Sharp lha haldtr d lha
tal tawing carllikatat hat Iliad
u ld cartlllcatat tar a la* daad
ta ba luuad maroon Th* cartlll
cat* num ban and yaart el
luuanca, lha dttcrlpltan d th*
properly, and lha name* In
whkh II wat auattad art at
Idtawi
Cartincata N* U .
Year d luuanca IN I
Datcrtptlon d Property: ■ S4
F T OF LO T a * E $4 F T OF N
M l F T OF LOT I SLK 4 TR II
TOWN OF SANFORD PB I PC

41

Nam* In which a u a tta d
Hudaon Freddie L. A Ro m L
All d Mta property balng In
lha Cauniy d Samlnota. Slata d
Florida.
Untau tuch cartincata or car
lllkata* than b* redeemed ac
cording to law lha praparty
datcrlbad In auch cartincata ar
cartitkata* will b* add ta m*
hlghatl blddar al th* court hout*
daar on lha Itm day d March.
IN la lllM A M .
Dated m il lim day d Fabru
ary. Ital
(SEAL)
David N Sarrlan
Ctarhd Circuit Court
d Seminal* Cauniy, Florida
Th*r*u4Aac*t
Deputy Ctark
Publtah: Fabruary II. It. St.
MarchS. IN I

o ic a
FluM aM atataalTM U
N O TICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX D IE D
N O TICE II H I R I E V
O IVEN. Ihal County d lam Inata
•ho haldtr d Ml* tallowing cartil
kata* hot lltad laid cartincata*
tar a tea dead ta ha luuad
lharaan. Th# cart Itkata num
bare and yaart d luuanca, m*
datcrtptlon d th* praparty, and
lha nemat In which (I wat
auattad are o* M taw*
Cartitkata tap tat
You P I
Oaacrtdtan d Praparty: LEO
SEC 14 TW P MS ROE M l I I
AC OF W S A C OF N M i l F T
O FSW taO FtW V*.
Nam* In which a u a tta d
L Griffin, Ernatlin* B
at Mid praparty
lha County d Sam Inata. Slata d
Ftartd*
Untau auch cartincata ar car
'
_____ ______Re­
tarding a low lha praparty
duertaad M tuch cartincata u
cartitkata* will ba taM ta Me
d m * court houu
an Ma ISM aay at Much.
N M ailLSSR AA.
Oatad Mta N h day d Fabru

ary.ttaf
(SEAL)
David N. Barr tan
Ctart d Circuit Court
i t Samlnota County. Ftartd*
Tharau Macao
Ctaputy Ctart
Publtah: February I t I*. I t
Mortal L U E S

OCC-lf

MADAME KATHERINE
M jM un sam A i bau

uajnm

HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL
affaire
7M M YUM
HOUtS I AM •» fM 7 Dus A Wash
SI

�O - t y m l i H H «fiM , Sanford, FI.

Tuotday, Fdb. H, 1W5

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - W inter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

MOT I d OP
ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C L A I M ! OR O E M A N O I
AO AIN IT THE ABOVE
E S T A T E AND A L L O TH E R
PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D IN
TH E ESTA TE:
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D t h a t the admintairelton el the aalala al
JAMES W. K EY, d icaaood. FIN
Number U U C P . N
In
Mia Circuit Court tar Samlnato
County, F i ar i aa . Probate
Dtvtaton. the address of whkh It

fofk&gt;NV«

Cortlfteoto No IN
Year al liauanca IMJ.
Oaacrlpllan al Prapartyi
LO T 1 BLK I LOCKH.
SUBOPBlPOM
Noma in which aaaaaiaa

In Iha property dtecrtaed about
W H E R E A S , INa Beard al
County Commi ssi oners al

0 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
HOURS
l *1—
W H E R E A S . Ilia Beard al
County Commissioners a l
Ssmlnsta Canty, Florida. AM
an Mia llth day al Oocomhar.
tt»4. IlnA and Aaclara a
atructura lacatad In Samlnato
County. Florida, to ba unaata.
w n t a n l l a r y and a p u b l i c
nuttanca. mot ma owner al INa

•:30 A.M. •5:J0 F.M.

J

5 !

DEADLINES
Noon Th e D ay Before Publication
Sunday * Noon Friday
M o nday - 1 1 : 0 0 A .M . Saturday

REWARD!

23— Special Notices

•AJO*
•A CAKES*
• • w r o te *

CALL MOMMY

323-5176
aaaaaaad are aa taltowr
Corllllcata No. I* «.
Year al laauanca HT7.
Oaacrlpllan ol Properly
LOTS If U a II WASHINGTON
PARK OVIEDO PB I PGM
Name In which anai aad
Hadden BamlcaC.
Ail al aald praparly being in
•ha County ol lomlnoto, Slato ol
Florida.
Untoae auch cartlllcato ar cor
liftedtoy moil ba ridn mad ac

NO F E S T IL L HIR ED

FRONT DESK

tram ma promises
NOW TH ER EFO R E, notice la
herMiy (Ivan la the laid Samaan
Hayaa and all pertlea having ar
claiming to hove any rlfhL title.

daacrlbad In auch cartlllcato or
com fleatoy will bo told to Rio
hlfhoet bidder ol Rw court houao
dear on the lfMt day al Febru­
ary, IfM et 11:00 A M
Deled ihly ird day al January.
hu
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clark al Clrcull Court
at laminate County. Florida
Cheryl Graar
Deputy Clark
Pubtlah; January ttnd. lath.
H U . February Mh. Itth, H U
OBBOt

33— Reel Estate
Courses

NOTICE OP
ADMINISTRATION
Tho odm lnlilrtllon al I ha
aalaia al Ftancat 0 . Blum,
deceased. File N u m b e r
M id i CP. It ponding In the
Circuit Court far Seminole
Caunt y, Plarlda. Pr abal o
Dlvtaton. Iha ad irIII at which la
Samlnato County Caurthouaa,
Sanford. Florida H i l l . The

WITNESS my hand and aoal
iMaladi day at January. IM I
(SEAL)
DAVION. BER R IEN
Clark to tho Board at
County Cammlaatonara
By i SondyWall
Daputy Clark
Publlah January I f 4 February
L II. It, IMS

ORB1N

IMS.

(SEAL)
(SEAL)
David N Borrton
Clark at Clrcuil Court
ol Samlnato County. P torIdo
ThoraaaMocok

Arthur H. Beckwith. J r
Clark al Circuit Court
at Samlnato County, Florida
Cheryl Oreer
Deputy Clark
Publlah: January ttnd. Itth,
IM L February fth. Itth. IMS.
D IB IS

tho Purchasing Ooportmsnt,
School Board al Samlnala
Cauht y, I S M Mal l ah al l l a
Avenue. Sontard. Ptortda Any
guitlonc relating to Mu pro

I S E A L)
A
DA V I ON BERRIEN
Clark to the Beard at
County Cammlaatonara
By: SondyWall
DopufyCtork

PubIWi January It 4 Fobruory
a. n. it. itu
DBB' ttl
_______
FIC TITIO U S NAME
am engaged m buitoaaa al MSI
N. O rlande Avo., Sulla I ,
Maitland. Samlnato Caunty,
F tor Ida B i l l under Iha ftctlitout
name al F R E E D O M B A I L
BONOS, and mat I Intend la
Clarb al Iha Clrtult Court,
Samlnato County, F torIdo In
accordance wllh iha pavhtota
al Mu Fkiitioua Hama Statutes,
to wit: lection S U M Florida
Statutes ItST
/t/DevidA.Malltaen
Pubtlah January n . It 4 Febru­
ary L II. IMS.

ADM INISTRATIVE

AVON BEAUTY COMPANY

Doonesbury

_____ to UN

Oraal patli i an ler career
minded. Ham secretarial and
•resuming. leal paced aal I

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

Shopping for A

hewOr UsedCtr?

NOTICE

�97— Apartments

Furnished / Rent
Catting customers li aomaitmes
Ilka pulling teatti bdt not
nt«an you u«a a — wt ad.

t » y a j RrrAwy expeCT US
■fo

gCARDINAL
( 1 1 1 -■ ,(,7 1 ,

x

T h at Your &amp; T r«N

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/Sale

D‘.ALet&gt; &lt;tl| BOCAOSe ybu
WCBC AN WnJfc lA fe ^rfTT.N O AofAff m &gt; M A bATC?

IP O TLB tS 1 Bdroa. SaadMomad
VWas- g a m
m m apartswain

ma

215— Boats end
Accessories

Part lima Maintenance/ Han­
dyman far Sanford Office
■wilding Ciparltncad AC.
plipnblng. and minor building
repairs Sand raauma' of aap
*• Property Managar. asae
University Bird Salta #*.
wmtor Pars. fi n m ______

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

217— Oarage Sales

141— Homes For Sale
Baying CASH far:
Aluminum. Cana. Capgar.
Ato m . Loed. Howvpapor.

0 ( ARDINAl

itaa Mustang, a cylinder

Glass. GoM. Silver.
KaasmaTasl.eilW.isi
■l:W l a l .» 1 » i m

0 ( ARDINAI

beWeem Cardinal Hama orltti
appllancaa. artabtr/dryer
hook ups. and Inalda uftllty

NOT MAOIC
B U T PACT
WANT AOS WORK WONDERS

B O A O O B I V K B t i Ownar
aparaiora aipariancad In re
frlgaralad commodities. n/or
•iibout traliara far plant da
llvorlta In Midwestern A
Northeastern states Eacallanl
a/o pack ago Pltats call

0 ( ARDINAl

eu ettt.tee

sis i n a m .

225— Trucks /
Buses/Vans

a t SSM Aafc far Bah._______

Sales Counselor
Cr ani ng National Walfhl.
Smoking, Nwlrlilanaf
Counseling Company la open
Mg canlora In Florida 1 now
opan and a mara piannadl
1111* I* a U. I . pa Ian lad

0 1 AROINAI

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
Call m »* 4 pay «r nigM

0&lt; AROINAI
W A N T E D - P t O P L I WHO
WANT TO WONK TO
P LA C E P I O P L I WHO
D I D N ' T . P a t M i ma only,
Thursday nlghli from 1 p m
fa 11 a m . Musi have Fla.
driver's license, bo I I year* or
older, able fo drive slick shift
Apply In parson Sanford Aute
Auction, m s W. 1st St . San

r « t For Sale
m iN i

H N B H f ll
Dabary Auto A Marina SaMa
Acraaa Itw rl«ar. lap a&lt; Mil
iffH w y i f t t Oabary aateNd

From i it la NSW mara
Can n M g R W M W

CONSULT OUR
91— Apartments/
House to Share

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

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

323-5774
U lllltU f
Tired a&lt; Mgb prices7 Call R A J
■lacIrk N e le k Me large ar
small. Frsa Estimates M Hr.
tarvtea. Installed " paddle

Hyaadawt

JUST BIBH T FOB VOW
CUNNINGHAM A W IP I -M . A
••I. palntleg A proasu'd

LANDCLIARINO
FILL DIRT, aUSMOOOINO

SA N FO R D . B e a t

C LA y A SHALE P I San

01 M{|)|f\l M

SWM SanSardAva W ia m

m n m m u ii

RatadWHiH

322-2420
( MdllNM

P a is a ia tT fr .

\ n m \ \ i

ir r fifn r

)

m y **1

i-

i

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.

•

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Older People Should Be
Careful With Weights

BEETLE BAILEY
THE GREEN AR M Y
IS VERY TRICKY

S O WATCH
CAREFULLY

FOR A N Y
TRAPS

I n o IT, KARDtci I \ VC WHAT ?
m

m

d c

it !

M W IVE B6EM VUMTUto TO CO

^

CKAf, OKAY,

CKAY,«WAr*

ALL y o u HAVE I D

X) &lt;9 SI VS HIM WHAT
h i

A

sacs

rot* /

CAPO*a

HANMP \

MGWDDES
PRACTICE
PRtVEAmVEMEDKJNE.?

ONLcm&amp;iiimmsT

FEES roRCmC£V6TCi...

DEAR DR. LAMB - I read an
article that stated that weight
lifting destroyed rather than
constructed muscle mass In the
older person. It said that the
ij
)
older person does not replace the
muscle tissue used In strenuous
exercise, and that weight lifting
therefore produces Irsa muscle
rather than more.
ly.M ort W alksr
I'm 62 and In better physical
health than when I was in my
40*. since I have gotten Into a
running and diet program. That
reduced my weight from 196 to
}&gt;cer
160 My endurance has In­
__
UsttfP
creased as you have said It
jj. w o u l d (b e y o n d a n y t h i n g I
thought possible nine months
yH y . aKo| and I would like to build up
R f i L , hA he
my strength, too. Would It cause
an y P roblem s If 1 began a
wc|ghl-tralnlng program, workOn? rVCCv IT
*nX ,n,° ** gradually as I worked
QCaa Met Into mnnlng?
DEAR READER — Most people
byA rtS an som
w h o ha v e e x p e rie n c e wi t h
—
■ strength training and muscle
building probably would dis­
agree strongly with *he article
you quoted. We all lift weight,
even If it Is Just our body weight.
Compare your leg muscles now
with the way they were before
you started your running pro­
gram . Most runners develop
belter thigh and calf muscles,
although they are not huge.
If you overdo weight training,
you ran defeat your purpose of
developing muscles. That Is true
for everything, not just older
Individuals. However, for other
reasons, people over 40 should
Indeed follow a careful training
program. This can be done while
also developing muscle size and
strength. One does not have to
strain to the maximum to devel­
op strong muscles. I see no
reason why healthy older people
cannot do moderate strength
training to develop and maintain
muscles, and muscles will In­
crease In size despite your age.
DEAR DR. LAMB - l, am a
64-year-old male In good health,
by Howl* Schnsldsr but I have bilateral Inguinal
hernias. The doctor felt there
was llltle danger that I might
AND STIRS MAKING
have trangulallon. He recom­
H00SE O W *
mended. though, that I have
surgery within a year or so. since
my health Is good and healing
would be belter than If I needed
surgery at age 75 or 80. Do you

agree with this?
DEAR READER T h in g s
have not really changed. An
Inguinal hernia Is a defect In the
abdominal wall where the cord
to the testicle passes Into the
small Intestine. The muscles In
the area may be tom. or the
actual ring and canal through
which the cord passes may be
enlarged and weakened. The
problem cannot be corrected
except through surgery that
repairs the abnormal or tom

structures.
Unless there are complica­
tions. there Is no need to rash
Into surgery. However. If surgery
Is to be done — and it usually Is
warranted — there Is no reason
to delay unless the patient Is III.

Send you r questions to Ur.
Lamb. P.O. Box 1551. Radio Cltv
Station. New York. N.Y.. 10019.

ACROSS
1 Typ# of fuel
4 Modicot tuffn
7 Nocturnal bird

lOObvoQoms

equipment
7 Loyal
6 Triumph
8 Landing boat

11 Ovor (pool)
12 Encore
11 Month (Sal
14 (Mowing
I I Com of franco
17 Canal lyttam in 18 Pottau
northern
21 City on the Oka
Michigan
23 Join
11 Oroenaward
28 lateball club
20 Verne hero
28 Knot m wood
22 Compact point 28 Infirmities
24 Barnyard sound 28 felt sorry about
27 Substitute
31 Winged deity
30 One (Cor.)
32 Strange (comb
11 Drive out
form|
34 Spanish
33 Disregard (2
chaperone
wds)
38 Indeed
38 Former weather
38 Organic
bureau
compound
37 Day(Hebr)
38 Octane
numbers labbr)
40 Rings
41 Indifferent
_______
(comp, wd )
’*
48 2001, Roman — ----------- ---44 Handle ( fr)
"
M j
SO Wave (Spy
75-------------------82 88. Roman
|
84 Poverty war
^
•gancy (abbr )
it »i
91
88 Short prosa
&gt;'11 »*

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□□□□□□

41 Pronunciation
mark
42 Water sprits
44 Corrida chasr
47 Dm
48 Asssmbiiaf
48 Orssk goddess
of tha dawn

83 Suit part

88 Name (Fr.)
86 Chilean Indian
87 The (Sp)
88 12. Roman

n a r r a t i v e _______________
MM

S8 Goes out
80 Singleton
61 Water |fr|
82 Hissmg sound
63 Harm
84 Superlative suf-

68 Be equal
DOWN
1 Oily liquid
2 Noun suffii
3 Asian country
4 Tee

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----„
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H H f u ~ ~~

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W IN A T BRIDGE

N O ' T H A T * (F I T S

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SKSN T H A T
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ARE B U R N IN G .'
WHAT POES
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MR.^V\ALL.«*

&amp; V A E &amp; N E Y9

T A L K IN G
about

ONE

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TO UR N A M E O N A
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you !

The play of the small club front
Four spades la certainly a very East waa Interesting, designed to
line contract. A cursory Inspec­ convey the Impression that East
tion o f declarer's chances In­ did not have the club king, but
dicates that the hand will make South waa not fooled by that
If the king o f clubs la located In card.
the West hand.
He played a spade to the 10.
If not. declarer Is still safe played the club ace and con­
whenever Eaat has the ace o f tinued with the queen. Eaat tried
hearts. That's good enough odds the king, which waa trumped by
for any gambler, but a bridge declarer, who then returned to
player ahould always want to dummy with the spade queen to
Improve the odda.
discard a heart on the Jack o f
S o u t h w o n t h e a c e o f clubs.
diamonds, cashed the king of
The contract waa now safe,
diamonds, and played a spade to and the chance o f an overtrick
still existed If the heart ace waa

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Vulnerable East-West
Dealer North
We»l Nsrtb Ea«i
Sm
!♦
Pass
I#
Paw I NT Paw
4*
Paw Paw Pan
Opening lead ♦&lt;

HOROSCOPE
Whot Tht Day
(fo rc efu l
ten with

foo ts m a t
in ,
lo t t w t always

« et

tesr seats.

the
T

m

Ah C V 2 - 0 .

F B U U A 1 T IS . 1 M B
Your gift far making friends
with people from all walks of life
will be accentuated this coming
year. Although you will get to
know many new people, you will
single two out far special rela-

■ w S B u w s w .9,

Try to vary your routine today
for an invigorating effect upon
your outlook and attitude. Do
so m eth ing en joyab le with
Wends. Looking for Mr. Right?
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker

TAD B D B (Aorll
Today y r o a r e Plkelj
concerned about lb
those you love than
own needs and wan
nobler Inspirations p&lt;
0 1 2 0 X 1 (M ay 2

May 20)

. ™
K&gt; |Au« 2i-Sept. 22) Try
*° devote some time today to
Projects that Improve or beamiiy
y o u r s u rro u n d in g s . Y o u ’ re
rather Ingenious in these areas
at this time.

____

be more
U ? B A ®«P*- 33-Oct. M ) If
relfare o f
h* ve ■*» Important matter to
out your
" “ h another today,
Let your
£ J * * P h o y or mail,
Ml.
J o u il * * btr ro°re effective in a

UfiSbtr?.':

poeeibtlittea. Their d
a bummer but yours
out to b* fen
C A N O H I (June i
Objectives you i
thought were unatl

from giving.

•

�</text>
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, February 12, 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>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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77fh Year, No. M7—Monday, February 11, 19d3— Sanford, Florida

Evening

Herald

—

(USPS

411 380)

—

4

Cents

Decision Due On A rb o r O rd in an ce, Flea W orld Plans
B y Donna Estss
homeowners to apply for permits before
H erald S t a ff W rite r
cutting down trees In their yards.
Flea World's annexation request and
City Manager W.E. "P e te " Knowles
final adoption o f an arbor ordinance are said there should be no problem In
on Sanford City Commission agenda for enforcing the ordinance If a "common
tonight.
sense" approach Is taken, reminding
The meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. that any tree within 39 feet o f the
at city hall.
bulldable area on a lot may be removed
The arbor ordinance, designed to and that trees, either Injured or dam ­
preserve trees In the city, was given aged may also be removed. He said the
preliminary approval by the com ­ ordinance can Involve the city in
mission at Its Jan. 38 meeting. Howev­ neighborhood disputes.
er. al a workshop held a week ago.
He said major emphasis In enforce­
Commissioners Milton Smith. John ment should be to stop developers from
Mercer and Robert Thomas expressed stripping land aa construction Is on­
con cern s about requ irin g p riva te going. Knowles said good developers

want to cooperate to save city trees.
Commissioner David Farr was the
only member o f the board to oppose
adoption o f the arbor ordinance two
weeks ago. saying the proposed law
could Infringe on private property
owners rights.
The commission will also consider a
petition filed by Syd Levy for annexa­
tion of Flea World, east of U.S. 17:93 at
Five Points.
Levy told the city commission after a
workshop meeting three weeka ago that
he wUl submit Improved plans for his
proposed expansion at the facility at
today's meeting.

While city commissioners were not
enthusiastic about the proposed an­
nexation. Commissioner Smith told
him to work on the plans for expansion
and revamping o f parking facilities and
lo correct traffic problems created by
hla business and come back to the
commission when he was convinced
the problems were solved.
Commissioner Smith said none o f the
commissioners felt positive about the
annexation. And Mayor Bettye Smith
said the flea market "generally appears
to be a blight and creates traffic
problems." Mercer said he could not
disagree with Mayor Smith.

Knowles has recommended the city
commission deny the annexation re­
quest.
He said L evy's plan to add parking
space does not take Into account the
parking space that will be eliminated In
his expansion plans.
Knowles said Levy has not provided a
solution to the traffic congestion pro­
blems at Flea World which are "now a
hazard to the public."
He said while Levy has asked for a
reduction In the city's occupational
license fees, his establishment will
create added service needs from the
city.

DER Arrives
Sew age Debate Begins

d e s ig n e d s c r a p e r b a s k e t In to b o d ie s o f
w a t e r to M a r c h fo r a n y t h in g t h a t m a y b e
o v a lu e ." D e r r i c k , o f D a y t o n a B e a c h , I s

m a t e r ia l a s a h a n d le a n d w h e e ls i l l o w l t t o
b e p u lle d a lo n g u n d e r w a t e r . P a r t o f th e
d a y 's t a k e : a s ilv e r p r a y e r r in g . " I 'm

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w it h a d ia m o n d

King Fahd To Press For Renewed
U.S.*Led Mideast Peace Initiative
WASHINGTON (UPI) - King
Fahd of Saudi Arabia, a key
player In the complex politics of
a region wracked by turmoil,
today was expected to press
President Reagan for a revived
U.S.-led peace effort In the trou­
bled Middle East.
Fahd, paying his first official
v is it to W a s h in g to n sin c e
assuming the throne In 1963.
was Invited to the White House
today for a red-carpet welcome
and a black-tie state dinner as he
began four days o f talks with
U S . officials.
Principal among the Issues
slated for his discussions with
Resgan was the status of the
peace process In the Middle East,
where the United States has
maintained a low profile since
pulling out of Lebanon In failure
last year.
U.8. and Persian Gulf officials
said Fahd Intended to urge
Reagan to begin a new search lor
ce In the aftermath o f his
dsilde re-election last year
and signa of a slightly more
conducive atmosphere In the
Middle East.
Since the election, the ad­
ministration has conducted a

K

fresh round o f diplomatic con­
tacts In the region.
Newsweek magaxine reported
In this week's editions that while
In Washington. Fahd also may
propose to Reagan a 930 billion
to 940 billion financial aid
package for the Middle East
financed by the United States.
Arab oil states and Western
European nations.
The regional "Marshall plan."
the magaxine said, would aid
Israel. Jordan. Egypt. Syria and
the Palestinians.
Fahd. who canceled three
previously scheduled visits, lx
•een by many Arab officials and
diplomats as heading a con­
certed Arab effort to persuade
R e a g a n to a d o p t a m o re
balanced and active position on
the Middle East.
His stay wtU be followed later
by visits from Jordan's King
Hussein. Egyptian President
Hosnl Mubarak. Algerian Presi­
d e n t C h a d ll B e n je d ld and
Kuwait's Emir Sheikh Jaber a!
Ahmed al Sabah. Arab officials
U.S. officials cited the Israeli
withdrawal from Lebanon, hints

o f flexibility from the new Israeli
g o v e r n m e n t and co n tin u ed
contacts between Jordan's King
Hussein and Palestine Liberation
O rg a n is a tio n lea d er Y a sser
Arafat as Indications the pro­
spects for peace remain alive.
A senior administration official
said the 8audla view this as a
“ historic m om ent" to move the
process forward but should not
expect " a bold, new American
Initiative."
"Short o f that." the official
said. " I don't think that they're
going *o go away disappointed. "
In the background c f the
Reagan-Fahd talks are a new
proposed sale o f arms to Saudi
Arabia, con tin u ation o f the
Iran-traq war and Saudi con­
cern s a b ou t U .S. a ttitu d e s
toward the oil market slump.
A proposed package that in­
cludes 40 F’ lfi fighters 3.000
air-to-air m issiles and 1.000
ahould-flred Stinger antiaircraft
missiles has been among the
arms deals halted for four to six
weeks as the administration
conducts a broad review o f
security needs In the Middle

■ y D a a a a Jordan
H erald S t a ff W r ite r
Sanford officials and stale
Department o f Environmental
Regulation staff squared off to­
d a y In the firs t bout o f a
scheduled 3-day confrontation
concerning tile alleged pollution
o f Lake Monroe.
Their first argument was what
to argue about.
B.J. Owens, assistant general
counsel for the DER Indicated
the purpose o f the hearing was
to determ ine I f the city o f
Sanford has met DER's order to
stop putting pollutants Into Lake
Monroe and m ade plans to
change Its sewage treatment
method from dumping Into the
lake to landsprcadtng.
The city of Sanford was there,
according to comments made at
a prior workshop session, to
argue that the city Is not pollut­
ing the lake and that Its treated
effluent Is of higher water quali­
ty than the lake water.
State Hearing Officer Diane
Relating kept Sanford's hopes of
making its ease alive by ruling
she would not exclude testimony
from consideration until she had
heard It. Then, she said, she
would determine ( f i t was rele­
vant to the purpose o f the
hearing.
She also ruled, however, that If
Sanford, through Its attorney
W illia m C o lb e r t , p r e s e n ts
arguments that It Is hot pollut­
ing the lake, the DER can
present a rebuttal.
Mias Owens said the DER will
prove that Sanford not only did
not comply with the DER order
In practice, such as not filing
forms on time, but more signifi­
cantly. she Indicated. Inten­

MmH Nr Tww^r VIm m I
D E R a t t o r n e y B . J . O w e n s g e s t u r e s w h ile g iv in g • s y n o p s is
o f w h e t th e d e p a r t m e n t p la n s to p r o v e d u r in g a 3 -d a y h e a r in g
t n - S a n f o r d . O n h a n d to g iv e h e r a s s is t a n c e Is C in d y H illy , ■
t e c h n ic a l e x p e r t w it h th e O E R . M is s O w e n s s a id S a n fo r d h a s
n o t t a k e n s t e p s to e n d It s e f f lu e n t p o llu tio n o f L a k e M o n ro e .

tionally chose not to abide by the
DER order.
Th e hearing stems from a
3-year-old conflict between the
city o f Sanford and the DER.
The state tested the water In
Lake Monroe around 1B81 and
determined It was polluted and
that sewage from Sanford was
the main source o f pollutants.
Th e DER told the city that Its
permit to operate Its sewage
treatment plant would not be

About 400 Kanjobale Indians live In
Indian town, having fled on foot and by
hitchhiking from the western highlands
o f Guatemala, the Tmmpm Tribune
reported Sunday. They teO stories o f
massacre and torture by government
troops and say they came to the United
States to escape persecution, but none o f
them arc here legally.
Indian town is In M aitm County, north
west o f Palm Beach and juat east of Lake
Okecchobr.

»

B

Ex-Wife Could Be Held For Murder

Man Dies From Gunshot Wounds
Inflicted Nearly 26 Years Ago
MIAMI (UPI) — A man who suffered two
gunshots In the stomach nearly 36 years ago died
from his wounds last month and police are
looking for his ex-wife to question her In the case.
Isaiah Wilcox. 61. died Jan. 33 from two
gunshot wounds Inflicted by the woman who was
then hla wife. Police said Sunday WUcox' death
has been ruled a homicide and they were seeking
his former wife. LUlle, now 98.
However, only If premeditation existed, making
It first-degree murder, could she face any charges
now. On any leaser offense, second degree
murder, manslaughter, or maaull. the statute of
limitations has long elapsed.
"W e 'll present the case to the state attorney's
office." said Homicide Sgt. David Rivers. "Right
now It doesn’t look like there Is going to be any
prosecution."
But police said they need her to piece together
what happened the night o f the shooting.
LUlle WUcox attended services for her former
husband, though police said she had no way of
knowing she was responsible for his death.

W ilcox' widow. Annie, found Ldlle W ilcox'
signature In a guest book at the funeral home.
WUcox and his first wife were divorced not long
after the shooting, police said. Lillie Wilcox was
not charged in the original a m — she claimed
she shot Wilcox after he began beating their
children.
Dade County's chief deputy medical examiner.
Dr. Charles WetlL said Wilcox died aa " a
ra a n lf
lL a
------------- a _ s a
&lt;
rC* Uh o f the^gunahot wounds" Inflicted upon h
on July 9.1959.
*
' ~
Th e bullets srere removed at Jackson Mcmor
Hospital during lengthy surgery that followed t
shooting and WUcox spent 36 days In t
hospital. WUcox recovered and lived a normal Ilf
Dut W eill said scar tissue eventually form
adhesions In WUcox* stomach that looped aroui
hla Intestines, causing an Infection and sevt
abdominal pain.
Wetli said the Infection killed Wilcox.
"T h is type o f complication la a reasonable ai
foreseeable consequence o f gunshot wounds
the abdomen." Wctil said.

Mayan Descendants Seek N ew Start In Florida
INDIANTOWN. Fla. (UPI) - Descen
dants o f the ancient Mayan civilisation
are looking for a new start as Florida
farm workers but the federal government
Is debating whether the Indians are
political refugees or U lefri aliens.

renewed unless the polluting
ended. According to the DER.
the preferred way lo end what It
determined to be the pollution
problem was not to dump the
tre a te d e fflu e n t In to L a k e
Monroe but to spread It on land
west o f the d ty where It would
rcolate down to the aquifer.
ic aquifer Is Florida subterra­
nean reservoir providing water
for wells and springs, rivers and
•M D B H .p a g «S A

TODAY

�iA - E v u lo g Hers Id, U n it * , ft.

Msnday, fsb. H, I W

Victim's Mother:
CBS Movie Factual H

NATION

But Network Receives Complaints
About 'The Atlanta Child Murders'

INBRIEF

A T L A N T A (UP1) - Sitting in
her living room. Venus Taylor
sipped on a Pepsi, shed a few
tears and watched her daughter
murdered all over again.
Taylor, whose daughter Angel
Lanier. 12. was one o f the 28
victims o f "T h e Atlanta Child
M u rders." watched the CDS
television movie Sunday night
with no misgivings.
" I wanted to see It." said
Taylor, who viewed the movie
with her sister, daughter-in-law,
two grandchildren and a friend.
"It was OK. That’s what hap­
pened."
Civic leaders, claim ing the
movie Is filled with Inaccuracies
and casts doubt on the guilt of
convicted killer Wayne Williams,
were not so receptive to the
telecast o f the "docu-dram a"
based on the three-year killing

Foderal Houtlng Moro Segregated
Under Reagan, Newspaper Says
DALLAS (UPJ) — Under the Reagan administration,
federally subsidized housing has become more segregated,
and units housing minorities have been allowed to
deteriorate, a Dallas newspaper reported.
The Da//as M orning News conducted a 14-month study of
47 federal housing projects across the country and found
that nowhere were projects fully Integrated.
The New t Sunday reported the problem of segregation
has worsened since government efforts to ensure equal
housing for blacks and whiles were stepped up In the
mid-1060s.
The New t said conditions have declined more rapidly
under the Reagan administration, which has cul housing
investigations and made prosecution of fair housing
violations more difficult.

Tape: Contractor Pressured M oose
WASHINGTON (UP!) — A taped conversation featuring
the chairman o f General Dynamics Corp. suggests the
nl shipbuilding firm sought to use White House aide
win Meeae to pressure the Navy In a 1100 million
dispute, a published report says.
A tape recording at a 1981 conversation with David
Lewis was provided to The W tahlngton P o tt by P. Takla
Vellotis, a former Oenerai Dynamics vice president, now a
fugitive living In Greece.
The tape indicates the previously disclosed While House
meeting with Meeae. who Is awaiting Senate confirmation
as attorney general, was an attempt by the company to
pressure Navy Secretary John Lehman.
The conflict Involved 1100 million in cost overruns on
nuclear submarines that the firm said the Navy should
pay. Lehman rejected the claim and the Pentagon moved
lo force General Dynamics out o f the competition to build
more subs.
The tape does not establish actual Intervention by Meeae
nor that Lehman backed down in reaching an eventual
settlement with the company, the report indicated.

B

spree that left 28 young blacks
murdered and the city scarred.
"It was a bad enough tragedy
as It was. and It’s really bad to
make it a worse tragedy and
that’s what the movie does.”
said Joe Drolct. a prosecutor In
the trial o f Williams. 26.
A CBS executive in New York
said the network received about
50 calls during the broadcast to
complain about the way the film
depicted the events In Atlanta.
"Most o f them are negative,"
said George Schweitzer. CBS
vice president of communica­
tions.
But Schweitzer defended the
handling o f the film.
"W e believe that drama baaed
on fact Is a legitimate form." he
said. "It Is ■ form of literature
that goes back to Shakespeare
and back even to the Greeks."

Comical Contribution
D o u g M a r ie t t a , a w a r d - w in n in g s y n d ic a t e d c a r t o o n is t w ith
th e C h a rlo tte O b s e r v e r , r ig h t , p r e s e n t s o r ig in a l d r a w in g s fo r
p o lit ic a l c a r t o o n s a n d h is p o p u la r K u d z u c o m ic s t r ip to
S e m in o le C o m m u n it y C o lle g e P r e s id e n t E a r l W e ld o n .
M a r ie t t a d o n a te d th e d r a w in g s f o r th e c o lle g e 's /M a rc h )4
a u c t io n to r a is e m o n e y fo r s c h o la r s h ip s . / M a rie tta , w h o
g r a d u a te d fr o m S C C In 1967, a ls o s p o k e to | o u m a lls m a n d
la w s t u d ie s c l a s s e s F r id a y .

Alan Charged With Attacking Woman, Deputy
A 43-year-old Longwood man
who reportedly hit a woman In
the face and head and held a
pocket knife to her throat and
threatened to kill her has been
charged by Longwood police
who also allege an officer was
battered by the man.
Longwood police report meet­
ing with Dorothy Dillon at South
Seminole Community Hospital,
atate Road 434. Longwood, at
about 2 a.m. today. Ms. Dillon,
31, o f 000 Wlndemere Ave..
Longwood, reportedly told them
•he had been Injured In a fight
wllh a suspect who had threat­
ened to kill her.
When the officers arrived at
Ms. Dillon’s home, where the4
suspect also lives, the man
refused to let them in and would
not come out to talk with police,
the report Mid.
The suspect put his hand
through a glass pane on a door
and grabt&gt;ed Sgt. Russell Cohens
by his Jacket and threatened the
lawman, the report said. The
officer’s forehead and left hand
was rut by dying glass, accord­
ing to the report. Lt. Mark
Smock said today Cohens’ Inju­
ries were minor.
Eventually the man calmed
down and Invited police In.

was being held In lieu o f 85,000 turbance was over when she
bond.
arrived at the Delux Bar on
A ctio n R ep o rts
Sanford police charged a San- Southwest Road at about 11:20
ford man with uttering a forged p.m. Friday and one o f the
* Fires
Instrument after he allegedly persons allegedly Involved tn the
tried to cash s 829 check that dispute had left,
★ Courts
had been altered to 8299 at Sun
A witness reportedly told her
* Police Beat
Bank. First Street. Sanford, a that the other man Involved who
police report aald.
was still at the bar had branBank officials reported the dished a gun during the fight.
Cohens entered and brought the ofTenae to police and David Alvin The man reportedly took 4 gun
suspect out and arrested him. Lott. 19. o f Route 3. Box 507B. from under hla shirt and a knife
the report said.
was arrested at the bank at 2:50 from hla pocket and sunrnded it
Steven Th om pson, o f 900 p.m. Friday. He was being held to the deputy when she began lo
Wlndemere Ave., was charged tn lieu o f 85000 bond.
search him. a sheriffs report
with aggravated assault, battery
sold.
and battery on a police ofllrer at
A thief entered five businesses
Everett McClennon. 30. o f 426
3:21 a.m. today. He was being at Hunt Club Plaza. Hunt Club E. Broadway, was arrested at
WASHINGTON (UP1) — House Democrats do not have “ a
held In lieu o f 85.000 bond.
B o u le v a r d . A p o p k a , a ft e r 11:24 p.m. Friday. He was being
legal or factual k « to aland on " in refusing to seat an
Indiana Republican who claims he has won the nation's
breaking through the back o f a held tn lieu o f 85.000 bond.
TH E F T Ik FRAUD
longest-running House race, Republicans say.
Two men in unrelated Inci­ vacant ahop and entering the
DOT ARRBB TR
The GOP contends the 8th House District In southern
dents have been charged with others by breaking through ad­
Th e following persons have
Indiana Is being deprived unconstitutionally o f a voice In
using autom atic bank teller joining dry walla, a sheriffs b een a r r e s te d In S e m in o le
Congress because Its aeat Is being kept vacant while the
cards to allegedly steal cash and report said.
County on a charge o f driving
House Admlnstratton Committee decides who won the
The burglaries occurred be­ under the Influence:
a third haa been charged with
Nov. 6 election — McIntyre or one-term Democrat Prank
forgery for allegedly altering and tween 3 and 5:21 a.m. Friday —Douglas Edward Williams.i ■
28.
•rowpi
McCloskey.
and an Inventory o f missing o f 102 Lake Minnie Drive, San­
trying to cash a check.
San- i
Party spokesmen say McIntyre will file suit today in U.S.
Edward James Yurecko, 23. of m erch a n d ise h ad not been ford. was arrested at 84)3 p.
&gt;m . i
District Court asking that he should be allowed to take
203 W e k lva S p rin gs Road. calculated when a sheriffs re­ Friday, after hla car (ailedI t o l
office while the Administration Committee makes a
.airs* ]3
maintain a single lane on Lake
Apopka, was arrested at 1:10 port was written.
decision In the case.
Shops hit were; Muncheea.' Mary Boulevard. Sanford. He
p.m. Friday, at Wags Restau­
Democrats say It Is not clear who really won and the
rant. Altamonte Springs. He has Touch o f Claaa, New York Hair was also charged with driving^:
Investigation Is the prudent way to find out.
been charged with grand theft In Design. Ariza Pools and Hunt with a suspended license.
Republicans say that in 82 other contested elections, the
—James R. Dawson. 31. o f 7411
connection wllh the use ol a Club Laundry, the report sold.
House allowed the candidate with an election certificate to
Rivervlew Ave.. Sanford, at 2:10
stolen automatic teller card that
serve while the dispute was resolved.
Patricia Mull, 43. o f 884 Cutler a.m. Friday, after hla car
was reportedly used to withdraw
Road. Longwood. reported to Involved In a single ear accident j
8200 on Jan. 2. In Longwood.
in
deputies a suspect who had been on Orange Boulevard, west o f 1
Sheriffs deputies reported that
prior lo that, a suspect was living In her home moved be­ Sanford.
tween Jan. 31 and Friday, tak­ —Reginald Leon Burke. 27. of
photographed using the card on
ing 81,250 worth o f her house­ 801 E. Fourth St.. Sanford, was
two occasions at a Lee Road
hold Items Including two chain, arrested at 1:37 a.m. on Fourth
bank.
pot and pans and bedding, a S treet. Sanford, by Sanford
Yurecko was being held In lieu
police who reported hla car was
sheriffs report aald.
of 88,000 bond.
stuck, half on the curb and half
Terry Lee Workman. 31. of
By W illia m C otla rsll
which has been wooing conservative CubanIn the street. Burke reportedly
O U NC H AH O C
H elflow er R oad , A lta m o n te
TALLAHASSEE (Ul’ l) - Five north Florida
Americans In recent years.
A 30-year-old
kyeoi
Oviedo man haa became verbally abusive, “ vio­
Springs, was also charged with
legislators, working with a new public Initiative
” 1 sort o f feel like this country la founded on
w llh carrying a lent. uncooperative." and kicked
man
grand theft in connection with a been charged
petition campaign, are sponsoring a constitu­
English. 1 know It’s a mixture o f s lot o f people
similar ofTenae. He Is accused of| c o n c e a le d fir e a r m a ft e r a a police officer two times, a
and those people have a right to apeak any kind o f
tional amendment and a statute lo make English
using a stolen bank card lo sheriffs deputy who answered a police report said. He was also
the slate’s official language.
language they want to talk," said Kelly. "But I
withdraw 8600, deputies re­ disturbance call at a Sanford bar charged with restating arrest
also think that if you're going to live here, you
Prom a purely political standpoint, backers of
reportedly found « .22-caliber with violence and battery to a
ported.
should apeak the language. It's an Englishthe "English Language Amendment" and Its
police officer. He was being held
Workman wan arrested at hla gun In the man's possession.
Implementing legislation concede It is significant
speaking country."
The deputy reported the die- in lieu o f 86,000 bond.
home at 9:15 a.m. Friday and
that their districts are all far away from heavily
Kelly and Robinson denied there was any racist
Hispanic Dade and Broward Counties. Sponsors
Intent behind the bill, while admitting some
also concede they have little prospect o f passing
Spanish-speaking Floridians may be Insulted.
the amendment — which would take a two-thirds
"1 have nothing against anyone wanting to
vote o f the House and Senate, then a public
apeak German or .Spanish or French." said Kelly.
referendum — but hope the debate will heighten
“ I think they should retain their culture, while
Inlcreal In the petition campaign.
N A T IO N A L R E PO R T! Snow p.m.: Iowa, 7:37 a.m.. 7:46 p.m.j and thunderstorms later today
learning ours.”
"Language can be a very powerful tool." said
blanketed the Midwest today In N r t C an averal; highs. 1:16 ending after the wind s h ift Wind
The Florida English Campaign, headed by
Rep. Grover C. Robinson. D-I’ensacola, the
time to make a m e n of the ■ m.. 1:40 p.m.j Iowa. 7:28 a.m.. gusty and sees rough and conformer State Rep. Robert Melby or St. Petersburg,
primary sponsor o f the constitutional amendment
m o rn in g ru sh h ou r, w h ile 7:36 p.m.; m
highs. 74)1 fused near thunderstorms.
late last month announced formation of a petition
and Implementing bill. " A single language can
avalanches blocked a major a.m.. 6:13 p.m.; lows. 12:37
EETBNDBD PO RBCABTi
drive
to
bypaaa
the
Legislature
and
put
the
unite a nation or a state or a people."
Washington Interstate and Gulf a.;n.. 11:21 p.m.
Generally
fair and cold Wed­
language amendment on next year's ballot. That
Robinson said he "saw the divisive effects of
Coast storms Uttered Louisiana
A R E A FO R E C A ST: Cloudy nesday through Friday. Lows
would take signatures o f 334.404 registered
btllnquallam" last summer during a vacation in
wllh overturned mobile homes and windy w ith showers or mid and upper 30a. Highs tn the
voters — 8 percent o f the total vole In the past
Quebec, where French-speaking separatists have
and downed power lines. A thunderstorms likely during the 60s.
presidential election.
toe years sought a divorce from English-speaking
Pacific storm packing gale-force afternoon. High tn the low to mid
Robinson, who intends to sign the petition
Canada. He said verbal conflict has produced
w in d s t o o k a im a t th e
70a. Gusty south wind 16 to 25
himself, said he hoped hla bill would "get people
open hostility between Canadians in that pro­
Northweat. prom pting winter mph. Rain chance Increasing to
talking
about
It"
and
generate
more
signatures
vince.
storm warnings for heavy snow 60 percent. Tonight showers or
for Melby. He said Illinois. Indiana. Kentucky.
Robinson’s constitutional amendment states,
In Ihe mountains o f Oregon. th u n d e r s to r m s lik e ly th en
Ohio
and
Virginia
have
declared
English
their
" T h e English language shall be the official
W a sh in gto n and the Idaho becom ing partly cloudy and
official language.
language of Florida. The Legislature shall enforce
panahandle. A w inter storm turning colder. Low near 40.
Robinson sold designating on official language
the provisions or this section by appropriate
watch covered north central Wind shifting to northweat 18 to
would mean the state would not have to fund
general taw."
Idaho. At least 11 deaths have 25 mph then decreasing. Rain
bilingual education In the public schools or post
I f passed by the House and Senate, the
been blamed on the weather chance 60 percent this evening.
traffic signs In any language but English. He aald,
amendment would be on the general election
since Saturday: including four Tuesday mostly autuiy, breezy
how ever, the atate could publish business
b a llo t In N ovem b er 1986. Robinson also
people in traffic accidents on Icy a n d cold- H ig h lo w e r 50a.
brochures or teaching materials in any language
sponsored a statute declaring English the official
Iowa roodsta a fsrS : Maury O ssstlslt. O ffe rs :
Northwest w tn d lS to 30 mph.
It desired — It Just wouldn't have to do ao.
language, effective next Oct. T. That would
Frsawtc* ia lS sts. OWm s : Tarry M*rt aaS
B
O
A
T
D
IQ
F
O
R
E
C
A
S
T
:
St.
A
R
E
A
READ
O
M
M
(9
SJK-)l
we*
fin
"T
h
ere's
very
little
Incentive
for
anyone
to
require only a simple majority In the Legislature
learn a new language when the old one la printed temperature: 60; overnight low: Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 80
but could be vetoed* by Oov. E
Bob Graham, who
S I ; S u n d a y 's h i g h ; 7 0 ; miles — Wind southerly 16 to
right next to tt." Robinson sold.
has stated
his opposition.
ope
ed hla
I f the ELA makes It to the ballot next year — barometric pressure: 30.06; rela­ 20 knots later today. W ind
Both proposals were co-sponsored by Repo,
either by legislative action or through public tiv e h u m id ity : 77 percen t; shifting to west 30 to 30 knots
R. Smith or
of BrooksvUle, Everett A. Kelly
Charlesi K.
petition — federal law will require it to Be printed winds: southeast at 13 mph; tonight and continuing through
o f Tavares. Sam Mitchell o f Vernon and John
sunrise: 7:07 a.m.. sunset 6:13 Tuesday. 8ca 3 to 4 feet tntn Spanish In porta o f the state.
Lawta o f Jacksonville. None o f the sponsors la
creasing to 4 to 6 feet later today
p jn .
"T
h
a
t
would
be
Ironic."
sold
Robinson.
"B
u
t
If
South Florida, where Cuban-born voters
and 6 lo 10 fact
we can get It that far. that would be all right with
a major force In the past 20 years,
highs. 1:23 a.m , 1:48 Scattered to
m e."
la a member o f the Republican Party —

House Demos Shut Out OOF Rep

Lawmakers Sponsor Drive To Make
English State's Official Language

WEATHER

HOSPITAL
NOTES

Florida Cocaine Haul A Record

First Federal Names Manager
For Orange City Branch
Frank N. Mebane IU. 28, of
Sanford, haa been nam ed
branch manager o f First Fed­
eral o f Seminole's Orange City
office an Enterprise Road.
Mebane was a branch man­
ager with Sun Bank before
joining First Federal. Ha was
also w ith First Federal la
Brevard County before coming
to Seminole.

A g r a d u a t e o f F lo r id a
Southern University, Mebane
Uvea on Crystal Drive In San­
ford with hla wife and one
child.
"Mr. Mebane will
eral year* experience In I
rial institutions to First Feder­
a l's Volusia County opera­
t i o n s . " s a id T h o m a s E.
Buckley, president o f First
federal o f seminote.

\

MIAMI (UP1) Authorities
arUcd more U*m 4,600 pounds
o f cocaine In Florida from Jan.
19 to Feb. 3. an amount exceed­
ing ihe quantity confiscated by
federal agents nationwide tn
1961.
Officials are unsure what this
means. They wonder whether
they are In terce p tin g m ore
shipments or if simply more
d r u g s h a v e b e e n p a a e tn g
through the elate
re to soy we’re getting
love
"?d k
tit I couldn't really teU
better, but
you whatt'a causing It." aald Jtm

Dtngfelder. a spokesman for the
South Florida Task Force on
Drugs.
Improved Intelligence helps
warn lawmen about shipments,
such as the narcotics that were
being stockpiled In the Bahamas
Tor shipm ent to the United
States beginning Jan. 18. Capt.
Robert Lam on t o f the MctroOade County Organised Crime
Bureau said.
On that day. 500 pounds o f
high-grade cocaine was captured
on the open teas in what officials
■aid was Ihe largest bust In

marine patrol Malory. The next
day. 470 pounds were seized In
Cour
south Dade County,
and a day
later, officials confiscated 630
pounds at a Broward County
home.
O fficials looked at the in­
creased number o f seizures as a
m ixed blessing and said the
la rge sh ipm ents confiscated
served as a reminder that record
amounts o f cocnlne continue to
pour into the United
i V u tit more '* * * " 61
spent to atop the flow.

tu rn wi nsi
Mangey, February II. t m
Vet. 77. Ns. 147
by Tbs lasts*
tsc. MS M. Frame Ay*.
Fis. nni.

n wna. »!.*

M-flj • Mme*. %HMt 4
W A V n r .N IA Ir iM i
uj*

muss,

urn t

w arn « rnmrnt. u u n
Mum (M ) n s m ii .

-T

�Evsnlnq Herald. Sanford. FI.

Monday, Rt&gt;. It, 1W —1A

Local Job Office Has Woman Manager

J o b S e r v ic e m a n a g e r C h e r y l M a u g h a n , s t a n d in g , g o a t o v e r a
c o m p u t e r lis t in g w it h J o a n L o s le w lc z w h o h e a d s th e a g e n c y 's
jo b s fo r th e h a n d ic a p p e d p r o g r a m .__________________________________________

H era ld S t a f f W r ite r
When Cheryl Maughan. fresh
out o f Seminole High School,
showed up at the doorsteps o f
the state Job Service In Winter
Park In 1976 looking for work,
ahe had little Idea she would one
day be the manager o f a similar
office, helping others find Jobs.
At that time, the 18-year-old
woman was tired o f her short­
lived secretarial Jobs at a real
estate office and a plant nursery
and wanted som ething with
some security. She got It.
TWo months after she applied.
Mrs. Maughan landed a Job as a
clerk-typist at the Job Service's
Sanford office. Today, nine years
later, ahe la manager o f the office
and Its F ern Park branch,
overseeing a 20-member staff, a

•300,000 budget and six pro­
grams.
At 27, she’s the youngest Job
Service manager In the state,
accord in g to reg ion a l office
Director Ken Rlngdahl. She Is
also the first woman manager In
the 35-year history o f the San­
ford office.
Success came fast for Mrs.
Maughan. an 11-year resident of
the city. After being a clerktypist for two years, she was
promoted to Interviewer and
then to supervisor o f the Job
placement, offender placement
and food stamp programs. Final­
ly. on Feb. 1 she was named
manager of the Sanford opera­
tion.
“ I've been In the right place at
the right time and I give 101
percent." ahe said.

Longwood To Honor Lyman Principal;
Weigh Zoning, Annexation Requests
B y Jaws C asselb erry
H tra ld S t a ff W r it e r
Lyman High School Principal Carlton
Henley will receive an award from the
Longwood City Commission tonight In
‘ .recognition of hla being named one o f the
most outstanding high school principals In
the nation.
Henley received the honor last fall the
National Association o f Secondary School
‘ Principals.
, /The Longwood commission will also take
iip four rezoning requests and one annexa­
tion request when It meets at 7:30 p.m. In
‘ city hall. 175 W. Warren Ave.
Thomas Hutchens la asking to rezone Lota
' 1. 2. and 3 In Block 4. Entzmlnger'a
Addition No. I, on the west aide o f County
Road 427. from I-1 Industrial to C-3 general
commercial.
Joseph L. Abrams is requesting rezoning
for Lota 139, 261, and west half of lot 259
from R-3 residential to C-2 commercial
(south aide of Bay Street. |
Stella ZafTla la requesting Lot 17 and west
half o f Lot 18, Farmer’s Addition on the

south aide o f Evergreen Avenue be rezoned
from R-2 residential to C-2 commercial to
conform with the Future Land Use Map.
Robert C. Dietz la requesting rezoning for
the east 275 feet o f parcel 5A and all of
parcel 5C. south o f Overstreet Avenue, from
R-l A single family residential to R-2 duplex..
An annexation request by John B. Wilson,
for Lot 3, N elson's Lakevlew Heights.
County Road 427. will be considered.
Contractual negotiations between a t­
torneys for the city and the engineering
consultant firm o f Dyer. Riddle, Mills and
Precourt. Inc., w ill probably not be com­
pleted in time for the contract to be
approved at Monday night’s meeting as had
been hoped. Mayor Harvey Smcrllaon said.
Other Itema on the agenda Include:
• An easement request by Kenneth M.
Beane for to permit hla clients, WlllUun E.
and J. Winifred Nlcarry access to Range
Line Road across a 50 foot easement atrip
owned by the city.
• Used car dealer Bobby Clark concern­
ing a warning he received that he was In
violation o f the city's setback regulations.

• James Kirkland, 1514 Meadowlark St..
who la using fenced off city property to gain
access to hla backyard In Skylark.
• Final hearing for Florida Residential
Community‘a Tlberon Hills Phase III.
• Bill May o f Skylark to discuss lack o f
progress on traffic lot on 17-92 at Raven
Avenue: striping o f Raven Avenue; and tax
mlllagc.
• Gerald Korman will discuss responsibil­
ity for paytng for water sam ples.
• Southeast Properties. Inc. request for
sewage package plant on Range Line Road
to serve a restaurant
• Acting City Administrator Greg Mann­
ing will report on soil borings for tennis
courts In Reiter Park: Longwood Retirement
Center for which city Is withholding a
certificate o f occuapancy until sewer Im­
provements are completed.
■ Ordinance listing qualifications for city
administrator
• Ordinance requiring approval by city
commission on all city contracts.
• Ordinance requiring proper accounting
for building fees.

CALENDAR
M O N D A T .F U .li

Georgia and South Carolina
lagged behind, government fig­
ures show.

Ssnford-Semlnole Art Assn.. 7
p .m ., S a n fo rd C h a m b er o f
Commerce. Slide presentation
by Maitland artist Dorothy Hales
on various art techniques.
Weklva Wom an’ s Dub. 7:30
i.m.. home o f Terry Louder.'307
ntley Drive. Speaker from
A d sm W alsh M issing Child
Foundation.
the overall turnout figures for
Bowling league for mentally
Mississippi “ startling."
handicapped. 4-5:45 p.m.. Alta­
He said that If one considers monte Lanes. 280 Douglas Ave.
the traditional socio-economic Call 862-2500 for Information.
Re bos Club A A . noon and 5:30
and demographic factors that
Influence turnout — education, p.m.. dosed. 8 p.m.. step. 130
percentage o f women In tradi­ Normandy Road, Casselberry.
tional roles, percent o f black Clean Air Reboa at noon, closed.
voters — “ Mississippi ought to
Apopka A lco h o lics A n on y­
be on the bottom ."
mous. 8 p.m.. dosed. Apopka
E p is c o p a l C h u rc h . 815
"Obviously, you have some­ Highland.
thing confounding the normal
Al-Anon Step and Study. 8
relatlona. I favor a political
.. Casselberry Senior Center.
explanation for It,” said Beck,
N. Triplet Drive.
w h o s tre s s e d th a t w ith o u t,
Sanford A A. B p.m.. dosed.
breaking down voters by at­ 1201W. First St.
titude. residence and other such
Fellowship Group AA. senior
factors It was difficult to clearly citizens, 8 p.m., closed, 200 N.
assess the overall figures.
Lake Triplet Drive, Casselberry.

A survey o f those 18 and older
— done two weeks after the
election by the Census Bureau
and Just released — shows the
.eight states had turnouts rangfrom Mississippi's down to
4 percent In Oeorgla and
South Carolina’s 48.0 percent.

Beck theorized that the high
turnout In Mississippi might
have to do with “ the nature o f
competition for races below the
p resid en tia l le v e l ... and a
perception among voters that
their vote could make a dif­
ference.”

C ensus officia ls, h ow ever,
‘ ca u tio n e d , th at b ecau se o f
built-in sampling error, a com ­
parison o f states In which turn­
out was similar la difficult and
riaky- They also atremed the
.Oaturc at the Census survey
usually results In turnout figures
about fiv e points above the
actual voting level.

He also said It could be due to
the growth o f the Republican
Party In Mississippi — which
could mean better OOP can­
didates, better OOP recruitment,
more political competition and
ultimately more voters going to
the pells.

a

Nationally, the Census Bureau
said. 59.9 percent o f the vot­
ing-age population reported they
'h ad voted In the 1984 presi­
dential election — an increase o f
0.7 percentage points over the
JBBOand 1078 elections.

K

O th e r w is e In th e r e g io n .
Census said, the turnout broke
dow n In the follow in g way.
(Comparisons are given only if
the change was statistically sig­
nificant from I860 to 1064.)
O verall turnout.
60.6 Dercent compared to 56.4

number o f people placed In Jobs,
she said one of her main con­
cerns ts cleaning up what ahe
calls the agency's "im age pro­
blem ."
The problem, she said. Is th j
Job Service la perceived largely
by the business community as a
trafficker tn menial tasks.
“ W e still have a problem tn
getting professional Jobs from
the business community.” Mrs.
Maughan said.
W hile the Job Service has a
smorgaaboard o f clerical and
service Job openings. It has very
few professional Jobs to offer,
even though there are many
Inquiries for them. T o correct
that, she has started a resume
forw a rd in g service, w h ereb y
personnel officers send her Job
op en in g s In such fie ld s as
engineering and she sends them
resumes o f interested applicants.
In addition to helping veter­
ans. students and former Jail
Inmates find Jobs, she said the
office has a targeted tax program
where businesses are given tax
breaks for hiring people from the
Job Service.
She sees her role as largely one
of getting the message out about
the Job Service. But she also
said her promotion lo manager
after her short tenure with the
agency is a message within Itself
to the more than 8.000 people
who come to her office each year
looking for a Job — a position she
was In not that long ago.
"I believe In what I'm doing. I
think anybody can succeed If
they really want to."

OW Mi l s

I IlS lIl illK T ?

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
l r P h . 322-0285

J

2 5 7 5 S . F r c i e h A v e ., S a n fo rd

xA u to- Ow ners insurance
I Ifr. Ilnmr. tar. Htulnov One nzmr

Mississippi Tops
Voter Turnout
In The Southeast

F lo r id a 's v o te rs In clu d e d
males. 50.9 percent: females,
55.5 percent; whiles, 55.5 per­
cent; blacks. 43.2 percent; and
. Spanish origin. 29.1 percent.

1lo ilK

i

Florid a Ranks Sixth

U P l Sou th ern C o rresp oa d sa t
W A S H I N G T O N (U P IJ Florida was sixth among eight
Southeastern states In overall
voter turnout with 53.3 percent
In November’ s presidential elec­
tion. according to a newly re­
leased survey, while Mississippi,
by far. had the highest turnout
with 09.3 percent.

Her superiors credit her en­
thusiasm and motivation for her
meteoric rise up the bureau­
cratic ladder.
"S h e’s one o f our best," said
Gordon Punshon, o f the Job
Service's Bureau o f Operations
In Tallahassee. "S h e has the
experience and we think she's
going to do a great Job."
R ln g d a h l. her Im m e d ia te
supervisor, said her Involvement
with business and community
leaders has brought greater co­
operation between the public
and private sectors and boosted
the Job program In Sanford.
"I'm always positive and try to
avoid the negative and Cm not
your typical bureaucrat," Mrs.
Maughan said. "I g o out (here
and ask these people. 'Your
money Is paying for our Jobs.
What suggestions do you have to
Improve our program?"*
Communication and public
relations la what It takes to keep
a public social program going
d u rin g these days o f fiscal
austerity. Mrs. Maughan said.
Although President Reagan's
federal budgets keep leaving less
and leas money for social pro­
grams. Mrs. Maughan said the
Job Service will still be able lo
do Its Job — help find work for
about 2,000 people a year In
Seminole County.
The office's 8300,000 budget
will not be cut through 1986.
she said. And with a relatively
low county unemployment rate
o f 5.2 percent, the office should
be able to function without
economic pressure.
While her goal Is to boost the

.it
C e n tr a l F lo r id a R e g io n a l
Scholastic Art Awards Exhib­
ition featuring art and photo­
graphy by middle and senior
n ig h s c h o o l s t u d e n t s o f
Seminole, Brevard. Orange and
Osceola counties. Robinson's.,
Altamonte Mall. Feb. 9-24. 10
s.m. to 9 p.m.. weekdays and
noon to 5:30 p.m. Sundays.
Orlando Area Chapter o f the
N a t io n a l O r g a n iz a t io n fo r
Women. 5:30-8:30 p.m.
Quarter Restaurant.
Speaker Orlando City Commis­
sioner Mabel Butler. Open to the
public.
Seminole County Aaaociation
for Children and Adulta with
Learning Disabilities (gifted and
alow learning children|. 7:30
p m.. Longwood City Hall. I7S
W. Warren St., Longwood. Bruce
Henry, child psychiatrist and
clinical director for adolescent
development at South Seminole
Community Hospital, will speak
on hyperactivity. Mrettngi ate
open to the public.

materials.
Sanford Lions Club. 12:05
p.m.. Holiday Inn. Interstate 4.
Sanford.
O r e s t D e c is io n s , 8 -w c e k
foreign policy series lead by
J a m es L. W h itm ore, retired
avals lion consultant to the U iL
governm ent, 1:30-3:30 p.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center. 300
N . L a k e T r ip le t D r iv e .
Casselberry. Open to the public.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St., Sanford. 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m. F lorida HospitalAltamonte Branch. 601 E. Alta­
monte Ave., 11 a.m. to 7 p.m
Sanford Lions Club, noon.
Holiday Inn.
Sanford Toastmasters. 7:15
s.m.. Season's restaurant. 2565
S. French Ave.
Sanford Optimist D u b. 11:45
a.m.. Western Slzxlln Restau­
rant. Sanford.
Sanford AA. 5:30, dosed dis­
cussion. and 8 p.m.. open dis­
cussion. 1201W. First St.
Re bos Club AA. noon and 5:30
m.. dosed. 8 p.m., step, 130
ormandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rcbos D ub. noon,
dosed.

8

24-Hour A A group
open discussion. 8 p.n
and Bay Streets. Sanford.
17-92 Oroup A A , 8 p.m.,
c lo s e d , M e s s ia h L u th e r a n
Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road.
O vereaten Anonymous, open,
7:30 p.m.. Florida Power ft
Light. 301 &amp; Myrtle Ave.. San­
ford.

It all.

FREE S P IN A L E V A L U A T IO N
WMNMM SIGNALS OFfWCtKD MOVES
1. Frequent Headaches
a. Low Back or Hip Pain
a . O lulnaaa o r Loaa o l Sloep
4. Num bness o f Hands or Fast
B. Nervousness
B. Nack Pain or 8 llffn a ss
7. Arm and Shoulder Pain

JIMANt)O RVi

S e t

’f o c ip

2 o

u e

*.

S h jo u /

Charm Your Sweetheart With Som ethin!
Special .A BALLO O N S O U Q C m

Balloon Magic
For Every Rseasn an! Cvsry Season
P.0. BOX 174 • SANFORD, FL UTTl

W B D H M D A Y .fS B . I S
Full Oospel Business Men's
F e llo w s h ip In t e r n a tio n a l
breakfast meeting. 6:30 a.m.,
Holiday Inn. State Road 436 and
W y m o r e R o a d . A lt a m o n t e
Springs. For details call 656Ootden Age Games Executive
C om m ittee, 8 a.m .. G reater
Sanford Chamber o f Comm erce.
Central Florida Blood Bank
*i«n,ii,iijj County ffw K h i 1302
B. Second SC, Sanford. 9 a.m. to
6 p .m . F l o r i d a H o s p i t a l Altamonte Branch. 11 a.m. to 7

Treating

ia m O verall 56.5
la. SS p e rc e n t;
sreent; wmte.59.1
47.2 percent

ir n h lo m
uif prooitm

• is A

MeefteMM and drag d^oodeaey era

Can 1-800-A LC O H O L NOW

State Vntverstty. called

percent; black, S I .4 percent.

n

�E v e n in g H e r a ld
(UtPS 4II-M0)
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Code 305-322 2611 or 831 0903
Monday, February 11, 1W5-4A
W sy n s 0 . D oyle, Publisher
Tho rn** G io rd a n o , M anaging E d ito r
M elvin A d k in s, A d vartisin g D irecto r

Itfjfnr Ih-livrry W rrk, S I 10. Month. S4.75: 3 Mnnthv
• 14 25. fl Month*. 127.00; Yr-ar. $51 0 0 By Mail Wrrk.
• 1.50: Month. M W 3 Month* $18 (X). tl Month* $32 50
Vrur. $60 00

Sanford Police
Accident Probe
Handled Properly
T h e r e w e h ave 11. S anford p o llre officers
h a ve m a d e It a practice In the past to d riv e
th eir patrol cars w ith the headlights turned
ofT, osten sib ly for a d va n ta g e In the ev en t th ey
happ en ed on to a b u rglary or oth er crim e In
progress.
S om etim es, though. It w as don e w h ile
night-shift officers, app a ren tly w ith n oth in g
b etter to do. w ere p la y in g "c a t and m o u s e "
ga m es, a cco rd in g to an Internal Investigation.
A p p a re n tly the o fficers drove around c ity
streets try in g to evad e or find each oth er In a
hide and seek fashion.
T h e n , th e In e v ita b le . T w o patrol cars
crashed head-on and, ulthough the In vestiga ­
tion Indicates It ca n 't be proved, the In­
ve stig a tin g officer says h e 's co n vin ced the
g am e-p la yin g w as In progress and the patrol
ca rs' headligh ts w ere o ff Just before the
accid en t occurred,
W h a t a ls o e v o lv e d fro m that In tern a l
accid en t Investigation Is that another nightsh ift o ffice r w ork in g the sam e shift on the day
the accident occurred fired ofT a firecracker at
a lieu ten a n t's car. T h e Investigation d id n 't
p ro v e such even ts are com m on practice
d u rin g night-shift tours, but, again, d o cu ­
m en ts from the probe and sw orn officers'
statem en ts Indicate such a ctivity has not
been rare.
O kay, gentlem en, shape up. Y o u 'v e got a
p olice c h ie f w h o says he probably w ill retire
.In a cou p le o f years — a fter 37 years w ith the
departm en t. N o sense em barrassing him any
further.
. It w ould be unreasonable to think the police
c h ie f kn ow s ev ery th in g his m en do around
the clock, especially du rin g night tours. He
has to rely on his shift su pervisors to keep
him posted. In this case, a shift lleutcntant
w as h im se lf Involved In the a rcld en t, a l­
thou gh he denied there w as any horseplay.
T o h is credit, P olice C h ie f Ben B utler pulled
no punches. In fact, he becam e suspicious
about h o w the patrol cars m igh t h ave co llided
and Initiated the Internal Investigation.
T o th e fu rth er credit o f B utler's depart­
m en t, Det. Sgt. Bill Hasson, the officer w h o
In vestigated the entire m ess, also pulled no
u nches, Indeed. In his report Hasson says
e ’s co n vin c ed both officers w ere responsible
for the accident through their negligence and
carelessness, and he recom m en ded both be
a p p rop riately punished.

K

T h e y w ere. A ll th in g s considered, the
10-day s u s p e n s io n w ith o u t puy le v e le d
a gain st the tw o m en In volved In the accident
should shake them up and restore som e
d ecoru m on the night shift.
B u tler says If It doesn 't, and the fun and
m es continue, h e's co m in g dow n a lot
rder n ext tim e.

R

T h e c h ie f also says h e 's Issuing a m em o
w a rn in g his m en not to d riv e their patrol cars
w ith ou t the h ead ligh ts on du rin g hours o f
darkness, except In special circum stances.
A n d h e 's Issued a w ritten reprim and against
the o fficer w h o shot o ff the firecracker, w ith a
prom ise any such a ctivity In the future w ill be
dealt w ith m ore severely, possibly Im m edlu ie
dism issal.
Em barrassing as w e 'r e certutn the en tire
ep isod e w as to B utler and the rest o f his m en,
and w om en In the departm en t, It's still to his
credit and to H asson's cred it that the Issue
w as handled professionally and forth righ tly.

M IRY'S

DONALD LAMBRO

Military Pensions Are Surely A Scandal
W ASHINGTON Budget Director David
Stockman has bravely told Congress what
lawmakers have known for decades but are too
cow ardly to say outright: The m ilitary's
20-year-an d -ou t re tire m e n t system Is a
"scandal."
Stockman, deeply frustrated during the past
four years by the almost-lmpenetrable obstacles
— In Congress and within the admlnstratlon —
to cutting wasteful federal spending, vented his
pent-up anger before a stunned Senate Budget
Committee.
"It's a scandal — it's an outrage," he told the
assembled senators — who had never heard any
government official, let alone a budget director,
use such blunt language to describe the military
pension program. "W h e n push comes to
shove." he said, "they'll give up on security
before they'll give upon retirement."
T h ere is som eth ing Incongruous about
private-sector taxpayers In their 50s. 60s and
older working to pay the military pensions of
relatively young men and women who are
allowed to retire In their late 30s and early 40s.

totaled 116.2 billion. T w o years later, the yearly
cost has climbed to 9 18.3 billion.
If this growth rate Is not curbed, the Grace
Commission calculates, yearly pension outlays
will rise to 9149.6 billion by the year 2022. And
o f this total increase. 934.6 billon, or 25.fT
percent. Is expected to result from automatic
annual Increases for Inflation.
This is why the administration Is merely
asking the military — which last month received
a 4 percent pay raise — to forego next year's
cost-of-living Increase and thus help cut a
half-billion dollars from the deficit.
But deeper changes arc needed If the pension
scandal Is to be cleaned up.
Congresa must raise the eligibility age for
future military personnel to at least 30 years o f
service, ft must cut all future Inflation adjust­
ments and must modestly Increase payroll
contributions.
Americans want their armed services to be
well-paid for performing a difficult and often
dangerous Job. But Stockman's right: Today's
military pension system Is truly a scandal.

With the federal government plunging ever
deeper Into debt, how can Congress Justify a
retirement system that allows our best military
people to retire at one-half their pay after a mere
20 years o f service? Worse, that retirement can
come as early as age 37. and In some cases,
even earlier.
Obviously, this is an offer that is hard to
refuse, and half o f all nondtsabled officers and
enlisted retirees leave the military after 20 to 21
years of service.
"T h e military pension scheme Is not simply
generous, It Is lavish." says Democrat Lea Aapin
of Wisconsin, the new chairman o f the House
Armed Services Committee.
A few years ago. Aspln found three Navy men
who had retired as early as age 35. He
calculated that by the time they reach normal
retirement age. they each will have received
more than one-third o f a million dollars In
pension payments. "This Is straining generosity
a wee bit." he said at the time.
T o understand the system's furious growth.
**"n*irirr this: fn fiscal 1983. military pensions

WASHINGTON WORLD

DO N GRAFF

k WlHt

Was Will
Rogers
Right?
B y A rn old Bawlalak
U PI Settlor E d itor
WASHINGTON (UPII - One Dem­
ocrat who says he Isn't discouraged
about the party’s recent reverses Is
Rep. Claude Pepper, who Is about
the only person left In Congresa who
remembers the election o f 1928.
That, Pepper recently recalled In a
National Press Club speech, was
when Democratic presidential can­
didate Al Smith was clobbered by
Republican Herbert Hoover. 444-87,
In the electoral vote, and many
people were saying the GOP. having
broken the Solid South, was un­
beatable.
Well, said the 84-year-old Flori­
dian. it was only four short years
later that Franklin D. Roosevelt
swept Into the White House and the
Democrats were In control o f Con­
gress. n dominance they held for 20
years.
Pepper discounted reports o f his
party's imminent demise, noting
that while the Republicans hold the
presidency and slim control o f the
senate, the Democrats have a "big
margin In the House, two-thirds ol
lhr governorships and legislatures.But Pepper Is not just blindly
optimistic about Democratic pro­
spects. What the party needs to hnd
In the next four years, he said, Is "a
new face, a hearty voire, o darning
spirit ... that will lead us to the
White House.”
He did not say so. but It seems
likely that Pepper was talking about
reinventing FDR.
R o o s e v e lt and h is p o lit ic a l
wizards. Louis Howe and James
Farley, moved Into the vacruum left
by Smith's crushing defeat, and
organitrd an unstoppable campaign
for the 1932 nomination.
Then, having won It. he Imposed
Ills policies on the party, which was
so badly split that It had taken more
than 100 convention ballots to find
a nominee eight years before.
It la hard to sre how the Demo­
crats ran expect to return to the
W hltr House In the forseeable
future. The same week that Pepper
predicted Democrats would be back
In 1988, the party's national com ­
mittee gathered to elect a new
chairman who was supposed to heal
the wounda and pick up the pieces
left by last November's disaster.
The upshot of Paul Kirk's election
was that Southerners. Westerners
and blacks went home mad. leaving
the public Impression that Will
Rogers would still be right today In
saying. "1 belong to no organized
political party. I am a Democrat."

On The
LDCs
And Us

WORST ufctfii1

S'
% .%,&lt;•
Sf* \
r

■j

\ f?

z&gt; 1

.

_ -3 H

-

1

ROBERT WAGMAN

Budget Cuts Hit Poor
W A S H IN G TO N fN E A ) The
Reagan administration Is pluying up
the fact that Its proposed 1986
budget would make significant cuts
In programs which benefit thr
middle class.
The Idea is that since the poor
shouldered rpuny of the cuts In
Reagan's first budget four years
ago. It's now the wealthier folks'
turn.
However, while thd budget would
make major cuts in middle-class
programs. It ulso would make sharp
new cuts In programs affecting the
poor.
For example, thr Whltr House
proposes a 9180 million cut In Aid
to F a m ilie s w ith D e p e n d e n t
Children — the main cash-welfare
p ro g ra m — by fr e e x ln g a d ­
ministrative grants to the states that
run the program. In addition, an
unmarried minor mother couldn't
leave her parents' home to qualify
for benefits, and paym ents to
able-bodied parents whose youngest
child is 16 or older would be
eliminated.
Child-nutrition outlays would be
cut by 9654 million by dropping a
cost-of-living Increase In payments
for school breakfasts and lunches,
and by excluding those who earn
more than 919.000 for a family of
four.
The food-stamp program would
be the exception: It would be set al
about 911.9 billion — up nearly
9100 million from this year, due to
an expected Increase In the monthly
allocations.
As for the federal-local Medicaid
program, which Is aimed at the
disadvantaged, the new budget
would cap federal payments to the
states at 91.3 billion less than the)
hey
would receive under current law. It
would limit future Increases to the
rate of medical Inflation.
Operating aid for local public-

housing authorities, which are al­
ready In fiscal trouble, would be set
at 91 billion — a 9240 million cut.
Available cosh to repair aging hous­
ing projects would be reduced by
about three-quarters, und subsidies
for thousands o f vacunt apartments
would end.
In his 1981 budget, Reagan halted
most subsidlzed-houslng construc­
tion. Instead, the poor were given
rent vouchers so they could seek
housing In the p rivate rental
market. In the new budget, the
administration proposes to almost
eliminate rent vouchers — cutting
them from 100.000 to 3.500 —
while maintaining a freeze on rent
subsidies.
The new budget also seeks to kill
other programs aimed almost solely
ul the (joor. Reagun Is again trying
to kill the Legal Services Corp.,
which gives legal aid to the poor,
thus saving 9282 million. The Job
Corps, which trains young workers,
wopld tie eliminated, saving 91.3
billion aver three years. The workincentive program, which prepares
welfare recipients for Jobs, also
would be dropped.
Some of the cuts are less appar­
ent. Many programs aimed ut the
poor would be frozen at current
levels — but these programs were
hit by the sweeping reductions In
the 1981 budget.
For example, funding for WIC — a
food program for women. Infants
and children — would continue to
aid about 3 million recipients per
m o n th . L o w -In c o m e e n e r g y
assistance would remain at 92.1
billion and black-lung benefits for
disabled coal miners would be
frozen at current levels. However,
due to Inflation and the greater
number or applicants, all of these
freezes amount to reductions.

You've probably already heard
thr bad news on U.S. trade — an
all-time record deficit for 1984 of
9123.3 billion by the Commerce
Department's reckoning.
The Stale Department, however,
has somewhat better news In Its
analysis o f our trade relations with
one group o f nations — the lessdeveloped countries, or LDCa.
We're running a deficit with the
LDCs as a group. In part because
some pretty formidable economies
a re s t ill c a te g o r is e d as lessdeveloped. Taiwan, for example,
which alone accounted for 911.1
billion o f the total 1984 deficit. Also,
trade with the LDCs. no leas than
with the major Industrial economies
o f Japan and Western Europe. Is
distorted by a persistently highpriced dollar.
But the deficit with the LDCs Is
manageable, and the overall trading
rela tio n sh ip Is expan din g and
mutually beneficial.
Stale's breakdown is not as up to
date as the latest Commerce deficit
figure- going only through 1983.
But It shows that during the past
d e c a d e , t h e s h a r e o f U .S .
manufactured exports absorbed by
the LDCs has Increased by a third,
reaching 975 billion, roughly 38
percent o f the total. In 1983 and
exceeding sales to the Japanese and
Europeans combined.
The figures are even better for
agricultural exports. The LDCs In
1983 look 915 billion worth. This Is
out of a total of 936 billion In world
sales and Includes some 70 percent
of U.S. wheal and two-thirds o f rice
exports.
In what may be the understate­
ment of the decade, the State report
observes that the rapid expansion of
this market for U.S. products la In
pari "a result o f post-1973 Income
g r o w t h In th e o il- p r o d u c in g
countries."
That Is also a factor In the rapid
growth In U.S. purchases from
LDCs. which hit 9103 billion In
1983. Still, business Is business,
and there is more to this part o f the
story than oil. Over a four-year
period, the LDCs have Increased
their sales of manufactured goods In
the U.S. market by 80 percent.
In several key raw materials.
Imports from the LDCs are critical
to the functioning o f the U.S.
economy. These countries account
for more than half the U.S. supply o f
tungsten, bauxite, tin and cobalt.
The United Stales Is a major
source o f capital, In the form o f both
Investment and loans.

JACK ANDiRSON

Nothing New About 'Star Wars^
W A S H IN G T O N P r e s id e n t
Reagan's "Star W ars" defense plan
won’t be limited lo destruction of
Incoming Soviet missiles. The Pen­
tagon also wants the capability to
blind the Soviets In the crucial early
stages of a nuclear exchange by
neutralizing their spy satellites,
which keep tabs on U.S. ships and
other retaliatory forces.
Th r truth is that "Star W ars" Is
nothing new. Both sides have had
military satellites In space for years.
Indeed. Pentagon analysts have
been working out priorities for the
various kinds o f Soviet satellites
that would have to be knocked out.

"C x c u m mo/ / work to r A nn L o n d o n D o you
p ro to r D oing cuddtod, or... 7 "

According lo a secret General Ac­
counting Office study obtained by
my associate Dale Van Atta, there
are four types o f Soviet spy satellites
that would have to be destroyed.
Here are the satellites and the
reasons they qualify for top priority:
— RORSAT (radar ocean recon­
naissance satellite): The GAO report

Uracrtbca the deployment In "Star
Wars" Isnguage. "These satellites
provide rest-lim e tracking snd
targeting d a is to users In the
vicinity o f the target or non-realtime data to central control points,"
the report explains.
In this context, "real-tim e" means
that the location o f an American
ship la known to Soviet monitors In
the area the second the satellite
p ic k s It u p . It ta k e s lo n g e r
("non-real-tlme") If the Soviet ships
a ren 't m on itorin g the satellite
themselves and the Information
must get to them by way o f a
Moscow clearinghouse.
How good Is the Soviet RORSAT?
The O A O report says tt “ can
probably detect destroyer-size ships
in good weather and aircraft-car­
rier-size ships — or smaller ships In
close proximity to each other — In
rough seas."
— B O R S A T (e le c t r o n ic in ­
telligence ocean reconnaissance
satellite): "These satellites are used

with RORSATs for detection and
tracking o f naval veaaela In open or
coastal waters," the OAO report
states, adding:
"The EORSAT la possibly the
Soviet apace-baaed system which la
moat capable of aea target detection.
It provides targeting data of about
2- kilometer accuracy to anti-ship
mtseile platforms (on other ships,
helicopters. elc.|. In land or air
warfare, It would also be used to
detect airborne warning and control
systems, radar sites and operating
airfields."
— E L IN T -3 (th ird -g en era tion
electronic Intelligence satellite);
"These satellites operate In a re­
cord-playback mode and can locate
pulsed emitters to a beat accuracy o f
about 10 kilometers." the secret
report explains. They can ptek up
anything that sends out s radio
signal, whether It's a radio station
or a hand-held transmitter, and
locals tt srtthln 10 m o m en ta an the
first orbit.

"T h e y can detect radars and
operating airfields If using pulsed;
emitters, snd possibly provide an*
after-the-fact assessment o f the
location o f airborne warnings and
control systems. Repeated
increase accuracy and th
the i
threat to U.S. forces. These satellites
historically have been used aa a
three-satellite constellation and
support sea. air or land warfare."
— Advanced ELI NT: Pentagon
Intelligence experts anticipate de­
ployment o f a new EL1NT system by
the end o f 1965.
"O f particular concern." the GAO
srams, "are Improvements tn the
data resolution (accu racy), the
storage capacity and
ability to transmit data In
to tactical users." Tactical
the units that are actually out
the b a ttle fie ld , aa op p osed to
strati
Jfp r

from their home bases

�SPORTS

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Monday, Fob. 11,1W -SA

Lyman Boots Brantley; Vero Next
Lady Greyhounds G et 5 Unanswered Goals To Snatch District Title

Marietta,
Richardson
4*
_
, ■
,
. .
Savor Friday s Upsets

Lym an's Lady Greyhounds found
themselves in an unfamiliar position

_
, . _
, „ . .
.
Seminole County s basketball boys have tasted
the rubber of Volusia County fast break, all year
long. Volusia has the best basketball its had In a
f t * « ® e . Seabreeae Is ranked No. 1 in the Mate
3A poll while DeLand Is No. 6 In the 4A poll.
Mainland was ranked earlier In the year and
^ rw Jl *? Pret,y S00*1-t0°All four o f those teams have pretty much had
their way with the likes o f Seminole. Lake Mary,
Lyman. Lake Brantley and Lake Howell this year,
It's not that the county teams are that bad. It's
Just that Volusia s Big 4 are that good.
O f all the encounters Involving Volusia and
Seminole this year prior to Friday, all Seminole
could offer was a Seminole victory over Spruce
Creek. There had been some close ones but on
the whole. Volusia had kicked the air out o f

scored the first goal o f the match but excellent group of athletes," Lyman
that was all Lyman's defense would coach Tom Barnes said. "I expect a
l U nd for and IU explosive offense real tough match Tuesday."
cam e back with five unanswered
Vero Beach, which advanced with a
R(mU to cUlm . 5-l victory In the 3-0 win over Vero Beach St. Edwards
D istrict 3 Tournam ent finals at In the District 4 championship. Is led
Lym an High.
by high-scoring Lisa Pickle. In the
T h e victory ran Lym an’s unbeaten Burger K in g Tournam ent. Pickle
s t r e a k to 20 th is s e a s o n and pumped In toumament-hlgh 11 goals
advanced the Lady Greyhounds to In three games.
the Region 2 championship against
Th e winner of Tuesday night's
Vero Beach High. Lyman will host match advances to the Section 1
that match Tuesday night at 6.
playoff. Lyman wilt play an away
Lym an has played Vero Beach match In the sectional, at either the
twice this season and both Umes Jacksonville or Gainesville area. If It
Cam e out on top. 5-1 In the first wins Tuesday. The Lady Greyhounds
round o f the Burger King Touma- are looking to get back In the state
ment. and 5-2 at Vero Beach In finals after finishing second In the

state a year ago.
In Saturday's district finals. Lake
Brantley Jumped out to a 1-0 lead 17
minutes Into the match when Pam
Anderson booted In a free kick from
30 yards out. It was Just the second
time this season Lym an haa trailed In
a game. Gainesville BuchhoU had
taken the lead over Lyman In the
Burger King finals only to see Lyman
score two minutes later.
Lym an came bock to tie It at M at
halftime when Kim Mitchell scored
with 10 minutes left In the first half.
Dawn Boy esc n lofted a shot over
the head of Brantley's keeper early In
the second half to give Lyman a 3*1
lead and the Lady Greyhounds never
looked back from that moment on as
they tacked on four more goats.
Mitchell's second goal o f the match
made It 3-1. Allison W right's goal
upped the lead to 4-1 and Stacey
Roy's score made the (Inal 5-1. For
Wright, the only senior on the team.

It was her first goal o f the season.
Lym an took 31 shots on goal
Saturday compared to nine for the
L a d y Patriots w h o d id n 't have
another serious threat after A n ­
derson's goal.
,
"T h e y (Lake Brantley) really never
came close again after that goal,”
Barnes said. "Our defense did a good
Job o f containing them the rest of the
w a y ."
Barnes said Lym an's top defenders
Saturday Included the always-rrliabfe
Karen Abemethy, Diana Boyesen.
Kellie Straw and Wright.
Lyman was playing without Junior
forward Sheila Mandy (20 goals) who
Barnes hopes to have back for
T u es d a y ’ s match. Mandy has a
pulled hamstring. Playing In Mandy‘s
place was freshman Bonnl Sleeves.
"S h e started and played the entire
m atch," Barnes said o f Sleeves. "And
she did an outstanding Job."

Bizarre Twist:
SCC Boosts FJe
LAKE CITY — The Mid-Florida Conference race
has taken a bltarro twist. A ll season long
Seminole Community College's Raiders have
waged a basketball war with Florida Junior
College. The Raiders and Stars battled evenly
through the first 10 games o f the Mld-Florlda
Conference schedule, each winning eight.
Then the Raiders slipped, losing at Santa Fe
Wednesday and Lake City Saturday. And the
Stars survived, they escaped with a one-point win
over St. Johns River and tapped Valencia
Saturday.
With the two wins and a 10-2 record, they have
clinched a tie for the MFC. Seminole. Lake City
and Daytona Beach are all 8-4. If FJC wins one of
Its last two games or the other three lose one
more. It Is the champion and receives an
automatic berth In the slate tournament. The
Stars host Lake City Wednesday and Santa Fe
Saturday.
Which puts the Raiders In a strange position.
Even though they still have an outside chance of
tying for the conference title, they must pul that
behind them since a lie would be a loss since FJC
has beaten them twice.
"W e have to cheer for Florida Junior." said
____ MillBill
M_______
im don't
coach
PayneI-.................
Sunday night. "U
"W/»
e a
sure
want lo go back to Lake City for the conference
tournament. I don't care If we host It, but I auto
don't want lo g o back there."
Payne said nc considers Lake City the hottest
team In the conference right now. If FJC wins the
MFC, the rest o f the teams do battle for thp
division's second berth to the state tournament.
The team with the second-best record hosts the
tournament after the preliminary rounds.
Seminole. 19-10 overall, hoala Central Florida
Wednesday and goes lo Daytona Saturday. Payne
aald he would like Saturday's gam e to be for
second place. But for that to happen. FJC must
beat Lake City Wednesday and. o f course, the
Raiders need to beat Central Florida.
A Lake City win over Florida Junior would
almost assure It o f a 104 record since the
Tlmberwolvea hoal Valencia Saturday.
For all of this to material, however, Seminole
has to play better than Its past few games. “ We
didn't play well Saturday night," said Payne
about the 83-69 loos to Lake City. "And we
haven't played well the past few gam es."
Seminole started out well against Lake City.
The Raiders, behind 14 first-half points from Greg
"S lim " Johnson and eight from Llnny Grace,
bolted to a 37-36 lead over coach Joe Fields'

highlight the year for Seminole and Lake Mary,
they did something more. Both teams have to be
regarded as legitimate challenger* for the district
title.
Now. If we can only get them In opposite
brackets...Seminole-Lake Mary III.

Battle Of The Boards
R e b o u n d s w a ra a
v a lu a b la c o m m o d it y
F r id a y w h a n L a k a B r a n t le y 's K lr s t a n D o llIn o o r , to ft, a n d S e m in o le 's A p r il P e t e r s o n
d id b a f t to a t S e m in o le H ig h S c h o o l. D o ll*

Lake Mary Blanks
Mainland In Final

undisciplined team, la keep your cool
and play your game. Lake Mary's
Rama did Just that Saturday as they
shrugged o ff the rugged physical play
at Mainland 1* Bucs to claim a 54)
victory In prep soccer action at
Memorial Stadium.
" W e knew going In that Mainland
would play that way and the guys did
a good Job o f keeping their cool and

Mull Picks Georgia

Lake M ary ended th s regu lar
season wtth a 19-8 overall record and
5 4 in the Five Star Conference.
Lake Mary's Drat goal Saturday was
scored by Tony Florentine on a
crossing ball from Tom Mlsuracs
from 40 yards out. Pete Kinsley then
drilled In a left-footed shot and Jerry
M eyer* kicked one in for a 34)

(Meyer*),'’ McCcrfcle said.

S a m ln o lo s to o k th o m a jo r it y o f th o rn a n d t h i
fla m # to m o v o In to a f i r s t p la c o tlo w it h tho
f if t h - r a n k e d
Lady
P a t r i o t s , T o n ig h t ,
S o m in o lo s h o s t s L a k a H o w o ll. T u o s d a y ,

SCC s biggest lead o f the first half was 22-17
when Rob Brantley tossed In a field goal and a
pair o f free throws.
The drought came early In the second half. The
Raiders, who usually break quickly from the gate
In the final 20 minute*, couldn't find the hole.
They were score leva for the first 4:15 of the

Incentive
Sem lnoles M e e t Apopka, Eye H ow ell

want to beat them."
After tonight's qualifying round,
the district gets Into full owing with
four games Tuesday. No. 1 Lake
Howell will host tonight’s winner. No
2 Lake Brantley entertains Spruce
C rack. N o. 3 L y m a n w elcom e*
Mainland and No. 4 DeLand host
Lake Mary. All games a n at 7 p.m

�IvtiU nf HsraM. Burtard, FI.

Penick, Politowicz Whiz Past Familiar Foes
■ y C h ris P la te r
H erald S p o rts W r ite r
W INTER PARK - Seminole High s
BUly Penick went up against some
fa m ilia r faces Saturday In the I.SOO
meters at the Hl-Y Spring Oames at
Showalter Field and once again the
Tribe Junior outdueled his rivals.
Penick turned In a time of 4:14.60
compared to 4:10.96 for the second
(•place finisher. Lake Mary Junior Ken
■Rohr. Lake M ary's Matt Palumbo
: finished fourth at 4:21.56.
n During the 1984 cross country
season, Penick was the pacesetter In
.•■Seminole County while Rohr and
Palumbo were hts closest competition.
A lo n g w llh P en lck 's first place
finish, Seminole took three seconds,
one fourth, two fifths and one sixth.
Eric M arlin finished second to
. Apopka's Sammy Smith In the 330
; yard dash with a time o f 36.15. Smith
breezed to first place w llh a lime of
35.57. Right behind Martin was Lake
!tBrantley's Steve Emmons (36.22) and
‘ Seminole's Louis Brown (36.26).
Dexter Jones took second In the
triple Jump at 42-i m and he also

—

placed sixth In the 60 yard dash at
6.53. Smith also won the 60 yard dash
with a time o f 6.25.
Freshman Arthur Mersey opened his
Seminole High career by placing fifth
In the 60 yard high hurdles at 8.12.
Oak Ridge took first through third In
the 60 yard high hurdles. Another
freshman. James Myers, placed fifth In
the long Jump with a leap of 19-1M.
Brantley's Emmons took second In the
long Jump at 20&gt; 1IA.
Seminole entered two teams In the
440 yard relay and they lied for second
wllh Identical times o f 44.56. Seminole
1 Included Ken Temple, Pat Davis.
H erbert H llle ry and Jones w h ile
Seminole 2 consisted o f Martin, Myers.
Mersey and Brown. Orlando Evans
won the 440 yard relay with a time of
44.33.
Sem lnoles' Frank Barnett. C liff
Campbell and Leo Peterson did not
compete in Saturday's meet.
In the 3.000 meters It was Winter
Park's Jeff Burger coming away with
first place at 9:04.05 followed by Lake
Mary's Palumbo at 9:20.52 and Rohr
at 9:21.68.

Track/Field
L a k e B r a n t le y 's J oh n M o n d o
finished second what was almost a tie
In the 660 yard run. Mondo recorded a
lime of 1:24.85 while the winner. Oak
Ridge's Mike Lee. finished at 1:24.84.
In girls action at the Hl-Y Meet. Lake
Howell's Lady Silver Hawks came
away with a pair of first places while
other Seminole County highlights in*
eluded the all-arou nd ta len ts o f
Lym an's Jeanlne Oauvln and the
1.500 m eter duel between Trinity
Prep's Adrienne Politowicz and Lake
Howell's Lisa Samockl.
Lake Howell put Its cross country
prowess to good use as It took first
place In 2*mlle relay. The winning
relay team Included Am y Ertel. Diane
D IM a u ro, S a m o c k l and M a rth a
Fonseca with a time of 10:16.58.
Winter Park (10:2894) finished second
followed by Trinity Prep (10:35.80),
Lake M ary (1 0 :5 4 .6 4 ) an d L a k e
Brantley (11:01.42). Lake Howell also
took second In the 440 relay (55.24).

The Lady Hawks also took first place
in the high Jump as Cheryl Brinkley
cleared 5*2. Lake H o w e ll's Kim
Ham m ontree also cleared 5*2 for
second place and Lyman's Oauvln was
third at 5-0.
Oauvln had an Impressive day as she
also took first In the discus (112*1).
second in the long Jump (14-5M) and
fifth In the shot put (30-6VS). Gauvtn
will be an athlete to watch come
heptathlon time.
Politowicz. a Junior at Trinity Prep,
and Samockl. a Lake Howell sopho­
more. met up for the second time this
school year. Th e first time. Samockl
came out on top In the Seminole
County cross country m eet while
Politowicz was coming off an injury.
Saturday, It was Politowicz who
sailed to victory In the 1,500 meters
with a tim e o f 4:56.04. Samockl
finished at 504.64 followed by Winter
Park's A m y Camber at 5:09.73. Lake
Howell's Martha Fonesca was sixth at
5:15.46.
Trinity Prep sophomore Katie Sams
took th ird In the 660 yard run
(1:45.90) and Lady Saint freshman

Stacy Johnson finished fifth In the 330
yard dash (44.65).
.
In the 3.000 meters. Lake Mary s Jill
Buddenhagen took sixth place with a
Ume o f 11:59 94. West Orange's Chrts
Cardwell won with a time of 10:52.72
and Winter Park's Camber was second
at 10:53.06.
Mary also took second In the
mile relay (4:27.20).
Sanford's Lady Semlnoles took only
a few athletes to the Hl-Y Oames.
Katrina Walker placed second In the
330 yard dash (42.23). Glenda Bass
was sixth In the 330 yard hurdles
(5 2 .2 4 ) and the L a d y Sem ln oles
finished third In the 440 relay (56.82).
Next on the track agenda for the
boys la the Wildcat Open this Saturday
at Showalter Field while the girls will
be at the Lake Howell Open. Lyman.
Sem inole. Trin ity Prep and Lake
Brantley will go to Lake Howell while
I .she Mary will compete In the Boone
Open.
Seminole High will host a quadran­
gular meet Tuesday beginning at 4:30
p.m. w llh Winter Park, Lyman and
Lake Brantley (boys and girls).

Sp en cer Lives Up
To Billing, Wins
Wire-To-Wire Run
N EW SM YR N A BEACH After “ The lights went ou t" on
night No. 1 o f the 19th Annual
World Series o f Asphalt Stock
Car Racing at New Smyrna
Speedway becaust o f brush fires
burning poles and transformer.
J im m y " M r . E x c i t e m e n t "
Spencer was the class o f the
modified field on Saturday night
when he scored a wire to wire
win In the MSW Spyder Spark
Plug Wires feature.
"1985 Is Spencer Tim e for the
M o d ifie d C h a m p io n s h i p . "
Spencer said slier the 25*lsp
event.
Before the late model feature.
World Scries defending champi­
on Dick Trickle and his crew had
to rebuild the whole front end of
the car which was destroyed In a
grinding warm-ups crash trig­
gered by grease from Freddie
Fryar's "busted" rear-end.
Trickle who started on the pole
by virtue of hts sixth fastest
time, led all the way, but before
each restart, during the crashfilled event, he could be seen
lightening his right front lug
^.nuts with his fingers.
Joe Shear, who challenged ail
the way, was strong second,
followed by Jack Cook, Butch
Miller and Frank Wood.
T h u n d c r c a r " A " fe a tu re
winner was Stan Eads. Besting a
record 64-car starting field. Bob
Ncwllng took the *'B" main.
At the start o f the modified
finale, Reggie Ruggiero got side­
ways In the marbles, off turn
four, making contact with Richie
Evans who pitted with damages
and started the event In his
back-up car.
F ro m th e r e s ta r t to the
checker, It was a battle between
the Reardon-Oendreau Troyer
Cavalier of Spencer and Doug
H ew itt who finished In Ihe
runner-up spot. Th ird place
went to Richie Evans over Reg­
gie Ruggiero. Rounding out the

I

Auto Racing
top five was Mark Fleury.
Spencer, along with Trickle,
received a 1250 check from
MSW Spyder Spark Plug Wires
representative Pete Pis tone.
MOOIFIBM
Tim* Trl*U ttiwwtnf Srlvw. car number,
tim*M. stem* Ivan*, 41. M U t t. Dave
HawIM. n . U M i 1. Raw la Rw**Nra. 44
iT.rii 4 Jimmy I pnusr, 14 I7.w» I. Jam la
Tamalna, W. K i l l 4. Jaft Fullw, 4IX. It .II,
7. Maaaa M**ltl, If, 14M, 4 Mart Flawy,
MX. 11.14 f. Kan Waatay, tt. If. 14, IS. Mlfea
Cwanlttka. n. If If , II. Mantay VaaSury. tt
If-Mi » .0 k t T r k k l* .ia » .4 f .

FtrUhast (tt lawn Cham* JarmmSak.
Faatwra (M K**)l. Jimmy Ipimn, j.
Oau* Haarttt, a RkMs Ivans, 4 Rawla
R w w krs, a Mark Flawy, 4. Maaaa Hawttli
I k n ltl,

I. Billy Park, a Manky Vaakury, f. Alan
McCIwa, IS. Jam I* Tamaka, II. I S YlnSrai
II. Kan Waaky Jr., ta M ka IwwMtaka, 14
Ckarlk Jaru mkat, 11 JaM Fullw , 14. Okk
T rk k k . Las l i i i i r : Jimmy laancart I IS
L A T B M O O Ilt
Tima TrM t Ilkamtnf Wfvar. car nwmkar,
lim a n . Davis Ratara. II , IS.SS, t. Jack
Caak. f4 lOtti 1 Oraw FraammMn. 14
iau, 4. j w ifcaar, M. a s , a k m
Oriatwn. n , Mat, 4 Okk TrkkM, ta, ia r t;
7 OanM Kaana, a M B , 4 Jimmy Capa. II,
i s m p Frank Want, tt, H U , tt, FraSfy
Fryar, 14 I4 tf, II. Brae* Lawranca. 14
U i f i If. Oarrlka Cap*. 7, K M ; It. ta*
FaWk. t t I4 ff, 14 IcaH Fullar. t il. tf.lt,
14 Slav* Ckrlatman, 14 It .t l, 14. J w
MISSklan. FI. If FI, IF. Jim Drawn. NX.
If Hi It. Tim Naanar, S IX It.tt, It. Owctik
La*. T/ll, IM S, t t Fran Calacn, tt. M M , II.
LaanarS Chaaaar, 44. M.I4, M. Carl Vaalkar,
41. M i l , U . Jarry Marsuk, t t M U , 14. Pkll
Darman, t t II M, tt. Jakn Maaaay, 44 tl.tt,
14 H4r*M Jtknaan. N . I I .f t , If . Sill
Oramavkk. t. tt.tt, M. Ai Or ay. * tt H i » .
DavM Naval). I. t i l l , M. Jim Cansran. H,
M tt, I I . Sultk Millar, MX. no Itm*.
FkathaW ns lajiall. Oankl Kaana.
tow ns haal 1tt lap*) I. Bukfi M llkr.
Faatwra (tt lastt I. Okk T rk k k , &gt;. J w
Wiaar, t. Jack Caak, 4. Bukh M llkr, 4
Frank WaaS, 4 FraSSk Fryar, f. Ir a w
Law ranca, I . Ran M cC rary, f . O rat
FrsammMa, it Jarry Maraula, n Oarrlka
Capai It. J w MMSkkn, It. Hava Orkaam,
U. Oana Owan, 14 Bill Oromovkk, tt. Cart
Vaalkar, if. Osnkl Kaana, 14 Dovtt Rapara.
It. HarsW Caak, M. Tim N a m r , II. JWn
Maaaay, t l. Jim Carwran, t a Oavtt Hawaii,
14 FBU Dorman, tt. Oarwy Bowman, M.
Hava Ckrlatman, V. HaroM Jafmaan, M

Jimmy Cap*.

TNUN0 1 SCA B !
“ A" Faatwra (M k p tH , Han laSa.
Faatwa (llta p a )l. BakNawiMp

wtafcy AaSy Walt

L a k e M a r y 's P h il D o r m a n (N o . 55 ) f r ie s to o v e r t a k e J o e
M id d le to n o n th e In s id e d u r in g a L a t a M o d a l r a c e a t th e N e w

Labonte Runs Away With Record/Cash
B y C arl V a n sa ra
S p ecia l to th e H arold
DAYTONA BEACH — Th e numbers were
big for Terry Labonle Sunday.
The Corpus Crisll. Tx. driver ran the
fastest Busch Clash In history Sunday os he
sipped to a 15-mlnute win at an average
•peed o f 195.865 miles per hour st the
Daytona International Speedway.
Along with ihe 550.000 first place prize.
Labonte also won 515.000 In bonus money
for leading the filth. 10th and 15th laps.
Labonle took Ihe lead on the fifth lap In
Ihe Piedmont Chevy and hold on the rest of
the way. "T h is Chevy performed better than
the car w e're preparing for the Daytona 500
next Sunday/' aaid Ihe defending NASCAR
Grand National champion, who broke (he
draft or Dan ell Waltrip's Chevy with three
lapa remaining to win going away by
seven-tenths of a second.
"T h e car we ran today finished second
here several limes. It was Ihe only car we
have which never won a race. We were

errell's 1st Victory
as Shaky Moments
•f

Msrald fp srts Cdltsr

•1

M ik e F e r r e l l 'e S e m in o le
ball coaching record stands
I 1-0 after Saturday's win over
Titusville Astronaut. It will be
qne win he'll remember for a
long Ume for all o f the usual
reasons and some unusual,
i J u n io r rig h th a n d e r Brian
$heiricld worked out of several
Jams during thr seven-inning 6-5
Victory In the Tribe's season
opener and Tony Cox supplied
the power with a second-inning
burner at Mims' Holder Park,
j Bui the real drama came In the
Horn of Ihe seventh when
stronaut. tra ilin g 6-4. put
rs on first and second with
open the inning. Tim Moore
‘ with a long blast which
ked Joey Carol to the fence In
field.
"T h is place was h
so small. It
sde Chase Park look like
a n k n Stadium." Ferrell sold
bout the 300-foot dimensions.
Corel made a nice play. I
bought II had a chance to go
uL"
After Corel's catch, both runmoved up a base, Jamie
followed with a medium
ball to James Heresy In
reey gathered In
[turned It toward
11. in the direction
, The runner on third scored
h i n t Hums es it h i m high
Rrvd hit U&gt;s lop o f Ihe backstop —

ij

Baseball
and bounced back, keeping the
lying run at third. "Jam es has
a cannon." sold Ferrell about
pitcher-right fielder. "H e sold
he let go of the ball a little earlier
that Ume."
Sheffield, who was doing him
best to stay cool during all of
this, decided lo take care o f the M ik a F t r r a l l p ic k e d u t h l i
U a t h it t e r h im s e lf. T h e
f ir s t
w in
bb
S a m ln o la
k n u ck ts-b a llln g rig h th a n d er
zipped a dipping curve ball past b a s e b a ll c o a c h S a t u r d a y b u t
n o t w it h o u t B o m o n o r v o Ken Watson far the third strike.
The ball, however, bounced In r o c k ln g m o m e n t * .
the dirt and catcher Tom WUks
kept It In front o f him. He Jensen and reload the
pounced on It In front o f the Oalney'e sacrifice fly to center
plate and threw to Cox at first field put Seminole up. 5-3.
base to preserv e the victory.
8 e m ln o le p la y s a t E v a n s
" It was real good to get that Tuesday ml 9:90 p m .
one out o f the way, ■old Ferrell.
In two other games, Oviedo
“ Sheffield did a great Job keep­ picked up ita first win In three
ing his composure. W e mode six outing with a 4-1 victory over
errors, so U took B lot o f guts to Cocoa behind the three-hit pit­
hang In there."
ching o f Mark Hofmann and
Astronaut Jumped on top early Craig Duncan. Duncan picked
with two runs but Oox loosed up up the win. striking out seven In
tbs Tribe wllh a solo blast over three Innings
the right field fence In the third
The Lions, blanked the first
P five Innings, cam e a live on
tw o ora runs on a
Looter Cabrera’s RBI double In
tbs sixth.
In one other game Saturday,
in the fourth, Roy Jensen Pat Lusk tossed a three-hitler ae
singled to right and Sheffield Lake Brantley took care o f West
ana Cox walked. David Rape Orange. 6-k. "P o t throw
tanned but Derr hit a Mow rotter g u n s ," said Patriot
to score Sm ith.
third

E

S m y r n a S p e e d w a y S a t u r d a y n ig h t . M ld d la to n e v e n t u a lly
m o v e d a h e ir i f o r 16th p la c e . D o r m a n s a t t la d fo r 2 4 th p la c e .

Auto Racing
going to sell It after the Busch Clash, but
now we may run It at Talledega.”
Cole Yarborough took the lead on the first
lap and pulled away from field by os much
os 10 seconds before he fell behind Labonte
and had to drop out o f the race. " I ’m not
r e a lly sure w h a t w aa w r o n g ." aald
Yarborough. "W e ran the motor os hard as
we could and the engine must have got hot.
It didn't thow on the gauge.
g
1 Just don't
know."
Yarborough sold he didn't have any
second thoughts about his strategy. " I could
have tried to lead those 65,000 laps, but
that would have put Terry right bock
behind me and In the right position (to
slingshot past) at the en d."
BUI Elliott, who set a world record for
stock cars on Saturday with a 500 pole­
winning speed o f 206.114, had problems

from the start. "T h e engine sounded real
flat and It didn't pull real well at the start."
said Elliott. "W e thought the air cleaner was
hitting the distributor, so we changed that
and the cell.
"A fter that. It ran great. If the race would
have been a little longer we would have got
them."
Four o f the first five cars at the Buach
finish were Chevys, Ihe string broken by
Elliott, who was third In a Ford.
I he race's only mishap cam e when Dsvfd
Pearson hit the wall In the fourth tum after
his right front tire blew out. Pearson was the
first cor out o f the n e e. Benny Parsons and
Joe Ruttman also were sidelined by blown
engines. Ruttman's departure brought out
the day's only caution flag.
In Sunday's other race, Glenn Sears, s
26-year-old power plant mechanic from
Apex, N.C., held o ff the challenge o f Davey
Allison to capture the A R C A 200. Red
Farmer was thinl.

Parrish's Kick Return Lifts 'Gades
JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - Or­
lando's Jerry Parrish took the
opening kickoff B7 yards (or one
touchdown and caught Ihe goahead score in the third quarter
to lead O rlando to a 20-10
victory over the Jacksonville
Bulls Saturday In U8PL exhib­
ition action.
Parrish, a second-year man
fr o m E a s t e r n K e n t u c k y .
thcrcd In B rian F ra n co's
koff and raced dawn the left
s id e f o r O r la n d o 's f i r s t
touchdown with Just 17 seconds
elapsedThe Renegades Improved their
prescsson record to 24). The
Bulls are 0-1.
Parrish a d d ed his second
touchdown on a pass from

K

Pro Football
quarterback Reggie Collier a t
1302 In the thlrdquartcr. giving
th e
a 14*10 advanivlllc got Its
on a 27-yard Franco field goal
m idw ay through the second
quarter. Brian Sipe. newly ac­
quired by the Bulls after tearing
the New Jersey Generate and 67
million rookie quaterback Doug
Ptutta. added a touchdown when
he hit tight end Victor Hicks on •
14-yard pass w ith 95
TAM PA (DPT) -

...Bizarre
sacond half as Labs City used quick point guard
Ronnie W illiams to build a 49-97 food. Johnson
finally hit a free throw with 15:45 to ploy to
the spell.
Assistant Dean Smith sold tbs
Setting

cr Kknny Edwards Into the

Tbs Tamps

Bay Bandits exploded to a 21
point halftime lead and coasted
to on easy 21-7 victory over the
New Jersey Generals in a USPL
exhibition game Saturday night.
Doug Fhitte. who signed a
five-year, 67 m illion contract
with the Oenerate earlier this
week, didn't suit up for the
contest. The Heisman Trophy
winner from Boston College was
dressed In street clothes as he
watched from the sideline as
New Jersey fell to 1-1.
Before a crowd o f 32.370, the
Bandits. 1-0, Jumped to s 144)
first quarter lead on a 14-ysrd
scoring strike from quarterback
John Reaves to Eric TnivtUlon
and 1 3-yard run by Oreg Boone.

C urt la Hlcka. w
attended E a ton vllle'a
W y m a n Tech, rW
the Raiders by making 7 of
9 shots ta the second half. "“ H
He
was- the
e was
difference." H id Payne. "W e couldn't stop him ."
Hlcfca. a 9-2 guard, ftatahsd wtth 36 potato.
Johnson finished wtth 17 points and 16
rebounds far SCC. O ra n , who was plagued by
faul trouble ta the second, finished with 10
Potato. No other Rakfer was In double figures.
SCC had Juta 12 aaatata (O ran 9) and atx steals
(O ra n 3). W h season Iowa.

NBM HI Ml —lesseSt M 414 LastaS 1-4 at 4

mhm* st

N 4 «m M u a a n e e M 4 4 »4 M H U K 7 M
M U 4 aornsrm a a T jS u s m z m u /b* s sT m l 5 Z T *
tana CUT o r — t a m o n u h i aunt u u i
Mat*Stt47tt
MW44KVlattttNOMlMH
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-a -

�\

Evening HsraM. Sonlord. FI._____Monday, Fob. 11, IW —7A

Lee Sparks SCC Women
B y C h ris F ilt e r
H erald S p o rts W r ite r
Pam Lee and Tam m y Johnson
p roved a potent guard combina­
t io n S a t u r d a y In le a d in g
Seminole Community College's
Lady Raiders to their sixth
straight victory. 61-58. over
Pensacola Community College at
the SCC Health Center.
SCC. which Improved to 15-8
with the win. has this week of!
before closing out the regular
season F r id a y . F eb . 22 at
M a n a te e . T h e fo llo w in g
weekend. Feb. 26 through March
2, the Lady Raiders will host the
State Junior College Tourna­
ment. SCC has already clinched
a berth In the state tourney.
Lee led the way for the Raiders
Saturday with a game-high 18
points on 9 o f 15 shooting and
the sophomore guard »l*n dished
out eight assists. Johnson, a
freshman point guard out of
Lake Howell High, added 17
points.
Sophom ore forw ard Juana
Colettl contributed eight points

University Campus.
Stetson snapped a four-game
losing streak with the win and
the Lady Hats tool control from
a n d e ig h t r e b o u n d s w h ile (he beginning as they reeled off
freshman center Kim Lemon the first 10 points of the game.
Terri Cain chipped In with 11
also chipped In eight points on 4
o f 4 shooting. Sanford's Andrea points for the Hatters while
Johnson, a Lake Mary High Dallas Boychuk added 10 and 12
graduate, hit 2 o f 2 shots for four rebounds. HUIery. a Seminole
High graduate, also pulled down
points.
FIMACOtA (Ml - GWvftr H I 14 11. seven rebounds. Nunez, a Lake
DkiMi m n ii. Mow* ir e s * . w*a* t « * * B r a n t le y H igh g ra d , ca m e
S. Coo 1S»• 4. Mori* 1SH 4. Dottier 141-4 through with her best effort of
4, Slmi 11*4*. HorOMy M » • ». TMtll
the season after coming off an
M-as-ua
KC (ill - Loo MS M a T Minton 4 14 ankle Injury.
S* tf. Lemon 44 M X Cotettl H i l l *
JOHNSON S P A R K S R O L L IN S
Jefcnaen 11 M 4. Ktborl* 14 M 4 M in VI
W INTER PARK - Freshman
• St T*l*l» II Jf M l 41
Hemime — SCC 1L Ponoocoia 11 Fowl* — guard Mary Johnson poured In a
SoniocoU I I SCC *0 Fouled owl — non*
career-high 18 points to com­
TocSMcolt- "mop le m e n t M a ry M c D a n ie l’ s
H1LLERT, NUNEZ L IF T H A TS
game-high 26 as Rollins sailed
DELAND — Sanford's Dleldre past Eckcrd. 76-57. Saturday at
HUIery pumped In a team-high Rollins College.
13 points and Longwood's Linda
Johnson, a Lake Howell High
Nunez contributed a season-high
duate. hit on 6 of 15 from the
lO Saturday as Stetson's Lady
»r and 6 o f 9 from the free
H a t t e r s u p e n d e d F lo r id a
throw line. T w o other Lake
Atlantic. 71-61, at the Edmunds
Howell High grads got Into the
Activity Center on the Stetson a ct S a tu r d a y as fre s h m a n

Evert's Passing Shots
Jolt Jordan In 2 Sets

Basketball

C

• -«

D L L R A Y BEACH. (UPI1 Even when No. 2 seed Chris
Evert Lloyd has an off day. It's
hard to beat her. But ninthseeded Kathy Jordan found out
Sunday that when Evert Lloyd Is
on top of her game. It's hard to
even play.
Evert Lloyd downed Jordan
6-4. 6-4 to step up to the
quarterfinals o f the 81.8 million
M a r y J o h n s o n s c o r e d a c a ­ International Players Champion­
r e e r - h ig h 18 p o in ts S a t u r d a y ships.
"Chris played the best she
a s th e
R o llin s L a d y T a r s
s a ile d p a s t E c k e r d . J o h n s o n , ever has against m e ." said
a f r e s h m a n , p la y e d h e r p r e p Jordan, who beat Even Lloyd In
their last meeting. "Her passing
b a s k e t b a ll a t L a k e H o w e ll.
shots kept me from the net. If I
can't get to the net. I can't do
Monica McNrll added a season- anything."
Eighth seed Zina Gairlson and
high 11 points and sophomore
Cindy Blocker contributed seven No. 14 seed Pam Casale were
knocked from the tournament
points and three assists.
Lake Brantley High graduate Sunday, while No. 2 men's seed
Linda Trimble, a sophomore at Mats Wllander o f Sweden was
able to reach the fourth round.
Rollins, added eight points.

Tennis
Kathy Rinaldi defeated Garri­
son 7-5. 6-1. taking a 3-0 lead In
the first set and a 4-0 second set
lead.
Casale lost 6-2. 2-6. 7-5. to
West Germany's Beilina Bunge
In a match that drew conduct
warnings for each player. Down
a service break In the third set.
Bunge drew even at 4-all and
broke Casale again In the 12lh
game.
" I didn't play as well as I did in
my oilier matches." Bunge said.
“ I made too many unforced
errors. Pam got a warning for
saying something. I got one for
hitting the ball over the fence."
Wllander bounced from 1-4 In
ihe final set to defeat Bob Green
6 3 . 4 6. 6-4.

SCOREBOARD

SPORTS

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Betslnger, Broennle Carry Rams
To JV Soccar Tournament Title
Tournament MVP Scott Betslnger and Ernie Broennle
combined for all six of Lake Mary's goals over the weekend
as the Rams claimed the Lake Mary Junior V an ity
Tournament title with victories over Lyman and Lake
Howell.
In Friday's first round action at Lake Mary High, the
Rams broke loose for four second half goals and went on to
blank the JV Greyhounds. 4-0, Broennle and Betslnger
scored two goals each as Lake Mary oulahot Lyman. 24-6.
In two previous meetings with the Greyhounds, Lake
Mary and Lym an battled to a scoreless tie and the Rams
had to scrap for a 1-0 win the second time.
In Friday night's second game. Lake Howell blanked
Bishop Moore. 2-0. to set up Saturday's final between the
Rams and JV Sliver Hawks.
Lake Mary took a 1-0 lead In the first half against Lake
Howell as Betslnger headed In a com er kick from Steve
Sapp. Lake Howell came back to tie It In the first hair on a
diving header by Kenny Higgins.
The score remained tied at 1-1 until Lake Mary broke It
with 11 minutes left. Sapp carried the ball almost the
length o f the field before dishing off to Broennle who flicked
It over the sweeperback's head and shot it past Ihe keeper
from 15 yards out for the winning goal.
Lake Mary's J V ended the season with a 16-1-2 record,
best In Seminole County and Orange County.
In the consolation match, Lym an claimed a 1-0 victory
over Bishop Moore by converting a penally kick in the
second hair
— C h ris P la te r

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M VP Sam pson Helps
W est Break Drought

Gross Splashes To Butterfly Win
BONN. West Germany (UPl) — Michael Gross. West
Germany's double Olympic champion, continued his
superb demonstration o f swim m ing versatility by winning
the men's 100 meter butterfly Sunday In the Arena Short
Course Meet, and American Jenna Johnson won three
events.
But Growi. 20. who had earlier set world bests In Ihe 800
meter freestyle and 200 meter butterfly, was pressed down
Ihe (Inal length by American Chris O'Neil.
Gross, the first man since Mark SplU to hold world
records and Olympic titles in tw o different strokes, clocked
53.35 seconds. 0.45 seconds o ff his own world mark.
O'Neil, from Huntsville. Ala., posted 53.50.
The West German's pace In one o f his gold medal events
In Los A ngeles had clearly been blunted with his
excursions Into middle distance swimming but he was still
talented enough to win.
The 17-year-old Johnson, from Santa Rosa. Calif., was
the Olympic 100 meter butterfly silver medalist behind
Mary T. Meagher. On Sunday she won the 50 meter
freestyle In 25.54. the 50 meter butterfly In 27.65 and the
100 meter freestyle In 54.97.
Another versatile Olympic champion. Canadian Alex
Baumann. 19. took the 200 meter individual medley In 1
minute 58.81 seconds. The political science student at
Laurentlan University was only 0.30 seconds outside his
own world best.

INDIANAPOLIS (UPl) - After
watching the West lose Ihe last
five All-Star Games. Coach Pal
Riley figured It was time to give
the new guys a chance. And he
was right.
W it h y o u n g s t e r s R s lp h
Sampson — the gam e's Moat
Valuable Player — and L an y
Nance dominating Inside and
Rolando Blackman connecting
from the perimeter, the West
clipped the East 140-129 Sun­
day before a record NBA crowd
o f43,146 a lth c Hoosicr Dome.
The fans braved a blizzard
outside to watch the scoring
blizzard inside, topping the pre­
vious NBA attendance mark of
41.163. set Feb. 4. 1969 for a
double-header at The Astrodome
tn Houston. Only two other NBA
crowds have exceeded 40,000.
Sampson. 24. an All-Star In
each o f hla two pro season*,
grabbed 10 rebounds and scored
11 o f hte 24 points In the final
quarter to spark hla squad in the
35th annual mid-season classic.
"Sam pson really played well,
he deserved Ihe M V P ." said
Denver's Alex English. “ Atl our
young guys played very well. It
could be a changing o f the guard
In the N B A."
R ile y t o ld N a n c e a n d
B la c k m a n to r e m o v e th e ir
warmups with 3:58 left In the
opening period and the East
ahead 29-26. The strategy paid
immediate dividends as Nance
hit 3 baskets and Blackman 2 to
■park a 14-6 burst that gave the
w est a 40-35edge.
B lackm an, the 25-year-old
finished1
guard, finished
with 15
points on 7-of-l4 shooting while
Nance. 25. shot 7-of-8 for 16
ompUahrd
points. Plus, he
n o f doing
what many only &lt;1
— he stuffed "T h e DucL m .
W ith Philadelph ia's Ju lius
Erring coasting to the hoop In
the fourth quarter. Phoenix'
0-foot-10 forward m uck up and
•lapped the ball iw ay.
"H e didn't sec m e." Nance
aald almost apologetically. "H e
gotng up for a two-handed
k and 1Just blocked him. I'm
i tf heaaw me. he would have
out o f Ms bag

Holman Rolls By Webb, 233-205
VENICE I UPl I — Marshall Holman won the prestigious
Bowling Proprietors Association o f America U.S. Open for
the second time in his 12-year career Saturday with a
233-205 victory over Wayne Webb In the finals.
The lop-i
|Kseeded Holman, who
a
had won only six times In
20 attempts from the No. 1 position going Into the
nationally-televised finals, collected 838.000 for capturing
his first Pro Bowlers Association title o f the year and 18th
o f hla career.
The bowler from Jacksonville. Ore. also Non this event tn
1981 in Houston.
Webb, o f Indianapolis, earned 820.000 for second. He
defeated Steve Wunderlich. 226-197, and Dennis Jacques.
223-192. to reach the title match.
Wunderlich, o f St. Louis, eliminated Alan Oranat.
Palisade. Colo.. 202-193. tn the opening match.
" I think this la m y turning point In m y televised bowling
career." said Holman, whose last singles victory came hers
at Galaxy Lancs hi 1993. "But winning this tournament la
a big deal. It la an exceptionally prestigious tournament. It
puts me up there with Pete W eber for the money lead and
It builds up m y confidence to go to the next atop and do
well.'*

Bed Luck Fellows Decker Sleney
her lately

KFGoodrich
Desifiel aid engineered lot a
s b m U i i U i aiding a i l r a g *
Liinanr XLIT eUtomll

NBA
Game, hit 10-of-12 shot* for 23
points and Maglr Johnson o f Ihe
Lakers — a six-year veteran at
age 25 — added 21 "olnta and
15 assists.
The Lakers' K.ireem AbdulJabbar. playing In a record 14th
All-Star game, added 11 points.
The East got within 120-116
w ith 5 :2 1 r e m a in in g b u t
Johnson and Sampson look
charge, ending any East hopes.
Johnson hit 2 baskets to restore
an 8-polnt bulge with 4:20 to go.
then sent an alley-oop pass to
the 7-4 forward, who Jammed It
fora 127-118 lead.
*'l got a kick oul o f that." aald
Sampson. “ He (Johnson) pushes
ihe ball up the court and playa
with such great court awareneaa.
If you get Into position, he'll
make Ihe |
IN D IA N A P O L IS (U P l) French-born Dominique Wilkins
applied the coup de grace to
M ic h a e l J o r d a n w it h tw o
“ perfect" slams In the final
round Saturday to capture the
s e c o n d a n n u a l S la m -D u n k
Championship.
Wilkins, the Atlanta Hawks'
forward who finished third In
last year's competition, collected
147 o f a possible 150 points to
defeat Jordan In a fun filled
affair on the afternoon preceding
the A ll-S ta r G am e. J o rd a n
finished with 136 points.
However. It was rookie guard
Terence Stanahury o f the host
Indiana Pacers who captured the
fancy a raucous Market Square
Arena crowd o f 10.083.

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INBRIEF
(/.5. Official: Both Sides
To Blamo For Kim Fraeat
SEOUL. South Korea (UPI) - A U S . Embassy ofTlcUI.
refusing to take sides, said today both the South Korean
government and an American delegation are to blame for
the violence that erupted with the return of dissident Kim
Dae Jung.
Kim returned to South Korea last Friday after two years
o f self-exile In the United States to boost the opposition In
.Tuesday’s parliamentary elections, even though he Is not
allowed to run for office or participate In political activities.
While Kim remained confined to his house, U.S. officials
who accompanied him home for security reasons held a
news conference to criticize the government for their
“ violent reception" at the Seoul airport.
, Members o f the U.S. delegation. Including two con­
gressmen, said they were punched, kicked and thrown to
the ground at the Seoul airport by South Korean police
who dragged Kim away and placed him under house

Ethiopia Start$ Own Rollof Effort
ADDIS ABABA. Ethiopia (UPI) Ethiopian leader
Menglstu Halle Mariam, under pressure from Western
nations. Is Imposing drastic austerity measures In a
desperate attempt to save 7.S million Ethiopians from
starvation.
Menglstu Is putting Into effect a seven-point program
that calls on all Ethiopians to donate part o f their salaries
to relief efforts, help foreign aid workers and make better
use o f water and agricultural resources.
The plan, outlined by the Marxist leader In a speech
Saturday night. Includes banning the Import of textiles,
autos and luxury Items, rationing gasoline and prohibiting
the central bank from granting loans for homes or
businesses In the hope the money can be used In relief
efforts.
"Every Ethiopian national, whether residing at home or
abroad and whatever his or her area o f activity, should
contribute money commensurate with his or her Income."

A u a d Ro-oloctod To Third Tom
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — Syrian President Hafez Aaaad.
who has survived a series of Internal and regional
challenges, was re-elected to a third seven-year term with
90.07 percent o f the vote, officials said today. He was the
only candidate on the ballot.
Interior Minister Nassereddln Nasser said of the
0.500,802 registered voters. 0,522.202 exercised their
rights and cast votes In Sunday's elect Ions.
Assad. 50, who seized power In a 1070 coup and helped
consolidate hla rule by appointing to the government
members o f hla minority Alawlte sect, was unanimously
endorsed for a new term last month by the ruling Baath
Party.
A "y e s " vote In the referendum was described by Vice
President Abdel Halim Khaddam as a ballot "against
Imperialism, Zionism and reactionism."

Team Searches Crash Site For M IAs
BANGKOK. Thailand (UPI) — A Joint
U.S.-Lao team searching for American MIAs
In Laos began excavating the crash site of
an Air Force plane that was shot down In
1072 with 13 men aboard, officials said
today.
"Things went very well." a U.S. Embaaay
official In the Lao capital of Vientiane said In
a telephone Interview.
She said the American charge d'affalrs In
Vientiane. Terry Tell, went to the city of
Pakse In southern Laos to observe the
beginning o f the 11-day Joint excavation by
Lao and U.S. experts.
The 12-member American team flew to
Laos Sunday.
The operation, scheduled to end Feb. 21.

...DER
C on tin asd fro m page 1A
lakes throughout the state.
The city, however, maintains
the DER measured the water
quality of the lake was Its water
level was at Its lowest point In 70
years Indicating that low level of
water made the pollution appear
more concentrated than It really
Is. The city, according to city
manager W.E. "P ete” Knowles,
maintains the treated effluent It
la pumping Into the lake — 6
million gallons dally — Is o f
higher quality than the lake
water and therefore benlflclal to
the lake. Th e city also maintains
that the pollution Is coming from
sources other than the city.
The DER wants the city to
switch to a land Irrigation dis­
posal o f treated effluence
Another reason city hall his
bucking the DER and Is willing
to go to court over the Issue Is

Mr. Jack Chick. 80. o f 375
Palm Springs Drive, Altamonte
Springs, died Sunday at Orlando
Regional Medical Center. Bom
Nov. 15. 1004 In New York, he
m oved to Altamonte Springs
from Brooklyn, N.Y.. In 1064. He
was a retired food salesman and
attended C ongregation Ohev
Shalom , Orlando. He was a
m em ber o f Knights o f Pythias.
; Su rvivors Include his wife,
Pauline; two eons. Steven. Alta­
m onte Springs, and William ,
Boetoni daugner. Elinors DeL u c a . L o n g w o o d ; b ro th e rs ,
Harold, Halkndale. and Irvin,
Laa Vegas; slater, Sally Frelman,
St. Louis, Mo.t nine grand­
children.
Beth Shalom-Ooldsteln Memo­
rial Chapel. Orlando, Is In charge
o f arrangements.
Mr. John Hoffman. 78, o f 1106
Georgetow n Drive, Casselberry,
dtsd Saturday at W inter Park
Memorial Hospital. Born Nov.
•IS, 1904 In Austria, he moved to
rasasIherry from Moneaacn. P a .
.In 1909. He was a retired food
market owner and a member of
•Temple Israel. Orlando. He was
a ctive In the United Jewish
Appeal and Israel Bonds.
Survivors include hla wife,
Rosei tw o daughters, Claire
Chepenlk. Maitland, and Gall

Storch. State College. Pa.; four
grandchildren.
B e th S h a lo m - O o ld a t e ln
Funeral Home. Orlando. Is In
charge o f arrangements.
W IL L IA M J. THOMPSON
Mr. W illiam Junior Thompson,
50. o f 232 E. Wilbur Ave.. Lake
Mary, died Saturday at the
Orlando Naval Hospital. Bom
August 12. 1025 In Akron, Ohio,
he moved to Sanford from MillU.gton, Tenn., In 1002. He was a
retired U.S. Navy chief petty
officer. He was a member o f the
S e m in o le C o u n ty R e a lt o r s
Association and the Fleet Re­
serve B. Duke Woody Branch
147.
Survivors Include his wife.
Nola "P s t;" two sons. William
Raymond. St. Louis, Mo., and
W illiam Robert. Geneva; two
daughters. Jeanne Davis, Belle.
Mo., and Diana Weiss, Sanford;
mother, Dora K. Rowen, San­
ford; four grandchildren.
O ra m k o w F u n eral H om e.
Sanford. Is In charge o f ar­
rangementa.
Im n a s n c ^ ita n a ift
Mrs. Mildred Calangelo. 70. of
142 Hacienda Village. Winter
Springs, died Sunday at Life
Care Center. Altamonte Springs.
Bom Oct. 25. 1000 In New York
C ity, she m oved to W in ter
Springs from New York In 1970.
Site was a homemaker and a
Catholic.

working for
the family
It's understandably difficult for families to
do things during a tims of lots. . . end yst to
many things have to be done. Ws’rs here to
do everything for them that ws can.

GRAMKOW
FU N ERA L HOME
ISOWI8T AIRPORT SOOLEVARD
BAMFORO. FLORIDA
TELEPHONE 132-3*13
Ik.

M Aift
Atlantic tank......... ..............nn siv%
gtr—ttSenk.......
Flrat FI—llty ILL
Ftort— Pawar
G ll|—..............
Fla. Fragraw.........
114* t|lb
MCA....
Hugh—lupply .
Marrlaant .......
........... J|V% I0H
NCR Carp
Pteeeey
l*N WH

Survivors Include three sons.
Anthony. Altam onte Springs.
Peter. New Jersey, and Louis.
W inter S p rin gs; tw o gran d ­
children.
B s ld w ln -F s lrc h lld Funeral
Home Is In charge of arrange­
ments.
Mrs. Elsa W ilm a Powers. 86, of
2041 W. State Road 426. Oviedo,
died S a tu rd a y at Lu th eran
Haven. Bom March 26. 1006 In
Cleveland, she moved to Oviedo
from Fort Lauderdale In 1070.
She was a homemaker and a
Lutheran.
She Is survived by her son.
WtlUam T. Powers. Lake Placid.
B s ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Home. Orlando. Is in charge of
arrangements.
Mrs. Abbte Wood Boyd. 04. of
010 E. Second St.. Sanford, died
Saturday at Lakevtew Nursing
Center. Bom March 0. 1000 In
Florence, 8.C.. she and her late
husband, C. Mills Boyd, moved
to Sanford from there In 1026.
She was the executive director of
Seminole County's welfare de­
partment from 1036 until she
retired In 1076. She was also a
member o f First Presbyterian
Church. Sanford.
Survivors Include her son.
Mills, Sanford; (w o daughters.
Mrs. M aynard Warner. New
Smyrna Beach, and Mrs. Walter
M o rc o m . W in d e r m e r e ; IS
g r a n d c h i l d r e n ! 13 g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Brtason G u ardian Funeral
Home. Sanford. Is in charge o f
arrangements.

F ito a fk l N o t ic g t

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legal Notice
NOTICE 0#
PUBLIC NIASING
THI SOASD or COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS o r
SEMINOLE COUNTY will —to
S puMIC — tog M t a n S IS
el to* lamina** County kryla,
Building, laniard. Fir an
Marc* L i w r rm PM . et a*
aaan Maraattar aa adaal—a* ta
cantldar a IPICIFIC LAND
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prtkanalvt Plan anS REZON
INOat to* daacrWadpraparty
AN ORDINANCE AMINO

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A M IN O I T H I O I T A I L I D
LAND U 1 I E L E M E N T OF
T H E SE M IN O LE CO UN TY
C O M FEB H B N S IV E FLAN
PSOM HIGH DENSITY RESI

OSNTIAL

TO COMMERCIAL
TOE THE PURPOSE OF REZONINO

FROM R-4 MULTI FAMILY
OWELLINO DISTRICT
TO OF OFFICE DISTRICT S
C -l RETAIL COMMERCIAL.
Ilia fallowing —aerto— pr#
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Infertility Increase
WASHINGTON (UPI) - One of
three American women o f re­
p rod u ctive age cannot bear
children or would have great
difficulty doing so. says a survey
by the National Center for Health
Statistics.
Of the 54 million women of
childbearing age. 9.4 million
have been sterilized voluntarily
to limit the size o f their families,
th e s u r v e y s a id . S u r g ic a l
sterilization Is now the leading
method of birth control In the
United States.
The survey, released Sunday,
also said another 4.2 million
women had been sterilized for
purposes other than birth con­
trol.

•p m T—ak— e*
So pkm Ui la ONI—* Man—tat Park
—toOr^VJty *" *1——Had——" ir lw !
ham el MamaTg'olwdiin*(&gt; —a i ^

Experts are not certain why
Infertility has Increased, but
some blame It on an Increase In
certain pelvic diseases that
cause sterility In women.
Am ong married couples, the
survey reported, half say they
cannot have children or w ou ld'
have great difficulty doing so.

Almost 8 million couples were ,
surgically sterilized for birth
control purposes. Another 6 mil­
lion arc unable or unlikely, due
to physical Impairment or In­
voluntary sterilization, to have
The survey. "Fecundity and another birth or a first birth.
Infertility In the United States: Including 1.4 million who are
1065-82.” offered the first na­ childless, the survey said.
tionwide preliminary statistics
A m on g women w ho never
on fecundity — the physical
ability to conceive and bear married. 93.8 percent say they
children — among married and believe they can bear children.

legal Notice
itwnc* Narto tlHe’U" tea tor
114.11 toat to the Paint al
' application HAS SEEN
SUBMITTED BV SOS MAT
TAWAV INVESTMENT CORF.
(*)
A—III*—I Intarmatton may
b* a—a— try contacting toa
Lank Manasamant AAanagor at
SMIJAIlt. 441.
Ptnent imafcta ta attand it»
tw wtt* to eammant
Lank Manaaamant Civilian
Sk Public
erter to
h toa
at
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May will naak a retort el toa
praetaklnf*. ink. ter meb
t*ay may naak ta
4a varSatlm racark at
la mak*. w*to*
racark Inciukaa the taaUmany
I* tobabaaet
CawntyCammtoatonart
SamMatoCaunty. Ftortka
By: R—art Storm. Chairman
Attoati
Dtvtkto. Sarrton

PUSH*: FaSruary II, IMS
MC* 'woTicr e --------P U S L K M A R IN S
THE SOARO OF COUNTY
C O M M IS S IO N E R S OF
SIRU N O LI COUNTY wtU totk
• puSSc baartn* to RaamSMM
at toa Sim iM ii CaaaPy Sarrita*
Banking, Santork. F la. an
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ti l l N r a SP E C IF IC LAND
U SE A M EN D M EN T to the
S a m l n a l a C a w * t y Camwakanatva Plan ank REZON
INO a toa kMcrtoakpra— rtf
AN ORDINANCE AMEND
INO OROINANCI FFM WHICH
AM EN DS T H I D E T A I L E D
LAND U SE E L E M E N T OF
▼ H E 'I IM IN O L E COUNTY
C O M P R I H B N S I V I P LAN
FROM O f N ERAL RURAL
TO INDUSTRIAL
FOR T H I PURPOSE OP ■■ZONINO
F ROM A l AGRICULTURE
TO C - l G EN ER A L COM MIE
C IA L ANO W H O L E S A L E
DISTRICT, toa taltowtna k*
Taa
i FA, an Taa
........ ..
Mag #m to Sactton
F-tlS-ttC, Samlnala Caunty.
Ftortka CwwNNns at I J acta*

(OUT. M)

legal Notice

Legal Notice

ank unktr toa wal at toa Caunty
Caurt at Samlnala Caunty.
Ftortka. —an a final Mpamant
rankarak In toa ataraaaM caurt
— toa M* kay at Oacambar.
A D. Ito*. In toal cartaln teee
antlttad. Sawtoam Laan S FI
nanca C a . Inc. Plaintiff, —m —
■III* R. St ilty. Daltnaant.
w *k * ataraMlk Writ *4 Eaacu
tton waa aallvarak b m n
Stwrllf at Samlnala Cawnty.
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toa tottowlna eeeuhet praparty
aw—k by RUM R. Statoy. utd
prap arty balng lacatak In
nbwto Caunty. Ftortka. mara

•ntlllad. Anoclatad Dry G—
Carparallan. ale.. Plaintiff.
—aru— John J. Capping** and
NOA Capping**. M* wit*. Da
ton—lit. W*ic* ataraaaMWrit at
■■•cutton wee —tlvarak la ma
a* Stwrltt at tarni—to County.
FtorM*. and I *ava to* tod upon
I— tattowlng —aertoak praparty
aw—4 — Jatw J. Cap*Intor ank
NGA C«y*l"t»r taM praparty
Ralng lacatak In Samlnala
Cawnty, Plarlka. mara
lartlcvlarly kaacrl—k at

•tlcwlarly 4**crlba4 a*

0— Ito# Park F-t» 10 4
■MRRCJMI4 —tog ttarad at
• utcN't CNavran, Sanfark.
Ftortka.
ank toa unktrelg—4 — Wwrlfl
at Samlnala Caunty. Ftorlk*.
will at II IS AM Ml I— 141*1
kay at Fa—wary. AO. m i
attar tar tala ank (all ta toa
Mghatt bto—r, tor cat*, tublact
to any ank aH *ii*ung lama, at
toa Frant (Waal) Da- at toa
at toa lamtoata Caunty
In Santork. Ftortoa.
T*at *aW —to la —tog ma­
tt E—eutton.

1 ^ - g
MBH
^P8* a^^ggk
Ef^aRi

Simtoali Caunty. FlarWa
Ta — a—artla— FaSruary 4. It.
IS M. wtto toa aato— Fa—wary
0EC1S
. IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE EW N TIEN TN
lU dtCIRL CIRCUIT.

IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLECOUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION
CASE NO. Cl—MM-CA—-P
THI FIRST. F A ton—rty
FIRST FEDERAL UVINOS
ANO LOANASSOUATION
OF ORLANOO. a cargara—n.
EARL ATENNINT */%/*
IARLTENNINTmN
LVNDAH. NEW
—Va LYNOA TENNINT.
Mawtto.ataL
NOTICE OP ACT
TOi Lynka H. Naw —k/a
Lynka Tanasal. LAST KNOWN
A D O R IS S ; H I PeMSraah

On* IM1 Tayata I 4*ar
Automablto. Dark glu* In Color,
id

t i T i m x c a r n a n — mg

atarat at Samlnala Ft,
Langna—■Ftortka
and I— un—rtig—d aa Srwritt
at Samlnala County. FtorIda.
will at 11 — AM an i— Mm
—y at Fa—uary. AD IML
attar tor wto and —II to t—
Mghatt bto—r. tar cat*. aub|*ct
la any and all aaltllng lain*, at
tht Frant (Waatl Door at tha
atop* at t— iaminoia Caunty
Ceertheete to lantord. Ftortod.
I.
That —to tato la —ing ma­
la tatlafy tha tormi at tato Writ
at (aacutton
Mm E.Ptok. Stwrltt
Sami—toCaunty. Ftort—
Ta — a—arttaad Fa—uary t, II.
It, M. wU* l— tola an FaSruary
SLURS
• f l i t * _________________
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC MARINS
THI BOARD OP COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will —to
R Rustic baBrtog to Raam W HR
at l— Samtoato Caunty Sarvtc—
Guliking. Sanfard. Fla an
March*, mset F to PAL, or a*
canat—r a SPEClflC^LANO
USB AMINOMINT la t*a
Samlnala Caunty Cam*
Plan ank REZON-

INO at aw kaacrs— praparty
AN OEOINANCI AMINO
INO OROINANCI » M WHICH
AM ENDS T H I 0 I T A I L I 0
LANO U S I E L E M E N T OF
T N I SE M IN O LE CO UN TY
C O M P I E N I N S I V I PLAN
FROM LOW DENSITY R E SI­
DENTIAL
TO LOW IN TEN SITY COM
M EIC IA L
FOR T H I PURPOSE OF R l-

VOL ARE NOTIFIED Mat —

FSOMA l AGRICULTURE
TO CN R E S T R I C T I O
NEIGHRORHOOO COMMERCIAL. t— tattowbig -*r-— if

L— U. WkRIVA*HILLt.
SECTION ONI. tw a n g to

" t5r i 6— nt N. at toa su at
toa NEW at toa SWto at Sacttan
SRIIS IRE. Sami—la Caunty.
Ftortka.
tern toa Sauto M It. wto
-----. . . . ^ . ((M j- y ^ ,

Ptort—am

APPLICATION NAS MSN
S U B M IT T I0 SV N.S.
MUSSELtgHITE

at— at L a uto at

—atoal
Ntoaar— acapy

Many,

...
F. H—gtonk. at
OILES. HIDRTCK A
P A .N R 8 .O w r c *
Salt* SRI. Orlan— .

APPLICATION HAS M I N
S U S M I T T E O S V JOHN
WHETSEL

r C 'iT T L S -

■to* —cl— to aggMt any —
ctoton msEr at Swaa maatowa,
•ay wttt naak a racark C t o

toe
at towCam* an;
(SEAL)

Oav iq n .MEEIEN
CtorS at Eto Ore—• Caurt
— : Ola— K Q—toy

PvSaN* t— ary M A FaRruary
AlLltoNM.
OCR-MR

SptcialUing in runtrel Dtelgne

(Soiling

NOTtCt IS H EM BY GIVEN
---------

NSTICESP SMSaiPp-tSALE

32M 3N

o f re-,

O verall. In fertility has re­
mained steady among married
couples In recent years. But the '
new survey confirmed a trend
reported earlier that found In -.
fertility among young couples —
with wives aged 20-24 years —
soared from 4 percent In 1065 to
11 percent In 1982.

B i l l Man— cant—
M*WSi** Stoat atong m W
Rat tor tM l torn to aw

a tor ms*
M as toat
maaauraSal
i to) S « taut* m— at
talk Nartkwaat to st tka
to at aw towits nt to

W

u n m a r r ie d w o m e n
productive age. 15-44.

Another 4.4 million women
have a physical Impairment that
makes It difficult or Impossible
for them to conceive and carry a
baby to term. Tw o million of
them have never had a child.

n a me
to at toa Narto, nt to
to tor O V Mat to toa

•OTAASS4IW.

R S ,

u

Icsrty'i
Iw S lII
tun Sinks...

tnctvPeretell mertua/merkOeem.

AREA DEATHS
JACK CHICK

cost should nothing be resolved
during the 3-day meeting In
Sanford.
T h e city fa ce s a 038- to
•43-mlllion price tag with large
Immediate costs to switch to a
land disposal method. If the city,
however, gets permission to
upgrade Its plant and continue
to pump Into Lake Monroe, the
cost Is about 027 million and Is
spread out over several years.
Further, according to the city,
switching to a land disposal
method would Increase con­
sumer’s bills from an average of
•20 a month to between 840 and
•60 a month.
It Is not known when the DER
will make a decision regarding
Sanford’s problem and that loo
puts pressure on the city, ac­
cording to officials.
Sanford Is facing a March I
d e a d lin e fo r 8 0 .6 m illio n
federal-state grant money which
c o u ld be u s e d fo r fu tu r e
expansion or repairs o f sewage
treatment planta If they use the
landspreading technique.

STOCKS
Ttme eueithons pr*i Mad Sr members et
Ms Mettenel Auoelelion s1StcvrfM** Ossten
ere reereeentellve Inter teeter prkee ee et
mWmrWif tehey Inter Peeler merkett

The American team was headed by Lt.
Col. Joe Harvey of the Joint Casualty
Resolution Center In Hawaii. It Included 11
military experts and an official o f the U.S.
Embassy In Vientiane.
The U.S. C-130 Hercules transport plane
was shot down Dec. 21. 1972. In a nigged
area northeast o f the Mekong River cttynrf
Pakse.
U.S. records Indicate two of the crew
members parachuted to safety but 13 others
went down with the plane and are presumed
dead.
The Joint U.S.-Lao excavation team will
try to recover the remains of those killed or
determine the fate of the men aboard the
flight.

Is the first Joint effort to account for some o f
the nearly 2.500 Americans still listed as
"m issing In action" In Indochina.
Although Vietnam has turned over the
remains o f 18 Americans killed during the
Vietnam War. which ended In 1975. the
U.S.-Lao crash site excavation was the first
Joint effort to determine the fate of missing
U.S. servicemen.
O f the 2.483 Americans still listed as
missing In action. 560 o f them vanished In
Laos — the only one o f the three communist
governments In Indochina that maintains
diplomatic relations with the United States.
A special plane carrying the U.S. team
arrived Sunday In the southern Lao town of
Pakse.

NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN

•at by vtrtoa al mat —lato
mat at I w k i p toaasE «k al

• * iM " ‘

___ ______iw —at at toa i______
C au rt s t O r gaga Cauaty.

iT.vsa

A a to—, to

DEC —

�PEOPLE

Ivmtefl Herald, Ssatsrd. PI.

Monday. Fab. II, IMS—IB

Museum Founder Turns 100
A nd He's Still Collecting
Feb. 12 marks the 100th birthday of Thomas
Byrd Gillespie, an event only one In 2.000
Americans will ever celebrate.
Gillespie. Stetson University benefactor and
founder o f the Gillespie Museum of Minerals at
the university's DeLand campus, donated his
private mineral collection ot the school when he
was 74. He and his wife. Nellie, spent many years
and traveled thousands of miles accumulating
their mineral specimens
Gillespie, a road builder and entrepreneur In
Florida, was raised In a mineralized area of
Jefferson County. Ala. While growing up. he
observed how little was known about the
form ation and use o f minerals. Th is was
especially true In Florida, a sparsely mineralized
area.
The Gillespies became Interested In mineral

collecting In the 1930s. Nowhere south of the
Smithsonian Institution In Washington. D.C. was
there a mineral collection o f any consequence.
The Great Depression made It possible for the
Gillespies to purchase many lifetime collections
and they often outbid the Smithsonian.
When the collection grew to museum-sized
proportions, the Gillespies looked for a suitable
place to display It. Stetson University was
determined to be the place, and the $230,000
collection was donated.
What started out as a collector's hobby more
than 30 years ago has grown In excess of 25.000
specimens. Still, today. Gillespie and Stetson
professor and former dean. Robert Chauvln.
travel In search o f new and belter.speclmens for
the museum. The two have traveled out west and
In Mexico searching for minerals.

Woman's Perfect Love Has
A Major Flaw: He's Married
D E A R ABU T: 1 met a terrific
y last summer. It was love at
it sight. "Frankie" told me he
worked for Boeing out of Seattle
and lived w ith a couple of
buddies from work. We saw each
other only two evenings a week
a n d S a t u r d a y a ft e r n o o n s
because he said he was taking

B

TONIGHT'S TV

some classes at night.
Everything was perfect until I
saw his car parked In a shopping
mall last Sunday, so I waited
around to see him. and a woman
came along, opened the car with
her keys and started to get In.
I asked her what she was
doing with Frankie's car. and

she said she was his wife! I
nearly had a heart attack, then I
started to cry and told her the
truth about me and Frankie. She
was very nice and said I wasn't
the first girl he's done that to.
but she was hanging In then*
because they had two darling
children. She also lotd me that
Frankie didn't work at Boeing;
he worked In a sawmill.
Abby. he told me he loved me
and even asked me to marry
him. Can a man love two women
at once? What shall I do?
HURTINO
D B A * H U R T I N O : T e ll
Frankie that a man Is entitled to
only one wife at a time and he
already has his. so to leave you
alone. And yes. a man can love
two women at the san\r time,
but It could be hazardous to his
health.
_____
D EAR A B B T : My husband
and I Just moved Into a new
home. Everyone who comes here
a d m ires It becau se it 's so
b e a u t ifu lly d e r o r a t e d and
unique. We had some special
cabinets custom-made for us. An
acquaintance was here, saw the
cabinets and raved about how
beautiful they were. (We told her
at the time they were handmade
for us.)
She telephoned a few days
later, asking where we had our
ca b ln els m ade because she
wanted some made exactly like
ours for her home.
How can I tactfully tell her
that we had ours custom-made
because we wanted cabinets that
were different from everybody
elae's?
Abby. please don’ t tell me that
Imitation Is the since real form of
flattery. I'm not flattered. I'm ...
TIC KE D OFF
Dt SCRANTON, F A .

DEAR TICKED OFFt Tell her
— Just as you (old me. And don't
hesitate to inform her that the
craftsman who made your cabi­
nets can custom-make some for
her that will be Just as lovely —
but different

M iss
P feifa
M. L . Thrift
E x ch a n g e V ow s
Donna Jane Pfeifauf and
Michael Leroy Thrift were
married Dec. 29. 1984, at
7;00 p.m., at the First Pre­
sbyterian Church o f Sanford.
The traditional candlelight
and double ring ceremony
was performed by the Rev.
Dr. Virgil L. Bryant Jr.
The bride Is the daughter
o f Nick and Elolse Pfeifauf.
300 Tammy Drive. Sanford.
The bridegroom Is the son of
Leroy and Mary Thrift. 2413
South Adams Court. Sanford.
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride chose for her
vows a formal brocade satin
own, fashioned along the
Ictorlan silhouette, with
pearls trimming the neckline
and wrtsta. The fitted bodice
featured an off-lhe-shoulder
Illusion, w ith full mcllon
sleeves. A cap o f Alencon lace
and seed pearls held the
fingertip length veil which
was embellished with lace
flowers and seed pearls along
the scalloped edges. She car­
ried a formal arrangement of
w h ite and red ro ses.

«

m iniature carnations and
holly.
Mrs. Coni Solomon was the
matron of honor. She worr a
rad taffeta gown with an
cm boride red ofT-lhr shoulder
b o d ic e and fu l l m e lo n
sleeves. She curried a hurri­
cane lamp surrounded by u
flo r a l a rra n g e m e n t uf
m iniature carnations and
baby's breath.
Mrs Linda Nadelmun. sister
o f the bride, was brldesmuld.
Her gown and arrangement
were Identical to the honor
attendant's.
Sgt. Tom Hobbs and BUI
Tu rn er served the b rid e­
groom as best men. Ushers
were Ken Pfeifauf and Tom
Thrift.
Following the ceremony, u
reception was held ut the
Deltona Hills Country Club.
The bride Is a management
trainee for K mart, and the
bridegroom is continuing his
e d u c a t io n In e le c t r o n ic
engineering.
The newlyweds are making
their home In Oalncsvlllc.

In And Around The County

Woman's
The Longwood Woman’s Club
will sponsor a Chicken Bar-BCue on Saturday. Feb. 23. from
11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.. at the club
building. ISO W. Church St..
Longwood.
BUI Mitchell, famous for his
barbecue and owner of Trigger's
Bar-B-Que, is d o n a tin g his
s e r v ic e s In p re p a ra ln g the
barbecue for the club, according
to Elda Nichols.
Adult portions wUI feature
one-half chicken, baked beans,
cole slaw, rolls, dessert and
drink for a donation of $3.50.
Children under 12 wtU receive
one-fourth chicken for $2.50

Barbecue
The following students were
winners in math competitions at
their grade level and represented
Longwood Elementary School at
the County Malh Festival Com­
petitions on Jan. 31: Michelle
p e r e z . f i r s t g r a d e : D av i d
s e c o n d g r ade:
Whitehead
Christina Moreland, third grade:
Michael Akeraon. fourth grade;
and Donnie Mounts, fifth grade.
T h e Lupus Foundation of
Florida Inc., wUI hold a meeting
ot\ Saturday. Feb. 18. at 2:00
p.m.. at 1215 E. Nebraska St.
(Boy Scout bldg.). Orlando. The
public Is encouraged and Invited
to attend.

Publicity Procedure

For more Information, contact
the Lupus Foundation of Florida
I n c . , (3 0 5 )6 7 1 -2 38 4 or
(305)568-4303.
Three local non profit organi­
zations are Joining forces to
bring a mini health fair to the
general public at an Orlando
area bonk.
On Friday, Feb. 15. from |0
a.m . to 4 p.m.. the Fleury
Foundation wUI present Its 11%
Solution Handicap Awareness
Exhibits at the same Ume Pre­
vent Blindness makes available
free glaucoma screening and
Central Florida Chapter o f the
American Red Cross will give
free blood pressure checks, all
s p o n s o r e d b y th e O rla n d o
Branch o f Savings o f America.
2914 E. Colonial Drive. Orlando.
The public Is encouraged to
attend and avail themselves of
these free services.

Ic f c n T G E O V S 6u0
2 L

I

O H 0001

WWW M v o u D e v i'

�IB —Evan'ng Htrgld, Sanford, FI.

legol Notice
_____ OMm Cearl
County, Ftortda

Monday, Frt. 11,1W

Legal Notice

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
Ctm m nrn
THE
BOARD
OF COUNTY
OAC FIw m Carp «l l« iM ,
C O M M IS S IO N E R S O F
Plaintiff
SEMINOLE COUNTY wtlt hoM
«t.
Thama* Walk in* ana tar ah • pubik hearing In Ream W IN
at th* Seminal* Ceunty Service*
Watklnt. Oatondant
Clrtatf Caart SemlnaH County. ■ulidinf. Santard. F la . an
March S. IMS at I:M FM ., ar a*
Florida
taan Iharaatiar a* peaeibM. to
Ceaafie MiaCAOi E
centlder a SPECIFIC LAND
Inc.. Plain
USE AMENDMENT ta th*
S e m in a l* C o u n ty Com
*1.
prahantlv* Flan and RKZON
Tam Wahiin*. Oatantanf
I NO at lha daacribad property
NOTICE OP SHERIFF'S 1A LI
AN ORDINANCE AMEND
MOTICE II H EREBY GIVEN
ING ORDINANCE ff tt WHICH
Ihdf try vlrtva of *hal certain
Writ af Execution, a* ityled AMENDS TH E D ETA ILED
LAND USE ELEM EN T OF
a&gt; m and mar* particularly
Hid certain Writ at Ecacwtlan THE SEM IN O LE COUNTY
iMuad awl at and under the tael C O M P R EH EN SIV E FLAN
at lha ClrcullCevrt at Ifcnlnato FROM MEDIUM DENSITY
Caunty. Ftorta*, upon * final RESIDENTIAL
TO COMMERCIAL
ludgamant rendered In lha
FOR THE PURPOSE OF REataraiald cawrt an lha »rd day at ZONING
Dacambar, A O. IM4 In fhtl
certain cat* antlltad. W ilierIan F ROM A l AGRICULTURE
TO C - l RETAIL COMMER
Lumper, Inc.. Ptdtntlff, —v * Tam Watkma, Oatandanl. whkh CIAL, the lei towing daecribad
praparto.
atariMld Writ at leacwtian tea*
The North le at lha South vyef
delivered la m a * * tharltt at
1amMat* Ceunty, Flarlda. and I ih e lia a tih a N E to a tlh a N W
U at Section a S lt-IfE, Seminal*
have levied upan the lei levin* County.
dm cAad praparty aemad by It* acre*.Fkaide Cantiitin* at
Thame* J. Walk In*, tald pre
Further deterIbad a* totaled an
S^^nmA^^d tee W* — i -- * yy
1*1 ®®uTi(Fa^Bw lha watt aid* at SR 414, narth at
C o u n ty . F la r ld a . m a r*
Sand Laba Read (DIST. Ml
a a tU tk O flT d aicrlkad at
APPLICATION HAS BEEN
S
U B M IT T E D B Y LO U IS
O n* I f T1 F a rd t ie
OAEOS
flanwagan.lD I IBF4HI1J4SS
Add11ion*I Inform* lien may
a
lt^
am
kw
tu^
i^
ep| •BFTtiPra^EW
—
Ru
P^
g
BJ' itti
Ri v—
®
e*e
OPr b* abtelnad by contacting Ihe
laniard, Flarlda.
ILPto
anH flW
UanMMMMt
SIm bm # ■
at&gt;
H ETiPn EPUTwflf
On* 1*71 Fard Pint* It*,
» l IIM .Elt.44t.
ftanwagan, ID « JXilxiew aj
Parian# urtobi* to attend Ih*
keln* ■fared at laniard Faint A ^ddai^n
M
Bm* W
---(IB
eA
--------*
ItotHIrty U
wnw
flie TO C
awavilllffllT
&gt;*dy. laniard. Flarlda
an th* prapa«ad action* may
tubmll written ttatomanf* to th*
at Im M * Ceunty, Flarlda, Land Man*famant Oivitlan
will at 11:00 A M. an th* lath prior to lha tchadutod pubik
day at February, AO im ,
he*« in* Ftraana appaartof al
attar tar tala and tail M th* Ih* haarlnf* may aubmlt writ
hlghatt bidder, FOR CAM .
Ian •lalamanla ar ba heard
•ubiact M any and *H tutting
•rally.
Min*, at lha Freni iwaatl Dear
Partont ar* advlwd that. It
at lha i lap* at
they decide to appeal any daCeunty Caurthauaa in laniard, tltien made at thee* meeting*,
Flarlda, th* abaea daacribad they will need a record of the
paraanal praparty,
prdtaadlnft, and. tor *wch
Thai aald MM la baing mad* purpaM, they may need ta
M Mllity th* term* *t laid Writ •nture
that a verbatim recard at
af EaecwtMn
th* proceeding* I* mad*, which
M w l. Falk, tharltt
rocerd Include* the toatlmany
laminate Ceunty, Flarlda
and avldancd upon whkh lha
Ta b* advartlaad February 4, II,
•pedal I) to b* bated
Id. tl. vtlh Ih* MM an February
Board at
a . mm
County Commit*loner*
DEC a
Seminal* County, PtorIda
NOTICE OF
By: Robert Sturm, Chairman
PUBLIC MARINO
Attaat:
THE BOARD OF COUNTY
DavidN. Berrien
C O A A A A IIIIO N E R t O F
PuMIth: February It. IMS
SEMINOLE COUNTY will held DEC4I
a public hearing in Ream W im
at th* lamlnaM Ceunty terylcaa
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
Bulldln*. laniard, F la . an THE EIBNTEENTN JUDICIAL
March I. IN I at I « F M . ar a* C IR C U I T . S E M IN O L E
***n IharaalMr a* paatlbM. M COUNTY, FLORIDA
cantldar a SPECIFIC LAND C I V I L A C T I O N NO.
U l l AMENDMENT I* Ih* *4 }m C A 0 *K
• a m ln a l* C a u n ly ComTALMAN HOME MORTOAOE
prahantlvt Flan and RE TON
CORPORATION, ale..
INO eflht datcrlbad praparty
FiamtiH.
va.
AN ORDINANCE AMEND
INO ORDINANCE n i l WHICH
RICHARD W. PITTMAN and
AMENDS THE D ET A ILED
KATHIE C. PITTMAN, at u*. at
LAND U IE ELEM EN T OF
al.
TH E SEM INOLE COUNTY
C O M PR EH EN SIV E FLA N
NOTICE OF SALE
FROM LOW DENSITY RESI
NOTICE it hereby given IheI
DIN TIAL AND FRESBRVA
punuanl M Ih* Pinal Judgment
TtON
at Feraeloture and SdM anlerad
In th* C*VM pending In Ihe
TO FLANNEO UNIT DEVELCircuit Court al th* f|OH
OFM8NT (FUDI FOR THE
PURPOSE OF REIONINO
TEENTH Judicial Circuit. In
and l*r SEMINOLE Caunty.
FROMA I AORICULTURE
Florid*. Civil Action Number
TO FLANNEO UNIT O EVEL
OFMENT, lha 1*1law Inf da
M tn iC A ftK Ih* undesigned
acrlbed praparty.
Clerk will Mil th* prgparty
Beflnnin* at th* IntaraactMn •Hueled In Mid Caunly. da­
te
rIbad •*:
at lha Sty R/W lln* at SR alt
wtlh Ely line et Lat M. Black 0.
Lai M and Waal M U Met *i
O R Mllthall't Survey at th* Lat t t In Black U . SANLAN DO
Levy Oran! an Lak* Jaetup. Fb
THE SUBURB BEAUTIFUL.
I. Pg. I. Seminal* Caunly, PALM SFRINOS SECTION,
F MrIda. Mid palm alt* bain* according to lha plat thereat a*
lha NW tamer at Ih* Colonnade* retarded in Fiat Book l, peg*
Flral Section, P I IS, F f. Ft and alto et th* Pubik Retard* ol
« . fhence run S I l ’ U X E
Samlnoie Caunty. Florid*,
•ion* the I line of m M Lat M a at public Mia, to th* hifhatl and
dtalanca al i.ttl 44 It. M lha IE
batt bidder tar ca*h at li fe
earner at m M Lai M. thence rwt o'clock a m., an Ih* ith day at
S E f im " W *Mnp the I line at March lass, al Ih* W IST
•aid Lat M. a dltiance at MI.4* FRONT doer at Ih* SEMINOLE
It. M the SB earner at Lat I, Caunty Caurthou**, SANFORD.
lu ndaM. Fb tf, F f *1. thence Florid*
run N a r a t 'ir W «len* the E
(COURT SEAL I
line at Mid Lat I a Pittance at
OAVEON. BERRIEN
TU m It. M the Ne tamer at Mid
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
Let li thence run I W SJ'41" W COURT
I the N line et Mid Let 1 a
By: /k/Diana K. Oakley
i el M M ft: thence N
Deputy CMrk
W *1'W E MB ftj thence run S Puhiith: February II, I I IMS
W 4 IW W D M Iti thence N O ECfl
•rtl-tr- fl MM Hi thence S
NOTIC1UNDIR
w s n r - E u se * tt, thane* N
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
IH " I M M II. M F a
NOTICE IS H ER IB Y OIVSN
I Sly R/W lln* It SR
Ihel Ih* undesigned, dealrtng M
dMi thane* run I Bf*4B* S aMnf
engage
In bualnata under lha
Mid R/W lln* I.III Tl H. M Ih*
fkllttou* name *1 OROFNAS
FOB Cantainbif M il acre*
PROPERTIES. INC *1 Number
tM Jewell Lana, In lha City at
Further daacribad a* located
Santard, Florid#, intend* M rag
aauih and ***• at Hwy If at and
••tor Mid noma with lha Ctork at
M4M.
lha
Circuit Court *1 Saminato
APPLICATION HAS BEEN
Caunty. FMr Id*
SUBMITTED BY CHARLES
Dated *1 Bloom(told Hill*. Ml.
C U R R Y -F ill *M l M
Ihl* Ifth day at January. IMS,
AddHMnal Information may
UNFORD
be ablainad by tantectin* th*
iIpB
w
upFu™
d|| Lluapamaiilf FaIM
.a-M
-w-M--PROPERTIES, INC
B
TOa ilBr
/a/ Bernard Wtnoarad
M lHM.Bat.44l
Chairman al Hid Board
Parian* unabM M attend lha
^eeebu uAe wiy| ht PCM
M
blM
^M
PbB
IV Kenneth HOald
an the prtpatad aclMna may
aubmll wriIMn ilaMmanMM HW Fubiith February 4. II. It U.
IML
Land Mantfamanl Oivitlan
DEC II
aMr M tod icheOuMd public
prtot
waring
NOTICE UNDfR
ton ttaMmanta ar ba hoard
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
it. It
NOTICE It hereby flvon that
May dmid* M
punuanl ip Ih* "FicliiM ui
rlMpa,
May will need * record at lha
Florida Statute*. Ih* lei towing
pracaadlhf*. and. tar twch
Ikltttou* name will ho ragltpure***, may may need •*
Mrad with Ih* Clerk *1 th*
I that a verbatim retard *1 qinull Court. Saminato Caunly.
i M mad*, whkh
kWh receipt at praat at pubik*
Ih* taatlmany
•ton *1 Ihl a natica, I* wil:
L A K E S I D E N O R T H AT
apaaoiHMbal
ALTA M O N TE MALL
laard at
APARTMENTS under whkh lha
County Cammtaalanara
Mltowlng party la engaged in
SamMaMCounty. Flarlda
hualttoM al AltomwM Spring*.
~yi
RMart Sturm. Chairman
B
y iM
Flarlda i T B N N F L A
PARTNERS, a Tannauaa gan
a im ati
era! partner Mip
FlMIth February 4 It, M. tfc
11.1
IMS
DEC a
DECS*

legal Notice

legal Notica
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
Flto Number***** CP
IN R | : ESTATE OF
C E C IL IRENS HUTCHINS
Dacaotod
MOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* admlnlalratton at th*
a a t a l * of C E C I L I R E N E
HUTCHINS, dacaatad. File
Number ItbOPCP. la pending in
lha Circuit Court tar Saminato
Caunty, F l a r ld a . F r a b a l *
Dtvttian. lha addroa* at which I*
Saminato Caunty CaurthavM.
Santard, Ftortda. TTT71
Th* name* and addran a* at
the paraanal rapratantdthto and
thd perMrval npraaantatlva'*
ettorney are tet torlh Mtow
All Inlaraalad perten* ar#
rapulred to llto with thto court,
W ITHIN T H R E E MONTHS
FROM THE DATE OF THE
F I R S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
THIS NOTICE: l&gt; all cailm*
ageinti ih* eeieto and I I any
abfacliana by an Inlaraalad
per tan ta whom nolle* wet
mailed that cheltonget th* valid­
ity af the will, th* ouallfMattan*
*4 lha pereenef repveeehteflt^*.
ar th* venue ar |urltdlcftan at
Ih* court
A LL CLAIMS AND OBJ E C
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL
BE F O R E V E R B A B E E D
Publication *4 mu Notice ha*
baoun an February II, IMS
Pertenei Raprttantatlv*
ORACIE L U i WHITE
I I * Ldfca Elton Drtv#
Cate* Marry, Florida HMT
Attorney tor
Paraanal Repratantollv*:
M ARGUERITE BRENNAN
M47 Tamarack Trail. Apapka.
fl

nm

Tatophena ( M l fS*HM
P u b ll t h : February I I ,

II,

tw so E C n
IN THB CIRCUIT COURT,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE M OM M IICA-H
UNITED COMPANIES
FINANCI AL CORPORATION.
Flalnlltf.

v*.

RONALD M. MCDONOUGH,
SALLY JO MCDONOUGH, hi*
wlto. and THE UNITEO
STATES OF AMERICA.

AMBRDED
NOTICE OF
FO RECLO SUREULB
NOTICE I* hereby (Ivan Ihel
Ih* undaralgnad, DAVID N
BERRIEN . Clark at the Circuit
Caurt #1 Saminato Caunty,
Flarlda. will an Ih* Uih day *4
February, IMS, between || a m.
and 1 p m .*• Ih* Waal front dear
*4 Ih* Saminato Caunty CeuH
tor tale and Mil at pubik autcry
to lha M pm l and beat bidder
tor ceth. lha toitowin* daacribad
preparty tlluato In Seminal*
Caunty. Flarlda.
Lot Sal Waadcreal. Unit Five,
according to th* Flat thereat, a*
recorded In Flat Back If, Page*
It. H. and If. Pubik Record* *1
Smainato Caunly. Florid*
purtuenl to Ih* Final Judgment
entered In a ca** ponding in h M
Caurt, Ih* ttyto *1 which I*
Indlcetod abev*
WITNESS my hand and at•total *a*l at aald Court ttu* Stth
day &lt;NJanuary, IM*
DAVID N. BERRIEN
CLERKO F THB
CIRCUIT COURT
By: VirginiaJacktan
Deputy Clark
Pubhih: February*. It, IMS
DEB III
IN TH I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATS DIVISION
File Numb*. II tt* fP
IN R E: ESTATE Ol
CATHERINE A.LEONARD.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* admlnltlralton at Ih*
aalat* at CA TH ER IN E A.
LEO N ARD , d ictated . File
Number ItM bCP, I* pending In
lha Circuit Caurt tor tamlnai*
C au n ly, F la rld a , F ra b a l*
Dfvlttan. Ih* addraa* at which I*
North Park Avenue. Santard.
Flarlda Jtfft Th* name* and
addraa*** at Jh* paraanal ropr*
tentative and Ih* partenei rap
rpaanlailva'a aitornay ar* tat
torth below
All Inlaraalad partan* ar*
ragukad to Ilk with Ihl* caurt.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: III ail ctalma
*gein*l lha atlato and III any
abjection by an Inlarailad
tarved that challenge* Ih* valid
lly *1 lha will. Ih* *u*l meetion*
*4 Ih* partenei '*pre**nlelivo.
venue, ar |url*dtollan *4 lha
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJBC
TIONS NOT SO FILED W ILL
BE FOREVERBARRED.
Publication al Ihi* Nattoa ha*
begun an February AIMS
Foraanat Raprttantatlv*:
PATRICK A. LEONARD
Ml Deg* wad Drive
Santard. FL Jiff I
Attorney tor Pertanel
Rapraaanlahv*
J AMIS A B
I ARKSat
ShtnhetMf. Mencrtot.
BarktbRaw
Foal Otltoa Ba* Ufa
tantord. FL tffn nr*
Tatoghana: IM HM lliaa
Fubiith February 4 II. IMS.
DEC M

FICTITIOUS NAMI
Notice to hereby given that I
am angagad In bualneM at Rad
Bug Rd. 4 Tuacewtll* Elvd .
Saminato Caunty. Ftorta* under
ih* ttotiitoua name at HAIR
GRAPHICS OF TUSCAWILLA.
and that I Inland to regitter *eid
name with th* Ctork *4 th*
Circuit Caurt. Samtoai* Caunty.
Ftorta* In accordance with Ih*
prevalent el Ih* Plcllttaul
Nam* Stetutot. town Section
Its tt Ftarida Statute* Itjf
/*/ Mich* toAnn Oamatree
tv Patricia Camp
tv Cardan Camp
Publlth February 4 II. 14 M.
IMS
o ec m

FICTITIOUS NAMI
Hafic* la hereby given that I
ere angagad to bualnau al 111
Shaw n** T r a il, Sam lnala
Caunly, Flarlda undar lha
llctltlaua nama al J-ANO F
LAWN SERVICE, and that I
Inland to ragtotor Mid nama
with Ihe Clark tl lha Circuit
Cawrt. Samlnala Caunty. Flarlda
to accardanca with lha pre
vtttona pI lha Fktlllew* Nama
Statute*, towll Section te ll*
Ftorta# Hatuto* mt.
/t/JahnP Jahntan
/a/DanaldJ Oumbta
Publlth Fabruary II, II. U A
March 4 IMS
DEC to
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FlkP Member to4 to CP
IN R Ei ESTATE OF
FLOYDQUINTIN FR EER
Oaceated
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
A G A I N S T T HB A B O V E
ESTATE AND ALL OTHER
PERSONS IN TERESTED IN
THE ESTATE:
YO U A R E H E R E B Y
N O T I P I E O that tha ad
mtaittrafton at lha atlato at
FLOYD QUINTIN F R E E R ,
d a c a s i a d . P l l a Number
SS-dff-CP. la pending in Ihe
C lrcull Ceurl far Samlnala
Caunly, F la rld a , Frab al#
Divittan. lha addraa* *4 whkh it
Saminato Caunty CaurthauM.
Santard. Florida, n 771
Tha paraanal rapraaanlatlva at
tha aitala la W E S L E Y B.
FR EER , whoa* addreta It 1*41
Baal Club Road. Oviedo. Flarlda
mas. Tha nama and addraaa at
tha paraanal rapraaanlatlva'*
tltornay ar* Ml torlh batew.
All paraant having claim* er
dtmand* againtl lha atlato art
raaulrad. WITHIN THRBC
MONTHS FROM THE OATS
OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION
OF THIS NOTICE, to llto with
lha ctork at tha above caurt a
written ilalamanl at any claim
ar demand thay may have Each
claim mutl ba to writing and
mvtl Indkal* lha bail* tar tha
claim, lha nama and addrau at
• Itarnay, and lha amaunl
claimed II th* claim it not yet
dua, Ih* dal# whan II will
bacam* due than ba llatod II
tha claim It canttopanl ar uniI
guldatod. Ih* nalura at Ih*
uncertainty thatl be Mated II
tha claim I* tacured. tha tecurl
ly thall ba datcrlbad Tha
ctalmanl (hall dtilvar tuflictonl
Yapto* *4 m* claim to in* clerk
to anebi* toe dark to mall an*
paraanal rapr*
copy to aach
i
Mnlatlve
All partpn* Intorettod to th*
atlato to wham a copy at Ihl*
Nolle# *1 Admlnltlralton hat
bean mailed ar* ragulrad.
WITHIN T HRE E MONTHS
FROM THE DATE OF THE
FI RS T PUBLI CATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to llto any *bdtaltonge Ih* valtally *4 Ih*
dacadtnf* will. Ih* pMiitka
itant *• Ih* parienai rapt*
tanlallva, ar tha vanw* ar
lurtodktton allha court
ALL CLAIMS. OEMANDS,
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILEO WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED
Data *4 Ih* Ural public titan *1
•hit Natica *1 Adminlitralton
Fabruary 4 MBS.
/•/W ttityE. Freer.
A* Fananal Rapraaanlatlva
et lha Batata at
FLOYD QUINTIN F R IE R .
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
THOMAS A. SPEER
O tS P E IR R S P IIR , P.A.
F O B * * DM
Santbrd. F torIda SX77I
Tatophana IMS) m *M1
FuMtoh Fabruary 4 tl, 1M1
OECM

NOTICE OF INTENTION TO
l a O IS TI R FICTITIOUS
NOTICE IS H EREBY OIVIN
limited

R IO LION APARTMENTS
Upan receipt at great at
pwbtkatton *4 M t natka. lha
undanignad will ragtotor tack
fkftttawt name wlto to* Clark at
to* Circuit Court al Samtoai*
County. Ftorid*
Oatad tot* krd day at January,
IML
ORACI PROPERTIES NO f,

LTD.

It/k/a O rtca Frap artia*
Lim ited N*. f l. g Flarlda

By: Fh
Fortaop

legal Notice
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC N EARIM
THE BOARD OF COUHTY
C O M M I S S I O N E R S OF
SEMINOLI COUNTY will held
• pubik hearing to Ream W-tJt
i^
dl A
guO
e fIJN
m
rwT
i1lIfW
■-1TO
-a
—
m
m
t,1ltfl
re*
T
O
TIT
W
vm
TO
iTO*..
TJf #
iffY
Building, Sanford Fla an
March I. IMS at f :« FJH.. ar a*
Man lharaattor a* poialbto. to
canaldtr a SPECIFIC la n d
USE AMENDMENT I* th*
S a m l n a l a C ou n t y Compnhantiv* Flan and REZONINO at too daicrlbad praparty
AN ORDINANCE AMEND­
ING ORDINANCE ff If WHICH
AMENDS TH E DETAILED
LAND USE ELEM EN T OF
THE SEM IN O LE COUNTY
C O M P R E H E NS I V E FLAN
FROM LOW OCNSITY RESI
DINTIAL
TO MEDIUM DENSITY RESI
DINTIAL
FOR THE PURPOSE OF RE
ZONING
FROM A l AGRICULTURE
TO RF RESIDENTIAL FRO
FESSKM AL. tha toitowing dr
Tha South M* toot *i lha North
SIS toot *4 to* Watt 4JS It. at ih*
NEW V lha Nlto (tot* raadl. to
Sactton IS llS M l. Saminato
i. (DIST. fl)
aacrtoad at tocatod
an to* aatt *14* at Tutkawiiia
Road, MB toat narth *4 Olka
Raadl
APPLICATION HAS BEEN
SUBMITTED BY KENNETH
WICK
Additonal Intermtlton may
b* ablainad by contacting Ih*
Land Managa^nanf Manager at
S I-IIJL Ext. 441.
Paraant until* to altond Ih*
aettont may
Hwanfl Wrinin IffllnTOnl TOTITO
Land Managamanl Oivitlan
prior to to* tchadutod pubik
hawing. Ftraana appearing it
ar b* hoard
rally.
that. It
thay dacid* to
ctitan mad* at th*M matting*,
thay will natd a record at lha
precaadlngt. and, far auch
purpaM, they may naed la
•nture toat a verbatim record at
to* p ricaadlngi la mad*, which
record Include* lha totlimony
and avldtnca upan whkh tha
appeal toto babPMd
Baardat
County Cammtottonar*
Saminato Catmty. Flarlda
By: Babort Sturm. Chairman
Attoat:
David N. Berrien
Fubiith February II. INJ
O IC a * ________________________
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
C I R C U I T IN AND F O R
I I M I N O L I COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASINO: BSBIS1 CAdf F
SANDY COVE CONDOMINIUM
AS S O C I AT I O N , INC. OF
SEM INOLI.
Plaintiff,
v*.
RICHARD HALL.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: RICHARD HALL
YOU ARE NOTIFIES tool an
action ha* baab Iliad againtl you
and you art required la terv* a
copy at your wrltton Atlanta*. II
any, la N IA L MCCULLOH.
Flaln lllt'g Atlarnay. whata
•dtrete ta *w N. Palmaito Ava.
Orlande. Ftarida n e t. an ar
katore Fabruary If. IN I. and
111* Ih* artginal with Ihe Clark *4
tola Ceurl either hater* iervice
an Plaintiff* Attorney er imma
•lately there*Her, ar a detaull
will ha entered againtl you tor
lha raltol damandad in th*
Complaint ar Petition
WITNESS my hand and Seal
at IN* Court an January llth.
IMS
(SEAL)
DAVION. BERRIEN
CLERKOFTHECOURT
By: David M McCollum
FuMtoh: January II, ft Faint
ary 4 It. m i
P E B II4 ________________________
IN THE Cl BCUIT COURT
FOR SEM INOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
c a s e MAM-iae-ch-aa-p
CIRCUIT CIVIL
LINCOLN FINANCIAL CORF..
Plaintiff
V4
0. CHAPLIN! REED, JR.,
at u*. at el.

NOTICE OF ACTION

TO: 0 Chaplina Raad. Jr and
ito Read “ whata lati
Ciuat Caurt, Merton*. Gaargta

YOU ARE NOTIFIED mat an
•clton M Wroclaw a
County, Ftorid*. towit:
L a t S. C L U S T E R I .
WILOWOOO. • Planned Unit
Oavatopmant. accardtog to lha
Fiat thereof a* racer dad to Flat
Both If, Papa* f. 4 a, and to.
Public Retard* af Samlnala
Caunty, Ftortdahaa bean ttlad egeinai yeu and
yaw ar* required to aam * capy
*f your wrltton datonMA Many.
to it an RARRY M ELKIN.
■TOr* iTOTOWEvIET• ■HTO*FTO|F*
SuMa l i t SI FtNnburg. FL
n m iiiiis f ta n * an ar Utora
Fabruary a . IMS. and hie lha
original with Ih* ctork at tola
caurt attoar hator* **rvlc* an
gtatotltfa atlamay ar immadi
ri athanatM a

WITNESS my hand and the
•aal al tola Caurt an January
IMS.
(M ALI
OAVIDN. BERRIEN
CLERKO F THECOURT
By: tV UgaWatlaca

February it, )&amp; »

CALL TOU. F R U
DEC-**

tl. M 4 FabM B -tu

It. I

legoi Notice
FICTITIOUt NAME
Nufk* It hereby given Ihel I
am engaged in bw*lna** al F O
Baa M il, Santard. Saminato
Caunty. Florida U ffl under lha
llctltlaua name *1 JOYFUL
SOUNDS!, and Ihal I Intend to
ragtotor m M name with me
Ctork *f ih* Circuit Cawrt.
Samlnala Caunty. Flarlda
at lha F k ill law* Nama Siafutoa.
town Sactton tu rn Florida
Siafutoa i«sf
/*/ Oougta* Edward Pawall
PtbJIth January N 4 Fabruary
a h . ii. iats
DEB If*
FICTITIOUS NAMI
Nafkt to hereby given that I
am engage* *" butJnet* *t f*gi
Brawn Bark Dr., Orlande.
Saminato Caunty. Ftorid* M U
under lha tktlttou* name el
A I R. REFIN ISH IN C COM
FANY. and that I Inland to
rtglttor Mid name with lha
Ctork af Ih* Circuit Caurt.
Saminato County, Ftortda in
accardanca wtlh Ih* prevltient
*1 tna Fkilltout Nam* Slatuto*.
towll Sadton to)Of Ftarida
Slatuto* IfSf
/*/Q*targ*M. Swtoruynthl
FuMtoh February II. If. IS 4
March A IMS
OCC-fl
FICTITIOUS NAME
Natka I* hereby flvon that I
am mgagif In butkwta at les
Whooping Laap. Allam anl*
Spring*. Stm lnal* Caunly,
Ftarida fffgi under lha fkllttou*
nama al ACTION CREDI T
SERVICE, and ihel I inland to
ragtotor told nama with lha
Clark al lha Circuit Court,
Samlnala Caunly, Ftorta* In
accardanca with lha provltton*
at tna Fkllttou* Nama Slatuto*.
towll: Sactton lass* Florida
Slatuto* ItSf.
HI ACTION, INC
IV H E Bramtott
V P 4 Sac
FuMtoh February II. It, « 4
March 4 IMS
DECS1
IN THB CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE IfTH JUOICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR IIM IN O L I
COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASINO.: »Sm CA bSK
C I T Y OF A L T A M O N T E
SFRINOS.
JOSEPH j. WEISENFELD.
Trust**: FIRST NATIONAL
■A N K O F B O S T O N :
NATHANIEL VEFEEN. SR.,
T r u a l t a l ar NEW F R O
VIOENCI BAPTIST CHURCH,
l/k/a Spring Lak* MlMtonary
Baplltl Church: NORTON
H E R R I C K COMPANY c /0
NORTON H E R R I C K :
ME R C ANT I L E NATIONAL
B A N K AT D A L L A S :
C R O W - C H I L OR E S l HARROD LTD. , a T a i l *
Limited ParbwraMp qualified to
da bwainaat in Ih* Stato af
Flarlda c/# WI LLIAM C.
DOSTER: WESLEY T. and
F C L T O N H. W I H O O l
AMERIFIRST FE D E R A L
S A V I N G S AND L O A N
ASSOCIATION l/k/a FIRST
F I O E R A L SAVINOS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION at Miami:
RALPHAS A and MARY R
WILLIAMS. FIRST FEDERAL
S A V I N O S AND L O A N
ASSOCIATION OF ORLANDO.
NOTICE OF ACTION IM
E MI NE N T DOMAIN AND
NOTICE OF HEARING
TO: All Oatandanl* named In
lih ib il A. attached, it all
panto* claiming Intoratl* by.
through, undar ar againtl lha
panto* having ar claiming to
have any right, till*, ar tntoretl
In the praparty daacribad In
EkhIMIA.
A PalIIton in Eminent Domain
proceeding* haa bean filed to
acquire certain praparty Inter
t a i l In Sam lnala Caunly.
Ftorid*.
Each Oatandanl la required to
*wT V *

w r it tr n

(M iV n iB t

TO ITTO

P atllltn an Fellllanar'a at
lar nay. wh*M name and addraaa
era atoen katow. an ar batora
March IA IMS. and to III* Ih*
artginal at Ih* Ottawa** with th*
Clark at ihl* Ceurl either batora
ta n k * an Fallttonar'i attorney
ar Immadialaly
_l^^e Iharaatiar.
*■*!. I _
PTOIW^ wTOT
iITTO* Bt^w
•at ar Iton Ih* Oatondant ha* In
ar to tha grapkrty daacribad In
lha Patlltan and to
takan bath by Order at Taking
and Final Judgment tor Ih* uaa*
and purge*** aat torlh in lha
Patman If any Oatandanl tail*
to da ta. a default will ha

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE Mat
• Doctortitan *4 Taking ha*
11n ihi* cam* and RtM
at
Caurt deem* prepare** hearing
batora tha Hanarahto Judge
McOragar. ana at tna Judge* af
thto Caurt. an fftarth 14 IMS. at
II M AM in Otombar* at Pta
rauntu
--ja ^—*- Ma
Santard. Ftorid* AN partto* M
lha action and an parttaa inter
at mat hearing
WITNESS my hand and lha
•aal af nu» Court an m i 1*1 day
at Fabruary, IMA at Santard.
I im India County. Flarlda
(U A L )
DAVION. BERRIEN
Jto Ctork at lha Court
By: Etta Crabbed
A* Deputy Ctork
THOMAS C. FEENEY. Ill,
ESQ
F awtor, william* 4 Alrth.
PA .
F .a id a im
.Fl
JUtamay* ■ ■ ____■
FuMtoh: Fabruary 4 It. M. tt.
HM
DECS*

CLASSIFIED ADS ~
Sem inole

O rlan d o • W inter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 Ur m ................ ATC a lag
HOURS
3 cbRSdCdtht tlrntf I 1C b Rgb

f c » A.M. • 5:30 F M
MONDAY t i n TODAY
SATURDAYt

7 MdMCRtiv* UdM* U C i Km '
10 cddSdcathd ttawi 44C a In*
Contract Rata* AvaNaMg
3 Urbs I

DEADLINES
N oon T h e D ay B efo re Publication
Su n d ay - N oon Friday
M o n d a y - 1 1 : 0 0 A . M . S a tu rd a y

23— L o s t A F o u n d

71— H t l p W a n te d

REWARD!

ACCOUNTING CLERK

Necklace yeltow gold chain
with I diamond*. to*t In
downtown arte, ar Dr. Raga 4
Doe*mend office Greet tan
tlmenlal kaepaaket Ample
C a ilP l ll»t

Eipartoncad In Accsunt* pay
abto and recelvtbto Typa al
wpm ac cura to Farmananl
paaltton.
Never# Pa#

25— S p e c ia l N o tic e s

Acrylic Applketori needed to
apply pratoctiva coaling an
car*, beat* and plana* U i*
SU par hour We train Far
work In Santord araa call
Tam p aiu taan u
AVON EEAUTT COMPANY
FaN/part Ihna/ Kara la-ltt hr
CoIHm mad Iff 1*14 n&gt;l*M.
AVON (ARNINOS WOWIII
OPEN TERRITORIES NOWIII
n iM M arm a***

T t llf TERM 774-1343

CCUBRATE
A BIRTH!
Mr. Stork-* viail
make* tor a Iftottm*
*4 memartoa, gift* 4 all I
CaH Linde m e n :
27— N u r s e r y A
C h ild C e r e
BABYSITTING In my hema day
•r night AIM by lha hour
m u u.
Fra# ar Raducad Child Cara
II yau quality
i n saw ar m u u
Will da babytmmg in my home
Dependable and raipantlbto
Call Mary m *14*
______
Attar 4 P M
33— R e a l E s t a t e
C o u rse s
BOB M. BALL JR.
SCHOOL OF R SAL 1ST A T I
m 41II or Iff 71*4
53— B u s in e s s
O p p o rtu n itie s

••• 4 C 0 P •••
Liquor LkaaM SEMINOLE
COUNTYMOVEABLE!
I4a.t*4 dawn Raceltont term*
•a kale no I Pint Ftortda
Frapertlea P I *11*__________
A t— M o n e y to L e n d
Butinaia Capital SM.aoo la
Sl.aaojoa and dear. F. O Ban
M il Wtatar Pfc. Fla, a m .'
HOMB 4 FOhICLOaUhB- 4
martgaga ca won't accept
yaur p a y m a n l a t Call
McTeggert tor talwtton 4U
ft**
7 1 - H e lp W a n te d
Haatakaepar tor Apartaiaal
Cemptoi Pull lima paaltton
Ganaral cleaning
Nrtor
i piaaM H I l
Thru Frl FOI
phana work. Sludanl* and
h d u a a w l va a wel c ome
Call n il
I mma d l at a apanl ng lar
t al a t / *• r v I c a Wal l
ttlabllfhed cempany locking
tor Indtvtaualt who have a
datlra to ba lha yucca** lhay
know tnay can ka Campant*
Iton plan. Vahkto fumlthad 4
company banatlla Apply g I al
114} Park Dr

Ltgol N o tk i
MOTICB OF BE SOLUTION
CLOSING. VACATING AND
A I A N D O N I N G
RIGHTS-OF-W AT O l
DRAINAGE EASEMENT
TO WHOM IT MAY COHCIIIN.
NOTICE IS H EREBY OIVIN
•4 Caunty Cam
M
b
Sh.4^Hiu
bW
i4 e
erv
uf A^toOtokidiuklldk V
*rEmm
mfiGBW
M
YV
MmeBvw
pr
Ftarida, dt
haid an lha Mh day pt Fabruary,
A D , IMS. In lha Caunty Cam
mlattonara ffaatlng Raa^h al
BF
GT
bM
..M
B1
—
lAu».lee*
F
O CtoatokldM^ WJTta
O
IE*W
f1 IB
iy im I
Building In Santord. FtorlGA
puraudnt to Patlttan and Natka
Gw HE I VaaaiuttorT
vacating and

i

and alt right tt tha Caunty at
iMilMte
IPi da
in
C
^torvvvaww^^^to -tao
wm
rM
pw^MMeJk.ii*
aq* w
ry liid
ta tha fallowing datcrlbad
righto dtwdy ar Watoig* tmt
mant.towH:
Thai partlan *4 Ird SI. lying
batwaan btocka C 4 D F im
aubdivtoton. plat bath 4 page t t
public raeprdt at Samlnala
Caualy FL.
By Vn Board dt Caunty Cam
mm tonan al Samlnala Cacmty,
Mh day *4 Fabrw
ary. A D . IMA
BOARD OF COUNTY COM
MISSKMERS OF SIM iNOLI
COUNTY. FLORIDA
B V : SANDRA O l I N N .
CHAIRMAN
ATTRST: DAVID N B IB
BUN. CLERK
FuMNh: Fabruary II. IMS

otcu

Capa Canavaral firm aepandlhg
in Semlnoto I worker* pro
ducing. • mart madid tuo
F/T. I4M full lima Career
ortontod people Only over IS
Full training
I II SMT.batora*
Carpenter* needed tor tub ‘
contract work. Mu*I have
truck, toed and aiparlanca.
Application* being takan a*
M J Myrtto Call tor appt
l» la t d A M .B ) IM )
Cathiar* and Aitociato Mariag*' needed Chance at advan
cement tor the right people!
Mutt ba tt yra a* ag* and
have 3 checkedto |ab refer
•neat Applleaftana being
ecceptod now Intorvlawt
•tart an Wadnatday. Pet
llth. at t PM Jkpaty al:
Tannaco Oil. ItdO t ranch
Avt ■Santord. Pla. EOE.

Child Care Sptcialist
Raaldwitlat Treatment Cantor
tor tmef tonally dlalurbad.
taaually abuiad children
(•get a to ID. Mutt ba laving
but firm and creally* CAII
Mr* Smith 1 tu n tM lO .
Of
l too 411 **M Send
return*' to Delta Treatment
Cantor*.
F O Baa Jtt.
Greenwood. PI* 11*41
Dei Igner wanted, mutl ba tamlt
lar with 11**41* nark Craft*
and have peed amtMa eMitty.
W i can urn yau M l thwa ar
part lime Salary open Call
-•
D it M ________■

DISCOVER US!
AAA EMPLOYMENT
FOR
•A JOB*
•A CAREER*
•A FUTURE*
CAUMOROAT

323-5176
N O F IIT IL L H IR ID
FRONT D ISK .---------- to SIM
Oreal paaltlan lar career
minded, light tacrater lei and
accounting, fail pecad wall
ettaMIthad company
WINDOW INSTALL! R....M IMt
Are you lamlllar with cut glawT
TM* I* tor yau.
Eacaitonl money tab* made.
ACCOUNTING CLIRKS..M B4
S petition* Knawtodga H re
caiyabto and payabto needed
to flip Into Rwaa led* CRT d
piut. Great bpnafltt
WAR! HOUSI/OR IYER .....IIM
Thit company It toaklng tor a
hard worker Knawtodga al
weed • pig*. Train an Invan
tory and torkUtt.

GAL FRIDAY__

Warm amlla
win* hara.
Fhanat. light
keeping.
will toach payroll a*ual ef
tka
TRADESMAN___________ lif t *
Need "Jack al all Trade*'.
B
■
*.——
—
e- .TO
_ im
^—
e
L f " 'A m
ClfpBBif|
lw.l —
Him
metal tipartonca Itocfrkal f
DELIVERY..

Itadt

O K I 111 MBS
- IT O

m n n
Frant dtah (lark. Frl
FrlaaGtw*
naat,
Ap*y to
paraan Man Frl. N am.
am to I
pm Pollan* Inn
Ganaral Otfk* J
Salary
1)4* pulling toath but not
~ * yau uaa a w e t ad-

�KIT ‘tr CARLYLE ■by Larry Wright
—

•1 — A p a r t m in t s /
H o w to S h i r t

153— A c re a g e L o t*/ S a le

Hair Stylist- Experienced

AKoIrtcR. SwieffTefc.
&amp;.•£■&gt; frtc Cww.

73— R o o m s fo r R o n !

I f f — P e ts A S u p p lie s

FREE CAT. Petit* gray tamale
Very friendly with Children
Seed hem* only jjjim
Rhedetlan Ridge back Rag
Female 1 month* beautiful
dog SIH Hi *1*3
Two deg* Sheparp Lab ml* 1
Monde. 1Meek Fro* to good
homo N* W limit

OSTEENS A let* HOOP dawn.
Term* Lake Privilege* No
mobile* Kerry 1. Oregger*
Realtor »*ei«l
Ottaen- 1 acre* high, dry,
cleared an hardroed frontage
t ml tram Here* 13000 Pawn
UaSmp By Owner) HI fOaO
to acre* InOttaen Corner Gulae
Rd 4 Catriah Dr S3S.MP
tl 000 down. tOyr* to pay bal
Contact Thome* B. Burleaon.
PO Boa MS. Okteen. FL

127—O fflc « Rental*

OFFICES
m
C. ORLANDO SR &lt;1* at
E«t Watt fipwy A Laka
Uat wWt Ratt visibility a
Accessibility I Highest TraHtc
CovetI Ptggty Wiggly Anchor.
TIRMSI W IW Anytime
rm n m n rr r m r i r r
new shoppino center

203— L iv e s t o c k a n d
P o u ltry

Pip fot Sale
173 11*1

*155— C o n d o m in iu m s
C o-O p / S a l*

C A R D I N A l

B

M .

living room, dining roam,
paneled family room, laundry
room, workshop and largo
acraanad perch Call tor la
tormatlon m llkk ScltOO

ea g

••

nap* -*• a •

H I I - &gt;1.71,

4*nr *1
Daytona Beatb
* * • * • Welds a * * * * * *
PUBLIC AUTOAUCTION
(W 1 « M NlteettiMPM
* W h tro A n y b o d y *
♦ Con Buy or S t ill*

Ear mart M ill
_______i m m u n _______

213— A u c tio n s

NEWSMYRNA BEACH
Intra coastal waterfront 1
Idrm., It* bath Candominium, turnlthed FInane
mg D IM
Beechatde Realty. REALTORS
tM-OMItl. Open1Deytl
SPOTLESS t bdrm. tondtaweed
Villa* I1S.W*. New appll
eace«/cerpet/*cr.patterpeel.
Sentry Mgt..... fn iR U U IIh
WON'T LASTI Only I1SMdawn.
Sift me.. It qualified
Sendlewsed Unit C l, 1
bp-mi bath, all appliance*,
wether/dryer. Irg peel saaoo
RELOWappraisal USeeae

77— A p a rtm e n t*
F u r n is h e d / R e n t

★ DAYTONA A U T O *
★ AUCTION ★

AUCTION EVERY FRI.NIONT

L &amp; E AUCTION
M* Saeterd Are
CONSIGNMENTSWELCOMII
3234513

FOR ESTATE
Cammerclal ar Ra«ld*ntlat
Auction* 4 Appraisals Call
Dttl't Auction m SUP
215— B o a ts a n d
A c c e s s o r ie s

Incoin Cantlnanlal Town car
IWJ Hvy duty taw pack
U M HI alt* __________
t

D ISCO U N T

f t *
^

a u t o

SALES

WE FINANCE
French Av*.............H 3 ISkt

FIBERGLASS CANOE
Eacellent condition Value
tm Will swap ler outboard
motor ot comparable value
Call M3Tier

157— M o b il*
H o m e s / S a l*

COUNTRY VILLAGE

217— O a r a g e S a le s

Frl Sal - Sun.- Vs ml Eaal at
Geneva Bridge on Hwy a* Jth
Howe* Trailer an right “A
little Ml *t everything M ult MbWIb Nbrw Put

321-075* E v e 322-7443

21 f— W a n te d to B u y

MODELS ON D4SFLAT
INS. Men. thru Sat.

Gabyi led* Stroller*. Cloth**
Playpen*. IK . Paperback
Beak* m u i i m m i
Paying CASHtor
Aluminum. Can* Copper.
Bret* Load. Newspaper.
Ole** Gold. Sliver
Kakaxn* Teat. *l| W. 1*1
MMSef etroiioe

set *43 aosr......... m -tK im
IMS E. Orem...... Oreape City
tat. HI W Plymouth Ava
Oatand.Fl.
_________

0
f t — A p a rtm e n t*
U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t

(

IS f — R e a l E s t a t e
W an ted

A R D irsJA L

M il

Q ( ARDINAl

r&gt;&lt;»7(,

AIRPORT ROAD. NEW highly
energy afflelent, expendable,
affordable 1 bdrm Cardinal
Hama Only 14.111 with Im
mediate availability Mtg li
naming aulllanca Call
i aoew iirt, ext ait*
COIV FIRIPLACI
Neat 1Bdrm. ) bath brick home
an IHi IN oak etudded lot
Attractively decorated Wail,
wall carpet. Cent, air Loan
value tn.OOO. price IktJPP

Q

(

A R D I N A l

H II

8 l l ri ( . 7 b

Oetttng Dtverced tran*terred.
Nrctotur*. need quick talet
Can Da.a » l «wr
Prtvaaaparty eeeda
ler Ikidrnm heme.
StMttl

223— M is c e lla n e o u s

STENSTROM
REALTY*REALTOR
SMfRrfs Saits Utdtr

I 4 f — C o m m e r c ia l
P r o p a r t y / S a la

N O M O R E!

2 3 5 -T ru c k */
B u se s / V an s

W* have Ih* cur* I0B%money
Back guaranlaa Tucker*
Farm 4 Garden Center. San
lord, andOeland
Far Sal* new Shoal Helmet,
man * geld ring, new baby
crib. 4dr*ta*r 111 ate*
Far Sol* Stereo. TV. drape*
axarclte bike Sun lamp,
twrnllura. pictures, many
lion. Tourt tor UM Dump
householditems 111 HP*
truck feature alone It worth
SMWadoy H iP em i
Oalv. Wire Oates ill li"a
l*"4 (llll"«4 *"w lth
-t» Dodge Van cyl. alandard
peatvnttmgs seam fait
thltt Panelled, carpeted.
»"•» •» Jeep CJt Renegade,
PIANO Spinet, good cand SaM
pockego. hardtop a cylinder
*r best otter Call before l
1 ipeed 4a4. AM FM radio
pm HI m i
mWMoraMWM________
RebaNI RIEBT/Snt.ea 4*p
M Ford F IM Heavy “ Duty
Guaranteed Kirby C*
khotka A spying*. a cyl, a
MIW. 1st It. Ill Met
Selenite TV System*
Complete All you need. &gt;*•%
*aO
—
*Rfip*anf in■ IS
Mwrtt
II.1MM Universal HI Vie

Kenmere Fart*. Service
Uied Wither* niPaet
MOONEY APPLIANCES
• PINT TOOWN*
Caior TV*, stare**, washer*,
dryer*, refrigerator, treater*,
lurnitura. videorecorder*
Special lit week* rent Wc
Alternative TV BAppt. Rental*
layre* Shopping Canker
RHM
THIUSRD STORE
w* Buy Sell
Appliance* Furniture
We Finance Anyane
* lit E. led Street HI 4US a
WILSONMAH R FURNITURE
III HIE FIRST IT.
m tan
I D — T e le v is io n /
R e d io / S te re o

Realtor » n w
SANFORO ■AIRPORT BLVD.
Approximately 1100 tg tl
Newer quality cenatructlen
Attractive decor. May uaa
portion ea reaidance. Many
possibilities SOUTHERN
REALTY ENTERPRISES
sscean

*15 MinUA|- 6m 4 Shapel

HP Firm........iia ma attar a

FLE A S t

111— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n it u r e

MOM A P O P P L A N T
NURSERT. J bdrm . ] bath,
baaulltul brick wall fireplace
in great room, largo eel in
kitchen, plua &gt;AM *q tt at
nuraary Detached garage
V4.P00 Sellar will look at all
otter*

lft* Mustang a cylinder,
automatic, many no* part*
goadbody U W WtOT

COLOR TELEVISION
RCA IS" Cental* color telavi
elan Original price ever MOO
Balance due IMS M cash or
laka aver payment* sjo par
month Still In warranty* NO
MONEY DOWN Free home
trial NsabOgellen
Call Ml list Day ar night

2 3 1 -C a rs
M C r td t?
N oC ndtl
71 MtstARf.___...|100 DORN
NE FINANCE

TOP Ootlar Paidlor JunkA
Uaedcar*,truck* 4 heavy

MTKMIAl WTO SALES
U N L S a a fa ri 1214075

CONSULT OUR

appliance*, carpet. Blind*
SIM NICE I Move now no renl
until March Allard Realty
REALTOR m « d ___________

323-5774

SANFORD1AVCEII

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
D id 322-26TI or 831-9993
g

l

\ U U IIN A I

RA JELICTRIC

computerlead financial slat
tamenI Quarterly returns
W R R Aik ter Frank 111.

CARUTMlAi TfeUCKIM

Fill dkl end landclearing

LANOCLIARINO
FILL DIRT. BUSHOGGING
CLAY 4 SHALE HI MU

VERY RELIABLE- SB»I»WI»

0 1

A R D IN A l

WAU. &gt;T. COMPANY..Jn-HM
i4G LSEBfcH £iiiiiii£ii2
0 1

\ R I)l\

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0 1

M (l)l\

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wSSSSsifear

tt.drBr.r..T

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*1 * * fTIf**

.*

�&gt;*&gt;•

Milk Intolerance May
Be Cause Of Gas Pains

T H A N K S' H O W I' l L
HAVE A HECK O F .
A TIME TELLING /
WHICH 13
vA
WHICH

CAAbO-ASTIT, I1U \ WAZM IT,
NMOOMT,
LCOSY... I fELLA!

W 6 IF E IP . C S A k E S T E Y

IC M T
ev er
cw m h am c!

)

k CHARCCP WITH* \

eyedrops. taking vitamins and
buying a humidifier. The last
eye doctor I visited told m e to
take a vitamin supplement with
extra vitamin A and D In It. but
he didn't say how much. I have
been taking these vitamins for
five months with no effect. Can
you recommend anything that
will provide some relief? I only
have the problem from October
to May.
DEAR READER - You to have
your diagnosis clarified. You
may have Sjogren's syndrome,
also called sicca for which Ihe
Lactose — the carbohydrate In
usual treatment Is some form ol
milk — Is a double sugar, made
by Joining galactose to glucose.
• Hurts
ACROSS
Humana cannot absorb double
7 Auto failure
sugars o f any type. All double
I Crawls
sugars. Including (able sugar,
10 Human veto
must be digested to single sug­
ars. T o digest the double-sugar
lactose, one needs an enzyme
called lactase. Babies. Infants
and young sucking animals all
have an abundant quantity of
this, but after the nursing stage,
this enzyme decreases In many
people and animals. This occurs
In young schoolchildren, but It Is
more frequent In teenagers and
even more frequent In adults.

D E A R DR. L A M B My
husband has colitis and has a lot
o f trouble with gas pains. He's
been to doctors, and basically
they say he has to live with It.
Friends tell us he should stop
eating dairy products. Is there
anything to this?
DEAR READER - There could
be If he has lactose Intolerance.
Colitis Is not a very specific
d ia g n o s tic term , but y o u r
comment about gas suggests
that your husband may have a
spastic colon.

Lactose Intolerance may or
m ay not be your husband's
problem, but I have discussed
milk Intolerance In more detail
in The Heallh Letter. Special
Report 26. The Milk Question.
DEAR DR. L AMB Four
years ago. after the birth of my
son. I developed dry eye. I have
tried everything to alleviate Ihe
p r ob l em. Including using

THEJXTl BE A CLUCK GLANCE
AT
HEADLINES... A
SHORT FHCNE CAR.TO MOM...
AND A LOOK AT THE WEATHER
FTCMTHE OLD B B N T WINDOW.,

Station. New York. N.Y.. 10019.

□ □ □

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□ n n n

n n n c m

□□□□
□

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□ D E
□ □ n
a n n
□ □

e d e

n o
D
n n n
Q
D E
D E E
D E E
E D E D
E
E
n n n n
n n n n
D D E

rone (abbr.)
42 last
43 Article of faith
48 Bowfm
1

9

1

%

4

10

•

d e e s

O
n
n
D
E

D D
n n n n
n
D E
D E E
D E E D
D D D
D E
E E
n
n n n
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E E D

•

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11 1

11

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48 Building
location
50 Newts
52 It it (coni)
54 Half a score
55 Sooner than
58 Change color

34 Vermin
38 Infgniftcent
39 luerd
41 Demilitarised

44 Roman deity
49 First copies
Isbbr.l
47 French women
(abbr.)
49 Folklore
creeture

n n n

nnnnnnnn

b e

n n
D D
□ D
□ E

The result Is that lactose Is not
digested or absorbed. It Is then
acted on by bacteria In your
colon. The fermentation pro­
duces gas. bloating, cramping
and even diarrhea. The
symptoms can be quite severe.
The solution Is to avoid lactose
In any foods. Including some
candles and foods one might not
have thought about. Another
solution Is to use an enzyme
preparation called LactAld. In
some places you can find milk
that has already been treated
with this enzyme, or you can get
the enzym e and treat your milk
yourself. LactAld tablets also are
available now. Individuals with
la ctose d eficien cy can take
LactAld with milk or a meal and
be pr ov i de d with enough
enzym e to digest lactase.

COMING U P IN THE N £X T
HALF-HOUR... IU . BE HAVING
A HEARTY BREAKFAST...

artificial tears. However, the
problem can also be associated
wlih rheumatoid arthritis.
Your statement that It bothers
vou only from October through
May Is peculiar. See a specialist
In Internal medicine, rather than
jusl focusing on your eyes, and
determine exactly what your
problem I*
Send your questions to Ur.
Lamb. P.O. Box 1S51. Radio City

1ft

114
it

10 it

it

&gt;i 1

94

f»
53 Hoisted
57 Understand?
69 Quick lunch
place
59 Sweettop
60 Dirk

ft
n

DOWN
1 Punch (tl.)
2 Charlemagne's
domain (abbr.)
3 Gone
4 iiceptional
• Energy unit

WIN AT BRIDGE
y o u 'v e

W HY?

p u t t h e p a in t

U N U P S IP E

PUW N /

H E Y /A M I T O P S Y ­
TURVY/ w t u
H A VE J o PO
TH A T F E N C E
A G A IN f

■ 7 Jam es J a cob y
Bridge purists might argue
that South did not have enough
o f a hand to Jump to three
hearts. Maybe so. but the game
w as rubber bridge and. for
practical purposes, South did
not want to lake any chance of
p l a y i n g bel ow g a m e after
rtner bid two diamonds. North
d an easy raise to four.

G

Planning the play at trick one
should achieve the proper result.
It's certainly Instinctive to take
kings with aces, particularly
when declarer has a singleton In
the suit led. but covering Ihe
king of clubs with the ace would
bring down the curtain on todav's deal.

I u r f W A SSnv

3 HAT* WA38-TS.
3 VOTE VUBBTT5 .

What declarer wants to do Is

prevent East from gaining the
lead to come through the king of
spades. Yet diamonds must be
established.
The answer was easy. The
king o f du bs was allowed to hold
the first trick. On the club
continuation, a diamond was
discarded from the South hand.
The ace o f hearts come next,
followed by the king and ace of
d i a m o n d s a nd a d i a m o n d
trumped high.
Then the king of hearts and a
heart to the queen enabled
declarer to throw two spades on
the good diamonds.
This was a simple example of
avoidance. If you'd like to see a
trickier application of thia prin­
ciple, try tomorrow's column.

NORTH
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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
Wrtl

Narth Ran

Opening lead ♦K

HOROSCOPE
What Ths Day
Will Bring...
t ’M JTAPveP
WHAT ARE-

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F U I D A I T I t , IM S
Some pleasant surprises could
be In the offing for you in the
year ahead. Il looks like you're
going to derive benefits from
several
things where others have
------- --------------------already laid the groundwork.
A Q U A R IU S (Jon. 20-Feb. IB)
Be optim istic rega rd in g the
outcome o f events today. Get
your Astro-Graph predictions for
the year ahead by m oiling t l to
Astro-Graph. Box 489. Radio
C ity Station. New York. NY
10019, Be sure to state your
aodlac sign.
r m c m (Feb. 2 0 -March 20)
Major achievements are possible
b o th to d a y and to m o r ro w ,
Establish worthwhile targets and
devote ths best that is In you to
attaining them.
A IM
(March 21-April 191.

Join! ventures look especially
promising for you today. T ry to
arrange a coalition that offers
you the greatest possibilities for
gains.
OBMUIl (May 21-June 20)
___ ______
^ ____
You
have____
the_____
ability
today to
b
g divergent Interests
' r i nig
together for a collectively
beneficial purpose. Under your
guidance, alt will do weU.
C A N C M (June 21-July 22) If
y o u ' v e b een c o n t e m p l a t i n g
making a change that you feel
will Improve working conditions,
to Implement It today. Fa*
vorabie results are likely.
| J O (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
personal appeal la accentuated
today and. you are likely to be
the centsr o f attention wherever
you go. regardless of the crowd
involved.

VIBOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
might be a trifle reluctant about
getting a specific project under
w ty today. However, once you're
on a roll. It'll work out well.
LIM A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) T o ­
day is an excellent day to take
care of old social obligations.
Whatever you plan will turn out
lo b e Ain.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Overall conditions look favorable
for you today, but your greatest
luck is likely lo b e In situations
where you can either make or
save money.
SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your pretence will have •
powerful Influence over others
today. Your warmth and good
humor will bring sunshine into

all they con to

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                    <text>Exercising for good
hoolfti? Studios show
you may bo causing
cancor.

How ono couplo
found lovo
and marriage
through a 'personal

The doll doctor has
a plan to benefit
city's centennial
chapel.

-VIEWPOINT, 4D

77th Y|or. No. 146-Sunday, February 10, l»9$-$anford. Florida

I

Evening Herald -

-PEOPLE. 1C

(USPS 491210)

P a y P la n C o u ld
B ring W in d fa ll
To C o u n ty B ra ss

Look Out,
Daytona

Randy Lee, 9-year-old son of Den Leader
p«t Lee and Alvin Lee Jr.. Upsala Road,
E X " h,» car for the big race at Cub
Scout Pack 534 s Plnewood Derby held at

Upt«la Prasbytarlan Church. Randy
placad third whlla Steven Kyle. left, placed
tlr*t. Matt Patras, 9, not shown, was
second. The cubs made their own racers
for the event.

U.S. Will Monitor Kim Treatment

WASHINGTON |UPI) - State Dertment officials will keep laba on how
uth Korean opposition leader Kim
Dae Jung Is treated by his government
and have called for the lifting of house
arrest restrictions.
Officials said no fundamental change
Is expected In relations between
Washington and Seoul over the police
violence that marred Kim’s return
home Friday from two years of exile In
the United States. President Chun Doo
Hwan'a official visit to Washington Is
sUll set for April, they said.
But the United States lodged a formal
protest over the government's handling
of the arrival and served notice
Washington would be watching how It

K

treats Kim. 59. the lesdlng opposition
figure In South Korea for the last 15
years.
A senior department official, who
requested anonymity, said officials
from the American Embassy In Seoul
would hold further meetings with
Korean officials during the next few
days to make It clear "how much
trouble this has caused In bilateral
relations."
The department will also keep close
watch on how next week's parliamen­
tary elections, the first since 1981. are
conducted.
Witnesses said Kim was punched and
kicked by police upon arrival at Klmpo
Airport as police tried to separate him

Volckor Seas Economic Peril |H g |
In Heavy U.S. Borrowing
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Fcdersi R eserve Board C h airm an Paul

Volcker's testimony before the
Senate Budget Committee Fri­
day seemed to describe another
economy other than the one
President Reagan said Is gelling

TODAY

nev erth eless riskier the longer It I
la done - as Lalln A m erica I

amount from abroad relative to
their groao national product.
Banka were lending money very
freely."
"It looked wonderful while It
was la s tin g ." he said. " I t
couldn't last forever."
M o st L a t i n A m e r i c a n
economies are now locked Into
harsh long-range austerity pro­
____
grams because forel
foreign debts
overwhelmed their A lllty to
pay.
"Nobody could hare predicted
when that was going to change.
But when It changed. It changed

from the American delegation that
accompanied him home. Kim was
hustled Into a government vehicle and
driven to his home, where he was put
under house arret I.
D epartm ent spokesm an Edward
Djerejlan said the airport events "are
only part of the story."
"Mr. Kim's treatment by the Korean
authorities In coming weeks and
months will continue to be something
that we will follow closely, as we will
follow and work to encourage political
liberalisation In Korea."
Of Kim's house arrest, he said. "We
hope that these restrictions on Kim will
be lifted as soon as possible."

By D o o m Bates
Herald SUIT W riter
Some Seminole County department
heads would receive windfall salary
hikes If a recommended pay plan la
adopted.
Sweeping changes In wage scales and
Job classifications for Seminole staff are
proposed In a plan submitted by a Long
Aaaoclates of Ft. Lauderdale, after
several months study. If the consulting
firm’s recommendation Is accepted by
the county commission, some county
department heads will receive windfall,
automatic pay raises.
A special committee, composed of
County Administrator Ken Hooper.
Deputy County Attorney Bob McMillan.
County Planning Director Woody Price
and Public Services Director Gary
Kaiser. Is studying the Long report and
gathering comments from department
heads on the proposals.
Hooper said he expects the commit'
tee will make a recommendation to the
county commission in early March.
Figures were unavailable Friday on the
cost of the study, but It Is known the
county commission budgeted 950.000
for It and and a management organleatlon study. The management study,
conducted by Public Administration
Service of McLean. Va.. was completed
In mid-November.
. Commlaalonsrs wanted the salary
study to find out If Seminole County
pay Is competitive with private In­
dustry and other nearby local govern­
ments. There has been concern that the
county la losing too many employees to
the private sector.
Hooper said the committee will.also
be discussing Its findings with Carolyn
Long of Long Aaaoclates before making
the recommendation.
A number of county department
heads are already being paid higher
salaries than the top of the pay ranges
specified for their offices. These Include
Director of Public Services John Percy.
County Engineer BUI Bush. Director of
Management and Budget Eleanor An­
derson. McMillan. Kaiser and County
Attorney Nikki Clayton.
And some, like Hooper, will receive
an automatic pay raise If the plan Is
adopted.
Hooper was nam ed county a d ­
ministrator In December at a salary of

•54.500. 93.500 more than paid his
predecessor T. Duncan Rose III. and
•10.000 more than the 944.388 annual
salary he received as environmental
services director.
As environmental services director.
Hooper's salary was more than the
specified range for that Job. 928.777 to
940.661.
The salary range for county ad­
ministrator Is 930.929 to 956.420. The
Long report recommends It be upped to
955.640 to 977.646. And Mrs. Long
also urges th a t those em ployees
“ whose current salary level Is below
the minimum level In the assigned
range" be raised to that minimum.
Thus Hooper could receive another pay
raise of 91.140.
The pay range for the county at­
torney. 937.177 to 952.528, would
become 955.640 to 977.646.
Ms. Clayton la being paid more than
the salary range of her office. At
959.965 annually she la Seminole
County's highest paid employee paid
solely from county funds.
Dr. Jorge Deju. director of health and
human services, receives more, but his
salary comes from both county and
state funds. The county contributes
920,033. while as state director of the
public health unit here he Is paid an
additional M I4 9 7 by the Mate for a
total 971.800. The county specifies a
salwy of 924.244 to 934.248 for his
rec®fnm*nded new range Is
•28.001 to 939.312. If the Long
proposal Is followed. Deju stands to get
a raise of97.968.
Under the Long plan, the county
attorney and county administrator
would be In the same salary range. Now
the county attorney salary range Is one
step below that of the county ad­
ministrator.
Among the consultant's other rec­
ommendations:
• Raise the pay range of the deputy
county attorney from 928.777 to
940.661 to 939.540 to 955.200.
McMillan Is paid 944.898.
.
• Director of public services from
928.777 to 940.661. to 930.992 to
943.326. Percy Is paid 942.670.
See PAY, page 6A

PSC Backs Proposal

Private Pay Phones?
vendors to step Into the pay phone
business with Florida's Public Service
Commission having decided Tuesday to
ask the Legislature to change the law that
s ta n d s In the w ay of pay phone
entrepreneurs.
The PSC gave unanimous backing to
private pay phone service, staff analyst
Ju lia Patton said. And that means
commiseionera will be asking lawmakers
to void an existing statute that prohibits
duplication of local exchange services
already provided by another telephone

revenue service for local exchange com­
panies already In business.
Representatives of Southern Bell and
United Telephone of Florida, serving
Seminole County, said they don't mind
the competition as long as It's fair. But
they fear newcomers will be given a
competitive edge, because they may not
be regulated on the same basis as major
aervlce providers. They also expressed
concern Hut In the long run Ihe privately
owned pay phones may not serve the best
Interest of home and business customers.
Although Mrs. Patton said private pay
phone vendors would pay existing local
exchange companies a minimum of 930
per month and 12-cent per message fee
on each phone for use of their lines,
phone company representatives said that
tonrt^enough to offset their expected

S o u th ern Bell spokesm an Larry
Strlckler said last year his company
collected 994 million for calls made from
Florida pay phones and Uoyd Karhes of
Untied Telephone said local coin calls
generated
93.3 million for that company.
t frame for prtvati
They don't expect the proposed line
hasn't been cstabiished. ^ b u tl
foes to offset potential losses and Strlckler
and Karnes said ultimately their home
and business customers will sec higher
phone bill, because coin phone monies
are used in part to subsidise, therefore
lower, rates for that type of service.

�M -Iv s e to e HwiM, tooted, FI.

luodiy, Fab. It. twa

NATION
IN BRIEF
W orld-Traveler Walters
To Be Next U.N . Am bassador
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Vernon Walters, one of the
century's great diplomatic travelers, approaches his new
Job as U.N. ambassador with the firm belief the United
Nations Is a necessary pursuit.
President Reagan Friday nominated the (all, portly
Walters, currently an ambassador-at-large, to be the U.S.
permanent representative to the United Nations. He will
replace Jcane Kirkpatrick, an outspoken conservative
Democrat who has resigned, and like Kirkpatrick, he will
be a member of the Reagan Cabinet.
*T think the United Nations Is necessary for the world."
Walters said. "Otherwise I wouldn't consider accepting this
Job."
Walters. 68. a bachelor, Is fluent In seven foreign
languages: Russian. Spanish, French, Portuguese. Italian,
Qerman and Dutch. Since 1081. as Reagan's roving envoy,
he has traveled a million miles to more than 100 countries
on quiet diplomatic missions that Included talks with
Cuba's Fidel Castro.

Planned Cenrall Sale Draws Fire
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The administration's decision to
sell Conrall to Norfolk Southern Corp. has aroused loud
rumbles of discontent In Congress, which must decide
tough antitrust questions In the mammoth merger.
The selection of Norfolk Southern to take over the
government-owned freight line, announced by Transporta­
tion Secretary Ellisbeth Dole Friday, promises to draw fire
on Capitol Hill, where opponents wasted no time In
declaring war.
“As soon as Congress reconvenes on February 18th, I
Intend to Introduce legislation to block the sale of Conrall,"
said Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., whose state contains the
railroad's Philadelphia headquarters.

G M M a yR oca ll 1.7 Million C a n
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The government has asked
General Motors Corp. to recall more than 1.7 million A-cars
because of "significant safety problems" Involving rear
brake lockups that can cause cars to go out of control.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said
Friday It wants the nation's No. I automaker to take
"responsible corporate action" and fix the brakes of
1883-1084 autos.
The front-wheel drive cars, which number al Irast 1.75
million, arc Chevrolet Celebrity, Uulck Century. Old
Cutlass Clera and Pontiac 6000. They are among OM's top
selling lines.
Philip Davis, director of the agency's defects Investiga­
tion. cited 448 complaints, 60 accidents and 33 Injuries In
a Jan. 3 letter to General Motors.

A Valentine Story

Couple Found Love A n d M arriage
Through A M agazine Personal A d
B y F rsd sn d J a n Tager
NEW YORK INEA) — We met last year on
Dec. 7, Pearl Harbor Day, and got married
33 days later. On the battlefield of love, thta
courtship was definitely a sneak attack.
We met through an ad. we fell In love, we
decided to get married, and we managed to
do It all fn three weeks.
This la our story and. like most love
stories. It Is really about trust and courage.
J a n 's story
It started when I decided to apply some of
what I had been teaching In my timemanagement seminars to my personal life.
Since I had my goal — to get married and
have children — I wanted to meet as many
people as possible who shared that goal.
So I placed an ad In New York magaxlne
and The Village Voice. It began: "On*
e-ln-a-mllllon. I'm a pretty. 35-year-old
Ph.D.. published author, and artist....”
I received 100 letters. After talking to
about 30 men on the phone. I made dates
with 15. But the ad was attracting doctors
and lawyers, which was fine, but not Tor me.
What I wanted waa a successful fellow
artist.
So I wrote a new ad that read: "Cicero
wrote: 'Love la the attempt to form a
friendship Inspired by beauty.' I'm a
successful non-fiction srrtter looking for an
equally exciting successful man. 5 B plus.
33-45. who wants a wife and children. I'm
pretty, 35, fun....'*
It appeared In New York magaxlne on Dec.
3. Four days later. I received a batch of
letters: Fred's was among them. It began:
"Well now you've done It. You've gotten me
to answer one of these ads...." He went on to
describe himself as a "tall. 38-year-old
screenwriter looking for a collaborator In
love and war."
This was more like It. There waa a
refreshing directness to Fred's letter, but
even more Important was the sincerity In
his voice when I called him.
When It came to meetings through
personals. I usually set up a rendezvous tn a
public place at least a week after the Initial
call. But there was something about Fred
that shouted "Immediacy." so I met him
that night.
We talked non-stop for three hours. He
asked me to see him the next day. but I
already had a date. Undaunted. Fred offered
to meet me afterward. I did. and spent
almost the entire day with him.

During the coming week I had dates every
night, but Fred managed to work around
that. I decided he was the funniest,
sweetest, most Intelligent and kindest man I
had ever met. and too good to let get away.
Sol proposed.
F rsd ’a story
My first impulse when I heard Jan's
proposal was to run. But I said. "I'm not
quite there yet.*' Which was true. I had
recently ended a four-year relationship and
was Just starting to date again.
Although I had been com bing the
personals for weeks, I hadn't responded to
any. But her second ad got me to take
action. I was attracted by her creativity and
her desire to have children.
Over the phone, she told me she wrote
books, taught sociology and gave seminars
on time management. My first thought was
how was she going to have time for me. let
alone a family.
As soon as I saw Jan. I knew she waa
special. As we talked, we became aware of
how similar our lives were — not Just the
present, but the past and even our hopes for
the future. I decided I wanted to spend as
much time with her as possible.
By the end of the week, we had grown
very close, a proposal was on my mind. loo.
But there was something I had to confront
first — Jan 's three-pack-a-day cigarette
habit. ,
Jan told me she had tried to quit several
times but she always returned to cigarettes.
Realizing It was probably the cigarettes or
me. Jan decided to stop for good. Hating
and loving me at the same time. Jan
suffered severe withdrawal. I stayed with
her. and by the end of the second week

Woman Sees Burglar Fleeing
A 71-year-old Fern Park
woman returned home Friday
Just In time to see a burglar flee
with mote than 516.000 worth
of her Jewelry, but a suspect was
nabbed by a Florida Power and
Light Co. workman who spotted
the man and gave chose, depu­
ties reported.
Angle M. Kocchto arrived
home at 481 Meadow Wood
Blvd. at about 3:30 p.m. Friday.
Mrs. Rocchln said Saturday she
realized something was wrong
because her kitchen door was
locked from Inaldc. She went to
the front door and noticed a
screen was off a window and a
blind waa out of place.
Mrs. Rocchlo went to her
neighbor's and asked the man to
check her house. From the
outside he saw a suspect In the
house and the burglar ran out
when he realized he was seen.
As the neighbor chased the
burglar, Mrs. Rocchlo said, a
power company car drove by
and her neighbor's wife alteried
the driver to the theft and Lee
Thompson, 40, of 510 Park Ave.
8.. Winter Park, picked up the
pursuit and caught and held the
suspect for deputies.
Mrs. Rocchlo said (he man,
who was nabbed at 417 Prairie
Lake Road, Fern Park, waa In
water when he waa caught and
Jesrelry Including Including sev­
eral rings set with various stones
Including diam onds, pearls,
am ethyst, sapphires, rubles,
topaz and onyx, stolen along
with 515 cash from her home
have not been recovered.
Mrs. Rocchlo said she almost
entered her home with the thief
Inside, but her neighbors cau­
tioned her not to and today,
which is her birthday, she said
she’s glad she took their advice.
She doesn't know If the suspect
waa armed. The arrest report
didn't Indicate recovery of a
weapon,
Nabbed by Thompson and
charged by sheriff's deputies
srlth burglary to an occupied
dwelling and grand theft was
Alvin Lee Fitzgerald J r., of
EUenboro. N.C. lie waa arrested
at 3:45 p.m. Friday and was
being held Saturday in lieu of
58.000 bond.
A 3 0 -y ear-o ld A ltam onte
Springs man haa been charged
with grand theft, burglary to a
conveyance and poaacaalon of
burglary tools In connection
with the theft of a ttre from a
truck parked at the Altamoote
T. Joatyn, 35, of DeId ftHamnnls 5
pete* ha and • friend i
* the im port no he atood

Joalyn's pickup truck with the
spare lire that had been removed
from the vehicle. Joslyn turned
the suspect over to security
guards at Sears and police ar­
rived and arrested a suspect at
4:44 p.m. Thursday.
John Arthur Baumgardner, of
799 S. Wymore Road, haa been
charged In the case and released
on 55.000 bond. He Is scheduled
to appear In court Feb. 35.
TRIED TO SNEAK RADIO
A 19-year-ald Sanford man
who allegedly took a car radio
cassette player In a Sanford
store, handed It off to another
man who put the Item back, has
been charged with grand theft.
The incident occurred at JAB
Sound, 3937A S. Orlando Ave.,
and the man was arrested there
at 11:55 a.m. Thursday, a police
report said. The radio was
valued at 5110. The man who
reportedly put the Item back was
not charged.
Charle K n ig h t J r . of 44
William Clark Court waa being
held In lieu of 58,000 bond.
lI R N B lA I T I O
Deputies have the name of a
suspect who may have used a
BB gun to fatally shoot 13 birds
with a combined value of about
5500. The cockatlcls. parakeets,
pigeons and pheasants belonged
to Jeanettes Patllaon. 63. of 407
Beth Drive, Sanford, and were
shot between Feb. 3 and Wed­
nesday, deputies reported.
RUROLARBS * THEFTS
A 530.000 Jeep Wagonecr was
stolen from a lot at Royal AMC
Jeep, 555 E. Semoran Blvd..
Fern Park, between Monday and
Thursday, a sheriff's report said.

Action Reports
★ F lr a t
it

Courft
it P o llc a B a a f

from In front of his apartment
around 10 p.m. Thursday, a
sheriff's report said.

managed to force the man's
vehicle from the’food. The man
reportedly put his car In reverse
and tried to speed away again,
but the trooper pulled him from
the vehicle, the report said.
Charged at 8:33 p.m. Thurs­
day on Jackson Avenue at
A m anda S treet, A ltam onte
Springs, was Richard Wright of
111 Jackson St. He was released
on 5500 bond and is scheduled
to appear In court Feb. 15.
—John Graham Batchelor. 30, of
Bowie, Md.. was arrested at
11:31 a.m. Wednesday after he
was seen driving his car without
headlights on state Road 436,
Altamonte Springs.

A set of sliding glass doors
worth 5175 were stolen form a
building site at 588 Portland
Circle, Apopka. Tuesday or
Wednesday. Lou Scaglla. 43. of
Tavares, who reported the theft
to deputies, said the doors
w in n e r l o s e s
belong to Florida Residential
An Orlando man has been
C o m m u n ity , of A ltam onte
charged with robbery and grand
Springs.
theft after allegedly grabbing the
Blaine Nelson, 38, of 100 winning ticket out of the hands
Stefanlk Road, Winter Park, re­ of a dogtrack bettor. The man
ported to deputies about 5735 was nsbbed by security officers,
worth of stereo gear was stolen but not before he hsd passed the
ticket to another suspect who
from his home Thursday.
fled, making the winner a loser,
A female pony worth 5350 Is deputies reported.
‘hie Incident occurred al about
missing from a pasture on San­
ford Avenue, Sanford. Sandy 4 p.m. Wednesday as the victim,
Thomas. 35. of 1401 W. 1st. St.. w ho w as not nam ed In a
Sanford, reported to deputies the Longwood police report, was
5-year-old pony disappeared be­ crossing from the bar at the
tween 6 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. SanJbrd-Orlando Kennel Club on
Dogtrack Road. Longwood. to
Tuesday.
the ticket booth to pick up his
Richard A. Young. 4B, of 3380 8150 winnings.
The thief snatched the ticket
Sandlake Road. Longwood, re­
ported to deputies a 8300
grinder was stolen from a shed
at his house betsrecn Feb. 1 and
3.

when she had quit. I knew Jan was the
woman I was looking for because of her
courage aqd the commitment she had
made.
On Christmas. I met Jan 's parents. Then
we drove upstate and she met mine. On the
drive bock. I asked Jan. "Will you marry
me?"
Oar story
The next day we got our blood test. Not
wanting to wall for the results, we drove to
the laboratory In New Jersey. We then drove
to City Hall for our marriage license.
Friday night, we began inviting family
and friends to a friend’s loft that Sunday at
3 for our wedding. Within 38 hours, we
found a rabbi for the non denominational
service, bought a wedding gown, gloves and
flowers, hired a bartender and a cham­
ber-music duo and bought a wedding cake,
champagne and pate — with a little help
from our friends.
More than 130 astonished but delighted
guests attended the wedding.
Now It's Valentine's Day. and we've been
married 47 days. When people ask how we
did It. we say we followed our hearts. All It
takes Is courage, a belief In love, and a
commitment to togetherness. Most of all. It
takes being ready, but sometimes you don't
know If you are ready until you do It. That's
how we found out.
Playing the personal game
My ideal man Is bald or balding. He
appreciates a sense of irony, and he has
friends of his own. He won't make me wait,
worry, dance or doxe. Me: redheaded,
successful, great shape, good time.
So said a personal ad in Intro, a magaxlne
that Susan Block, author of "Advertising for
Love: How to Play the Personals" (Quill,
55.05) calls the "L.L. Bean of American
singles."
The personals seem to be getting more
specific. And there are usually readers out
there who fit the bill, says Ms. Block:
"You could try the Village Voice where
you can get Just about anybody and
anything you desire." Or. she continues,
"You can play with a more refined group
In... New York magaxlne. or get beyond It all
tn/ntro."
Then of course, there Is your local dally
newspaper. Who knows. Write an ad and
maybe you'll wind up like Fred and Jan
Yager.

Her Jewels
and rxn. Bcfore he was grabbed
by club security officers the
suspect handed the ticket over to
a second suspect who got awsy,
a police report said.
Club officials put a stop pay­
ment on the ticket, so It cannot
be cashed, police Sgt. Don
Knight said. And without that
ticket the winner can't claim his
earnings, because the club has
no way of knowing it was a
winner unless they see the
tic k e t, c lu b o ffic ia l Tom
Bowcrsox said.
Samuel Getters. 35. has been
charged tn the case. He was
being held In the Seminole
County Jail today In lieu of
58,000 bond.
An IB-year-old Sanford man
has been charged srlth child
abuse as well as grand theft and
conspiracy after allegedly letting
tiro Juveniles out of his car to
snatch a woman's purse tn a
pre-planned crim e. Sanford
police report.
The boys were taken Into
custody along with the man after
the 10 a.m. Wednesday purse
snatching which occurred tn
front of Liquor Oarden. 3485
Airport Blvd.. Sanford, a police
report said.
Police said the boys grabbed
the woman’s purse and Jumped
back tn the man's car. But the
woman grabbed her purse back
out of the car and the trio srere

nabbed before they could make a
getaway, the report said. The
victim was not Identified In the
report.
Ronnie J. Horn. IB. of 47
Castle Brewer Court, was being
held In lieu of 55.000 bond. The
Juveniles were turned over to
Juvenile authorities.
CAN’T SLEEP TH EM
Two men charged srlth bur­
glary reportedly told Altamonte
Springs police they entered a
vacant ap artm en t at 849-L
Ballard Drive because they
needed a place to sleep.
The pair, whose arrests forms
showed no address, reportedly
said one of them hsd found a key
to the apartment In the laundry
room of the complex a couple of
days before they were flushed
out at about 3 a.m. Thursday, a
police report said.
Police called to the scene by
the m an ag er of W lndoong
Apartments reported hearing
voices Inside the apartment.
When no one responded to police
orders to come out and warnings
police dogs would be released
Into the apartment, a dog was
sent In. the report said.
The suspects surrendered and
the dog was called off, the report
James David McCumber, 19,
and John Henry Mawdjkew, 37,
have been charged In the case.
Both were being held tn lieu of
55,000 bond each.

WEATHER

A Florida Highway Patrol
(• i n . ) :
trooper reported charging an
temperature:
48:
overnight
low:
83-ycar-oid
Altamonte
Springs
A total of 5345 was stolen from
38;
Friday's
high:
55:
barometric
two cash boxes stored In a man with DUI. rerklesaa driving
30.53; relative humidi­
locked room at Woodland Ele­ and fleeing and attempting to pressure;
ty;
63
percent:
north at 8
m entary School. 1430 E.E. elude an officer after the man, mph: rain: .01winds:
Inch: sunrise:
Williamson Road, Longwood. be­ whose car was reportedly In­
tween 5 p.m. Wednesday and volved in a hit-and-run accident 7:06 a.m.. sunset 6:11 p.m.
ABBA FORECAST; Today
7:50 am . Thursday. There was at state Road 436 and Lake
sunny
and cool. High upper 80s.
no sign of forced entry to the H o w e ll R o ad . A lta m o n te
Northeast wind around 15 mph.
room an d s e c r e ta r y Mary Springs, fled.
fair and cold with the
Schaefer told deputies she has
The trooper reported beginn­ Tonight
low
in
the
upper 30s. Light
one of two keys to the room and ing hts pursuit of the man when
the other la kept In a desk at the he spotted him driving on the northeast wind. Sunday mostly
school.
____
median of U.S. Highway 17-93. sunny and warmer. High near
The
suspect reportedly Ignored 70, Southeast wind 10 to 15
Patricia E. Font. 38, of 801 the lawman's
mph.
signals to stop.
Fox Valley Drive. Longwood.
SUNDAY TIDES; D aytona
The
man
reportedly
ran
sever­
reported to deputies that 11 al stop signs and a couple of red le a s h : highs. 11:50 am .. —:
custom-Htted dress shirts with a tights during the chase and hts lows. 5:25 a.m.. 5:44 p.m.: D iet
combined value of 5500 were vehicle skidded out and blocked Canaveral: highs. 11:42 am ..
stolen from her car while parked
lanes of traffic at the In­ —: lows. 5:16 a.m.. 5:35 p.m.;
a l Albertson’s, state Rood 434, two
tersection of state Road 436 and B aypsrti highs. 4:18 a m .. 4 0 6
Longwood. The theft occurred Lake Howell Road, the arrest p.m.; lows, 10:13 a.m ..—.
around noon Wednesday.
I 8QBDAY T IP ffi D aytona
report said.
Donate
highs. 13:33 am .. 13:46
He sped away from the scene,
A 1551 motorcycle worth traveling onto county Rood 437 pm .t lows. 6:28 am ., 6:42 pm .;
53.000 and belonging to David and from there to several back F o rt C anaveral: highs. 12:14
Alan Kid. 35, of *f4lT
m .. 13:38 p.m.: lows, 6:19
streets and dtrt roads to Jackson aam
Apartments. 3500 N.
.. B 33 pm .; D ayparti highs.
Avenue. The trooper Anally
Blvd.. Winter Park, w
5:36 a m ., 4:36 pm .flow s. 11:24

am ., 10:42 p.m.
ROAT1NO FORECAST: St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Small craft advisory Is
tn effect. Wind east 10 to 15
knots Saturday night. Wind
southeast 10 to 15 knots Sun­
day. Sea 5 to 7 feet but higher In
the gulf stream. Partly cloudy.
BXTBNDBD FORECAST: A
chance of showers north Monday

a n d s o u th M onday nigh
Otherwise mostly fair Tueadi
th ro u g h W ed n esd ay . Mil
Monday then cooler. Low tn tl
40a north to 50a south Mondi
cooling to 30s north to near f
south Wednesday. Highs 1
north to 80 south Monday lowr
tog to 8 k north and near 1
south by Wednesday.

Evening Herald

HOSPITAL
NOTES

lusptu:

m i

Sunday, February 14, INS
Vol. 110. No. 144
i

Daily sad toaSti
Satedoy by T*a M m
la*. M U. FrancX Ara.,
pis. am .
riwtda a m

Paid at
&lt; Wook. 11.11;

M.NJ » MnU. IMJI: *
to m Vaar. W1JZ. By Mod:
»IJ*j Monlb. 10.00; I I
«MSr * MontX*. M1J0;
e v e ry MX*, a Why |lrt.&lt;

ta n m -ait.

�Evsatm HtraM, Sanford, Ft.

Ssaday, Fsb. tl, m i-lA

W ORLD
IN BRIEF

G o O ut A nd G o t 'Em
Shirley Schllke. chairm an ol the
Greater Sanford Chamber of Com­
merce membership drive, challenges
Dennis Courson, left, Arthur Beckwith,
right, and 14 other team captains to
make the 19*5 goal of 1,300 members.
The drive will be held Feb. 19, 30, 31.
Membership now Is 1,08*.

M oscow Says Washington
Poisoning Talks Atm osphoro
MOSCOW (UP!) — The Soviet Union u ld Saturday the
United States U "poisoning the atmosphere" for nest
month's Geneva arms talks by labeling existing pacts
Ineffective and using the pretext of a Soviet military
buildup to Justify Its own.
The charges were made In a major editorial In Pravrta,
the Communist Party newspaper, critical of the Reagan
administration's recon! on arms control.
"Heavy damage was Inflicted to the process of arms
limitation and reduction In recent years as a result of the
U.S. administration's policy and practical actions," Pravda
It said Ihe United States was undermining existing arms
control agreements. Including SALT I and SALT 11. by
pursuing President Reagan's "Star Wars" anti-missile
defense Initiative, chemical weapons research and the MX
missile. The SALT II accord was never ratified by the
Senate.

HenM W w li W O reew r Oelw*

W an t To Be
L e g is la tiv e
In te rn ?

Vlotnamoso Poised For Attack

Applications will be accepted
until March 1 for persons who
would like to serve In the Florida
H ouse of R e p re s e n ta tiv e s '
legislative Intern program to
begin Aug. 16 and end Aug. 15.
1066.
State Rep. Carl Selph. RCaaeelberry. said the Interm
program, now in 1U 17th year,
provldea research assistants for
House committees. An annual
stipend of 17.200 will be paid to
those selected for participation.
To qualify for the program.
Interns must be Florida resi­
dents or be attending a Florida
university, and have completed
their undergraduate degrees by
August. 1065.
Since the interns must work In
the state cspltol of Tallahassee,
they may enroll a t a state
university In the graduate pro­
gram. The House of RepreaenUttves will pay fees for up to
12 hours per semester for each
of the three semesters the In­
terns are In the program, Selph

ARANYAPRAT1IET. Thailand (UPI) - Up to 5.000
Vietnamese soldiers backed by 30 tanks moved Into
position to stu ck the headquarters of the Khmer Rouge,
the largest of three Cambodian rebel groups. Thai military
sources said Saturday.

Applications for the program
are available In Selph's district
office. 20 S. U S. Highway 17-92.
Casselberry.

PLO Flnancad Satolllto In Orbit
PARIS (UP!) — Two satellites — one bull! with Palestine
Liberation Organisation funds — were orbiting the earth
today to provide television and phone communications for
the first time to remote areas of the Middle East and Brazil.
The Arabaat and Braztlsat spacecraft were lofted Into
orbit al 8:22 p.m. EST Friday aboard a European-bull!
Arlanc rocket In a flawless flight from the Kourou space
center In French Guiana on the northeast coast of South
America.
The rocket, built by the European Space Agency, first
deployed Arabaat Into an orbit above the equator over the
African nation of Zaire. Ninety-five seconds later. Artane
slotted Brazllsat Into orbit over the Amazon Jungle of
northwestern Brazil.
The satellites will provide unprecedented communica­
tions links not only to the cities of Brazil and 21 Arab
states, but to Isolated Jungle and desert settlements whose
residents have never seen television and rarely used
telephones.
The 21 members of the Arab League and the PLO
provided 8133 million to Aerospattal of France for the
construction of three Arabaat spacecraft. A second will be
launched In May and third was kept as a spare.

Chuluota M an Who Pleaded G uilty

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To Lewd A ct G e ts 15 Y e a rs Probation
By Dosae Jo rd an ' ' " *
Herald S taff W riter
A Chuluota man who pleaded guilty to
performing a lewd and lascivious act In the
presence of a child has been sentenced to 15
years probation.
Gerald Roger Kelly. 38. of 120 3rd Court, was
sentenced by Seminole Circuit Judge Robert
McGregor. Kelly, who also agreed to continue
al ohol abuse counseling, could have received up
to a year In the county Jail.
According to Investigators. Kelly attempted to
have oral sex with and fondle a 10-year-old girl.
The Incidents reportedly occurred at the man's
home, one on June 24. and the other July 6.
Kelly was arrested July 11 after the girt and her
mother reported the Incidents to the sheriffs
department.
In other court action:
—Daniel Adam Chaffee. 19. of 259 N. Country
Club Road. Lake Mary, arrested Aug. 21 for
possession of cocaine and marijuana In the
parking lot of the Hotline Bottle Club. 803 W.
Altamonte Drive, Altamonte Springs. He was
sentenced by Circuit Judge C. Vernon Mize Jr. to
two years probation. 80 hours of community
service and a 8250 fine. A codefendant. David
Paul Laasonde. 22. address unreported, was
sentenced to 3 years probation, 190 hours of
community service and a 8600 fine. Another
codefendant. Kurt Allen Lawoe. 19, of 190
Tollgate Trail, Longwood. was sentenced tn
January to 2 years probation and 120 hours of
community service.
—Ray Alan Chestnut. 30, of 219 W. 17th St.,
Sanford, arrested July 27 by Sanford police for
possession of cocaine, was sentenced by Mize to 2
years probation. 2 weekends In the Seminole
County Jail and 80 hours of community service.
He was also ordered to pay the Public Defender's
Office 8300. A codefendant. Kermoo Jessie. 25, of
11 Carver Court. Sanford, awaits dlspoattion of
his case.
—Randolph Washington, 23, of 819 E. Oth Sc.,
Sanford, arrested Sept. 17 for burglary
sentenced by Mize to 2 y ean probation
hours of community service. He was ordered to
pay the Public Defender's Office 8280. A
codefendant. Ernest Wilson, 96. of 303 Pine Ave..
Sanford, pleaded guilty to burglary and is
scheduled to be sentenced Feb. 15.
—Charles Morgan Sawyer. 42. of Orlando,
arrested July 11 and charged with conspiracy to
traffic In cocaine, was sentenced by Mtsa la 7 Vi
years probation. 364 days tn the
County Jail, and 400 hours of conununi
He was ordered to pay the Public

SCH O O L
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ofoce jssO. A codefendant. Minas Can dares. 30.
of 200 Maitland Ave., also charged with conspira­
cy to traffic In cocaine, was sentenced by Mize to
5 years probation. 9 months In the county Jail,
and 300 noun of community service.
—Jaunlta Oil berry. 23. of Haines City, arrested
Aug. 14 on charges of burglary to three
Altamonte Springs businesses, was sentenced by
McGregor to 5 years probation, and 60 days In
the county Jail. She was also ordered to pay the
Public Defender's Office 8540.
—Anthony Natoll Jr.. 32, of 604 Endsley Circle.
Altamonte Springs, arrested Ju n e 19 after
purchasing food and gas with stolen credit cards,
was sentenced by Mize to 3 years probation and
190 hour* of community service. He wsa also
ordered to pay 81.041 restitution.
—Jam es Mark McTeer, 45, of 1403 E. Valencia
Court, Sanford, arrested Aug. 1 on charges of
grand theft in connection with the July 23
burglary of a Sanford home, was sentenced to 18
months probation.
—Michael Dorsey Steward, 27, address un­
reported, arrested June 20 on charges of grand
theft in connection with an Oviedo break-In. He
eras sentenced by McGregor to 5 years probation,
ordered to participate tn an alcohol abuse
program, not to drive any vehicle and to pay the
PubUc Defender's Office 8350.
—John Allen Schrewsbury. 16. of 275 Crane's
Roost Blvd., Altamonte Springs, arrested June 9
for the burglary of a Sanford home. He was
sentenced by McOregor to 1 year probation. He
was also told not to drink any alcohol and was
ordered to pay the Public Defender's Office 8600.
-E dw ard Quattlebaum. 35. of 1600 W. 5th St..
Sanford, arrested July 29 for carrying a concealed
firearm and possessing a short-barrel .22-caliber
rifle. He waa sentenced by McGregor to 2 years
d was ordered not to posoeaa any
He waa also ordered to pay the PubUc
—Stacie Joiner. 21. of 106 Dolores Drive,
Altamonte Springs, pleaded no contest to
poessestiwi of a controlled
She was
tn Altamonte Springs Oct. 30 for
of cocaine and marijuana after an
saw her using marijuana In her car. She
rive up to a year In Jail when sentenced
by Ctrcutt Judge Dominick J. Saif!.
Marie Kortrtght 27. of 310-F Cherokee
Court. Altamonte Springs, arrested Oct. 1 after
revolver from her boot and
paopfe with ih t gun. pleaded
*' he could nreceive up
to a yaar la the county Jag when
April
• by Ctrcutt Judge VotisWflUaro*.

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�4A -Iv—h&gt;f Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wwday, F » u , tits

Break-Up Pays
Off For AT&amp;T

BUSINESS

AAa Bell's Profits Jump 40 Percent

IN BRIEF
Southeast O ffers An
IRA With Options
Southeast Dank ha* Introduced a self-directed Individual
retirement account giving It* retirement account custom*
ers more flexibility and control when deciding to whom
and when their IRA contributions are Invested.
"Unlike other IRAs that are based on one type of
Investment with a fixed rate of return, we give our
customer* the ability to choose from an array of
Investment options, lo regularly change their Investment*
as Interest rates swing, and most Important, to mix the
type of Investments they have." said John Y. Mercer,
manager of Southeast's Sanford Banking Center.
The Southeast Bank self-dlrretf &lt;1IRA Is composed of two
types n( luvr Jrrteni tn counts
tore account” and the
certlflcAti. lu Ui itonji (CD) pirnlm- "nc The "core account"
gives ciiM'iincrs the option .u have their funds earn current
money market ratesThe CD account la an alternative for customers who
decide to purchase one or several certificates of deposits
with all or a portion of their IRA Investment. Customers
can buy CDs at a fixed-rate of Interest with money In their
core account or with deposits of 1000 or more at any time.
To open a self-directed IRA, a customer must be below
the age of 701*.'Earned Income contributions may start
with a $100 deposit and not exceed 12.000 a year.
Contributions are tax deductible when made and both
contributions and earnings are tax-deferred until
withdrawn, anytime after the age of 591*.

Som eone N ew In The Showroom
Lifestyle, Inc., has announced the promotion of Patsy
Urady to showroom manager of their store located In the
Interior Decor Center, Altamonte Springs. Ms. Brady has
been with the company six years as a buyer and seller of
lighting and plumbing fixtures.
In her new position, Ma. Brady will act as liaison between
consumers, factories, designers, and construction crews.
Llghtslyle. Inc. la the retail division of Hughes Supply,
Inc., and has stores in Altamonte Springs, Orlando. Winter
Pork. Lakeland, and Venice.

Realty To G ive A w ay Seedlings
Over the past 14 years, Forrest Greene. Inc., realtors, of
Altamonte Springs has given away more than 33,000 tree
seedlings. On Valentine's Day, the company hopes to boost
that total to more than 30,000.
The company will be giving away 2,000 red cedar
seedlings on a flrnt-come. first-served basis Thursday from
0 a.m. to 0 p.m. at Its office located at 106 Forest Ave..
Altamonte Springs.
Red cedars have been grown In Florida and are
accustomed to the slate's climate.

UCF Sponsors Loan Sem inar
The steps to take In applying for a commercial loan will
be covered In a special workshop to be conducted Tuesday
through Thursday at the Junior Achievement Center In
Loch Haven Park, Orlando.
The workshop, sponsored by the UCF Small Business
Development Center and the Florida Vietnam Veterans
Leadership. Program, will cover the various procedures
required lo get a commercial loan.
Each of the three hour sessions will begin at 6:30 p.m.
The cost Is 60 a person, which covers all three meetings.

Scanlon Re/olns Jeno's
Jeno's Inc., the Casselberry-based frozen pizza and
snack company, announced the promotion of Larry
Scanlon (□ assistant comptroller.
Scanlon, of Deltona, Joined the company as an
accountant In 1071 when li was baaed In Duluth. Minn. He
moved up lo manager of corporate accounting In 1062. He
then left the company and Joined Pauluccl Enterprlaes —
another business owned by Jcno Pauluccl — as vice
president of finance. He has rejoined Jeno's as assistant
comptroller.

By Sydney Shaw
WASHINGTON (UP11 - Con­
sumer groups say local rate
hikes helped bring In first-year
profits for American Telephone
&amp; Telegraph and the seven new
Bell companies that were more
than 40 percent higher than the
old Bell System showed In 1083.
The eight companies, created
by the Jan. 1. 1084. breakup of
the world's largest corporation,
had (00.05 billion In revenues
and ( 8 .186 billion In profits.
By comparison. Ms Bell In
1083 had (60.403 billion In
revenues and (5.7 billion In
earnings before writing off (5.5
billion of telephone equipment.
An AT&amp;T spokesman said the
Bell System had a pattern of (4
billion to (5 billion In revenue
iwth each year but that Mill
ves a (2 0 billion gain for Uic
first year after divestiture.
A lth o u g h A T &amp; T 's lo n g ­
distance rales have dropped 8.1
percent as a result of divestiture,
local Bell com panies were
granted (5.1 billion of the (10.0
billion In rate hikes they re­
quested last year.
"That Increase comes from
somebody and you know who —
the consumer." Sam Simon,
director of the Telecommunica­
tions R esearch and Action
Commlitee, said last week.
Of the regional companies. Bell
South, the holding company for
the South, did best of all.
earning (1.257 billion on (0.5
billion.

G

Bell Allantic earned (973.1
million: N.Y. Nex. (986.4 mil­
lion: Pacific Teles!*. (828.5 mil­
lion: Southwestern Bell Corp..
(883.1 million; US West (887
million and Amerltech. (990.9
million.
AT&amp;T had only (1.38 billion
In earnings on (33.188 billion In
revenues, much worse than the
company had anticipated. Part
of the reason for the poor results
was that the company paid a
whopping (20.633 billion lo the
regional Bell companies for ac­
cess to the local telephone
network.
All long-distance companies
pay the access charges, but
AT&amp;T Is paying 45 percent more
than Its competitors until the
quality of their connections are
equal.
Many of the local companies
have said they need the rale
PMsSrWIinw
hikes lo counter the threat of Tlllls samples some of the new line of snack foods that bears
decreased revenue as more big his name.
business customers build their
own phone systems ip bypass
the local network. Simon said
(he companies are engaging In
Country singing star Mel Tlllls Mel Tlllls snack foods are avail­
activities that will promote was
In Orlando last weekend to able al area Ready Markets. Ideal
bypass.
Introduce his new line of food Foods. Tiger Gas stations, and
"What we're having Is a fairly products which Include various Thrift Ways, and "hopefully will
large degree of Irresponsibility chips, cheese curls, nuts and soon be sold" In LU' Generals.
on the part of the operating meat. The goodies will be test Mr. Grocers. Plggly Wigglys. and
companies (hat Is going (o come marketed tn Central Florida by chains such as Winn Dixie,
back and bite Ihem. There Sherra Foods, of Orlando, and Publlx. and Albertson's, ac­
should be a moratorium on rate expanded lo other parts of the cording lo Shrrra's Vice Presi­
country as production allows. dent for Marketing. Al Garza.
Increases."

'Like To Try A Chhhhhip?'

Union Gains Help Erode AAembership
By Rich Bansr
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Union leaders
caught In a work environment Increasingly
hostile to unions are worried about Iheir
organizations' future because of declining
membership and, Ironically, their own
success, a Cleveland Stale University study
shows.
Only 20 percent of union presidents and
research directors agreed that the future of
the labor movement Is secure; 50 percent
said the labor movement has an uncertain
future.
"I think It has to do with the environment
union leader* find themselves In," said
Brian P. Heshlzer. an assistant professor In
CSU's management and labor department.
"They're getting a lot of negative feedback.”
Heshlzer ana Harry E. Orshsm, also s
professor at CSU, mailed questionnaires In
1083 to 212 presidents and research
directors In the AFL-CIO and other in­
dependent unions, and 70 responded.
The poor economy In the curly 1080s and
generally Improved working conditions In
most non-union shops were singled out as
reasons for Ihe decline In union mem­
bership. Heshlzer said only about 10
:rcenl of non-agrlcullural workers In Ihe
lilted States In 1082 were union members,

B

down from about 35 percent in the
mid-1950s.
"At least In the short run labor will have a
difficult time m aintaining Its base."
Heshlzer said. "From 1980 to 1982 there
was a 10 percent decline in union mem­
bership. That's two million people, and I
don’t think they will recoup those losses.
The prospects of growth In the short and
Intermediate termsare not good."
Heshlzer estimates union membership
has dropped by an additional 000.000 since
1082. In comparison, union membership
between 1070 and 1980 grew by 1.1 million
to 22.4 million.
"I would expect some further decline in
union membership." Heshlzer sold. "But If
we can escape another deep recession. It
probably won't drop os much as tn the early
years of this decade."
Union leaders blame ^bolh Ihe economy
and Iheir own success for declining Interest.
"In raising Ihe standard of living for union
members," one labor leader remarked In the
study, "other segments of society have been
pulled along, and those segments see no
reason now to unionize.”
Heshlzer said many of the respondents felt
unions have lost "their sense of movement

F F V A : V e g e ta b le s
S u r v iv e d F r e e z e
B e t te r Than E x p e c t e d

T h e se 'H e a rin g A id s' H a v e
4 Leg s A n d Lo ve To Ea t
Perhaps "hearing ear" dogs
will become as readily accepted
for the deaf aa "seeing eye" dogs
are for the blind. Thai la the
hope or executive train in g
director and founder Michael
Supp of "Ears for the Deaf," a
charitable organization begun In
Michigan in 1080. An Indepen­
dent Florida-baaed branch has
recently been established In Or­
lando.
In the four ycara the program
has been in ealstence. It has
trained and placed more than 50
doga tn the homea of deaf
recipients. Costs have been
borne by dona l tons from Indi­
viduals and from community
organizations such aa service
c lu b a , v e t e r a n s ' g r o u p s ,
churches and foundations.
Hearing dogs are trained to
respond to sounds such as
alarms, doorbells, a baby's erica.
Intruders and other significant
noises and to arouse their
masters. They are even Uuight to
distinguish between various
sounds and to communicate the
nature of the sounda to thetr
owners.
Dogs are careftilly selected at
local anim al s h e lte rs from
among unwanted animals which
would otherwtss be pul to sleep.
They ere pretested lor attributes
such aa Intelligence, bearing,
general health, retrieval abilities,
alertness and stability. After a
one month Indoctrination, they
undergo a three to four month
training period along with their
new owners. After completing
this training they are able to
wear the distinctive blase orange
collar that Irtintlfls* them as
hearing dogs.
The Ears lor the Deaf program
la unique In that training takes
p lace tn th e hom e of the
hearing-impaired Demon
than la a hsoaeL The new

I

r ih ir ;',*

continued training needed lo
keep the animal at top perfor­
mance aa auxiliary cars.
The dogs are provided free of
charge, while they arc not suit­
able for oil deaf persons, they
can permit many owners s
degree of Independence and
freedom from fear not available
prior lo the Introduction of a
nearing dog. It Is estimated that
at leagt 10 percent of Ftortda'a
785 thousand deaf persons
would be able to benefit from the
assistance of a hearing dog.
There la no charge to the
hearing Impaired person. The
approximately (1,000 training
cost Is u sually born by a
s p o n s o r in g o r g a n is a t io n .
Because training takes place In
the home of the recipient rather
than in a training kennel, the
coat la a fraction of that of
similar groups In other parts of
the United State*.
Head of the Florida organiza­
tion of B an for the Dear la F.
Robert Freeland of Lake Wales.
Slate training director la Pam
Freeland.
T h e p r o g r a m la b e i n g
sponsored In part In ihe 8araeota
area by the Quota Club of
Sarasota, a charitable organisa­
tion of business women de­
dicated to helping those with
hearing
h a n d i c a p s . A rc s c h a p t e r
coordinator of t a n Cor the Deaf
ts Sarasota audiologist Donna M.
Simmons who also serves as a
Director of Certification.
The greatest need on the part
of the organisation at the present
time la for funding and for
additional animal trainers to
le a rn th e sp ecia l tra in in g
methods needed to prepare doga
to assist deaf persons. Anyone
wishing more Information in the
ganaota/Manatfe arena la In­
vited lo call the Quota Hearing
Line. (• 19) 922*1964.

"♦"f- sQ

toward a cause."
The survey showed union leaders think
many things they fought for — due process
In firing, higher wages and better working
conditions — are now enjoyed by moat
workers, and they see their sons and
daughters lighting back against them.
"They feel unions have not been given
proper credit for what they did." Heshlzer
said of the respondents. "All (hey were
getting was criticism from non-union
workers for being greedy."
Many of the respondents believe compa­
nies used (he recession of the early 1080s to
minimize strength of unions. One union
official called the economy "a battering ram
that companies have used to break col­
lective bargaining relationships."
Union officials also feel the government
has been unsympathetic to their concerns.
Heshlzer said.
But he added, "The bulk of the criticism
dealt with short-sightedness of union lead­
ership ... and an obsession with being
el cted."
Many union leaders are afraid they will be
thrown out of office If they show a
cooperative aplrll with m anagem ent.
Heshlzer said.

Consumers should continue lo
see s plentiful supply of Florida
vegetables at bargain prices fol­
low ing the recent J a n u a ry
freeze, a spokesman for the
F lo rid a F ru it &amp; V egetable
Association said.
C e le ry , le ttu c e , e n d iv e ,
cacarole and other leafy Items,
Including cabbage, withstood
freezing tem peratures much
better than first believed, ac­
cording
to Wayne Crain, FFVA
NTs
production and marketing man­
Charting The Course
ager.
"Leaf vegetable grower* expe­
Daryl McLain, of tha Greatar Sanford Chambar of rienced
a Uttk harvest Interrup­
Commores, right, and Paul Wafklna, owner of Sun Ray flight tion, but
are now back on
school, study a now map of tha Sanford Airport they schedule," Crain said. Crain
designed. Tha two wort also planning for tha tha SO-plus added that although cabbage In
airplanes that wart to land Saturday for tha Airport Fly-In the Hastings area was seventy
program. Pilots from across tha state wort to converge at damaged, cabbage In central and
southwest Florida sustained only
ma airport for lunch and a tour of tha facllitlas.
minor damage.

Post

Supplies of Florida tomatoes,
peppers, squash and eggplants
are still available In limited
supply; however, these Items
will ajpUn be plentiful within 60
days.
In other farm news, the stale
Department of Agriculture an­
nounced this week that sales of
v e g e t a b l e s , m e lo n s a n d
s t r a w b e r r i e s to p p e d th e
billion-dollar mark for the sec­
ond year In a row.
Sales for the 1063-84 season
totaled (1.058 billion compared
to the previous year's figure of
(1.001 billion.
Even though sales were down
by about (33 million tn the
1063-64 season, more land was
formed. Farmers grew crops on
about 416,000 acres last year
compared to about 402.000 In

Needs A Home F irst C a rs W ith A irb a g s

The U.S. Postal Service Is
asking for offers to lease space In
an existing building or a newly
constructed building at ground
level for a new main post office
at Lake Monroe.
Under th e Postal Service
"open advertising" program for
leased facilities, prospective
bidder* a n asked to oner site
and construction bids or build­
ing and maneuvering area aa a
single package. No public bid
opening la held.
Bid packages are to be sub­
mitted no later than March 8.
1085 lot Walter Popaden, man­
ager. Real Estate Branch. Field
Real Estate and Building. Office,
US. Postal Service. FO. Box
22725, Tampa. Fla. 33622-2725.
An existing building should
h av e a p p ro x im a te ly 1,856

square feet of Interior floor space
at ground level.
For a newly constructed build­
ing. the site should have 30,000
square feet of land or a lot with
dimensions of 150 feet by 200
feet. The building will have
1,856 square feet of nterior floor
space, it will be built with
vaie funds and leased lo the
ual Service.
The desired location la in an
area bounded on the north by
Michigan Avenue, on the east by
county Road 15, on the south by
Church Street, and on the. west
by Missouri Street.
.
The proposed n*wnew £?*,'£!
postal

K

pS L ^ R * S t a S d c M d
of 15 year* with renewal options
for 25 additional year*.

D a llv a ra d To G ovornm ont
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~
Ford Motor Co, Thursday de­
livered to the federal govern­
ment th a first of more than
6000 Ford Tempos equipped
with alrbagi aa part of a
program to ev alu ate the
safety devices
In c e r e m o n i e s in
Washington. Ford Chairman
Donald *. Peterson presented
the keys of the Ant car to Ray
Mine, acting edmhiietratnr of
the General Services Ad-

that inflates and
the bog in
125th of a second after a
fan* equivalent to a 25 raph.
front-end crash la detected.
Ford said the device la only
Intended se a supplement to
aeat belts, which should be
worn to protect occupants
from all types of Impacts.
1 The cars also have e rear
shadow-mounted third brake
which

The Tempos, equipped with
.potn safety
andard three-point
have the

have an experimental lami­
nate on the Inner akfo of the
designed to pro­
mts from further
hi the event of a

the

�P rin c M G uilty
Of Boating M aids
LONDON (UPt) - An Arab
Kinceaa has been fined t550
ind given a 6-month suspended
all sentence Tor beating taro
nalds allegedly for "looking out
rf the window or sweeping too
ilowly" In her London home.
Sheika Faria Al Sabah from
Kuwait was told by a Judge tn a
London court her conduct "was
llsg ra cefu l verging on the
barbaric." after she pleaded
guilty to whipping one of her
maids with an electric cord and
burning her hand on an electric
hotplate.
The other maid suffered a
black eye. the court aras told.
The prosecution said the
mistreatment came to light last
year when a shopkeeper near the
princess' luxury home noticed
the maid had serious Injuries
and helped her escape from the
house.
Police found lengths of electric
cord in the house and a riding
whip that had been used to beat
the maids.
The prosecution said the taro
m aids had been struck fre­
quently "for... looking out of the
artndow or sweeping too slowly."
The princess' lawyer told the
court she was a "person of some
standing In her own country"
and had been under great stress
a t the time.
Her sister. Sheika Sarlya Al
Sabah, reported to be seriously
111 In a Kuwaiti hospital was also
accused of more assaults on the
maids. Her trial was postponed.

Neil Simon's 'Fools

Cutting Craw
Cutting the ribbon at Dedication Day for the
now $2 million Seminole County Department
of Health and Human Services facility with
surgical precision are, from left, Seminole
County Commission Chairman Bob Sturm,
Commissioner Fred Streetman, Paul Snead,
District VII Administrator for the stale
Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services, and Dr. Jorge De|u, Seminole

County Health Unit director. The building,
located on Airport Boulevard west of U.s.
Highway 17-92, houses the County Health
Unit, Veterans Services and the County
Welfare offices and expanded clinical and
laboratory services. It also contains a new
pharmacy, environmental health laborato­
ry, and an X-ray facility.

Investigator Blasts M ovie A s Fiction
HOUSTON (UPII
Lee Brown spent two
years heading the Investigation Into the
•cries of child murders that terrorized
Atlanta, two years he says he and others
devoted entirely to catching the killer.
Brown la not upset that someone has
made a television movie about the cases.
But, he would warn viewers, the movie Is
not fact.
The two-part ministries will be broadcast
Sunday and Tuesday by CBS. Brown
headed the Investigation of the slayings os
Atlanta's public safety commissioner. He
now la Houston police chief, a Job he
accepted In 1962.
"It would be okay If It was labeled
fiction." Brown aald of the movie. "It's not
factual. There are a tremendous number of
Inaccuracies. It Is a woeful distortion of what
1 am led to believe docu-dramas do. It takes
a factual situation and changes It to what
would be fiction."
CBS bowed to pressure from Atlanta civic
leaders Tuesday and agreed to air disclaim­
ers at the atari of the broadcasts and during
commercial breaks. It will warn the film Is
not a documentary, but "a drama based on
certain facta" surrounding the string of
murders.
The ministries portrays Williams as an
innocent man railroaded by Atlanta ofllclals
pressured to find the killer and preserve the
city's Image for tourists.
"To even suggest there was not a great
concern on the part of the Idly) administra­
tion la grossly wrong.*' he aald. “We had
young kids ouraelvea ... It would be
unconscionable to even suggest there waa

not concern about the deaths of kids. I think
It's wrong to portray the city aa uncaring."
Brown said he rem ains convinced
Williams was the killer and that he waa
convicted because of the evidence against
him. Williams was found guilty in the
slayings of two men in their 20s and
sentenced to two life prison terms.
"The FBI, the Georgia Bureau of In­
vestigation, Atlanta Police and eight other
law enforcement agencies all worked on the
investigation and we all unanimously con­
cluded ... Wayne Williams was responsible
for the deaths of the young children."
Brown said. "He was found guilty by a Jury.
They unanimously agreed with that de­
cision. It has been upheld by the Georgia
Supreme Court and never waa appealed to
the U.S. Supreme Court.
“Justice has run Its course. Indeed the
man Is guilty — that's not a question for
debate with those of ua Involved In the
Investigation."
Brown blasted as the "moot blatant"
misstatement the television series' claim
that the Atlanta murders remain unsolved
and that the string of slayings bus con­
tinued.
"There were murders of young blacks
before the Williams case, and murders of
people since the Williams case." he aald.
"The difference Is there are no murders that
fit the same pattern. We have murders In
every major city of young black children.
That i*ttem . however, Is what la Important.
There have been no murders In Atlanta with
the same characteristics since we set eyes
on Wayne Williams."

The play’s the thing.
Romance is in the air as
students plan to celebrate their
favorite holiday. Students aren't
the only ones preparing for next
week when the Seminole High
School thespians will proudly
present Nell Simon's ''Fools".
"Fools” is a love story about a
small town In Russia that has
been afflicted with a curse of
stupidity. A schoolmaster at­
tempts to break thta curse and
falls madly In love with the
stupidest of the Kulenchlklvltes.
Many problems face the poor
teacher and his (Inal fate will
•w rit him on opening night.
Wednesday, so everyone bring
your sweetheart to a ribcracking
night of entertainment.
The cast Includes: Jerry Walsh
as the school master. Mellanle
Boyd as Sophia Zubiitaky. Andy
Ellmore as Dr. Zubiitaky. Cindy
Phillips as Lenya Zubrllsky.
C h r i s M e g lll a s C o u n t
Yauskevltch. Beth Nelson as
Yenchna, Darryl Edgemon as
M lah k in , M ike H o rn e r aa
Slovltch. Kenny Eckstein as the
priest, and Chriatln Merriflcid as
the shepardeaa.
The play will be held on two
consecutive nights; Wednesday
and Thursday at the Seminote
High school auditorium at 7:30.
The admission price will be S3.
This week's activities:
Monday the 11th — SHS band
booster meeting at 7:30 p.m. In
the band room; Brain bowl at
Oveldo with Seabreeze: girls
basketball with Lake Howell at
home. JV 6 p.m.. varsity 7 45
m.; boy's soccer at Lake
Ighland. 7 p.m.

6

who stopped Williams on a bridge spanning
a river where several bodies were found, he
aald, but he does not know of anything
overall that could have been done dir
ferenlly.
The fact that Williams waa n onnested on
the bridge and his car searched allowed him
to destroy aome evidence. The delay made
investigators work harder. Brown sold, but
did not prevent them from gathering
enough evidence to convict Williams.
"No one could provide ua with anything to
show we didn't do the right thing," he aald.
”1 think the Investigation waa carried out
very properly.
"Wayne Williams got caught. He wasn't
as sm art aa he thought he waa. He waa up
there throwing bodies off the bridge and we
caught him."
Brown said be was not contacted by
anyone associated with CBS or the pro­
ducers of the television drama. He will
appear on an Atlanta television program
with others Involved in the Investigation to
discuss the movie at Its conclusion.
“ I think this would be an obligation, if
CBS waa Interested in fairness, for (he
network to air that program nationwide." he
said.
Asked what he would tell viewers of the
ministries. Brown said:
"That It's not factual. It's fiction. They
have not depicted reality."

Around SHS
By Mellanle
Boyd

Tuesday — NEDT ninth grade;
baseball at Evans. 4 p.m.: track
at home. 4:30 p.m. boys and
girls; tennis with Trinity Prep at
home. 3:30 p.m.; boy's basket­
ball with Lake Howell at home.
JV 6:15 p.m., varsity 8 p.m.:
girl's soccer regional. TBA.
W ednesday — "F ools" In
a u d ito riu m at 7 :3 0 p .m .:
weightlifting with Titusville and
DeLand at home. 2:30 p.m.
T h u rs d a y — " F o o la " (n
a u d ito r iu m a t 7 :3 0 p .m .:
Seminole invitational baseball
tournament at SCC 3:30 p.m.:
tennis at New Smyrna, 3:30
m.: girl's basketball with
Unland at home. JV 6 p.m.,
varsity 6 p.m.
Friday — County concert high
school band festival; Seminole
Invitational baseball tournament
at Oak Ridge. 3:30 p.m. wrestl­
ing district at Lake Mary. TBA:
boy's basketball with Mainland
at home, JV 6:15 p.m.. varsity 8
p.m.; girl's doccer sectional.
TBA.
Saturday — County concert
high school band festiv al:
Seminole Invitational baseball
tournament at Oak Ridge, 3:30
p.m.: Track Wildcat open at
Winter Park, boys only. 10 a.m.:
wrestling district at Lake Mary,
TBA.

E

25th &amp; Airport Btvd.
(Behind Winn Dixie)

1114414

H u n t

In s til

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
/# _

P h. 322-0285

* 3 5 7 S S. Fre n ch A ve.t Sanford

O w ners in su ra n c e

SUNDAY, R l . 10
citizens, 8 p.m., closed. 200 N.
C e n tra l F lorida R egional Highland.
Al-Anon Step and Study. 6 Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry,
Scholastic Art Awards Exhib­
TUESDAY, FEB. 12
ition featuring art and photo­ p.m.. Casselberry Senior Center.
Casselberry Klwania Club. 7
graphy by middle and senior 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford AA. B p.m.. closed, a.m.. Denny's. State Road 436
n ig h s c h o o l s t u d e n t s of
and Oxford Rood,
Seminole. Brevard. Orange and 1201W. First St.
Osceola counties. Robinson's.
Altamonte Mall. Feb. 9-24. 10
Florida i Only Authorued Center
a.m. to 9 p m., weekdays and
noon to 5:30 p.m. Sundays.
Sanford Blg Book AA. 7 p.m..
open discussion, Florida Power
and Light building. N. Myrtle
Avenue. Sanford.
Alonon meeting. 0 p.m.. 1201
W. First S t. Sanford.

LOSE WEIGHT

Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminols County Branch. 1902
E. Second S t. Sanford. 9 a.m. to
9 p .m .: F lo rid a H o sp italAltamonte Branch. 001 E. Alta­
monte Ave.. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Free income tax help for re­
tirees, 9 am . to 1 p.m., Sanford
Chamber of Commerce. 400 E.
First St.. Sanford. Through April

ASM S T S T lM S

m

The Big E Ddtooa
Boren Plaza Office b
movingiCToi* the street
to a new location in
Providence Plaza lo offer
you more service and
convenience than ever
before. Additional services
at our new office will
*
include a Monerokx*
'
persona! financial center,

. w j

insurance and real estate,
from our affiliated
companies. Our new
facility will also offer an
HONOR automated teller
machine with banking
24-hours a day, and
drive-in idler service.
Join our Grand
_______
M V

Opening Celebration on
February 11th through the
I5th. There'll be refreshmenu and a chance to win
a 19* remote-control
color TV.
lfou'U find we’re still *
the same friendly bank
branch you've learned to
trust — but now we’ve got
a toll* more room to grow.

�*A—Kvsalm Herald, laiHard, FI.

Sunday, Fak.1l.1HS

$38,521 to $35,859 to $50,120.
M rs. A n d e rso n 's sa la ry Is
$42,101. She has also been
serving for several months as
Continued from page IA
acting assistant county ad­
• County engineer from ministrator.
$27,282 to $38,521 to a range of
• Director of public work's
$30,992 to $43,326. County from $30,479 to $42,067 to
Engineer Bill Bush, scheduled to $39,540 to $55,200. Since Larry
retire later this year. Is paid Sellers, recently promoted to the
$45,948.
position. Is being paid $37,496,
• Computer services director his salary would be Increased by
from $28,777 to $40,666 to $2,054 under the plan.
$34,153 to $47,756. Since
• Director of public safety
Monty Beamer, who holds the from $30,479 to $43,067 to
office, Is paid $33,078. she $ 4 1 ,5 1 6 to $ 5 7 ,9 0 0 . Gary
would receive a pay raise of Kaiser, who holds that post, la
$ 1,077 under the proposal.
now paid $45,813.
• Director of management
• Director of county planning
and budget frum $27,262 to from $27,272 to $38,521 to

...Pay

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Do/#; SocIp I Security Freeze
Would Cost Recipients $200 Hike
PALM BEACH |UP1| - Scnalc Republican leader Robert
Dole aay* there Is a strong consensus concerning the
president's budget that everything must be touched, from
defense and entitlement to aid to state and local
government." Dole said. Among the possibilities In a
one-year freeze In Social Security cost-of-ilvlng allowances
which he said would cost the average recipient about $200
In Increases.
"We don't want to do It, but we may have to do It to put
together our deficit reduction package," said Dole. R-Kan.
speaking to the national directors of the Anti-Defamation
League of 0 ‘nal B'rlth.
The proposal would not reduce Social Security benefits,
but would keep
kee| them from Increasing. Social Security
recipients
will also feel the budget cuts In other ways, he
reclpii
said.
The president's fiscal 1906 budget, which Is $180 billion
In the hole, scraps domestic programs such as the Small
Business Administration, urban Development Action
Ormnts and federal revenue sharing.
The Senator also said any cuts In defense spending
would not affect the U.S. promise to help Israel.

G olden G irls1Hip Lifts Censored
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Florida Stale University's
Oolden Girls, short-skirted, leggy dancers who perform at
athletic events, are mlfTed at school's move to censor their
hip lifts and pelvic thrusts.
The university's nthletlc department benched the
award-winning 14-member troupe at one basketball game
this week and limited their future performances to only
three of the remaining home games.
Officials said they had received complaints that the
halftime dance numbers were too suggestive.
"We want the Golden Girls!" some fans demanded
Wednesday as the dancers sat glumly In the stands In
trench coats and other civilian apparel watching the
Semlnoles defeat Tulane 74-01,
"1 don't understand," Oolden Girts captain Susan
Carpenter told the Tallahassee Democrat. "When 95
percent of the audience enjoys us and a small percentage
write In, all of a sudden we can't perform."
Asalstant FSU Athletic Director John Sheffield said his
office began receiving complaints about the .dancing In
December.

Service Denies Capsize Blame
MIAMI (UPI) —The Coast Guard said Friday It accepts no
blame for the capsizing of a Haitian refugee boat that
resulted In at least seven drownlngs lost summer, but Is
taking steps to help prevent a similar tragedy.
The findings of a Coast Guard Investigation were
released at a news conference. Haitian activist Gerard
Jean-Juste said later they "were biased and not complete."
The drownlngs occurred 20 mllfTnbHfi 'd n ialll JWW fi
after crewmembers on a boat fro© DtfcTiSMfGtidrflTQItcf
Hamilton began to board a rtckrljr StMbai D w fcti sailboat
which was apparently on Its way to the United States.
There were 83 survivors.

Graham Signs 2 Death Warrants
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Gov. Bob Graham,Friday signed
death warrants In the cases of a convicted child killer and a
parolee who murdered a woman after a dispute over use of
a car.
Officials at the Florida Slate Prison at Starke set the
executions of Johnny Paul Witt and and William Middleton
Jr. for 7 s.m. on March 6.
Witt confessed to the 1973 suffocation death of an
II-year-old Hillsborough County boy. Middleton admitted
that In 1080 he killed a Miami woman with a shotgun as
she slept on a sofa.

...Phones
C autlauad fraaa paga 1A
Mrs. Patton said current pro­
viders. such as Southern Bell
and United Telephone, would
still be required to maintain
phones In "emergency loca­
tions" where phone service la
needed, but not profitable. They
would also be guaranteed one
phone per exchange In a highuse. hlgh-proflt area.
Strickler and Karnes said that
confirms their fears that their
companies will bear the burden
of providing unprofitable service,
while vendors could skim off the
profits In hlgh-useareas.
And Karnes said those profits
m a y n o t b e a s h ig h a s
entrepreneurs expect, because
they will have to buy and
maintain their equipment and
pay the access fees. Pay phones
cost from $300 to $2,000 and
vandalism can be expected to
run up the cost of operating any
phone system, he said.
"It's not Just putting In a
phone and collecting money. It's
• bit more complicated than
that." Karnes said.

Complications. Mrs. Patton
said, Include the requirement
that private vendors maintain
their phones under the some
standard as major companies.
That means bringing a broken
phone back on the line within 24
hours.
They will also be required to
provide free access to 911
emergency lines and directory
assistance, but will not have to
have operators on duty, she said.
The Federal Communications
Comm ission (FCC) In Ju n e
opened the door to private coin
phone ownership and since then
about 12 states have approved
the sendee. Mrs. Patton said.
The PSC has received many
Inquiries on the topic, but she
could not pinpoint any Interest
from Seminole County.
Karnes said he doesn't antici­
pate a public outcry against
private pay phones, even though
the advent of the service will
most likely mean higher phone
bills for customers who rarely
use pay phones and who when
they pay for their home and
business service think they are
are subsidizing pay phones. The
reverse Is true, he said.

REALTY TRANSFERS
FlrmauthNett Naalty Inc. toDmMC Nafial
S *»Ctoutoa J. La*4). BMi 0 , Ktot imi Far*,
frtorat*. tM.N&gt;
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$34,153 to $47,756. Planner
Woody Price la $37,853.
Among the other recommen­
dations Is to Increase the work
week to 40 hours for those who
work 37 V*.
The proposal says most of the
employees that fall Into this
category are "p in k collar”
workers. The report adds that In
actual practice many. If not
most, of these employees are
working a 40-hour week, but
being paid less than their coun­
terparts who are scheduled to
work 40-hour weeks. In addition,
the report says, some of the
Incumbents In the categories are
actually sypervtslng employees
whose work schedule la longer

...Volcker
Coatiaued from paga 1A
very abruptly." he said.
That observation la at the
heart of Volcker'a disagreement
with the Reagan admlnlstratIon's view that any adjustment
In International confidence and
credit levels would come about
gradually.
Volcker said history suggests
It "would be very unusual If you
didn't" have a recession some­
time before the end of the
decade.
But what worries him more,
he said, la the possibility the
economy will keep growing and
borrowing until foreign Investors
lose confidence and start to
extract much higher Interest

th an th e ir supervisor'*.
Listed a m o n g observatio n s in
the re p o rt Is th a t a recreatio n
a tte n d a n t sh o u ld not be req u ired
to hold a h ig h school diplom a
an d th a t a p lan n in g aid e II
should have a n associate o f aria
degree, w hile a n adm in istrativ e
a s s l s t s n t s h o u ld h a v e a
b a c h e lo r 's d e g re e a n d Ih re e
year’s experience.
T he report also recom m eq g s
the c o u n ty co n tract out for fleet
m a n a g e m e n t s e rv ic e s r a th e r
th an h av in g a d ep a rtm e n t to
handle those services.
And th e co unty sh o u ld in­
vestigate. th e report say s, the
savings a n d Im pact of a ch an g e
In c o u n ty p ay p e rio d s from
weekly to bi-weekly.

rales for their lending.
"There Is no way In God’s
Earth that we won't have to
borrow a lot of money abroad."
Volcker said. "The only question
Is the terms and conditions of
the borrowing."
L a te r V o lck er s a id : " I t
w ouldn't be astounding to thtnk
there could be a recession before
1990. But I'm making no pre­
dictions whatsoever."
He did not flinch when asked
about alternative tax systems,
suggesting the steeper levies
European economies tolerate
through sales, consumption and
energy taxes do not harm eco­
nomic growth as much as a
higher Income tax would.
The Important thing, he said,
was that, "In a prosperous
economy the (pderal budget
ought to be balanced."

Conviction in Sidewalk Slaughter
SANTA MONICA. Calif. (UPI)
— A man who drove his speed­
ing car down a crowded side­
walk on the eve of the summer
Olympics, killing a young New
York tourist and Injuring dozens
of other pedestrians, has been
convicted of first-degree murder
and 48 counts of attempted
murder.
Daniel Lee Young. 21. a
d ia g n o s e d p a ra n o id
schizophrenic, showed little
emotion Friday during the 45minute reading of the verdicts of
a nine-woman, three-man Supe­
rior Court Jury.
Young, a towering and beefy
young man. rocked back and
forth In his chair, yawned sever­
al times and scanned Ihc court­
ro o m w ith a c o n c e r n e d
expression.
D e fe n se a t to r n e y Irw in
Pransku conceded, during the
month-long trial that Young was
guilty of second-degree murder,
but not first-degree murder, and
assault, not attempted murder,
because he did not premeditate
the wild car attack.
"I'm disappointed." Pransky
told reporters after the verdicts.
"I hope the Jury will listen to mr
at the second phase of the trial
when I will tell them he was
In san e at the tim e of the
events."
Y o u n g , of s u b u r b a n I n ­
glewood. had pleaded Innocent
and Innocent by reason ol In­
sanity. and now faces the sanity
haae of his trial, scheduled to
egtn Tuesday.
If he la found to have been

K

sane at the time of the attack, he
could be sentenced to state
prison for the rest of hls life. If
the Jury decides hr was insane,
hr will be committed lo a mental
hospital.
Young admitted at the trial
that he plowed Into (he pedestri­
ans the evening of July 27 —
less than 24 hours before the
opening cerem onies of the
Summer Olympics — In the
trendy Westwood shopping and
movie theater district near the
UCLA Olympic Village.
Calling himself a "vigilante,"
Young said he was angry
because he had never been paid
billions of dollars owed him for
songs he believed he had written
— under orders from Congress
— for such rock stars as Prince
and Michael Jackson and for the
soundtracks of the hit films
"G hostbuslera” and “ Purple
Rain."
Eileen Deulsch, a 15-year-old
tourist from New York City, was
killed.
Anolhrr 54 pedestrians were
i Injured, uml must of the 48
whom Young was convicted of
trying to murder filed Into the
court In a grim parade to testify
about (heir Injuries, Including
skull fractu res and broken
limbs.
Nghl Truong, a 22-year-old
immigrant from Vietnam, lost
her tight leg In the car assault
and was paralyzed from the
waist down. A 2-year-old girl
■pent 10 days In a coma and
remains paralysed on the right
side, unable to speak.

AREA DEATHS
ETHEL E. ARMSTRONG
Mrs. Ethel E. Armstrong. 81.
1169 Howell Creek Drive, winter
Springs, died Thursday at South
Seminole Community Hospital.
Longwood. Barn August 20.
1903 In Spruce. Mich., she
moved lo Winter Springs from
Sarasota In 1983. She was a
homemaker and a member of
P in e S h o re s P re s b y te ria n
Church, Sarasota. She was a
member of the Order of the
Eastern SUr.
Survivors Include two sons.
Lee. Winter Bpringa. and Jim,
Nogales, Artt.i three daughters.
Mary Lou Qreenwsy and Shirley
Helnemonn, both of Orlando,
and Pauline Adams, Traverse
City. Mlch.i 17 grandchildren:
five great-grandchildren.
Bsldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home, Oolden rod. is In charge of
arrangements.
S.M. COVET
Elder S.M. Covey, 75. of 1101
Feme Drive, Longwood, died
Friday at Florida HospitalAltamonte. Bom Sept. 17, 1909
In Mount Sterling, Ky., he moved
to Longwood from Wildwood In
1975. He waa a minister of the
Church of the Lord Jesus Christ,
Longwood,
Survivors Include hla wife,
Viola B.i four daughters. Jewell
Carroll, Longwood. Goldie Noel,
Hopkinsville, Ky.. Opal Marie.
Toledo. Ohio. Bonnie Johnson.
Chicago: five son*, Harold of
WUUamatown, Ky., Dclmor of
W oodbury, K y., D allas of
D a y to n , O h io , D o n ald o f
Longwood. David of Apopka; five
b r o th e r s . L e o n a rd ol
P o rtsm o u th . O hio, Olle of
Dayton. Wilson of Wsyncsvtlic.
Ohio, Ray and Jasper, both of
4 Wllilamatown; three slaters,
1 Oracle CoUlnewotth, Mount BierTownsend. Nantc

I-*,-,

- v- • '

*

Whitt, both of Davton: 34 grandc h i l d r e n : 21 g r e a t *
grandchildren.
O ram kow -O atnes F u n eral
Home, Longwood, Is In charge of
arrangements.
RANDOLPH O. KAUFMANS
Mr. Randolph O. Kaufmann.
71. Qf 215 Margarita Road,
DeBary, died Wednesday al Fish
Memorial Hospital. DeLand.
Bom In Washington, D.C., he
moved to DeBary In 1964 from
Pompano Beach, He was a re
tired office manager for BAH
Sales. Orlando. He was a World
War II U.S. Army veteran and a
member of All Saints Episcopal
Church. Enterprise, He was a
member of the DeBary Volunteer
Fire Department, was a founder
and former chief of the Deltona
Volunteer Fire Departm ent,
helped create the Pompano
Beach Highlands Volunteer Fire
Department and waa a former
member of the Silver Spring.
Md. Volunteer Fire Department.
Survlvora include hla wife,
Muriel Whitehead Kauftnann;
daughter. Karen K. Scuddcr.
Sanford: two grandsons, James
and Kevin Scuddcr, Sanford.
Allman Funeral Home. De­
Bary. la in charge of arrange­
ments.

Mary, Is In charge of arrange­ NJ .. Edith Ahl. Fort Lauderdale;
ments.
18 grandchildren; six great­
grandchildren.
Mr*. Doris A. Sir bold, 69. of
Baldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral
B20 Keystone Ave., Altamonte Home. Altamonte Springs, la In
S prings, died T hursday at charge of arrangements.
Florida Hoapltal-A ltam onte.
Bom June 2. 1915 In Brooklyn.
Mr. James Samuel Ritchie Sr.,
N.Y.. she moved to Altamonte
Springs from Sunrise In 1964. 66. of Osceola Road. Geneva,
died Friday at Central Florida
She was s homemaker.
S u r v lv o r a I n c l u d e h e r Regional Hospital. Bom Dec. 19.
husband. Raymond R.: five ISIS in Geneva, he was a
daughters. J u n e Brendofen. lifelong resident. He was a veter­
Solon. Ohio. Dorothy Bowers, an of World W ar II and a
Orrvlllc. Ohio. Nancy Eggeman. Protestant. He waa employed by
Marshalvllle. Ohio, Gall and the Seminole County Road De­
Debra Siebold. both of Winter partment.
Survivors Include two sons,
Springs; son. Jam es Hair, OrrvUle: four brothers, Oscar, Robert Ritchie, U.S. Navy,
Magnuson. Long Island. N.Y., Jamea S. Ritchie Jr.. Sanford: a
Edw ard M agnuson, M yrtle daughter. Mias Helena Ritchie.
Orove,
Eugene Magnuson. Sanford; brother, John Ritchie,
M e s q u ite , T e x a s , O ro rg e Q enevq; aleter, Mrs. Mary
Magnuson. Brooklyn; two sis­ Branaman. Geneva.
Brlsaon G uardian Funeral
ters. Beatrice Wcstcnbcrgcr.
Home la In charge of arrange*
men to.
Sptrlthstng In FU nm J Drlgru

Mrs. Louise On. 77. of 700 N.
Maitland Ave., Maitland, died
Friday at American Health Care
Center, Winter Pork. Bom July
7. 1907 In ErneUe. Ala., she
m o v ed to M a itla n d fro m
Alabama In 1919. She was a
retired schoolteacher and was a
Presbyterian. She was a member
of Maitland Woman's Club.
S u r v i v o r s I n c lu d e h e r
husband, Thomas; ton, Robert.
Syracuse. N.Y.t brother. L.M.
Swain Sr.. Sanford: one granddaughter
Outlaw
iwn Funeral Home, Lake *

• • \ » ►*

, rmtoiAu

(UaUitts
m

.

J2M JM

FULL SERVICE AT ONE LOCATION

OAKLAWN FUNERAL HOME / CEMETERY
• CONVENIENCE — ALL FUNERAL $ BURIAL
**i*.U M
ARRANOIMINTS AT 0N« LOCATION
• SAVINGS — WITH EVtRYTHMaUNOCRONC LOCAL
MANAGEMENT COSTS ARE LOWER
• CASKET SELECTION i ITEM
• TOTAL PRE-ARRANGEMENT
• FLOWER SHOP

ONE CA U TAKEE
CAM I f EVUTTHM

KAUrSUUM. aXMOOLCH0.
KMftMnn. n, pi 111Mstmtiu a* .
•Tto*to* Mto*np***r. trills* N*MM
Mp.m In All UWl CpUtap** Otorcfc *1
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n sw li Sawaltow* St mas* to to* Cawcar
Ipctoty er AM taint* Islupppl Church,
■ntorprlte, FIs. Altmw Funeral Hama.
OaSary, tochpraa.
-Svrisi taevkt* tor Mr. SsaSsiph 0

S lT C M Il. J A M l t i .

BlKhto lr. tA. at uacspl* Mae*. Genera. «h*
Ma* Fr&lt;a*y. will s* st I p m w*an**a*y at
to* ptmMi to Genera Cam*tort •&lt;*, top
Oar Las Ktop ptftcipttop. Vtoatop will B*
*r*m IS mm. Tua*S*v SrltMh Funeral
Mama, « Quartoan Chapel, to charpa m
Hll
ONa, LOUIIS
-Funeral aarvlcs* tor Mr* Latota Orr,
MtMton*. will Ss hato Man***. FaS II, HW
M1 pm. a* to* Osttawn Funaral Hama
C*m*l wlto to* tor. |*m I Ilian aNktottoa.
Serial toOsttoato Mamar1*1Par* VHMatton
tor family an* Irian** will ha h«4*luttopy »*
P». Optlpww Funeral Ham*. Mamarlal
Far*. Ftortti lhap- a Ml aarrtoa hmarai
ham*toana totalIantochar**

"CENTRAL FLORIDA'S LARGEST"
PROVIOER WORLD'S MOOT PREFERRED HEARING AIDS
F R O CONSULTATION
DELAND
( COLLECT

(•0 4 I7 M 4 0 1 7

M
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Funsril Notices

3St*4SSS

�'Notes Shock No. 6 DeLand

Rod Henderson scored a ca­
reer-high 27 points Friday
night as Seminole shocked
No. 6 ranked DeLand. Hen­
derson, a 6-3 sophomore, also
collected 15 rebounds.

By Sam Cook
H erald Sports Editor
Rod H enderson h s d Ju st
scored a career-high 27 points
and pulled down 15 rebounds
but all he wanted to talk about
was Craig Walker.
Jam es Rouse had Just made a
key free throw and pulled down
the last rebound of the game to
preserve a 57-55 upset victory
over No. 6 ranked DeLand and
all he wanted to talk about was
Craig Walker.
Andre Whitney had Just con­
verted the most pressurized free
throw of his life and coordinated
the offense like a city planner
and all he wanted to do was talk
about Craig Walker.

Who Is this Craig Walker
anywky? Well. If you don't
already know. Craig Walker Is a
6-6 freshman basketball player
who made hts varsity debut
Friday night at DeLand's band
box gymnasium. And what a
debut It was.
The 15-year-old ninth grader
scored seven points and pulled
down seven rebounds to make
"Just enough" difference as the
Fighting Semtnoles pulled the
biggest upset of Chris Marlette'a
coaching career by nipping a
DeLand team which had beaten
Seminole earlier this year by 27
POINTS —at home.
"This Is a big, big win for us."
said Mariette. "Nobody thought

said Marletlr. "We won't play
any more physical players than
Johnson and Anderson. But he
nnd Maxwell both did a good Job
we could come over here and defensively. They held their
b eat them b u t we did It. ground,"
Seminole High Is not dead yet."
And so did Henderson. The 6-3
Actually, the Seminole* may forward took control offensively
be reborn. The Tribe played from stan to finish. Fired by the
most of the game with a lineup presence of Walker. Henderson
of two freshmen (Walker and took It to the basket every
guard Andre Whitney), a soph­ chance he gnt and pulled up for
omore (Henderson) and two se­ the short Jumper when the lane
n io r s (R o u se a n d K enny was clogged.
Gordon). Matt Maxwell, a 6-2
"That Is Roderick's best game
Junior, also did a good Job or as a Seminole." said Mariette.
battling 6-4 Marcus Johnson and who had been prodding his
6-5 all-stater Randy Anderson.
talented soph to produce at both
"I knew It would be a lough ends of the floor, not Just the
first game for Craig (Walker)." offensive end. "If he played

B a s k e tb a ll

Scaled-Down Brown
Covets State Crown
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports E ditor
One-tenth of a pound.
Tony Brown will never know If
he was one-tenth of a pound
from the state 4A 140-pound
Wrestling cham pionship last
year. Ditto for the district and
regional championships.
The Seminole High School
senior will never know because
when he stepped on the scale
before last year's sem ifinal
round of the district, he got that
dirty look that the Weight Wat­
chers group made famous.
That look that means: Shame
on you. You've been snacking.
You didn't lose any weight. Tony
Brown remembers that Saturday
of 51 weeks ago very well. It was
the most disheartening Saturday
of his life.
Brown, the son of Sanford's
Ulysses and Delorts Brown of
1809 Strawberry Ave„ went Into
that semifinal round wllh a 24-1
record. He was the top seed al
hts weigh! class — a shoo-in for
the district title.
"I was so disap p o in ted ."
Brown said Friday afternoon
before practice. "The weight
clo u wasn't that strong and I
knew I could breeze through It.*'
He never got the chance. After
winning Friday evening, he went
home and got Into hts mother's
chicken. Two drum sticks, a
short thigh and a wing or two
later. Tony Jlrown was a hefty
148.
"I didn't rrultzc that I would
gain that much weight." he said.
"Bui I did. When I weighed In
Saturday morning. I couldn't
believe I weighed 146."
He still had time. Quickly, he'
, went to the track where he ran
lap after lap. Next were Jumping
Jacks and sltups. He felt lighter.
He thought that lie had sited the
unwanted baggage. He was sure
he was down to 142.
He got on the scale. It read
I42...anddne-tenth.
"Isn't tliat close enough." he
asked Ihc official.
"No. I'm sorry son. you didn't
make weight." was the reply.
There w asn't much Tony
Brown fould do. He was em­
barrassed and discouraged. Ilia
24-1 record was no fluke.
Seminole's "Master of Many
Moves" had beaten the best
competition In Central Florida,
claim ing Lyman C h ristm as
Tournament and Five Star Con­
ference championship title rn
route.
"T here w asn't anything I
could do." said Brown. "Except,
try and not to let It happen
again. 1 was determined that It
wouldn't happen again and I
wanted to come back and win
the state championship the next
year."
Strong talk, of course. Every

R am s
U p set
C ra b s

P re p F e a tu r e
Two drumstlcka, o short
thigh and a wing or two
lafor, Tony Brown wot o
hafty 144 pounds.
wrestler who steps on the mat
has a state championship as his
goal. But how many can really
achieve It? Not many. Although
wrestling In Central Florida has
grown by leaps and bounds. It
still can't match championships
with the Tampa and Miami
areas.
Then came Lyman's Mark
Schuster In 1977 and Lake
Brantley's Richard Fanner In
1962. Jack Likens was next with
his back-to-back state champi­
onships (109 and 116)In 1983
and '84. Joining Likens on the
top rung last year was Oviedo's
121-pounder Brian Smith, who
tra n sfe rre d to St. T hom as
Aquinas for his senior year.
But what about Tony Brown?
Is he In that class? He thinks so
and so does hi* coach Roger
Beat hard and Lake Mary Coach
Frank Schwartz, who has wat­
ched all of the state champs the
past eight years.
"1 think 1 can do i t " reaf­
firmed Brown. "I'm more de­
termined this year and I've
Improved a lot over last year. I
beat Just about everybody In the
summer tournaments and you
usually don't face any better
competition than that.
Bcathard agreed. "Tony la
much better wrestler than he
was last year." said Bcathard.
"He Just has some many moves
and he la so quick that no one
can handle him. The only time
he gets In trouble Is when he
gets too conservative. But we're
going to try and not let that
happen."
S c h w a r t z a g r e e d w ith .
Bcathard s assessment and went
one step further. "Yeah, 1 think
he can do It." said Schwarts.
"He showed he was for real last
year with he beat (Brandon’s
Dalcl Perassota. He handled him
easily and Penutzola went on to
finish second In the Mate."
Schwarts, like Beathard. la
most awed by the quickness.
"Tony’s quickness la Just un­
believable and he Is real good on
hi* feet. Before you know It h ell
have two points (for a takedown)
and you on your back." said
Schwarts. "He’s real deceptive,
too. Sometimes ha acts like he’s
tired sod then comes up with
that great single-leg. He's defi­
nitely state championship cali­
b er/
From the appraisals of the
coaches, one might think ‘h*1

H erald Photo by Tommy V laeeat

Tony Brown hasn’t joined Weight Watchers
but ha has a good reason to bo happy with
his 140 pounds. Seminole's undefeated senior
wrestler missed the semifinals of lest year's
Brown haa been throwing oppo­
nents around for at least half of
Ms 10 yean. That observation la
far from the truth, however.

district because he was one-tenth of a pound
too hoavy. This yaar, Brown vows to keep
his weight under the 142-pound limit for next
week's district at Lake Mary High School.

class. "I was fooling around
w restling before class," re­
m em bered Brow n. "C oach
Sherman said as my punish­
ment I had to come oul for
Probably the moM remarkable wrestling pnctlce."
thing about his accomplish*
Once there, he got punished.
men.* to that they have been
performed In Juat three yean of Former Seminole* Vince Clark
wrestling. And. If the quiet and Ronnie Watson tossed him
sen io r h a d n 't been fooling around and more or less used
around In Biology class, he him as their sparring partner.
might not be dreaming state
and Ronnie kept me
cham pionship dream s right "Vince
going," said Brown. “They beat
up on me pretty good, but one
Former Seminole wrestling day 1 wanted to be able to say I
coach Scott Sherman discovered
rasas good as them."
bta young pbenam one day in
That day has arrived. As a

C o ffe y S in g le s P a triots P a st Lion s
OVIEDO — Brad Dunn and
Tim Smith combined on a alabitter as the Cake Brantley
Patriots made use of five Oviedo
Lions’ errors and a two-run
single by Mark Coffey to post a
5-3 victory In prop baseball
action at Oviedo High School
Friday.
For Lake Brantley, it constltuted a successful season
opener for coach Gary Smith
whito the Liana of coach Howard
M abie fe ll to 0-2 . “ L ak e
Brantley's got a real good club."
said liable. "But we helped
them. Those errors gave them
the game.
Oviedo look a 2-0 first-inning

defense wllh that Intensity evennight out. look out district
tournament."
Henderson, who can handle
any position, hit three buckets In
the first three minutes, the lost
on a brilliant pass by Whitney
for a 7-6 Tribe lead. DeLand.
though, bounced bark on a
rebound bucket by Anderson, a
Jumper by Terry Williams for a10-7 edge.
When Johnson went to the
backboard three times before
getting a layup and then added a
free throw. It wna "W alker
Time." The big freshman lum­
bered olT the bench with 3:24 to
go nnd although he didn't do
Bae WALKER. Pag«4B

Q
—
broke froa
Mapped off
third. Lowi
■rod's brother. Andy, set the
table far the tying run when be
single to i
Hermann a
la cents* and roared to
sse e n d w hen M ark Coffey
Barr ett wall
grounded out to shortstop Newand Bobb;
another wall
Lake Brantley cam s right back and Baas faffowsd with a hot
when pow erful Ravin Baas shot off tho pitcher's glove.
drilled a double to left center. Burns hurried Me throw to first
Dun Beaty fhad out to right though, and it w w wild allowing
which o w e d Baas to third. Brad Dunn to score the tying run,
Dunn and Fat Lush both walked
A eoupts more o fte n set Um
to M ik a k o M . _
_
iW to k H H M ta

sophomore. Brown posted sn
Impressive 22-6 msrk. He had
10 pins snd placed second In the
district, third In the conference
snd u surprising fourth In the
region. Lost year, he added 24
more wins and 12 more pins
before his unfortunate chicken
dinner.
Wllh 16 more wins and 12
more pins this year, hto threeyear record to a sparkling 62-7
with 34 pint. "I've had a pretty
good success." said Brown about
hto three year*. “But I still want
that slate championship."
Enough to lay off the mom's
chicken for one more month.

John Nelson
Herald Sports W riter
Lake Mary's unpredictable
Rams were at their unpredicta­
ble best Friday night.
How else can you explain u
64-63 victory over Seabreeze,
the top-ranked team In the slate
3A poll?
"I never predict whai we're
going to do.*' said an emotional
Lake Mary coach Willie- Rich­
ardson after his Rams had pulled
ofT the Five Star Conference
shocker of the year before 800
raucous fans at Lake Mary High
School.
It was. Indeed, a dream come
true far the Rams who won their
third straight game to Improve
to 12-9 overall and 6-6 In Five
Star. Seabreeze, which haa been
No. 1 since Jan. 1. fell to 20-4
and 12-2.
"The kids had the Intensity.1
everybody contributed.'' said
Richardson. "Whoever hit their
free throws was going to win It
but nobody could hll Ihe free
throws. We tried to give It right
back to them."
Tried and almost did. Lake
Mary trailed. 63-62. when Fat
Johnson fired a Jumper wllh Jual
30 seconds to play. The ball
rolled off and Lake Mary's
Donald Orayson grabbed the
rebound. Seabreeze's Terry
White, however, climbed up
Grayson's back putting the se­
nior Toward al the foulllnr wllh
27 seconds logo.
Orayson swished both free
throws to give the Rams u 64-63
lead. Seabreeze Inbounded the
ball and worked the ball around.
With five seconds left. Terry
Johnson took a Jumper and
missed. Once again Orayson
snared the rebound and was
fouled.
With two seconds left. Orayson
went to the line, needing Just
two makes or a miss to keep Ihr
ball 90 feet sway from Ihe
Seabreeze basket. The 8-2 senior
arched hto first shot and ll
missed. The clock ran oul and
the Jubilant Lake Mary fans
poured onto Ihe door.
The celebration, however, was
premature. Orayson hud stepped
on the line alter shooting the ball
causing a violation. Seabreeze
was given the ball Just past
midcourt. 55 feel from the
basket.
On (he inbound* play, a pass
w as r if le d to w a rd T e r r y
Johnson. As Johnson and Lake
Mary's Jeff Reynolds converged
on th e ball they collided.
Reynolds was whistled for the
foul snd Johnaon went to the
line with a one and one and one
second to play.
Johnaon missed the shot and
this time when Grayson hauled
down the rebound. It waa finally
over. “Donny did a great Job on
the boards." Richardson. ‘‘He
kept (John) Parka away ao he
waa hardly a factor. Parka got
some big rebounds but Donny
did a good Job on him."
coach Joe Ptggoite
Jr. waa Impressed wlln the
Rams' effort. "Lake Mary played
a heck of a game, they deserved
to win." said Plggotte. "We
missed loo many easy shots, but
we never gave up. that's all 1
ask."
Daryl Merthie tod the Ram
attack with *22 points while
Orayson had 20 and 14 re­
bounds. The Rama played ag­
gressively maids as Orayson and
Reynolds w ant bead*to-head
with Parks. John Tiunbtoaon
and White.

�t

i a - i v t f U » 0 H s ra M , U n h r 4 , F I.

W i X i y , F « e . IS, t r a

Hall Totals
Rams Win 17th

Lady Seminoles
Spread Out Pats
To Tie Up 5-Star
By C h ris F ilte r
Herald S p o rts W riter
Sanford’s Lady Semlnolee
were put In a muel-wln situation
Friday night with their hope* for
winning the Five Star Confer­
ence and earning the top seed In
the district on the line against
the fifth-ranked (4A) Lady Patri­
ots of Lake Brantley High.
So. when the game came down
to the stretch run, Seminole put
the ball In the hands of Mona
Benton and the cagy veteran put
the Lady Sem inoles In the
drivers' seat.
Benton scored seven of her
game-high 10 points. Including 9
of 6 from the free throw line, and
handled the ball Impressively in
the fourth-quarter spread offense
as the Lady Seminoles outlasted
the Lady Patriots. 49-37, before
900 fans at Seminole High,
Seminole, 20*9 overall, now
stands at 13-2 In the Five Star,
tied with Lake Brantley for the
lead. Seminole should end the
season with Just two conference
and district losses as Its last
three opponents include Lake
Howell, Mainland and Apopka.
"We wanted ll and we won It.",
Benton said after the win. "But
Brantley sure gave us a flghL"
Lake Brantley, 21-4 overall
( th r e e of th o s e lo s s e s to
Seminole), has a pair of tough
conference gam es remaining
with Lake Mary and Seabreeze.
But the Lady Patriots have
bounced back time after time
this season so their title hopes
are far from over.
Just like the first conference
meeting, which Lake Brantley
won, Friday night’s game was a
fight right from the start.
Seminole look a five-point
lead. 0-4, early In the first
uarter with five straight points,
uee by Catherine "Kitty" An­
derson and two by Benton.
K irste n D e llin g e r, Lake
Brantley's 6-1 senior center,
took over Inside the remainder of
the quarter as she scored eight
straight points for the Patriots
for a 12-11 lead at the end of the
quarter.
Benton's layup and April
P eterson's fre e ’ throw gave
Seminole a 14-12 lead early In
the second period, but Benton
aoon picked up her third foul
and sat our the rest of the half.
But, In Benton's absence, se­
nior guard Andell "Soul" Smith
took over and scored eight sec­
ond-quarter points, Including a
steal and Jumper with 10 sec­
onds left that gave Seminole a
22-21 halftime lead.
The lead changed hands five

S

B a s k e tb a ll
wonted It and wo won

It. But Lako Irantloy
•uro govs us a fight.'

— M ona
times In the third quarter before
Seminole built a four-point lead,
31-27, on Benton's three-point
play. Dellinger's layup ana two
free throws by senior forward
Michelle Brown tied the score at
31-31 going Into the fourth
quarter.
Benton’s driving layup, after a
steal by Anderson, put Seminole
up, 33-31, to open the fourth
quarter and Anderson made one
of two from the line for *
three-point lead, 34-31, "Kitty"
came back to connect on two
more free tosses as Seminole
took a 39-31 lead with 6:49
remaining.
Brown scooped In a layup to
cut It to three, 39-33, but Benlon
kept Seminole up by five, 39-33,
by hitting two free throws. Kim
Wain brough Brantley back
within three. 36-39, with a short
Ju m p er with 2:49 left and
Seminole then went to its spread
offense.
Brantley fouled Benton with
2:27 left and the senior sharp­
shooter made one of two from
the line for a 39-39 Seminole
lead. Seminole got the ball back
and went to the four corners but
Brown's steal gave Brantley the
ball and a chance to pull within
two with 1:94 left.
Brantley couldn’t hit the shot
though and Kim "Big Wheel"
Johnson snatched the rebound
for Seminole.
Seminole went back to the
four comers with 1:30 left and
ran It down to 99 seconds when
Peterson hit a clutch Jumper
from six feet o u t to give
Seminole a 41*39 lead.
"I was hoping she (Peterson)
would take It." Merthie said of
the shot. "She was right In the
paint and had a high percentage
shot." ‘
"I though she (Peterson) was
going to throw It back out to
m e .B e n to n said. "But she had
a good shot and took It."
Lake Brantley sealed Ita own
fate with a turnover with 42
seconds left and Benton put the
finishing touches on with a pair
of free throws with 36 seconds
left that made It 43-35.
Benton added six rebounds
and three asatsts to her game-

Mona Benton goes airborne for
points against the Lake
Brantley Lady Patriot*. Benton, Seminole's all-purpose
senior, ran the Tribe's spread offense to perfectrtlon
I and
converted her free throws to pull the Lady Seminoles into a
first-place tie with Brantley.
high 16 points. "I Inspired Mona
tonight," Benton’s sister Sabrina
said. "I told her I’d buy her a
Whopper If Seminole won."
A nderson co n trib u ted 10
points, a game-high 14 rebounds
and four steals. "We wanted this
one really bad." Anderson said.
"Once we got the lead back In
the fourth quarter we weren't
golngtoletgooflt."
‘'Soul*' Sm ith added eight
Ighl
Tribe while
down nine re­
bounds and Johnson ripped
down seven boards.
Dellinger's 12 points and 13
rebounds were high for the Lady
Patriots. Brown had her usual all
around game with 10 points, six
rebounds, three assists and three
steals. "I like playing against

Michelle (Brownl," Mona Benton
added. "She makes you play
hard."
Lube now added eight points
for the Lady Patriots and’Sherry
"Ice" Aaplen dished out a
game-high five assists.
"We had our spots where we
didn't play well." Lake Brantley
roach Kenny Bctria said. "Bui
the refs were terrible, they Just
couldn’t handle the biggame.”
U K B SSANTLl V |V I - AmHn I. Brown
IS DolUnfor It. Lukowon A M*» I. Th s SSoII

AW*ln7 Tofall: IIMV

tIM IH O LI test - A ftunS N 1. 1
14. Ronton M, Jihnion 4, SoftfMH l A. Imllh

1 B ImMiS Tout*: ISIStl «S.

Hoim&gt;na — l omlwolo XL l A i Branttoy 11.
Fault — Lska Brantley U. Jomtnoft It
it — nano. TecAnkal — sane. A —

Jo h n Nelson
HefUd S p o rts W ritsr
Courtney Hall toseed In 23
points and Kim Avrrlll threw In
17 as the Lady Rams of Lake
Mary increased their record to
17-5 with a 57-50 victory over
the Seabreeze Sand Crabs Fri­
day night at Lake Mary High.
The Lady Rams stayed a game
behind Sem inole and Lake
Brantley In the conference race.
Seabreeze la 15-8 overall.
Despite the seven-point dif­
ference in the final score, the
game was close throughout.
Sand Crab point guard Michele
Efferson consistently attacked
the Ram defenses and finished
with 26 points.
Both teams opened the scoring
slowly despite the running game
the Crabs would later Imple­
ment. A patient ofTense and
strong rebounding by Donnell
and Delores Wesley decided the
9-6 first-quarter In Seabreeze's
favor.
,
Lake Mary continued with Its
game plan of sharp passing and
movement of the ball on offense
until the last five minutes of the
half, which became a faster
paced game as the Crabs went
Into the man defense.
Efferson stole the ball twice
and added 9 for 8 from the foul
line to help open the game to a
six-point lead midway through
the period.
With a little more than two
minutes left Hall broke away,
scoring five points consecutively
to bring the Rams to within two
again. The Lady Rams, though,
squandered several free throw
opportunities, allowing the
C rabs to hold the lead at
halftime. 25-22.
The third quarter was much
(he same as the previous but the
teams scored In spurts Instead of
Intervals. Lake Mary Jumped out
first Jumping up by one (26-27)
but only lasted for leas than a
minute.

B a s k e tb a ll

Courtnay Hall worked Inside
for 23 points to lead Lake
Mary past Seabreeze.
Late In the period. Efferson
broke loose for nine points which
was Just enough to remain ahead
38-37. However, at the start of
the final minutes Lake Mary
opened up with 15 consecutive
points while the Crabs sniggled
with only three points added to
the score and time running
down (92-411.
The Lady Rams turned thr
ball over only four limes all
quarter and rebounded effi­
ciently enough to take home a
•even-point win.
Lake Mary will play the
Mainland Buca at home next
Tuesday starting at 6:19 p.m.
LAKl MART t i n - Avar-Ill 17. Oatholftr
A Forming A L. Mall I. C. Hall IT. PoMorten
X Stan* A LocMo A RoynoMt 0. Totoli 11
11-14 V.
M A S a i l l l (Ml - Donntfl W otftr IS
Tollvor IA M orion M. Dotoro* Wtttay A
Filch A J flrottom A M Flroilono A
WaUnon A Grooc 0 Tot ala I f U D M
Hatnima — Saahraaia 1A Laka Mary n
Fouli — l aatraata if. Laka Mary ir. Fouftd
out —non# Tachnkal — nena

Tribe JV Rolls O ver Brantley
For the p a s t few w eeks
Yolanda Robinson has carried
the Seminole Junior varsity. The
sophomore center has averaged
over 20 points per game as
Seminole has won four of Its last
five games.
With Robinson dominating
Inside, all the Lady Seminoles
needed waa someone to com­
plement her from the outside.
Rana Cash and Sharon Manley
came through with their best
performances of the season Fri­
day night and Robinson had
another strong game as the JV
Tribe rolled to a 67-20 rout of
Lake Brantley at Seminole High.
R o b in s o n p u m p e d In a.

B a s k e tb a ll j.
game-high 22 points and pulled
down 12 rebounds while Manley
poured In a season-high 16 and
Cash tossed In a season-high 13
and collected five steals and
Dednt Chavers contributed eight
points.
— C hris F ilte r
LARI SRANTLIV JV (M) - R lviri t.
LWfco X P tftrt A LlJouno 1. Blow I ToUlt

USUIS.

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Fault — Laka BrantMy tx SamlnaM 71
FauMS aut —nona. Tactmlcal — nana

N ew Sm yrna O vercom es Lo k e rs, N elson To Tip Lady Lions
OVIEDO - Oviedo's Lady
Lions came back from • 19-polnt
deficit to pull within two points,
but the Lions couldn't come all m in u tes1 remaining but New
the way back as New Smyrna Smyrna Beach held on for Hit
Beach claimed a 98-92 victory win.
Friday night at Oviedo High.
Mary Lokers pumped In 13 of
Oviedo, which now stands at her game-high 22 points and
8-17, came back within two Stephanie Nelson poured in 14
p o in ts , 4 8-44, w ith th re e of her IB In the second half to

B a s k e tb a ll

sp ark O v ied o 's com eback.
Behind Nelson and Lokers.
though. Oviedo combined for
Just 11 points.
"Lokers scored most of her
points Inside." Oviedo couch
John Thomas said. "She did a
od Job once wr got her the

Ell."

New Smyrna Beach received a

balanced attack led by Tonya
Ellison's 16 points.
NSW IMVRMA BSACN (Ml - fMtan ll.
W*lkor IA T*yMr •. I r m t w i a t il Mss 14.
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Haititmo - Now Smryno Booth JO. Ovftdo
71 Foul* - i Now Smyrna Booth IX OvMSi IS.
FouMd out — nano Tothnkol — nono A —
MB

Kowboys Ride Past Lions
In O ran g e Belt Encounter
K ISSIM M EE - P la y in g
without two starters and with
another one battling the flu.
Oviedo’s Lions couldn't keep up
with Osceola Friday night as the
host Kowboys galloped to a
98-47 victory in Orange Belt
Conference action.
"We played a Utile shorthanded." Oviedo coach Dale Phllllpe
said. "Cary Justice (point guard)
haa two bad ankles and It looks
like he will be out for the aeaaon.
And James Stewart (6-9 center)
waa out with a sprained enkie.
Terry Campbell la still recov­
ering from the flu and played
only sparingly."
StlU. behind the play of Mark
Stewart. Al Unroe and Robb
Hughes, the Lions were able to
make a game of It. Oviedo stayed
within five, 32-27. at halftime
and came back within two at one
Umc In the third quarter before
the Kowboya took a 49-41 lead
into the fourth. Oviedo never got
closer than for points the rest of
the way.
Unroe’s 13 points were high
for th e Lions an d he also
grabbed eight rebounds. Stewart
and Hughes contributed 11

The Premium
ROUND ONE

B a s k e tb a ll
points and 11 rebounds eaci
Freshman point guard Qarl
Bo)too, playing his first varsti
nc, added eight points on 4
■hooting from th e floo
Freshman center Steve Kand&lt;
also added four points.
"We played aa well as w
could under the circumstances
added Phillips. "They (Oaccol
hit the offensive boards hard ar
we didn't do a very good Jc
reoundtng defensively."
Oviedo feu to 6-12 for U
see eon and 4-6 In the Oranj
Belt Conference. The Lions ho
Eustia next Thursday. "We
lu s t like to get everybod
healthy." said Phillips. "We're
young team and 1 hope we
come around by district Urn
which la coming up."
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Muhammad Tires O f Problem s
NEW YORK (UPI) - For both,
farmer WBA light-heavyweight
At a weigh-in Friday morning
c h a m p io n t a d l a M u sta fa ha waa hauled off to New York
Muhammad. Friday waa his ca- Superior Court by sheriff* to pay
rearm microcosm.
a contempt of court Rnc. and
F riday n ig h t he ex erted a
"My whole career has been mioMuim g eflift in taking a
controversy and Inactivity," he 10-round decMon over Tyrone
■aid. Friday, he had a Utile of Book .
49
• -*&lt;w

Am

, *„

g a»

►■*“■**»

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X

�Rams Get 4-Year Pins
In Victory Over Howell
Lake Mary's first four-year
class of wrestlers graduated with
honors from their dual meet
career Frlflay night as the Rams
pounded Lake Howell. 57-11. In
prep wrestling at Lake Howell
High.
"The seniors really came
through." said Lake Mary coach
Frank Schwarts. "This Is the
first four-year group which has
graduated from Lake Mary and
they take a lot of pride In that. It
was a real big thing for them to
finish together."
The four-year men — Ivan
Carbia. Todd Beauchamp. Mark
Lindquist and David Kingsbury
— all picked up pins to go out In
s ty le . Billy " B a n g B an g "
Caughell. another four-year vet­
eran. didn't wrestle because of a
bruised chest.
The victory was Lake Mary’s
12th In 13 dual matches. The
only loss was to powerful Miami
Sunset. The Rams now prepare
for next weekend's district meet
at Lake Mary. Lake Howell will
conclude Its dual meet season
Tuesday at home against West
Orange.
C a rb ia , a 1 1 6 -p o u n d e r,
secured the first pin of the
four-year men by sticking David
Horvath at 4:40. Beauchamp, a
142-pounder, took care of A1

.— • -

F|,

Sawdsy, Fsb, to, m t - 1 »

S occer

3 Second-Half
Goals Propel
Pats By Evans

W re s tlin g

Mlrlzio In 1:12. Lindquist needed
just 12 more seconds to flatten
By Chris P later
Harold Helm and Kingsbury
Herald Sports W riter
pinned James Sandberg In 4:10.
Lake Howell won two matches
After a scoreless first half.
with the first one between Lake
Lake Brantley's Patriots broke
Mary's Scott Rosa and llawk
loose for three goals In the
Greg Buckley drawing most of
second half and went on to blank
the applause at 159 pounds.
Orlando Evans' Trojans. 3-0. In
Buckley, the Five Star Confer­
prep soccer action Friday at
ence champion, built an early
Lake Brantley High.
lead and outlasted Ross for a
The sixth-ranked (4A) Patriots
10-7 victory.
finished the regular season with
"They were really going at It,"
a 17-2-1 record, second In the
said Schwarts. "It was the best
Five Star Conference and the
match of the night. Ross got hurt
district. Brantley will host Its
* when he fell behind early but he
first round d is tric t m atch
really came back. Buckley was
Tuesday at 7. Evans now stands
Just toe good to overcome."
al lfl-8.
The feature bout of the night
"It wasn’t one of our better
was supposed to be at 223
games." Brantley coach Jim
pounds where Caughell was to
Brody said. "We didn't really
meet Howell's Hal Crowley.
wake up until the second hair.
Because of Caughell’s Injury,
We finally started to play at the
though, the battle never came off
wf .«mm| rmtwn end. We need to work hnrd for
and Crowley picked up an easy
dial riels next week."
pin In S3 seconds against Paul
Lake Mary's Craig Johnson gives Chris Clno a ride before beating him Friday.
Owen.
Brantley's goals Friday were
In the Junior varsity meet.
scored
by Chad Marten. Simon
H v tk ln i. J Ht l i t — U t t t n (LM ) d
Klnstoury (LM) p Skndbtrg. 4 N; II* Lake Mary won the only mat­
Trumble
and Cory Sheffield. The
I
d
n
M
r
n
.
I
t
;
I«1
—
BM
vehtm
p
(LM)
p
W hm |LMI wen by to rtslt tit - Crowtoy
ches wrestled and picked up 11
M idi to. 1:11; I t t — Undquit* (LMI p Holm.
Patriots
took
23 shots on goal
(LM) p O m d . U UH - Ja c k tm I LMI B.
fo rfe its for a 7 8 -0 w in.
Lacorp. I l l
t:M ; 1M — Buck toy ILH) d Rent. I t M M compared to 11 for the Trojans.

Driver's Death Dampens Disposition At Daytona
DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) - Nine
days of racing at Daytona International
Speedway began Saturday with a
sorrowful band of drivers In the
qualifiers for the two front row posi­
tions of the Feb. 17 Daytona 500.
With the threat of death and disabl­
ing Injury In the back of their minds
each time they strap in. the situation
'Intensified following Thursday's acci­
dent on the backstretch that killed
•ARCA driver Francis Aflleck.
The road to NASCAR'a Grand Na­
tional championship starts at Daytona
with the prestigious 500-mlle stock car
race. That event also heralds an
Inaugural million dollar bonus payoff
for a driver who can win three-of-four
designated races during 1965 — the

Daytona 500, the Winston 500 at
Talledega. ala., the World 600 at
Charlotte. N.C. and the Southern 500
al Darlington. S.C.
The Immediate financial plan for
drivers Is to make out with the big
bucks during race week. There's a
quarter-million dollars for anyone
winning today's pole. Sunday's Busch
Clash, one of the twin 125-mlle
qualifying races on Thursday and the
500 a week from Sunday.
"There's no doubt that everything at
Daytona pales In comparison with the
500." says BUI Elliott, who won four
pole positions last year. "Especially
now since It la the first part of the
Winston Million deal. If someone
guaranteed me a win In the 500 If 1

A u to R acing
didn't win the pole, the Busch Clash or
the 125-mller. 1 would forget about
those other three. But there are no
guarantees In racing. So I'm going for
a clean sweep." One of the favorites to
earn the pole Is Calc Yarborough and If
tradition prevails for Waddell Wilson
cars, the 44-year-old driver agnln will
emerge as leader for the starting grid
on Feb. 17.
Wilson's cars have won the Daytona
pole five times In the lust six years,
including Yarborough's performance
last season in which he set a qualifying
record of201.848 mph.

"There's a lot of pressure to see If we
can win the pole again." says Wilson.
Yarborough's crew chief and one of
NASCAR'a finest engine builders. "But
most of the pressure Is coming from
Waddell Wilson. I put more pressure
on myself than anyone. I'm a perfec­
tionist. and that means I can’t satisfy
myself."
Yarborough believes Wilson has
butll an engine good enough to power
his Ford Thundcrblrd to an extremely
competitive campaign.
"Our testing In mid-January went
very well." says Yarborough, "welt
enough to think we've got an excellent
shot at winning the pale and the 500.
"This Is the first time I've driven a

Buddenhagen Rolls 648 Scratch For Star Award
The Star &amp; Queen of the
m o n th for J a n u a r y w ere
crowned last week as Lea Bud­
denhagen rolled 144 pins over
hts average to win Star and Sam
Bolton bowled 104 pina over her
average to win the Queen award.
Les. who bowls with the
Washday Dropouts Seniors and
carries a 168 average, rolled a
scratch 648 series. Sam, of the
Ladles High Noonera League,
carries a 145 average and
bowled a 539 series. Robbie
Boles of The Rebels was second
and Arnold Butler, also of The
Rebels, look third In the Star
competition. Second place In the
Queen rotloff was won by Carole
Shlndle of The Hurricanes and
third by Jan Kinlaw of the High
Noonera.
O ur 1‘Best B all" doubles
tournament was a tremendous
success as we had over 70
e n trie s. W inners and cash
awarded were first — Randy
Judkins ft Lee Garrison, $100.
second — Randy ft Donna
Judkins, $40. third — Dan
Dougherty and Mark Quick, $25,
fourth — Ken Perry ft Audry
Duller. $16. fifth — Buddy
Lawson ft Ed Housloun. $14.
six th — Regina and Perry
Whitehurst. $12. seventh —
Jean A Charlie Noe and Claudia
Joss ft Vince Cara. $10 each
team.
.W e p r e s e n tly h a v e tw o
tournaments In progress at Bowl
America. Our "S tar Search"
tournament for the month of
February Is No-Tap singles, knd
we have squads at 3:30 today
and 2 p.m. Sunday, or anytime
two or more teams wish to roll
and lanes are available. We also
have our CFBPA Sweetheart
doubles tournament In progress
as Sanlbrd bowlers compete with
other Central Florida bowlers for
t)»e $000 fbat place prise money.
• Two happy Moonlight bowlers
walked away with jackpot cash
Last Saturday night. Cheryl
waoe broke
onx the second game
Wade
‘ \ far
Jackoot
for $175. She had to pick
i off a hill rack to win It,
tjveeptast
svan broke the third
Dill Dova
jackpot for $50. He needed a
ftrtke to wtn bis mooey. TotfgjU's Jackpots are Oral game
$175, second game $60, and
bird game:$50.
; HigK scores for last
a follows: Night Riders
± Ed Houston 218/254-649
w rits; Ptnbusters Seniors —
Cohn Sayer 22$. Rose Navulls
S I! and Roy Lyons 202: TOIF

Heaps 202 and Scott Larson

R o g e r

Q uick
Herald
Bowling W riter

League — Al Benin 235, Pee
Wee West 211, Al Bowling 234.
Jeff Chestnut 224, Dee Hogan
214. Perry W hitehurst 209.
Bruce Berger 205. and Jim
Morace 215; Southeast Bank
League - Pee Wee West 211,
Jeff Chestnut 224, Gary Larson
234. Ocorge Mansfield 236, John
S c h m id t 213, V ince C ara
235/200-624 series. Bob Bates
227, Mike West 208. Lee Garri­
son 205. Ed W alters 2312 13/629. Mark Quick 203. and
Ed Houston 234/620 series.
G ators Seniors — Charlie
Lucas 230 and Joe Johnson 202;
The Rebels — Ed Johnson 232;
Scratch on Thursday — Larry
Ptcardat 213. Jerry Kaiser 207,
Nancy Wldener 204. Phil Roche
203 and Barbara TUky 202;
Blair Agency — Curt Scarbro
223, Vince Cara 212, Dean
Cowdery 203. Michele MUIer 203
and Harold Brandenberg 202;
Moose Lodge —Tony Dunklnson
226, Susan 207, Wayne Lively
210 and Aaron Kaufman 201;
Thursday Night Mixed — Jerry
Farella 229-214-193/636. Rich­
ard Heapa 234. James Cason
206 and 204. Tom Larson 207,
Buster Anderson 202. Marlene

212. Pee Wee West 219. Ron
Lemond 211 and 202. JcTf
Islander Vocation League — Chestnut 220 and Rich Heaps
BUI Devon 211-208/609. Charles 213.
S a n fo rd CH y — T o rre y
S h o w 2 2 6 - 2 0 4 /6 0 6 , T om
Maclean 210. Bob Richmond Johnson 279/652 series. Ron
213, Mark Quick 224 and Dan Allman 2 14 and 2 18, Bob Powell
Daugherty 214; Drift Inn — 206 and 209. Ruland Crevler
Chuck Stlmely 228, Ron Allman 236, Al Bowling 201. Vcrn
222, Phyllis Welton 204. Carole Messeramllh 208. Al Denman
Andrews 206. Richard Hrupn 218, Wayne Johnson 205. Don
203. Toby Buddenhagen 210. Gorman 245. Jim Carver 202.
Francis Cato 200; Floosies Gil Benton 203. Mark Quick 212.
Ladles — Murdcll Gonterman Dean Hamilton 211. Melvin
215 and Dottle Morgan 206: 3 Spangler 217. Gerald Behrens
M'a Seniors — Bernle Paulson 233. Van Tilley Jr. 212 und 202.
210 and Gene Dykes 201; Ronnie Green 200, Al Heron 2 IS.
Washday Dropouts Seniors — Lynn Ellnnd 204. Bill Oiler 211.
Marcel Vandebeek 203: Educa- Gary Larson 230. Julio Ccballun
tor’s — Mary Johnson 238. Jean 235, Joel W augh 222
Debbera 208 and Tim Seibert Bernard Hudlcy 202: Jet
ereltea Ladles — Tonya Klnnard
201.
Swingers Ladles — Franny 227 and J.C. Fairy 217; Ladles
Fowler 202; Hurricanes Seniors Match Point — Dorolhy Yams*
— Steve Razso 206 and John 202.
Smith 206; Tues. Nile Mixed Dave Hanson 222-199-189/610.
Dean Hamilton 231. Jay Smith
204 and John Ptnder 201: CFRII
— Tony Monxlleonlc 219-18924 1 /6 4 4 . J a y W illia m s
200-226-175/601, Jim Clayton
202 and 229 and Red Roland
202; Unprofessional! — Hal Rich
18 1 - 2 4 7 - 2 2 5 / 6 5 3 . D a n
Daugherty 233-190 188/611.
Ckne Rogero 224-197-180/601.
C h a rle s B lbery 209. Rich
Williams 209, Dan Neal 202.
Harold Sauer 232. Rick Chester
208, Gary Larson 214, Dave
Cote 202. Al Bowling 232.
Chuck Stlmely 213 arid 207.
Jerry Farella 212. Don Sapp
201.

®IFGoodrieh

Ford In more than 10 years ... and
th a t's a long tim e In ra c in g ."
Yarborough said on the eve of quali­
fying. ” 1 was really surprised to find
that the new Ford's don't really handle
any dlfTerently than the other cars I
have been driving. There's Just the
subtle differences that come from the
aerodynamics of the Thunderblrds."
Winning the pole has been the
gateway to victory In the Daytona 500
on five occasions — Fireball Roberts In
1962, Richard Petty In 1966, Buddy
Baker In 1980 and Yarborough In 1908
and 1984. Roberts and Yarborough are
the only drivers to pull off a triple by
winning the pole, a qualifying race and
the main event 500 mller.

�tB -lvtatag HsraM, Sawterd, FI.

... Walker
Continued from IB
anything boxscore-wlae during
the next three minute*, hi* mere
presence moved the Seminole*.
“ With Craig In the lineup,
there’* more room for me to
operate." said Henderson. "I
don't hove to worry so much
about rebounding and can do
other things."
Which Henderson did the rcsl
of the period. First, he hit a short
jumper. Second, he fed Whitney
for a basket. Third, his two free
throws tied the score at 13 with
1:35 to play. Fourth, he blocked
a shot at one end and tipped
down the go ahead basket for a
17-13 lead.
"I've been coming on stronger
the last few games." said Hen­
derson. "But I haven't had that
exact great game that I’m capa­
ble or. I wanted to play better
to n ig h t b ecau se we really
wanted this game."
Along with Henderson's of­
fense. a strong I n s i d e defense by
Walker and Maxwell kept DeLand scoreless for 3:22 of the
quarter. Williams finally hit a
jumper with two seconds left to
cut the lead to 17-15 at the end
of one.
Anderson knotted the game in
a hurry when he brought down
the house with a savage dunk on
n rebound. Henderson came
back with a pair of free throws
and House hit a long Jumper and
H e n d e rso n p u s h e d the
Scmlnoles head. 22-21. with
another pair of free throws.
Anderson, who already has
signed lo play at Stetson,
grubbed a rebound and was
fouled. Ills free throw pulled Ihe
Bulldogs even with 5:03 to play.
Walker, who was pulled for
Maxwell but reinserted when
Mntt fouled Anderson, had just n
short breather before making his
first big varsity play. House
tossed up a Jumper from outside
off the break which missed.
Walker, hustling every hit of Ihe
way, corralled the rebound und
put It In us Johnson cume down
on his back.
Not only did Craig complete
Ihe three-point play with a
swish, but DcLund roach John
Zeoll was forced to pull Johnson
to the pine with Ills third foul.
Exit one tough rcbounder.
After on exchange of turn­
o v e r s . S e m in o le u s e d u
turnaround Jumper liy Whitney
and a steal and a bucket by
Gordon to pull ahead. 29 24.
with 3:29 to go In (lie first half.
DcLund regrouped somewhat as

Hawks,
Lyman
Tumble

Sender, Frt.t». IW5
Williams scored on a pair of
Jumpers and dropped a free
throw. Seminole, though, came
back when Rouse hit a Jump
shot and Whitney threaded the
needle to Henderson underneath
who made a nice scoop move to
his right for a 33-30 halftime
lead.
"Craig makes such a dif­
ference out there," said senior
Rouse about his new teammate.
"You can Just feel it. When he's
In the middle (of the zone) you
don't have to worry and can
gamble on the steal."
J o h n so n retu rn e d to the
lineup in Ihe third quarter and
Immediately muscled Inside for
two buckets and with 4:30 to
play as the Bulldogs pulled even
at 37 all.
Whitney, who was playing his
third game with the varsity, was
left alone as Seminole ran Its 1-4
offense. The super-quick frosh
darted through the middle and
laid It home for a 39-37 lead.
When Henderson added another
bucket on a drive 35 seconds
later, Zeoll again called timeout.
The lead stayed at four points
when Henderson and Anderson
traded turnaround Jumpers but
the Bulldogs blew a big chance
to get back into the game when
the usually reliable Welckcl
missed two free throws with 13
seconds left.
Seminole quickly built the
lead to 49-41 In the fourth
quarter when Henderson. Rouse
nnd Walker scored within 45
seconds. Walker’s bucket came
on a goal tend by Anderson, who
was becoming frustrated with
this upstart freshman.
Williams, who finished with 17
points, pulled the 'Dogs within
four on two wing Jumpers but
Henderson and Gordon each
scored to push the lead up to
55-48 with Just 2:55 to play as
DcLand called yet an o th er
timeout lo try und stem the tide!
Anderson, held In check most
of the second half, took matters
Into his own hands and almost
ulled off the comeback in the
is! two minutes. The 6-5 leaper
scored on a rctiound to pull
DcLand within 55-51. He then
hit a free throw line Jumper to
cut the deficit to two. Walker
then tried a baseline Jump shut
but Anderson rejected It lo
Gordon who was fouled. Gordun.
however, missed the free throw
with Just 1:10 to play and
Anderson out let ted lo Williams.
Williams look off for the other
end but Walker was already
there and when Williams tried to
gyrate around him. the tall
freshman tnnde Williams alter
his shot and Henderson grubbed

G

the rebound. There were Just 36
seconds left when Marlette
signalled for a timeout.
Whltrfey Inbounded to Rouse
and the senior swlngman dribbird away 12 seconds before he
was trapped and whipped (he
ball to Whitney. DcLand imme­
diately fouled the freshman
guard.
Whitney calmly stepped to the
line and swished his first free
throw for a 56-53 lead. "I knew I
had to make the first one so
that’s what I concentrated on."
said Whitney. “1 didn't hear the
crowd but I know they were
screaming."
The crowd screamed a little
louder when Whitney missed hts
second attempt and Anderson
triggered Ihe ball to Williams,
who took off down the lane for a
layup which brought DcLand
within 56-55 with 18 ticks to
play.
Seminole inbounded the ball
to Rouse who whittled off nine
seconds before he was fouled.
Zeoll called his last timeout.
Then came Seminole's lucky
bounce. Rouse stepped to the
line and fired. The ball bounded
high off the left side and straight
to Walker, who caught (he ball
flat-footed and Immediately gave
It up lo Rouse.
DcLand Intentionally fouled
the Tribe senior, giving him two
shots. Rouse missed the first one
but dropped the second. DcLand
hurriedly Inbounded the ball and
hustled It lo Welckel on the deep
rig h t w ing. Ills 2 5 -fo o te r
bounded off the weak side and
Rouse was there to secure Ihe
Tribe's biggest upset In a long
time.
"These boys are a lot more
aggressive and stronger than
Junior varsity." said Walker
about hts first varsity test. "I
knew I had to piny a lot harder,
loo. Before the game. I didn't
think I was ready for the varsity.
"But I'm ready now.”
A thought that should keep a
few roaches awake at night for
the next four years.
IIMINOLB tin - Whltnoy 1. Gordon I.
Rouo* f. Hondonon JJ, M*i**ll 1. Wotfcor I.
Wright 0. Totoll 24*1117
0 1 LAND (Ml - WIIHom, 17. PoUoy 0
Wolcktl 4. Andorkon M. Johnton », Finley 1.
Gov vino 1. Ruoggor 0. Total, &gt;4 7 M M.
Malftlmo — Vominolo U. DoLand 20 Foul,
- Somlnolo II. DoLand It. Foulod out —
William,. Tochnkat — nono A — ISM.
IIM IN O L I JV (dll - Dlion 0. Edward, J,
Hoidon II, Haptan t. Franklin 1. Farkor u ,
KnlobSo I. Lowl, t. F ouitl t. Total,: II t t
41.
DflLAND JV 117) - Lllko II. Im llh 1
Millar 7, Penney I. Hamlin A Fludd IS, Gray
I. WhlloS. Total* 1111 1147
Halttimo — iamlnato 71. DoLand 11. Foul,
— Iamlnato It. DoLand II. Foulod out —
nano fochnkol —non* A —MO

Craig Walker pops In a lumper against some freshman
competition. Walker, a 6 6 center, made his mark against the
varsity Friday, scoring seven points and collecting seven
rebounds to help Seminole upset DeLand.

...Rams
Continued from IB
"They were big. but we were
ready for them." said senior JcfT
Reynolds. "We Just have to
block out and get good poslllcm.**
Mcrthlc agreed. "We figured
they would tie physical, wr Just
goi physical with them," he
said.
Lake Mary hosts Mainland
Tuesday.
In the Junior varsity game,
coac Charles Steele's Rums
dropped u 50-49 drclsloit to the
Sand Crabs. A free throw vio­
lation on Terry "The Cat" Miller
with Just 11 seconds to go In the
final hulf kept the score at one
(mint.
"Wc gave It away." said Steele

after watching the clock tick
down.
Miller nnd Jimmy Stewart led
(he Rams with 12 points each.
For Seabreeze. Tim White (16
points) and Norman Kennedy
114 points) had consistent games
lo help drop the Rams to 14-3
overall team.

DAYTONA BEACH - Lyman's
Greyhounds found out Friday
was no day at the beach. Lake
Howell's Silver Hawks had a
little better time, but not much. '
T he G re y h o u n d s v isite d
Mainland for a Five Star Confer­
ence basketball game and were
promptly sent reeling by an
85-46 count. Lake Howell,
meanwhile, played Spruce Creek
Mbit tougher In Port Orange but
still dropped a 66-56 encounter.
For Lyman. It was the third
straight drubbing by a Volusia
, County foe. The Greyhounds
have lost to DeLand by 38
points. Seabreeze by 37 points
and Mainland by 39 points.
L y m a n , w h ic h p la y s a t
Apopka Tuesday, fell to 5-15
overall and 2-12 In the confer­
ence. Lake Howell, which travels
to Seminole Tuesday, dropped to
11-12 overall and 3-11 In the
Five Star.
Efrem Brooks tossed In 24
points for Lake Howell and Scoil
Anderton added 12 but the rest
of the Silver Hawks were pretty
much Inactive. The same ww
true for Lyman as guard T.J.
Scaletta tossed In 17 points and
center Ralph Phllpoll added 18
but none of the other 'Hounds
had over five.
Spruce Creek, which received
50 points from Kenny Southall,
Johnnie Bennett and Jon Fedor,
raced to a 27-6 lead and waa
never seriously threatened.
Mainland, which had sopho­
more Mike Polite and senior
George McCloud with 21 points
each, built a 42-22 halftime lead
against Lyman. „

LAKE MAST (441 - Mart*to » . Hart,Mold
7. Mowtoy 7, Reynold, 4. Grayton 10. Jatkton
I. C,ornl*|taU i 0 T o l^ , 14 IIM U
IIA IR S I1 E 14J) — T John ton II. Whllo
7. Bockton L John ton JO, Schod 4. 0 Fork,
12. Tumblottn Tolol, JJ 14 21U
Malftlmo - So.br 0 .1 0 31, Lake Mary If
Foul, — Lokt Mory 11. Soobrooio IS Foulod
out — Fol John ton Technical, — J Park,.
PlgpotW. Rich*,dun
LARI MART JV (44) - Millar IJ, Napoli 4.
Gibb, 4. Gam*, A O Morthio 7. tuffon 4.
D ow ortll Total, II 7 11 of
J f A B R IC II JV (M) - Mila, A Morrell A
While 14, Kennedy 1A Coni* A Willi, 4
Total,: 243 IISO
Halttimo Lake Mary 20. Jaabraai* It
Foul* — Laka Mary I*. Soobr.*!* II Faulad
aul —Marthlo Tethnical, —Non*.

LTMAN 1*41 — Burg*,■ J. Doming 0.
Thom*, L Sc4l.fl* 17. MouIMn A William, 0.
Radiak 0. Phiipoii ll. NowWn o. Total, 17
14 2104
MAINLAND (Ml - J. Haney I. D Henry X
Meckaroy A Anthony a Manning 0. Hall II.
M arti, A McCloud 31, John, A tiler A
Andarwn A Pallia II, Total* 14171411
Halttimo — Mainland 42. Lyman 22 Foul,
- Lyman 14. Mainland Jd Faulad auf —
non* Technical* — P*m* Ihanging an rim).
Lyman loam (IllagaJ dafanta)
LANS HOWILL (M) - AndorNn It.
Waaldrldga A Broad* IA Llanard A Law* 4,
Sdmlfker A Total* Z J I I 12 M
I PS UCI C StS K (Ml - Oarihard A Hill
I. radar IA taufhall 17. N khal, j. i e n w i 17.
Hallman a Thame, j. Shook A H orn, I
ToUlt: 1714 1**4
Halftime — Ipruco Croak 11, Laka Hawaii
14 Fowl, — Laka Hawaii 2A Igruca Croak II
Fouled aul — Wgaldrldga Tachntr*)*
NichoH. Southall

ICBA Leaders Stay Unbeaten
Stray Cats Hold Off W inter Park In Foul-Filled G a m e , 53-50
All four divisions In the Inter-County Basketball
Aaaoclntlon are headed by undefeated teams amt
despite aonie pressing moments last week, they
remained Ihe same.
The unbeaten! are: Seniors — Oviedo Duda
Stray Cats B-0, Varsity Boys — South Seminole
Bobcats 64), JV Boys — Jackson Heights Lions
5-0, Girls —Jackson Heights Scorpions 5-0.
The Stray Cats held ofT a tough Winter Park
Rcc team, 53-50. In a foul-filled brawl. Doug
Ackerman waa the big gun with 23 polnta
Including I t of 12 from the foul line. Kelly Klukia
had 13, Eddie Norton and Pop Bowera 8 each.
Demltrioua Hill combed the bo4uds with 12
rebounda when he waan't witting out with four
fouls. Terry Dixon led WP with 12. Ricky Oodbold
had 10 ana Pat Maaoey 9.
The Cats also trimmed Wesimonte, 85-44. as
HUI scored 21. Bowera and Klukia 12 each.
Norton II and Scott Dlax-Qreen 8. Hill had 15
rebounda and Norton 12 asalsta. Dave Martin led
Wcstmonte with 12. Ryan Walhouae and Kevin
Brown had 10 each.
Winter Park won a pair and loal another In a
busy week. It waa dropped by Eastmonte, 52-46.
as Lance Wall tallied 14 and Steve Falk 13. Tony
Emanuel led WP with 23. Dixon had 15. Winter
Park then bopped the Winter Park YMCA. 85-23.
Maaaey led with 22 while Ed Stmmona had 16.
Oodbold and Emanuel 12 each.
The other wtn waa over Wesimonte, 50-45.
Simmons scored 15 and Masaey 14. Willie
Meadows led Weatmonte with 21 and Mike Young
had 12.
In varaity play, the Bobcata beat the Jackson
Heights Lions. 50-40. and topped another lough
Winter Park Rec team. 61-51. Agalnat the Llona,
hampered by foul troubles (top reboundcr Danny
Rubin and playmaker J J . Miller) and sickness
(top scorer Willy Daunic). the Cats pulled through
thanks to superlative efforts by Delmon Simpson.
Larry Watkins and Brad Bolton.
Bolton hit 10, all In the first half, to keep SS
close. Simpson hauled down 16 rebound and
scored 12. Walktns tallied 14 and had 17
rebounda and lota of hustling defense. Miller
managed to score 10, add 6 assists and 15
rebounds despite playing with four foul*. Rubin,
who fouled out. still managed to block 6 shots.
Donovan Williams waa nigh for the Llona with
11. Chris Kewlct scored 9 and fought the
high-jumping Cats off the boards to keep the
Llona In the game. Charles Warner tallica 0 and
Matt Blanton 5 for the Lions.
In Winter Park game. Rubin led the way with
10. Miller added 15. Bolton bad 8. Rubtn pulled
down 10 boards In this one, Terry Dixon led the
Parkers with 22. Rodney Paul added 7.
In other varsity games, the Knights fell twice, to
Wesimonte and to the Llona. Westmonta got
polnta from Antoine Howard 14. David Bain 13.
Terry Donahue 12 and CUnt Johnson 0, Big guns
[Una
Lfona were Kewley and Rick Ham;
lor the Lton
lampion
14 each.
each Williams 13. The Knights had 14
with 14
’ Barth In the 04-22 loss to the Lions.
from,AndyBi
On JV boy action, the Llona came back from a
to taka the lead and hold on
first
over the South Seminole
for a' 33-30
Tomcats. Forest Rogers led the Llona with 9

t *• **'•"*t -‘i r - **"

B a s k e tb a ll
points and a fine all-around game. Danny Phillips
added 8. Robbie Crager and Chuckle Atkins led
Ihe Tomcats with 10 each, Thcron Perkins had 8.
The previous day the Tomcats were thumped
by Winter Park Rec. 64-17. Nine dllTercnt WP
scorers combined to nut the SS'ere away. Dryon
Jam es ted with 11. Caly Hair. MaxArthur Kelly
and Arthur Glover all chipped In with 9. Mario
Bargalneer's 4 led Ihe Tomcats.
Winter Park also took the Jackaon Heights
Wildcats, 51-19. Harl had 13. Keith Brewer and
Jamea 6 each. Jim Morris led the Wildcats with
14. Tuskawllla lost a pair of JV games. 40-28 to
the Lions and 35-21 lo the Wesimonte Patriots.
Wr M IM. tMli Hd I. Hooor* 4
11 t a S Cnw l UN» 4 leo* i

TOUCH

THEUtHE
u /lth

VALENTINEUWELIN ES
Send that som eone sp ecial in your Ufa a m essage of love this Valen­
tine's Day. The sentim ental m em ories It will create w ill last much
longer than flowers or candyl
Create your Valentine's Day Love Lin es m essage on the lines provid­
ed, then ca ll classified to place your orderl Deadline Is Feb. 11. Co st
is $3.50 per Inch. The sam ples shown here will give you an Idea of how
your ad w ill apear on Valentine's Day.
Sam ple ads:
Margaret,
R o ses are red,
V iolets are blue,
There's no one on earth
quite like youl
Love, Robert

H uggyBear,
You light up my lifel

O

L

Sw eet Pea

Mylovellaels
ARUkm IS—

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S u n d a y , F **B. | | , I M S - S B

A popka Shoots 71 Percent To Blitz Patriots
A LTA M O N TE S P R IN G S M lkr Low m an pop p ed In 24
p o in ts, m o stly o n long-range
ju m p e rs , an d A popka ahot the
lights o u t from th e field a s the
Blue D arters b lazed to a 83-67
v ic to ry o v er L ak e B ra n tle y ’s
P atrio ts Friday n ig h t In Five S tar
C o n f e r e n c e a c t i o n b e fo re a
crow d of 400 a t L ake B rantley
HighA popka stay ed in th e th ick or
th in g s In th e co n feren ce a s the

D arters Im proved to 13-9 overall.
8-6 In th e Five S ta r, a n d 8-4 In
th e d istrict. Lake B rantley now
s ta n d s a t 3-17 overall a n d 1-12
In th e conference.
T h e D arters rippled th e n ets
for 71 p ercen t from th e field (32
for 45) a n d played strin g m usic
from th e free throw line, h itting
19 of 24 for 79 percent.
"T h e y (Apopka) w ere stro k in ’
’e m .” Lake B rantley co ach Bob
P eterso n said. "W e d id n ’t shoot

B ran tley s ta y e d w ithin n in e .
5 8 -4 9 . o f th e h o t-s h o o tin g
D arters after th ree q u a rte rs an d
the P atrio ts pulled w ithin seven
badly, b u t they were sh o o tin g and had th e hall early tn th e
fourth b u t c o u ld n 't com e an y
th e lig h ts o u t.”
B rantley had the hot h a n d too. closer.
W ade W ttttg led the w ay for
but not a s hot a s A popka. T he
P atrio ts hit 61 percent (27 of 4 4 1 B rantley w ith a season-high 14
p o in ts a n d se v e n r e b o u n d s .
from th e floor.
A popka d ash ed o u t to a 21-15 David H ardw ick contributed 13.
lead a fte r the first q u a rte r an d M a rk M o s e r 11 a n d G r e g
C ourtney added 10 points a n d
to o k a 4 3 -3 3 h a lftim e lead

B a s k e tb a ll

JACK NtCKLAUS

Legal Notice^
IS TNECISCUIT COURT,
EIOHTIRNTM JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN ASD FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO: Bt-MIk-CA-Bt-0
WERIVA VILLAS. INC..

Platnttff.

v»
DENNIS

SCOREBOARD
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A

HIGHTOW)

DONNA SUE HIGHTOW. JOHN
A. FINHOLSTER. and DONNA
HINSON
DaFonBanti
NOTICE OF SUIT
TO: DENNIS A. HIGHTOW
DONNA SUE HIGHTOW
K i t . Broadway
Tatty Warn. New Verb IBM!
YOU AND EACH OF YOU ar*
twraby notified that amt hat
bean comment ed agaknl yeu In
tk* Circuit Court at Iho Elgh
toanlh Judklal Circuit *4 th*
Stale at Florida s and tor
Sem inal# C ounty, th* ab
brovlatod lltl* a t which It:
WEKIVA VILLAS. INC., n
DENNIS A. HIGHTOW. ot a l . In
Civil N*: St JBFFCABPG Th*
nature at thii twit t* a t n u
cam*lalnt Farecloaur* *1 that
certain m artg ag a hold and
earned by Crea* Plaintiff. JOHN
A FINHOLSTER. and rocardod
January M. 1MI In Official
Record* Book lil t . Pag* u»;,
Public Racardt a t Sam Inal*
County, Florida, encumbering
that certain Mac* or pare*! ar
prw *rtr locotad. alhiat*. and
being In i*M County and Slat*,
lowtt:
U nit B UB, B u lld ln a 4.
WEKIVA VILLAS, a Can
dominium. according te S o Do
deration ot R oatrklkm . Rotor
rattan*. Covenant*. Condition*,
and iH t f n tn t i recorded S Of
tklal Rtcord* Book Mil, Fag*
t i l l . P u b l i c R e c o rd * *1
SomtnoN County. Florid*
EACH OF YOU IS RE
QUIREO I* Ilk your anawar or
afhar w rttkn doknioi to S t
Complaint w i s S o Clark et S *
C ircu it C ourt « t Sem inal*
County. Florida. S S ft greeted
MR and k wrv* a copy S tre et
ugen S * Croat Plaintiff'! at
Ik MARK A. KOTEEN, B t
QUIRE. I Mi Clay Avenue. Sulk
i n . Orlando. F k rtd a HBOL a t
ragulrad by law, not la tor San
S a I t s day at March. MBS In

Friends Return To Mayfair
Marc Best Of Golfing Jones?
; A lth o u g h th e w e a th e r h ad
b een so m e w hat e rra tic lately,
th e co u rse h a s been really bu sy .

; The com m ents ab o u t Ihe
Condition of (he course have
been most gratifying. A lot of
folks who stopped playing
bfayfalr because Ihe conditions
prere not the greatest have
Btailed coming back en masse,
ft’s good to see many of our old
friends again.
; For those who haen’t been out
lately, I recommend you stop by
jhc pro shop and meet our new
teach in g professional, Marc
Jcnes.
: Many of the local folks are
familiar with the Jones family of
prhlch Marc Is the youngest and
berhapa (at least according to his
Pad. Gene Sr.) the best golfer of
Ihe family. Gene Jr. may argue
that point.
I But. tn any event. Marc Is an
b u ta tan d ln g player an d an
kxcclknt teacher. For Informa­
tion about lessons, call the pro
khop at 322-2531.
I Speaking of lessons, our head
bro, BUI “Red" Addison, plans to
■gain run a youth clinic this
spring and I’m sure that Marc
Will be assisting him. More about

Rudy
S e lle r

that later.
By the way, we've had several
calls lately by folks inquiring
about Junior memberships. They
are available al a cost of 8100
plus tax. This en titles the
youngster to full club privileges
Including the use of the swim­
ming pool during the summer.
Any additional questions can be
answered by calling 322-2531.
One other reminder for those
of you who play during the
week, the discount coupons are
•till available at the usual loca­
tions. Including the Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
Holiday Inn at either Lake
Monroe or 1-4. Sanford Landing
Apartm enu. Days Inn at 14.
Shoemaker Construction Com­
pany or In the clubhouse at
Mayfair Country Club. It’s a
good way to save a few bucks.

Now for the weekly tourna­
ment results:
On T uesday, the Mayfair
fellows held their Dogfight on
the back nine holes with the
following results:
Low Net Team- 130, Tie —
Match of Cards): David Grether
and Harry Smith.
Second Low Net Team: David
Grether and Wes Werner.
Third Low Net Team: Charlie
Stroanider and Bud Richards.
Last Wednesday, the Mayfair
W om en's Golf A sso ciatio n
played Its Odd Hole Tournament
with the following winners:
Genevieve Woodruff — 3 Is
Irene Harris — 32: Dosale drGanahl - 32V*; Stella Brooks 33 W: Jane McKibbin - 33V*.
The Wednesday Afternoon
Scramble had to be cancelled
due to Inclement weather. Better
luck next week. guys.

AUTOMATIC

M M

SANFORD TRUCK I AUTO SERVICE.
I " '.

AVO,
'

M

IM

I

ju*

M

iff hmt. u m

seven boards.
Behind' L ow m an 'a gam c-hl^h'
24 for A popka. Earl Clayton
tossed In 13 a n d Keith Hardwick
popped In 10.
L a k e B r a n t l e y tr a v e l s to
Seabreeze T u esd ay for a bnttle
against th e No. 1 ranked (AAAJ
S and C rabs. T he C rabs w ere
surprised by Lake Mary Friday
night.
"T h at m u st h av e really been
s o m e t h i n g ," s a id P e te rs o n .

legal Notice
default thereof S t cauo*
ot a Dotouff egalmt you
WITNESS my hand and th*
aaal *1 S l i Caurt an S * m i day
ol Fabruary. IMS
(SEAL)
•
OAVION BERRIEN
Clerk ot S a Court
• y : Fk/Choryt R. Franklin
Deputy Ckrb
Publlth Fabruary M. II. la A
M arch s. MBS

DECS*
IN TNB CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE BIBMTBBHTN JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT . IN AND F O R
S IM IN O L B C O U N T V .
FLORIDA
CASE NO SSUPCAdtO
IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF
AR SHAD ALI.
Petitioner /HutBoad.
and
SHAHEENA. ALL
Rattendant/W lk
NOTICE OP ACTION
THE STATE OF FLORIDA TO.
Shahaan A All i n ■ Modal
Town Lahore. P e t Ilian
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED S a t a Petition ter
O ltaelulkn et M arrlef* h ai
been llk d apainit yeu and S a t
P atltk n ar. ARSHAD ALL It
leaking re ik i ageln*! yeu.
YOU ARB REQUIRED t*

«*ru* a cepy *1 yew
Pleading k Ihe Pelltkn ugen the
Petltkner'i offerney. Oeerg* R.
Wallace, at P.0 Orewar O.
Sankrd. Fkrtda. and Ilk Ihe
orlgSal Rmeant* ar Pleading S
Sa Offk* *1 Sa Ckrk at Sa
Circuit Court, an ar kekre th*
Hat day *1 Fakrwary. IMS. It
k da t*. a
Judgment will ba taken agaknl
yeu kr th# retkt demanded In
at
County. Florida. S i t MS day at
January. IMS
OAVIDBERRIAN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
By: Elga Wallace
Deputy Ckrk
Publlth: January ML II Fabru
ary 1. W. IMS
OBB IBS

"M aybe we r a n do th e sam e
th in g to th e m ." — Ctaria F ls te r
APOPKA t u t - R|&lt;* 1. Shv&gt;*r » Johnton
1 Lowman H Bowen t Elmer* a Pierce 4.
Cley fan 1J K. Martfwlt! Ifl Telali » It 14

U

L A K E S R A N t l.lv ItM - Shorty }. O
H arBoltk U Meter 11. Wlfftg u Hodge! 1
G ro iecto * I. Deck A Courtney It Ttlelt I I

u n t;

Helfllme - Agep4a *1. Lake Iranlley U
Fouli — Apopka It. L akt Sian Iley 11 Pawled
Owl —none Technical— none A —400

legal Notice

Legal Notice

attar being duty a worn, deet
hereby declare under oath that

PA-. P it Witttr» otter nay. whaaa
mailing id d r it t la IBS Weal
Central Boulevard, twite IMS
P O Baa OtS Orlando. Florida
MRI R S an ar before Ih* n
dey at February IMS and nia the
original with the Clark at **k
Court atlhar batare aarvka an
PMntlfPk often wy e r Immedl
atety tharaetten atharwle* a
detault will be entered againat
yeu tar the relief du wandid bt
Ihe Complaint a r Petmen.
WITNESS my hand and iaal
et Rtk Court an tha taw dey et
January IMS
(MALI
DAVID N. BERRIEN
CLBRKOF THE COURT
By: I V Cheryl R. Franklin
Deputy Clarb
PuMIth: January IS II A Fab
ru a ry l t s ltU
DEB Idt
_______
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nattc* la hereby given that I
am engaged In buelnett at Sulla
in . Plata North. J*t Dowglti
Avenue. Altam onte Sprlngi.
SemlneM County. Florida 11114
wnder the flctlllewa name at
WEISS A ASSOCIATES and
that I Intend te regltter laid
noma with the Clerk et the
Circuit Court, l aminate Ceunty.
Florid* tot accordance with the
p re v a le n t at the Plctlllawk
Nam* Statute*, l a wit: Section
Ml H Florida Statute* IW
TERRY M. WEISS
A ASSOCIATES INC.
/i/E y : TERRVM WEISS

ml IVippVnVi miVTVVIiQIHITU
- - M ----» - » ----------- * - • i — 0 ^ _

bwabtaaa er prate ta lon carried
an wnder the name at SISSONS
PLASTERING COMPANY si
4TSB Slpst Avenue. San tort.
Florida, a rm . Is B. J. SISSONS
ANO SONS QUALITY BUILT
MOSSES INC. and iho extent at
M
u U
W m I ^&lt;
r n tr^or■
i o i r at
H
mn
k
•TtM
HT^Fnf
*■u U CD
rO
In aaM bwsJnatt la MB*.
B. J. SISSONS ANO SONS
QUALITY BUILT HOMES INC.
By: B J. SUSONS SR . Prel
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF IESSI HOLE
I t e m la and twbacrlbod bo
Nr* me n i l Ph day at Fabrwary,A O ltU
L otlM butcher
N e la ry P u b lic. S la te pt
Florida
M y C a m m liila tt E e p lr e i:

ID D
PwWhh: Fabruary IB. IT. It.
March a ltU
DEC U

IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNI IIBNTRRNTM
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SISSINOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION

NO.ibtimCA-eel

FIRST FIDELITY SAVINOS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
etc..
Plaintiff.
LEWIS M. GLASS, et ua. at Pi.
Detandantt.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: LEWISM.OLAtl
CHARLOTTE GLASS
RESIDENCE: UNKNOWN
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action ta krgckt* • martgsga
an tha M kolng property In
SEMINOLE County, Florida.
Lot L Stack E. ROHAVIN
TURE HEIGHTS. SECOND
ADDITION, according la the
P M thereat pa roeerdet in Plat
Beak i s Pag* b m t u . Public
recerda f t SEMINOLE County.
Florida
h a t boon Hied agalnel you and
OEOROIE BLACKASORE and
you are ragelred t* tery* a copy
at yewr written dataneea. It any.
t p It pit OR A C E A N N E
OLAVIN, Swann and Haddock,

Publlth January IS IF A Fabrw
aryI.M .1M I
D IS H
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* I* hereby given that I
am ingagad In bualnaa* at ltd.
It 4 Mery, a s Samlnata County.
Florida under th* tic III leui
nam* *1 SAULS 4 SON AUTO
SALES and that I Intend M
rag liter k*id nam* with th#
Clark *1 the C ircuit Caurt.
lamina** County. Florida in
accordance with the prewteMn*
*1 th* F k tltk u ! Nam* lla tv k t.
taw ll; Section 141B* Florida
Statute* 1*0.
/* /Jam et F. Sauli
Publlth February IS 11, St B
March S HW.
DECdd

�&lt; 6 — E v e n in g H a re M , J e n lo rd , FI.

legal Notice
NOTICK
The if Johns River Water
Men*gamanl District het re
ce'ved *" spplkafton tar Cen
tympflm Water Uh front;
INDIAN CREEK INC . MM
CHEYENNE
TRAIL. LAN
FOND. PL n &gt; « . application
n l u e u ; a n . m n / v / u Th*
*00 &lt;lcenf
proposal
to
withdraw mo
MOD
ef
GROUNDWATER PROM THE
PLORIOAN AQUIPER VIA 1
EXIJTINO W IL L I AND I
PROPOSED
WELL
FOR
PUBLIC SUPPLY to terve 1MB
acrelsI In Seminal* County
keeled In Section M. Township
JO South, Ran** jo [ | | | ,
EDWIN AND DOROTHY
BOLLINO. P. O BOX no.
LONGWOOD
PL
am
application FI Ilf 01J0AU. on
II/lf/B i The applicant prepota*
et withdrew
I MOD ef
GROUNDWATER PROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA J
EXISTING WELLS FOR A
NURSERY to terve JO acral&gt;1
In Sentinel* County located In
Section IS, Towns)* Jp South.
Rang* X le s t
CITY
OP
ALTAMONTE
SPRINGS.
ns
NEWBURVPORT
AVINUR,
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS. PL
X7B1. application n 1I7BIXAN.
on II/1B/B4 Th* applicant propaaaa to wflhdrew 1 a* M O at
OROUNDWATER PROM THE
FLORIDAN AQUIFER VIA U
EXISTINO
WELLS
FOR
PUBLIC SUPPLY AND COM
MERCIAL/INOUSTRIAL USE
to tarva 1307 acral i] in
Semlneta County localad In
Secftenltl II.IJ.U.I7. II and U.
Tpanahlp II South, Rang* If
JQ | f | f

HAROLD A WARD, III. IIM
FAWCETT
RO .
WINTER
PARK. FL n m , application
a U fliiiA N , an It/H /S i. Th*

a|u|lI#
woeS prO
itrtiH
iaM
aI
i E
■
WHllEnI
pQ
TmOwWISAA*
lfflOriW

MJ MOD at GROUNDWATER
FROM
THE
FLORIDAN
AQUIFER VIA I PROPOSED
WELL FOR CITRUS to serve *
a cred ) in Sentinel* County
located In Section 11. Twonship
JB South, Sanaa 11 East
BE LAIR GROVE LTO„ HIM
S TROPICAL TRAIL. MER­
RITT ISLAND. FL X *n.
appllcelton n illO lilA U , an
I1SII/S4 Th* appldeni prapoaai
to withdraw IX MOD ef
OROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA 1
EXISTINO WELLS FOR CIT
RUS to terve IN a c re d ) In
Sentinel* County totaled In Sec
flan « . Township M South.
Ranee M East.
BARI
(RNETT BANKS TRUST
c o na . p . o . b o x m m .
JACKSONVILLE, FL m i l .
application n tlfllM A U . an
ISQI/Si Th* applicant p ries it i
to withdrew l i t MOD at
OROUNDWATER PROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA I
EXISTINO WELL FOR CIT
RUS to serve Si acrels) In
Sentinel* County located In
SecHand I X and X.
N South. Rang* M Rett.
WINTER PARK LAND CO,
P. O. BOX « . WINTER PARK.
PL
X7X.
application
H i l l BISSAU, on 11/17/Si. Th*
applicant prepeaet to wither aw
171 MOO *« OROUNDWATER
PROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA I EXISTINO
WELL FOR CITRUS to aarva so
a cre d ) In Sentinel* County
located in Sad ton it. Township
MSeuftaRtawellEa**. .
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARD.
l il t
MELLONVILLE AVE, SAN
FORD. PL 11771. application
PI iiflii/A U , an II MBS. The
applicant prapaiai I* withdraw
111 MOO *f OROUNDWATER
PROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA I EXISTINO
WELL FOR ORASS IRRIOA
TION I* serve I I a c re d ) In
Semkteto County located in Sec
lien N. Township II South.
Rang* X Cast
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARD.
lt d
M ELLONVILLE A V E , SAN
FORD. PL » 7 fl. APPLICA
TION n III 0I44AU. on ll/ X / li
Th* applicant prepots t to
withdrew
M
MOO
el
OROUNDWATER PROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA I
EXISTINO
W ELL
FOR
PUBLIC SUPPLY AND OUT
SIDE USE to serve 7 a cred ) In
Sentinel* County located In Sec
Hen BBTewnthlp SI South.

Rang* X Best.
SEMI
■MINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARD.
1111
MELLONVILLE AVE.. SAN
PORO. PL 0771. application
f l Ilf BISSAU. Mt l l / a / l i . Th*
oppidan! ptM MM to withdraw
■BM MOO tf OROUNDWATER
PROM
AH
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA I EXISTINO
WILL FOR A RECREATION
AREA to serve X acrels) In
I am Inals County totaled In Sec
•ton N. Township X South.
Range X I eel
SEMI
IMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARD.
IBIS
MELLONVILLE AVE, U N
FORD. FL W ll. application
f t 1II4IMAU. an ll/Jt/S*. The
applicant proposes to withdrew
111 MOO *f OBOUNDWATIR
FROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA 1 EXISTINO
WELLS FOR PUBLIC SUPPLY
to serve I a c re d ) AND A
RECREATION ARIA to serve
X a c re d ) In t omlnolo County
totaled in Sectlen M. TewntMp
H lewlh. Rang* X le s t.
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOO
BOARO.
mi
MELLONVILLE A V I, U N
FORO. FL X X I. appllcelton
A II7BIMAU, an ll/M /Si Th*
applicant proposal to withdraw
*11 MOd *t OROUNDWATER
FROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA I EXISTINO
WILL FOR A RECREATION
ARIA to mtv* I a cre d ) In
ta mlnets County tocotod In Sec

‘

H e m e X Ia tf
SEM
IMINOLE

II

COUNTY

S tm d a y , F ob. 10, IM S

Legal Notice

legal Notice

legal Notice

SCHOOL
BOARO.
t il t
MELLONVILLE AVE, U N
FORD. FL X X I. application
A II7 01MAU. an tlA B /li Th*
applicant prepsais to withdraw
MBS MOO of GROUNDWATER
FROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA 1 EXISTING
WELL FOR PUBLIC SUPPLY
to aarv* 1 a c ra d ) ANO A
RECREATION ARIA to aarv* i
a cre d I In le w lnaia County
totaled In Sectlen » , TewntMp
II South. Rang* x East
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARD,
til l
MELLONVILLE AVI., U N
FORD. FL XX I. application
A IlfBIS7AU, on l i/X /ti Th*
applicant prapam to withdraw
017 MGD el OROUNDWATER
PROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA I EXISTING
WELL FOR A RECREATION
AREA t* tarva 7 a cred ) in
Seminole County totaled In Sec
lien 71. TewntMp 11 South.
Range X East.
SEMI
MIMOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARD,
till
MELLONVILLE AVE. SAN
PORO, FL X X I, application
A H7atWAU. an t i / x / l i . The
applicant prspats i to withdraw
m MOD of OROUNDWATER
FROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA I EXISTING
WELL FOR PUBLIC SUPPLY
to serve 1 a c re d ) In Sant Inals
County located In Section X.
TewntMp X South. Rang* X

OX MGO ef GROUNDWATER
FROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA I EXISTING
WELL FOR A RECREATION
AREA to serve X acrels) to
I sm lnols Ceunty totaled to Sec
Hen M, Township II South.
Ranp* X t e s t
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARD.
n il
MCUONVILLE AVE.. U N
FORD. FL m i l . appllcatton
#1 117 StefAU. an ll/ X / t i Tha
pnpMVI I®
Off MGO of GROUNDWATER
FROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA 1 EXISTING
WELL FOR A RECREATION
AREA to serve is acrad) to
Sam Inala County located In Sac
Han Bl. Township 11 South.
Re ra s X East
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARO.
Ill)
MELLONVILLE AVE. U N
FORO. FL 17771. application
n II7BISUU. an ll/M /Si Th*
applicant prapoaai to withdraw
M l MGO af GROUNDWATER
FROM
AN
UNKNOWN
AQUIFER VIA I EXISTING
WELL FOR PUBLIC SUPPLV
to aarv* 1 acred) to Samtoala
Ceunty located to Sectlen X.
TewntMp X Seuth. Rang* X
■eat
Th* Governing Beard *1 th*
District will take act ten to ar ant
*r deny th* application)!) no
■saner than X days (ram lh*
data af IMs nolle* Should you be
totorasted to arty af to* IIt tod
application*. you should contact
to* St. Johns Blear Water Man
egement District at P O. See
ISX. P alette. Florid* XB7B
UX. ar to parson at It* affke an
State Highway IM West.
Palatk*. Florida. Xi/XBBXI
Written
otfectlen
I* th*
eppllcatlen may Be mad*, but
should be received no later then
l i days from lh* del* ef
publication Written abfectlens
mould Identity th* ob|*ctor by
name and addraa*. and fully
describe lh* abfactlan I* Mi*
application Filing a written
objection duos net antltta you to
a Chapter IX. Florida Slatwtot.
Administrative Hearing: Only

RICHARD BURGOON. toll
WARWICK
PLACE.
LONGWOOO,
PL
X7M.
application A IttaiH A U . an
ll/X /Bi. The applicant prapesei
to withdraw
fl MOD cf
GROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA II
EXISTINO
WILLS
FOR
WATERCRESS IRRIGATION
to serve X acrels) In Semlneta
County totaled in Sedtend) X
end BJ, Township 11 Seulh.
R*nps I t East
RICHARD BURGOON. IMI
WARWICK
PLACE,
LONGWOOO.
FL
X7M.
application A1I7BMSAU, tat
l l/X /ti Th* applicant prsposn
to withdrew
M MOO ef
GROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA It
EXISTINO
WELLS
FOR
WATERCRESS IRRIGATION
to serve X a c re d ) In Stmtools
County located to Section IS.
Township M South. Ring* 11
la s t.
DONALD WEAVER AND
RICHARD BURGOON.
IX
WHOOPING LOOP, ALTA­
MONTE SPRINOS, FL XXI.
application A 11741*1 AU. on
tl/M/Si. Th* applicant p re p im
to withdrew I t ) MOO at
OROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA X
EXISTING
WELLS
FOR
WATERCRESS IRRIGATION
to serve « a crad ) In Samtoala
County totaled to Sectlen IS,
TewntMp X South, Rang* II
Bail.
DONALD WEAVER ANO
RICHARO BURGOON.
IX
WHOOPINO LOOP. ALTA
MONTI SPRINGS. FL XXI.
application A1I7BU1AU. an
ll/X /S i Th* applicant propaass
to withdrew I X MOD *1
OROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA II
EXISTINO
WILLS
FOR
WATERCRESS IRRIGATION
to serve X acrels) to StHilfwta
County totaled in Section
li. TewntMp X South, Rang* V
East
DONALD WEAVER, P. O
BOX F. OVIEDO, FL X7U
application ftllfS M IA U . an
ll/X /S i Th* applicant proposal
to withdrew I D MOO ef
OROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA X
EXISTINO
WILLS
FOR
WATERCRESS IRRIGATION
AND FAC KINO to serve M
acrels) to Seminal* County
located to Secttondl SI and IS.
Township X and II South,
Rang* II East.
DONALD WEAVER, P O
BOX f. OVIEDO, FL X7U.
application f l II7B1S4AU, an
l l / X / t i Th* applicant prop****
to withdrew I M MOD et
OROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA 17
EXISTINO
WILLS
FOR
WATERCRESS IRRIGATION
to serve M a c re d ) to Semtoeto
County located to Sect ton 11.
Township X South. Range II
Beet.
DONALD WEAVER, PO
BOX *. OVIEDO. FL XTM.
application n 111 BISSAU, an
ll/JS/Si Th* applicant prep lan
to withdrew H MOD ef
OBOUNOWATIB FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA IS
EXISTING
WILLS
FOR
WATERCRESS IRRIGATION
to serve X a c re d ) in Semtoeto
County totaled to Sectlen 1 1
Township X South. Rang* 11
la s t
DONALD WEAVER, PO.
BOX f. OVIEDO. FL X7SL
appllcatton O It/eiSiAN. an
li/X /S i Th* applicant proposes
to withdraw .X MOO at
OROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA I
EXISTINO
WILLS
FOR
WATERCRESS ANO SWEET
BASIL IRRIGATION to te rm M
a cred ) In Semtoeto Ceunty
totaled to Sectlen X. TewntMp
II Seuth. Bangs 11 l e s t
DONALD WEAVER, PO.
BOX t. OVIEDO. PL XfSS.
appllcatton FlllfSM fAU . an
IJ/X-'Si Th* applicant p ta p in i
to withdraw I l f M O O a f
OROUNDWATER FROM AN
UNKNOWN AQUIFER VIA I
EXISTINO
WILLS
FOR
WATERCRESS IRRIGATION
to serve X ecrelsl to Ismlnols
Ceunty tocotod to Section I t
Township X South. Rang* ] |
IBM.
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOL
BOARO.
III!
MELLONVILLE AV I.. SAN
PORO, PL M ill, N p U csto t
f l II7BMMU. an l l / X / t i The
to withdrew

totorpsts ore effected by tha
application and wtw file a pell
af Section x I X I, F A C ., may
obtain an Admlnltfraflv* Hoar
tog All ftmafy Mad written
ab|acllant will b* proton tod to
th* Beard tor It* cenaldaretten
to lit deltberetlen an th*
eppllcatlen prior to th* Beard
taking aetton an Mw application
Dennis* T. Kemp. Director
Division af Records
St. Johns River Wetar
Management District
Publish Ptbruery X. IfM
DEC 17
NOTICE OF ULK
UNIT f l i l - Bobby Elwood
Gordon
UNIT t t l i - Timothy H
Radloti
U K IT fltf-R e y Alton Grille
UNIT f i l l - A rchie W
Woodruff
UNIT f i l l - R k h o r d Leech
UNIT M i l - T rey Hell
Barnet
UNIT M07 —DennisC Pippin
NOTICE IS HEREBY given
that pursuant to Florida Statute
*310*. Enforcement of Liens.
Furauant la Owner's Lien e t
pravldsd In Flerld* Slelul*
*3101. th* owner at SECURITY
STORE-ALL. tocetad at IX
U S Highway 17ft, Farw-Parkr
Florid# 337X. will tell miscall*
numbered units. That th* pro
party may b* viewed et Security
Store All Warehouse Call tor an
a p p o in tm e n t a l le le p h o n t
number t x oast Thai th* &lt;
will b* saw tor cam al public
tala an th* lath day ef F*bru
ary. ix i. al I N P M et the
below address, to satisfy owner
Iton tor rant dv* to accordance
with Florida Statutes
ASBOTTM HERRING
SECURITY STORE-ALL
IX U S Highway t i n
Fern Perk. F lortdeDTX
Far Jena F. Peulucd
Owner/Operator
Publish February 1, If, INI
OECD
FICTITIOUS NAME
Noth* I* hereby given that I
am engaged to bualnasi al ISX
W. L a k e B r a n t l e y Rd ,
Long wood Soml nolo County.
F tor Ido X lff under lh* fktlttout
name at STANDARD IRRIOA
TION AND LAWN MAINTI
NANCE, and that I Inland to
register said nemo with th*
Clark kt tha Circuit Court.
Sam Inal* Ceunty, Florida to
accordance with the previsions
at th* Fictitious Nsmo Statutes,
to wit Section H IM Florid*
Statute* 1fS7.
/*/ Thomas W Dearth
/ * / Rkhord I , Dearth
Fublim February L IB. 17. is.
1X1
O IC X
NOTICE
UNDER PICITIOUS
NAME LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVIN
that Mw under signed, desk tog Ip
f I c t l l le u s s t m t e f L inen
Supermarket *1 numkor M i
Em I Altemonto Drive, In Mw
Clly ef Allemetsto Springs.
F bride. Inlands to raglstor Mw
said name with Mw Clerk at th*
C ircu it C eurt e t Sem lnel*
Ceunty. F tor Me
Dotod et Miami. Ftor Me. Hilt
Hh dey ef February. IMS
Lhwn Supermarket. Inc
Attorney tor A*pil«enl
Karen I . Raton, l i p
Well. Gotmol k Mongei
BM Brkkeii Avenue. Pent
Miami. Ftorld* X III
Phene: (X II» P M H
PuBthFi: February IB, 17. M
March L 1X1
O f C-4B

FICTITIOUS NAME
Ftetke It fwrtby given that I
am engaged to bualnei* at x *
A c o rn E a s t . L a n g w a e d ,
Somtool# County. Ftorld* under
Mw fktlttout nam* at WED
DING BUSS, and Miat I Intend
to raglator said name with lh*
Clark *1 tha Circuit Court,
Somtool* County, Florida to
accordance with tha provisions
pi too Fktlttout Mam* Statutes,
to wit Section MIPS F tor toe
Statute* t o t
!%) Short* Each
Pubtirn Jonuory 17 A February
i. to. li. m i
DEBUS

/r* MsrsormnowY

■msr*a€H*H£m

Seminole

SECOND AMENDEO NOTICE
OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
THAT, pursuant to th* Final
Judgment entered an March 1.
IX i and th* Second Amended
Final Judgm ent e n te red an
January 73. 1X1. In Mw above
ttyWd cause. I will tall lh*
property situated to Semlneta
Ceunty. Ftorld*. described a t :
Legal Description
Let l i . WINOFIBLD RE
SERVE. PHASE I. according Ip
th* plat ttwroot a t recorded to
Plat Beak u Pages X and n .
Public Records at Soml note
County, Ftorld*.
Street Address
1717 A l v a r a d * C e u r t
l eng awed. Ftorld*
ef public sot* to Mw htghetf end
best bidder tor cam at th* West
Iran i doer at Mw Ceurtheue* to
S e m in a l* C ounty, S a n le rd .
Ftorld *. a l the hour of II X
i n P I N Jtth dey ef Febru

*ry, 1X1
( SEAL )

OAVIDN BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
■y Virginia Jackson
At Deputy Clerk
Pubtim February 1. X. INI
DEC 17

*30 A.M. • 5:30 Ml.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATVROAY •

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO DOUQLAI I RUEENG
1741 W. Olendel* P heenla,
Ar Hone tu rn
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a
Petllton tor Adept ton he* bean
filed agelntl you end you ere
repaired to serve a copy of y*ur
written detente*, it any. to the
Petllton an Mw Petlltoner's at
larnoy. P I T E R N SMITH,
wtwet address Is GURNEY B
HANDLEY. P A , to ll W Slat*
Read SM. Langwaed. Ftorld*
D77f. an ar hetore February n .
INS. and file Mw talgtoel with
th* Clerk af Mitt Court either
be tore service an Petlltoner's

•A O O tTIO N *
1st Trimester abortion 7 II wkt
SIX Medicaid SIX ISIS wkt
UX Oyn Services t t l Prp
gnency tost. Fra* counseling
PreSesstonel care, supportive
atmosphere Cenltasntlal

Free *r Redvcad CMM Care
If yxi totality
O M X P in t/H
Will da babysitting to my ham*.
Dependable end i sspanilMs
Call Mary IMfMS
Alter * P M.

CENTRAL FLORIDA
WOMEN'S HEALTH
NEW LOCATION
I7X W. Colontel Or. Or Unde

33— Raal Eftatc
Coursas

►Mt-:

bOBM. BALL JR.
KHOOLOP RIAL ESTATE
X l i l l l or 177 MM

MMJUHT

25—SpGClAl Noticis
CIUIRATE
A BIRTH!
Mr. Stork's vl*M
makes Nr a Ittetlms
el memartot, *m . a afll
Call Linda m i l l !

2 7 -N u n o ry A
Child Car*
BABYSITTING In my hem*day
or night Also by the hour
313X11
____

TAHN6
IT7

TALK 10AW^

YOUDON'T PAY
THI FIE

equivalent combi nation at

. AMBty to type (A Semlneta Caunty
typing test wilt be required
prior ta NOON an the ctoeing
d a le .) NOTE; P R E F E R ­
ENCE WILL BE GIVEN TO
APPLICANTS WHO LIVE
WITHIN A XM ILE RADIUS
OF WORK S I T E FOR
PURPOSES OF CALL-IN)
AND ALSO THOSE WITH
CRT EXPERIENCE. THIS
POSITION INVOLVES SHIFT
WORK (11 HOUR SHIFTS)
POSITION MAY BE PILLED
PRIOR TO CLOSING DATE
Apply by NOON. March L
IfIS. Se mlnpl* Ceunty
Personnel O ttlc*. County
Services Building. 1X1 E. let
I f , Sanford. PI Agpfkattans

c e n tre d w*rk. M utt have
truck, toafs and atparlanca
Aapllcatlen* hatog token at
m S. Myrtle Call tar agpf.
7 X t o f MAM 3T11U7

through Friday. ■ X AAA. ta
NOON. Equal Opportunity
era* Given on Initial Hire.
Cep* Canaveral firm (
In Sent tael*. I wprhe r t prp
during. * m*ra needed. SMB
P/T. MX full time. Career
oriented peepta Only aver IS.
Fufltratalna
X IP B f.k e ta ra i
Cathtort and A xodate Manag' Chanca X
X if yrs. af age and
have 1 chackabte |eb refer
nir&gt;
w B^mirarta
VnCVI. DcinFlrp|lram
v*

LOCAL ROUTE

w

i

rm .
Ilth. *1 I PM. Apply et:
Tannec* Oil, 1BX French
Ave . Sanford. Fla EOE

%

Distribute name brand toed
product* and/or natural trwtt
ju k es Restock product end
collect money only Can make
MX 00 per week or mere No
special vehicle needed Re
quires appro* I fwurt per
w eek a n d I IS.BBS IB te r
equipment Up to M% la*
writeoff 1st year. Yau mutt
qualify to handle money tar
ethers Will* Mr Mason, Bos
MB147. B ham, AL 3173* In
d u d * nam e, address and
phene number sr call toll free
1 11* l l t - i l s t betw een t
AM 4 XPMCST

KNOW OP KXCBLLKNT
VENTURE OP WEALTHY
TREASU RE — OOLO B R IC K S
NEED CAPITAL
Q.S.A. RESEARCHING!
CAN PURNISH RBPERBNCES

4C 0 7

CALL

Liquor License SEMINOLE
COUNTYMOVIABLBI
Hs.se* e*wn Iscsllenf terms
an
balance I Firs) Ftortaa
m em

CALL TOLL FREE
ixa-M M U l

(3 0 5 ) 8 6 0 -1 7 1 4
Q IO H Q B «. A N K A R LO

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

Accounting A
Tax Sarvic*
Far Small kw»ln***as Monthly
computer I;#d llnanctol stat
temenl Quarterly returns
XJBNO Ask tar Frank III
PratotttaM l Tk* I sport t Ft,
para, my affka a r year ham*.
Best prtcaei B l • X A- lit.
Laap-lil- CaR after s- f f e u r i
Semi retired ta* « countant Win
arepars test* to year hem*.
CaMTBBXM

Additions A
| Rim odtling |
F R t l ESTIMATBS

Wprtfetitonel *spurtone* an
h
tataXU
Bi**Xufff'W
A|a|M
talB
tairE'inm
PXfSfM
M
dhp
lIimnp
ikwiX
raiSm
repairs With ratarancae Call
R sbertxa l i f t*S3

Horn* R p p a i r s

Fainting

Jim 's Hem* Aapekt- carpentry,
etoctrkal. plumbing, painting
If ypudtfd*** M-c*)l II1M II.
Matntananca at all Types

-TONY COFINOtr

Flrowood/Futl

CARUTNBRSTRUCK IND
PHI dirt and lend ctoertog.
Sib M
M
OBNIVA LANDCLBARINO
L*f and Lend ctoertog.
flit dkt. and heultog
C e llM b X M erM ev n
LANDCLEARING
PILL DIRT. BUSHOGGING
CLAY A SHALE m i i l l

FIRIWOOO FOR SALE
CALL AFTER SP.M.

end rutb seat wwavtog Rso ten
ebto price* Call »3**i7

Handy Man
B n i H s a d y it* . Bel Reftobto
Free 1st. meal any kb. Bast
Rata*. X td lll. Call Anytime
BELIABLB RAY- Bqp, eBtyges

Add! line* Rtp«lr
M X . Service Na l a t r a Ckargs.
If fr. eap. MBBM1, SMblM

IIS-7411

Corgontry
iD B R H O in n
VERY ■ E L IA B lB ...X B t»lf4I

Cloonlnf Sorvico

srmnnEsr

R esta. including strip, was f
A Halt
W f.k Che., 131 3 0 X

Eloctrical
R A J ELECTRIC
Tired et high prices! Cell R A J
Etectrk. Ne |eb toe large *r
■mall Pra*. Eitlmatat. 14Hr.
tarylce. Intlaltod " paddle
lens, ftaed lighting, burglar
*terms, service Cheng*, ra
dtuqtalliw
^taU
imRXiing,i M
Wl^us*
Txnt. h
nr raw
hem **" 1711X1

Oonoral Sorvicas
OmAwW
oLmuIta
afcnln
^blllliH
w^^pSuw
eraBYeXt^p

ADDITIONS RIMOOELING
Bill Strip* Custom ButMar
Stott Lie..................RROOIMX

1 0 m &amp; W fM 6 Q M * t
N

/C N B .

once as # complaint taker or
h i gh v e l u m * t e l e p h o n e

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

ref 1*1 demanded to I
Dated: January If. 1X1
OAVION BERRIEN
Clark ef Mw Circuit Caurt
By: I Ig* Wallace
Clerk
»
Publish JJanuary X 17 Febru
a ry l. XL INS
D IB x e

JW K M C AM K

AAAEMPLOYMENT

CONSULT OUR

BuIMJnf Contractor!

tunumHtt*ctWK&gt;
HMAmenAWFHumm*€ONUfMr

public safety, lew tntarc*
meet, or c*m*totlen ef a
cem m unlcallent tcheel

PPOPf

Necklace yellow gold chain
w ith 1 die mends, tost to
dewttlown a re *, or D r. Rap* S
R a x mend office Greet sen
llm entel k tep sekel Ample
reward C all 333 l i l t

L«sa

MDTU4DIC

aUTFACT
WANT AOS WORK WONOERS

Hoaltti A ftoauty
TOWER'S AIauVv U lON
FORMERLY H errtott't Beauty
H e x i x i . i t i s t x i urn
U
xxu
w ||MXB^mA
■^^M
wwW1Im
WVu^M
WVWvpmWEI1
H eJaB T x S x aB
111 B artta Lena, lepitrd
Xt-BfX
F a x ta Peace*. CabSwtt ta
C*mm*d*s P a ir g rU e i.
SB*-TIMMS, N 1ini ta........
Ptombtog. Petoftag, Etoctric
Cerpwrfry Owi'l So* Mf AMB*l
ta y rt l a p ..............BALXIBMI

•wmv H V p w w i
CaIM ntIJi Repairs end
ramddettog. Ne kb ta* tm
*M.
CaHXSfAM.

CM! MMSIMM

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
HOtm AtU,A7F*sr

Graduate fram high
«ta tt* 1*1 month* ef prior
communications espertonca to

71—Halp Wintad

BEVERLY________ COLLEEN
Acrytk AppfkaStas needed to
pppty protective ceetlng on
care, heats and planes U to
SI) par hour W t train. Far
• a rk to Santsrd area call
Tampa 111 ***-7)li
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
ACCOUNTING CLERK
SECRETARY
KEY PUNCHER
WANG OPERATOR
CLERK TYPIST
CRTOPEBATONS
Immediate asslgnmants avail
abto to Lake Mary and San
Sard Arad. Call Abtott Temp*
rary Sarvkpt- XI XX.______
AVON BEAUTY COMPANY
FeM/pert Maw/Bara M i l l hr
Call Itwsad. XMflB. HS-HX

55— Buslnass
Opportunities

after; otherwise * deleutt will

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given Miel I
am sngkgsd to business *1 IMI
Atlantic Ay* . Sanlerd. Semtoeto
C eunty, F lorida under lh*
llctlltous name *1 SAM GLASS
ANO MILLWORK, and Rial I
intend to register seta name
with too Ctorh at the Cktwlt
Court. St mine t o Cettoty. Ftorld*
In accordance with the pro
vision* et Mw Fktlttout Norn*
Statutes, tow n teetton Ski i f
Ftorld* Statutes t*S7.
/* / William D. lodtrsktaw
Publish January X If 4 Febru
ary I X INS.
D IB IN

AVON EARNINGS WOWIII ’
OPEN TERRITORIES NOW1II
XM
CALL RECEIVING
OPERATOR

323-5176

27—Nurwry A
Child Car*

REW ARD!

Business Capital IX .tO t to
SIJOBAM end ever. P. Q Bo,
T ill Winter Pk. Fla J77X
HOME A FORECLOSURE A
mortgage to won't accept
y *ur p a y m e n t s f Cell
McTeggart tor sefwtton IX
« l«

YOUTHE JODI

21— Personals

23—Lost A Found

71—Halp Wantad

nu. Rt err

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

Pet II toner/Wile,
and

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OP
TNI EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
C I R C U I T , IN AND FOR
SEMI NOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO SS ID CA X P
IN THE MATTER OF THE
A D O P T I O N OF S C O T T
WESLEY BREWER and
ALI CI A BETH BRE WE R .

7 cbm w M thrB Um xs 5 2 0 a I
1 0 CBNMOrtlvB Um x s 40C a I
C e n tr e d R a te s AtbHbM b

3 liBtB

IN ANO FOR SEMINOLE.
COUNTY, FLORIDA.
CASE MO IS ID CA Si K
IN RE: Th* M a rrla g a ef
PAULA GEORGE.

I la “
a - S I . , ---I w m l tr»Tinofi,
DATED at Sanlerd, lorn toe to
Ceunty, Ptortae, Milt 7th dey el
Ptbru ery, i x i
(SEAL)
DAVION BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
■y: /* /Cheryl R. Franklin
Deputy Clerk
Publish February X. IF, l i
M arch!, 1X1
DEC M

831 -9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 M a x ........................ 47C * I
HOURS
3 cam gcM ttve tim es C1C a I

IN TH E C IR C U IT CO URT.

JOHN GEORGE.
Respondenl / Huabend
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO JOHN GEORGE
K/70 Ovarbrook Drive
Lake Dreamland, Kentucky
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that a Pttlttan for
Dissolution af Marriage h at
been filed agelntl you. and that
you ere required to terve * copy
af your ratpanaa or pleading to
•he Petition upon lh* Pell
Honor's attorney. Themes C
Greene, Post Office Bos sfl.
Sanlerd. Ftorld* D ili, and file
th* erXtoel response ar plead
tog to the effk* ef Mw Clark af
the Circuit Caurt. Seminal*
Caunty Courthouse. Sanford.
Florida X771. an or be tor* th* li
day af March. INI II you toll to
0* so. * Default Judgment will

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

IN TN I CIBCUIT COUBT OF
TNE IIO N TIIN T N JUDICIAL
C I R C U I T . IN AN O FOR
SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASINO U DOS CA M C
STEPHENB MOORE.
Plaintiff.
vt
K E N W SCHRAW a n d
SCHRAW REALTY. I N C , a
Flar Ida carper alien.

D o o n e sb u ry
OUTOFHAM *&amp; t M

CLASSIFIED ADS

*1—Monty to Land

A O SA A M W /

bfveUpb*rd**togf
Id u ^ w i^ W M
WITHNBbZl OWANTADBI

iL
f—
---—
*e—
—
fO
viIw
E—
m
ry*■P.alailw
dlIfT■1nii&gt;|peel. —S-i—
and etectrk X liB X

Landckaring

Serving Central Fla tar IS yra
with template quality pptol
tog service* Quality a Must
Specie! well teettag, H H M I
CUNNINGHAM A WIFE Int. k
**t. painting A p re ssu re
Lk. A tot X I 4X1
PAPERING...

DRYWALL

V E A Y R EllA B L E-feenU X Y
ill

a n d window g le iln g end
caulking. Rape rata* Free
t i l 31) XM Gary, BUI Devls.

Lawn Sarvlco
8 A1100 lA ill Comm. Mm.
II1,AuptfMfit ft iiighij

etc. Give your
ta x
WE CARE Q ify work. X
Lk
cant
vra *«p X71X7.

XM S SentardAv* XIB171

Pogor Hanging

Landtcagfng^ ^ H e g Mewtng

PAPSBHANGINO

CMeOm Btel
hj*
CbmHeMUwfl Car* J
«rv HbmerbUb I ubs
X S b 3214441

PtaitoHng
• ALL
XI

Toy tor BraMwrt Lawn Sarvic*
data rata MRtog t» garGwx
XI f i l l Ruas Tartar
EMORY’S PLUMBING

Masonry
HAL Ctaxrata

1 man wwUfy

M

^ K

P ^

O m r t x i m u * * * x f 'r a V

TWo

UM M M e . _____ J»91»
H oning Cart
bin «MsMwMby*uratjtaiysr

| Troolorvtao |
soK m ilU K iW

11 s k i n s . Htaar, d x
Rstarawtas X I I1X.

la p -

OURRATESARE LOWER
B x rU w d x T s w ta N

M4M

FraaE
I Law P riest l
U
-T if f 1
JOHN ALLENS LAWN G THE B
llrairam w m l.L k .B k x .
P ra e s tf.X il
■TUMP ORINDINO
F red
oeftoMtasi X &gt; m * -d * y m&lt;
" E X t a i T ra it
‘

Shopping For A
How Or Used Ctrf

w im i*
kt Lk* f ranked
t a i i lf l i d e e r t taw.
F riday‘a E ie eto p H er a ld

1 \
:

• j* .* 14 »

* * p a -• * v y

i ♦ t a

■-4,. nc x- —&lt;v-W i - v-to r. v.. ,

�KIT ‘H’ CABLYLI •by Larry Wright

71-Help Wanted

you e r n e # *

E v tn lt ig H e ra ld , S a R je rd , F I .

\

BeH-ND it\ yoofi. PeAO'.f^\ •
m en You fvwc
)
a p .ttcn

I Child Cart Specialist
RaiMantlal TraatmarR Cantar
ter emotionally disturbed.
Miuatty abutad Children

S u n d a y , F r t . 19, m i - T B

T u tk a w llla ] M fm I bath
P O O L . F a m i l y Room,
•crooned porch. Obi gerega
w i t h o p a n a r l i s t ma
L e n t Option availablo
Br Itttn Am erican Realty

CARDINAL
141— Homes For Sal*

i» m i_______

D r iv e r : A g g rtn l
Bulldtog M alarial

growth. haa troatod an apppr
tunlty tar a Driver/Yardman
Wtlimpnaao and anthueiaam a
muatl Knowledge a t bulldtog
materiel not aaaantlal but will
ba ra te g n lttd Call Alain
Kilpatrick at G ra n ary

•aturtty MIKto
321-0754 E vt 323-7*43

GENEVA GARDENS
APAN TKN TS
(m u n w T

and with certtfka

1M—DuplexTriplex / Rent

RIDGEWOODMIMS
APARTMENTS

tap. INI I . Iat
Ian laid.
PL. Application* plaan and
accap tad Monday through
Friday • to a m . to NOON.
Equal CWpertunlty Employer.
Vatar ana Preference Oltaa an
InWIal Mira._____________

• A d ult • fam ily
Sort ton i
• W /D Connection*

• Coble TV. Pool
• Short Torn laaaaa
Avollobla

I. M S. Ipt. I k IX

1-2-3 Bedrooms.
pbiadtpoail.ua am._____
I Bdrm . I bath halt duplaa WOO
tacurlty dapoalt. Good lace
lien U » Month rant H I l i f t

W e H a ve T h e H o m e . .
W e H a ve Th e F in a n c in g

OFFICES
, arpartanca Mutt p a m ta and
' m a i n t a i n a valid Florida
Orlvara Lkanaa. (Oattoman at
VALID: Tha laauad lkanaa
h a t not aaplrad nor h a t.
' within Iha part thraa It) y e an
■boon denied. raatrktod. ra.vakad or taapandad | A Copy
•at Irani and bock It reguked
! prior to NOON at Iha ctoatog
•data. Apply by NOON. Fab. a
. I M S , Samlnol# Ceunty
-P e ree n n a l O lllca. County
'.Sarvkat Building. INI C. tat
; S I, Laniard. FL. Apptkattona
. f t van and accaptad AAanday
• thrauph Friday I to AM. la
:NOON

NIW SHOPPING CENTER to
I . ORLANDO- SR t i t at
■ail Wail Iip w y . B Laka
UndarhJil Baal VtttoMty »
FACTORY H I L F IR t - Goad

v iv o ran i r r i u n p t i i 'w n

InIHalHIro._______________

FORASUTTilAS...

atarttoapay Full banaftta

$00400*
F ranl dark clack. Friendly,
n ta l. parpanabla. Apply In
paraan. Man-Frt. to a m. to I
boon danltd. raatrktod. revakad or i wtpandid I Copy at
Irani and back la raauirtd
prior to NOON at iha ctoatop
data. Apply by NOON Fab. 14
1*1 S. S e m i n o l e Co u n t y
Par t annal O lllc a , Caunly
larvkaa building, IMS t lit
I I . Santard. FL. Applkallana
ptyan and accaptad Monday
through Friday. • : » AM N
NOON. ErwoI Opportunity
Imptoyar. V ttorant Fra tar
anca Glvan an Initial Mka

E a u a l Opportunity

pletlon at a cammunkatkna
School training count, ar an
equivalent combination ot ro
fated training and arpartanca
Ability to typo- (A Samlnola
£aunty typing toot trill ba
required prior 1b NOON of tha
Slating data.) NOTE: PREF­
ERENCE WILL BE OIVEN
TO APPLICANTS WITH CRT
^EXPERIENCE AND WHO
J.IVE WITHIN A t o MI LI
RADIUS OF WORK SITE
FOR PURPOSE OF CALL
BACK AND EMEBGENCY
CALL-IN THIS POSITION
INVOLVES SHIFT WORK IIS
HOUR SHIFTSI POSITION
MAY BE FILLED PRIOR TO
CLOSINO DATE Apply by
N O O N M a r c h «. »*•»■
Samlnola Caunly ParsanMl
o ttk a . Caunly Sorvkot tu ttd
top. I Ml E. 1st It.. Santard.
FL. Applkallana plvan and
a ccap tad Monday Ihrauph
Friday. • » AM. to NOON
Epual Opportunity Emptoyar.

9 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

WBLOIR- 1 yaara ttactrk and
toon paa welding arpartanca
Knowledge at machlna tool
fabrkatton rebuked Apply to
panon: 1 1 H Fabricating A
Engineeri ng. H U Jewett
Lana. Santard. Laa Mr M
Murdock
I N DOLLAR BILLS t In every

W E P A Y A L L CLO SIN G CO STS!

73— Employment
Wanted

Full lima Haapltal Madlcal
Racorda Dept ICD t CM cod

91—Apartments/
Hoyseto Share

appliance!. carpal, blind*
SIM NICE I Movt now no ronl
until March Allord Raalty.
realtor

eluding Sunday. Eat. MISS
J o u r n e y ma n O l a me k t r tor
fabricating tubing and to m
top dtoa. Muel ba a «par lanced
to Iabrkalian, n u mbly, and
try out a t m alal t er mi ng
tyttome Apply In ponan at:
S B H Fabricating and
E nplnaarlnp. IOM J a wa t t

m um ______

Bdrm. I bath, upatalrb i .ood
aq, ft., now carpal, walk to
downtown S mlnutot to 1 4
U f l par mo No pot* Call
R ueelat HMar

A L L A R IA S

bam

‘

POO Co

v e a pts.

'

*
♦* f

-

f t 9

�II

l u n d a y , f i b , 11, iW i

141— Homes For Solo

22J—Miscellaneous

141—Homos For Solo

C A R D4« IN
A I|
d.» .

D

Nko I badroam homo with
living room, dining room,
panalod family room, laundry
room, workihop and largo
icraanad porch Call tor in
te rm a tto n .m iH i UMW

NEW SMYRNA BEACH
I nl ro c o + 'e l w atar/renf j
O d r m , J&gt;&gt; b a t h C a n dominium, lurn'thed. FInane
Ing 171000

★ DAYTONAAUTO★
★ AUCTION *

For Sola Storoo. TV. drape*.
• l ar c l l * blha Sun lam p,
furnltwra, picture*. m any

HwyPi»*

.......

Cl----------------- *"-»•
FRINCHIES CUSTOM VAHS

DsftiM BmcM

m o is t .....................

• # • • # Hi Mi i # • # # #

baachtlde Raalty. REALTORS

rUUK AUTOAUCTtOR

mt-awim. opan ? Payti

71 Gremlin
Good condition 1300
» alas offer a PM.

ln r r &lt; M .M « i i ir : M P M

Sandalwood V illa*. 1 bdrm . I

* Whore Anybody *
★ Con Buy or Soldo

bath, ecraanod porch, pool,
clubhouaa. w ith er. dryer,
coiling lam . aihor aatra*.

xnoiM

WE FINANCE

0 t A R D IN A I

«n m

•r» Dodo*van Cyl. »«andard
(h ilt Panallad. carpeted
» t m 7 t Jaap CJ? Renegade,
package. hardtop * tylmda*
] *paad hA AM FM radio,

a a a w o rta fa w ________

0. L Carral Can__ 111-1921

215—Truck* /
Bum * / Von*

l . DISCOUNT
U rn
auto
*
SALES

•tana flroplaca. Formal dining
roam and much mere Ra
ducad ta SHJ.H0 Lata Mary
RaaWy, RoWkr. m ? ioa

*

CNfvv V A iri-------- --------tw s

BUY JUNKCARSATRUCKS
F rom ilS ktlO orm ore
Call 37? IAJ4 373 &lt;3H

tlon Your* tor laJOt Dump
truck toahrro a Iona la worth
COOOodoy SOS W asm

I M I - r&gt;(,7(,

0

C
A *•Rl D•• IN
AL
*•
wa- » i ’ i

NEWCAR TRADE-INS
IMPORT CLOSE OUTS
ALL
PRICES^M p/
REDUCEDN$fe&gt;
THAW t i t

im -% 7 / ,

0 t A R D IN A I
323-5774

0 ( A R D IN A I
0. K. Canal Cars— I t t 1521

i m - r»f&gt;7i&gt;

ACCCPTTD

^

AIRPORT ROAD. NEW highly

onorgy officiant, aapandabla.
affardabta I bdrm. Cardinal
Hama. Only M .ITI with Im
madiata availability. Mtg. fi­
nanci ng a t t l t l a n c a . Call

nwawisn.iXT tv.

Dotting DI reread tranaltrrad.
tarcleoura. m ad quick tala?

€RUJIN MOTOR SRL€S
Wholesale To The Public
| I -\1 I t it

• 1 | .tbs MmYIIH*

4
*

121 2391 * 321 2416 "*■
I y r i . y a o a g h a ma . VA
a paraded. Ottarad at SKIM.

I l l —Appliances
/ Furniture

LAKE MARY patootUI Mgb
daMlty,
I t a tr e i, aw nor
mathratad. Bring an attar*.
Call tar dataH*.

Waa
MWJ

(
I

1979 Mercury Marquis

1*02 Escort 4 Dr. Hatchback
4 S p d . A/C. d o th Intar lor
What A Go* Savor...................................

1M1 Dadae Otu) 4 Dr. Katchba
Spatial Ol The Mordh A/T. Dark Blue.
Ho Money Down With Approvod CradH

1979 Ford Falnaeat 4 Dr. tads
4 Spd . Oat Economy, A/C. P/S.
AM/PM Siarto. Crufae Control,
Special For O
n
l
y

*3495
•3444
*4795
*2595

fj

i m ItMlVltH

COURTESY
PONTIAC
NO MONEY DOWN
323-2121
NQBQDY
425-5090 WaT kSAWAY V liic iS iiE Y ?
3219 HWY. 17-92 SANFORD ^

.

1990 Char. Meat* Carla
2 Door, Butkaa Saata.

FREE COMPUTIRIIID
Atarfcet Amtyyk of yoer
Am m o . Call USA Tadayl

OfX ■ 1l l 1• t 1i ! 111• • • 11*

MAOL A/C,

1979 Ford Hutting Hatchback

0 ( A R D IN M

♦6595
•1795

1900 Ford E. ISO

A Sporty Link Car. A/T. A/C P « . P/S
AM/PM Slarao. Cloth ltd..........................

drUST FOR LESS*-

im m i

A/C,

Monogara Spatial. A/T.
A/C, 6 Cyl.. P/S, P/B
Ford-a Big &amp; Cyl Oat Economy
A/T. A/C. P/S. n o
Cairo Cl*on Car Moot Drive ................

Laha Mary Of IIt a/Commercial
building, prim* *lk MUM
Langwaod Hwy ala eip e tu re
napr Spdrtng* Plata SUtAH
tantard luay Grocery Store ♦
g aabar
Reduced le til t . 000
PR IM ! COMMERCIAL/ APT*.
SITE All wlllllko......lUm.OOO
oo oooooaaoaaaooa

sot W. LabeMaryBlvd.

4 Dr., A/C A/T. FtS. P/B
Cloth lotaitor. Raody To Oo

V-6, A/T, Buckrit.
Drlvaa Lika How........................................

Acraa. toned a# unit*/ acral
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
COMMERCIAL LIITINOI

Its —Machinery/Tool*

322-2420

0 ( A R D IN A I
IH I-r.l.7(,
199— Pet* 4 Supplies

KI NOSWOOD MANOR CanVO
n k n l I# ovarthlngl Sattkd
neighborhood. NEW 1 bdrm./I
bath Cardinal Homo. Only
tad. ta t for ttu* energy effl
clem home with thick Intuit
Hen. dbi pane window*. We'll
help yew guallty. Far mare
Information, call III k i t . a il.
4IY___________________

Q ( A R D IN A I

Doberman Pupa. I Weak* aid
lm ak.Ikm ak
Call Jim sn a ta o

WE HAVE AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF
PREVIOUSLY OWNED, LIKE NEW CANS!

1973 FORD LTD111979 CAMARO

MH, piles?

2-28

V-8, A/C
AUTO., STEREO

DELTONA

0 1 MilllNM
AUCTION EVERY FRI. NIONT

liM ta b-u - a , , , at | ■ i

mam*
PayingCASHkr

M IU-M nyof^M fry

za rscm zm zzza x n zB zz

\

’IMS Btilck Skylark C w t o m I
1*74 MaaUR* 1 Dr. Hatchback

dryer*. rafrlga'atar, Iraaitr*.
furnltura, vldao racordar*
Special Itlw aakiranltfa
Altamattva TV * Apgl. Rardalt
Zoyrat Shopping Center

W* WILL LIST, ADVERTISE.
SIL L YOUR HOME POR *%.
WHY PAY MOREY

*3995
11HONDAACCORD
*5995
t t M U U N M V TF R K Q
■ KS
................... '*5995
S
ITOYOTA
CEUCACT
SIMM*,
m OWJM
*6995
**§§*»
SITOYOTASUPRA
M9MMY J4WWI *»»• #*•****#* *8495
11itVfTACOJCAtT
OMM
*099S
S m tL ,
Mb ItllllllllM fl

*1995
*2695
*1695
*2695
*2995
*2995
*3495
*3995

�Dog Owners
Need Facts Of
Heartworms
Blackle was an 8-yearold dog
who had grown up In Florida.
Her owners were originally from
a northern . stale and Blackle
moved south wtth them as a
puppy.
Mrs. Smith brought Blackle to
see a veterinarian because she
had been coughing a great deal
lately. She had been getting
thinner over most of her body
but her abdomen was more
bellied than before. In the
few weeks she had become
leas active and seemed to sleep a
great deal more.
The veterinarian did a physi­
cal exam and found that BUckle
had a heart murmur, her lungs
sounded harsh, her muscles
riete wasted, and her abdomen
appeared to be filled with fluid.
In questioning the ow ner
about Blackle'a background, the
vet found that she was not on
h e a rtw o rm p r e v e n ta tiv e
medication.
Based on those findings the
vet suggested that a blood test
be run to check for evidence of
heartworm disease. In addition u
would be wise to consider
bloodwork to evaluate the liver
and kidneys as well as x-rays
(radiographs) to help access the
changes In the heart and lungs.
A small amount of blood was
removed from a vein In the dog's
arm. One drop of blood was
Immediately put on a glass slide
and examined under a micro­
scope for the presence of young
heartworm larvae. The rest of
the sample was mixed wtth a
solution which kills the larvae
(mlcroflleria) and ruptures the
red blood cells to make the
arorma easier to find. This mix­
ture la centrifuged (spun) to
concentrate the larvae In the
bottom of the tube. Afterwards a
stain Is added to tbs material In
the bottom which will color the
larvae blue and make them
easier to see. Another lest uses a
very fine filter to trap the amall
worms. In both methods a mi­
croscope Is used to scan for a
tiny worms. Brandy had larvae
present in her blood sample.
The sequence of events Just
described la what usually hap­
pens when an animal la sus­
pected of having heartworms
when brought to a clinic. What
happens next may differ be­
tween different veterinarians
besed on th eir personal a t­
titudes. their background, and
how they view their commit­
ment to educating their clients.
Your first duty as the owner of
a-dog d ia g n o s e d w ith
heartworms is to try to un­
derstand the disease as much as
possible so that you can make an
educated decteton on what could
ba a Ufa or death choice for yur
dog.
As Florida residents, every dog
owner should be aware of the
facta of the disease. In todays
and next weeks column we will
discuss the cause, treatment and
prevention of this potentially

B

Betty Davit thow t a
cate o f h er exqultlte
antique d o llt. When
her d olit are on
dltpley to ben efit the
Altam onte Chapel,

M ichael T,
Wolth,
DVM

this type of news. Moot owners
are"not aware of the details of the
disease, so It la Important at this
point to ask for an explanation.
The agent of heart worm dis­
e a se Is a p a r a s ite c a lle d
DlroAlaria tmmltls. Mosquitoes
Ingest the Immature larval forms
( m i c r o f ila r ia ) w h ic h a r e
circulating In the bloodstream of
Infected dogs. These larvae mlgrate to an area of the mosquito
associated with the mouth parts.
Her the larvae go through taro
stages of maturation (molU) to
reach their Infective stage.
They enter the dog through
the skin puncture wound caused
by the mosquito anti migrate to
tissues beneath the surface.
Within BO days the larvae molts
two more times. By 100 days
post Infection the young adult
worms arrive at the right aide of
the heart. Mature worms reside
In the outflow tracts from the
right aide of the heart, the
pulmonary arteries. At 6 months
post Infection the female worms
are capable of producing their
own young which can then be
picked up by mosquitoes to
Infect other animals.
The physical presence of the
worms causes dramatic changes
In the vessel walls. The re­
sistance to normal blood flow
Increases resulting In pulmonary
(lung) hypertension. TMs leads
to a decreased exercise ability
and may eventually lead to heart
failure.
The sign seen with an Infec­
tion may differ depending on the
length of time Involved, the
number of worms, whether there
are worms dying In the lungs,
etx. Some dogs present as
Blacklt. having progressed to the
later stages □( the disease before
It Is detected. Others may pres­
ent In an acute state of collapse,
with depression and labored
breathing. Many Initially may
show only a chronic cough.
There are some cases where
there are no young produced by
the worms but there are still
adults present causing the heart
changes. In these cases the tests
we described earlier will not be
helpful. Fortunately, there Is a
test for these hidden Infections
(occult heartworm Infection).
This test looks for antibodies
produced ag ain st the adult

DAR To Honor
Lady Liberty On
Valentine's Day
The National Society Daugh­ as the outside to Insure the
ters of the American Revolution preeervaUonof th is great symbol
has proclaimed Thursday, Feb. of Freedom.
1$. as "Liberty Love Day-"
U will take over two years to
On This day. all 211.000 complete the restoration and
members will participate In *a cost a total of $45 million,
nationally coordinated according ot
statu e of Liber*
effort to ralae funds for the
restoration of the Statue of rededication la scheduled far the
Liberty. Locally the Sallle Har­ Statue's birthday • Oct. 20.
rison Chapter of Sanford la 1000.
sponsoring this effort srtth each
Both the sta tu e , built In
member making her own con­ France, and Its pedestal, built in
tribution and contacting at least the United States, were funded
five non-members for donations.
The Statue of Liberty win be

they w o n i lu tt be
ttandlng there looking
beautiful, M rt. Davit,
who frequently
lecturet on doll
collecting and
reitoration, lik e t for
her d ollt to look
octive—to appear at
If they have lu tt
arrived in a carriage
or are ttrolllng In an
old European tatting.
So you may catch
them In action at the
Chapel Fair,

Centennial Showcase
Not Just Any Doll M easures Up For
Collection Of Bisque- Head Beauties
Altamonte Springs' Betty
Davis has turned her atten­
tion from her former pro­
fession. Interior decorating,
to her current passion, col­
lecting and doctoring dolls.
But the latter la going to pay
off for a special building In

centennial. Mrs. Davis, a
member of th e Altamonte
C hapel A C om m unity
Church on ptstv Road 450 at
Forest Avenue, will display
her dolls along wtth those of
two ocher collectors to help
earn money for the upkeep of
the chapel, reportedly the
oldest
in Altarooote

sign, the Davises "found the
co n g reg a tio n Is like an
extension of our family. We
have no family except for our
daughter. We're from Canada
originally and' lived In Nassau
and then Coral Cables for
almost 25 years. Everyone
was so friendly and nice,"
she said.
Alter selecting Altamonte
Springs as their retirement
home. Mrs. Davis said. "We
thought, lets start going to
church. You know it a funny
as you get older you do like to
Involved In the church. I
'I know what It la about
us Christians that want to do
that."
Mrs. Davis got Involved at
the right time. Her decorat­
ing skills were called for In
the redorating of the more
contemporary buildings on
the five-acre church alls. "Of
course being an old decorator
all anybody has to say Is
would you ukc to redo some­
thing. My husbsnd says he’s'
going to pul a tipper on my

£

That's lust the event for
May. Each month througout
the chapel's centennial there
will be celebrations and
fund-raisers, which Mrs.

Davis bald, will hopefully
bring In about $25,000 to
cover the costa of a new roof,
painting and other repairs
■os EXHIBITORS, 5C

�IC—gyswlag BsrsM, laafscd, FI.

tvw4ay, Fsk. 1&gt;, i w

Engagements
U n e b a rle r •
Burleson
Mr. an d M rs. S am uel
Llncbarirr. 100 W. Jlnklns
Circle, Sanford, announce
Ihe engagem ent of their
daughter. Rebecca Lynn,
1307 Park Ave.. Sanford, to
Douglas Edward Burleson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson E.
Burleson. 107 Falrlane Cir­
cle. Sanford.
Bom In Lancaster. Calif.,
th e b r i d e - e l e c t Is th e
maternal granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Fish.
Chestcriown. N.Y., and the
paternal granddaughter or
Mrs. P e a rl R ich ard so n ,
Daytona Beach.
Miss Llnebarier Is a 1981
graduate of Seminole High
School and Is employed as a
medical assistant at Noope
Medical Center. Sanford.
H er f i a n c e , b o r n In
Johnson City, Tenn.. Is the
matrnal grandson of Mrs.
Virgil Freeman, Newland,
N.C. and the late Mr. and
Mrs. Robert A Burleson. Roan
ML.Tcnn.
He Is a 1077 graduate of
S em in o le H igh School,
served three years In the U.S.
Navy and la employed by
Publlx Inc.

In And Around Lake Mary

Pat Vick Elected A s
Teacher O f The Year
In an election held at Lake Mary Elementary
this week, teachers and stafT were asked to vote
for their choice for "Teacher of the Year". The
winner was Mrs. Pat Vick.
Several teachers were nominated and the votes
were then cast. Under consideration for a vote
were some of the best teachers at Lake Mary. The
teachers nominated are ones who have earned
the resect of their peers.
In this case Mrs. Vick Is a teacher with 11 years
experience. She came to Lake Mary 10 years ago
to teach tn the Title t program. After six years
there she was moved to second grade where she
has been for the past four years. Her co-workers
and the parents of Ihe children she has taught
find her to be a warm, friendly, conscientious,
and concerned for both educational and persona]
needs of her students.
Pat and her husband Jerry have two children.
Lisa and Erik. Pat will now go to county
competition along with the representatives of the
other shcools In Seminole County. From them the
winner goes to the State level.
We all wish Pat the best of luck and sincere
congratulations on being selected as Lake Mary
Elementary's "Teacher of the Year."

Rsbtcca Lynn Llnsbsrltr, Douglas E. Burlsson
The wedding will be an
event of June 20. at 10 a.m.,

in the gazebo of Centennial
Park. Sanford.

Checefsky-D eGaetanl
Mr. and Mra. Edward Clircefsky, IOS N.
Sunland D rive, Sanford, an n o u n ce the
engagement of their daughter, Brenda Jean
Checcfaky of Longwood. to Dennla Wayne
DeOaetanl of Deltona, aon of Mr, and Mra. Gary
C. DeOaetanl. 4 0 2 1 Nolan Road, Sunford.
Born In Sanford, the bride-elect la the
grnnddaughtr of Mra. Anna Checcfaky of
Olyphant. Pa. She la a 1070 graduate of
Seminole High School and la employed by

Florida National Bank.
Her fiance, bom In Sanford, la the maternal
grandaon of Mrs. Rufus Benton, Nolan Rood,
Sanford, and Ihe paternal grandaon of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank DeOaetanl, Nolan Road, Sanford. He
attended Seminole High School and la selfemployed.
The wedding will be an event of April 20. at 2
p in., at Nativity Catholic Church. Lake Mary.

Lunn-Krzewlnsk!
Mr. and Mrn. Edwurd Lunn of Highland. Calif.,
and formerly of Casselberry, announce the
engagement of their daughter. Sally Allen Lunn
of Holly Hill, to Robert Anthony Kriewlnakl of
Saginaw. Mich., aon of Mr. and Mrs. Joaeph
Krzewlnskl of Fremont, Ohio.
Bom In Rochester. N.Y.. the bride-elect Is a
1908 g rad u ate of Lyman High School,
Longwood. She graduated from Florida Techno­
logical University I the present University of
Central Florida) with a I).A. degree In 1070. She
la employed as a laboratory technician.

Her fiance, born In Fremont, la the paternal
grandaon of Mrs. Stella Kriewlnakl, Toledo.
Ohio, and the late Mr. Kriewlnakl.
He Is a 1072 graduate of St. Joseph's High
School. Fremont, received a B.S. degree from
Embry-Rlddle, Daytona Beach, In 1070. and Is
employed aa a pilot by Simmons Airlines.
Saginaw.
The wedding will be an event of April 27. at
11 u rn., at Ormond Beach Memorial Oaniens.
Ormond Beaeh.

Last week I reported on the Math Fair winners
from Lake Mary. Well 1 am proud to say that
there were county winners In that group. In
second grade. Lake Mary's MacKenzIe McAleer
won a second place ribbon. In third grade, the
class project from Mrs. Dickinson's room won the
first place ribbon aa did the fifth grade entry of
Mary Ann Craft. Our congratulations to you and

DEAR CANTt All recruits are
given written Army regulations,
which Include the consequences
uf going AWOL,, so your aon
should know the' consequences

Dear
Abby
of "running away.”
Ills punishment will be less
severe If he turns himself In. He
may be confined to the base for a
certain period of time. He could
be court-m artialed and dis­
charged from Ihe Army with a
dishonorable discharge. He
might have to serve time in a
military prison. He could be
docked In pay or assigned extra
duties. None of this can be
d e t e r m i n e d unt i l the
circumstances of his running
away are examined.

Tell your son to contact the
nearest military police, or call
his last command station and
turn himself In Immediately.
The longer hr Is gone, the
more severe the punishment.

to all the winners.
Upcoming events: Rumor has It that the City of
Lake Mary will be holding an Art Show. I don't
have loo many details on this yet but 1 am
promised more In the very near future.
Also. Country Carnival Is the title of the Lake
Mary Elementary PTA's fund raiser set for March
9. There will be a wide variety of happenings for
all. This too will have more details upcoming.
Seminole County 4-H members are very busy
getting ready for competition at the Central
Florida Fair. There will of course be Ihe usual
livestock shows, but there will also be game
board competition, fashion show, demonstra­
tions. and an essay contest. To prepare for this
one. 4-H'er George Nunnery prepared barbecue
chicken with his special recipe for 4-Hers who
had been attending a workshop. The kids were
told to simply bring their appetltes-and they dfd
and were well fed. The chicken was truly great.
George will be competing with his recipe and If
what I tasted Is any Indication. George will do
well.

Band Students Tune Up For Contest
T he s tu d e n ts of th e In ­
strumental music department of
Lake Howell High School have
been busy working on solos and
ensem bles for their district
competition to be held on Feb.
21-23 at Lake Mary High School.
Two of these students. Carlos
Bolsselle and Chris Cannartato,
will be featured In a free concert,
open to the public, at 7.30 p.m..
on Feb. 12 at Lake Howell High
School in the commons.
Recently, six students from
the Lake Howell Band — Carlos
Bolsselle. Jennifer Ragsdale.
Kendra Knickerbocker, Lynn
Deramo. Shert Seaman and
Stephanie Karp — traveled to
Tam pa F lorida after being
selected to perform with the
All-State Banda and Orchestra
where they rehearsed and pres­
ented a concert for more than
8.000 spectators.

AWOL Soldier Is Too Tired
To Run; Too Scared To Stop
DEAR ABBYi I need help. My
son Joined Ihe Army, then after
he finished basic training, he
took nfT without leave. So far,
he's still running, calling me
whenever he can. He called Iasi
night saying he was tired of
running and couldn't take It
anymore, and he wants to give
himself up.
I need to know what the Army
will do to him for running away.
Will he have to go to prison? Will
they beat him? He's only 20.
Please answer soon because he
Is walling for your answer, und
so ami.
CANT EION TRIE

Ellen
Waldrop

offered to stay away from the
wedding rather than cause a
family conflict. However, the
bride, the groom and BUI have
Invited me to attend. The bride's
mother says if I go, she will not.
question is, should I attend
DEAR ABBY i I have been thMy
e
w ed d in g u n d er the
dating a man very seriously for circumstances?
Ihe past year. (I'll call him Bill.)
BILL** GIRLFRIEND
He and his wife have been
divorced for four months. I had
DEAR GIRLFRIENDS Give
n o th in g to do w ith th e ir Bill's daughter and her fiance a
breakup, but she despises me wedding gift — a gift of love —
and refuses even to speak to me.
The problem Is that Bill's by absenting yourself from their
daughter Is getting m arried wedding.
Bill's "ex" has a lifetime of
soon, and his "ex" Is totally
opposed to my attending the memories in -raising her daugh­
wedding. She says It's a family ter. and even though she feels
event, and I am not a member of some anger and bitterness now.
she is still the mother of the
Ihe family.
I get along very well with Bill's bride, and she. not you. should
daughter and her fiance. I have be there.

In addition, band students
were selected to attend the
University of Miami's South
Florida Honors Band where they
will also present a similar type
concert. Nine students from
Lake Howell chosen after being
personally recommended by the
band director. Greg Martin arc
as follows: Stephanie Karp. Kelly
Sauter, Stacy DeZutter. Lynn
Deramo. Tom Wlnkleman. Mike
Mailman. Carlos Bolscllcand
Sherri Seaman.

The following week the Silver
Regiment Band will travel to St.
Petersburg to represent Florida
at the Festival of States Band
Competition. There will be IS
bands from states all over the
United States challenging for
Grand Champion. This Is an
honor band m em bers were
selected for by winning Grand
C h a m p io n a t th e F lo rid a
Tournament of Bands In St.
Petersburg last December. This
will be a competition beginning
on March 26 with closing cere­
Besides their individual ac­ monies and awards on March
complishments. the band's large 30.
ensembles have begun to work
Fund ' raising for the Silver
on their upcoming competitions
In March. The District Concert Regiment Marching Band's trip
Evaluation competitions will be to 1085 Macy's Parade next
held on March 22-23 at Apopka November Is underway. The
and for the first time in our band was selected out of 23
history. Lake Howell will have bands who applied from Florida.
three concert bands participat­ The band will be selling various
Items throughout the year.
ing.

The Glamorous U fo ' Theme
Of Miss Altamonte Pageant
"The Glamorous Life" will
be the inaugural theme of the
first annus! Mias Altamonte
Spring Pageant. The pageant
will be held on Feb. 23.
Eastmonte Civic Center In
A lta m o n te S p r in g s . A
champagne reception will be
hosted by Carlos Murphy's
Immediately following the
pageant to honor the newly
corwned Mlsa Altamonte
Springs.
T here are 18 talented

young women from around
the Altamonte Springs area
who will compete tn private
Interview, evening gown,
s w i m s u i t 1a n d t a l e n t
divisions.
The pageant will begin at
8:00 p.m. Tickets for the
pageant and the champagne
reception wUI each be 88.00.
For ticket Information con­
tact Russ Hauck. 8944081.
or Bill Ombres. 841-3430.

In House
8PECIALI

Men And Women's

Alterations
By Brenda Foster

Bee My
Honey
Bouquet

Now Available At

•U ”

1 1 6 W. F ir s t S treet
i 929-4132 Downtown Sanford
All Types Alterations
lead Not Be Purchased At Lois')
Brenda Guarantees To Plesse"

Flower
f fip p
2 0 6 E.Com
■R

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J

A l t EL ViOfTMVMVwMM
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In A nd Around Sanford

Iw iiy , Ft». 1*. IW -iC

Hospital Auxiliary Installs
A t Annual Aw ards Luncheon
Centra) Florida Regional Hos­
pital Auxiliary Inc. Installed of­
ficers and held the annual
awards presentation at a lun­
cheon In the banquet room of
Sanford's Skyport Restaurant on
Jan. 29.
In the absence of the president
Audrey Roush. President-elect
Gall Stewart presided. Dr. Earl
-Weldon, president of Seminole
C o m m u n ity College and
chairman of the hospital's Board
of Trustees, spoke briefly com­
mending the auxiliary.
Jam es D. Tesar. hospital ad­

ministrator. Installed the of­
ficers. Officers to serve during
1985 are as follows: Audrey
Roush, president: Gall Stewart,
president-elect; June Moore, vice
president: Mildred Haen. trea­
surer: Dorothy Gatchel. re­
cording secretary: and Miriam
Askew, corresponding secretary.
The administrator also cited
the following for hours of service
during 1984: Mildred Haen. Elsie
Querry. Audrey Roush and
Grace Smith, all over 1.000
hours; Katherine Cull, over 800
hours; Marlon Cox, over 600

When Marge Brown turned 74
last November, she was under
the weather in Georgia.
But after arriving back home.
Marge was given the birthday
luncheon that Selma Williams
promised.
Selma entertained Marge and
friends at a birthday luncheon
h o u r s : a n d Carol B oston, last week at her Idyllwtlde home.
Dorothy Gatchel. Esther Lansing The hostess prepared the de­
and June Moore, all over 500 licious foods served In an elegant
hours.
setting —the last word.
No party Is complete without a
It's better late than never to birthday cake which was made
celebrate s birthday.
by Selm a's daughter, Linda
Terwllleger.
Sharing the special event with
the hostess and honoree were:
Martha Azzanrllo. Edith Meyer.
Susie Calhoun. Carolyn Buie,
Edda Bennett. Frieda Tyre,
Lenny Moye. Rubye King. Nellie
Coleman, Grace Hudson. Lucille
Jarrell. Domaitus Vam. Ruth
Carlton. Virginia Chapman. Dot
Marge Brown shows a red velvet lounging robe she received
Williams, Mildred Bishop and I.
as a gift at a belated birthday luncheon. See In A n d A ro u n d
Founder's Day festivities will Sanford.
be celebrated Sunday, beginning
at 2 p.m.. at the General Henry Gielow. Juanny Mercer. Grace Pac 'N Send. 304 E. Commercial
S. Sanford Museum-Library. 520 O’Brien. Penelope Peterson and St., all In Sanford.
E. First St. The program, which Orlan Walker, all active mem­
begins at 2 p.m.. Is free and open bers of the library-museum
On Valentine's Day, The
to the public.
associates and historical pre­ Seminole County Extension
llomamaker* Council will hold
F o llo w in g th e p r o g r a m . servation society.
th e a n n u a l " A p p r e c i a t i o n
Martha Yancey will conduct a
The children and g r a n d ­ Breakfast, from 7 to 8 a.m. at the
tour of the quaint facility. Ruth
c
h
i l d r e n of Mrs. C h a r l e s Agricultural Center auditorium.
Swlnney. house chairman, wtll
be In charge of the guest regis­ (Elizabeth) Wilke will honor her
The big Beta Sigma Phi Annu­
try. Genevieve Richardson, ex­ at open house on her 80th
hibit chairman. Barbara Moore birthday, Saturday. Feb, 16. al Valentine Charily Ball Is set
Saturday. Feb. 9. at the Sanford
and Ruth Hamilton will In­ from 2-5 p.m.
The event will be held al Mrs. Civic Center, beginning at Hp.m.
troduce
a
series
of
Swedish
Participating In Central Florida Regional
James D. Tesar, Installing officer; Mildred
Wilke’s home. 420 Summerlin
It's still not too late to attend.
Hoepltal'a Installation of officers for 1985 Haen, treasurer; June Moore, vice presi­ artifacts.
Light refreshments will be Ave. All friends are Invited. The According to nrenda Elswlck,
are, from left: Ejste Querry, standing In for
dent; Gall Stewart, president-elect; and served In the East Room by family requests your presence, ball chairman, tickets are avail­
Grace Smith standing in for Audrey Roush, hostesses Patricia Barden. Jean but no presents, please.
Dorothy Gatchel, recording secretary; Ruth
able at the door to the semiHoffon, hospital admlnistatlve assistant;
president.
formal benefit.
Fowler. Elizabeth Gallant, Frieda
" T h e Time of Your Life
Highlighting the ball will be
Spaghetti Dinner and Celebrity the crowning of a quern from
Auction" will be held on Satur­ Valentine Girl candidates repre­
day. Feb. 23 at the Garden Club senting each BSP chapter In
of Sanford on U.S. 17-92, The Sanford.
event will benefit Ballet Guild of
XI Beta Eta Chapter honored
Sanford-Semtnole. a non profit Its Valentine Girl and queen
C m tia a e d Proas Page 1C
you gave them to me. They bother me. I
When you see a half-way decent doll you dance company based In San­ canldate Cathy McNabb with a
and upkeep for the Chapel.
don't like their faces. Some people like a want you have to act quickly. Mrs. Davis ford.
brunch at H.P. Cassidy's In
Mrs. Davis' love of dolls developed about wax doll. I wouldn’t have a wax doll In my
said, or someone else will have grabbed her.
According to Sandy Dunn, Longwood. Chapter President
eight years ago when she and her daughter house.
Once she has her hands on a new old doll, dinner will be served from Q to 8 Carol Ann Smith presented
Barbara, who now lives In Montana with her
"I look at the face and the eyes. I buy a Mrs. Davis researches to find out who she is p.m.. followed by the auction, Cathy with a crystal vase as a
husband and daughter, opened a shop to doll because I,like fier face and eyes. I would and where she la from and that gives her from 8 to 11 p.m.
memento of the occasion.
buy a doll and pay top price for It Just clues to how the doll should be costumed.
sell reproduction dolls In Coral Gables.
Donation is 85 per person.
According to Sharon CornAt the request of her customers Mrs. Davis because It looks like someone 1know. I don't Most of her dolls are German with a few Tickets may be purchased at the stock. "Cathy U our (lower in the
said she took a course and became a doll c a n what kind of shape ahe'p In as long as French and one has a Russian heritage and following locations: School of bouquet of sisterhood and the
doctor. Her real Interest In collecting there's no crack In the (ice. After I've expression although she was made In Dance Arts, 2560 Elm Ave.; Sun true meaning of life, learning
Victorian dolla. not reproductions, devel­ finished dressing It there's something about Germany. They all date from 1860 to 1912. Bank. 3000 Orlando Drive; and and friendship."
oped when she took two vintage dolla In It. like adopting a puppy or something, but I she said.
She tries to salvage as much of a doll's
payment of a 81.100 debt one of her never name my dolls.
"After you've worked on them for two to original costuming as possible and additions
doll-fancying clients had run up.
She gradually began amassing more three days you get a feel for them. If I don't arc made from old fabric she has picked up
bisque-head beauties and said she really have to do something for a doll. If I don’t In thrin. Junk and antique shops. That's the
became serious about her collection when even have to wash her face, she's not going key to redressing and restoring old dolls, she
her granddaughter, Leslie Ann. was bom to do much fur me. but the ones I work on said, but cautioned that the face must
remain original, but washing is permitted.
are sweet little things.
three years ago.
"The orlglonal clothes add a lot. That's
*'l work on these Tittle dolls and they stand
"When she was bom I thought, gee. I'll
never get to know her. What can I do so there and stare at me and I think. 'Gosh, the ultimate." she said. But If the original
she'll know her grandmother loved her. She who did you belong t07 What stories could clothing Isn't available, Mrs. Davis, with her
and my daughter both have a great love of you tell If you could Just talk.' They decorator skills, sees no reason to leave a
doll dressed in tatters.
fascinate me." Mrs. Davis said.
dolls. "Mrs.Davlasaid.
They're so fascinating that Mrs. Davis
And when her dolls are on display to
And Mrs. Davis said she never adds a doll
to her collection unless she feels an iiasn't been able so far to part with any of benefit the Altamonte Chapel they won't
Just be standing there looking beautiful.
her dolls.
attraction to It herself.
When she spots a doll she wants at an Mrs. Davis, who frequently lectures on doll
"1 tike dolla, but I'm not one of these
people who has to buy every doll that comes auction, show or antique shop. Mrs. Davis collecting and restoration, likes for her dolls
along. It's got to tell me something. If a doll said she checks her bank account to see if to look active — to appear as If they have
doesn't speak to you when you look at It I her earnings from her doll doctoring will Just arrived In a carriage or are strolling In
cover the Investment. She bought about 10 an old European setting. So you may catch
don't think you should buy U.
them In action at the chapel fair.
"There are some dolla I wouldn't have If dolls last year, she said.

Doris
Dietrich

...Exhibitors Wanted For Chapel Fair

Home Salutes Good Samaritan
■ There la a smiling, friendly
and kind-hearted young woman
whose face can be seen around
the Good Samaritan Home as the
Residents eagerly a w a it. the
special kindness she extends to

“&gt;
R|p0lpp« Pugh also sponsors pro­
grams for the residents and
M orv a
plans weekly activities to get
them Involved. She has been a
Hawkins volunteer with Oood Samaritan
Home for
Them.
ra-M ii
aver a year, she Is the mother of
' Verde11 Pugh shows that she
two sons and has been In Florida
loves helping to make the Uvea of
the residents of the home better monthly newsletter, she writes two year*.
by the many things she does In letters and listens to the resi­
In Observance of Black History
dents. She says listening Is an
their behalf.
Verdell is with the Develop- Important part of the Job. Al­ Month, some of the citizens who
ilnole though. she can't always solve have helped In the outstanding
M ental Dtvislon of Bemlnol
C o m m m un lt y College. She the problem. It helps the resi­ advancement of the community
assists the Good Sam aritan dents Just to have someone are as follows: Mrs. Annie
A.L. James. H.L. Rofoe
Home residents In preparing a sincerely Interested in their feel- «LaFalr.
Sr.. Mrs. Ella W. Stmcs. Mrs.
Lillie H. Williams. Mrs. Lula
Scdro. Mrs. Lucille Brown. Mrs.
A l b e r t a D e t r c v i l l c . M r s.
Oereldlne Zackarey, Deacon
R.M. McClain. Mis. Lura Thom­
as. Mis. Victoria Burton. Mrs.
Beatrice Clark. Mrs. Ju n e Bell.
Edna Evans and Mrs. Leota
Knox.
Black History observance wtl
be held at the 11 a .a . worship

serv ice at First S hiloh
Missionary Baptist Church, 1101
West I3lh St. Thomas Poole,
president of the State NAACP,
will be the guest speaker. The
community Is Invited to attend.
Wilma Jones la the chairman.

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Assembly Of God

Church Of Christ

Does the goal you re seeking seem as remote— as unattainable— as
this snow frosted mountain top? Does it seem, sometimes, as it you 11
never get there? Are you on the verge ol giving up?
Don't! Though your objective may seem light-years beyond your
reach. If it’s the right thing for you. God will help if you II let Him. The
teachings of His Church will give you the patience and endurance you
need to accept setbacks-, .and still keep trying.

Episcopal

Don't try to climb to the top all by yourself. It s a lonely ascent. Let the
Church help you. as it helped those who were here before you. . . and as it
will help those who come after you.

Nazarene

Catholic

Presbyterian

Sunday
1 Corinthians
1 28-31

,

i’
IM OKI b y t n .

Monday
Psalm
11941-48

M m V jom .

Tuesday
Jerem iah
14 8

Wednesday
Luke
4 18-19

Thursday
Galatians
5 4-8

CopywgN 'BAA k» i is* Wuewe Newspaper I * ..* . ' O

n

Fnday
Saturday
Mark
Psalm
9 33-37
16 1-11
. k d , .............. ... n m

Spanish

Congregational

Church Of God

Ih o Following Sponsors Moko This Church Notlco And Directory Pago Possible
A TLA N TIC N ATION AL NANK
Sanford, F la .
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

C S L IIIY C IT Y
FAIN TIN G C O ., IN C .

CO LO N IA L ROOM
A SSTAUAAN T
Downtown Sanford
116 East First 81.
Bill A Dot Painter

JC P o n n o y

SUN BAN K and Staff
200 W. First SI.
3000 8. Orlando Dr.

Sanford Plaxa

O RBO O RY LUN BBR
TH US V A LU E HARDW ARE
600 Maple Ave., Sanford
N A N N ILL A B S V IR L Y
TRAN SM ISSIO N
David Beverly and Stall

HIQHT'S SNOB BTO RB
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight and Staff

T H I M oKIBBIN AOBNCV
Insurance

PA N TRY PRIOR
D ISCO U N T POODS
and Employees

M IL 'a
GU LP S S R V IC S
Mel Dekle and Employees

P U B U X M A RK ETS
and Employees

O SBO R N 'S BO O R
ANO B IB LE BTO RB
2699 Sanford Avs.

S IN K A R IK G LA SS
A PA IN T C O ., IN C.
Jerry A Ed Senkarik
and Employees

L.D . P LA N TS, IN C.
Oviedo, Florida

DIRECTORY

** * ■•&gt; * •*’ - ML’ *

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STEN STRO M R E A LT Y
Herb Stenstrom and Staff

'

W ILSO M -BICH ELBERO EA
M ORTUARY
Eunice W ilson and Staff
W ILSON M AIBR FU R N ITU R E C O .
Mr. and Mrs. Fred W ilson

W INN-DIXIB S T O R ES
and Employees

�RELIGION
Evmlftf Herald. Sanford, FI,

B riefly
Bill G unter To Speak
A t JailM inistry Banquet
State Treasurer and Insurance Commissioner Bill Gunter alll
be the principal speaker at "A Night lo Remember." the second
annual Good News Mission banquet to acquaint the public with
the Seminole County jail ministry. The dinner will be held
March 8 at 7 p.m. In the Sanford Civic Center.
Sheriff John Polk will speak briefly and Inmates or former
Inmates will share about how God has changed their Uvea.
There will be special music. Food will be furnished by several
area churches and there Is no charge, but a freewill offering will
be received. For complimentary tickets contact your church
office, any advisory board member or the Chaplain Charles
PltrofT at 323-2550 by Feb. 24.

7-Wook

BibleInstitute

A 7-week Bible Institute on the theme. The Christian and the
Holy Spirit, will be held on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. beginning this
week at Sanford Church or God. 801 W. 22nd St.. Sanford.
Coordinating the institute will be the Rev. William Thompson,
pastor. Teaching the college-level courses will be the Rev.
Dwain Pyett. pastor of DeLand Church of God; Thompson.
Jerry Ingle, youth minister. There will be courses on the
subjects. The Holy Spirit and Power. Spiritual Gifts, and Dare
.to Be Free. The Institute la open lo all laypersons and
ministers.

Carter A lo is Choir To Sing
North Central Florida Friends, a non-profit civic organization,
will present the Carter Tabernacle Maas Choir In concert at
7:30 p.m. Friday. Feb. 22. at the Sanford Civic Center. 401 E.
Seminole Blvd., Sanford. Tickets are $3.50 and may be
purchased at the door.

Family Crusade Scheduled
Evangelist Dan Matter and Ann Matter, children's worker,
will conduct a family crusade at Longwood Church of the
Nazarene Feb. 10-17. The Christianaires will sing Tuesday
through Sunday. Hours wUl b e ' 10:45 a.m. and 6 p.m. on
Sundays and 7:30 weeknlghts. Mrs. Matter will have puppets,
stories and treasure chest with prises for the children's service.

M en's Day A t A llen Chapel
The men of Allen Chapel AME Church, 1203 Olive Avc..
Sanford, will hold the annual Men's Day program Sunday at 11
a.m. and 4 p.m. on the theme Christian Men Yesterday, Today
and Tomorrow. Dr. Willie F. Newman. MD. a Sanford native,
will speak at the morning service. The afternoon service will be
“Sermon In Songs” by the Interdenominational and Rescue
church choirs. Robert B. Thomas Jr. la chairman and the Rev.
John H. Woodard, pastor.

Building Campaign
Ascension Lutheran Church of Casselberry will enter the
.intensive period of their A Time to Build campaign this
Sunday. The three goals for the campaign to erect a new
Fellowship and Education Center will be announced In the
services.

Family Film Series
Family expert James C. Dobson's film series on the family
will be co-sponsored by the Community Alliance Church and
the New Life Fellowship Church of Winter Springs. The films
will be shown at New Life Fellowship Church, al Tuskawllta
Road and Lake Drive on seven consecutive Sunday evenings
beginning at 6 p.m. this Sunday. Entitled fbcus on the Family.
the aeries presents seven of Dobson's most popular pres­
entations filmed live at family life seminars starting with a film
*on The Strong-willed Child. An optional discussion will follow
each film. Chud care will be provided.

Women To Hold Luncheon
The Episcopal Church Women of Holy Cross Episcopal
Church. Sanford, will hold a covered dish luncheon meeting
Monday at noon al Bram Towers. A musical program Is
planned. Dessert and beverage will be provided.

Vestry Plans Retreat
The Holy Cross Episcopal Church vestry will go on retreat at
the Canterbury Center. Oviedo on Friday and Saturday for a
time of planning and renewal.

Sunday, Fab. II, tftS -S C

Hindus Observe
Rite Of Penance
KUALA LUMPUR. Malaysia
(UPH — In an annual rite of
penance, some 2.000 Hindus
pierced their tongues and bodies
with dozens of hooks and spears,
hung ho mem ade altars on
themselves and then climbed
272 steps to a temple cave.
The ceremony In honor of
Hindu gods Lord Subramunlum
and Lord Muruga was pari of
Thaipusam an annual day of
penance celebrated by Hindus
for centuries.
Former Australian diplomat
Carl Belle allowed 108 hooks
and two skewers to be Inserted
through his skin on various
parts of his body and (hen,
attaching his altar to the hooks
by chains, climbed up to the
Balu Caves temple Monday.
Belle, whose Hindu name Is
Vadlvella. said he first carried a
"kavadl” - or altar - In 1981
and vowed to Lord Muruga he
would repeat the ritual five
times.
About 100,000 helpers, rela­
tives and the curious gathered al
the limestone caves to spur on
the " k a v a d l" bearers, who
groped their way In a trance up
272 steps to the pulsing best of
drums and religious chants. In­
s i d e the r a v e s , h om e to
thousands of bats, the sir was
thick with the smell of heady
camphor and perspiring bodies.
The participants appeared to
feel no pain, seldom bled and did
not bear any physical marks

from their ordeal. Preparing for
the penance, they follow a strict
diet of edible seeds and then fast
before the event.
The Hindus are bathed in a
muddy river and put Into a
trance. Priests then
Insert
various size hooks through
participants' skin on their chest,
arms, neck and face. Spears, up
to 6 feet, are Inserted through
one side of a person's cheek and
out the other. Smaller spears,
usually about 12 Inches long, are
thrust through the tongue.
Chains are then put on the
hooks on the person's body and
the other end of the chains are
attached to portable attars, deco­
rated with pictures or statues of
Lord Subramanlam and peacock
feathers.
The Hindu carrying the altar
then walks through the temple
ground, up 272 steps and Into
the temple caves. When the
kavadl bearer enters the cave,
the hooks are removed by the
priest and the act of penance Is
completed.
As the priest draws out the
spears and hooks, he places
ashes and white powder on the
bloodless wounds. The carrier
then says a quick prayer and
leaves the cave.
Malaysia Is one of the few
countries where Hindus still
celebrate Thaipusam Day on
such a large scale.

tv

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Cm m S w o

Building Consecrated
Participants In the consecration service Sunday (or the
new two-story education building at Community United
M ethodist Church, C a sse lb e rry , from le ft, R ick
Casselberry, chairman of the board of trustees; Orlando
District Superintendent Robert D Bledsoe; Don Stevens,
building committee chairman; Cleveland Hightower,
Casselberry branch manager for Florida National Bank;
the Rev. Wight Klrtley, pastor; and Gordon V. Monday,
architect, stand In front of new addition.

Thou Shalt Observe Safety Sabbath
The menaces on our roads
come In many varieties.
There are the speedsters, and
the drunks. Then there is the
group we seldom think of as a
highway hazard. They are the
drivers who can't drive well.
The February Issue of Esquire
magazine has an article on NBA
star Julius Ervlng. “ 1 went for a
ride recently through downtown
Philadelphia with Julius Ervlng
In hla Maacratl.” says Mark
'With each passing
block It became apparent: Julius
Ervlng cannot drive very well.
"It wasn't a question of reck­
less speed or Ignored signals.
Rather, he seemed unsure, ten­
tative. His huge hands clutched
the steering wheel a bit to
tightly. His head craned un­
c o m fo rta b ly tow ard the
windshield. He accelerated with
a lurch, obvious openings In the
traffic went unseen or untried.
"This struck me as amusing.
Just a moment before. I had
compared the act of aeelng
Julius playing basketball to SI.
Francis w at ch in g blrda In
flight."
But when we add up the
speeders and the drunks and
even those who can't drive .well,
we still have accounted for only
about 50 percent of the drivers
on our streets and freeways.

Saints And
Sinners
George Plagenz

The other half Includes the
largest single group of highway
m en aces: the dis courteous
drivers. Bad manners may not
seem like such a big sin, but bad
manners when you are behind
the wheel of a car can be the
unforglveablesln.
The discourteous driver may
have Just left church. He may
still be In the church parking lot.
But he drives by the rule of the
Jungle, not the Golden Rule. He
reaenta everybody else on the
road. He swears at his fellow
m otorists who In any other
circum stances would be hla
friend.
He Is rude and Impatient. He
sees openings where there are
none. Hts blood pressure rises at
every red light, and you'd better
be ready when he la the moment
the light turns green.
If he doesn't like the way you
drive, he'll let you know it. To
those whose reflexes are not aa

quick as hla. he shows no mercy.
He Is the ultimate Angry Man.
a greater terror than the mug­
gers who lurk In subways and
shadows. This tenor Is every­
where. day and night.
If all this sounds more like a
lecture from the National Safety
Council than a religion column,
you're partly right. But only
partly. The National Safety
Council has designated Sunday,
Feb. 1/7, as Safely Sabbath.
Ministers all over the country
have been encouraged to preach
that day on the theme, “Love
Thy Neighbor — Help Prevent
accidents."
Safety Sabbath Is a good Idea.
It's about time churches let their
members know you can't be s
good Christian and a bad driver.
But sermons on the subject
won't do the Job. I have an Ides
that will. My Ides Is to gel
bumper stickers or decals that
say: ”1 Am a Courteous Driver."
S o m e t h i n g I l e a r n e d In
Psychology 101 makes me think
this will work.
We all hate lo be "found out."
Once we go on record as claim­
ing to be something or other, we
are ashamed to be caught not
living up to our claim.
So we will get bumper stickers
for people to put on their cars
that say: "I Am a Courteous

Driver." Having proclaimed this
to the world, they will live In fear
of being unmasked ss s hypo­
crite or a fraud. Their driving
therefore will Improve overnight.
Once the Idea catches on.
everybody will start wondering
about the manners and civility of
the driver who doesn't display
the sticker.
Since nobody likes to have his
manners and cIvtUly under sus­
picion. everybody eventually will
capitulate. Our highway* will be
filled with driven trying lo live
u p lo t h e i r e s t i m a t e s of
themKlves ss courteous drivers.

Families are
for lovingt

Wedding Bell Service
jit t &amp;

... A Wedding Bell service In honor of the Rev. and Mrs. Jimmy
Johnson's 17th wedding anniversary will be held Feb. 17 at
Prairie Lake Baptist Church. Fern Park. A marriage renewal
service will be pari of the 11 a.m. worship service. There will be
special music by the Johnson Four. A dinner In honqf i f the
pastor and hts wife will follow the service.

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C ELEB R A T IO N O F W O RSH IP IN
T H E S P IR IT AND T H E WORD.

SUNDAY SCHOOL ................................................. 2:48 A M .
MORNING W ORSHIP ............................................ 10:80 A.M.
EVENINO W O R S H IP ....................................................... 6:00P.M.

M ission Pledge Service

William Thompson, Pastor

Marvin McClain, former OMS missionary to Halil and now
serving the mission with his wife, as a support team, will speak
at Community United Methodist Church of Casselberry, this
Sunday at the 8:30 a.m. service In the chapel and 9:30 and 11
a.m. In the sanctuary. He will conduct a mission pledge service
for the church’s Work Area on Missions of which hq Is a
member.

Sanford Church of Ood
Ml Ws*t Mud S

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7* S t . £«!»&gt;

Family Night Supper

Sonllght Trio Concert
free.

Variety Show Slated
The Spiritual 1st Church at Awareness of Orlando will sponsor
a variety show at the Orlando Garden Coub, Feb. 23 at 7:30
p.m. Altamonte Springs Commissioner Eddie Rose will be the
master of ceremonies. The show will feature, dancers, singers,
comedians and musicians. For further Information call
834-5378.

Bishop To Visit Church
Dr. John B. Moyer, bfo
Church sin speak at ****
10:30 a.m . a t W inter Springs Community
‘ Church. Prior to hie election lo
churches lo Cataaaoua.
i
rrnm 1OTM979. he

at

CENTRAL
BAPTIST
CHURCH

1111 OAK AVENUE
W ith S p e c i a l G u e s t:

‘JCutljermt
(dtjurclj

A family night supper will be held at 6:30 p.m. Sunday. Feb.
17 at First Presbyterian Church of Sanford. Afilm. Take Stock:
Worship, will be shown.
Sonllght Trio from Nashville. Term., will sing Gospel music
In concert at Metropolitan Baptist Church. 4400 N. I
Is
Drive. Orlando. Wednesday. Feb. 20 at 7:30 p.m. Admission
Admls

CMUMIII'B
BAY

YOUTH
From

8:30 A.M. and 11:00 A.M.
SUNDAY SCHOOL • 0:46 A.M.

Speed To Share
Lake Sp«td, professional
driver on the NASCAR Grand
National circuit, will thars
tils faith In Jesus Christ at
First Saptlst Church, San­
ford. at the 7 p.m. sarvico
Sunday. La Its, grow up In Hw
Baptist Church In Jackson,
Miss., but drifted away as a
Man. Ha was U.S. Carting
Champion six times and won
tha F lA W orld Carting
championships at LeMans.
Franca In ItTI. Since his
cammltmsnt to Christ, his
llfssfylo has changsd. On the
r«ar of his Spademan car is
painted "Jesus Loves You."

Come To

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A«CH« r

_ _ ______

EEK A M EEK

TOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUARY 10. 1085
Substantial strides can be
made this coming year In your
chosen field. However, you must
be careful not to alienate friends
to fulfill your ambitions.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Do not be Intimidated by
challenging situations today. Al­
though they may overwhelm
others, you'll rise to the oc­
casion.
P IS C E S (Feb. 20-March 20) A
friend may come to you for
advice today and. out of kind­
ness. you might be tempted to
tell him what he wants to hear.
Tinting the truth won't be
helpful.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Industriousness, not Lady Luck,
will enable you to accomplish
what you set out to do today.
Stand on your own two feet, not
the rabbit's foot.
TAUEU8 (April 20-May 20)
Today your presence will have a
soothing and harmonizing effect
on your companions. You'll
know exactly what to do to calm
troubled waters.
OEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
You should be able to find
willing helpers today to finish a
task you couldn't do alone. It'll
be a welcome relief to get It out
of the way.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Even though you'll be In a
sociable and gregarious mood
today, you'll also appreciate
serious thinkers with whom you
can exchange worthwhile Ideas.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll
function best today If you
operate Independently of others.
Partners may be fun to have
around, but they'll keep you
from finishing what you start.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
you Intend to relax today, forget
about your work and enjoy
yourself. However. If you Intend
to work, don't daydream about
doing something else.

Answer to Previous Punts

3 Au uliary (abbr)
4 16. Roman

1 ConsgsdsgrM
(tbbr)
4 Sherry
9 South Alncsfl
tnb*
10 Cuts
13 Wild «o«t
14 W m vshieN
15 Seed covering
IS — degree
17 Preposition
18 Eidemetion of
surprise
20 Xnrer in the
Congo
23 Crier
26 MoAutk
30 Freshweter por­
poise
31 Unused
33 Chemicel tuffii
34 Peg
39 Crest
inscription
31 Wemen i neme
37 Hem
39 Ash
41 Spece egency
(•MX)
43 Hnre dweller
44 Here's hutbend
47 Acceunting
egency (tbbr)
49 Royel Scottish

5
• Hydrophobia

u n
□ □ □ □ □ □
□ CEDD
________
nnnn
o
n o Oc e o
n

7 Black
8 Lath
9 White

nnnn nnnnn
nnnnn nnn
u ec
nnnnn nnn
n nnnn
nnn d c d c
_□□□ nnnnn
znnnnn n n cn n n
□nnnnn nnnnnn
□nnnnn nnnnn

10 landing boat
11
12
IB
19

□□□

Hawaiian island
WWII area
By birth
Ouido’a high

21 Greek dialect
22 Soap ingredient
23 Cry of pern
24 Novefcet
Begnoid
25 Benda
27 Potential
trouble source
28 Brink
29 Back and
32 Doctor (abbr )
3B Actress Balm
36 Chemical luffii

1
■
t

□nnnn
U D E ID D D

uu

1

38
40
42
44

I
Nigerian tribe
Awry
Collection of an­
imals
45 Old slave
45 Employs
48 Sum

50 Greek island
51 Mother of Peer
Oynt
93 Shame
54 Identifications

(HI
55 Hooswr State
(ebbr)

J

1

IS
is
■ ’a
11

It

14

Academy

M

(•bbr.)

52 Timed to bone M
5S Secred bird of
the Nile
50 From • single
perspective
(comp, wd |
57 See port m
Alaska
58 Colorado perk
59 811, Roman

17

M

DOW N
1 Plague
complaint
2 Youig bed

s it r

id IS IS t&gt;, N f* IM

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) A
situation that has been going
downhill can be rectified today.
It looks like you'll be enjoying
gains Instead of coming out on
the short end.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Your Judgment In Important
matters Is likely to be better
than your peers' today. Listen to
what they have to say. but make
the final decision yourself.

SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23 Dec.
21) If you hope to have an old
debt repaid, it may be necessary
for you to call the Indebted
person aside today to give him a
gentle reminder.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
191 An organization or group
you're affiliated with may ask
you to take on some added
responsibilities today. Render
your services but not your purse.

t h e y r e . a l l o ut

c f e a ^v s h w j t s

YOUR BIRTHDAY
services for you today must be you In the profit or loss column
FEBRUARY I I , I08S
given concise, clear-cut Instruc­ today. Don't take small details
Involve yourself this coming tions. Fuzzy directives will result for granted.
year In organizations affiliated In poor performances.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
with your work or career. The
CANCER (June 21 J u ly 22) Y o u h a v e t h e m e n t a l
contacts you make will turn out Someone you're Involved with wherewithal today to aolve
to be of enormous help.
today may suggest a switch In perplexing problems. Once you
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) plans. Be receptive, because his get a bright Idea, use it pro­
Regardless of how Interesting Ideas could be better than yours. mptly. Don't let It gather dust. .
your topics are. don't dominate
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Keep a
SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
the conversations with friends lid on Irritable family topics 21) Information from "Inaidera"
today or they may label you a today. Instead, direct your dis­
be taken with a grain of
"know-it-all." The Matchmaker cussions along convivial lines should
salt today. A portion of what
wheel reveals your compatibility where everyone Is In agreement. they say could have value, but
to all signs, as well as showing
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) the rest may be just hot air.
you what signs you are best This ts a good day to drop In on
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
suited to romantically. To get friends you haven't seen lately.
yours, mall 92 to Astro-Graph. Your visit will be warmly re­ 19) Involve yourself In activities
Box 489. Radio City Station. ceived. but take care not to today that you find pleasurable,
but don't spend your entire
New York. NY 10019.
overstay your welcome.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marrh 20)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) It'll week's allowance just to have
Ambitious objectives will have a be the little things that will put fun one day.
better chance of being fulfilled
today If you keep the knowledge
of what you are doing limited to
those directly Involved.
*
C E L E B R IT Y C IP H ER
C» s* h»t CfNt cupioyaeN i t cis t s *
By fstwous pm ps MM s*4 mam
ARIES (March 21 April 19) Be
lath wffw* mm
mc* * pf
•"*•*•* foday &gt;p u
an attentive listener today, even
by CONN* Vkif M H
when around a friend who often
bores you to tears. Hr could be
*'K D DQLIU a HICDQKV LKVS BP HBSCOJI
the purveyor of valuable In­
formation.
DB QWWIO MBRCUIWP DB UVBO OYSUI
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
When dlacuaalng a sertoua mat­
WKODWI OIOL UTBOU DVQD AM
ter today, keep the conversation
on track. If you get off on
HVOCOHDICU VQII ." - AO SIW K VI L O W .
%
Irrelevant aide Issues, nothing
will be accomplished.
U lftX S U S S P S M — .. S A S y S J S lS S M tp u i |*t|| S K X H * M « S U M S S O O I M o y«
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
SOLUTION
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I'M GOING TO FINE?
WHOEVER IB POlMGr IT.V I’M 00ING TO BITE HI

By J u m i Jacoby
Remember that old adage
"Eight ever, nine never?" It
refers to finessing against a
defender's queen when you have
eight cards In your combined
trump suit and playing for the
queen to drop when you have
nine. The adage may provide the
right percentage play In one suit
but. as always, the more impor­
tant consideration la to makr
your contract. All of which
brings us to the current deal.

danger Ilea for South?
If your answer ts that If East Is
allowed to gain the lead, he will
lead through South's K-J of
clubs, you have hit the nail right
on the head. The key to assuring
the contract ts to extract trumps
without letting East get on lead.

Accordingly declarer plays ace of
spades and leads a low spade
from dummy. When East follows
low, South flnesaes the 10.
When that holds, declarer draws
th e last tr u m p a n d playa
West opened the acc and diamonds, discarding taro of his
continued hearts against the clubs and making an overtrtek.
four-spade contract. When • Even If West had won the queen
contract looks easy to make, the of spades, the contract would be
correct approach for declarer la safe, since the defenders srould
to ask himself how he might go have no way of taking two club
act. Can you see where tne tricks.

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SUNDAY,
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B ( *D HCALTH MATTFRS

AT S T A T E F I N A L S
6 NEW CARS
AT N A T I O N A L S IN M I A M I

SANFORD W OMAN S CLUB
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�VIEW POINT
Evening Herald, Ssnfortf, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 10, IMS-1 D

pending A W e e k e n d A t 'John Polk' R eso rt
'e lco m e O p p o rtu n ity F o r In m a te s To S e r v e Tim e, K e e p T h e ir J o b s
By S a i u Loden
H erald S taff W riter
[You may like to spend your
rkends away from home, but
DU probably wouldn't want to
end them at the "John Polk
t," — as tt'a railed by some
also known as the Seminole
mtyjall.
i But for the 70 or so "weekenrra" who turn up at the jail to
re their time, this alternative
oT sentencing Is a welcome
tunlty which helps them
ilntaln their regular Jobs while
rklng off their sentences. Jail
director Robert Slckler

Those who actually spend their
entire weekend In Jail, and those
volunteers who sign In. but
rather than stay in Jail the entire
weekend, work during the day
on city and county public works
projects, then go home at night.
The latter group of weeken­
d e r s p a r t i c i p a t e s In t h e
Alternative Community Services
Program (ACSP.I To qualify for
the program they must have
served at least one weekend of
their sentence In the lockup.
(they must have been approved
by a Judge to be eligible to
volunteer for the program and
they have to be physically able
Weekend sentences, which are to do the work. Half or more of
tabllshed by the Judge In a th e w e e k e n d e r s u a u a l l y
fendant’s case, are for a participate In the ACSP. Slckler
me number of weekends said.
d are usually served from 7
“They wear their own clothes
tn. Friday through 7 p.m. and pack a lunch, because they
inday. But If It will help a cannot leave the Jobsite to go to
eekender keep his or her regu- a restaurant." Slckler said. Once
Job where he Is scheduled to the ACSP prisoners complete
k weekends, the "weekend" their day’s work they go home
Jail can be served during the and return to the Jail to report for
k. One purpose of this type of duty again the following morn­
ntence. Stckler said. Is to keep ing.
he Inmate In the workforce so
They work as unpaid laborers
&gt;e can support himself and his under the supervision of city and
amily, which might otherwise c o u n t y p u b l i c w o r k s
me a burden to taxpayers.
supervisors. Currently there are
Another major reason for the three crews, one working for
progam la to relieve overcrowd* Seminole County fleet mainte­
Ing in the Jail. On a typical day nance and two others working
the Seminole County Jail, de­ for Longwood and Altamonte
signed to house about 290. Springs.
overflows with a population that
Altamonte Springs provides
hovers around 300, with some the only regularly scheduled
having to sleep on the floor. ACSP Jobs for women weekend
Slckler. 66. said.
prisoners. Slckler said. They
The program has been In effect work In that city’s nursery or on
three years and Slckler said landscaping projects. Women
participants are "serving sen­ may sometimes be called on to
tences for almost any offense help clean up trash In waterways
you could name, except the most or on roadsides. Slckler said.
serious charges such as first
But as In the genera) popula­
degree felonies. Those assigned tion of the Jail, males outnumber
to weekends are those, a Judge the females, who usually make
has decided a weekend sentence up about five percent of the
would be appropriate for. This Is Inmates. Slckler said.
a way the Judges try to make the
While they’re on a public
punishment fit the crime. Many works project Seminole County
are on weekends Tor driving
ring Sheriff John Polk Is responsible
under the Influcn
Influence, suspended for the welfare of the prisoners
d r i v e r ' s J.lice
l c e nnse , v a r io u s ^ and lUbcyiare Injured or become
misdemeanors, petty theft. UlAp.thp.Job the county would
Others Tor "crimes without vio­ be responsible for thatr medical
lence — bad Checks, violation of care. Slckler said.
probation." he said.
Although il hasn’t happened
Weekends are when the Jail yet. a weekend inmate who
population peaks, with most suffers an Injury on the Job, or
arrests being made on Friday who suffers some type of Illness
night, when the weekenders are requiring emergency medical
scheduled to report In. Because care, and even a lengthy hospital
of this, Slckler said, weekenders stay, could cost the county a
are divided Into two groups. huge sum.

An Inmata (above) spends some time watenmg
while another Inmate (right photo) sits on mattr
cell during weekend stay at Seminole County J
Inmates have to sleep on the floor becaut
overcrowding, especially on weekends when
Inmates arrive.
That’s because, according to
J o h n S p o l s k l , s h e r i f f ’s
spokesman. If a weekend Inmate
has a heart attack, or suffers an
attack of appendicitis, or any
other major Illness while In
custody, the county would pay
all of that Inmate’s medical
.expenses. Inoludlng surgery.

;bmales needs.
% q g"**&amp; t f r g
But If a ACSP worker becomes
111 during his weekend lime at
home his care Is his own respon­
sibility. Slckler said. And If
weekend prisoners, either In or
out of Jail, have dental problems
while serving time they will have
to wait until Monday to seek

treatment on their own. because
Slckler said, dental care la not
available at all at the Jail on
weekends.
When dental care Is provided
for regular Inmates, he said. It Is
to relelve pain and that probably
means extraction of the trouble­
some tooth, unless the inmate
paid to see a prtvats dentist,
which could be arranged.
As fbr the other weekenders,
the ones who don’t volunteer for
or don’t qualify, because of a
J u d g e ' s r e s t r i c t i o n s , to
participate In the ACSP. they
dress out In Jail garb and become
a part of the Jail population for
their weekend behind bars.
They. Slckler said, arc treated

Just like all other inmates.
They. Slckler said, are usually
housed In a cell with trusty
prisoners who work outside the
Jail during the week. "The
w e e k e n d e r s a r e In effect
truatys.” he said. The outside
trustys and the Inside weeken­
ders uaually.never mix,with the
other Inmates. Slckler said. This
Is in an ef!biir(ppsriBee the
chance that drugs or other
contraband might be brought In
by one of these inmales who has
contact with the outside.
A 32-year-old Longwood man
s e n t e n c e d to s e r v e t h r e e
weekends In Jail for driving with
a suspended driver's license said
he spent his first weekend In the

watching television,
cards and chit-chatting
other prisoners learning
for what.
"Maybe to a point you're
aware you’re In Jail, but It
doesn't seem a whole lot dif­
ferent from being tn the hospital.
Everybody's tn there and you’re
basically locked in a ward
(cellblock), but It's not like
you're locked In a cubical.
"They leave our doors open all
night, at least In the section I'm
In. There are a couple of com­
munity bathrooms, and there’s
room to move around without
being overly cramped. That’s to

Getting Used To Low Gas Prices Is Going To Be Tough
Gasoline prices are plunging.
At my station, regular gasoline la
now offered for a good-old-days
price of 88 cents. The day of
three-digit prices fade In the
memory; all that remains Is a
stack of signs with the number
"1." sitting unused behind the
station.
Gasoline, relative to other
prices. Is now back to about
what la was BOPEC — before
OPEC. But while relative
line prices have returned to their
BOPEC levels, our consumption
has not.
Having learned to conserve,
we are having a hard time
responding to prices that tell us
It Is OK to g u ulc again.
We have. It seems, forgotten
how to use gas. how to use It
la vis hly , waatefully. g l u t ­
tonously. how to use It us we did

BOPEC. We need help.
Fortunately, gas guzzling sem­
inars are now being offered.
I signed up for a class in my
area. A young man with long,
rather greasy hair conducted the
first session. He wore Jeans and a
black leather Jacket.
He began by describing the
simpler virtues of a time when
there were no video games,
floppy disks, or home satellite
dishes. It was a time when are all
used lota of gas.
He then took us out to see a
shiny red object that looked
remarkably like a car. except
that It was bigger than a modem
house. It had huge fins lining the
tall section, and great gobs of
silver metal on Its Imposing
front. It had a hinny name that
sounded American.
We cautiously approached the

One young woman, bolder
the rest of us, marched
right up to the p assen g er
quarters, and stared wide-eyed
at the cavernous back seat.
“Ylkeal” she exclaimed. "This
backseat is big enough to ...
m Ex telly Whatt bock seats were
once used for." our leader InterJccted hastily.
He then showed us something
called a "trunk." This was a
huge vault In the rear of the car.
It appeared large enough to hold

the combined w ardrobes of
Michael J a c k s o n a n d Boy
George.
"This, class. Is the kind of
machine you'll need If you really
want to use gas." he said.
Once we had gotten over our
Initial shock, the machine began
to have a certain appeal. Our
Instructor suggested a test drive.
A dozen or so of us got In. I
was selected to drive. Our In­
structor took a position called
"shotgun.”
We practiced fast starts, gun­
ning the engine at Intersections,
an a erratic acceleration. In
almost no time, we were able to
get the gas gauge close to the
"em pty’T ev er
"Very
o
ery good," our
Instructor
told me proudly. Now pull In to
th a t service station on the
m cht.'

started poking around under the
hood.
"Is he going to steal some­
thing?" I asked nervously.
"He's checking the car —
that’s called 'service,'" my In­
structor explained.
I watched, dumbfounded, as
the man cleaned the windows
and then checked the air pre­
ssure In the tires. I swallowed
hard when he came to present
the bill.
It w as le s s th a n S 20. 1
breathed a sigh of relief, paid,
and headed off on a purposelesa
cruise around town.
Qettlng used to low gas prices
Is going to be tough, but I think
I'm getting the hang of IL
(T im othy Tregerthea web
cornea the opportunity to co m rpond with readers. WrtMtohtm
puyThen the man In the funny hat f/i care of the Evening HersW}.

"But that's a full service sta­
tion.” I objected.
"Don't worry, you can afford
It," he replied.
I pulled In. reluctantly. 1
couldn't remember the last Ume
I had been to a full service
pump.
A tall man wearing a Jump suit
and a funny hat walked up to
my wtndow. I asked the In­
structor what 1should do.
"flay ’fuienip.’" he said. See­
ing my confused expression, he
explained that "fUknip" was a
request to fill the tank.
I gave the order, hut (eared I'd
have to call my banker to get an
OK for such a large purchase. My
Instructor, however, reminded
me not to worry.
‘Gas la cheap.” he said hap-

by Garry Trudtflu

�.

Evening Herald
(IMF* 441-1**)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305 322-2611 or 831-0903
Sunday, February 10, IMS — 2D
Wayaa D. Dayla, FuSIHIwr
Tfcamai Oierdan*. Managing Cdlfar
Ma«vln Adktm, AdvartKing Dtractar
Home Delivery: Week. 01.10; Month. 04.75; 3 Month*.
014 25; 6 Month*. 027.00; Year. 051 00 Dy Mall: Week.
01.50; Month. 06 00; 3 Month*. 010 0 0 :6 Month*. 032 SO
Year. 000 00

DER Should Heed
City Of Sanford
Beginning Monday Sanford's consulting
engineers will try to convince a state
Department of Environmental Regulation
hearing officer that the city should be allowed
to continue dumping effluent from Its Poplar
Avenue sewer plant Into Lake Monroe.
The appeal will come during a three-day
hearing In Sanford before the DER hearing
officer at which several other experts are
expected to testify In the city's behalf. What
they'll be trying to convince that officer, Is
that the effluent the city's dumping Into the
lake la of a higher quality than the water
already In the lake. And. further, that If the
DER doesn't change Its position and con­
tin u e s to d em an d S an fo rd go to a
landspreading technique to dispose of Its
effluent, the cost would be astronomical and
would result In a monthly Increase to city
utility customers' bills of between 940 and
$60. That means those bills would be
somewhere between $60 and $80 a month,
based on the current average monthly bill of
$ 20.

If the Sanford city administration and Its
consulting engineers are to be believed, and
no one In our opinion has thus far produced
any evidence to the contrary, such a result
would be disastrous and grossly unnecessary.
What the city would rather do, according to
the city administration. Is to modernise and
expand the existing sewer plant, providing a
more extensive treatment of that sewage so
when the effluent goes Into the lake. It'll
further Improve the quality of the lake's
water.
Further, If the city can proceed on that
basis, the costs for plant Improvement and
expansion can be spread over several years so
that new customers hooking onto the system
will help pay for It and they, as well aa
existing customers, won't be hit with that
$40 o r $60 a month Increase. Additionally,
developers who currently pay a $1,000
Impact fe&amp; fur each new unit hooking onto the
system, would also contribute a significant
part of those expansion costa. If the city has
to go the landspreading route, It would have
to do so almost Immediately, having to buy
the necessary land and prepare that land for
the process. That landspreading technique
would cost the city between $38 million and
$43 m illion, according to engineers'
estimates.
The city says that Isn't necessary, and we
agree.
The problem between the city and DER
actually began about three years ago when
DER took water samples from the lake, which
at that time waa at Ita lowest level In 70 years,
and tested It. DER said the tests showed It
was highly polluted and that Sanford was
contributing to that pollution. It warned
Sanford It would not renew Ita operating
permit when It expired In October. 1084.
The city argued the lake was being polluted
from other sources and maintains today that
the effluent It's putting Into the lake Isn't
polluting It.
Sanford city commissioners are backing the
city administration and saying If DER doesn't
change Ita mind after these hearings and
c o n tin u es to dem and the city go to
Itndspreadlng, the city should take the
matter to the courts.
Such actions generally are costly and
time-consuming, but In this case, that's
probably what the dty should do.
Are you listening DER?

BERRYS WORLD

.

.

DICK WEST

The Right Time To Turn Off Your Senator
WASHINGTON (UPI) - C-SPAN In an au­
dience survey touching on the move to televise
Senate sessions reports enthusiastic response to
Its live telecasts of proceedings on the floor of
the House of Representatives.
The campaign to have the Senate admit tv
cameras also received a recent boost from the
Democratic leader. Sen. Robert Byrd of West
Vlrtngla. He warned that without television
coverage the Senate would become "the invisi­
ble half of Congress."
The implication here Is that senators can
expect high ratings If they let cameras Into their
chamber. That argument Impresses me as
rather specious.
Man and boy, I have spent a lot of time
observing senators In action, and I can attest
that a television audience Is likely to reach the
cut-off point long before the lawgivers do.
Very well, you say. All a cable television
viewer need do to change the channel Is push a
button. True enough. There Is, however, more
to watching senators than pushing buttons.
"Anticipation" Is the watchword. Truly

well-rounded viewers should learn to recognize
when the unimportant parts are coming and act
accohllngly. If they wait until they already are
suffused with dullness. It may be too late.
With a little practice, you can tell from the
opening line whether to stay tuned to a
senatorial speech for Its entirety.
Listen for the term "Mr. President." That may
be the Upoff. Remarks addressed to the Senate's
presiding officer are almost certain to be
non-essential.
I don't necessarily cite the following examples
as exemplary, but In these excerpts of typical
Senate oratory, the three dot* (..) mark the
place where my button clicked:
"Mr. President. 1 move to reconsider the vote
by which the motion to lay on the table the
motion to proceed to the consideration..."
"Mr. President, many of us question the need
of various expenditures In foreign..."
"Mr. President. I want to join the dlstlngulshed senator from...”
"Mr. President, there have been some ques­
tions raised In the administration about the

intent of the committee in proposing Its
substitute for..."
"Mr. President, several members of this body
have raised questions regarding..."
"Mr. President I will speak for only four or
five minutes to restate my support for..."
"Mr. President, when we debate whether to
terminate assistance to ...”
"Mr. President 1 might suggest this Is not the
place tp debate th e ..."
"Mr. President. I have concluding remarks. I
thank both aides for..."
“Mr. President. I wish to compliment my
distinguished colleague from..."
"Mr. President, at this time I am privileged to
associate myself with..."
"Mr. President, let me say that the Issue here
Is not related to ...”
"Mr. President, given the severe time con­
straints facing the Senate. I do not wish to ...”
"Mr. President. 1endorse everything th e ..."
"Mr. President. I have two purposes tn rising.
The first is..."

RU STY BROW N

SCIEN CE WORLD

Women
Want VDT
Answers

New Way
To Treat
Gallstones

A woman has a right to be worried
about an office affair.
I'm not thinking of love behind
the filing cablneta. but a more
common affairs the relationship
between a woman and her video
display terminal — or. VDT. as
thaw computerised typewriters are
called.
This high-tech tool for secretarial
and clerical work la revolutionizing
the workplace. Yet whether or not it
poses a threat to women — who are
the majority of the 10 million users
In this country —la still unknown.
New research links VDTs to heart
problems for the first time. A federal
JUUAN
study of female clerical telephone
workers In North Carolina showed
that those who worked all day at
VDTs have twice aa much angina
n aa other working women.
we Included women aged 30 to
30. Such chest pains are often the
The theme of this year's Black
first sign of heart problems.
History Month Is the black family.
Dr. Suzanne Haynes, chief of But because Feb. 1 was the 25th
medical statistics for the National anniversary of the beginning of the
Center for Health Statistics In student sit-in movement In the
Hyattsvtlle. Md.. said-findings also South, much of this year’s re­
showed that women who worked at miniscences will focus on yester­
VDTs all day reported more eye day's demonstrations and pro tests.
strain, headaches and back pain, are
Recalling the past should help set
well as Increased fatigue and In- the record straight. Non-vlolent
uemonstratlona — drawing Inspira­
Despite numerous tests shearing tion from the Montgomery bus
only non-haxardous. low-level radia­ boycott (whose 30th anniversary
tion from VDTs (leas than a TV set. will be Dec. 1) — Integrated
for example), there have been Southern lunch counters, libraries,
puzzling, scattered reports of mis­ movie theaters and other public
carriages and birth defects among places, and forced Congress to pass
women workers.
and President Johnson to sign the
In response to this, the National Civil Rights Act of 1064.
Institute for Occupational Health
That history lesson Is more than
an d S afety h a s au th o ris ed a an academic exercise. Part of to­
three-year study of the reproductive day's social debate centers on
health of 1.500 non-management whether yesterday's solutions can
working women, users and non- anawer t o d a y ' s problems, or
users of VDTs, to detect any signifi­ w h e t h e r new m e t h o d s m u s t
cant difference In spontaneous supersede outmoded ones. Seeing
abortions and birth defects.
the past wrongly robs this genera­
It also should be noted that claims tion of the opportunity to replicate
for w orkers' com pensation for old victories, when all that may be
VDT-related Injuries appear to be on required la minor retooling.
the rise, according to an article In
For a case In point, examine the
the Nov. 12 Issue of Legal Times.
Free South Africa Movement.
.' All these findings will no doubt
Bom on Thanksgiving eve, the
boost the case for VDT regulatory aeries of a m sta and demonstrations
bills already introduced In at leaat — largely at the South African
15 states.
Embassy in Washington but also at
Such legislation la an attempt to South African counaular offices In
regulate VDT uae by calling for a 10 other cities — has never Involved
variety of precautions. Including more than a few hundred people at
periodic rest breaks and eye exams a time.
for users, periodic Inspection and
The number arrested per day has
radiation testing, job alternatives for never climbed past 50, and the
pregnant women and-or protective movement has never had a massive
demonstration equal to even oneSo, no one should be surprised third the size of the protests that
that women want answers to ques­ were common during the Southern
ctvtl-rlghta movement 20 years ago.
tions about VDTs.

By P al ta d Proas In tern atio n al
By Injecting a type of liquid ether
into the gall Madder doctors at the
Mayo Clinic may have solved the
problem of removing gallstones
without surgery.
Many chemical* have been used
to dlaolve the painful stones, but tn
the past they all either took too long
or resulted in dangerous side ef­
fect*.
After Injecting methyl tert-butyl
ethe r Into dogs with h u m a n
gallstones placed tn thetr gall blad­
ders doctors attempted the tech­
nique on humans and found the
stones dissolved within four to 16
hours.
Thetr results were published tn
the New England Journal of Medi­
cine.

Learning From Past

S

Yet within three weeks of the first
arrests — and without a charismatic
leader like Martin Luther King —
the frozen parts of the American
foreign-policy apparatus had begun
to move. Within a month, the white
supremacist government of South
Africa Itself had shown It could be
affected by protests here.
The first signs of the effect of the
movement came from a group of
conservative Republican House
members, who told South African
Ambassador Bernard O. Fourle,
they would support sanctions
against his country unless Ita rigid
system of racial separation was
modified. Next, South African Pres­
ident P.W. Botha admitted what
protesters had charged all along;
The Reagan administration's policy
of "constructive engagement" — of
soft-pedaling criticism of South
Africa In hopes of some moderation
of apartheid — had absolutely no
effect on his government
The release of six »• 13 South
African labor leaders. L. a had been
arrested and held without charges,
followed the first protests here.
Then President Reagan issued the
strongest anti-apartheid statement
of his political life. The chairmen of
the Senate Foreign R elations
Committee and the Senate aubcommltee on Africa also expressed
their displeasure with the Pretoria
regime.
Finally. Botha announced at the
end of January that his government
waa prepared to offer "a aay at
higher levels" to urban blacks In
South Africa, who today arc vote leas
non-citizens, prevented from own­
ing property or freely traveling tn
thetr own country.

Thanks to road salt, the highway*
are leas slippery. But because of
road chemical runoff. Lake Ontario
la saltier and its ecology la chang­
ing. according to a biologist at the
State University of New York Col­
lege at Brockport.
A c c o r d i n g to J o a e p h
Markarcwlcz, Oswego Harbor on
Lake Ontario In New York is now
home to microscopic, salt-tolerant
plants that are not usually found tn
the lake.
The phytoplankton may have
entered the lake with bilge water
from ocean-going ships traveling
t h r o u g h the la k e s, said
Markarcwlcz.
Because of changes ln the lake's
sodium chloride levels, these new
arrivals survive better than native
freshwater competitors.
The harbor water Is now too salty
to drink or to use tn industrial
processing, said Markarcwlcz. who
analyzed water samples aa part of
an EPA-funded project.
Solid matter comes tn two forma.
It la believed, but now scientists aay
they've found what appears to be a
third.
The new form, found tn alumi­
num manxanear alloy. Is baaed an a
for atoms inside a solid and la called
"q u asi-cry stals." U niversity of
Pennsylvania scientists said.
The previously known forms a n
crystal, where atoma Us In repetitive
patterns, and amorphous, tn which
atom arrangem ents are jumbled.
In quasi-crystal
are arranged on parallel ________
with crystals — but nnHhe crystals,
the planes are not spaced tn a
regular pattern.

JA CK ANDERSON

Pacification Tried In El Salvador
o

•

r ‘

o

•

•

.
s
♦■■•••**••&lt;
'
f 9i * f\
" f j w u a --* *«««
have a n te s &lt; **'
**-i__ uvng
iio w if f

WASHINGTON — Can soccer
balls and subtle threats succeed
where military might and death
squads have failed to win the hearts
a n d m i n d s of El S a l v a d o r ' s
peasants?
The government of President Joee
Napoleon Duarte evidently thinks
It's worth a try.
My reporter Jon Lee Anderson
accompanied a Salvadoran arm y
unit on a helicopter "drop-In" on a
village deep In territory under the
Influence of leftist guerrillas.
The commander of this airborne
p ro p ag an d a mission waa Col.
Domingo M onterroaa. who waa
killed not long after when hla
gunahip was downed.
The high point of Monterroea'a
visit — as Car aa the younger
villagers were concerned, at Mm —
sms when ho handed out y an k in g
new. red-and-black-chacksred
S S i i S f c aoccer^balfe ^to th e

that*they had

colonel by way of a political officer
In th e U .8. E m bassy In S an
Salvador.
Monteneea had been guaranteed
ad attentive audience for h is
psychological warfare experiment,
An advance party of soldiers had
been sent In to the Jungle hilltop tho
day before and shooed away the
rebel sm ttneis pooled outside the
village In a b rief exchange of
gunfire.
T he t h r u s t of th e c o lo n e l's
msaaage to the villagers was that
the army wanted their support — or
else.
“Tell me I'm not lying." he
shouted
true what I
have been I
__,
k j f ^ wcrowd
a n i r f ashouted
f t w u i l n tl
Voices •an
In t tho
rnafirmillpn
*1 knew h ." cried Montsnoan.
“But even as. I haven 't cofisd on tho
t ^ f a r t ^ ta , bam b ^here, nor the

brothers." he shouted. "We are
giving our blood to the earth. But
It's up to you to make the earth
produce."
Montcrrosa turned the podium
over to a female "aodal worker”
and a maht peychnln0 s t. members
of a "pay-ops" team, who expanded
an his theme of cooperation botween vMag* and army.
By the thne the morafcg apoeeheo
closed with a three-minute prayer,
the crowd waa aoM y In the coion et 's p o ck et. S ev eral women
approached Monterroaa and began
whispering to hhn. He stationed
himself at the podium - a table set
.
_
t h i f l f f l to
I n denounce.
t i n m a i m r a come
M M and
ICWi ten
to ll
things
me and wo wM Investigate what you
n r ."
T he co lo n el g o t m ore th a n
wkn^ in r, W uhla aajfrour^a^w cta

to a

hiding place w here th e "su b veralvoa" had burled autom atic
weapons
. Monte trues teamed his psy-ops
basics In Tehran. In 197$ he was
one of ab o u t 20 high-ranking
Saivsdoran army officers who toon
th e t w o - m o n t h c o u r s e . H la
rtasamotia included es-MtU. !
a rts d'Aubulaoon, the. fM **
politician, and C ot R
chief of staff of the
,
“ “‘• P " . B***d_Pu*
jjjJ J m S E e ih r a ih Z t 12 ^ JJT

-wra. ...“as.. ■
&gt;
.

U M tM tfl*

ttt

MM*

th fl

B R W E 19

1

IV*

Did the cotanel think hla day's
d in t to m Mc nar the vMaffws had

vttfctl*

I'ttfc q rr

�OPINION
Growing

Americans Don't Need Tax Reform
By C harles D. V an Baton
Are we undertaxed? There are cer­
tainly a lot of media " movers and
shakers" who seem to think wo. Some
of them are even conservatives (the
young Old Tory. George Will, cornea to
mind). After all. America has experi­
enced 25 federal deficits over the past
26 years. And Mr. Stockman of OMB
tells us there are bigger and better ones
facing us down the road. Surely we are
undertaxed.
It's abundantly clear that when some
politicians talk about deficits and jump
on the bandwagon of the current vogue
In fiscal policy "tax reform" they have
tax increases In mind. Take, for
example, a recently released study on
corporate tax rates. According to this
report, accelerated depreciation and the
investment tax credit have resulted In
corporations* accounting for only 6.2
percent or total federal tax receipts In
1983.
The two liberal Democrats who*

released the report. Representatives
Donald Pease of Ohio and Byron
Dorgan of North Dakota. Insist that
their report offers clear evidence that
our tax system Is ‘'riddled with favors,
preferences and gimmicks.'* Obviously
for these folks tax reform must result In
bigger tax revenues from Incorporated
firms or It Isn't tax reform.
Americans are far from being un­
dertaxed. If anything. Americana have
been overtaxed.
Look at the record. Gross National
Product (the annual dollar measure of
final output of goods and services) grew
at a compound annual average rate or
9.9 percent from 1970 through 1980.
Pretty good, but very deceptive. When
adjusted for Inflation — which averaged
9.3 percent per year over the decade —
GNP grew at a compound annual
average rate of only one percent. That's
the mark of a stagnant economy.
But forget ONP. There's a better

m easure — national Income (the
measure of Income actually earned In
producing each year's output — the
sum of wage and salary Income.
Income from rent. Interest Income on
capital, and corporate gross profit —
excluding transfer payments and sub­
sidies which do not reflect actual
production). National Income, unad­
justed for Inflation, grew at a com­
pound annual average rate of 10.1
percent during the decade of the
1970'a. But real (l.e. Inflation and
adjusted) national Income grew at a
compound annual average rate of less
than one percent (In fact, growth was
negative during three years of the
decade). The U S. economy was not
healthy. Indeed It was virtually at a
standstill throughout the 1970‘s.
But federal revenues and expen­
ditures rolled forward like a Michigan
December cold front. While the work­
ing economy was struggling Just to

stand still, federal revenues were
growing at an 11.2 percent compound
annual average rate. Even during
calendar year 1980 when dollar na­
tional Income was rising only 7.6
percent and real national Income was a
negative S.l percent, federal receipts
Increased nearly 10 percent.
Undertaxed? No. we're not undertax­
ed. we’re over-spent. It's time to turn
the table. Most of those who In 1981
Insisted that spending cuts should
precede tax cuts are still there. Now
before all this talk about the need for
tax reform to enlarge the tax base turns
Into what many In politic* really want
— a tax Income which will feed more
spending — the president must Insist
that spending cuts should precede tax
reform. We don't need tax reform, we
need spending reform.
(Van Eaton Is Johns-ManvJJJc Professor
o f Economics at Hillsdale College.
Michigan.)

OUR READERS WRITE
Tribute A Success

Tree Rule Unneeded

We of the Afro-American Society of
Seminole Community College extend
sincere appreciation for the excellent
coverage of Heritage Jubilee, an
evening of culture In tribute to Miss
Eunice I. Wilson.
Your support helped to generate the
overwhelming success for which this
annual civic and cultural event con­
tinues to be recognised.
Stephen C. Wright
Annye L. Refoe

Because some developer* go too far
In cleaning land, the City commission.
Garden Club and Women's Club
Intend to punish and enforce their will
on all Sanford homeowners by re­
quiring them to ask for permission to
remove trees.
If a person Is old enough and
Intelligent enough to own their own
home, they don't need Big Brother
telling them how to landscape their
yards

A Fact Of Life

Sanford la an old town and anyone
can see there Is an abundance of trees
In people's yards. Homeowners are
not going lo cut down good trees for
several reasons. The simple matter of
coat, It would reduce their property
value, and loaa of shade would make
their homes hotter and Increase cool­
ing coats.
One ridiculous provision of the law
requires permission to cut down
certan weed trees 3 feet tall. So the
next time yuu want to clean up your
yard have your wallet ready.
Craig Tipple
Sanford

The editorial “Evidence Enough"
was a "Block Buster" and shows that
there Is one of "The Viceroy (Think­
ing) Breed" left.
It has been known since 365 B.C.
that. “It la a fact of life, that neither
time nor circumstance will alter, that
those of greater power will rule over
those of leaser power." This fact Is
why this nation must unliateraly
guarantee Its own safety and thereby
• SORRY Mac. m e cow s WILL RAVETO 6 0 '
the Freedom of Mankind, for this
Republic Is the last best hope for that
freedom.
Picking Vegetables Beats Jogging Any Day
It should be noted that the "Salt
T a l k s " stem from S ta te Dept.
Is jogging a waste of energy?
highest decibel.
Publication 7277 which says. In
In my opinion it Is. And an 1 Almost any farm owner would give
effect: NO ARMY. NO NAVY. NO AIR expensive one.
permission to glean what you could,
FORCE. AND TURN OUR SECURITY
before the vegetables are plowed
In
the
first
place.
If
you
want
to
be
OVER TO THE U.N.. Senator Joseph one of the smart set. special attire under. What you could bring home
C. Clark, one of the organisers of the must be worn. The price range for would cut down on the grocery bill.
Members of Congress for Peace shoes alone runs between 830 and That would please Dad. and your
through law, said on the Senate Floor.
650. A pair of tennis shoe* would mother would be pleased to have fresh
This document (7277) la the fixed classify you as one of the have-nots.
vegetables to serve to her family.
and determined policy of the Execu­
If you wake up sore and stiff the
Can you think of better exercise next morning, you will then know
tive Arm of the U.S. Govt., this led to,
In the 16lh General Assembly of the than carrying an empty hamper to the that muscles got a workout that never
United Nations, a Declaration of end of long field rows and gleaning were used when jogging.
complete and total Disarmament In a your way back to the truck? Of
Kathryn Stagner
Peaceful World, then came the Salt course. It would be no fun to do this
Sanford
Talks with the end result that they alone, but In a group, like washing
have made of the U.8. a sitting duck cars to raise money to pay for the
for a Nuclear First Strike, until band's uniforms. It could be fun. And
mw
President Reagan's efforts to restore the bending, squatting and reaching
our defense capabilities. It should be would exercise muscles that jogging
la tte r* to
noted that Rep. Lea Asptn (Dem. Wia.) doesn't use.
th
#
*41
ta
r.
They
m
u
st
b* signed
Of course. If It takes music to
la doing all in his power to abrogate
rltk m ailin g a d d re ss and If
activate
you
muscle*,
someone
of
Reagana efforts.
n a k e r . W* r*5.B. "Jim " Crowe your group could bring along a
i th e rig h t te ed it.
Sanford battery AM-FM radio and turn It to Its

PI

»

*/ ' -

Writ#

Speer Was Right
Your Wednesday Jan. 23 headline
"Protruding Planters Prompt Gripes"
and Ita accompanying story are only a
portent of thing* lo cutnc. The sad fact
olnted out by the story Is that until
undreds of thousands of tax dollars
have been squandered on such a
monstrosity, the bulk of the tax
paying public does not become aware
of what has been done to them.
This underscores again the old
saying "there are none so blind as
those who will not see” .
It Is a credit to the outstanding
efforts of attorney George A. Speer, Jr.
that he did foresee the ultimate
outcome, and devoted his best efforts
In trying lo save the taxpayer* and
the Sanford public from It.
A. Edwin Shin hotter
Sanford

E

O lder
U.&amp;Rrp.

New Laws
Affecting
The Elderly
READERS. I WAS asked in an earlier
column to Inform you of major legisla­
tion adopted In the BBlh Congress
affecting the elderly. Here are the
measqrea enacted In the areas of
employment and training and social
service*.
Vocational Education: Changes In
legislation (1) acknowledge the shifts In
population toward older workers and
special needs of this group by
earmarking 20.5 percent of state grants
for training and retraining adults.
Including single parents and home­
makers: (2) require states to assign at
least one employee full-time to ad­
minister programs to serve women: and
|3) target persons 55 years and older for
a 835 million authorisation for training
and employment development.
Community Service Employment: A
new measure appropriates 8325 million
Tor the Senior Community Service
Employment Program. Increasing the
number of positions by about 1.000
over the current funding.
Adult Education: Recently passed
law (1) extends through 1998 grants to
states for adult-education programs to
teach Individuals basic literacy skills:
(2) authorises 672 million through
1989 for the Women's Educational
Equity Act to support projects pro­
moting equitable treatment of women
In education.
Older American Volunteer Program:
The new law authorises for three years
the Older American Volunteer Protms. Including Foster Grandparents,
ntor Companions and Retired Senior
Volunteer Program (RSVP).
Older Americana Act Amendments:
Last year's changes (1) authorise 84
billion over three years for nutrition
and social-service programs for the
aged: and (2) place new emphasis on
meeting the needs of minorities, aiding
elderly victim* of violence and abuse,
and serving victims of Alxhelmer's
disease and their families.
Elder Abuse Services: The 98th
Congress voted to (1) establish a
national clearinghouse on family vio­
lence to conduct research and dissemi­
nate Information on the problem or
elder abuse; (2) provide grants to the
states for local community-based orga­
nisations to treat and prevent family
violence. Including elder abuse, and |3)
prohibit age discrimination In the use
of family violence funds to ensure that
the elderly are not turned away from
shelters because of their age.
If you have a question for Claude
Pepper, please send It to "Ask Claude
Pepper. Room 7)5, House Office
Building Annex I. Washington, D.C.,
20515. Volume o f m all preventa
personal replies.
REP. CLAUDE PEPPER Is th e
chairman o f the health subcommittee
of the House Select Committee on
Aging.

E

*

What Newspapers A cross The Nation A re Saying

It's Time For Restructuring U.S. Tax System
8y Ualted Praee tatematlenal
The B oats* O lsho
The tim e has come for restructuring the
American tax system. President Reagan la In a
historically unique position for making that
change: he owes It to the country to spend some
of hla enormous political capital on behalf of the
effort.
Without his active support, change will be
difficult to achieve. Without change. It wlU be
even mors difficult to undertake the revenue-

Because "the Western world has not tried to
bring pressure on the Soviets to withdraw."
Humphrey pointed out, they have shown no signs
of doing so.
It la bitterly ironic that a conservative senator
m ust serve aa the conscience of a conservative
adm inistration ... on the Issue of the impending
famine in Afghanistan resulting from what
Humphrey described aa the "deliberate efforts by
the Soviets to destroy agriculture outside the
areas they control.**

to the government sriU riae....
In the job m arket ... Businesses could well
Introduce emeriti programs in which people
continue to work, but not at such stressful levels
of command aa they once held.
In the fields of marketing, transportation, and
housing, there *riU be change*.... The graying of
America will bring m any changes, and it la not
too early to atari getting ready for them,
lie h m a n d rva.) Ttm ea-D issatsh
In a landmark speech nearly two y ean ago.
President Reagan condemned the long-held
strategic doctrine of Mutual Assured Destruction
and called upon scientists to come up with the

Moyaffum's stint at that post during the Ford
ad m in letratlo n h as any rep resen tativ e so
fervently Insisted that Uw nation assert its

p-,-— — r
i„ 1942
6«snvko t

coordinated, well-financed and well-equipped
with sophisticated bomba....
The Kremlin wanted to keep its missiles In
place but deny NATO the ability to respond In
kind. The Soviet machinations were thwarted
when the members of NATO stood firm, despite
demonstrations In cltiea throughout Western
Europe.
Having lost that struggle, the Soviets may be
attempting to achieve the same ends by tenoriet
tactics. Without question, something or someone
is guiding the terrorist activity...
When different groups In five pat tons ... begin
attacking the same targets w ith a pknttfhl supply

�D anger:
A g e n ts P ro d u ce d By E x e rc is e M a y C a u se C a n ce r
By L idia W u e v le i
UPI Science W riter
BERKELEY. Calif. (UPI) - Rcwarrhrn* have
found in teal* on animals that physical exercise
generates massive bursts of agents that have
been linked to cancer and aging.
Rats and guinea pigs running on tiny treadmills
suffered Immediate cell and tissue damage If they
were deficient In vitamin E or had Ingested too
little or too much vitamin C. the researchers said.
The findings were reported Friday and Satur­
day at an International' meeting on cancer
sponsored by the University of California and the
National Foundation for Cancer Research.
'T h e more are research, the more evident It
becomes that risk is present in everything and
that In the end it will come to a question of
tradeoffs." said Dr. Lester Packer, professor of
physiology and anatomy and director of the
Membrane Bioenergetics Group at the University
of California at Berkeley.
"Exercise may be good for shaping up the
cardiovascular system and trimming potentially
deadly body fat — but we have evidence It may

Books

chemicals, which are normally present In the
body, air and food but which are mass-produced
and run amok during Jogging, jumping and other
vigorous activity.
These tiny culprits, called free radicals, have
been attracting a great deal of attention recently
among cancer researchers and were the focus of
the weekend meeting at Berkeley.
"A free radical Is a molecule which has an
unpaired electron and la. therefore, extremely
reactive and tries to pair with other molecules.”
said Dr. Carmla Borek. professor of pathology and
radiology at Columbia University's College of
Physicians and Surgeons In New York.
In their search for partners, the free radicals
can damage the genetic material. DNA.
membranes, proteins and inactivate or disrupt
the functions of celts.
“One of the types of damage Induced by free
radicals probably leads to some change that
either by Itself or in combination with other
factors will result in cancer,** Borek said. "Our
research alms to find out Just how this happens."
Although used In normal body metabolism to
generate energy and found to possess some
anti-cancer properties, "free radicals are a
taro-edged sword, which becomes dangerous

when It is out of control." Packer said.
While normally the body takes In oxygen to
produce water and energy, he said, "this process
sometimes slips, and an extra electron Is added,
creating oxygen radicals, which when un­
controlled may contribute to aging and cancer."
Packer and his associates have been studying
rats and guinea pigs that run at 1 mph for up to
two hours a day.
The researchers discovered that during exercise
oxygen radicals are generated In several ways.
"A type of fat tissue called brown adapose —
shown to play a role In cancer formation —
shrinks during exercise. Later, as the tissue goes
bock out again, the process generates oxygen
radicals," Packer said.
"Some Ischemia, or cutting off of the blood
supply to the muscle, occurs during exercise.
When the oxygen returns, oxygen radicals are
produced in a burst that's too great for the body's
defenses to prevent some permanent damage
from occurring."
Oxygen radicals also can be produced when
iron — normally packed safely away inside the
hemoglobin protein in the red blood cells - is
dislodged.
"Each of these steps." Packer said, jumping on

0

Author Puts Pizzazz
In 'If Tomorrow Con
There are also questions for the
com m unity, especially regarding the
growing split between the small portion
of the community that has attained the
fruits of desegregation and the growing
black underclass. There also Is the
question of the future of the black church
Itself — where the now-beleaguered black
colleges provide a negative portent —
facing the pressures of integration and
the suggestion that in a "color blind"
aodety there is no need for Its existence.

I f t o m o r r o w C s a i s s . b y Sidney
Sheldon. (Morrow. 418 pp., 817.09).
. Over the years. Sidney Sheldon's name
has become synonymous with sexy and
scandalous tales.
Hla newest novel won't disappoint his
fans and It may even sway a few critics
for It Introduces his most Intriguing
heroine and most imaginative plot. "If
Tomorrow Comes” la sexy and alluring,
seducing readers through the * of* a
cutting

his left foot, "crushes 1 million red blood cells,
releasing the Iron within.
"When the Iron Is released, my hunch is It gets
into body fluids and comes In contact with
vitamin C. which can donate an extra electron —
and baml D angerous oxygen radicals are
created.”
•
In addition, the scientists found vitamin C. In
either too low or too high doses, "greatly
decreased the animal's ability to run and caused
cellular damage.” Packer said. "We are working
now to determine what Just right is."
As for vitamin E. the Berkeley and Columbia
studies showed the body can't seem to get
enough during exercise.
"We found vitamin E is used up quickly In
exercise," Packer said. "When there was a
deficiency, the animals did not live as long, could
run only half as long as animals getting high
doses, and the many tests we took detected
damage .at the cellular level, such aa loss of
energy generation.”
This spring. Packer and his team will begin
human studies, placing volunteers on different
vitamin regimens and analyzing their blood and
urine before and after exercise to determine any
damage.

Superintendent's
Suicide Blam ed
On Petty Politics
■ pM lhs C asey
CLEVELAND (UPI) — Dr.
Frederick D. Holliday tackled the
many problems of Cleveland's
school district with a cool determination that never betrayed
the turmoil that boiled within
him.
His suicide a couple of weeks
ago stunned the city, and
particularly so because he wrote
in a suicide note that "petty"
school board politics had made
his Job "meaningless."
The Harvard-educated Holllday was hired 2Vk years ago as
Cleveland's schools superln-

PERSPECTIVE

While vaguely rem iniscent of his earlier
“Rage of Angels.” in which the heroine
lawyer la set up by the mob but manages
to clear her name. Sheldon keeps hla
a»d sentenced to IB years I t th e
Louisiana State Prison for women. She
lives for the tomorrow and escape that
will allow her to get revenge on the crime
lords who put her there and who drove
her mother to suicide.
Sheldon's depiction of Tracy's time In
prison is graphic, delving into Inmate
rape and the like. When the inevitable
pardon comes, Tracy soon teams that
despite her Innocence, the world will
never view her as guiltless.
The ingenious ways Tracy metes out
her revenge give the plot some merit.
Sheldon sets up some plausible situations
that, while highly unlikely, put pizzazz
Into the story.
Tracy eventually embarks-on a career
as an international thief who uses her
intelligence and beauty as weapons. No
art treasure Is theft-proof in her mind.
For example, she procures an orglnal
Goya hanging in M adrid's Prado by
painting over the original signature with
that of an Imposter's and then signing the
m aster's name atop that. When museum
oOlctala check the painting and discover
It to be an excellent ‘'fak e.” th e
masterpiece la auctioned off to a dis­
guised Tracy. She. in turn, prepares to
hand It over to a private collector for a
tidy sum.
What she doesn't expect to encounter is
a man whose past Is aa colorful as hers.
Jeff Stevens Intercepts her messenger
and collects the foe for himself. When she
finally opto to team up with Stevens, a
m an ana describes as “a scoundrel but an
ta g g in g one." the sparks fly.

has sickened me." he wrote In
the note. Intended as an open
letter to the city. "The events of
the past few weeks makes my
reporting to work meaningless."
Then he took his revolver to
the high school's mock control
tower where he liked to listen to
air traflic controllers from the
nearby municipal airport guide
pilots.
Holliday pressed the muzzle of
the revolver to his chest, pulled
the trigger, walked u few steps
down the stairs and collapsed in
the stairwell.

Two days later, on Monday, a
student found Holliday on the
steps.
Officials discovered the note In
Barbara Wood works this premise as
the basis for "Vital Signs.” the story of
three medical school roommates who
eventually go on to become pioneers in
their respective fields of medicine.
The author of "Dotnlna.” a historical
novel about one of the first women
doctors In America. Wood brings to her
latest work some of the same fascinating
medical detail. The majority of the book,
however, revolves around the drama of
the doctors' personal Uvea. Suffice it to
say th at all are successful but unfulfilled.
As in her previous novel. Wood interJecto a suitable amount of bittersweet

l™
frightened by problems.
The following year for the first
time In 13 years Cleveland
voters approved a tax increase to
pull their beleaguered school
system out of bankruptcy.
But things started to cave In
the following year.
,
.
.
Some board members complained that Holliday. 58. was
secretive and too dose to board
President Ted Bonds, who dellverrd the four-vote majority to
approve Holliday's policies.

Within hours Clevelanders
were stunned.
^
**&gt;B note. with Its attacks on
Cleveland's politics, prompted
Public officials to search their
aouls. "Use this event to rid
yourselves of petty politics,
racial politics, greed, hate and
corruption. This city deserves
better." the note said,
_
.
„
, „
Cuyahoga County Commls•lonef Ttni H*4*n “ W the words
w en
100 accurate. "In this
town- ^ * 7 attack you personally
and Impugn your motives. There
C o n t e n t i o u s I s s u e s . Is a meaness In politics here.” he
particularly the aale of the ad- said. "What bothers you Is that

Best Sellers
2. So Long. And Thanks For All The
Fish —Douglas Adams
3. The Life and Hard Times of Heidi
Abromowttz —Jo an Rivers
4. ” ... And Ladles of the Club” - Helen
Hooven Santmeyr
5. The Sicflun — Mario Puzo
.
6. The Finishing School —Oall Godwin
7. White Noise - Don DehUo
8. Life Its Ownaelf—Dan Jenkins
9. The Talism an - Stephen King and
Peter Straub
10. Jitterbug Petflune—Tom Robbtna

The pressures tn Cleveland
ere intense, but Holliday had
sen the principal of a rough
orth Philadelphia high school
»d the superintendent In York.
l . and Plainfield. N J.. where
man. He was worried (hat his
contract would not be renewed."
Tegreene said.
Tegreene assured the superlntendent that cajoling had won
Holliday the four votes he
needed for a one-year extension,

by C. Brie Lincoln.
1.. 817.98).
cam paign for the

h

?g reg atio n and hard budget
^edekm ajust as in Cleveland.
H olliday tackled problem s
head-on without much outward
emotion — even h ia w ife's
»uicide in 1979. Ethel was suffertng from terminal cancer and

S E K sa ssR a s—

denim Jacket and oporto shirt.
“He waa boiling with turmoil
taped a public affairs program at 00 the inaide." said former York
• radio station and then went to achool board member Helen E.
em pty Aviation High with a .367 R ohrtsugh. "but he waa a pillar

Weekend In Jail
serve a full year of weekends in
Jail and som e pre-sentcnced
status prisoners also serve
weekends in Jail, at the dkcretloo of a Judge. But they are not

rum
alios
po |
mod
pro*

Aviation High was Holliday'a Another friend. Plainfield
metuary. a'p lace to shod the guptertntendsot Oliver W. Lanzasa heaped on him at Ida eaeter. said Holliday w as a

j 'Tsh erJudge
, i swantsr them
* •to ;pretr
s
spend the time in JaU. so they ’ll
get a good idea what it's like, so
when they present the Judge
with a snggratod sentence program th eyll know what they're

they
lag I
requ
week
Th

Holliday closed his suicide

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                    <text>M arkle N am ed Archbishop
Sanford resident Bishop Dlsmas Markle of the Eastern Or­
th od o x C ath olic Church In
Am erica will be Installed aa
m e tro p o lita n arch bish op In
services 10 a.m. Sunday at the
Cathedral o f St. John's In Fern
Park.
T h e archbishop-elect, w ho
Uvea on Miller Road In Sanford
with his wife. Teresa, and sons.
Nicholas. 5. and David 2. said he

will be m oving the the church's
headquarters here.
T h e r e tir in g m etrop olita n
a rc h b is h o p . John A d a ir o f
Oklahoma. Bishop Mark Schultz
o f Kentucky. Bishop Markle and
IS priests from around the
country attend a meeting o f the
Holy Synod Saturday afternoon
2-6 p.m. at the Holiday Inn on
Lake Monroe. Sanford.
A dinner wtll be held at St.

John's Sunday following the
service.
Bishop Markle attended St.
Francis College. Ohio University,
and Three Hierarchs Seminary.
He founded the Our Lady Queen
of Peace Church In Sanford eight
years ago and served as Its
pastor until he was ordained a
bishop two years ago. Since then
he has made his headquarters at
St.John's. —J a a a Casse lb e rry

Fracas In
Korea
As Exile
Returns
SEOUL. South Korea (UPI) South Korean opposition leader
Kim Dae Jung was punched and
kicked today by police and then
dragged away from a delegation
o f U.S. officials who escorted
him home from two years of
self-exile In the United States. At
least four Americana said they
were roughed up In the melee.
Shortly after stepping off an
airplane that carried him from
Tokyo to Seoul's Klmpo airport,
the 59-year-old Kim was forced
onto a minibus filled with securi­
ty guards and taken to his
h e a v ily g u a r d e d h o m e In
western Seoul.
Meeting reporters there later.
Kim said he was not harmed but
"a n g r y " that authorities had
"used violence against m e." Kim
said he was pushed and shoved
and "violently forced Into an
elevator "
During the fracas. Robert
W hite, the form er U.S. am ­
bassador to El Salvador, was
thrown to the ground and former
S ta te D e p a rtm e n t o ffic ia l
Patricia Derian was repeatedly
struck as police dragged Kim
from the entourage. W hite said.
"W e weren't Just manhandled.
W e weren't Just pushed." aald
Derian. who said she was "c o v ­
e r e d w ith b la c k a n d blu e
m arks."
"B ob White was thrown to the
ground. I was hit In the upper
part of my body. It was a very
carefully orchestrated effort to
hurt us, to Intimidate us. but
mostly to separate us from Mr.
K im ." she aald.
Repo. Tom Poglletta. D-Pa..
and Edward Felghan. D-Ohlo.
aald they were also roughed up
In the Incident, which dashed
U.S. hopes that Kim 's return
would be peaceful.
The Seoul metropolitan police
Issued a statement aaytng secu­
rity guards "m erely separated
Mr. Kim and hta family from
those accompanying them and
escorted them to an elevator In
ostler to ensure his safety. No
basting o f Mr. Kim or any o f the
p e o p le a c c o m p a n y in g took
place."
Kim told reporters he was "not
sure If I was really beaten
because the situation was so
confused." But Felghan and the
other Americans said they saw
Kim being struck repeatedly.
" I personally observed securi­
ty -officers hitting Mr. Kira —
u n eq u iv o ca lly . T h e re Is no
clearer way of saying It. The four
o f us w ere also p h y s ic a lly
abused — pushed, kicked and
punched." he aald.
‘Asked why Kim's own account
o f the Incident seemed ambigu­
ous. Felghan said. " I can't
speculate on why he said what
he said. There may be many
reasons."
A lth ou gh a u th orities have
strongly denied lUm Is under
house arrest. Kim told reporters
the district police chief told him
that " I can'Aeave m y house for
a while and that my only visitors
from now on can be m y rets-

County To Sift
Applications
For Top Posts
B y Donna E stes
H erald S ta ff W rite r
By the end of next week a special
committee wtll begin screening 110
applications lor two new deputy county
administrator posts — one to be In
charge of administration and the other
In charge of development.
County Administrator Ken Hooper
said the screening committee Is com ­
prised of himself. Health and Human
Services Director Dr. Jorge Deju. Public
Safety Director Gary Kaiser. Bill K.
Nolan o f Cardinal Industries, and
James Easton, former assistant county
administrator who left the county a
year ago to work In the private sector.
Ex-C ounty A d m in istra tor R oger
Netawender withdrew as a member of
the screening committee after his wife,
Ann Netawender. personnel director
with the Sem inole County public
school system, applied for one o f the
Jobs.
Other familiar names among the
applicants are: Eleanor Anderson,
county director o f management and
budget and acting assistant county
administrator; Woody Price, director of
planning; John Percy, public services
director; Storm Rlchanls and Rick Holt,
administrative assistants to County
Public Works Director Larry Sellers;
Kathy Rice, city manager o f Lake Mary:
and Aaron Dowling, assistant director
o f the East Central Florida Regional
Planning Council.

Balloon
Chtryl Hubbard, director of davalppmant at All Soul* School In
Sanford, praparo* a cluster of balloon* for rataasa during a
cortmony celebrating Catholic School Weak. About 210 student* sent
balloons containing their addrosao* Into the wild blue yonder early
today In hopes they will float Into the^hand* of potential far-away pen
pals. The event capped a weak eft activities at the school which
included a open house and re-opening pf the school's remodeled gym.

Salary range for the posts la *29,736
to 142.017. H ow ever. In the Job
classification and pay plan study re­
cently completed by consultants, the

recommended salary range for deputy
county administrators Is *43.596 to
*60.881.
A committee comprised o f Hooper.
Price. Kaiser and Deputy County A t­
torney Bob McMillan. Is reviewing the
study and gathering comments from
department heads on the proposed
plan.
Hooper said after the comm ittee
gathers 'Its Information and confers
w ith C arolyn L on g o f L o n g and
Associates, which conducted the study,
a report will be taken to the county
commission for Its approval or disap­
proval In early March.
Meanwhile, another special commit­
tee. composed o f Hooper. Mrs. An­
derson. Price, Com puter S ervices
Director Monty Beamer. and Cindy
Wrtght. administrative assistant and
a c tin g d ire c to r o f en viro n m en ta l
services, h ave screened som e 26
applications for the post o f county
environmental services director, and
selected live for Interviews, beginning
today. The five selected are: Budget
analyst and u tility m anager Pam
Hastings. Environmental Control Man­
ager Tim Claubaugh. W inter Park
utility director Hoyt Owens, and a Dr.
Phaup of Titusville, Hooper said.
Under a new county policy. Hooper
will appoint persons to all three posts,
and ask the county commission for Its
concurrence.
- T h e pay ra n ge for d ir e c to r o f
environmental services Is *28,777 to
*40.661. The proposed Job classifica­
tion and pay plan calls for a salary
range for the office o f *39,540 to
*55.200.

Forms Not Printed In Time

Flouridation Poll Delayed
Cockroaches Conquered?
UF Claims To Havn Tha Secret
TALLAHASSEE (UPf) - The German
cockroach, a hardy pest that has con­
quered commercial poisons, can be wiped
out by a new Insect spray developed at the
University o f Florida, a university re­
search official says.
Dr. Kenneth R. Tefertiller, director of
the UF Institute o f Food and Agricultural
Sciences, told the House appropriations
subcommittee on education Thursday the
bug spray Is called "Oencoc." He said It
was developed mostly through private
foundation grants to IFAS.
Tefertiller said Oencor. unlike some bug
killers. Is not a "hard" pesticide that stays
In the environment permanently. He also
said It does not actually kill roaches right
away, but renders them sterile, disfigures
their wings and discolors thetr bodies.
In six months to a year, he said, they die
without any heirs.
Tefertiller IFAS scientists began work­
ing on Ocncor. using mostly private
Industrial grants, about two and a half
years ago. He said " it's a m y mild
chem ical" that can safely ba used In
homes.

ijah' Charged In
ONALASKA. Wte. (UPI) — A man calling
himself "E lijah " and griping about girts being
allowed to read Scripture faces murder charges
after a Roman Catholic priest and two other
people were gunned down after a special mass for
Bryan Stanley. 20, Is to ba arraigned Mooday In
the deaths o f tbs Rev. John Roaattcr. 64. o f St.
Patrick’s Church. J*n&gt;tnr William Hammea, and
partehoaer Ferdinand Roth.
Police said a man carrying a 12-gauge ahotgun
opened Are Inside the church Thursday mnratag
after the children had tan— art their paetor an3
•
a

"It doesn't even kill the cockroaches."
he said. "W e think we can target other
household pests with the same technique
— possibly fleas."
Tefertiller aald commercial pest control
services have been able to control most
other Florida bugs. He said the Oerman
cockroach Is a hardy strain that can Uve
srlth commercial sprays and reproduces
In great numbers.
•
"It's the only one ere have no control
over. All the hard pesticides can’t handle
It." he aakl. " I f you've got a spraying
program and you've still got cockroaches
around, they're probably Germans."
Tefertiller said Oencor turns to a powder
In areas where It Is sprayed. For about
three week* afterward, he said. " I f a roach
walks in it. he doesn't die right away but
hla wings become deformed and his color
turns darker. In six months, he's a

A problem with getting bill forms
tied
ted during the December holidays
delayed until Ihe end of this month
a poll o f Seminole County's a.000 to
9.000 water customers on a proposal to
fluoridate their water supply.
The survey question o f whether the
c o u n t y 's w a t e r c u s to m e rs w an t
fluoridation or not was supposed to be
printed cm December water Mils. But.
Pam Hastings, utility manager In the
county's environmental ser vices de­
partment. said because o f printing
delays, the survey question will be on
the Dills to customers on Feb. 27 and
28. The county utilities operate under
the environm ental services depart­
ment.
Mrs. Hastings said the department
has mailed notices to the customers
telling them that fluoridation la being
considered and advising that an In­
formation packet on fluoridation Is
available, upon telephone request at
environm ental services office. 323­
2500. T h e o ffic e Is located In a
temporary portable building behind the
county agricultural center at Five

K

She said 66 telephone requests
received In 2 Vi days this week.
A Anal count o f the polla results Is
In late March. Mrs. Hastings

ing Of Priest
the clergyman

Th e steerlnigi com m ittee for the
d system,
‘
* !d by
county ow ned
system headed
County Commissioner Bill Kirchholf.
authorised the poll In November.
At that time Hooper said (acta about
water fluoridation would be prepared
by the county's Health and Human
Services Director Dr. Jorge Deju.
Deju said he Is "about 90 percent In
favor” o f fluoridation. He aald the
county's health department provides
fluoride treatment for 0.000 to 6,000
elementary school children on a regular
basis upon request.
“ Most experts recommend fluorida­
tion to prevent tooth decay,” he said.
Deju added that the state will provide
funds for equipment and coats o f
operation for the first two years fluoride
Is Injected Into the water supply.
After that, the county utility system
would have to pick up the fluoridation
costa. There are no estimates available
o f those costa.
The county provides water for unin­
corporated areas plus some sections of
Barbara Christensen,
a m em ber o f tba u tility steerin g
committee, said before the county
begins any fluoridation arapmm. If It
ultimately docs, a public n**r1"g on the
nuuter w illb e held fost.

TODAY

�I

l A - I v s w l w HsraM, testers, FI.

Friday, Fate. », IH5

T e e n A c q u it t e d In R a p e

NATION

By Deans Jordan
Herlad Staff Writer
"O h . thank God." a nervous grandmother
bawled as the court clerk announced a
Jury's verdict saying her grandson was not
guilty o f rape and burglary.
But Just behind the older woman and to
her left, the 19-year-old victim cringed, her
face contorted, tears wetting her flushed
cheeks.

IN BRIEF
Police Roily Around
One Of Tholr Own
NEW YORK (UPJ) - About 10.000 off-duty officer* nearly half the city's force — staged a raucua rally to
support a colleague charged with manslaughter for killing
an emotionally disturbed woman being evicted from her
apartment.
The police poured Into the streets Thursday outside the
offices of Bronx District Attorney Mario Merola and chanted
"Ayatollah Merola." "Merola Must O o " and "Mario Beals
Hla W ife."
They waved American flags and several officers held a
dummy dressed In a police uniform with a noose around Its
neck and a sign that read, "Merola's Idea of Justice."
The demonstration was triggered by the Indictment last
week of officer Stephen Sullivan, a 19-year veteran and
member of the city’s elite Emergency Services Unit.
Sullivan was charged by a grand Jury with second-degree
manslaughter for killing Eleanor Oumpurs. 66, with two
shotgun blasts last October. Sullivan said he fired because
Bumpurs. who has a history o f emotional problems, lunged
at his partner with a butcher knife.
An autopsy showed she was shot twice, first In the hand
. then fatally In (he chest.

The defendant. Williams Dukes Jr.. 17. of
Longwood. stood motionless and silent as
court deTk Claudia Hughey read the not
guilty verdicts on two counts of rape and
one count o f burglary. Dukes' attorney,
Christopher Smith, also o f Longwood.
beamed.
The acquittal, rendered at 5:35 p.m.
Thursday after 2V4 hours o f deliberation by
a four-woman, two-man Jury, came after
Seminole Circuit Judge Voile Williams

asked the Jury whether It wanted to stop
deliberations for the night or continue and
Issue a sealed verdict. A sealed verdict
would be kept by the clerk until court
resumed the following day and then be
announced.
The Jury asked to retire and consider
whether to adjourn for the night and within
20 minutes Issued Its not guilty verdict.
The Jury apparently believed that the
victim was mistaken In the Identity o f her
assailant. T h ey w ere also apparently
swayed by Smith’s questioning o f why the
woman did not cry out for help when the
man entered her room. Her parents were
home at the time, he said.
While Dukes escaped a possible sentence
of life Imprisonment In this case, he Is
scheduled to be sentenced April 3 In another
case for choking a woman with a belt. He
pleaded guilty Jan. 28 to the September
Incident and can receive up to a year In the

For Importing War Booty

A dm iral O n ly W arned;
Six Others Imprisoned

Stockman:'Clean Houte'
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Budget director David Stockman
Is calling on Congress to make a "once In a century
housecleaning" by agreeing to drastic budget cuts aimed at
“ duclr.g the federal deficit.
President Reagan has propoaed cuts In hla fiscal 1986
budget In almost every area except the military to slice the
deficit down to 9180 billion next year.
Stockman, after hours o f questioning from members o f
the House Appropriations Committee, each o f whom
seemed to single out one Item In Reagan’s proposed cuts lo
attack, said It would not be enough to give the budget a
“ haircut” but that entire programs must be eliminated.
" It ’s time for a once In a century housecleaning." he
said.
Repeatedly, he told the committee members, "W e can’t
J *-— i is « •
_
...
.1 .
. ,
m m
m
afford It.” commenting on everything from federal revenue
sharing to guaranteed student loans for families makinn
more than 932,800 annually to farm subsidies.
Treasury Secretary James Baker said the government
"n o longer has revenue lo share" with local governments.

FLORIDA

MtrtU

11 was a bit too cool this morning for most of us to (Jo any
sunbathing, not to mention the fact that there was no sun to
bathe In. All that didn't deter this kitty from curling up on a
roof at 1300 Elm Ave., Sanford. But then it had a nice fur coat
to keep It warm.

Aff

Mrs. Hannah Jacobson. 84. a
longtime Sanford resident who
with her late husband, Manuel,
founded the Manuel Jacobson
D ep artm en t S tore on F irst
S t r e e t , d ie d T u e s d a y at

W IL L IA M L. GOODWIN
Mr. William Lcw lt Goodwin.
87. of 702 E. 29th St., Sanford,
died Thursday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Born June 15,
1917 in Marblehead. Masa.. he
m o v e d to S a n fo r d fr o m
Melbourne In 1973. He was a
retired electronics engineer and
a Methodist. He was a veteran of
World War II and a member of
AARP.
Survivors Include five sons.
W illiam and Steve, both o f
Laconia. N.H.. David of Cocoa
B e a c h . O a r y C a m p b e ll o f
Fairfield. Ohio, Glen Campbell of
M elbourne: three daughters.
Sharon. Cocoa Beach. Janice
Farnsworth. Sanford, and Karla
S a y lo r . C le r m o n t: m o th er.
Gert-ude Goodwin. Marblehead:
brother. Charles, Seabrook.
N.H.: sister, Pat. Santee. Calif.:
10 grandchildren.
D a v la F u n e r a l H o m e ,
Melbourne. Is In charge of ar­
rangements.

CANTONMENT (UPI) - Nearly 919.000 was seised in
this weal Florida town when a parent — suspecting Junior
high students were bringing home more than grades —
tipped officials about an 8th-grader giving away wads of
money.
Escambia County authorities said Thursday that 92.300
was confiscated this week froen students at Ransom Middle
School 12 miles north o f Pensacola. Another 916.450 was
unearthed at a vacant lot near the student-benefactor’s
home.
The 14-year-old pupil told authorities he stole the money
from a relative, but nobody has reported the money stolen
and no one has stepped forward to claim II. No charges
have been filed and none were anticipated against the
youths.
"W e know who had the money originally. We don’t know
how that person obtained the money and our probe Is
centering around whether It was obtained through Illegal
means," said Lt. Don Packer o f the Escambia County
Sheriff’s Department.

WILLIS T. KILL
Mr. Willie T. Hill. 55. of 2319 C
S treet, Eureka. C alif., died
Monday in that city. Bom Sept.
I I , 1929 In Sanford, he moved
to Eureka 25 years ago. He was a
veteran and a pharmacist.
Survivors Include his wife.
Marge: two sons. Richard and
Leroy Hill, both of Eureka; two
daughters, Denise Hill, Eureka,
and Deborah G ravenberg of
Stanton, Calif.: mother. Nellie
Mae Freeman. Sanford: stepfa­
ther. Clifford Freeman, Sanford;
o n e b r o t h e r . A r t h u r H ill.
P h ila d e lp h ia ; g ra n d m o th er.
Minnie HUI o f Sanford; three
grandchildren.
Sunrise Funeral Home, San­
ford. la in charge o f arrange­
ments.

Did You Forget Something t
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Comptroller Oerald A. Lewis
plans to start running legal advertisements next week to
find owners of nearly 96 million In cash and property left In
forgotten bank accounts and vaults.
“ Our Abandoned Property Section functions like a
statewide lost and found departm ent." said Lewis.
"Thousands o f Floridians have lost or forgotten soul
millions of dollars worth o f securities, credits or cash. Our
efforts are designed to find the rightful owners or heirs and
return this money to them.”
State law provides that money left In bank accounts for
10 years, or property In safe-deposit boxes for seven years,
without a transaction can be confiscated by the state —
after a suitable search for owners or heirs.

CAPT.CaASLMM.LSSP

STOCKS
in »

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f terto fr a *

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is

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Steamy---J ib

Lakeview Nursing Home. San­
ford. after a lengthy Illness.
B o r n S e p t . 9 . 1 9 0 0 In
Paterson. N.J.. she moved to
Sanford In 1931 from P r o ­
vidence. R.l. She was a member

o f Temple Israel, Orlando.
Survivors Include her son. Dr.
Sherwood Jacobson. New York
City: daughter. Mrs. Charles
(A r le n e ) T e te n b a u m o f

Longwood: seven grandchildren
and four great-grandchildren.
Beth Shalom Goldstein Memo­
rial Chapel. Orlando. Is In charge
of arrangements.

AREA DEATHS

Student Generout With Cath

....j i w

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Six garding the capture and dlsposl
servicemen who brought back tion o f enemy weapons followkig
captured autom atic weapons a battle.”
"H e has been apprised of the
from Grenada In 1983 were
court-martialed, kicked out of existing regulations governing
the military and sent to prison the disposal o f such weapons
but the admiral In charge of the and the rules prohibiting their
Invasion was only "cautioned” retention as souvenirs." a Navy
for a similar offense. Pentagon statement said. “ He Is now in
officials say.
compliance with those regula­
Of the six. one soldier and a tions.^
Marine were charged with trying
Five soldiers from the 82nd
to sell their weapons, the Army Airborne Division based at Fbrt
and the M arine Corps said Bragg. N.C., and a Marine frbm
Thursday.
C am p L e je u n e . N .C ., wdre
Th e U.S. Custom s Service court-martialed and sentenced to
seized 24 AK-47 Kalashnikov p rison for b rin g in g sim ilar
automatic rifles and 24 ammuni­ weapons Into the United Staths.
tion magazines from the plane the military said. A court martial
ca rryin g V ice Adm . Joseph Is pending against a second
Metcalf and several of his aides Marine.
when they arrived at the Norfolk.
Military regulations that apply
Va., Naval A ir Station from to the four services and artGrenada Nov. 3. 1983.
based on the 1934 National
The names o f Metcalf and Firearms Act prohibit the Im­
several of hts aides were taped to portation o f automatic weapons
16 of the Sovlet-bullt rifles, a from a war zone.
Navy ofltclal said.
Th e Navy declined to com­
Metcalf barred reporters from ment further on Metcalf's case,
the Island during the first two but a Navy official asked about
days of the Invasion and threat­ the apparent double standard In
ened to shoot them.
meting out punishment for the
Customs turned the rifles over offenses, said the incident In­
to the N a v a l In v e s tig a tiv e volving the admiral ^ps not
Service since they were seized similar to the attempted kale ol
on military property. The Navy weapons by the soldier and the
said Metcalf was "cautioned re­ Marine.

W ife O f Sanford Store F o u n d e r D e a d A t 84

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — A law that makes It Illegal
to sell bogus cocaine, heroin and other Illicit drugs has
been affirmed by (he Florida Supreme Court giving law
enforement agencies another weapon to combat drug
trafficking.
The 0-1 ruling Thursday was a legal setback for 10
defendants In Hillsborough, Orange. Palm Beach and
Broward counties who were accused o f selling phony
drugs, usually lo undercover police officers.
The high court’s decision overturned the 4th District
Court of Appeal and other lower courts that had found the
1981 statute unconstitutional chiefly on grounds that It la
vague and does not represent a legitimate state Interest.
Critics of the statute contended It amounted to a
“ consumer protection law” for drug buyers who are ripped
off by street dealers but proponents said law enforcement
agencies needed It because their undercover agents often
are the rip-off victims and. thus, lose their cases.
The high court concluded that the lower courts were
misled by considering the statute as an anti-fraud measure
when. In fact. It statutorily relates to drug use.

SsAMi toe*

teyTammy Vlacaaf

CATchlng Some Ray§

IN BRIEF
law tanning Thn Sain
Ot Bogus Drvgt

county Jail.
In the rape case, sheriffs investigators
said the woman reportedly recognized the
man who entered her bedroom at 3:20 son.
on Oct. 23. The suspect closed and locked
the door of the woman's bedroom, pushed
her down on the bed and held a screwdriver
to her throat as he raped her. deputies
reported.
The woman told deputies she frightened
the suspect by screaming and he Jumped
out a bedroom window and fled.
When deputies arrived at the woman's
home at 3:30 a.m.. she gave them the
suspect’s name, description and a descrip­
tion o f hts car.
•
A Longwood officer spotted a car fitting
the description and stopped It on E.E.
Williamson Road. Longwood, at 3:35 a.mJ
Sheriffs Investigators then reported to I he
scene and arrested Dukes, 16 at the time,
who said he had Just been out drinking.

It

Capt. Charles Morton Leep. 75.
o f 6 1 9 F o x V a lle y D r iv e .
Longwood. died Thursday at
South Sem in ole Com m unity
Hospital. Longwood. Bom Oct.
14. 1909 tn Jeffersonville. Ind..
he moved lo Longwood
Alexandria. Va. In 1977. He
retired from the U.S. Arm y and
waa a member o f Messiah Lu­
theran Church. Alexandria. He
was a 32nd degree Mason, a

member o f Scottish Rite. Kena
Mitchell’s Funeral Home. Or­
Temple, Virginia, and National lando, la In charge of arrange­
Sojourners, Virginia.
ments.
Survivors Include hla wife,
Helen B.; four sisters, Grace
Mrs. Effle Pritchard Wilson.
Rider, A lice G etz, Margaret
Harlan, all of Jeffersonville, and 94. of 989 Orlenta Ave.. Alta­
monte Springs, died Tuesday at
Ueaulah Bertram, Hudson. N.Y.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch lld Funeral Life Care Center. Altamonte
Home, Altamonte Springs. Is In Springs. Bom Dec. 7. 1890 In
Tennessee, she moved to Alta­
charge of arrangements.
monte Springs from Kentucky In
RANDOLPH O. KAUFMANN
1906. She was a homemaker.
Mr. Randolph O. Kaufmann.
Survivors Include a daughter.
71. o f 215 Margarita Road. Courtney Collins, Franklin, N.C.;
DeBary, died Wednesday at Fish two grandchildren.
Mem orial H ospital. DeLand,
Winter Park Funeral Home.
Bom In Washington, D.C.. he Winter Park, la tn charge o f
moved to DeBary In 1964 from arrangements.
Pompano Beach. He was a re­
a n n a :_______
tired office manager for BAH
Mrs. Anna Zedlak. 67. o f 1001
Sales. Orlando. He was a World
War II U.S. Army veteran and a Esplanade W ay. Casselberry,
member o f All Saints Episcopal died Wednesday at Winter Park
Memorial Hospital. Bom Dec. 24.
Church. Enterprise. He helped
1697 In Europe, she moved to
form the DeBary Volunteer Fire
elbcrry from Pennsylvania
Department, waa former chief of
the Deltona Volunteer Fire Dc- tn 1963. She was a homemaker
artment. helped create the and a m em ber o f St. Mary
mpano Beach Highlands Vol­ Magdalen Catholic Church.
unteer Fire Department and was
Survivors include two daugh­
a former member o f the Sliver ters, Helen Moore. Maitland. Mrs.
Spring. Md. Volunteer Fire De­ E v e ly n T o w n s e n d . S p r in g
partment.
Church. Pa.: two sons. Alfred P..
Survivor* include hla wife. Panama City. Samuel. Lower
Muriel Whitehead Kaufmann; Burrell. Pa.; 13 grandchildren:
daughter. Karen K. Schudder. two great-grandchildren.
Sanford: two grandson*. James
and Kevin Schudder. Sanford.
Altman Funeral Home. De­
Bary. la In charge o f arrange­
ments.

Cox-Parker Guardian Funeral
Home. Winter Park. Is tn cliarge
of arrangements.
F u n oral N o fk a t
-O ra trttto tarylca* ter Mr*. Haora*
J i t S u , la «f totters, «*a M Tunary,
■ill S* to to y *111 ■ a m. In Tamste l*r*n
Camatery. Ortoto. an* will hr catovcte* toy
SaSSt Otaim I . arrow*I al Tamste Itrart
The family rraurrfl cater tewttera In mama
ry at Mr*. JaaSaan Sa mas* te Ha*a*fa*
toxic** anS arransamante *nSm**S te Srf*
listen OaftoaM atemartel CkasaL 111 W.
Oar* M* Oriarto. O H S i
M U .W IU .iaT.
-funeral nrvtea* ter Sir. WiHte T. hmi, m .
#&lt; IwaSa. Can*., will ha hate Ntoteay at «
am. al (ten Map* Mtettenary a*sH*l Onyrcn
wite Ste tea*, i L. SraaSt attkiaMra
Vteafea team naan until • * m to n * .
WILLIAMS. CMASI.lt

at Mmmn. 0*.. tell h* hate WurSay at I
te-m. at Has Has* Mteatenary Sapai*!
Ornette. Vtetena tell Sa teSay ** am. Surtel
tea tea in INtete Camara , t o t e f «

E v e n in g H e r a ld

tuitetm u m )
F riday February L IMS
T
* f 7*. Ms. US
fol.
WtarSay tey Ttee teato* Herat*.
Ira. M* M. francs Ay*., tasters,
tela. m n .
all

Mr. Edgar Simmons. 76. o f
403 Longwood Ave.. Altamonte
Springs, died Tuesday in Florida
Hospital-Orlando. Born March 7.
1906 in Eaatman. Ga.. he moved
to A lta m o n te S p rin ge from
Longwood In 1931. He
retired water engineer and
member of St. Peter’a Freewill
Bapttat C h u rch . A lta m o n te
Springs.
Survivors Include hla wile,
M a g n o lia ; t w o d a u g h te r s .
M ild r e d B o u c y . A lta m o n te
S p r i n g s , G l a d y s D a v la ',
Casselberry; brother. Charlie,
Altamonte
tie. Altamonte
g r a n d c h ild r e n ! 26 g r e a t
grandchildren: 16 greet-great­
grandchildren.

-.a .

�EvenlngHereld, Sanford, FI.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Hijackers Surrender;
Whereabouts Unknown
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — Shiite Moslem gunmen held a
dozen hostages under threat o f execution aboard a Cypriot
airliner at Beirut airport for five hours before surrendering
and leaving for "an undisclosed location."
At least five men carrying pistols and sub-machine guns
stormed aboard the Cyprus Airways Boeing 707 and Into
the cockpit Thursday as It was preparing for takeolf and
demanded that Cyprus free two Jailed Shiite hijackers.
Cypriot Communications Minister Christos Mavrellts.
howevL.. said no deals were made during negotiations
between the gunmen and Lebanese officials and militia
officers, who were acting as Intermediary with Cyprus.
O ffic ia ls d e c lin e d c o m m e n t on th e g u n m e n 's
whereabouts and Voice o f Lebanon, the Christian
Phalange-party run radio, reported the group "withdrew to
an undisclosed location."

Rubble Combed For Survivors
.

CASTELLANETA. Italy (UP!) - Rescue workers using
shovels and dogs today searched for survivors In the
remains o f a six-story apartment building that collapsed on
Its sleeping residents, killing at least 34 people.
At least nine other people were Injured when the
rain-eroded foundations o f the structure In the hometown
o f m ovie legend Rudolph Valentino crumbled early
Thursday In Italy's worst building collapse In 25 years.
O r* " f the nine injured taken to hospitals (n the southern
Italian town was listed In serious condition.
By late Thursday, 34 bodies had been recovered from the
rubble by firemen, volunteers and nearly 1.000 army, navy
and air force personnel from nearby military bases who
began the rescue work within two hours of the collapse.
Officials who carried out a roll call of regular residents
said they expected to find no more bodies.

Grenadian Forces To Take Over
ST. GEORGE'S. Grenada (UPI) - Prime Minister Herbert
Blalze says Grenadian forces will take over security on the
tiny Caribbean lslnnd following the withdrawal o f all
foreign forces, an operation that begins In two months.
The Stale Department said the withdrawal o f the 250
U.S. troops and more than 400 troops In the Caribbean
Peace Force, stationed In Grenada since the U.S. Invasion
of the Island Oct. 25.1083. will begin in April.

...S ta n o
Continued fro m p s g t 1A
T h e h ig h c o u r t a ls o s a id
M c G reg o r d id not m ake a
mistake when he allowed the
so-called false confession to be
admitted Into evidence In the
murder trial.
In the appeal, filed in May.
Assistant Public Defender Don
West said there waa Insufficient
evidence to convict Stano o f
first-degree murder during the
course of a rape. He contended
the stale did not prove a rape
took place.

...K o re a
C ontinu ed fro m page 1A
Members o f the 38-member
delegation. Including 24 Amerl• cans, who attempted to visa Kim
-were not allowed to enter his
house, Foglietta said. The house
..w a s heavily guarded and signs
ed outside, in Korean and
llah. said. "Notice: This Is an
off-limits area for a temporary
. period."
As the scuffle occurred Inside
the airport, tens o f thousands of
: .Kim 's supporters, many shout&gt; -tn g " D o w n w i t h t h e
^ 'd ic ta to rs h ip !*' and ch anting
. K im 's name, converged on the
a irp ort In th e largest a n livernment demonstration In
e years, witnesses said.
•* Police firing tear gas kept
them away from the airport until
Kim left, but later allowed the

K

C

4 Suspected Drug Dealers Freed
Four of six men nabbed In
raids Thursday on six reputed
drug stash houses on the out­
skirts of Altamonte Springs have
been released on bond. Tw o boys
taken Into custody In the sweep,
were not charged as had been
reported earlier, deputies said.
In the simultaneous raids by
60 Seminole County sheriffs
deputies Including the Seminole
and V olusia C o u n ty S W A T
teams, cocaine, marijuana and
h e r o i n w it h a c o m b i n e d
w h olesale valu e o f at least
$ 100,000 was seized, sheriffs
spokesman John Spolskl said.
Th e drugs w ere reportedly
earmarked for sale by street
dealers who supply illegal drugs
to buyers who purchase drugs
openly In the North and Marker
streets area Just outside Alta­
m onte Springs. Sheriff John
Polk said.
Polk said his officers will arrest
hundreds of drug dealers and

m m u i w i %t &gt;m v u m o

S

*

Action Reports
★ F lr e t
* C ou rts
★ P o lic e B e a t
buyers over the next few months
that his men photographed In
drive-up drug deals.
Arrested Thursday were:
Wendell Julltan "B ig C ity"
Calller. 28. o f 222 W. 14th
Street. Apopka, at a Leon Street
home. Calller has been charged
with possession of cocaine and
was being held In lieu of $8,000
bond.
Vernon Lee Andrews. 52. of
713 M arker St.. A lta m o n te
Springs, was arrested at his
h o m e a n d c h a r g e d w ith
possession of cocaine and drug
paraphernalia. He was being
held in lieu o f $8,000 bond.

Theodore Small. 22. of 110
DeSoto St.. Altamonte Springs,
was charged at his home with
trafficking In cocaine, possession
of cocaine with intent to sell,
p o s s e s s io n o f m a r iju a n a ,
possession o f drug paraphernalia
and possession of three firearms
by a felon. He was released on
$10,000 bond and Is scheduled
to appear In court Feb. 25. along
with Tom m y Bell III. 25. of 121
P ly m o u t h S t ., A lt a m o n t e
Springs, and Milton Wilson. 22.
of 336 DePugh St.. Altamonte
Springs. They were arrested at
their homes and have been
released on $8,000 bond each.
B e ll w a s c h a r g e d w i t h
.possession o f cocaine, drug par­
aphernalia and less than 20
grams o f pot. Wilson has been
charged with possession o f co­
caine and drug paraphernalia.
G re g o r y Jerom e " R o l o "
Adkins. 25. of 409 Longwood
Ave.. Altamonte Springs, was

charged with possession of pot at
his home. He has been released
on $500 bond and Is scheduled
to appear In court Feb. 20.
G LASS BATTERY
A 20-year-old C asselberry
woman has been charged with
a g g r a v a te d b a tte r y a fte r
a lleg ed ly th ro w in g a glass,
which reportedly broke and cut
another wom an's face during a
dispute at a Casselberry bar.
police reported.
Sandra Deneen Rudolph of
1801 Espande Way 12-F. was
arrested at Roacoe's Lounge,
state Road 436. at 8:35 p.m.
Wednesday.
Kelly Simpson. 20. of 609
C a s a P a r k C o u r t . W in t e r
Springs, was treated at the scene
by paramedics, a police report
said.
Ms. Rudolph was being held In
lieu of $8,000 bond.

Zoning Denied For Duplex Development
Plans o f an Altam onte Springs land
developer. Suda Inc., to build a duplex
development on an 18.7-acre tract adjacent
to the Grovcvlew subdivision In Sryifnrd
have been turned down by the Seminole
County Commission.
At Tuesday's commission meeting, a
Suda representative asked commissioners
for an "Intensity" Increase on the property.
200 feet north o f Lake Mary Boulevard, west
o f Sir Lawrence Boulevard.
In Nov.. 1983. the commission granted a
waiver to allow Sanford to rezone the
property, after It was annexed Into the city,
for 7.500-square-foot. single-family home
lots.
The waiver was necessary because state
law forbids a change In zoning to a higher
Intensity development within two years
after annexation by a city unless the county
commission consents.
Prior to the annexation, the site was

West said there were "gross
discrepancies" In Stano's de­
scription of "Madam X " and the
descrip tion th at au th orities
pieced together. West said Stano
described a smaller woman than
the autopsy showed her to be
and Stano had said she was
wearing a different color and
style of shirt than found on the
body.
In a taped confession. Stano. a
short-order cook from Ormond
B ea ch , said he p ick ed the
woman up on state Road 436
near Interstate 4 and later asked
her to have sex with him. When
she refused. Stano said he drove
her to a wooded area behind the

mall and forced her from the car
at knifepoint. When she still
refused to have sex with him.
telling him he was not her type.
Stano said. “ 1 Just started stab­
bing the young lady four to six
times in the chest. She may have
scream ed a little bit, but I
repeatedly kept stabbing."

dem onstrators through their
lines, witnesses said.
The popular opposition leader
received a death sentence in
1980 for sedition but It was
commuted to 20 years In prison.
He was permitted to leave South
K orea In 1982 fo r m edical
treatment In the United States.
Kim still technically faces 17
years o f his prison term but the
suthorltarian governm ent of
Chun Doo Hwan, under heavy
U.S. pressure and concerned
about Us Image abroad, said
earlier this week It would not
arrest him.
Kim . a form er presidential
candidate, w as returning to
South Korea to help boost the
opposition In Tuesday's sched­
uled parliamentary elections, the
first in the Asian nation since
1961. He was not allowed to run
In the elections but said he was
returning home to fight for "m y

dream o f a democratic system."
In Washington, a White House
spokesman took a cautious view
o f the Incident, saying, the
United States does not condone
violence but Is awaiting the
facts.
Deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes told reporters there Is
no change In President Reagan's
Invitation to South Korean Pres­
ident Chun Doo Hwan to make a
slate visit to Washington In
April. No firm date has been set.
Speakes said he believed that
Reagan was aware o f the reports,
and he would be briefed by
national security affairs adviser
Robert McPsrlsne.
Speakes dodged a barrage of
questions, saying the State De­
partm ent would have a full
report later on Kim 's arrival.
"W e had received assurances
he (Kim ) would be allowed to
return trouble free."

from Pocatello to Malad City.
Blowing snow shut down In­
terstate 5 Thursday night In
Northern California.

a . m . . 5 :3 1 p . m . ; P a r i
C an averal: highs. 11:26 a.m..
11:46 p.m.; lows, 4:39 a.m.. 54)7
p.m.: B aypset: highs. 3:19 a.m..
3:40 p.m.: lows, 9:42 a.m.. 10:24

Stano said In the confession
that he partially disrobed'her
after she fell but did not say
whether he molested her. He
then fled the scene, according to
the confession and
discarded
her purse and shoes as he drove
h o m e to O r m o n d B e a c h .

designated for low-density residential devel­
opment.
The 7.500-square-fool, lots permit con­
struction of about four housing units to the
acre while low density development calls for
aboul three or less housing units per acre.
If the request o f Suda President BUI Miller
had been approved. Sanford could have
rezoned the tract to permit duplex develop­
ment.
County staff recommended the county
commission deny the request, saying the
tract abuts single-family residences and
duplexes would not be compatible with
those dwellings.
The staff also said the extra homes would
necessitate Installation of a traffic signal at
the Intersection o f Lake Mary Boulevard and
Sir Lawrence Drive.
Betty Sonenburg. the city’ s minimum
housing code Inspector, said Suda has
submitted a preliminary plan through the

Don't Cel Caught
CsU...

■Mi Tm&gt; Fnm &gt;»»«

{Ml t

SAIDA SALIH (MD)

I

(Adult, Adolescent, Child
&amp; Forensic Psychiatrist)

Waathartiwi
Host Pump/AIr Conditioner

0*

city's planning and zoning commission for a
single-family home development, but has
not moved to start the development.
Under the tract's existing SR 1A zoning.
Ms. Sonenburg said homes must have
minimum size lots of 7.500-square-feet and
duplexes are not permitted. Mrs. Sonenburg
said S R I zoning permits duplexes on lots
from 6.000- to 7.500-square-feet If a condi­
tional use Is approved by the planning and
zoning commission.
There Is also a difference In the size of
homes between the two zonlngs. she said.
SRI A requires a minimum home size of
1.300-square-feet w hile S R ) permits a
housing unit size o f OOO-square-feet.
Miller could not be reached for comment
at Ids Altamonte Springs office on how he
plans to use the property now that his
Intensity Increase has been denied.
In October, the city commission cun
change the zoning without the county's
approval. If It wishes.
— Donna Eatss

Is Pleased To Announce The Opening
Of Her Practice Of Psychiatry

»w i*.« ■*.»

W ALL

120 Eaat New York Are.. Suite 0
Deland. Florida 32720

1007 S Sanloid Are
S.nloid_____

M l. ( 9 0 4 ) 7 9 9 -9 9 7 9
ay Appointment Only

\

y fT '.'vy ^ r

— D eans Jordan

WEATHER
N A T IO N A L B B PO B T; A
near-bllizard made travel Im­
p a s s i b le In m u c h o f t h e
) Northwest today with more than
•: a foot of snow whipped by winds
, ! guatlng to nearly 60 mph, while
•: sub-zero cold tightened Its grip
•! from the Plains to the Northeast.
;; The National Weather Service
; ! reported blizzard conditions In
;i m o u n t a i n a r e a s o f t h e
;J N o r t h w e s t . W in t e r s to r m
; « W a r n in g s w e r e Is s u e d In
- 's
- o u th e a s t W a s h in g to n and
higher elevations o f Oregon.
Idaho and Northern California.
T ra velers advisories covered
western Montana and Utah's
B os Elder County. TemperaJ: tdree fell below aero early today
; from the Plains to the Northeast
; l and as far south aa Topeka. Kan.
•- Paducah. Ky.. set a record low o f
• 1 degree and high wtnde in the
^ N o r th e a s t sen t w in d c h ills
tunmeUng. In the West. IS
c b e s o f a n o w b la n k e te d
Borden. Calif., bringing its total
snowfall this season to 229
inches. Forecasters said as much
as 4 fact o f fresh aoow could
bury the Labs Tahoe haMn by
late today- Up to $ incbm o f
Idaho n o w scattered by winds
th at g u tte d to 5$ asph at
Pocatello rtrwrit 65 a n s a o f
h$9. 100 m ile s o f
31 and Interstate 19

Friday. F*b. I. 1 W -J A

ABBA POBBCABTt Today
mostly cloudy and cool with a
P BDATINO POBBCABTt Si.
few periods o f rain. High near
60. Wind north IS mph. Rain Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
m iles — Small craft advisory Is
chance 40 percent. Tonight
'In effect. North wind around 20
becom ing partly cloudy and
k n o t s b e c o m in g n o r t h to
cold. Low upper 30s to low 40s.
northeast 15 to 20 knots tonight
Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
and east IB knots Saturday. Sea
Saturday mostly sunny and cool.
S to 7 feet but higher in the Gulf
High lower 60s. East wind 10
Stream . Mostly clou d y with
mph.
areas o f rain becoming partly
cloudy tonight.
temperature: 42; overnight low:
IITBRDBD POBBCABTt
4 2 ; T h u r s d a y 's h ig h : 6 6 ; Partly cloudy and mild through
barometric pressur e : 30.30: rela­ Monday with a chance o f show­
tiv e h u m id ity : 93 percen t: ers north Monday and south
wtnds; northwest at 10 mph; Tuesday. Clearing and cooler
rain: .19 inch; sunrise: 74)9 north Tuesday. Lows upper 40a
s o n . sunset 6 .10 p.m.
to lower 50s north to 60s south.
• A T D R O A T T I D E S : Highs near 70 north to near 00
r i l t h i highs. 11:23 south dropping to low 60s north
11:49 p.m.: Iowa. 4:56 Tuesday.

HOSPITAL NOTES

\
i*

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1

�Evening Herald
(USPS 4*13*0)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-0093
Friday, February 8, 1985—4A
Wayne 0. Doyle, Publlther
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery W«rl&lt;. 81 10; Month. 8-1 75. 3 Monihv
814 25. &lt;) Moriihv 827.00 Year. 851 (XJ Hv Mall Wrrk.
81.50; Monih. *»i no, 3 Months 8 IH.00. flMonths. 832.50
Yrar. 800 00.

Teachers Put
To The Test
Teach ers, It seem s, d o n ’t like to take tests
a n y m ore than do students. M any educators
protested r e c e n tly w hen A lb ert Shanker.
president o f the A m erica n Federation o f
Teach ers, proposed that all a spirin g teachers
be required to pass a tough national test.
O ne a rgu m en t against such a test Is that It
w ou ld n 't tru ly m easure a p erson 's ability to
teach. T h a t u ndou btedly Is true, but at least It
w ould d eterm in e w h eth er p rospective teach­
ers kn ow th eir subject. A talent for teaching
Isn't o f m u ch use If you d on 't h ave som e
k n ow led ge to pass on.
It can be argu ed that tests — n o m atter how
carefu lly designed — are not w h o lly accurate,
but teachers kn ow better than a n yon e that
there sim p ly Is no better w a y to estim ate how
w ell a person has m astered a subject.
A national test for teachers m igh t seem to
underm ine state control o f education, but It
does not seem unreasonable or ph ilosoph­
ic a lly o b je c t io n a b le to s e t a u n iv e rs a l,
m in im u m standard for educators. Shankar
said that In Florida, p rospective m ath teach­
e r s a rc te s te d In t h e ir s u b je c t ut th e
slxth-grude level.
It Is probable that a tou gh national test
w ould tem p ora rily Increase teacher shortages
In som e parts o f the cou n try, give n the fact
that one-third o f those tested sin ce 1082 have
flunked a statew id e test In a large state.
In the lon g run, h ow ever, u pgrad in g the
qu a lity o f teachers cannot h elp but Im prove
m orale w ith in the profession. It’s not unrea­
sonable to ex p ect, too. that the public w ill be
m ore w illin g to Increase fu n d in g for education
os classroom Instruction Im proves. T h at is
the ph ilosop h y behind som e states' current
edu cational reform s, w hich la rg ely seem to be
w orking.
M any o f the better educators stron gly favor
to u g h te s ts , b o th for s tu d e n ts and for
teachers. S h a n k er's proposal should be given
favorable consideration.

Voice For God
E v e n th e 4 1 -y e a r-o ld p a r a ly z e d , selfpronounced atheist D eng Pu fang must have
adm ired feisty 74-year-old M other Teresa,
v is ito r to c o m m u n is t C h in a , w h en she
snapped back at him that " d e e p dow n in you r
heart, you hnve that desire to love G o d ."
Deng, son o f Chinese leader D en g X iaoping,
w as p aralyzed for life w hen ram p agin g Red
G u ards th rew him from a w in d ow during the
1066-07 Maoist Cultural R evolu tion.
T h o u g h confined to u w heelchair, he has
played u lea d in g role In C h in a 's expanding
efforts to h elp the handicapped.
M other T eresu went to C hina hoping to
establish m ission s for the destitute. She had a
spirited 45 -m ln u te talk w ith D eng. H e said he
w as an atheist w h o helped the handicapped
out o f a d esire to do social service w h ile her
good w orks w ere based on religiou s beliefs.
"A lth o u g h w e start from a different stand­
point. w e are doin g It for the sam e pu rpose,"
said Deng.
But sh e Interrupted. " I t 's the sam e stand­
point: It's ou r love for G od In a c tio n ." She
c a lle d th e p o o r a n d h a n d ic a p p e d " o u r
brothers and sisters under G o d ."
"Y o u can sa y that In y ou r w ords, but I am
an a th e ist," said Deng, and laughed.
She shot back: " T h e sa m e la vin g hand has
created you . m e and each o n e o f them for the
sam e purpose: to love and be loved. A n d what
you do Is y o u r love o f G od In action. Inside o f
you. you h a ve that desire to lo v e G o d ."
W h a teve r D en g w as thinking, he must have
been a w a re that he had Just confronted u
pow er o f m u ch m ore m agn itu d e than Is
Im agined In an ath eist's universe.

BERRY'S WORLD

MICHAEL K. EVANS
$

Likely Fate Of Those Budget Proposals...
WASHINGTON IUPI) - Once again It's budget — and fair — place to make substantial budget
time — lime to slog through thousand* o f page* cuts.
•o f detail* that will never be Implemented.
A id to fa n n ers: The administration has
Instead, let's take the short-cut route and asked for a 37 percent cut In these programs.
discuss not what's In the budget per se but what The response from Congrrss will be good, sound
Congress Is likely to do with the Reagan Idea but not "this” year, when the farmers are
proposals.
down and out. The right Idea would be to let the
Here's the Evans guide to the Budget. In brief.
farmers grow surplus grain and then sell It on
D efense: The administration has asked for a world markets at whatever the going price
•32 billion Increase, or 12.6 percent. They will happens to be. Instead o f pricing farmers out of
lie lucky to get half of that. Defense Secretary the market because o f the overvalued dollar. Of
Caspar Weinberger has weakened his case by course, that would cost some money, but It
attempting to stonewall Congress. It didn't work would be a lot cheaper than the present
for Johnson and It didn't work for Nixon: It's a schem es and would Insure the long-term
mystery why Cap thinks he can succeed where viability of our agricultural sector.
so many other* have failed. The first major
E lim in ate reven u e sharing: While cloaked
order of business for Congress will be to knock in righteous pieties, the main reason for this
the Weinberger defense budget Into a cocked punitive move Is to show the state legislatures
who's really the boss. Since many states have a
hat. Then they can proceed to other business.
H salth caret The request here Is for a freeze habit o f telling Washington to balance Its
on the payment schedules for Medicare and budget, what better way than by cutting ofT aid
Medicaid, meaning no Increase In doctor or to the very states who are complaining the
hospital fees. This one Is likely to go through. loudest. But the whole approach Is meanOnce the defense budget has been hacked apart, spirited and will not get a decent hearing In
legislators will feel some obligation to turn the Congress.
other blade on social welfare services. Since
C o t govern m en t p a y b y 8 percen t, fre o s e
most economists, let alone politicians, are at a re tire m e n t b e n eflte i The freeze on retirement
loss to explain w hy health care costs have risen benefits probably will go through and m ay even
almost twice as fast as Inflation over the past 20 be accompanied by a one-year freeze on social
years, this seems like an eminently reasonable security benefits as well. If both of these pass.

ROBERT WALTERS

Who
Owns
H aw aii?
KANEOHE. Hawaii (NEAI - In
theory, Hawull consists of eight
major Islands, all officially part of
the United Stales and therefore
open to any U.S citizen who wishes
to purchase land and live there.
Hut It doesn't quite work that
way. The entire 29.000-ucre Island
o f Kahoolawe Is controlled by the
Navy and used as a bombing range.
The entire 46,000-acre Island of
Nllhau was purchased In 1865 for
• 10,000 by the Robinson faintly. All
u c llv lty there is shrouded In
mysteryThe entire 90,000-acre Island of
Lanai was sold to Jumrs Dole In
1921 for • 1.1 million.
On the "Big Island" of Hawaii sits
the 224.000-acre Parker Ranch, one
of the world's largest cattle ranches.
The federal government own*
about 8 percent o f Hawaii's land,
the state government hold* more
than 34 percent and county gov­
ernment* control another 3 percent.
Among prlvnte land holders. Ihr
Robinson and Parker families rank
behind the Bishop Estate, which
controls 340.000 acres — nlmost 9
percent of Hawaii's 4 million acres.
The slate's nine largest private
ow ners of real estate hold 35
percent of Its Sand and the various
governments control another 45
percent. That leaves 20 percent for
everybody else.
Many families throughout the
state must rent the land on which
their homes are located.
Confronted with the most con­
centrated land ownership In the
nation. Hawull's state legislature In
1979 sought to remedy the situation
by enacting a relatively modest land
reform law.
Its most far-reaching provision
would allow the owners of singlefamily homes to purchase the land
which they have been renting for
decades, often at exorbitant prices.
The Bishop Estate mounted a
full-scale Irgul ussuult upon the law,
but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
unanimously last year that the state
had the right to curtail a "feudal
laud tenure s y s te m " that had
become a "social and economic
evil."
Land reform may be crucial lo the
promotion of democracy In Central
America and elsewhere tn the Third
World — but It certainly hasn't
become fashionable here In the 50th
stale.

government employees will forego their raises
next year as well. But an actual 5 percent pay
cut Is out o f the question.
Im p lem en t nser fees: Here Is a sensible idea
that has been proposed by leaders of both
parties for years, but never gets anywhere. The
Idea o f Individuals paying for the specific
Federal resources they use would seem to be an
unobjectionable suggestion that both Democrats
and Republicans could handle. But It always
gets bogged down In the hokum about making
available "ou r priceless national heritage" to all
Americans regardless of race, creed, color, or
pocketbook. This legislation w on’t get any
further this year than It has In the past.
T a x re fo rm : Aha. Maybe you noticed one
glaring omission in the budget message, and
that was that tax reform-increases were not
mentioned at all. Not even a token reference.
What happened is quite obvious. The big
business lobbyists made It quite clear to the
White House that If the administration was
going to try to take away all their tax breaks,
they would be so busy defending the status quo
that th e y w o u ld n 't h a ve a n y tim e left
whatsoever to support the spending cuts. The
administration got the message and promised to
propose tax legislation some other time. And. at
least In Washington. In February 1985. Ihat's
the way It Is.

of rue SPace M rLe

feaR MlLfTafWMISSION
' New
To SeeK ouT[_ .
I, To Boldly SPeNP YouR Tax
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SPeNT fteFoRe!

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Kfrw of me Rerusbc
in a vacuvM.

WILLIAM RUSHER

The Time Is Now
NEW YORK |NKA) - All those
Americans who voted for President
Reagan Iasi November awe him.
now. one further Important bit of
assistance: a letter tn their senators
and congressmen, expressing firm
support for Ills proposed domestic
budget cuts.
Kiinuld Reagan Is our point man.
but he can't possibly win this bailie
all by himself. In re-electing him by
a landslide, we guve him the
mandate lo demand these cuts. Now
let's give him the clout lo eompel
them. To paraphrase the old m ili­
tary drrinlllon or discipline, we
must make the members of Con­
gress more afraid o f the voters
behind them than they are of the
special Interests In front of them.
All the cynics In Washington are
betting hr can't do II. Back In the
early 1970s. when polls first In­
dicated thut moat Americans were
beginning lo describe themselves as
"conservative." Arthur Schlrslngcr
Jr. reassured worried liberals by
arguing that, w h ile A m ericans
might become "noticeably con­
servative." thry would always re­
m ain “ o p e r a tio n a lly lib e r a l."
Translated out o f the original
Harvardrar. that meant that, under
th e w elfu re s ta te . Just about
everybody wus getting a govern­
ment subsidy of some sort, and
while the voters might disapprove of
this In pure theory, their greed
could be depended on lo overcome
Ihelr principles In a crunch, because

their own snouts were In the trough.
I happen to think Schleslnger wus
wrong about this (as about so much
rlsel. and Reagan's election and
massive re-election certainly sug­
gest as much. But up till now the
dispute has been waged In the
reulm of theory: now the gloves
have come o(T. and Mr. Reagan bus
submitted his budget. It calls for
nearly 939 billion In domestic
rogram cuts, and the Intended
rncflclarirs of all that money, or
r a t h e r t h e ir p o l i t i c a l r e p r e ­
sentatives, are yelling to high heav­
en.
Why — to take the biggest single
Itrm — should the federal govern­
ment shovel 4 billion taxpayers'
dollars every year down Ihe throats
o f stairs and localities tn Ihe form o f
"general revenue sharing?" If they
need the money for local purposes,
the place to raise ii, surely, is in the
states and cities where It will be
spent.
II Is said that Mr. Reagan's cuts
are politically riskier Ihls lim e
around because now he's going
after the subsidies to the middle
class. Pine; The cynic* may discov­
er that America's middle-class Is
made of sterner stuff than they
realized.
Aa a matter o f fact, why not tell
your senators and congressman to
surprise President Reagan by mak­
ing deeper domestic cuts than he
has requested? And not to count on
your vole If they don't.

E

W ASHINGTO N WORLD

No Budge
On Arms
Budget
W A S H I N G T O N (UPIJ —
President Reagan, who wants
about a 13 percent Increase In
military spending next year, says
cuts would be "very risky." He
charges that the Soviets have con­
du cted the “ b ig g e s t m ilita r y
buildup In history."
Both Reagan and Defense Secre­
tary Caspar Weinberger are refusing
to budge on the Pentagon budget,
putting any proposals lo cut In In
terms of a threat lo national securi­
ty. The congressional leaders are
responding by calling Weinberger a
"draft dodger" when II cornea to
doing his share to slash the deficit.
T h e y also h a ve described h it
charges that cuts would abet the
enemy a* "McCarthyite."
While Reagan was never specific
during the campaign on the cutai;
Nor did he warn the middle clast
that they would be hard hit. Still, hit
gave an overview o f big government;
that appealed to the voters.
The only sacrosanct part o f the
b u d g e t Is f o r t h e d e f e n s e
establishment.
Farmers, smallbusiness men and women, students
deprived of college loans under the
new strict funding rules are going to
be left out In the cold If Congress
decides to go along with the presi­
dent.
In an East Room speech to
lawmakers. Reagsn threw down the
gauntlet against opponents o f hla
big military Increase.
"T h e defense o f our nation la the
one budget Item that cannot be
dictated solely by domestic consid­
erations." Reagan aald. "Despite
severe constraints on our budget,
we must respond to the unprece­
dented m ilitary buildup o f the
Soviet Union —* the largest military
buildup In world history.
" I f we lose the budget battle — If
we allow all the lessons of all the
decades of unchecked government
spending to go unheeded — then I
believe we'll consign ourselves and
our children to the tyranny o f ■
g o v e rn m e n t th a t res p ec ts no
boundaries and knows no limits."
The challenge la there. He is m
popular president and often suc­
cessful In staging 8 blit* to put
across his views. But this time
around, the American people will
have the figures before them and
they ran decide whether he ha*
put the nation on the right course or
not.

JA C K ANDERSON

Low-Interest Loan Becomes Nightmare

* * * * * * - &lt;y « x . .f l n s T1,

"Sorry. Mr. Prastdent. Timet up lor tbs Strug­
gling Farmer delegation The Struggling Bunker
delegation lawaiting."

WASHINGTON For Virginia
Isaacs, the low-interest federal loan
she got to fix up her modest home
seemed like a gift from heaven.
Instead. It plunged Ihe 57-year-old
Oklahoma City woman Into that
special section o f hell reserved for
those who put their trust In the
federal bureaucracy.
She Oiled out all the necessary
forms, submitted to all the routine
red tape and selected an officially
approved contractor. But the re­
modeling left her hearth and health
In equal states o f disrepair. The
house was a shambles, and her
doctors believe that a heart attack
two years ago was brought on by
stress.
Since the heart attack, Mrs. Isaacs
has been unable to work full lime.
But this hasn't stopped the Housing
and Urban Development Depart­
ment from demanding that she
repay every penny o f her 831,000
loan. Nor has the fact that HUD'a
own auditors determined that the
had been overcharged for the repair
work by as much as 810.000 and

that the supposedly rehabilitated
house was a safety hazard.
Although the Scrooges st HUD
pressed remorselessly for full pay­
ment, they were leas dedicated
about overseeing Ihe repair work.
They failed lo enforce thetr own
guidelines governing reconstruction
contracts under the so-called "3 1 2 "
loan program.
HUD documents seen by m y
associate Corky Johnson show that
the gutdeltnea designed to assure
proper work were not followed. The
federal agency seems lo have ab­
dicated It* responsibilities lo Ihe
city urban renewal authority, which
failed to follow the gutdeltnea that
might have spared Mrs. Isaacs her
grief.
When she got her HUD loan In
1980. Mrs. Isaacs followed Instruc­
tions and asked the local urban
renewal office for a list o f approved
contractors. In hindsight, she prob­
ably should have been auspicious
when several o f the numbers she

dialed had been disconnected. But
she persevered and finally found a
contractor who was still In business.
Here's what Mrs. Isaacs did — and
didn't — get for her 83I.000-.
— She paid for new gutters and
downspout*. HUD Inspectors found
the old ones still in place, leaking.
— Though she was charged 8200
for replacement o f rotted studs.
HUD reported that "there was no
e v id e n ce a n y rep la cem en t o c ­
curred."
— An old circuit breaker, frayed
electric wiring and leaky sewage
pipes were not replaced.
— Mrs. Isaacs couldn't use her
kitchen for seven weeks while the
contractor tried lo repair U.
— T h e c o n t r a c t o r tr ie d t o
persuade Mr*. Isaacs to buy a
refrigerator twice aa expensive aa
the one she wanted. When she
refused, the contractor pul her old
refrigerator out on the porch, where
the motor burned out tn two days,
— The house was left with gouged
and rotted celling beams, a garage
door completely o ff Its hinge*, and

unconnected ducts and drainpipes.
Mrs. Isaacs wasn't the only one
who saw her dream o f government
help turn sour. In Oklahoma City
alone, at least a dozen families were
the victims o f shoddy work by
contractors and sloppy supervision'
by officials. For example:
— One couple with a newborn
baby had to use s kiddle pool for
baths and dish washing for a month
because the contractor had dis­
connected the bathtub and sink.
They had to live In one room for
months because the repair crew had
knocked unnecessary holes In the
walla of the other rooms.
— One eight-room house had
electricity In only three rooms when
th e r e h a b ilit a t io n w o rk w a s
finished.
Footnote: A HUD official declined
comment beyond saying. "Som e
programs go better than others." A
spokesman for Oklahoma City ad:
milted lo problems with some local
contractors. Meanwhile. Virginia
Isaacs has Wed suit against HUD
and Oklahoma City officials.

�PEOPLE

/

E v e n in g H e ra ld , Sanford, F I.

F rid a y , F o b . I , 1 H 5 — SA

Gardening

■l.

G row Sun-Ripened Tomatoes For A Taste Treat
: If w e had to guess the one vegetable that people
most often Include In their spring garden. It
V ou ld be the tomato. Nothing quite compares
with the fresh taste o f sun-ripened tomatoes. And.
Judging by the popularity o f this vegetable, mast
gardeners feel that raising them Is definitely
Worth the effort:
. Believe It or not. tomatoes were once thought of
a s poisonous. The do belong to the poisonous
^nightshade family. But. so do potatoes, peppers
and eggplants. Part o f the reason tomatoes were
avoided may have been because they were
avoided may have been because they were not
inatlve to Europe. They originated In South and
Central America and were Introduced to Europe
iby the Spanish In the 16th century. The English
‘grew them on trellises as ornamentals. The
Trench considered them to be "peasant food."
Folks began to eat them here about the middle of
the 19th century. Since then, the tomato has
‘e njoyed a rapid climb to the top In popularity.
The targe red fruits we enjoy today have little In
common with their ancestors, grown by the Incas
In Peru. Those early tomatoes were small and
yellow. Today's sweet. Juicy tomatoes were
developed by the Italians and eventually found
their way to America.
T o raise any vegetable successfully, you need to
begin with adequate soil preparation. And.

Alfred
Bessesen
Urban
H ortlcu ltrlst
333-2SOO
E at. 1S1

tomatoes are no different. They prefer a slightly
acid soil, with a pH between 6.0 and 6.8 . If the pH
of your soil Is less than 6.0. It Is too acid and must
be amended. T o be sure. It*s a good idea to have
your soil tested for pH. Garden soli pH testers are
available at some garden supply stores, or you
can have It tested at the Agricultural Center In
Sanford for a small fee.
Another Important part o f soil preparation is
fertilisation. Some folks believe In fertilising the
soli before planting. If yu prefer this method,
apply about two-and-a-half pounds of a complete
fertiliser, such as 6-8-8 with minor elements, for
every 100 square feet of garden area. Do this a
week before planting and, m ix the fertiliser
thoroughly into the soil. Three weeks after you
plant the tomatoes, add another two pounds o f
fertiliser per 100 square feet as a aide dressing.
Then water thoroughly. Regardless of your

fertilisation method, make a side dressing o f
fertilizer every two to three weeks, adding a total
o f about ten pounds per 100 square feet during
the season.
Before you plant, be sure all danger of frost has
passed. Choose the heathiest plants from re­
commended varltles yu can find and handle them
gently. It's best to transplant on a cloudy day. or
late In the afternoon. And, as soon as possible
after a rain.
Set your plants slightly deeper than they were
growing at the nursery. You might want to add a
cutworm control at the same time, ir you wait
even a day before controlling cutworms, you may
have to but new plants. If the variety you choose
needs staking, you can drive slakes Into the soil
at the time o f planting. Place the stakes three for
four Inches from the plants, as the plants grow,
simply lie them to the stakes with string or strips
o f cloth.
T o help your plants get o(T to a good start, make
up a starter solution of one or two tablespoons of
an all-purpose garden fertilizer dissolved In a
gallon ot water. Pour about a pint or this liquid
Into the planting hole as you set each plant. Be
sure to shade your plants for a few days after
planting.
It's a good Idea to mulch your plants. Mulches

help conserve moisture. Inhibit weed growth, and
minimize fertilizer leaching. Good materials for
mulching Include: straw, dried lawn clippings
and black plastic. If you'd like to try plastic,
prepare the soli for planting, making sure It's
moist. Lay the black plastic over the entire bed.
and anchor the edges with soil. Then, cut holes In
the plastic and set the plants through It Into the
bed.
Tomatoes need about an inch of water once
each week — it’ s better than m any Itght
sprinklings. If your soli Is very snady. you may
need to water more frequently — especially the
first week after planting. Never let the soil dry out
completely.
Many insects bother tomatoes causing leaf und
fruit damage. A general purpose Insecticide will
control most o f them. Check with your favorite
garden supply center.
The most serious diseases of tomatoes are
blights, leaf spots, wilts and viruses. Leaf spot*
can usually be controlled with fungicide sprays.
However, viruses and wills must be controlled by
using resistant plant varieties.
Remember, plenty o f sunshine t* a must for
healthy, sweet tomatoes. 1FAS vegetable experts
suggest a minimum o f six hours n day. but
sunshine all day Is even better.
Happy Gardening.

Billy's Bad Mouth Not Fatal
DEAR ABB Yt Several of un
mothers have a common pro­
blem. It concerns a boy (I'll call
him Bltlyl who Is a bad influence
on our children. They are all In
the third grade, but this Billy Is
wise beyond his years. He gets
his Information (about sexl front
h a n g in g a ro u n d h is o ld e r
brother, then spreads around
what he has heard to the boys In
his class. He tells them things
about sex that most adults have
never experienced, and his lan­
guage la pure filth!
Our sons want to Invite Billy to
stay overnight, but we're afraid
o f what Billy might teach them.
B es id es , m ost o f us h a v e
younger children at home, and
we don't want Billy here talking
aboul Lord knows whut.
I understand Billy's parents
are very liberal minded, so don’t
suggest we talk to them. Maybe
If they read ihls. they w ill
understand why their son is
shunned by his peers.
STUMPED

Swedish artifacts displayed in Sanford museum exhibit, 'Tradition."

City Founders Honored
A t Open House Sunday
Mrs. Hortense Roumlllat was a
woman of tradition. She believed
In tradition. She honored tradi­
tion and during her lifetime In
Sanford, she did much to pre­
serve many of the etty'a tradi­
tions.
One of these traditions was the
annual "Founders Day" celebra­
tion. usually set for the Sunday
closest to Feb. 8. recognized as
the day a colony o f Swedish
Immigrants arrived In Central
Florida and settled In the Little
Community o f New Upaala. west
o f Sanford.
Th e arrival of these blond,
rosy-cheeked families, brought
to America by Henry S. Sanford,
land developer, solved some of
his labor problems and seemed
to call for a celebration, aa Mr.
Sanford presented each family a
fiv e -a c re tract o f land and
enough lumber to build a home.
If the head o f each family would
agree to remain aa a part o f Mr.
Sanford's Be lair work force.
D iligen t, honest and hard
working, the Swedes prospered
and looked to Mr. Sanford as a
father figure. At a Christmas
dinner for these new Floridians,
sponsored by Mrs. Sanford, a Mr.
J.B. Linberg, acting for the
Swedes, expressed tnelr grati­
tude by saying:
"W e were poor and friendless
when are came here and now
look around you... all are pro­
sperous... The land you gave us
Is one large orange grove. Not
one S w ed e has required or
received public assistance! I
have read In you books that he Is
a great man who has made two
blades o f grass grow where only
one blade grew before— but. I
tell you, Mr. Sanford, you are a

bigger man. For you have made
the orange trees grow where
o n ly t h e w i ld , s a w - t o o t h
palmetto has flourished!"
F o r m a n y y e a r s . M rs.
Roumlllat. Mrs. Peggy Chase
and Mrs. Carmeta Ray were an
active trio, assisted by members
of the Sallle Harrison Chapter o f
the Daughters o f the American
Revolution In keeping the tradi­
tion o f "Founder's Day" alive.
Each y e a r choosing som e
phase o f local history as the
subject for area school children
to use In a city-wide essay
contest Is based on some tradi­
tional aspect o f Sanford.
Following a lapse of several
years, the Henry S. Sanford
Library and Museum Associates
and the Historical Preservation
Society will reactivate this tradi­
tional event on Sunday. Feb. 10.
lo be h eld al the L ib ra ryMuseum. 530 East First Si.,
from 2 to 4 p.m.
MUdred M. Csskey. curator,
has announced a program which
Includes the following speakers
and guests:
James Jemlgan, Director o f
City Parks and Recreation; the
Honorable Bettyc Smith. Mayor
of Sanford: the Rev. Leonard
Jones, pastor. Union Park, First
B a p tis t C h u r c h . O r la n d o :
Francis Roumlllat and Mrs. Lucy
McLeod, son and daughter o f
M rs. R o u m llla t :
J u lia n
Stenstram. a direct deacendent
o f one o f the earliest Swedish
families to settle In this area;
Mrs. Ruth Lee. president. Henry
S. S an ford Llbrary-M uaeum ;
Mrs. Barbara Moore, president.
Historical Preservation Society;
Mrs. Leonore Jones, prominent
Swedish historian: Mrs. Virginia

Free Youth Orchestras Concert
tFUloarljIa
CtiMitLikHU
Vo
A..lk
id a S
ym phony Y
u th
Orchestras will appear In a free

t a S T f r 10.M 4

pm ..

Itoke A f* d r m y on

West Slate route 490. Forest
City.
The Young Artists Orchestra I.

L *

___i__ the
a.______
___ f__________
under
direction
o f Joseph
Wise, and Preparatory Orchestra

S S tS

nrrtewm Th
Ttu*
m o onh
M trar ■re
perform.
e Itw
orchestras
are
composed o f Central Florida
students.

Kelly, Regent. Sallle Harrison
C h a p te r D .A .R .: and M rs.
Genevieve Drumley. Mrs. Kathy
Wyle. members of D.A.R. who
will participate In Judging the
children's essay contest and will
assist In Issuing the awards.
This Founder's Day event,
arranged as a tribute to the
Intrepid Swedish people who
arrived In Central Florida to
settle the little community o f
Upaala over 100 years ago. to
free and open lo the public.
The Llbrary-Muaeum Board ol
Directors extends a special w el­
come to the Swedish guests and
their families. Sealing to limited
and available to early arrivals
and special guests.

DEAR STUM PED: If your son
and his classmulcs want Billy in
stay overnight, then obviously
B illy Isn't "shunned by his
peers" — It's their parents who
don't want him around.
Liberal-minded parents luvr
their children ns much as you
love yours, so please share your
concerns with Billy's parents.
It's not unusual for a child tu
entertain his peers with X-rated
Information In u bid for populari­
ty. Don't panic; It's neither
contagious nor fatal.

of the money, but now that It’s
tnonogrununed. I want to keep

Dear

I told my girlfriend that 1 will
do anything Abigail Van Burnt
thinks is right.
J A C K E T BACK

AbuV
•

D E A R J A C K E T B A C K ) She
lost your Jacket, and you ac­
feel thul she wns Irresponsible In cepted &gt;50 restitution, Pair
the first place, und It shouldn't enough. Six mouths later, she
matter Ihut the Jacket was found g n vr you the Jacket, monosix months later.
gruimned us a gift; she didn’t sc//
A friend of mine suggested 1 It to you. You are not obligated
give her the Jacket track Instead to pay her for a gift.

nave it!
So Will You With New G la m s. $•• Far Yourself
Now Much Bettor You Look And Fool!!

WHITE GLASS LENSES
SINGLE VISION

f 3 5 ° °

"K J5

LARGE SELECTION OF FRAMES

Tints Aflwli Cr«r AfStUM*. Taw OKtsr* Pr*urt*tlM BM. HUmt
M o ld . UjntMitt 5 ■•fdre.
« oijr m cixssts
SAVIXG CiNIIR

ni

DEAR A B B Yt Lust June. I
lent my girlfriend my Jacket, and
ahe lost It at the restaurant
w here she w as w orking. In
September she gave me 550 to
replace the Jacket, but I spent
the 850 on something else.
Well. Just before Chrislmus
there was a fire at that restau­
ran t. and w h ile th ey w ere
cleaning up. m y Jacket was
found In the basem ent. My
girlfriend had It cleaned and
monogrammed with my Initials
and gave It to me as a surprise
Christmas present. *
The problem; My girlfriend
says now that I got the Jacket
back. I should return her 850. I

M m

AZALIAS
flM M QUALITY
in m ot

HUVT ROOM
M CM II

V

Each
* _

_

Or 3 For * 1 0

COME
HEAR

CYCLAMEN
NON-STOP I

4 luck* S M 7 Inch
5 INCH l | * *

GRAND NATIONAL
STOCK CAR DRIVER

Sflist/cL
LAKE SPIED

Who Will Be Sharing His
Faith With Us On Sunday,

• HYDRANGEA
• PRIMR08E
• FLORAL MUM8
• RIEGER BEG0NIA8
• IVY GERANIUM8
• FLORAL GARDENIAS
• FUCH8IA BASKETS

FEBRUARY 10, 7 P.M.
FIRST b a p t i s t CHURCH OF SANFORD
&gt; if&gt; m ■&gt;■/ i v n n t D
S 1 9 PARK AVENUE

SANFORD. FLORIDA

S2771

*«*•
* TV £ 2 L ? ! ? l £ m

LAKE M ARY
S2341SS

HTN MMUtKJ

f* * * M W .IT -M

oru sm m i in
Off! MAT fcJttM

M AITLAN D
134.20 00

me

�SPORTS
4A—Evselne HsrsM, fenfecd, FI.

92-Foot
Heave
Goes In

Coletti-Led
SC C Women
Attain State
By Chris Fitter
Hotaid Bpart* Wrltar
There waa a m ovie that came
out a few months ago called
"Beal Defense." It was a box
office bomb. Th e makers of that
film could have taken some
pointers from Seminole Com­
munity College’s Lady Raiders.
The best defense In the MidFlorida Conference Is played by
SCC. according to coach (leans
Oallagher.
SCC's defense continued to
d r a w r a v e r e v i e w s fr o m
Oallagher and Its opposition
Thursday night as the Lady
Raiders clinched a berth In the
State Junior College Tourna­
ment with a 87-52 victory over
Santa Pe’s Lady Saints at the
SCC Health Center.
SCC. 13-8 overall and 4-2 In
the conference, snapped Santa
Pe’s 10-game conference winn­
ing streak. The Lady Saints won
the conference a year ago with a
GO mark and they were 4-0
going Into Thursday's game.
Santa Pe can clinch a state
tournament bid with a win over
Flurlda Junior C ollege next
week.
The Lady Raiders were hoping
that this season, more than any
other, they would make it to the
atate tourney. SCC will host the
tournament Thursday, Peb. 28.
through Saturday, March 2.
The key figure In SCC's tough
xone defense Thursday was
sophomore forward Juana Colettl. "W e put her (Colettl) out on
the wing and Santa Pe had
trouble getting the ball Inside
with her in the w ay." Oallagher
said.
Colettl waa Instrumental on
both ends o f the door Thursday
as (he talented lefthander broke
loose on the offensive end for a
game-high 23 points, Including

Basketball
Tm still flying high.
We've bHn working hard
ra'vw

'ra going to goor
down ond concentrate

— Ileana Gallagher
10 o f 14 shots from the floor.
The Clearwater Central Catholic
duate also grabbed a game_h 12 rebounds. "She ate
them (Santa Pe) up Inside."
Oallagher said.
Sophomore guard Pam Lee,
another lefth an d er, put her
Oeorge Oervln-llke shot to good
use Thursday as she connected
for 20 points. Lee also handed
out seven assists and pulled
down six rebounds.
Freshman point guard Tammy
Johnson contributed 15 points
and six assists, freshman center
Kim Lemon tossed tn nine points
and ripped down nine boards
and freshman forward Rayahs
Roberta contributed seven re­
bounds.
Sheila Archer was high for the
Lady Saints with 17 pointa while
Robyn Mathis and Christine
K rog er added 10 each and
Donna Dodd chipped In with
n i n e . S a n f o r d 's M a x in e
C am pbell, a S em in ole High
graduate, added two points for
the Lady Saints before fouling
out In the second half.
For the second gam e In a row.
the Lady Raiders built a big lead

K

•as BTATK, Paga 8A

Mona Bombs DeLand —
By C h ris P la te r
H erald B p erts W rite r
DELAND —
Mona Benton,
who missed (lie bus to Tues­
d a y 's gam e again st Spruce
Creek, made up for lost lime
Thursday night as the senior
standout hit IS o f 20 shots from
the floor for a season-high 30
points In Seminole High's 70-45
trouncing o f DeLand's Lady
Bulldogs in Five Star Confemce
uctlon at DeLand High.
Semlnolr Improved to 10-5
overall and 12-2 In the confer­
ence while DeLand, which has
lost two straight, now stands at
15-7 overall and B-S In the Five
Star.
The Lady S em ln oles used
Thursday's gam e to tune up for
tonight's Important conference
matchup with Lake Brantley's
Lady Patriots. Oame time Is 0:15
for the Junior varsity and 8 for
the varsity showdown.
"W e need a good game against
Brantley," hem mole coach Ron
Merthle said. "W e 'v e got to get
after them and try to get the girls
to play up to their potential."
Behind Benton, who also dis­
hed out nine assists Thursday
night. Catherine "K itty " A n ­
derson turned In her usual
outstanding performance Inside
with IS points and 18 rebounds.

Andell "Soul" Smith also tossed
In 13 points while Bea Smith
added 10 paints and eight
boards.
Robyn Swartz was high for
DeLand with 21 points and
Shawn Lane contributed 12.
Seminole bolted out to a 25-13
lead In the first quarter and took
a 48-21 halftime lead.
In Junior v a r s i t y a c tio n
Thursday. Yolanda Robinson
funneled in a career-high 32
points and yanked down 18
rebounds to lead Seminole to a
50-37 v ic to ry o v e r the JV
Bulldogs.
I I M I M O i l IN I -

a «rtm *

Lake Mary raced out to a 10-2
lead over the sixth-ranked (2A)
Panthers after one quarter but
Eustls battled back within two.
18-18, at halftime. Eustls came
back to take a seven-point lead
m id w a y th ro u g h th e third
quarter but Lake Mary chopped
It to two. 31 -29. going into the
fourth.
Lake Mary regained the lead
tw o minutes Into the fourth
quarter as Courtney Hall made
one o f two free throws. The
Rams got the ball back and went
to their spread offen se and
Avert!! waa fouled. Averiil made
both free throws and added
another after the glri who fouled
her waa called for a technical.
That gave Lake Mary a fourpoint lead and Eustls never got
any closer.
Alleen Patterson showed that
she la over her bout with the flu
as she led Lake Mary with a
game-high 14 points and IB
rebounds. A v e r iil added 13
points while Hall tosaed In 10
and grabbed 11 rebounds.
The Lady Rama also received
an outstanding defensive game
from Junior forward Karen De-

A/Wwwn

FH w w n 1, Wallacs I, iaSnwn f. TataN: M

tsarti 11. M m

4.

WyclM 4. Ian* II, Carr I TW»I»: If I U IS.
MaUttma - famlnata 4k D ala i* II Pawts
- lamina* I t D fU n S 1 PawtaS art - M * .
TatSnkal— nant. A — M l

L A B S M A R Ti 18-7
EUST1S - Kim Averiil hit 7 of
7 free throws In the fourth
quarter Thursday night as Lake
M ary's Lady Ram s upended
Eustls' Lady Panthers, 51-39, at
Eustls High.
Lake Mary Improved to 15-7
overall with the win. The Lady
Rams return to Five Star Confem ce action tonight at 8 il5
w hen they host S eab reeie's
Lady Sand Crabs.

B
a
liBrings Relief

Henley's Fly

W a lk e r Jo in s
T r ib e V a rs ity
Seminole basketball *coach
Chris Marietta said Friday
morning that freshman Craig
Walker would Join the varsity
team fo r to n ig h t 's gam e
against DeLand.
Walker, a 8-8 center. Joined
f e llo w f r e s h m a n A n d r e
Whitney w ith the varsity.
Walker and Whitney helped
the S e m in o le froah to a
perfect 154) season. Whitney
then went straight to the
varsity while Walker Joined
the Junior varsity.
tn two outing with the JV,
W alker scored 55 points,
pulled down SO rebounds and
blocked 10 shots. Martette
■aid his showing at the JV
level prompted the Immediate
promotion.
“ Craig aliouki be able to
help us with out rebounding."
said Martens. “ He has some
things to leant but he's got

U nited Press In tern a tio n a l
Until further notice. Bruce
Morris o f Marshall will take his
place In the record book — :
beside such distinctions as who
has the longest beard and who.
has taken the longest shower.
For In Huntington. W .V a .,';
Thursday night, Monts scored a
basket from 92 feet, the longest
shot tn basketball history, tn the
Thundering Herd's 93-82 victory •
over Appalachian Slate.
According to the Guineas Book :
of Records, the longest field goal
had been 89-feet-3 b y L e e ',
Henson o f Virginia Tech In a
g a m e -w in n in g b u z z e r shot
against Florida State on Jan 21.
1980.
Morris picked up the ball Just
Inside the baseline following a
blocked shot by James Roberts
seconds before halftim e. He
turned and hurled It like a
baseball the length o f the court.
The boll went cleanly through
the net. stunning the Henderson
Center crowd.
"It was a one In a m illion."
said Morris, a 6-foot -4 senior
from Deerfield. HI. "A fter ■
it In. 1 Just stood there. I
was In shock. 1 don't know what
I was thinking. It was sort o f
weird."
H ew ssn ol alone.
" I'v e never seen a shot like
that." Appalachian State Coach
Kevin Cantwell said.
Said Marshall Coach Rick
Huckabay: "First o f all, the shot
by Morris was the most exciting
thing that happened tonight."
T w o hours after the game.
Inside hla dormitory, friends
were still asking Morris to de­
scribe the shot, even after wat­
ching a television replay.
" I don't think I'll ever try It
again, though," Morris said. " I
don't think 1 can even hit the
backboard."
But he's In the books now.
And.
for the record, according t u .
to o arn a trip to state.
Guinness: the longest beard was*!
17 VS feet, belonging to Hans N. \
Langseth of Kensett. Iowa. In
1927; the longest shower was .
336 hours, taken by A rron *'
Marshall o f Australia In 1978. J
In the Top 20. No. 6 Illinois
Shelter.
lost to Michigan State 64-56; No.
" S h e (D e S h e t le r ) p la y e d
10 Michigan beat Purdue 95-84:
(Laurie) Robinson and did a good
N o. 12 N e v s d s - L a s V e g a s
Job on her," Lake Mary cosrtt
pounded Pacific 97-72: No. 15 '
Bill Moore said. "T h e last time
North Carolina defeated Virginia '
we played Eustls. Robinson had
82-73; No. 16 Louisiana Tech
29 points. This time, Karen held
downed Texas-Arlington 86-61;
her to 11. Karen's one of the best
an d N o . 20 A l a b a m a - '
around defensively."
Birm ingham blitzed Jackson
D eShetler contributed four
State 80-57.
points, seven rebounds, four
At East Lansing. Mich.. Scott’
assists and two steals for the
Sklles scored 24 points and Sam
L a d y Rams. S en ior forw ard
Vincent 20 to power Michigan
Andrea Penning (six pointa) had
State tn the Big Ten. Efrem’
her best game since coming o(T a
Winters had 16 pointa Tor Hit-,
painful knee Injury.
nots. 1841. Magic Johnson o f th e '*
Lake Mary's Junior feralty ran
Los Angeles Lakers, the form er'''
Its u n b e a ten s t r in g ! to 12
Michigan State star, watched the
T h u r s d a y w i t h k 6 1 -3 8
game from the Spartans' bench.
thrashing of the JV Lady Pan­ Kim AvotIII maos aura the
“ I think the fact that Earvin ‘
Lady Rama war* horn* fras was
thers.
here gave our kids a lift."-:'
Thursday night. Har seven MSU Coach Jud Healhcote said. *'
Terri Whyte, a 8-3; freshman
center, hit 8 of 11 from the floor free throws down the stretch
A t Ann Arbor. Mich.. Roy ’
Tsrpley struck for 31 pointa and
for a game-high 16 points and helped subdue Euatla.
she also pulled down six re­
Richard Rellford had 15 In the .
bounds. Tonya Lawson added seven rebounds and Tricla Noell first half to can y Michigan. 17-3.
12 points and collected eight came up with five steals.
In a Big Ten game. Freshman 1
Troy Lewis scored 22 pointa for .
s te a ls w h ile M a rcle D a ltlc l
Purdue.
tossed tn 12 points and handed
out four assists.
At Stockton. Calif.. NevadaLas
Vegas ran Its winning streak' ,
Lora Splatt. In her first start­
to 17. longest tn the nation, by '.
ing assignment for the JV Lady
cruising over Pacific. The Re­
Rams, contributed four points,
bels. 18-2. made 81 percent o f
five rebounds, two assists and
their shots. Pacific freshman
four steals. Teresa Lucarelll led
Dom ingo Rosario hit for 27 ‘
th e Ram a u n dern eath w ith
Bee QIRLB, Page BA
points.
At Chapel Hill. N.C.. Kenny *
Smith scored 17 points, includ­
ing 9 straight In the final 77
seconds, to guide North Carolina
tn the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Warren Martin added 16 pointa '
elbow trouble which lingered all
for the Tar Heels, 17-5. Virginia ‘
S'
year. The elbow was fine In the
la 1-8 In the league.
third Inning when he whiffed
Scott Underwood. Rod Metz and J a i T a p e l o a t h A lab am a 8 4 A
J A C K S O N V IL L E (U PI&gt; M ike Schm lt in succession.
That's cutting right through the Cleveland Williams and W illie
McDuffie scared 18 pointa each ,
heart.
Eric Hagen, who Lake Mary to teed Jacksonville University ,
coach Allen Tuttle la counting to • 72-84 victory over South ,
on as his No. 2 starter, could find Alabama Thursday In a Sun Belt .'
this chilly evening- &gt;
Whatever. Lake Iftery second the plate In the first Inning. He Conference gome.
bBatman Shane Letterto got the walked the bases .full before
The Dolphins ted by 10 to 14.;,
evening off to a rousing start T u t tle su m m on ed A n th o n y pointa through m ost o f the,',
w h e n h e d r i l l e d a D e r e k ' ssrstc with a 24) count on Paul game, leading 54-21 at halfUne.'.
and 65-55 with T M left In the. )
Llvem ots taetball over the left Ategre.
Held fence. Letterto. who had
The county's leading hitter game. South Alabama closed to
two other singles, scored two last year rifled a single for one within ftve points with 1:32 to
runs and drove In a pair, lined run but Clint Baker waa gunned go, but the Dolphins held on far, j
the ball off the lop o f the fetyce down at the plate when he tried
to score on an overthrow. Odom,
and It bounced overJacksonville's defense held,
T h a t waa on * o f the few nevertheless, gave the 'Hounds a South Alabama to .577 shooting
m istakes made by Llvem ots, 3-1 lead when he stroked a from the floor, marking the Brat however. The senior fire bailer double to left center.
It stayed that way until the have shot teas than A D p e r e S T ^ ’
struck out ftve In three Innings,
allow ed Just two hits and walked fourth when Lake Mary picked
Oviedo's donate Murphy had.
two.
up a pair o f cheap runs on walks 11 potato far the Delphine, 1M .
"M y arm felt good." he aatd to Kevin Hill ana Brent MoUt. a Junior forward Site South had
JO potato. 10
a fte r th e gam e. L a s t y e a r ,
7A
L iva rn o la ezp erten ced som e

Aver ill's FTs Lift Rams

Basketball

IJ. a. ImJtti w. A. knits II, AtounSw i
4 UN.
OSLANO IMt -

Friday, Fib. a, itt*

County baseball fans proved
that the football crazies don t
have anything on them. They
turned out In droves far the
L y m a n -L a k e M a ry nonconfercncc opener at Lym an High
School Thursday night.
O ver 200 fans braved 40degree temperatures to watch
th e Orsyhounds successfully
op en the season o v e r Uietr
fiercest rival. Mike Henley's sac­
rifice fly In the bottom o f seventh
Inning ecorsd Jim m y
for a
7-8 victory to send the Lyman
M th fb l horns happy.
"T h ese people are crazy." eaid
one shivering Greyhound. " I
haven't seen this many people
on some o f the warm nights test
yea r."
Not everyone o f l hoar warm
nights brought out Lake Mary
and Lyman, though. Both
have quality players who have
the scouts buzzing. One report
said that seven scouts were tn
the crowd — which do se n t saw
much for their Judgement on

ftrlgn Sheffield will get
atari when tomlnoto eg
with Tltu ivlllo Astronaut
S a tu rda y.

*

iA t o t o *

»

Sam
Cook

�J

I

Cowing Hsrsld, tsnfwd, FI.
BLONDIE

Friday, Fab.«. IT O -T A

match: Lyman, Lady Patriots In Final

erson's G oal Tips Lady Rams, 2-1;
Lyman Defense Too Tough For Tribe
By C hris P la ter
H era ld S p orts W r it e r
For the second year In a row. Lym an's Lady
Greyhounds and Lake Brantley's Lady Patriots
will meet for the District 3 championship. But
both teams were given a run Tor their money In
Thursday's semifinal action.
e At Lyman, Sanford's Lady Semlnolea fought
the Lady Greyhounds to a scoreless tie In the first
half, but Kim Mitchell scored two goals early In
the second to lead Lyman to a AG victory.
• At Lake Brantley. Pam Anderson's goal from
40 yards out broke a 1-1 deadlock as the Patriots
trimmed Lake Mary's Lady Rams. 2-1, In double
overtime.
Saturday's final Is set for 7 p.m. at Lyman High
with the winner going on to the Region 2 playoff
against the Veto Beach-Vero Beach St. Edwards
winner. Lyman has beaten Lake Brantley thrcfc
times this season. 7* 1.4-1 and 4G.
Lyman, which has won 10 straight this season,
continually aasualted Seminole's goal In the first
half but Tribe goalkeeper Sherri Rumler turned In
a magnificent effort .with 18 first-half saves. On
the other hand. Lym an's defense held Seminole
to Just four shots In the opening half, only one o f
which was a serious threat.
"V icky Pakovlc had a breakaway In the first
half but the keeper (Lisa Chatman) took It away
from her," Seminole coach Susy Reno said.
"T h a t was the only threat we had."
Lyman continued Its relentless attack In the
second half and the Greyhounds took a 1G lead
eight minutes Into the half when Mitchell scored
on an assist from Dawn Boyesen.
Reno said the goal could have been avoided.
"O n e o f our defenders was sh ieldin g the
goalkeeper and It trickled right between her
flitch ell came back two minutes later with an
unassisted goal to make It 2G. Meanwhile.
Lym an's defense continued to keep Seminole
away from the goal.
The Lady Greyhounds tacked on two more
goals In the last nine minutes o f play the first an
unassisted goal by Shelia Mandy and the second
by Boyesen on Mandy's assist.
"W e really ptaycd well on defense." Lyman
coach Tom Barnes said. "Sem inole didn't really
have any serious threats."
Barnes said his defensive leaders Thursday
Included sophomore Diana Boyesen. Junior Kellie
Straw, senior Allison Wright and sophomore
Karen Abemethy. Chatman had four saves In
goal.
For Seminole. Rumler turned In an Impressive
performance In goal. The sophomore standout
came up with 35 saves. Reno said defenders
Angela Freeman. Cindy Benge, Kim Walsh and

Soccer
Kim Machnlk also had excellent games.
"W e came to play and gave them (Lyman) a
great scare." Reno said. " I expected Lyman to
win but we made them earn It."
Lake Mary’s Lady Rams turned In one o f their
better performances o f the season but Lake
Brantley hung tough and came out with a 2-1
victory five minutes Into the second 10 minute
overtime period.
The two Seminole County rivals battled to a
scoreless tie the first 27 minutes o f play before
Kelley Broen broke loose for a goal to give Lake
Mary a 1G lead and It stayed that way at
halftime.
Lake Mary hung on to the lead for the first 20
minutes of the second half, but Lake Brantley tied
It at 1-1 when Kristin Paine scored. Paine
dribbled into the penalty area. then, with her
back to the goal, turned around and slipped It
past the keeper.
Neither team could score In the last 20 minutes
o f regulation although both had their chances.
"Fran Gordon had a couple of opportunities on
breakaways but hit the post both tim es." Lake
Mary coach BUI Etsaele said.
Again, neither team could score In the first
overtime period although Gordon again came
close as she had a breakaway but hit It Just wide
o f the goal.
Anderson then broke the lie midway through
the second overtime when she scored from 40
yards out. "Pam (Anderson) had taken a free kick
and the ball came right back to her." Lake
Brantley coach Debbie Shave said. "T h e she
kicked a high shot toward the goal and Lake
Mary's keeper seemed to misjudge It. It went over
her head and Into the goal."
The Patriots took 21 shots on goal Thursday
compared to 12 for Lake Mary. Lake Mary keeper
Laura Hellegaard came up with 18 saves while
Brantley's Karen Brown had 10.
Lake Brantley's usual goalkeeper, sophomore
Lcall Hobek. was out sick so Brown, a freshman
who usually plays fullback, took over In goal.
"S h e did an excellent Job." Shave said o f Brown.
Shave also cited the defi
efeaslvc play o f freshman
Reenle Deaver.
" I t was an exciting game." Shave said. "Lake
Mary has Improved a lot since the first time we
played them/'
" I was real happy, we gave them (Brantley) a
good gam e." Elasele said. "Although It's not a
win. It's a good way to end the season.”
Shave said that her troops would be ready to

Raiders Seek 1st
Win On Saturday
AVON PARK - The Seminole
Community College Raiders will
be search in g for th eir first
baseball win Saturday against
St. Petersburg, which Invades
SCC's field for a double-header
Saturday at 12 noon.
Th e Raiders' gam e today with
South Florida at Avon Park was
cancelled.
Th e Raiders, 0-1-1. battled to a
4-4 deadlock with St. Petersburg
Thursday at SCC. Chuck Brant
hurled all seven Innings for the
Raiders, giving up five, four runs
(two earned) and three walks.
Brant, the ace o f the staff last
year, was touched for three runa
In the first Inning but didn't give
up another earned run the rest o f
the way. Taro errors paved the
way for a sixth-inning run.
Mike Sawyer opened the Inn­
ing with a single to right field
but Mike Songlnl, running for
the catcher, was caught stealing.
Kenny Brawn struck out but
Rick Graves walked and Tim
Johnson singled him to third. A
double steal scored Graves on
the front end. John Bell filed out
to shortstop to end the Inning.
SCC came up with one run in
third. Daryl Badger grounded
out. but Jack Smith reached on
a bunt on an error by the first
haarman and sophom ore Brett
Thayer singled to right field to
chase Sm ith to third. Rick
Givens walked to load the bases.
Sawyer followed with a sacrifice
fly ball to right field to
mith. When the Raiders
hu n t Smith.

Baseball
trie d an oth er d ou b le steal.
Thayer was thrown out at the
plate.
In the fourth, the Raiders
p u lle d ev en at 3-3. Brown
grounded out the pitcher and
Graves struck out but Johnson
doubted to left and stole third.
Bell then beat out an Infield hit
to the third baseman to score
Johnson. Badger then filed out
to center field.
St. Petersburg picked up a run
In the sixth but SCC came back
In the top o f the seventh to tie
the game. Bell filed out to right
but Badger coaxed a walk and
Smith singled to right as Badger
stopped at second. Thayer, who
led the county tn hitting while
playing for Oviedo two years
ago, filed out to right. Given
followed with a double to left
center to tie the game at 4-4.
Sawyer walked to load the bases
but Brawn bounced out to the
pitcher to end the threat.
"W e stole nine bases
Brevard (a 7-5 loss) am
more against St. Peter
said assistant coach m**1* Tanxl.
'W e r e ailly
lly ru n
n nn i n g t h e
That's 16
The Raiders
been caught Just
twice In IB attempts.
Smith. Thayer and Jo)
each had two hits for coach Jack
Pantettaa'Rakkra.

Novak Bolsters UCF Staff

| ^ ..u

comet up 1o defend. Lake Brantley was
pushed into double overtime before edging
try to avenge the three setbacks to Lyman.
"W e're psyched up for them ," Shave said. "W e

^ry

few A f i i i n

W

Lake Mary, 2-1, In the district semifinal
Thursday. Lake Brantley plays Lyman
Saturday at Lyman for the championship.
have the desire lo beat them and 1 think It can be
done."

... Cook
Continued from 0 A
wild pilch and u run-scoring
error on a ground ball hit by
Ryan Lisle.
Lyman bounced back In the
fourth with a couple of tainted
tallica o f Ita own. Llvernola
reached on an error with two
oula and H enley and Craig
Meyer both acooted around to tie
for a 5-3 Lyman lead.
The Rama relied Ihe game tn
the fifth when Letterlo singled to
center and Underwood drilled a
triple Into the right field comer.
Metz hit an RBI chopper to
ahortatop for the 5-5 deadlock.
Lake Mary went ahead In the
s ix th w h en D anny B rid ges
tingled, Keith Wallace walked
ana one
on batter later. Letterlo
home Bridges for a 6-3

festivities Thursday. Hla Tribe
opens the season Saturday at
Titusville Astronaut. Ferrell aald
Tim Raines would be a practice
today at Chase Park to give
Seminole the proper aendoff.
Ferret! aald righthander Brian
Sheffield will pitch the opener.
"I'm sure T im will have a few
tips that will help." aald Ferrell.
Ralnea w ill report to spring
training In Weal Palm Beach
near the end or February. The
25-year-old outfielder has filed
for arbitration after he and the
Expos couldn't com e to terms on
a five-year deal.
Ralnea aald the Expos won't
give anything longer than a
three-year pact now and he
wanted 67.0 million over five
years. Ralnea aald he will proba­
bly sign for one year and become
a free agent In two years. If the
Expos don't trade him before
that.

Neal Harris, who was the
A lta m o n te S p r in g s ' S e n io r
League relief ace. threw Just 12
pitches In ihe fifth and seven In
the sixth. Harris looked as If he
was going lo pick up the win but
Greyhoundt rallied In the sev­
enth.
Llvem ols singled to start Ihe
rally and A leg re dropped a
surprise bunt down the third
base line. The third baseman
threw the ball past first base as
Llvem ols sprinted home to tie
the score and Alegre went to
third.
"Y ou don't usually want to
take the bat out of the No. 4
hitter's hands." said Lyman
coach Bob McCullough. "W e
gave Paul one swing because
he's been tearing the cover off
the ball.
"But your pest hitlers are
sometimes you r beat hunters. It
apS“* good Ume to try It and he
dimmed a perfect bunt."
T o e managerial
ms
wheels then
i spinning,aa Tuttle walked
the next two hi tier* to
o set up a
then grounded
tnlo a force at home for the A n t
out to bring up Henley.
Th e
football standout
(killed a line drive to mediumd e e p c e n te r fie ld and U n­
derwood’s throw had no chance
lo get Odom at home. And, the
chilled fane promtply headed for
the can. no doubt considering
th em selves lu cky the gam e
didn’t no Into extra Innings.
" I waa a little leery with
three, four and ftve miters
la g u p." said Tuttle. "But this
gam e didn't mean anything.
SHU. If w e had played ‘
defen se we would have won.*

It waa good to see Gary Nuas
out and about Thursday night.
N u sa, a p r o m is in g y o u n g
righthanded pitcher, waa In­
volved In a serious accident and
lost pari o f hla foot, ending hla
baseball.
The Lym an Junior plana to
keep busy keeping the score book
for the Oreyhounds. Hang In
there. Gary, you’ve got a lot
p e o p le p u llin g fo r y o u tc
overcome this tough hurdle.

w a s on

the

hand

to v ie w

tha

Bob Parker, the beat ahorsiof
In Lym an's history, waa alec
back at hla alma mater T h u n
day night. Parker Is property
the Houston Astros and aald
hopes to play for Kiselmmce-St.
C loud In th e F lorida S ta te
League Hits spring.
"It all depends on how I do In
spring tra ilin g ." aald the AllSEC Infielder from Mississippi
Bute. "T h e y have me working
out at
and second, but
I'd like go back to second base."
If Parker lands In Ihe FSL, It
will sure earn hla father. Sam,
The older Parker
a regular at

I f you want a second day of
baseb a ll a n d c o ld w eather.
Oviedo hosts Lake Brantley to­
day at 4. Oviedo coach Howard
■table sold T im Watson will start
fo r th e L io n s w h ile L a k e
Brantley coach Oary Smith said
he would hand the bell to Brad
Th e Patriots foot thek
W

didn't make gisites.

M
—
“ ilti last**
tuffi**» 9Uu

smmy.

**ifes4
out

m up. We
to take up

�•A—EvsnlngHerald, Sanford, FI,

Friday, Fab. 1,1HS

K e e p O n P e d a lin g . . . R e la x A f t e r R
With the National Bicycle League
National* underway, a lot o f riders are
traveling away from home to compete
for btg trophies and Iota of recognition
at these eventa.
For a lot o f racers, thta fame and
glory la always lust a berm away. It
may be due to a few common mistakes
a rider can make. Here are a few o f
these most common mistakes and
some ways to avoid making them.
• Getting a bad start. This Is
perhaps the most common mistake of
all. T o avoid It, a rider should practice
the gate a few times before the race.
Not all gates fall the same. During
practice, try to time the distance
between the green light and the fall of
the gate. Balancing on the pedals may
also help. Practice starts at home. You
don't need a practice gate. Just practice
on a flat surface.
• Slipping a pedal. Slipping a pedal
while racing can cost a BMXer pre­
cious time. To avoid allpplng a pedal, a
rider should make sure (hat the pedals

arc In good condition. Keep the
bearings well oiled so that the pedals
turn well. Also file the cages to deep
maximum grip. If the soles on your
shoes are wearing out. get a new pair.
This will also Insure gripping power.
• Taking a berm the wrong way.
There are different ways to take
different* sized berms. For a larger
berm, a rider should go In to It and ride
high. Then, about three-fourth o f the
way through, cut down low for more
speed. On a smaller berm, the best
way Is usually right through the
middle. In either case, there are
usually " lin e s " marking the best
route.

Christy
Davis
H erald 0M X
W r ite r

rider Is pedaling over a Jump, the one
In the air la clearing It In half the time.
The best way to take a double Jump Is
to clear the crest and land on the down
slope. Learning this takes practice. If
you don't think
'M r "you're gonna make It.
don't try It. It's even worse to fall
during a major race. Riders that are
taking Jumps may be crashing during
the landing. A rider should get the
back wheel on the ground first. Then
set the front down. Keeping the knees
slightly bent will help absorb the
shock.

• Getting knocked off a berm. If you
sec that you are about to get knocked
ofT a berm. Just lean to the Inside and
put your Inside leg out for support. In
this position you'll be leaning Into him,
and he'll wind up falling.
Falling to take a Jumper or
landing wrong on a Jump. Failing to
takes Jumpi alv
always cost* time. While a

•

Following riders through turns.

expert class. This weekend
tures south to compete In nail
Homestead and Miami.
Ten-expert Tim Fink bruoght home
a second place In race.

This can probably be called the most
rtsklerst mistake. If the rider In front of
you crashes, you might as well kiss
that path goodbye, pk-k a different line
and try to pasa him cleanly.
• Not pedaling to the finish. How
many times have you seen a rider so
sure he’s won that he sits down and
qultp pedaling before the finish line?
Only to have the guy he didn't see
sneak up and steal the win. I'll bet
more times than once. Don't let this
happen to you. It's only a few more
feet to the finish line, keep on pedaling.
You'll have plenty time to relax after
the race.
Be sure and keep that hl*lech
machine o f yours w ell oiled and
running smoothly. Check all the parts
and make sure they arc In working
order. A clean wheel helps It turn
smoother. This maybe the edge you
need to win.

Colby Brown place second In his
cru iser class and a first In hts
11 -expert class. Second place In the
13-novice class went to Todd Fink.
Ronnie Brewer placed third In h it.
13-expert race. He did even better In
his open class with a second placed
finish.
Jason Hefflngton was the most
successful Bicycle Connection rider
two meet* ago when he finished first In
the 14-novice and 14-opcn classes.
Mark Koch also had a first In the
17-open class and a runnerup In the
17-crulser class.
David Sanborn placed eighth In the
14*expert and came back with a
second In the 14-open. Andy Doering
completed the strong BC team show­
ing with a fifth place in the 13-novice.

Saturday afternoon at Barnett Park
was filled with racing excitement.
Jay Staley placed first In the 7-

in

IN BRIEF
World Sorias Of Dirt1Draws
Quality Racars 7a Barbarvllla
BARBERV1LLE — The 3rd annual "W orld Series o f Dirt"
n u n begun
u e g u n at
a t Volusia
v
has
County Speedway and 11 straight
nights of compeltllton are In the process or being reeled o ff
Sprint cars returned
re
to the fast, half-mile, banked dirt
oval on Wedne
Wednesday night and run through Saturday.
Modified* run on Monday night, Feb. 11, Stars late models
on Tuesday, Feb. 13 and then the two classes unite to close
out "Speedweek" with shows Feb. 13-16.
Oates open at 3 p.m. every afternoon and the first race
[oea at 7:30 p.m. every night. Howell's Racing Fuels,
ambler Chassis, McCreary Racing Tires, Wlseco Pistons,
Ultradyne Cams, Fel-Pro, Quarter Master and MSW will
sponsor all the competition.
Latest entries Include Jimmy Horton, Hammonton. N.J..
Fred Brfghtblll, Relnholds, Pa. and "Jumpln J a ck "
Johnson In the modified* and Tom Hearsl, Wilton, Iowa.
"L ll John" Provenzano. Chicago. Tom m y Joe Pauachert,
Carlisle, Ark. and Larry Moore, Seneca, S.C. in the Stars
late models.
Dave Blaney. Hartford, Ohio won Sunday night's 26-lap
sprint car feature and the 95,000 first prize. Brad Doty of
Orrvllle, Ohio, was second and Bobby Davis, Jr.. Memphian
Tn. finished third.
Voluata County Speedway la located 14 miles west o f 1-05
on Stale Road 40. For Information, call (904| 085-4402 or
255-2243.

S

Lakr Mary’s boys and girls tennis trams each ran their
records to 2-0 Thursday with u pair of 7-0 wins against
Orlando Evans. Both teams return to action Tuesday
ugalnal Lake Howell and Thursday against Lyman.
"W e're going w ell," said Lake
Mary boys roach Lurry
* Man
Kelley, "But w e’II have a couple o f toughle* next week.
Lake Howell and Lyman are both good teams."
In the girls singles. Suzy Stewart whipped Marcy
StudatlH, 8-6 , Gina Caputo nipped Helen Haas. 8-7, Kae
Ryerson trounced Denise Jacome, 8-0, Bernadette Peters
lopped Sharon Warner, 8-6 and Erin Higgins swamped
Laura Heuaer. 8-2.
In the doubles, Stcwart-Ryerson mauled Studstlll-Haaa,
H I, and D-anna Haynes and Heather Bennett blanked
Warner-Jacome. 6 -0 , before darkness halted the match.
For the boys, Lake Mary's Carsten Baslle hammered
Scott Eubanks, 8-1, Shea Whlgham tr1| d Rod Bloke r.
8-3, Mike Remind toppled Don Williams. 8-2. Trey Selbold
walloped Mike Frame, 8-1. and Robbie Shakar downed
Mike! I la In, 8-3.
In doubles. Whlghain-Kenard blitzed Eubanka-Blokcr.
8-0 and Brian Harris-ll.T. Bennett ripped Williams-Holton.
8 - 1.

Will Track Fans Forglva Lawlsf
INOLEWOOD. Calif. (UPI) - Carl Lewis will find out
tonight If Southern California has forgiven him yet for
passing on his lost two attempta of the long Jump during
the Summer Olympics — a move which drew boos from the
overflow Coliseum crowd.
Lewis, who won four gold medals an the Games. Is
entered In the long Jump In Los Angeles Times Indoor
Oamea at the Forum. He heads a field o f International track
and field athletes, some of whom are from the Soviet
Union, Romania, Oreat Britain. Cuba, Switzerland, Sweden
and Mexico.
The 23-year-old whiz kid who creates controversy as
easily aa he beats hla rivals In the long Jump and sprints
should attract much of the attention. He will compete only
In hla specialty, the long Jump. Hla expected victory In that
event will be hla 30th in a row. The all-time record for
consecutive long Jump wins la 41. set by George Brown
from 1050-52.

Marathon, 5K Sat For Fab, 17
ORLANDO — The fourth runnings o f the Florida Festival
Marathon and the Florida Festival 5K are set for Sunday.
Feb. 17.
Sanctioned and certified by The Athletic CongreM. the
marathon course begins and ends at Sea World1* Florida
Festival, a shopping and dining emporium adjacent to the
Orlando marine life park. The 26.2 mile race begins at 7
a.m.
The 912 marathon entry fee Includes a 92 packet mailing
charge.
Award* will be given to he first live male and female
overall winner*. The top three finishers in male and female
master*, wheelchair division, and 10 male and 8 female
age groups also will receive awards.

Sabavclk Undar Haavy Prassura
GOTHENBURG, Sweden (UPI) — Josef Sabovclk of
Czechoslovakia will be under tremenrfoua pressure today
when he takes to the Ice In the men's final1free program of
t European Figure Skating Championship
Vllh current champion Aleksandr Fadeyev o f the Soviet
Union out with an injury, the time appear* right for the
20-year-old
to ip
win
hla Ont vmajor
title.
Sabovclk
0
v'M
wp
sM
Hsig^Pw a
ssawt But (ja
maMUiwtL-‘it must
first defeat two strong skater* from the Soviet Union.

w -%

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•&lt;

Michella Brown has a good
reason for her coy smile. The
versatile Lake Brantley se­
nior tossed In an 80-foot
basket against Apopka
Thursday night.
ARORKA (M l — D*mp* a. McKInmy 11.
SotMftMn 4. Parr amort f Total* IS S I* »
LAKZ S R A H TL tV (Ml - Lubanow 4
Atpfoi 14, Brown J4, TwadOtll I. Dtlllnyar I.
Mar *• CorOon 1. Thom a* I, Hagan 4 Total*
144-11 IS.
Holftlmo — Lak . BranNay 47. Apopka It
Soul* - Apopka II. la k r BronMty 14 F ou M
out - Robinton Technical - nono A - IS
N O B I P O B T i O v I a St O l coo l o an*
Lyman Mainland |k 1t

Seabreeze, the No. ! ranked
AAA team In the state. In­
vades Lake Mary tonight for
the key appetizer on the Five
Star Conference basketball
menu. TIp-ofMs 8 p.m.
"W e're ready for them ."
Lake Mary coach Willie Rich­
ardson declared after hla
Rams nipped Apopka Tues­
day night. "Seabreeze la the
No I team In the state and
the lop team In our confer­
ence. so we wont to knock
them off."
No one would like to see
that more than DeLand, who
hosts Sem inole tonight. A
DeLand win over the Tribe
and a Lake Mary upset of
Seabreeze would throw the
Five Star lead Into a He
between the Sand Crabs and
Bulldogs, who will meet one
more time this year.
Elsewhere. Lyman travels
to Mainland. Lake Howell
Journeys to Spruce Creek,
Lake Brantley hosts Apopka
and Oviedo goes to Kissim­
mee Osceola.

SCOREBOARD
tube

Lakit Mary N,t$ 2 Mora I

W

No. 1 Seabreeze
Invades Tonight

...Girls

SPORTS

■m l - k f ^ • -

for a season-high 16 points.
K irsten D ellinger and Cam l
Twaddell added eight each for
the Lady Patriots.
Asplen also dished out six
assists while Brown handed out
Continued fro m 6 A
five. Kim Lubennw added six
L A K E B R A N TL E Y : 21-3
points and four assists while
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S A n g le May co n trib u ted alx
Lake Brantley's Lady Patriots
points and five rebounds and
sizzled the nets for a season-high
Kim Wain had a team-high
58 percent shooting from the
seven rebounds. Michelle Hagan
floor en route to a 72-35 trounc­
also added six points for the
in g o f A pop ka's Lady Blue
Patriots.
Darter* In Five Star Confemce
action at Lake Brantley High.
D O W NTO W N BROW N —
The fifth-ranked (4AI Lady Brown, a senior forward, set a
Patriots set a school record for Lake Brantley school record
w in* In the season a* they Monday when she made an
Improved to 21-3 overall and 80-fool shot at the halftime
13-1 In the conference. Apopka buzzer against Mainland's Lady
now stand* at 2-15 overall and Burs.
2-12 In the Five Star.
"She (Brown) Just goj the ball
Lake Brantley came out blaz­ out o f bounds, turned snd threw
ing In the first half a* the a baseball pass," Lake Brantley
Patriot* shot 61 percent from the assistant Debbie Frank1said. "It
floor In building a 47-10 halftime hit off the bac kboard and went
lea d . M ich elle B row n , w ho right In. Michelle didn't even
wound up with a game-high 10 know she had made it until
point*, made 6 o f 6 shots from somebody told her. After she
the floor In the first half and 0 for threw the ball, she started
10 for the game.
walking toward the lockrroom.
Brantley also got a big boost After the game the Mainland
from Junior guard Sherry "Ic e " girls were asking her If she was
Aaplen who hit 8 o f 0 Held goals on the soft trail team."

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tn the first half and never
relinquished It. Santa Fe never
had the lead the entire game and
it was tied only twice. 2-2 and
Colettl broke the 4-4 tie with a
three-point play that made It 7-4
and she scored four more points
for an 11-4 SCC lead with 12.G4
left In the drat half
SCC Increased Ha lead to 10.
21- 11. with 6:30 left In the hair
when Colettl grabbed an of­
fensive rebound and made the
followup. The Lady Raiders took
a 15-poin t lead, 28-13, at
halftim e behind C olettl's 11
points.
Santa Fe came back atroing at
the beginning of the second naif
as the Lady Saints
Salr
ran off eight
straight points to pull within
seven. 28-21. wllh 18:15 left In
the game. Mathis started off the
a tre u aa she grabbed an of­
fensive rebound and dropped in
the followup and Archer did the
same/to make U 28-17. Dodd
then popped In a Jumper and
Archer bit one from the outside
to make It 28-21.

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" I ' m at III f l y l p f h i g h . "
Gallagher said after (he win.
"W e ’ve been working hard on
defense and w e've come a long
way. Now we're going to gear
down and concentrate on state."

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SCC then called a timeout to
settle down and Colettl hit a
layup to atop Santa Fe'a string
and give the Raiders a 30-21
lead. Johnson made one of two
and Lame
i-21 SCC lea
layup for a 33-21
lead.
Santa Fe came tack within
eight. 41-33, wllh |1 minutes
left but SCC went ofi.u 8-1 run to
lake a 48-34 lead; with 0:45
remaining. The Lady Saints got
It bock to 10. 62-52. with 1:30
left and Sata Fe got the ball back
with 1:02.
But the SCC defense wouldn't
give an Inch and It task Santa Fe
29 seconds to get off a shot and
that was an alrball by Dodd.

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�by Chic Young

IT SAYS THAT PEO PLE AMP THElK

GEE, P O
YOU THlNlK

PETS TAKE OM EACH OTHERS

CHARACTERISTICS
IN TIM E
/ v N jv J

THAT WILL
EVER
HAPPEN
TO LIS* /

^

THE BO RN LOSER

SO ecu FRAWKLlU CWCOfcRED
w aeaRiciTy-.Bi4&gt; d e a l ! _

tM 0PY, CAU YOU IMAGING LIFE

RjUW ATO # JfoTV
BTOUPLELieHTT

^WITHOUT a e O R lO T Y T

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AM D SW r1

rr a p p e a r s t h a t t h l
WIPE A U D I WM.WS&amp;D
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110!

Proper Diet Can Ease
Problems With Colon
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
been d ia g n o s e d as h a v in g
diverticulitis and my husband
has dlvertlculosls. Which Is
more serious?
DEAR READER - I'd bet a
small sum that If you ever had
diverticulitis, you no longer had
It by the time you wrote to me.
S o m e t i m e s the term s
diverticulitis and dlvertlculols
are not used correctly. You and
your husband probably have the
sarr ? thing. This is not surpris­
ing. since diverticula are very
common and Increase with In­
creasing years. More than half of
the people over 60 In the United
Slates have dlvertlculosls.
Some people call dlverllculosls
"pockets o f the colon." They are
small pockets produced by the
te a r in g o r r u p tu r e o f th e
structures o f the colon.
Often these pockets cause no
symptoms, but other times they
an* associated with gas. lower
a b d o m in a l d is c o m fo r t and
cram ping. M any authorities
think the symptoms do not come
from the diverticula, but from a
spastic or Irritable colon. In fact,
a spastic colon may cause a
buildup o f pressure inside the
colon, causing the rupture or
blowout.
Diverticulitis is an Inflamma­
tion of one o f these pockets and
Is similar to appendicitis. It Is an
acute condition and occurs In
only ubout I percent of patients
with dlvertlculosls. As an Infec­
tion. It re q u ire s Im m ediate
treatment, and antibiotics are
necessary. It Is a one-time,
short-duration occurence In
two-thirds o f patients who lutvc
It.
Onr may not cut anything
during acute diverticulitis. C er
talnly. one's doctor will have to
determine what diet to follow. A
patient with dlvertlculosls may
benefit from adding hulk to the
diet and may also need to take
measures to prevent gas. I have
discussed the diet in more detail
In The Health Letter. Special
R ep o rt 20 . D lv e r tlc u lo s ls :
Pockets of the Colon.
DEAR DR. LAMU - How long
must food stay in the stomach to
be of nutritional benefit? I have
an Intolerance for dairy pro­
ducts. most fresh fruits and
many raw vegetables, chocolate.

liquor and other foods. Some­
times I consume these foods by
mistake and lose everything.
Llbrax usually corrects the pro­
blem. but I am concerned about
losing nutrients.

One does does not absorb any
nutrients through the stomach
wall, only alcohol w ill pass
through the stom ach.

DEAR READER - l hope you
are seeing a doctor and pursuing
a program to correct your food
Intolerance or to replace the
nutrients tn the foods you are
unable to tolerate.
ACROSS

Send your questions to Or.
Lamb. P.O. Box 1551. Radio City
Station. New York. N.Y.. 10019.
Answar to Previous PuiHe

6 Makecopee

of
1 W*nd«f«d
• Woody

12 M^can
13 Wickedly

14 Vonut'
iwssthoort
15 Ckpture OfOin
I t Rod Squkre

nomo
1? Nkkrty ON
11 Vory (FrJ
I t Chicken____

anno nnnn nnn
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□ □ □
G D D D
□ □ □ □
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nnn nnnn
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□on nnnn nnnn

7 Actor Monttnd
• Petite
• Wove (Sp I
10 Kind
11 Change color ol
12
0i*n«y
17 Financial
I I Club laadar

fobbr.)
21 Calattial b*ar

22 Favoritism

23 Bkinny fish
25 Raw materiel*
for ehort
21 African fo«
24 Trumpet
27 (oatnarod
26 E itf t'in M
friend
27 College degree
21 Quartat
(»bbr|
30 Mov« toctioni 21 Indian com
32 loot Indian trot 31 Biblical tribal
chiaf
33 Component of
atom
37 Anractivo viaw

20 Machinery oil.

46 Rivor In tha
Congo
41 Basketball
league (abbr |
50 High in pitch
51 Adversary
52 Boisr tear

36 Ash
41 Joyc* Kitmar

43 Onat
44 Map book
45 Saa (Gar |
47 Othsrwiss

W IN A T B R ID G E

l/V\ UU^T &lt;5&lt;?lNG TO TAP
W R KNEE WTTH 7H f5
HAMAYER TO T E S T - RELAX . &gt;
M R.SILLY !
TH ERE*

NOTHING

I TO p e

AFRAJPOf/

by W a r n * Brothers

BOOS B U N N Y

I : PONT KNOW W HY Y O U

\yatch those Old Bu s s
S u n n y C AR TO O N S.

COESNT TH * TM A k £
YOU STSAMIN M AO?

H e M AK ES A F O O L
O P YOU EV ER Y

TfiA N W &amp; ^ E N S iV E

W AV I D H E A T M V
H O U S E . , ------

By Jam as Jacoby
Bidding a slain on a finesse
Isn't the worst thing In the
world. But there's a kicker In the
works If you also need reason­
able distribution.
North showed a better hand
than he actually had. By bidding
diamonds and spades, und then
going to four hearts, he was
making a mild slam try. South
was happy to comply and asked
for sees.
It seemed as though the slain
would depend simply upon who
held the king o f hearts, but w lien
East showed out. more became
Involved. Although there la no
way short o f hypnotism to
compel West to cover a heart
honor with the king, there Is an
unusual type of play that can
take away the defender's trump
trick. It has a name — the

smother play. Watch It In action.
After two rounds of hearts.
West not covering. South cashed
the second high club, led u spade
to the ace and trumped a club.
Then he played a spade to the
king and trumped the third
spade. Now came the diamond
ace and king. A small diamond
from dummy put East on lead.
The only black cards outstand­
ing were with East, and hr had
to lead either a club or a spadr.
South trumped and West was
caught In the “ smother." If he
played the king, dummy would
play the ace. If he underrufTrd.
du m m y w ou ld d isca rd the
diamond. The hand could be
defeated only If West could have
won the third diamond and led
hla low heart, but that was
prevented by the layout of the
cards.

IMS

NORTH

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Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer South
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Opening lead: + Q

IP
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Whot The Doy
Will Bring...

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friendly manner. They may even
share Information with you they
dare not mention toothers.
TA U B U S (April 20-May 20|
Career conditions are favorable
Y O U K B IR T H D A Y
for you today. If you apply
F e b r u a r y B. I M S
Som ethin g you have long yourself, you can accomplish
hoped for has excellent chances feats too difficult for co-workers.
OBMUtl (May 2 N u n e 20) lt‘a
o f becoming a reality tn the year
ahead. Key people will step Into Important today that you act
the situation and do things for aside adequate tim e for fun
you that you can't do on your activities. Plan something en­
jo y a b le that In clu des close
own.
A Q U ARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 101 friends.
CANCBH (June 2 1-July 221
Be mindful o f your past experi­
F in a n c ia l s e e d s y o u h ave
ences when plotting your course
planted are about to bear fruit.
for today. Do not allow compa­
nions with leas savvy to do your You will derive benefits and ao
w ill two others w ith whom
thinking for you.
you're associated.
P I B C t t (Feb. 20-March 20) Do
L B O ( J u l y 2 3 - A u g . 221
not be hesitant today to request
Partnership situations should
favors from people you've helped
work out fortunately for you
In the past. Anyone who la
today, provided neither you nor
indebted to you will welcome the your cohort tries to upstage the
chance to balance the books.
dthcr. T h e s p o tlig h t Is big
A B U S (March 21-Aprtl 10) enough for both.
Others will be drawn to you
V1BOO (A u g. 23-Scpt. 33)
-today because o f your open. Financial trends will start taking

by Itonsrd Starr

A N N IK

THAIS AKSHT.

a turn fur the better today.
However, do not use this as an
excuse to squander your re­
sources.
L IB H A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Friends will receive you with
open arms today, especially In
social situations. The more you
relax and enjoy yourself, the
more you'll captivate your pals.
SCORPIO IOct. 24-Nov. 22) Be
definite about what you want to
accom plish today, and con­
centrate your efforts on the end
game. You can do what you act
your mind to.
B A O IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If there Is an acquaintance
you would like to get to know
better, entertain him at your
place today. Friendship will
blossom In convivial surroun­
dings.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jkn.
19| Today you'll reap rewards
for your past actions. Osina wlU
be s u b s ta n tia l fo r y o u r
merttortoua efforts or minimal
where you didn't do your beat.

Htn

CAR M R UP
sum . P0UCS
ON ROUT? 102. LOOHfP AtOHT
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�»A-Evtnlng Ho t Id, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Fab. I, m i

K e e p O n P e d a lin g . . . R e la x A f t e r
With the National Bicycle League
National*! underway, a lot o f riders are
traveling away from home to compete
for big trophies and lota o f recognition
at these events.
For a lot o f racer*, this fame and
glory Is always lust a berm away. It
may be due to a few common mistakes
a rider can make. Here are a few o f
these most common mistakes and
some ways to avoid making them.
• Getting a bad start. This Is
perhaps the most common mistake o f
all. T o avoid It, a rider should practice
the gale a few times before the race.
Not all gates fall the same. During
procure, try to time the distance
between the green light and the rail of
the gale. Balancing on the pedals may
also help. Practice starts at home. You
don't need a practice gate. Just practice
on a Rat surface.
• Slipping a pedal. Slipping a pedal
while racing can cost a BMXer pre­
cious time. T o avoid slipping a pedal, a
rider should make sure that the pedals

are In good condition. Keep the
bearings well oiled so that the pedals
turn well. Also file the cages to deep
maximum grip. If the soles on your
shoes are wearing out. get a new pair.
This will also Insure gripping power.
• Taking a berm the wrong way.
There are different ways to take
different* sized berms. For a larger
berm, a rider should go In lo It and ride
high. Then, about three-fourth o f the
way through, cut down low for more
speed. On a smaller berm, the best
way Is usually right through the
middle. In either case, there are
usually " lin e s " marking the best
route.
• Getting knocked off a berm. If you
see that you are about to get knocked
off a berm, Just lean to the Inside and
put your Inside leg out for support. In
this position you’ll be leaning Into him,
and he'll wind up falling.
• Falling to take a Jumper or
landing wrong on a Jump. Falling to
take a Jump always costs time. While a

C h r is ty

Davis
H era ld BMX
W r ite r

rider Is pedaling over a Jump, the one
In the air Is clearing It In half the time.
The best way to take a double Jump Is
lo clear the crest and land on the down
slope. Learning this takes practice. If
you don’t think you're gonna make It.
don’t try It. It's even worse to fall
during a major race. Riders that are
taking Jumps may be crashing during
the landing. A rider should get the
back wheel on the ground first. Then
set the front down. Keeping the knees
slightly bent will help absorb the
shock.
•

This can probably be called the most
risklerst mistake. If the rider In front of
you crashes, you might as well kiss
that path goodbye, pick a different line
and try to pass him cleanly.
• Not pedaling to the finish. How
many times have you seen a rider so
sure he's won that he sits down and
qultp pedaling before the finish line?
Only to have the guy he didn’t see
sneak up and steal the win. I ll bet
more times than once. Don’t let this
happen to you. It's only a few more
feet to the finish line, keep on pedaling.
You'll have plenty time to relax after
the race.
Be sure and keep that hl*tech
machine o f yours well oiled and
running smoothly. Check all the parts
and make sure they are in working
order. A clean wheel helps It turn
smoother. This maybe the edge you
need to win.

Following riders through turns.

Saturday afternoon at Barnett Park
was filled with racing excitement.
Jay Staley placed first In the 7-

expert class. This weekend Jajmven*.
tures south to compete In nation!
Homestead and Miami.
Ten-expert Tim Fink bruoght home
a second place In race.
Colby Brown place second In his
cru iser class and a first In his
11 -expert class. Second place In the
13-novice class went to Todd Fink.
Ronnie Brewer placed third In h is .
13- expert race. He did even better In g
his open class with a second placefinish.
Jason Hcfflngton w a s the most
successful Bicycle Connection rider
two meets ago when he finished first In
the 14-novlce and 14-open classes.
Mark Koch also had a first In the
17-opcn class and a runnerup In the
17-crulaer class.
;
David Sanborn placed eighth In the
14- expert and came back with a
second In the 14-open. Andy Doering •
completed the strong BC team show- :
Ing with a fifth place In the 13-novice.
‘ r:

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
World Sorias Of Dirt' Draws
Quality Racers To Barborvlllo
BARBERVILLE — The 3rd annual "W orld Series of Dirt"
has begun at Volusia County Speedway and 11 straight
nights o f competition are In the process o f being reeled on.
Sprint cars returned to the fast, half-mile, banked dirt
oval on Wednesday night and run through Saturday.
Modified* run on Monday night. Feb. 11. Stars late models
on Tuesday, Feb. 12 and then the two classes unite to close
out "Speedw eek" with shows Feb. 13-10.
Gates open at 3 p.m. every afternoon and the first race
goes at 7i30 p.m. every night. Howell's Racing Fuels,
Gambler Chassis, McCreary Racing Tires, Wlseco Platons.
Ultradyne Cams. Fel-Pro, Quarter Master and MSW will
sponsor all the competition.
Latest entries Include Jimmy Horton, Hammonton. N.J.,
Fred Brlghtblll, Reinholds. Pa. and "Jum pln Jack"
Johnson In the modified* and Tom Hears!, Wilton, Iowa,
"L ll John" Provenzano, Chicago. Tom m y Joe Pauachert,
Carlisle, Ark. and Larry Moore. Seneca, S.C. in the Sutra
late models.
Dave Blaney, Hartford, Ohio won Sunday night's 28-lap
sprint car feature and the $8,000 first prize. Brad Doty of
Orrvllle, Ohio, was second and Bobby Davis. Jr.. Memphian
Tn. finished third.
Volusia County Speedway Is located 14 miles west o f 1-05
on State Road 40. For Information, call (904) 088-4402 or
288-2243.

Lakti

Mary

Nats2 Whig

Lake Mary's boys and girls lennls teams each ran their
records to 2-0 Thursday with a pair of 7-0 wins against
Orlando Evans. Both trams return to action Tuesday
against Lake Howell and Thursday against Lyman.
"W e ’re going well," said Lake Mary boys coach Larry
Kelley. "But We'll have a couple o f loughles next week.
Lake Howell and Lyman are both good Irama."
In the girls singles. Suzy Stewart whipped Marcy
StudstIII. 8-0. Gina Cuputo nipped Helen Haas, 8-7, Rac
Kyerson trounced Denise Jacome. 8-0, Bernadette Peters
lopped Sharon Warner, 8-6 and Erin Higgins swamped
Lauru lleuser, 8-2.
In the doubles, Slewart-Ryerson mauled Studstlll-Haas,
H-l, and D-snna Haynes and Heather Bennett blanked
Warner-Jacome. 6-0 . before darkness halted the match.
ir y i Caratcn Baslle hammered
For the boys, Lake Mary's
rott Kubanka,
Eubanks, 8-1, Shra
Shea Whlgham trip
Scott
tripped Rod Bloker,
8-3. Mike Renaud toppled Don Williams, 6-2.
_ Trey Selbotd
d Mike Frame, B-l, and Robbie Shakar downed
walloped

K

for a season-high 16 points.
K irsten D ellinger and Caml
Twaddell added eight each for
the Lady Patriots.
Asplen also dished out six
assists while Brown handed out
Continued fro m 6 A
five. Kim Lubenow added six
L A K E B R A N T L E Y : 2 1-9
points and four assists while
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S A n g le May co n trib u ted six
Lake Brantley’s Lady Patriots
points and five rebounds and
sizzled the nets for a season-high
Kim W ain had a team-high
88 percent shooting from the
seven rebounds. Michelle Hagan
floor cn route to a 72-38 trounc­
also added six points for I he
ing o f A pop ka’ s Lady Blue
Patriots.
Darters In Five Star Confemcc
action at Lake Brantley High.
D OW NTOW N BROW N ~
The fifth-ranked (4A) Lady Brown, a senior forward, set a
Patriots set a school record for Lake Brantley school record
wins In the season as they Monday when she made an
Improved lo 21-3 overall and 80-fool shot ut the halftime
13-1 In the conference. Apopka buzzer against Mainland's Lady
now stands at 2-18 overall and Dues.
2-12 In the Five Star.
"She (Brown) just gof the ball
Lake Brantley ram c out blaz­ out of bounds, turned and threw
ing In the first half as the a baseball pass." Lake Brantley
Patriots shot 61 percent from the assistant Debbie Frank said. "It
floor In building a 47-10 halftime hit off the backtioanl and went
lea d . M ich elle B row n , who right in. Mlchellr didn't even
wound up with n game-high 19 know she hud made it until
points, made 6 of 6 shots from somebody told her. After she
the floor In the first half and 9 for threw the ball, she started
10 for the game.
walking toward the lockeronm.
Brantley also got a big boost After the game the Mainland
from Junior guard Sherry "Ic e " girls were asking her If she wus
Asplen who hit 8 o f 9 field goals on the softball team."

... Girls

ta W w . *4

TUBE
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TIMM
kw* - UI4.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI) — Carl Lewis will find out
tonight If Southern California has forgiven him yet for
passing on his last two attempts o f the long Jump during
the Summer Olympics — a move which drew boos from the
overflow Collaeum crowd.
Lewis, who won Tour gold medals an the Games, Is
entrrrd In the long Jump In Lo* Angeles Times Indoor
Oamra at the Forum, lie heads a field or International track
and field athletes, some of whom are from the Soviet
Union, Romania, Oreat Britain. Cuba, Switzerland, Sweden
and Mexico.
The 23-year-old whiz kid who creates controversy as
rosily os hr beats hla rivals In the long Jump and sprints
should attract much o f the attention. He will compete only
in hla specialty, the long Jump. Hla expected victory In that
event will be hla 30lh In a row. The all-time record for
consecutive long Jump win* la 41, set by George Brown
from 1980-82.

Marathon, SK Sat For Fab. 17
ORLANDO ~ The fourth runnings o f the Florida Festival
Marathon and the Florida FestlvalB K are set for Sunday,
Feb. 17.
Sanctioned and certified by T h e Athletic Congress, the
marathon course begins and ends at Sea World1* Florida
Festival, a shopping and dining emporium adjacent to the
Orlando marine life park. The 26.2 mile race begins at 7
a.m.
The $12 marathon entry fee Includes a $2 packet mailing
charge,
Award* w ill be given to he flrat five male and female
overall winner*. The top three finishers In male and female
masters, wheelchair division, and 10 male and 8 female
age groups also will receive awards.

Sabovclk Under Hoavy Pressure
GOTHENBURG, Sweden (UPI) — Josef Sabovclk of
Czechoslovakia will be under tremendous pressure today
when he lakes to the Ice In the men's final free program of
the European Figure Skating Championship.
With current champion Aleksandr Fadeyev o f the Soviet
Union out with an Injury, the time appears right far the
S O y n r o id
I Sabovclk must
first defeat t1

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Will Track Fans Forglvo Lowlsf

Mlch«lle Brown has a good
reason for her coy smile. The
versatile Lake Brantley se­
nior tossed In an 80-foot
basket against Apo pka
Thursday night.
APOPKA O il —

Dtmpt «. McKItory II.

Rofctowni. P*/r*mo&lt;«* ToUl» 1)1101
LAKK S S A N TLK Y (H I - LiUwnoo 4.
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NO S I P O S T i O » l* 4 * 0 « c * * la
L.m** 44*InIan. (Irll

Seabreeze, the No. 1 ranked
AAA team in the state. In­
vades Lake Mary tonight for
the key appetizer on the Five
Star Conference basketball
menu. Tip-off Is 8 p.m.
"W e ’ re ready for them ."
Lake Mary coach Willie Rich­
ardson declared after his
Rams nipped Apopka Tues­
day night. "Seabreeze Is the
No. 1 team In the state and
the top team In our confer­
ence. so wc want to knock
them off."
No one would like to see
that more than DcLand. who
hosts Sem inole tonight. A
DeLand win over the Tribe
and a Lake Mary upset of
Seabreeze would throw the
Five Star lead Into a lie
between the Sand Crabs and
Bulldogs, who will meet one
more time thlsyear.
Elsewhere. Lyman travels
to Mainland. Lake H ow ell
Journeys to Spruce Creek.
Lake Brantley hosts Apopka
and Oviedo goes to Kissim­
mee Osceola.

SCOREBOARD

&gt;10,8-3.

In doubles, Whlgham-Renard blitzed Eubanks-Blokcr,
8-0 and Brian Harris-ILT. Bennett ripped Wllllams-Hollon,
H I.

No. 1 Seabreeze
Invades Tonight

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In the first half snd never
relinquished It. Santa Fe never
had the lead the entire game and
ll was tied only twice, 2-2 and
4-4.
ColctU broke the 4-4 tie with a
three-point play that made It 7-4
and she scored four more points
for an 11-4 SCO lead with 12.-04
left in the first half.
SCC Increased Ua lead to 10.
21-11, with 6:30 left In the half
when Colcttl grabbed an offenaive rebound and made the
followup. The Lady Raiders took
a 15-point lea d , 2 8 -1 3 . at
halftim e behind C olcttl's 11
polnta.
Santa Fe came back strong at
the beginning of the second half
aa the Lady Saints ran off elight
straight points to pull witthin
•even, 28-21. with 18:15 left tn
the game. Mathis started o ff the
streak aa she grabbed an of­
fensive rebound and dropped In
the followup and Archer did the
same to make It 28-17. Dodd
then popped In a Jumper and
Archer hit one from the outside
to make It 28-21.

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" I ' m s t i l l f ly lp g h i g h , "
Gallagher said after the win.
"W e've been working hard on
defense and we've come a long
way. Now we're going to gear
down and concrntretr on state."

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SCC then called a timeout to
settle down and Cqlettl hit a
layup to slop Santa Pc's string
snd give the Raiders a 30-21
lead. Johnson made one o f two
free throws and Lemon hit a
layup for a 33-21 SCGlead.
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that waa an atrbsll by Dodd.

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by Howla Schnaidar
AM DSW
110!

fT APPEARS THAT THE
WIFE AUDI HA\£ WORKED
OUT A S O U T O O T O
OUR DIFFICULTIES

Proper Diet Can Ease
Problems With Colon
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
been d ia g n o s e d as h a v in g
diverticulitis and my husband
has dlvertlculosls. Which is
more serious?
DEAR READER - I d bet a
small sum that tf you ever had
diverticulitis, you no longer had
tt by the time you wrote to me.
S o m e t i m e s the t e r m s
diverticulitis and dlvertlculols
arc not used correctly. You and
your husband probably have the
satr? thing. This ts not surpris­
ing. since diverticula are very
common and increase with In­
creasing years. More than half of
the people over 60 In the United
States have dlvertlculosls.
Some people call dlvertlculosls
"pockets o f the colon." They arc
small pockets produced by the
te a r in g o r r u p tu re o f th e
structures o f the colon.
Often these pockets cause no
symptoms, but other times they
are associated with gas. lower
a b d o m in a l d is c o m fo r t a n d
cram ping. Many au thorities
think the symptoms do not come
from the diverticula, but front a
spastic or Irritable colon. In fact,
a spastic colon m. y cause a
buildup o f pressure Inside the
colon, causing the rupture or
blowout.
Diverticulitis Is an Inflamma­
tion of one o f these pockets and
ts similar to uppcndlcltls. It Is an
acute condition and occurs In
only about I percent of patients
with dlvertlculosls. As an Infec­
tion. It req u ire s Im m ediate
treatment, and antibiotics are
necessary. It Is a one-time,
short-duration occurence In
two-thirds o f patients who have
It.
One may not eut anything
during acute diverticulitis. Crr
talnly. one's doctor will have to
determine what diet to follow. A
patient with dlvertlculosls muy
benefit from adding bulk to the
diet and may also need to take
measures to prevent gas. I have
discussed the diet In more detail
In The Health Letter. Special
R e p o rt 2 0 , D lv e r tlc u lo s ls :
Pockets of the Colon.
DEAR DR. LAMB - llow long
must food stay in the stomach to
be of nutritional benefit? I have
an Intolerance for dairy pro­
ducts. most fresh fruits and
many raw vegetables, chocolate,

Dr.
Lamb

liquor and other foods. Some­
times 1 consume these foods bv
mistake and lose everything.
Llbrax usually corrects the pro­
blem. but 1 am concerned about
losing nutrients.

One does does not nbsorb any
nutrients through the stomach
wall, only alcohol w ill pass
through the stom ach.

DEAR READER — 1 hope you
are seeing a doctor and pursuing
a program to correct your food
Intolerance or to replace the
nutrients tn the foods you are
unable to tolerate.

ACROSS
1 Wanderad
• Woody

Ari*wtf to Previous Puiflt

ol

11 Chang* cotar ol

• W avs (Sp I

12
Oitnoy
17 Financial
IB Club ladder
(•bbr.l
21 Cetastial b u r
22 Favoritism
23 Skinny hah
28 Raw malarial*
2B African toi
27 Faathartd

38 Ash
41 Joyce Kilmer

fnand
27 Coliaga dogroa
2B
Quart*!
Ubbr.)
30 Movio taction* 28 Indian com
32 E u t Indian troa 31 Biblical tribal
ehiaf
33 Component ol
37 A (tract iv* vi*w
atom
34 Colorado park
3B Horto roletivo
31 Old lattara

■
14

41 Thrao (prol.l

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Motiam pnatt
Macabra
Coma togtthar
Braakfut food
Intarvana
Woman*
g*rm*nt

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4B River in tha
Congo

49 Basketball
43 Gnat
44 Map book
48 Saa (Gar)
47 Othtrwis*
4

league Itbbr)
50 High in pitch
51 Adveieary
82 Borer Baer

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40 Strong cart
42
46
48
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82
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noDDDD nnnnnn
nnnn Boon nnn
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□nnnnnn nnnnn
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□nn nnnn nnnn
□nn Bonn nnnn

B Patna
10 Kind

tor short
24 Trj.mpet
28 Eagle's noat

□ □ □
DDO

7 Actor Montand

14 Vtnul'

IB Vary Ifr.l
I I Chicken
20 Machinary oil

Station. New York. N.Y.. 10019

6 Maha cop&gt;a*

12 M»»aan
13 Wickedly
IS Capture again
11 Rad f o u r*
nama
17 Nearly all

Send your quest tons to L&gt;r.
Lamb. P.O. Bax 1551. Radio City

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84 Vmtgir
85 Spider monkty

SB Sharry

DOWN
1 Horseman
2 Pur* air
3 Oiaappaar

4 Eira
8 Coliaga dagraa
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W IN A T B R ID G E

MR. MEN AND LITTLE M ISS

liM J U S T &lt;50IN&lt;3 TO TAP
t o u r k n e e w rrH t h i s
HAAWAEK TO T E S T . RELAX. &gt;
M R.CILLY /
TH E B ES
N&lt;?THlNG
TO p e

AFKAJP O ff

by Wamtr Brothers

BUGS B U N N Y

I: PONT KNOW WHY VOU

HE MAKES A R X X

\YATCH 1MOSEOUP BUSS
Bu n n y c a r t o o n s .

O P &gt;OU

e ve r y

I

DOESN'T t m a t m a k h
vd u s t &amp; a m in m a p ?

ITS AN ^EXPENSIVE
WAV I D M £AT M y
W O JS H • ------ r M

B y J a m es Jacoby
Bidding a slam on n finesse
isn't the worst thing In the
world. But there's a klrkcr In the
works If you also nrrd reason­
able distribution.
North showed a better hand
than he actually had. By bidding
diamonds und spades, and then
going to four hearts, he was
making a mild slam try. South
was happy to comply and asked
for aces.
It seemed as though the stum
would depend simply upon who
held the king o f hearts, but when
East showed out. more became
though there Is no
Involved. Although
way short o f hypnotism
to
nj _
compel West to cover a heart
honor with the king, there Is an
unusual type o f play that can
lake away the defender's trump
trick. It has a name — the

smother play. Watch It In action.
After two rounds o f hearts.
West not covering. South cashed
the second high club, led a spade
to the ace and trumped a club.
Then he played a spade to the
king and trumped the third
spade. Now came the diamond
ace and king. A small diamond
from dummy pul East on lead.
The only black cards outstand­
ing were with East, and lie had
to lead cither a club or a spade.
South trumped and West wus
caught In the "sm other." If he
played the king, dummy would
play the ace. !r he underrulTed,
du m m y w o u ld discard the
diamond. The hand could be
defeated only If West could have
won the third diamond and led
hla low heart, but that was
prevented by the layout of the
cards.

1MI

NORTH
OAKS
YAM
♦ K IM
♦ M l

EAST
♦ QM72
Y--.

WEST

OJ 100
Y K T11
♦ 704
O Q JI 0

♦ U J 10
0*1141
SOUTH

041
Y q j toon
♦ A ll

Oak
Vulnerable: Eait-Weat
Dealer South
Waal Nartb Eaat
fo lk
1Y
Paia 20
IY
Pan
Paaa 14
Pan
2 NT
Paaa 4Y
Pan
4 NT
Pan
»Y
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Pan
Pan
Pan
Pan
Opening lead: +Q

HOROSCOPE
What Tha Day
Will Bring...

FRANK AND ERNEST

T H is COULD T A K * A W H | L E -tW \
$0|N *

Tb

C H E C K \ tx jK

&amp; F L B )C E S .

by Jhn Dovta

QARFIELD

ffM n tH

ifM PAVtb

3m r r rt i i m-jj±fin t 1
"

by T. K. ftyan-

s s S iK K a a

r OHAi'tOUCMi
C M *

YO U R B IR TH D A Y
FEBRUARY 9 . 1M B
Som ething you have lon g
hoped for has excellent chances
o f becoming a reality In the year
ahead. Key people will step Into
the situation and do things for
you that you can't do on your
own.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
Be mindful o f your past experi­
ences when plotting your course
for today. Do not allow compa­
nions with less savvy to do your
thinking for you.
H BCBS (Feb. 20-March 20) Do
not be hesitant today to request
favors from people you've helped
In the past. Anyone who Is
Indebted to you will welcome the
chance to balance the books.
ABIB B (March 21-AprU 19)
Others will be drawn to you
-today because o f your open.

a turn for the better today.
friendly manner. They may even
However, do not use this as an
•hare In form ation with you they
excuse to squander your re­
dare not m en tio n toolhera.
TAURUB (April 20-May 201 sources.
Career conditions are favorable
L IB B A (S ept. 23-Oct. 23)
Friends will receive you with
for you today. If you applv
open arms today, especially in
yourself, you can accomplish
■octal situations. The more you
feata too difficult for co-workers.
relax and enjoy yourself, the
OBMOtl (May 2l&gt;June 20) It's
more you'll captivate your pals.
Important today that you act
•C O B PIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be
aside adequate tim e for fun
activities. Plan something en­ definite about what you want to
accom plish today, and con ­
jo y a b le that Inclu des close
centrate your efforts on the end
friends.
CANCBS (June 2 1-July 22) • game. You can do what you act
your mind to.
F in a n c ia l a e e d a y o u h a ve
■ A O tT T A R IU B (Nov. 23-Dec.
lamed are about to bear fruit,
ou will derive benefits and ao 21) If there Is an acquaintance
you would like to get to know
III two others with whom
better, entertain him at your
you're associated.
L B O ( J u l y 2 3 - A u g . 2 2 ) place today. Friendahlp w ill
Partnership situations should blossom In convivial surroun­
work out fortunately for you dings.
C A P R IC O R N (Dee. 22-jan.
today, provided neither you nor
19) Today you'll reap rewarda
your cohort tries to upstage the
other. T h e sp otligh t Is big for your past actions. Osina will
be s u b s ta n t ia l fo r yo u r
enough for both.
V IR O O (A u g. 23-Sepl. 32) meritorious efforts or minimal
Financial trends wlU atari taking w h en you didn't do your beat.

G

ANNIK
THAT’S RIGHT.

cm KJW UP

by Lm

HM t€M-6TUTTP
/RIM /tfcX?

OH HOUTff |Q2. LOOAfP A#ff Tm
taW NO
a fe A T M - w L g i
SUHVIVORS- fTIL ,

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SHUOOUPf J AtYT
i otetri la o T fiOTmc/kWA
M£#t r - / A/r O'fttCMennm

am

B Starr

-BUT (TCAUtf A / /V./VO.
b o at n

[B-FLtm t,

tw its is a

**oor*rcA w *JJM W a u i

�- * “ p

IS A — E ve n in g H e ra ld , San lo rd , PI.

Bunk Bed
'Ju stice '
A R V A D A . C olo.
(U P !) - A ( i o f f *
npoken father who
waged a one-man
battle against the
world’s largest re­
t a ile r h a s w o n .
Sears. Roebuck and
C o. says It w ill
publicize modifica­
tion klta for the type
o f bunk bed that
killed Ed S h e lls '
son.
T h r annou nce­
m en t T h u r s d a y
from the huge retail
and catalog giant
w as a r e l i e f fo r
Shells.
" I t 's p a r t i a l
Justice," he said.
The kits Include
four retaining wires
that s tr e tc h b e ­
tw e e n th e s i d e ­
boards of the beds.

F r id a y , F a b .« , If tS

NEW YORK (UPJI Hrrnhard G oetz, the
suhwuy vigilante who
shot four teenagers In
December, fought off
would-be muggers In
1082 and twice raced
to the rescue o f women
being robbed.
Goetz's lawyer.
Joaeph Kelner,
Thursday recounted
the timrs his client
scuffled with muggers.
In the sum m er of
1082. Goetz missed his
stop at 06th Street slulion. He got off Instead
at 110th Street and
w as w a lk in g a lo n g
Central Park North.
Kelner said.
"T w o men started to
follow him. He walked
faster. T h ey walked
faster," Kelner said.
"H e walked slower.
They walked slower.
He crossed the street
and ... one ran In front
o f him and one ran In
bark of him. One of
them tiad a cunc and

B y Deane J ord a n
H erald S t a ff W r it e r
The following persons have either pleaded or
been found guilty of driving under the Influence
or having an unlawful blood alcohol level.
As first-lime offenders, most have had their
driver’s license suspended for 6 months, ordered
to pay a 9250 fine, pay court costs of 927.50 and
complete 50 hours of community service. When a
guilty or no contest plea ts entered or If the
defendant Is found guilty of an alcohol-related
charge, other charges are usually either not
prosecuted or dismissed.
—Gary Lee Dunn, 37. o f 552 E. Seminole Ave.,
Lnngwood. arrested Nov. 26 after his vehicle ran
a stop sign at Grant Street and Palmetto Avenue.
Longwood.
—Robert Walters Bowers, 50. of 115 Exeter
Court, arrested Dec. 7 at U.S. Highway 17-02 and
Airport Boulevard. Sanford, after a Florida
Highway Patrol trooper saw a car driving half on
the road and half on the median and then
straddling lanes.
—Leonard Honaker. 28. of 251 Concord Drive.
Casselberry, arrested Oct. 25 after a trooper
noticed his vehicle license tag was hidden by a
trailer hllch and the vehicle hit the curb several
limes. He was fined 9500. had his driver's license

h e ra is e d th e c a n e a s tf

to brain Goetz and said
'okay you blank blank,
give It up."
Kelner said Goetz
pulled his pistol and
the assullunts fled.
Goetz did not report
the case to p o lle r .
Kelner said. Goetz also
was brulni during a
mugging In 1081.
Kelner said G oetz
came to the aid o f two
other mugging victims
but did not pull his gun
In either Incident.
In 1 0 8 3 , a o e 11
helped a woman w*}iosc

purse hud been snat­
ched tn Central Park.
Goetz managed to re­
trieve the pock el book
but could not catch the
thief.
Tw o years ago. Goetz
ta c k le d an a lle g e d
bracelet snatcher. But
the victim refused to
call police and fled.
Kelner said.
Keln er refuted
c h a r g e s t h a t hi s
37-year-old client is a
racist because the four
teenagers he shot In a
subwuy Dec. 22 were
black.
G oetz opened fire
after the youths, car­
rying sharpened'
s c re w d riv e rs , asked
him for 95.
" I ' v e n o w sp en t
dozens and dozens of
hours with him and I
can safely say that I
know him as well us
anyone, even his fami­
ly," Kelner said, “ He's
not perfect, but he's
also not a racial and
v io le n t m a n . " - • ........

Black lendrru have
c h a r g e d t hat thr
shooting was racially
mollvlatrd.
A Manhattan grand
Jury refused to Indict
Goetz last month for
attempted murder, und
W e d n e s d a y G o e tz
pleaded Innocent to
c h a r g e s o f ille g a l
weapons possession.
His bull waa reduced
f r o m 9 5 0 . 0 0 0 to
95.000 and he remains
free.

suspended for 5 years, was ordered to spend 5
weekends In the Seminole County Jail and pay
the Public Defender's Office 950.
— Patricia A. Schooler. 33. o f Jacksonville,
arrested Jan. 27 after her car turned on 17-92 at
County Home Road. Sanford, and caused another
driver to take evasive action to avoid a collision.
—William Scott Denton. 48. o f 220 Pomegranlle
St.. Sanford, arrested July 3 by Sanford police
after his car was Involved in an accident on Park
Avenue at Oth Street. He was fined 91.000 and
had his driver's license suspended for 10 years.
—Barbara Joan Elflander. 20. o f Route 1. Box
191. Sanford, airested Nov. 16 In Sanford after
her car ran a red light on 17-02 at 13th Street.
—Calvin Harrison Gatewood. 47. of Orlando,
arrested Nov, 16 after he drove his vehicle Into
the parking lot of the Circus-Citrus lounge on
17-92 In Fern Park where someone told an FHP
trooper a man was driving under the Influence.
He was fined 9250.
—Katherine Elizabeth Sherbet. 35. o f Orlando,
arrested Dec. 8 after her car left the road and
crossed the centerline of county Road 427.
—Gilbert A. Richards. 54. o f 221 Homewood
Drive, Sanford, arrested Aug. 24 after his car was
Involved In an accident on county Road 46-A.
west of Sanford.

lagcl Notice

CALENDAR
n t I D A T .r B B . 9
Wcklva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m. Weklva
Presbyterian Church. SR 434. at Weklva Springs
Road. Closed.
Longwood AA, 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian
Church. SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same lime
and place.
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Alanon, same time
and place.
Sanford AA Step. 8 p.m., 1201 W. Plrst St.,
closed.
B A TU H D A Y . FEB. 0
Central Florida Regional Scholastic Art Awards
Exhibition featuring art and photography by
m iddle and senior high school students ol
Seminole. Brevard, Orange and Osceola counties,
Robinson's. Altamonte Mall. Feb. B-24. 10 a.m. to
0 p.m., weekdays and noon to 5:30 p.m. Sundays.
Central Florida Oulltrrs Guild will sponsor a
workshop on contemporary chintz by Jean Eltel.
prize-winning quitter and Instructor from North
Palm Beach. 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., First United
Methodist Church, 410 Park Ave.. Sanford. For
information coil Mary Aroenrau at 322-5407.
S w eetw ater Oaks W om an's Club nnnunl
S w eeth eart B all. Feb. 0, Sheraton H otel.
Maitland. Call Candace Hudson at 788-7418 for
ticket Information.
East-West Klwanls Club. 8 a.m.. Airport
Restaurant, Sanford.
Spaghetti supper. 5-7 p.m.. Congregational
Christian Church. 2401 Park Ave.. Sanrord. Open
to public. Tickets available at the door.
Frtendahlp Fling for all slngle/slngle again
adulta, 7,30 p.m.. First Baptist Church o f Oviedo
fellow h lp hall, S tale Roads 434 and 428.
A dm laa lon — a hom em ade va len tin e .-1 Free
nursery.
Sanford AA, noon (closed discussion) and 8
p.m., 1201 W. First St. open discussion.
Sanford Womens' AA. 1201 W. First St.. 2
p.m.. closed.
Casselberry A A Step. 8 p .m . Ascension
Lutheran Churrh. Overbrook Drive.
Rebosand Live Oak AA. noon. Kebos Club. 130
Normandy Road, Casselberry (closed). Clean Air
A A for nun-smokers, first floor, same room, same
place and lime.
SU N D AY. PBB. 10
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.. open discussion.
Florida Power and Light building. N. Myrtle
Avenue. Sanford.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Otcaata land Dev. to James
S
Rile hit 4
Mery Ann
lieneman. Parcel el land In
Sec M IS S . Lot » . Otctole
Stuff 11*1,1 par , IMS
Sloven F. Thomas M Walter J.
A I leaner M Thomas. Un. U.
•idf IIS. Ihaaah, Sac. Throe,
IMS
Lionel S. Appleby to Joy. J.
del ten 4 Wl Dorothy W end
W Williams 4
Dorothy S . (renters l/l M '- Let
I. Loch Arbor, Itie at Fines. Sac.
t. Amended Fl0t.tU .M f
(ucleide A. Deveeui la seme
essbeve. I/Mnt: S I4 JN
Dotty Tsylor I# tamo as
above, l/l M i S U M
Bornkd Jocttan If Seme at
about, l/l bill I I 1 M
Motel listen to tome os
t. l/l mi: S IA M

.i/imiisiuM

J 4 II John M tamo at
above, l/l mi: HAMS
My Capo inv. Inc to JudOy
Poliak. Un IA Tuscany P I,
Cand.Ph O n # .IS IJM
Key keetty 4 Dev to Control
Mamas FI Inc. Lett I lls . It.
If* lit. Otar Run. On 14
u ta t
Cedtim.
Inc
to
La
Mclochern. J r , 4 Wl. lid X ,
Lot t. Unrtc. Plot ol Vltla.

WIJM
The RyUnd Croup Inc. to
FridsrU h R. Lshrrrwnn 4 Wt
CohwrIna. Lai Z4 Dear Run, Un.
M . 114 Ml
Dentte A Simpean to 0 Scan
Ptenon. Un F-4 Labe KaMryn

Doonesbury

vuleft.
Suburban
Carp, SIM M
Chariot M. Cemeeu 4 Wl
M tfdeltni
to Arthur
E.
be v Inf ten 4 Wl Ruth I . Lai 14
Faiweed. Ph II, ttt '
yifWMtl L1- — — la#
Uerh
T. Buchanan 4 W IC V W y M .L d
F. blk 14 North Orlande Ran
chat. Sec M .M M W
John W. Lowe 4 Wl Mary to
Dan AI lantttlli 4 Wt Prencet I ,
Let I. bih i . Dammar kh Mali.
Sith Addn. I1M JM
Rabort H Flood 4 Wt Marilyn
la Refer A. Vinci 4 Wt Kathleen
0 , W l1ST el E t t r etc •M Sac.
m i i».S 4 i.m
Robert Rektw, Inc. to Ivol I.
Ofcaan 4 Wt R teamorto. Lai II.
Weklva Club ( t i t . lac. L
S IM M
U S Hama Carp, la Joseph
Vadela 4 Wl Jean A , Lai If
Tamar ah 1/0. ttt. too
RCA la PWr J Mitchell 4 Wt
Vvenue. Lai *4 Midden Lake
Villas. Ph IV.SS4JM
RCA la Joial I . Oevormann 4
Wt Marfarottw M , Let tl.
dtn Lake Vine*. Ph. IV.
RCA to James L. lenlhen 4
Wt Mery I . Lot 14 MtoOen
Lakt vines. Ph. IV. MAMt
Am V. Betohcab. Trustee to
Fred 0 Curtis 4 Wt IHiabath
J , Lai 14 Kvorproan V hIoa
II) ip
Oasrft W. Howell to Jamat H.
Wilder 4 Mary leu Wilder, pari
al Lais I. 4 4 4 Bib 4 Wtotf

Lui 0 Dvorak ta Oeorft
Malian 4 Marilyn Manhollen.
Let 4 4tk 14 tier 4 Tratiord t
Me# el SenlorA U.M0
Cot Carp, la Nall R. Schwab 4
Wt Nila 0 , Lai 114 Wthlva
Cava. Ph Three. I MlAM
Jeffrey B. Hall la Karan 0.
Hall. Lot U 4 Weklva Hunt Club.
Pea Hunt. Sac Thro*. CTJI.MS
The First la Robert W. Forbes
4 Wt SarHt K . Lai tf,
Tutcewllla, Un.f, tlil.MO
American PM Inc. la Craven
Dev . Lot m , Wthlva Cove. Ph
Three. tS A M
Leaner Hamah Inc. la Rarert
B. Schwerti 4 Jemot L
Norman. Lai 41. The Villas el
Catae(berry. Ph Two. t i l A H
Cento* Hamas t l PI. to Jerry
P. Proctor. Sr. 4 Wt Joyce D ,
Lot 1. rapt d Orovovtow Videos
lit Addn . MAtoi
Cantoi Hamas el PI. to O'Neil
* to, Rtpl
at
VIII
Itt
Wilma R took to John C
LaRata 4 Wt t Amaral. Late IF
4 t 4 4lb l.F N raH ts.S M f
Paul L McKemon 4 Wt
Laura to Oaten L KMiner 4 *“ •
Donne. L d I f Lake
Gary J. Alton 4 Wt Candy to
David M Aymar 4 Card 8 , Lai
4 9IR A, Sweetwater Oaks Sac.
I4 IU 4 M
Aiifdma AeHafila 4 Ilona T.
to Prances T. Murphy. Un. H A
EM. NS Atlnmsnto Village II.
Oovtd M

Lenftton 4

Prencetca to N A. Anman. Jr.,
Lai t. Blk 0. Sweetwater Oekt.
Set. II. IM A M
•rude Dev to Malcolm P.
O'Taato 4 Wt Ham! A , let u .
Golden Grew. Ml.MO
James Brdmen to Potty
Corucd 4 Wt Catherine, Un 1.
ild f. M4 beytree Villefo.
t il. tot
Security Pacifk
PM
to
0 earpe J. Noted. Lot 04 41b 4
Plat.
Themes J. Killer tn 4 Penny
to W Rtborl Ramsey 4 ArauM
AMrecM 4 Wl Louise. N Ml’ sf
■ toeiNWiesf n e w daw to r 4
E liriS e c n i l l f . U L N f
ta n Forest Mills Lid Ptr to
Willowcreek Hemet. Inc, Let
14 Lenfwond Hint. Un Two.
IM A Prtp. Inc. to ReOari 0
Dytarl 4 Wt Calharlna. Let m .
Lakt d the Weeds Townhouse.
Sac. II. Mi_lM
Harvey J. Master to Francis
W Waretek 4 Jamat McKeehy.
■ to d L d tt* 4 d l d M4 Town
d Lanfwead. II1AM
Char tot R. Lamarr 4 Wl Mary
L. to Jeffrey I Sempeen 4 Wt
Jpamo 4 d e l no Hpmmpnd.
Commonce pi S I cor Tr. A.
Lanfwoed I outre, SHAW
Ltonal J. Payoff* to John L.
Thomas 4 Wt Dahra 4 . Lot m
River Run Sac Four, 111tot
Crttsbse taid. Carp, to
Chariot M. Curtis. Un t f ttorro
Cend Ph II. l/AMO
CrattOoa Cend Carp, to Rab
art Oyer 4 Wt Annetto. Un. to
Storm Cand, Ph. 11. V 4 M

N d k # It hereby given (tut I
#m
In business d US
H lg h w ty 11*1, Lengweed.
Seminole County. Florid* under
toe fkllttaus w n t d Q M I ,
Inc . and Owl I Inland to regular
taid nanw with Clark d the
Circuit Court, Somlnolt County,
Florida In accardanct with aw
provision* at iha Fictitious
Nanw Stotutes. To oil (action
Its M Florida Stalvtot list
MaryS
Publlih February 1. I. IS. 14
IMS
OCC It
F IC TITIO U S N AM I
Nolle# It horoby flvtn awl I
am tnfagad In bwiltwtt at 1W
0 Orlando D rlva. laniard.
Somlnolt County, Florida under
th * f i c t i t i o u s nom a at
N ATUXE'S ANNEX, and mot I
Intend to roftttor told nemo
with aw Clerk of aw Circuit
Court, lorn Mole County. Florido
In occordonee with aw F**
visions of ttw Fktlllout Nome
Statutes, to wit Section MS f t
Florida Statutes its;
/tT Donna R. Smith
Fwbilth February I. it. 71 A
March I. IMS
DEC 41
C ITY OP
L A K I M ARY, PLORIDA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC H IA R IN O
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCE RN:
NOTICE IS HER EB Y GIVEN
by Iha City Commlttton d the
City d Lake Mary. Florida, (hat
Mid Commlttton will held a
Public Hearing al f ;N PAS. an
February 14 IH I. to consider an
Ordinance entitled at Mtowt
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C IT Y OF L A K I M A R Y.
FLORIDA. RBZONINO C IR
TAIN LANDS W ITHIN THE
C ITY OF LA KE MARY. AS
H E R E IN D E F IN E D PROM
T H E P R E S E N T IO N IN O
C L A S S IF IC A T IO N OF R -IA
SINGLE FA M ILY TO R 1 ONE
A N D TW O F A M I L Y .
PURSUANT TO THE TERMS
OF TH E FLORIDA S T A T U T E !
P R O V ID IN G FO R T H E
AM EN D M EN T OF THE OF
FICIAL ZONING MAP: PRO
VIDING CONFLICTS.
1 C V E R A B IL IT V ; AND EF
F EC TIV E DATE
changing the lonlng an Iha
following described proper I*
tlhtoto in Iha City of Lab* Mary.
Florida
The E ail to 'd tot II and all d
tots I ) and 14 Black *J. Plat d
Cryttal Lake Winter Hornet
Subdivision. Plot book 4 Pages
114 I I I and lid Public Racordt
d Seminole County. Florida
One holt Meek l a d d Country
Club Rood on Lo t* M ary
Avenue.
The Public Hearing will ha
held el Iha City Hall. City d
Lake Mary. Florida, an the loth
day d February, HU. ar at
teen hereafter at possible. at
which lima Intorestod parties
tor and against the request
staled above will be heard Said
hearing may be canttnuad tram
lima to time until final action It
taken by the City Can
Iha City d Lake Mery
THIS NOTICE shall be
M three ID puMk placet
me City at Lake Mary. Florida,
al Iha City HaU vritoto told City,
and pubflthad M the Evening
Harold, a nowtgipir d general
circulation to the City d Lake
Mary, prter to Iha derated
hearing In addition, notice shell
be peetod to the area to be
•t toast
prior
tor to iha data d the Pubfk
Hearing
A taped record d toil meeting
It made by iha City tor Itt
convenience This retard may
net candtfuto an edoguato re­
cord tor the purpattl d eppoel
ham a dtcttton made by too
City Cammlttton with respect to
Ihe faregelng matter. Any
person wishing to ensure that an
» actuate retard d Iha praciid
togs it memtetned tor aggdieto
purposes It advised to mehe Iha
nt coopery trrenptnsonft el hit
ar h tn e n ttpanta
C IT Y OP
U K I M ARY, PLORIDA
t v Carol Edwards
City Clark
D A TE D : January n . lt d
Publlih: January M A Fabruary
4 HW
D I E 1ST

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
S D .U D V O U
w o u H trm g

aq bvt

m s m jm p v

tm n ot

M

ri

’M H H O itX

m te rr

-t o r

w -

legal Notice

Nine Sentenced For DUI

Goetz Fought
Muggers Before

■*

*/

Flitlttoes Nansa
Notice It hereby given mot 1
am engaged to business d SI]
Highw ay I I t l . Longwood.
Seminole County. Florida under
the fictitious nemo of Rem
Reafty of Central Florida. Inc .
and that I intend to register said
name with Clark d the Circuit
Court, Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with Ihe pro
vistone of the F k ill tout Name
Statutes. To wit Section le lf f
Florida Stetutoe IfST.
Fran# A Werner III
Publish: February I. 4 15, » .
If U
D EC -tf
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SCMINOLR COUNTY.
FLORIDA
P R O M T ! DIVISION
FISe Number SAOffCP
IN R E: ESTA TE OP
HARRY WILLIAM SILRAUGH
NOTICE OP
ADMINISTRATION
The administration d the
a sia ta of H a r r y W illa im
S ilb a u g h , decaasad. P ile
Number ISbfF CF. Is pending to
Ihe Circuit Court tor Seminole
M erida. P ra b a la
Division, hit address d which It
P O . D ra w e r C . S onfe rd.
Florida, urn
The names and addraisas d
Iha personal rsprssenlellve s
attorney are sd torth bsle*
All Interested persons are
roqutrad to file with this court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
PROM THE DATE O P TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OP
THIS N OTICE: M d l cellmt
against the estate and 1) any
ehlectient by an Interested
person to wham notice was
mailed Rial challenges Ihe valid
Ity d Pto will. Iha quollfkattont
d hto personal representative,
ar Ihe venue ar lurltdlclton a*
the court
A L L C U IM S AND O B JE C ­
TIONS NOT SO PILED W ILL
BE FOREVER M R R E D
Publication of this Notice hat
begun on February 4 IfU .
Personal Representative
FloydH Powell
P O . Boa 1114 Orlande. F L
a*-*
a
ATYornvy
nr
Personal Representative
Frank McMillan
P O . 4eslMI.Orlande.PL
Tetophsn* I M l) Iff f ill
Publlih February 4 14 m i
DEC**
CITY OF
U K I MARY. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC H IA R IN O
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
NOTICE IS HER EBY G IVEN
by Iha City Commission d the
City d Lake Mery. F torIda. that
said Commission will hold o
Public Hearing al 1:M P M , on
February 14 IMA tocaneJder on
Ordinance entitled at toitowe
AN ORDINANCE OF TH E
C I T Y OF L A K I M A R Y .
FLORIDA. REZONING C IR
T A IN LANDS W ITH IN TH E
C IT Y OP U K I M AR Y. AS
H E R E IN O IP IN E O PROM
T H E P R E S E N T Z O N IN O
CLASSIFICATION OF A I AG
R ICULTURAL TO R IA RESI
D E N T IA L . P U R S U A N T T O
T H E T E R M S OP T H E
F LO R ID A S T A T U T E ! PRO
VIO IN O FOR TH E AM END
M I N T O F TH E O F F IC IA L
ZONINO MAP: PR OVIDING
CONFLICTS. SEVER AB ILITY!
AN D E FFEC TIV E DATE,
changing Ihe lining on the
tallowing described property
situate i.i Ihe City d Lake Mary.
Florido
The East I to chains d the
NE to d the SEto d the SEto d
Section f, Twonshlp M South.
Range )• East, Sem inole
County, Florida Located North
d the Intersection d Greenlee I
High Streds. Appro* I
ly U S ' o M l'. The Public
Hearing will be held al Ihe City
H a ll. C ity at Lake M a ry .
Florida, an the loth day d
February. IMS. ar a t seen
thereafter as patllbto. at which
apemet the ra guest stated
will be heard (did hearing may
be continued tram time to time
until fhml action Is token by Ihe
City Commiseton d the City at
t h i s NOTICE shaft be
In three (It publk pieces
iha City d Lake Mery, Florida,
at the City Hall within said City,
and published to the Evening
r a il a iwwtgtpor d general
circulation in Iha City ol Lake
U e «y
Ra M m
a k w p e e l^d
Ifm
f* w p l u u
ITU PmbMIV
hearing In eddHton. netke Mali
be gaoled to Iha area to ha
coneldsrad at toad fltlaan days
grtor ip the data d iha Public
Heaving
a^usdtaM1dtol b
siw
TTbfd
toFv^R99FB^tov(H
to mads by the City far Its
convenience T h is ---------not constitute an
card tor Iha purge*## at
tram a decision made by Pm
Cl ly Commiseton with respect to
th# lorogalng matter. Aay
VMMM *

(■ ITlMtDTwfr^W
_____
B b advised to mabg Pto
ortenge monte el Ms

Legal Notice

U gal Notice
AFFID A V IT UNDER
PICT tT KHIt NJUtot STA TU TE
STATE OF FLO R ID A I SS:
COUNTY OF ORANGE &gt;
Ttw undersigned, under oath,
ly#
I. This instrument ts being
■ecufed tor the purpose d
complying svtth Section ISS ff
Florida Stetutoe
t. it is toe intention of the
undersigned to engegt In 0
Iktlttous name of TOMORROW
R E A L T Y A N D A U C T IO N
COMPANY. INC located d ass
Forattweod Lane. In toe City ol
M a itla n d . F l o r i d a 11111.
Samlneto County, Florida.
1 Attached hereto and mads *
part twred It to# nom peptr
Prod d Publication as required
Oy said statute
4 The** Interested in said
enterprise, and to* aitont of to*
Interest deacti. Is at totlows:
NAME OP OW NER
Tomorr ow Realty
4 Auchan Company
INTEREST
SIGNATURE OP OWNER
Glenn A Elpckmpre.
ADDRESS OP OWNER
Past Oflk* baa if)0
Maitland. Florida m i l
tor* m* at Orlando. Orange
Coimty. Florida, this llih day d
Fsbrvery. itoa
M ALI
IV Potrkto A . Smith
Notary Pubfk.
Stale d F torId* at Largo
My C rvfH ntyn E *plras
January ZL m l
As referred to In Paragraph J
to r n . Prod d PuWlcaiton d
tols krtonfton to register if filed
visions at S*Cfton SOSO* Florid*
Statute*
ATTAC H P R O O F
OF PUBLICATION
Publlih January tS 4 Fabruary
1.4 14 IMS
DEB I d
FICTITIO U S N A M I
Notice It hwrsby given toot I
am engaged In buslnett *1 Mf
Clermont R d , Lak* Mary.
Ssmlnols County. Ftorlds D IM
under to* fictitious nemo et
C U R E JOHNER. and toot I
intend to register sold name
with toe Clerk d Pm Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with Iha pro
visions d too Fictitious Noma
Slafvtot. le*rft: Section its Of
Florid*Statutes IFST
IV Clarence J. Cranmer
Publish January 11. 14 I I A
February 4 IMS
D E I Cl
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT. IN
AN D FOR S E M I N O L E
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
CASE NO IS d lW C A b s K
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF
HENRY L FOX. III.
PdHtontr/Hutbond.
RITA J. FOX.
Rospandmt/WIto
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: Rita 1 Fo* Pool OtIk v Bos
m McCall. Idafwosis
YOU AR E H E R E B Y
N O TIFIED Itsat a Pefiiton tor
Dlssalutton of Marriage hat
bean filed against you. mid Put
you era required to servo 0 copy
d your respenee or pleading to
Ih* Peflllon upon Its* Poll
tomey. Themes C.
Pert Office be* d l .
bride n n i . and file
toe wlglnel ra span so or plead
Ing In too offlca d to* Cltrh of
Ih* CkcuH Court, on ar batora
to* ifto day at February. A O
IMS If you toil to do so. *
Default Judgment will be leksn
mended In Ihe Pdltton
D ATED d Sanlord. Seminole
County, Florid*, tols Uto day et
January, INS
(SEAL)
DAVIDN. B ER R IEN
CLERK OF TH E CIRCUIT
COURT
by: Eva Crabtree
Clark
Publish: J
January 14 IS Fabru
ary 1,41
1.4 ISM

»

OtJ±L

IN T M C IR C U IT COURT
OP T N I I I G M T I E N T N
JU DICIAL CIRCU IT
IN AN D FOG
SEMINOLE CO UN TY.
FLO R ID A
c a s e n o . is-n g c a m k
IN l i t TH E MAURI AGE OF
EDW ARDR0CHF0R0.
Petitioner/Husband.
and
M ARILYN ROCHFORO.
NOTICE OP ACTION
PON DISSOLUTION
OP M ARRIAGE
TOt MAR ILVN ROCHFOR 0
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
YOU A R I H E R E B Y
N O TIFIED b id a Pdltton tor
a* Mbrylib* hat

* lx

to larva a copy d
dafantat.
_ , t
IF any. ta it an
CARMINE M. BRAVO. ISO . d
CARMINE ML SRAVO. P &gt; ,
IMS state Rood 0 4 Suite 4
Langwaad Springe Pn to N lis i
Can tar, Langwaad. P tor Id*
•to clerk t l Hto

C ITY O P
U K I MARY, PLORIDA
I V Card Edwards
City C tors
D A T E O iiJanuary 14mi
PwbUth: January SI Fabruary 4
ms
D I B II*

a
re!tel (ra ie f ter in tka ^^0tl 1le^t
TbN Nsfke shew ba gubttohed
wwa each awah tar tour 14)
cansssutlva w aakt la th*
SAN FO R D H IR ALD .
W tTN IS t my hand and toe
seal d tatd Court M SantovL
F lends, an tols am dav **
(CIR CUIT COURT SEAL)
D A V ID N BER R IEN .
As Clark, Circuit Court
E. Ti
February 4 14 t l A

call to u

.n u s

ShoppingForA
HewOr IM Cart

DECS*

FIC TITIO U S N AM I
Ndlce Is hereay given tod I
am engaged In buUntte d Mki
s. Highway 1T-F4 Langwood.
Samlneto County. Florido und*
the fictitious nemo d DAN'S
RESTAURANT, and that I to
send to register sold name with
toe Clerk of toe Circuit Court.
Seminal* County. Florida In
accordance with to* provision*
of toe Fkttttoue Name Stdvtoe.
to wit: Section asSFf Florid#
Statutes test.
Dan's Enterprises. Inc.
A Florida Corpordton
IV Char las D. Wilder
Publish January 14 IS 4 February 1.4 ISU
0 (8 * 1
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT OP
TH E (IO M TE E N TM JUDICIAL
C IRCUIT SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA
C IV IL A C T IO N NO.:
M dOOCAOOE
CITIZENS MORTGAGE
CO RP O R ATION .de,
Ptolnllft,
vs.
PARK LA K E IN V E S TM E N T!
I N C .d e ,
Dstondants
N O TICE OF ACTION .
TO : P AR K LA K E IN V E S T­
M E N T ! INC
RESIDENCE : UNKNOWN
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D tod on
action lo torocl*** « mortfag*
on too tottowing preparty In
SEMINOLE County. Florid*.
Unit S D R . L A K I HOWELL
A R M S C O N D O M IN IU M , a
Condominium according to |tto
Declaration 0* Condominium
and Eihibitt annamad thereto.
in omelet Zixa*±*
\xn. Pag* IU 4 d to*
Public Racordt ot Somlnolt
County. Florida, together with
on undivided intortel In tod
common alament* and limited
common otomonts declared In
to ld Decl ar at i on *1 C o n ­
d o m i n i u m t* b* on a p ­
purtenance to toe above Con
dominium Unit.
has boon mod age mil you and
you ora required t o servo 0 copy
d your written detente#. If any,
to It on G R A C E A N N E
GLAVIN. Swann and Haddock.
P A . Platnllfft attorney, whose
moiling odd riu I* IIS West
Central Boulevard. Suits 1100.
PO . Boa AM Orlande. Ftorlds
day of February ItoSand file the
original with to* Clerk d this
Court either batora took* an
Plaintiffs attorney or Immedl
atoty thereafter; ototrwtt* a
default will be antorad against
you tor too relief demanded in
toe Complaint or Petition
W ITNESS my hand and teal
of tols Court on too ttrd day d
January IMS
D A V ID N . E IR R I IN
CLER K OP TH E COURT
By: Ev*Crabtree
Dmutv CJ*rk
PubfHft: January fS Fabruary I.
4 1 4 ISbS
O t b i s i _____________________
NOTICE OP IN TEN TIO N
T O R IO in iR
FIC TITIO U S N AM I
NOTICE IS HER EB Y GIVEN
tool In compliancy with Soctton
MS S* of too Florida Statutes, as
amandad. too undartlpnad will
rtglttor with to* Clark d to*
C ircu it C ourt at Saminai*
County. Florida, upon receipt of
Proof #1 Publication d tols
nama.towff"Hollywood VMto‘‘
under which too undersigned
still engage In too business of
solos and rental d vWo* tapes,
vide* equipment and rotated
Homs. In Somlnolt County,
F lo rid a , and that Iha un
dorslgnod Individualist ar* th#
anty portlet Inter vstori In said
O A T I O this t i l l day *1
Ja n u a ry, lets, al Daytana
baach, Florida
HOLLYW OOD
CONNECTION. INC.
By: Ellas Pspsdsai
Prasldsnl
H. CHARLES
W OCRNER. JR ,P .A .
MSI South Ridgewood Avenue
South Daytona. Florida W i t
(tot) M l M il
Attorneys ter Rwjlttrmt
Publish January IS 4 Fabruary
I , 4 14 ISM
DEB las
IN T N I CIR C U IT COURT.
IN 4 N 0 FOR
SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. IM HSCA-tS-E
IN R E : TH E MARRIAGE OF
W ESLEY SCOTT M AN N KIN .
K A R IN SUE M A H N K IN .
N O TICE OP ACTION

TO Karen Sue MahrWaw

ton Wynnewead Drive
Sdfdord. Florida am

YOU AR E HEREBY
NOTIFIED tool a Petitton tor

Dtsedutiafi of Marrtag* hat
yew are required ta 1
at your r a i g n i ar pNaGng la
to* Patllian upon to* Pali
•toner's attorney, Thames. C.
Greene. Pad Offk* Ba* * H
Florida SOTI. and M*
to* affka d to* Clerk d
to* Circuit Court. Samlneto
County Courthouse. Sanford.
Mto day d February, IMS. It
yeu toil to da t*. a drtouit

O A T I O al I
Caunfy, F torMl this ta d day d
(SEAL)
D A V ID N . BERRIEN
C LER R O P TH E
C IR C U IT COURT
9y: /S/Otapyl R. Pronhlto
Dwufy Clark
PuMtoh January M 4 Fabruary
1. 414 IMS
DC 9 -MS

�Legal Notice
■NTME C IR C U IT COURT
O P TM «»* TM
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
I I M IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. H O M C A a S
C ITY CONSUMER SERVICES
OF FLORIDA. IN C .
a F WrlPa corporation.
Plaint! A*,
at.
JESSE SMITH anP
ANNA THOMAS SMITH.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO : Ja*»a Smith and Anna
Thame* Smith il allra. and. ar
aH pman* or parttot claiming
'O r- traugh. wnd*r or again*!
' Ihatn RaofdWtoa Unknown
YOU ARE N O TIF IE D Rial an
Action far fortcleiur* af a
P t r ly .In

Samlnola County,

L a i a a na t . Black I ] ,
F O U R T H S K C T I O N
DREAMWORLD, accerdtog to
Flat Book a Papa f t al tha
Futile Ratera* al Semlnele
Cauntf- Florida
yaw are rogulrad la aarva a capf
al yaur written dvtonao*. If any.
■la l a
SFBAR AND HOF­
F M A N , A lta rn a y * . whaaa
■IP I I I w Caral OaMaa FaParal
BullPlng. ISai Sunaal Drive.
Satand Fleer, Caral GaBto*.
Florida m o . an ar about Iha
SMh Pay al February. IMS. and
N AN Aw arlgln#l vHIh Iha Clark
al Ih ll Caurl either before
aorvk* an L. J n **h Hettpan.
Eta atlamaya ar immaPiaWty
tharaattar, attwrwlaa a Default
tha rallat PamanPaP In the
Complaint ar Fall lion
WITNESS my hand and teal
af Fill Court an tht* lath day af
January. H U .
(SEAL)
D AVIDN B ER AIEN
AS CLERK O F TH E COUNT
‘ By: lot Cheryl R Franklin
Deputy Clark
Pubilth January 1*. M A Fat
ruery 1.1. INS
DEB N
; IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
AND FOR S E M I N O L E
COUNTY, FLORIDA.
CASE NO. Be 1PM C A M K
IN EE TH E M ANEIAOE OF
OLVAM BNACEW ELL.
Patlllonar/WiN.
and
LA R R YO BRACE W IL L .
Ru pondanl/Husband
NOTICE OF ACTION
T O : Larry 0 Eratowall
M l Avenue D
EnaJev. Alabama
YOU AN E H E R E B Y
N O TIFIE D lhal a Petition Nr
Dlttalullon at Marriage ha*
boon Map again*! you. and lhal
you are required to terve a capy
al yaur ratpent* ar pleading to
tha Pal 11lan upon iha FallHonor"i altarnay. Thama* C
Oroom. Pad Otlka Baa &lt;M.
Sanford. Florida SOTI. and AN
tng In tha office el Aw Clark al
Iha Circuit Court, Samlnola
County CeurtheuM. laniard,
Florida m i l , an or before tha
S*th day at February. H U It
yau fall la da to. a default
the Petition
DATED at laniard. Seminole
County. Florida. Ail* find day af
January. 1IU
(SEAL)
DAVID N. BERR IEN
CLERK OF THB CIRCUIT
COURT
By: f\f Cheryl R. Franklin
Deputy Clark
Fubllih January IS February I,
M l HU
DEB 141

Frida y. F#b. I , IN S -1 1 A

Legal Notice
FICTITIO US NAME
Notka N hereby given that I
am engaged In button* at P O.
Baa 111, Geneva. Samlnola
Caunty. Florida under the
flclltleu* name at A M IT Y
CH IM N EY SWEEP, and Awl I
intend to rogtakr told name
with Aw Clark af Aw Circuit
Caurl. SommoN County. Florida
in accordant! with the pro
vHWne at Aw Fktlttoue Name
Statute*, lawll Inchon M i t t
Florida Statute* T*I7.
/*/ G«orpa Parkhunt
Pubilth February l IL » ft
March I. H U
DEC a
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FNa Number UdfB-CP
IN RE i ESTA TE OF
LOUISE LEACH MA210CCHI
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
TO A L L PERSONS HAVING
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
AOAINST THE ABOVE
E S T A T E AND ALL O TH ER
PERSONS IN TE R E S TE D IN
TH E ESTA TE
YOU ARE HEREBY
N O T I F I E D lh a l Ih a ad
mini air often at Aw e*tete at
LOUISE LEACH MAttOCCMI.
Pacaai ad. File Nu mber
H M C P . l« pending In Iha
Circuit Caurl ler Seminal#
C a u n ty , P le rld e , Prebate
Dtvkfen, Aw edWuta af which It
Narlh Park Avenue. Sdntord.
Florida, n m
Tha paraanal rvpr*tentative af
AW attain it Sibyl Herbal t
■Pdrit* to f U Cratlwaad Lana,
Allamanta Spring* Fieri da.
U N I. The noma and addratt al
Iha paraanal rtpretenletlva't
■iHanBy V Ml fWTWI BBIWBP*
All panant having claim* ar
dtmand# againti Aw atlaia era
required, W IT H IN T H R E E
MONTHS FROM THE D ATE
OF TH E FIRST PUBLICATION
OP TH IS NOTICE. N Ilia with
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written ttatamant at any claim
ar dtmand Awy may have. Each
claim mutt b* In writing and
mutf Indicate Aw ba*la N r Aw
claim. Aw name and addratt af
a lta rn a y. and the amaunl
claimed If Aw claim I* net yet
due. the dale whan II will
became due than be alaled II
Iha claim la tenttnganl ar unit
guide tad. Iha nature al Iha
uncertainty ahall Be ttatad. II
Aw claim I* aecured. Aw vecurl
ty than be datcribad. Tha
claimant mall deliver tuffktont
copla* af Iha claim la Aw dark
to enable Iha dark la mall ana
copy la each ptnonel repre­
sentative
A ll
- a.- a
b_j in
a_ iOm
IL—
a ii fMnoni
atlaia k whom a capy of INI*
Nattea at Admlnltfrtlton ha*
B**n mailed ar* raqulrad,
W I T H I N T H R E E M O N TH S
FROM TH E DATE OF THE
F I R S T P U B L I C A T I O N OF
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A L L CLAIMS, DEMANDS.
AND O BJECTIO NS NOT SO
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Data af Aw A n t paMkonan af
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February 1 H U
Sibyl L. Hark*!,
of the Estatoaf
LO U ISE LEACH M A Z IIC
CHI,
A TTO R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
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Patf Office Drawer f4k.
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Telephone ( M l H I AIM
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DECK

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NOTICE UNDER
FIC TITW U 1 NAME S TA TU TE
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCE RN:
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Chapter 1*1 0*. F tor Id* Statute*,
will rtglttor with Aw Ctorfc *f
fh* Circuit Court. Seminal*
Caunty. upon receipt at proof *1
publication af thla notka. Aw
fkflttou* nem*. la wit: HEROO
PROPERTIES under which Iha
knowing parltot ar* engaged in
bu»n«au a* P O Baa M U .
Langwaed, Fl or i da J l t f t
J A M E S E . H E R O O and
W ILLIAM RAYMONO HE ROO
D ATED at Langwaed Orange
Caunty. F torIda. thla tth day at
January. IIU
/*/ Jama* E Herod
Pubilah Fabruary 1. L I I n .
HU.
DEC 14

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notka I* hereby given that I
am engaged In butlnata al IKd
W SR 414. Sufi* C. Langwaed.
Seminal* Caunty. Florida StFM
under Aw fktlltou* name af
CANDACE R EED HAIR O t
SIGN, and that | inland to
regiater u M name with Aw
Ctorh *1 Iha Circuit Court.
Seminal* Caunty. Flarlda In
af tn* Fktlltou* Nam* Statute*,
towlt Sactton M I A Florid*
Statute* H it
I\1Candace Reed
Pubilth January II. » ft Fabrw-

1.1 HU
lie

FICTITIO US NAME
Notice I* hereby given that I
am engaged In hutlna** at H I
M. Highway IF-Bl Langwaed
Semlrwto Caunty. Flarlda a n d
under Aw tictlltou* name *1
Z IM M E R /V O U N O I N V E S T ­
M E N T S and Awl I Intend to
rogtttor told name with Aw
Clork al Iha Circuit Court.
Samlnai* County. Flarlda In
of Iho Fktlltou* Nam* Slatuto*.
towlt: Section B U M Florid*
Slatuta* I W
/*/Walter Young
Pubilth January M ft Pabruary
1.1 IS. H U
D E G lit

Spaghetti Supper. Ctmptoto.
Cangragattonal Church M l
Park Sat.. Fab. ». I to F pm .
DwwftonQM.______________

27— Nursery A
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•k. *f adfacant c « m ;i ‘ijn d

jWwwiw&gt;hr.iin.»«»ni»

72— Employment
Wantod
1 M - DuplexTriplex /Rent

55— B u s in e s s
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DtVIltON
Fit* Number *4 MB CP
IN B E : I S T A T E OF
CAROLYN ELSI E HORSLEY
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The admlniitratlan af tha
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H O N S L E Y , dacaatad. Pita
Number *4 0*4 CP. It pending In
Aw Circuit Caurl tar Seminal*
C au nty. F la rld a . P ra btt*
Ofvitton. Aw eddrata af avhkh I*
North Part Aveng*. Sanford.
Florida, u m
The noma* and eddru iei of
Iha partanat foproaonloAi^y and
the pectonal rapratantaflva’a
attorney are aaf torth baton
All tn taro*tad partan* are
required to At* with Ail* caurl,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
FROM TH E D A TE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O TIC E : 1) all callmt
ageinil Aw ttiato and 1) any
*b|*cll*na By an Inlarattad
parien to wham nalk* wae
mailed that che Itongat Aw valid
Ify of Aw will. Aw quelirkatton*
af Aw partanal rapratantallv*.
ar Aw vwnua ar lurtidktton af

O p p o r t u n it i e s

TT1TF
T to illt O H M

107— Mobile
Homes /Rent

41— Money to Lend
Builnesa Capital I M .N t la
• I M M m i M r . P. O. Baa
sets. wvAorPb r u a w
H O M I a FORECLOSURE A

117— Commercial
Rente Is

71-Help Wanted

aarfc tn Sanlord araa call
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ALL CLAIMS AND ORJEC
TIONS NO T SO F IL E D WILL
■ B FO R E V E R B AR R IO
Publkoitan af Ad* ftofka ha*
ba^unonFjabruary I, Hbl
W ILLIAM rT n O R S IE ^
FS4J Ftofdcraal
Winter Park. F torId* » 7 f l

ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS
I large bdrm Conda Walk Auu
ctoaal. and unit Near I *.
mall*. Peal, towlt u i l Mo

Men(toy ratoa Util Inc. *N.

1 Bdrm. 1 bath vtlla. All
amenttto*. piua many aitrea

sa*oak

A du ikiM ifa c

77— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

Per tonal Rapraaantativ*
W ILLIAM A. G REENBER G.

Child
Soacialist
SR^UOOOgRI Cara q
wwPFwFOFU^wBBOFw1
laaidantial Treatment Cant*

DELTONA

01 MdfllMM
M il

A*a.law laP.Pla PT71

p MEMBRE

*h m i . Call Future* m b

nm w m r
m m eM

BAMBOO C O V IA F t T

FiMai
»» BAb

C bM fe I Pto far H y r v

NdNtawdltoWtoX

a a sS y F I U D IE T

a btoai

•StiCflSHSL

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a it g a la tlb f ft p a w v t a
L k -f t b t o -jt d lH .

m m uuuLT
CALL A F T E R 4 P M
M i l la P a Q A a a m a m

5SSg
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vstBssr
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■ a x T S ia

#4f prtaaa

127— Office Rentals

141— Homes For Sale
preductlBM i*M. Apply I"
p n m • A M Pabr kiting ft
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AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Electrical
■ K ilL lt f lf

m sM.

NEW SIWPPtNO C E N TR E to
E . ORLANDO- SR «S4 at
la st Dfatl Eapwy. ft Lab*
UMirMff. Bait VNtBHNy B
Ac tail NilAy I Highlit TreHto
- fi ' Wtggty Audi‘
M i Anytim#
T E B M II B4SIM4

annually abuaad children
(age* At* III. Muaf b* to*to
but Arm and craaltva CAI

To List Your Business...
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OFFICES

In

Patf Off k* Drawer K
FamPark. Flarlda It CM
Tatopban* ( M l U&gt;**44
Pubilah: Fabruary I. ft IW
DEC IF

111— Condominium
Rentals

Ortattan Apt*, ft Name*
TV , blkhan, laundry, maid. SM
wk upOrl.-dPSW /UM kie,
SANFORD FumWwd roam* By
Aw w**B. R***an*bto rate*.
Maid tarvka Call m*tU.
B&gt;

•need tn f a b r Ic a 'T a 'n ,
asaambiy. and tryout* at

Twating^ ? **

a a * IN DELTONA • a a
a a HOMES FOR R E N T a a

I

CONSULT OUR

Accounting ft
Tax Servlet

102— Houses
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aaw R W L

« 5 SS m a

�■n-v.-a ■&gt;■»•»■

Friday,Fpb.S.IttS
147— Commercial
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S A N FO dD -A IR P O dTB LV O
Appr ei l mel tl y IM S l « ||
H t— r duality construction
Attractlva decor M&lt;&gt; use

Fireplace carpeted. fenced
back . See la betlave ui.«oo

WALLACE C R U S R IA L T T ,
IN C
■ EALTOtl n u t t y

bam Canto h r S U fN T Ideal
situation Peedy h r quick
u t t CALL MOW11

321-0757 E v t 322-7*43

mrlgeretor ttf.lt* u.AOt
datingmill*
»

Q ( ARDINAl

hem

P R IC E S -/ ^

217— Garogt Solos

r ed uced n S j

Blinds.

dawn and owner will pay

itlaaa Araa • M u tt ta ll I
•aautlfui brand new home an
M ra t with accatt la
laaaly ltd* a acre Lata
Aihby Hat pand. lancing,
fireplace. »u*ury appllancat
and paddle lane Trada caw
tldarad O P E N THIS
W EEKEND! tat.Be united
Land. Raaltar a it Nta
»M L W U tt

rl. Sat * • S. Multi family.
Furniture. tays,
clethet
Mlae I t l I am St. LaAa Mary.
behind ElementaryScftaei.

CARDIIMAI

I t 44 Mustang, a cylinder,

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/ Solo

0 ( ARDINAl
POOL.

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217— Wanted to Buy

Paying CASH H r

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guarantee Tuckers
Farm * Otrdtn Canter. Sadtont. and Oa land

243— Junk Core

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CARDINAl

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1982

D A T 9U N

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*10,780

�Ewning llcrnfd

Complete W M k 'i TV Listings
Sanford, F lo rid a — F rid a y , Fofarwary a, I N ]

Composers
And Computers
M ake Beautiful
Music Together
‘But You Can Still Create
A Great Piece Of
Music With A Pencil9

I

&gt;o

�&gt; -gy— li»f HsrsM, teaferd, FI.

Friday, r«t. i, im

The IB M O v e r tu r e In PC S h a rp
Composers N ow Actually W riting Music O n A Computer
By Saun Lodta
Herald Staff Writer
On Aral thought H might w tm an unlikely marriage
— computrrn and mualc. Dul to mualc bulla aertoua
about tnetr craft, the computer la a tool that allows
them a wide range o f creativity, from puttering
around to creating full-blown musical compositions.
"There has always been an ongoing relationship
between mualc and math. It's traditional and
dcmonslratable and It’s only logical that It carries
over to computers." said University o f Central Florida
music professor Dr. Bruce Whlsler.
Whlsler. o f Winter Park, confesses he's no compos­
er. but he has programmed a melody or two on his
IBM PC (personal computer). " I don't own the
software necessary" for composing, he said, but
added that the best bet for would-be computer
Mozarts would be an Apple machine, because that
company lias geared more o f Its support material
toward music makers.
The logic o f using computers to create music Is
simple, ut least to Whlsler, because he said both
(Helplines are bused on a logical order of Ideas, and u
computer. Instrnd o f Inhibiting musical creativity,
may actually enhance Improvisation.
"T h e computer la another tool a composer enn use
In creating." Whlsler said, with the keys o f the
computer terminal serving a rote similar to that of u
musical Instrument.
"Computers don't normally write music and It's not
a quick and easy process In most rases." said another
UCF music professor. Dr. Ed llolallng.
Depending on the sophistication of the software and
the complexity o f the computer-oriented music
lystem . composers can key their work Into a
computer and get a printout of their creation or If
they have a more advanced system can play a
computer keyboard In much the same way an electric
organ might be played.
An Increasing number of musicians are utilising
computers In their art and say they get the same thrill
from programing that they do from writing musk*.
Some computer-musicians find a well written pro­
gram as m oving as a beautiful melody and Insist the
mathematical base of music and programing la

'Programing 1$ writing o score for tho com­
puter to ploy. Composing Is writing
a program for musicians.'
____________

-N e w York compotmr Joe Zltt

exactly the same.
Pianist Peter Nero doesn't use computers tn his
music, but he calls himself an electronics freak and
said the microcomputer he bought 10 years ago was
the 26th off the assembly line.
" I think when any field becom es computer
orien ted ." H otallng said, people begin to see
worthwhile things the computer can do." In the near
future mualc-making with a computer may be ao
perfected that in many cases It will take the place o f
musicians, Hotallng said, noting that computers are
growing ever more capable of reproducing exactly the
romplele sound range o f nearly every Instrument.
Hotallng said thla will have an effect similar to the
Introduction o f the aynthealzer, which tn some cases
eliminated the need for some musicians to create the
desired tune. But Hotallng said computers have
reduced even the work o f synthesisers.
"You can hit one computer key and come up with
the same sound It might have taken 37 different
settings on a synthesizer to creste."
Based on his familiarity with both computers and
music. Nero said musicians are "confined to certain
rules In musical form and It Is similar to the structure
faced by programmers," But leeway for Improvisation
la there both In mualc and In programing, he said.
"When I'm playing a concert at least 90 percent Is
Improvisation. You ran go beyond what's written.
When I write a program I do much the aame kind o f
thing. I always try to Improve U. make U shorter and
faster." Nero said.
Jazz-rock music an Herbie Hancock, noted for use o f
computers In his work and for his prowess as a
programmer, has a room of computers hooked up to a
variety of synthesizers. A logical m ove for him, since
his college major was electrical engineering.
" I did notice that when I got into computers I

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES

became obsessed with It with a si miliar kind o f
Intensity as the kind o f obsession I experienced when
I first started playtngjozz." Hancock aald.
"Programing ts writing a score for the computer to
play. Composing la writing a program for musicians."
New York composer Joe Zltt said. He noted that
taking a musical piece from concept to Its final form la
similar to the process o f creating a computer
program.
Even croas-country communication by computer
networks, called BBSIng. has It's counterpart In
mualc. Zltt aald. "BBSIng la like Jamming." where
musicians play together to work out Ideas and
develop themes that lead to Improvisation.
Whlsler. although drawn to the contemporary
computer technology, said he considers himself " a
musicologist. My primary Interest Is Renaissance
mualc: that’s music from 400 years ago. "
That leaves him wondering Just what the music
masters of the Renaissance might have come up with
If they had had a little help from a computer.
That thought may be enough to send you to the
keyboard — the computer keyboard, to see what you
can come up with. Since most o f us these days have
access to a computer. If not true musical talent, lhal
might give you an edge on Innovation.
You might be surprised and find that the cold,
precise logic behind computer programing con lake
you on a creative flight o f fancy that could defy the
conventional wisdom that the two don't mix.
But attempting to writs mualc with basic equip­
ment out. Hotallng said, be laborious and time
consuming, and "Y o u can still creste a great piece o f
art with a pencil."

1Killing FM d$' Dominate$ Award$ Nomlnmmt
LONDON (UPI) British
p ro d u c er David P u ttn a m 's
m ovie " T h e Killing Flelda"
received 13 nominations tn the
British Academy of Film and
Television Arts IB M awards.

"T h e Killing Fields." directed
by R o l a n d J o f f e , w a a
nominated for best film In the
so -ca lled " B r it is h O s c a r "
swards, along with Peter Yates'
“ The Dresser," “ Parts, Texa s,"

Wo alto m akt lit and 2nd mortgaoa loans
on Rasidantial or Commardal Rtal Estata
up to $100,000.
Personal loans art available including
Revolving Credit Line.

produced by Don Quest and
A n s to le D au m an . and " A
Private Function" produced by
Mark Shivas.
BAFTA's moat prrstltlgloua
awards were scheduled to be
announced March 5 In the
presence o f Princess Anne,
president o f the academy.
"T h e Killing Flelda'' Is a
British-made fuxn that portrays
a New York Tim es Journalist's
co vera g e o f A m erican
withdrawal from Cambodia In
1976. and th e events that
follow ed u n d er the Khm er
Rouge regime.

asort Pt«M t 1 » S. OrtsaOs Or. A i
.• • • —

COUPON*-

BUY I LAME
OF A MEDIUM

Other categories for which
" T h e K illin g F ie ld s " w as
nominated Included Joflic •
•core, and both Hatng S.
Ngor and Bam Watervtoo for
beat actor. N g o r also waa
nominated the
Ingi
"T h e

D resser'
w as
for seven
I n c l u d i n g Y a t e a as b e e t
director, and Tom Courtney
.A l b e r t ., g u v m t . i o n i t e

&lt;*tgwy of beet *fer.:v

�I v m t a B H w i M , it n t a r d . F I.

TELEVISION

Beach Boys Movie:
An Honest Look Back

February 8 Thru February 14
LJM a CR

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pmp on Ito wndoagon to matt
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M(t,*nooo eng petty d im ookum
Prnrdani Reagan a aecand farm

SUNDAY
240

(VINNO

too

■ n IHOQSJN Baiad on »w tonal
by Jamai Clataa in IPOO. aMa an
routa to ito Onant to aafatoah
trada. fngtok nangalor John
Buck motto (Richard CMmOartam)
and taa (ran art akgaracked olt
Pit total of Japan and MM captoa
by aanwai aarrtort (Part 1ol I)

•tod
and in* cel Aft Ml.

■ (M l NATIONAL M O O M M C
&gt;40
alee Pie Mary ol
(I ) O ATLANTA CML0 MUROBRB
aetMnpnCtoia
Tha tnaf of Wayna Wtoama to U L
a toienoM. o toomooor g too adto matoe on me Ml of
naariy M ntima m dramatoed PMP and a leoctor Q
bom text hanaenpt* Jaaon Re­ ■ (ft SMOOUN ARar atoraig Toro(TeMtopI
bardl portray! N toad of Pie de­
tenu loam and Rip Tarn ptey* PM
prOMtuhtg dntnet attorney (Pel
io tf tf j
■ (ft SNOOUN m reaction to Tore- tone to Aigto atore Maria (Toto
It bag** to leach han the
naga i iToewo Mdunel Maradl at
end cuaaona at Pa JapeBiet» metto (Itched Chambartaml
(PertlolP)
aatam [ngum ar a mreof to mae
•40
bade agreamanu arth Japan. pM
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asking them to buy trol of the networkstock to '•become Dan
Palmese hi Media, tha 1

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. LOS ANGELES (UPI| - They
Lead singer Mike Love said
e p it o m iz e d th e S o u th e r n he was "to o close lo It" lo have
California dream o f endless any critical opinion, adding
summers with cresting waves, that hia Immediate reaction to
sun-splashed days and bronzed the big screen production was
bodies, but there were darker "embarrassment."
days that tarnished the golden
Beach Boys A) Jardtne and
boys o f surf music.
Carl Wilson enjoyed the film,
A Just-released 110-mtnutc but Jardtne was slightly criti­
m ovie "T h e Beach Boys — An cal.
American Band." produced by
"It dwells too much on the
“ T h i s la E l v i s " d ir e c t o r 70s." said Jardlne. in reference
Malcolm Leo. Ungers on details lo Ihc group's troubled decade.
of the sometimes unsealing 35 "I'd really rather have focused
y e a rs w ith Ihc b o ys from on the surfers, hodads and the
Hawthorne. Calif.
60s stuff. I think the 70s stuff Is
“ Despite adversity, the Beach too mundane.
Boys have become an Instilu"M y favorite part wu» thr 60s
lio n , a slic e o f A m erica n — Ihc slrtprd-shlrt era.
folklore." said Leo In explain­
" I reminisce aboul Ihe wan­
ing why he look on the $1 derlust feeling of hunting surf
million projecl. "T h e alary of spots. It's so America. Il was
Ihc Beach Boys has all the safe and healthy.”
elements that would orem un­
Carl Wilson. OH. who now
true If you fictionalized them."
T h e m ade-for-hom e-vldco lives in Colorado "because I got
tired o f driving In tralffc from
m o v i e , now s h o w in g
Ihe beach." said hr found Ihc
exclusively In some major ru­
les and available this spring on film "h igh ly amusing."
vldeocassette. uses concert
“ Observing us as ourselves In
footage. Interviews and home our youth — our Innocrnrr —
movies to present the Imparl n( was fun." he said.
the Beach Boys an American
Much o f th r film shows
life.
Brian. Ihc crcatlvr force behind
" C a r a , c r u is in g , b each the band, co m m en tin g on
culture, love and the California Beach Boy history from bed.
m yth." said Leo.
Dennis Wilson, who acciden­
So-called "authorized" bio­
tally drowned In Marina del
graphic* usually leave out un* Key 14 months ago. came up
nattering parts of a life story,
with Ihe Idea for a band.
but the Beach Boys gave Leo
"Dennis wantrd us to write
free rein lo show L ie st range o f Brian Wilson’s reclusive surf songs." said Brian. "II
years In bed and frankly dls- worked.”
cuaaes the years of drugs.
The group's first song. "Su r­
" I hated It." said one band fin '." earned Brian an " f " In
member who asked not to be m u s i c c o m p o s i t i o n at
Identified. "It brought back all Hawthorne High School, but II
those memories. Officially. I'd became the first million record
better aay no comment."
seller for the Beach Boys.

RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) - Rep. than NBC or ABC." Wyman
Phil Crane has Joined Sen. said. "Complaining about thr
Jcaae H elm s' con aerva U ve coverage you get
or about
crusade to buy control o f CBS the coverage your opponents
S
V
S
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PPS VPtoe / U S OtotoK Traak
— a c a m p a i g n n e t w o r k get — to part o f the political
to* Stop Mm l Pm
ch a irm a n Th om aa W y m a n gam e."
called a "political gam e with
Th e CBS chairman aald the
&gt;WPM little chance o f succeeding.
chances o f the buyout attempt
C ra n e . R-1IL, annou nced succeeding arc "rem ote" and
toffttos*
Tuesday he eras Joining the a d d ed . " I d o n 't t h i nk he
because "It la the (Crane) adds a lot to their
conservatives have credence."
had to end the liberal bias • Helms aald If every person
iedla."
who got his letter bought 90
H elm s, a N orth C arolina shares o f CBS slock — now
Republican, mailed a million coating about S7S — con*
letters lo c
f a ------- -f f - if
’stives last servatlvcs could

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'Berrenger's'
N B C 's B a rg a in B a s e m e n t
S o a p O p e r a Is O l d H a t
By D a v id H a n d le r
‘ 'Berrenger's" Is NBC's big
new prime-time soap opera, ll
comes from David Jacobs, who
created "D allaa" and "Knota
Landing." It sports an all-star
raat. It la a major dud In the
ratinga.
That makes It the second
glossy serial to go belly up this
season. ABC's Juicy ‘ T a p er
Dolls" came and went with
surprising speed.
Could this mean the end la
near for n igh ttim e soaps?
Hardly. "D allas" and "Dynas­
t y " remain atop the ratinga. All
It Indicates Is that when au­
dience* find a soap they like,
they stay with It. It's not easy
to get them interested In a nrw
one.
Especially when it otters
n oth in g new. Like "P a p e r
Dolls." "B en rn ger's" dishes up
plenty of the big three: sex,
greed and glamour. But the
format la painfully familiar.
You've seen this show already.
Again and again.
Every big soap has a big
fortune at stake. This time It's
Berrenger's, a New York City
department store. It’s a place,
our narrator Intones, "where
you can get anything you want,
where dreams are bought and
Every big soap has a big
meanle. Ours la Simon Derrenger (Sam Wanamakcr), who
rules the family empire by
Intimidation and fear. "I'm the
atorel" he screams at hia son.
Paul (Ben Murphy), who la
president but who never seems
to know what Is going on. " I
made It and I can do what I like
with 111"
Simon has been known to
■lap Paul In front of other board
member*. Paul ha*. In turn,
been known to call bis rather
“ a miserable old cretin." The

two have been known to grap­
ple on (he office rug. Typical
business school stuff.
Paul Isn't a bad guy. but he
does have women (roubles. He
wants to d ivorce his w ife,
Gloria (Andrea Marcovtccl). so
he can marry one of his vice
p re sid e n ts. S h a n e (Y v e tt e
Mlmlcux). Gloria's attitude: fal
chance.
M eanw hile. Pau l's sister.
Baba (Anita Morris), has been
dlvorrcd four limes and Is.
frankly, s slut. And hls brother.
B illy (Hnbln Strand), is a
compulsive gambler who owes
mobsters money.
Moving down a few rungs In
Ihe store's claaa structure, wc
have our three plucky young
employee* who also share a
Manhattan apartment. Stacey
(Jonclle Allen) la an ambitious
black sa lesw o m a n . L a u rel
(Laura Ashton) Is a flighty
model. Commie (Leslie Hope) I*
* fresh-faced new kid from the
Midwest.
John Higgins (Jeff Conaway),
a window dresser who Is the
resident louse. Is Intent on
breaking poor Cammle's heart.
He also happens to be having
an affair with Baba, though
Baba Is now getting Interested
In Julio (Eddie Veles). a clerk
who wants (o design clothes.
Hanging over
o f this la
Simon's plan to merge Ber­
renger's with some vaguely
m o b 're la te d c o n g lo m era te.
D a n n y ( J a c k S c a l l a ) la
engineering the deal.
I have the same reaction to
"B e r r e n g e r 'a " aa I d id to
"P a p er D o lls ." I can't say
there’s anything wrong with It.
but there’s nothing right with
It. either. It's going to fake
more than Just the reliable
elements for a new soap to
succeed In the current market.
It's going to take freshness.

■ 39 MOWS -Tlw IM A*trg

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Ninth Annual Central Florida Regional
Scholastic A rts Ix h lb ltlo n . Peb 9-24,
Robinson's Altamonte Mall store. Alta*
ta Springs during store hours. Includes
award
County
lents as
___________ _______________ ,
■ — fcn»
Youth Orchestras 1
and II w ill p erform a t P o rta l Lake
A radam y. Parent City. 4 p jn . Open tem to
swavtas i*vhtoAitoi—

to the public.
Tri-media eahlMtion fonturtng work ot
Tom Woodward, pencil drawings: David
Oreenbaum. pottery: and Prank Rakoncay,
ml pastel drawing, through Psb. 10.
Mall land Art Center. 232 W . Packwood
Avs.. Maitland. 1*4 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday.frestothspublic.
O cn cn l Sanford Mnatum and Library,
Port M cflon ^ rfc. 620 B. Ph i l BC S an ford .
wUaoie County Museum. Highway

SBSSlr! j §E3 b = ••ffira-es
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636

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�Just How The Oscar Was Named Isn't Known
Stick with

award for the movies got Its name? J.H.,
Westvllle, lad.

I — W u than i m a picture a u w d
m. U i| k " with tha aaaa of tha
Aad woo thara avar t movie called
"Fishermaa Dwarf" with Bobby Breen singing In
It? O.O., Lake City, Tonn.

The origin o f "Oscar," as the nickname for the
Academy Award statuette, la In dispute. When It was
first designed. It quickly acquired the nickname.
Oscar historian Robert Osborne says It was probably
named by either Bette Davis, columnist Sidney
Skolsky or Margaret Herrick, the Academy’s librari­
an. Most people attribute It to Miss Herrick, who had no animal organ
reportedly took one look at It and said. "That looks
like my Uncle Oscar." But It Cannot be definitely
established.

I can't find any record of a "Laugh. Clown. Laugh"
movie. The Bobby Breen film waa "Fisherman's
W h a rf' and It was made In 1939.

DBAS DICK - Are Emilio Batovas and Martin
Sheen related? I think they look like father aad
eon. S.W., Amarillo. Texas.
They are father and eon. Sheen's real name Is
Ramon Eeteves. Some of his sons are using Estevez
and some are using Sheen.

DBAB DICK — I have hoard that the lata Peter
Lawford waa a member of Prank Mantra's Bat
Pack. What is the Bat Pack? WX..-Camp Point,
111 .

The Rat Pack was the slightly derogatory slang
term applied to Sinatra and his friends (basically It
was Lawford. Dean Martin. Sammy Davis Jr. and
Shirley MacLalne) who blazed a wild and wooly trail
across cafe society In the ‘60a.

DBAB DICK - I’ve hoard a rumor concerning
John Wayae, aad a friend aad I are curious to
know if ho had a calf's heart or aay salami's
orgaa. We've laquired everywhere aad no one
seems to kaow, oae way or the other. T.M.B.,
Port Hood, Texas.

her door ho oeea hia helmet hanging oa the hod
poet whore he loft It. What la the name of this
aaovie? K.P., Three Elvers. Mich.

JHNtAUXTAMCOOMrt AIMA m
M OtONi DAY AT ATOM

7M

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OUnUNOUM M M M N- ®

February 13

DBAB DICK — Can yea please toll mo what
Brian Keith’a real name la? Ho and I were bora
in the same town aad year, with oaa moath
difference. It oeeaaa to me that I should know
him from ochool. Mrs. W.C.T., Viaceatowa, N.J.

The only thing 1 can think o f la that It might have
been part o f "D arby's Rangers." That was a 1997
movie about a World War u unit and their various
romances, starring James Gamer. Jack Warden. Edd
Byrnes and David Janasen. That might have been the
segment Involving Edd Byrnes.

His real name Is Brian Michael Keith, lie Is the son
of actor Robert Lee Keith. So he’s always been Brian
Keith, even In school.

DBAB DICK — My mom says Bart Reynolds

It reads, exactly: "T h is Is a square house. Please
report any unfairness to the proprietor." (And report
any bad Jokes to the program director o f your local
station).

The Duke with a calf's heart? You must be kidding.
Maybe a lion's heart, but certainly not a calf's. Vo. he

WEDNESDAY

iur rich father. They never were.

THURSDAY

DBAB DICKi What done the plaque on the wall
of the "Cheers" bar any? It oaya something
about a square house. — Mrs. C.W., Taylor, Mo.

February 14

�• —Evtnlof HersM, isntord, Fl.

Friday, Fsk. a, IMS

Social Security Disability

'Nancy Drew' Crusading
Against Cocaine With Film
By Verson Scott
UFI Hollywood Reporter

"Freebaslng Is a relatively
new form of coke abuse that
H O L L Y W O O D (UPI) becomes even more addictive.
Pamela Sue Marlin, the one­ As far as I know, no one has
time dimpled darling of ‘ T h e made a picture about free bas­
Nancy Drew Mysteries" and ing."
"D y n a s ty '* T V aerlea. haa
It w as R ic h a r d P r y o r ’ s
written and alarm In a hard­ alleged attempt at freebaslng In
hitting movie about cocaine.
hta Los Angeles home several
Martin, now In her early 30s. y ea rs ago that caused an
knows her subject.
explosion and severely burned
She has experimented with the comedian who later used
potent drugs and haa seen the Incident In his comedy act.
enough drug use among friends
Martin's husband. Chilean
to last her a lifetime. The businessman Manuel Rojas,
destructive powers of drugs produced " T o r c h lig h t" and
convinced her three years ago enlisted the aid of 800-Cocalne.
t o w r i t e t h e s c r i p t f o r Narco non. the National Parent
•Torchlight,
due for release Resource Institute for Drug
this month.
Education and Cocaine Anon" I don't use drugs now. but ymous for expertise on the
I've tried them ." she said. “ I drug's effects on users,
never abused them
Martin, who r ec e i ve s
"I am part o f the 60s. a associate producer credit, said
generation that separated Itself her picture explores In depth
from the status quo. and that the psychological, physical and
m e a n t d r u g u s e . B u t em otional
nal degradation
dc
that
'Torchlight' Isn't about the 60s. accompanies drug addiction.
It deals with the past decade
"W e get Into the subtle ways
and the runaway use of co­
drugs change and distort a
caine.
person." she said. "W e don't go
"There la an entirely dif­
ferent approach to drugs now. In for those old-fashioned,
overdrawn scenes o f creatures
'Torchlight' doesn't deal w i t h ___ ...........................
...
society's dropouts. It's about
and lhe
ravages of withdrawal.
professional men and women,
"Reality Is much worse and
doctors, lawyers and execu­
tives. being Introduced to coke more powerful than those old
socially, people who never ex­ horror scenes."
perimented with drugs In the
"Actually, there's raaejy any
60s.
single big trauma Involved with
"I'v e written about It because coke use. It's become a very
I’ ve been around col^e enough casual social trip for millions of
lo see what It can do to people. Americans who don't suffer
Don't let anyone ever tell you any severe complications. But a
cocaine Isn't addictive."
good percentage o f them end
"Torchlight" Is set In Los up with serious problems."
Angeles, not Hollywood. Martin
„
____ . _ . . . . .
.
thinks the motion pIcture-TV ,
business Is no more consumed !5 *
n, n .tan
by cocaine than any other
community. She says drug use -T n r*h io m »^ * however*
in H o l l y w o o d l i m o r e
Torchlight
la a powerful
p u b i'c lU d I h . n r t .e w h .r e
I document with • . t r o i *
b e e j d » o f the hotohet, r f the
Martin plays the wife of an
upper middle-class business­
man (Steve Rallsback) who
seems lo have the perfect
marrtage and a bright future
until her husband becomes a
coke addict and. worse, begins
freebaslng.
The addiction ruins their
personal relationship, destroys
his business and eventually
ends In catastrophe.
"Coke Is a rampant social
problem all over the country
and that's what I wanted to get
across In this picture." Martin
said. "Th is Is a tragic contem­
porary love story.
" I can't honestly say why I
chase a drug theme three years
ago except I knew a lot oT
people who had been hurt by
cocaine. F reeb asln g Is the
darkest aide o f drug use. the
most dangerous (heating co­
ca i n e w i t h e t h e r until It
sufficiently liquid (or

..„ . ^ n e e .

moeed

___________________________

lo

We Specialize In:
• NEW C L A IM S
• REC O N SID ER A T IO N S • BENEFITS CU T OFF
• H EARIN G S BEFORE THE JU DG E

the picture and become In­
volved with the characters,
then It might convince them to
stay away from drugs," she
said.

WARD WHITE A ASSOCIATES
(Over SO Yn. Experience!

Free Consultation • No Fm Unless Ws Win I

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i

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77»h Year. No. 144—Thursday, February 7, IW S-Sanford. Florida

Evening

Herald

—

(USPS

441 280)

—

Price

25 Cents
r w

am

County Will Scrap For Iron Bridge Capacity
By Donna Eatea
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
With development hanging In the
balance. Seminole County says ll'a
ready to go to court. If necessary, to
force Orlando to give the county a
prom ised 1.4 million gallon sa day
sewer capacity at Iron Bridge.
The Iron Bridge sewer plant, near
Oviedo In Seminole County, was de­
signed to serve parts of Orange and
Seminole counties but Is owned by the
city o f Orlando.

A letter from Orlando Mayor Bill
Frederick, received by the county
earlier this week, said he plans to give
capacity Seminole believes was pro­
mised to Seminole to an Independent
agency to divvy up.
T h a t a g e n c y Is t h e S o u t h
Seminole-North Orange Transmission
Authority, created In 1978 under a
special act of the legislature to con­
struct a sewage transmission line to
Iron Bridge for Casselberry. Winter
Springs. Seminole County. Winter Park

and Maitland.
Seminole County Administrator Ken
Hooper said If Orlando reneges on its
promise to Seminole building could be
hailed In the southeast portion of the
county.
Development has already been on
hold there since May. 1984. when the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
and the state Department o f Environ­
mental Regulation, working In concert,
ordered a stop on new customers
connecting to Iron Bridge, designed to

handle 24 million gallons per day.
The stop order came about when It
was discovered that the Iron Bridge
plant's effluent, dumped Into the
Econlockhatchee River, contained a
high level of nitrates — an Ingredient of
fertlllier — and this was polluting the
river.
For the time being, the county Is
taking the position that Frederick Is
unaware of an agreement between
Orlando and Seminole and will Inform
him all about It In a letter today.

Hooper said.
H o o p e r e x p l a i n e d th a t w h e n
Seminole County, several years ago.
granted a special exception to allow
Orlando to locate Its sewer plant In
Seminole County, the exception was
conditioned upon Orlando guaran­
teeing Seminole 2.245 million gallons
of sewer capacity dally at the plant.
Seminole still has 1.4 million gallons
of unused sewer capacity coming under
that agreement. Hooper said
Bee COUNTY, page 3A

Reagan Only The Beginning, Polk Says
Calls For
Revolt,
Revision
W A S H IN G T O N (U P I ) President Reagan, saying a
time o f reckoning faces the
nation is mustering svpport
for a "second American revo­
lu tio n " to overthrow longentrenched federal policies —
Including the nation's tax
structure.
Reagan used his 37-mlnute
State of the Union addresa
Wednesday night to claim "w e

Reaction, page 6B
did what we promised" to put
the nallun back on (rack In the
first four years, "but It's only a
beginning."
The president, speaking to a
House chamber packed with
members o f Congress and Ills
administration, went on to
outline the prime targets o f his
second term — saying a con­
troversial Treasury Depart­
m ent plan to revam p the
nation's tax system would be
Baa RE AO AN. page B A _■

Arrest In Slaying
Of Ex-Sanford Man
An arrest has been made in
the murder of a former Sanford
man who was shot to death In
Pearson. Ga.
Dead Is Charles Williams. 33.
who lived In Sanford until about
a yeur ago, according to William
Jewell, police chief of Pearson,
located about 100 miles north of
Lake City, Fla
Jewell suld Williams was killed
al 2:30 a.m. Feb. 3 when he was
shot during u domestic argu­
ment with another man. The
man reportedly shot Williams
once In the right side o f the fare
w ith a . 10 -gauge s h o tg u n .
Being held on u murder war­
rant was Wlllia Veil Ashford. 28.
of Pearson.
—Deans Jordan

8 'Drive-In Drug Dealers'
Nabbed In Sheriff's Raids

By Susan Lodan
H erald S ta ff W riter
Early morning raids today on
six reputed "slash houses" on
the o u ts k irts o f A lta m o n te
S p r in g s , n e t t e d S e m in o le
County lawmen eight suspected
drug dealers.
Deputies arrested at least six
men and two boys accused o f
supplying marijuana, cocaine
and heroin for street deals.
Illegal drugs were reportedly
found In all six of the private
homes.
The simultaneous raids are
"only the beginning" of arrests
In connection with drive-up drug
deals In the North and Marker
Street areas near Altam onte
Springs, said Seminole County
Sheriff John Polk.
Polk's forces have for the past
three weeks, at the conclusion o f
three-m onth Investigation.
i arm
.
_ .
street
drug deala In that neighborhood
and within the next two yearn
l*olk said his officers will use
those photoa to Identify and
u ltim ately arrest both drug
dealers and buyers.
He called the drug operation a
"supermarket" where at times
cars were lined up In the streets
with their drivers, many from
outside the neighborhood, wait­
ing their turn to buy small
quantities of Illegal drugs from
various street vendors.
T h e d e a l e r s s ig n a l th e
availability o f drugs with what
thr uninitiated might believe Is
nothing more than a friendly
wave to passing motorists, Polk
said. And It Is common for
motorists who stop In that area
and In v ite a dru g d e a le r's
approach to have gold Jewelery
ripped from their necks.
" I don't feel sorry for them ."

NsrsW nwtMSr

Deputy B a rry Brady frisks Tom m y Bell III, follow ing B ell's
arre st at 121 Plym outh Ave.
Polk added.
d r u g s In the c o u n t y . T h e
Polk said he didn't expect the amount of Illegal drugs con­
"stash house" raids to yield a fiscated had not been calculated
large quantity of Illegal drugs, early today.
but the operation would help dry
“ There's no question In my
up the braren, street drug deal­ m in d that th ey (th e street
ing that has a significant Impact dealers) played a very large part
on the supply qnd availability of In funnellng drugs to the resi­

Fu,ch
dents not only o f Sem in ole
County, but to others who were
aware o f this area os a distribu­
tion point and were driving there
to make a purchase." he said.
Sixty lawmen Including the
Seminole County and VolusU
County SW A T (Special Weapons

USm

*"d s,m G,b“ "

and Tactics) trams and Seminole
deputies simultaneously con­
verged at 8:55 a.m. In six 9-man
trams on homes on DePugh.
Leon and Marker streets, and
D e S o to , P l y m o u t h and
R e a c tio n , p a g e 6 B

Ex-Dog Track Manager
In Likely Murder-Suicide

Double
Trouble

Two crumpled vehicles aw ait towing fol­
lowing separate accidents within 200 feet of
each other Wednesday afternoon. No Inju­
ries w ere reported. According to the
Florida Highway Patrol, which did not
have details early today, the southbound

car, left, was forced off state Road 427
south of Sanford by another vehicle making
a turn. The northbound truck, unable to
stop to avoid the accident, left the road,
hitting a tree. The truck d river was cited
for careless driving.

The former manager of Seminole
Greyhound Park apparently killed his
es tra n g ed w ife then fa ta lly shot
hlmaelfTaccordlng to police.
Dead Is Carrol Toler. 64. and hla wife
Judith. 47. both o f Cooper City, west of
Ft. Lauderdale, according to Det. Rich­
ard Dellapletra o f the Cooper City Police
Department.
T h e T o l e r s l i v e d a t 401 N .
Sweetwater Blvd.. north of Altamonte
Springs, before moving to Broward
County.
Mrs. Toler died Tuesday afternoon
from three gunshot wounds and Toler
died o f a single shot to the head, police
aald. Investigators expect an autopay
report today will confirm their suspi­
cions that Toler shot hla wife and then
killed himself.
Police were called to the scene after
neighbors heard screams coming from

the Toler residence.
According lo the police, the Tolers
were living In a new house In the
neighborhood and were not wellknown.
"T h ey have been having continuous
domestic problems and the police have
been
called out there often." said
Dellapletra.
Toler was manager o f the Casselberry
pari mutuel dog track In 1981 and
1982. He was rem oved during a
management shake-up and an In­
vestigation by the state Into alleged
gambling ties and questionable man­
agement practices.
In 1982. a hearings officer for the
state ruled that Toler was guilty of
s e e in g J oh n F ou n ta in , o f N orth
Carolina, who was convicted o f gam bl­
ing and conspiracy charges.

Reagan, Hawke To Meet On Pact Crisis
W
A S H IN G T O N
W ASHINGTON

f l l P I I -_
(UPI)
President uReagan
meets Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke
today amid severe strains on the 34-year-old
South Pacific defense pact o f Australia. New
Zealand and the United States.
Th e m eetin g cornea one day after both
administrations caved Into pressure from the
Australian left and decided the United States
would hold a MX missile test In the area this
summer without Australian help.
A senior administration oftlclal aald Reagan's
White House m eeting and lunch with the
55-year-old charismatic Australian would cover
"a great breadth o f Issues." Atop the agenda will
be the apparent crumbling o f the ANZUS defense
pact reached by Australia. New Zealand and the

.w

_____ - ■

.

_____________ _

TODAY

_

United States In 1951 to counter a feared postwar
Japanese resurgence.
* "It would be absurd to suggest that on all of
these subjects we will find complete agreement."
the oftlclal aald. "Inevitably there will be some
differences on specific Issues In a relationship as
broad and Intense as this one."
The U A decision to monitor the MX missile
■pUahdown In the Tasman Sea without using
Australian support faculties was announced
TUeaday by Secretary of State George ShulU
following a two-hour meeting with Hawke.
It was the second reversal for U S. military
might In the South Pacific In as many days. On
Tuesday, the administration cancelled March
ANZUS naval maneuvers with New Zealand and

Australia because of New Zealand's refusal to
allow a U.S. destroyer to dock at Its ports
Elected in July. New Zealand Prime Minister
David Lange Included In hla platform a prtmlse to
ban American nuclear ships from New Zealand
ports.
The Australian government said Initially (acui­
ties In Sydney would be provided American
reconnaissance planes monitoring the unarmed
MX missile landing In International waters
between Australia and New Zealand. But con­
fronted by domestic charges the Labor govern­
ment was a "puppet o f the Reagan administra­
tion.” Hawke changed hla mind.

Action Reports..... 2A
JfW Qa.................. 2A
Classified*......... 4,SB
Comics................... 2B
Crossword............. 2B
OBBrAbby..............IB

Florida.......
Horoscope.
Hospital....
Nation........
Paopla........
Sports........

£&gt;••♦♦*•....................2A Television.

J*- Lam b.............. 2 B Weother....
Editorial............... 4A W orld........

,...2A
....2B
.... JA
....2A
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&gt;...3A
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Oscar nominations released, 4B.
.
Chances good for a state non-smoking
bill, 2A.

Saa PACT, page 3A

-«• » e —»&lt;

.1 „

�l A - l w I n f H ifiM , tiw h rt, H .

Chances Appear Good
For Non-Smoking Bill

Thursday, Fib. 7 .1HS

NATION

TALLAH ASSEE (UPI) — A bipartisan
group o f lawmakers says the prospects for
passage are good this year for a bill to
require that non-smoking areas be set aside
In public buildings, work places and most
restaurants and bars.
At a news conference Wednesday, pro­
ponents o f the measure said they already
have several co-sponsors In both the House
and the Senate, all of them non-smokers
who believe they should have the right to
avoid breathing second-hand smoke.
"T h e voluntary effort at providing non­
smoking areas has not worked and It's time
for the state to take action to see that It's
done." said Rep. Sam Bell, D-Ormond
Beach.

IN BRIEF
U .5. Opens Worldwide Hunt
For A ngel O f Death' M engele
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Untied States Is opening an
Intensive worldwide search Tor Dr. Josef Mengele to resolve
allegations the Nazi "angel o f death" slipped out of U.S.
custody soon after World War II.
T h e announcement Wednesday by Attorney General
William French Smith came as an International panel In
Jerusalem asked "all governments, all heads o f religions
and creeds, all International associations" to help bring
Mengele to trial.
If he Is still alive. Mengele Is 73. He was last seen In 1062
In Paraguay.
Mengele conducted grisly experiments, aimed at de­
veloping a superior race o f humans, on people brought to
the Auschwitz concentration camp In Poland during World
W ar 11. Named the "angel of death." he was particularly
Interested In twins.
Smith declined to speculate on what would happen If the
United States located Mengele In a foreign country.
Reports two weeks ago that Mengele may have been
captured by American authorities soon after World War II
and released helped prompt the reopening o f the case.

"Second-hand smoking Is like second­
hand love — there's a lot o f diseases
associated with both o f them ," said Sen.
Doc Myers. R-Hobe Sound, a physician.
Proponents said a similar measure failed
In the House last year only because of a
parliamentary move inspired by tobacco
Industry lobbyists. The sponsors call the

Homestead Filing Deadline March 1

G eneral Feared *Bombshell1
NEW YORK (UPI) - The military Intelligence chief in
Vietnam testified at Gen. William Westmoreland's 1120
million libel suit (he general withheld enemy troop counts
from W ashington because they w ere a "p o litica l
bombshell."
Gen. Joseph Mc-Chrlstlan testified Wednesday he told
Westmoreland In May 1067, seven months before the
disastrous Tet offensive, to revise (he count of Irregular
Viet Cong troops In the official estimate.
Before the Tet offensive, the official Arm y-tailm ota was
300,000 troops, while other estimates — Including those of
the CIA — were as high as 600,000.
Earllier In the trial. Westmoreland testified that he never
made such s claim and said the expression "political
bombshell" Is "not In my lexicon."
Westmoreland says CBS libeled him In a documentary
that charged he deliberately reduced the number of
Irregular forces In the offlcal enemy troop count so
President Johnson would commit more troops to the war.

N ltro Blast Kills Two
RADFORD, Va. (UPII - Tw o workers were killed In a
mushroom-cloud explosion o f 2Vk Ions o f nitroglycerine
that vaporized a concrete building at an Arm y munitions
planl and rattled windows 20 miles away.
"T h e re 's nothing left to piece together the possible cause
of the explosion." Lt. Col. Craig Curtis, commander o f the
Radford Arm y Ammunition Plant, said after the Wednes­
day morning explosion.
Curtis said a 5,000-pound charge of nitroglycerine was
being piped to a storage area when the explosion occurred.
Plant spokeswoman Frances Selnow said special blast
barricades around the nitroglycerine building, which
makes propellants for tank artillery, directed the explosion
force up and out.-preventing damage to other buildings at
the 4.000-acre complex.
Seven people working nearby were treated for minor cuts
and shock, but all returned to work later In the day.

FLORIDA
Evlnrude Heiress Killer
Asks Court To Spare His Life
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — A man sentenced to die for his
part In the abduction and murder of an heiress to the
Evlnrude boat motor fortune has asked the Florida
Supreme Court to spare his life.
Alphonso Cave was convicted along with three other
men for the execution-style slaying of Frances Julia Slater
during a robbery at the convenience store she worked at
against her family's wishes. Her body was found In a ditch
13 miles from the Lll General store In Stuart the day
before she was to celebrate her 19th birthday.

Rock 'n Roll G ra ffiti
For all you readers who aren't contem­
porary music buffs, ZZ Top Is a rock
band. Apparently, a fan arm ed with a
can of spray paint wants motorists who
pass this sign a t Oak Lane and
M arkham Woods Road, Lake M a ry , to
know just how he feels.

March 1 is the deadline for Seminole
County homeowners to Hie homestead
exemption forms with Seminole County
Property Appraiser BUI Suber's office at the
county services building In Sanford or at
branch offices In Sand Lake Center, off state
Road 434 and Sand Lake Road, near
L o n g w o o d , an d S e m in o le P la z a .
Casselberry.
Norma O liver, homestead exem ption
supervisor In Suber's office, said about
46.0UJ homestead exemption renewal cards
have been sent to homeowners who have
previously filed for the exemption.
To be eligible for the 825.000 homestead
exem ption, a person must be a legal

resident o f Florida, must own hla home and
must have lived In that home prior to Jan.
1. 1965.
Widows and disabled veterans may file for,
an additional 8500 exemption, she said.
However. If a veteran Is totally andI
permanently disabled and has been a
resident o f the state for five years or m ore.'
he may file for a total exemption from
property taxes.
Ms. Oliver oold those filing homestead
exemptions for the first time should bring
thetr deed and driver's license with them t o :
Suber's office.
All three offices are open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m..:
Monday through Friday.

Pair O f Janitors Accused Of 'Cleaning Up'
dent report that one of the man's pursuing the motorcyclist onto a
T w o J a n ito r s h a v e b een
charged with grand theft In
fingers was slightly swollen.
dirt road, then to 29th Street, a s •
Richard Nazareth. 41. o f 120 the rider ran stop signs and
connection with the theft of
about 8400 worth o f Items from
Springsldc Court, made the re­ almost collided several tim e s;
* F /ro i
port Friday at 6:35 p.m.
with several police cars.
an Apopka store they were
Nazareth said he waa leaving
Th ey caught up with t h e :
assigned to clean.
★ C o u rt$
his former wife's residence when suspect when he stopped at his .
S em in ole C ou n ty s h e r iffs
it Pol/ci float
she broke his finger. Specific home, the report said.
deputies reported a third Janitor
details were not Included tn the
(old the manager o f Walgreens,
Joe Ashton Veltman. o f 209
Hunt Club Comers, that he had tlon was checked the suspended report.
Palm Place, waa arrested at 8 0 6
found Items In the crew's truck d r iv e r 's license ch arge was
No charges were filed.
p.m. Tuesday. He was later freed ‘
on 8500 bond.
that he believed had been stolen added, police reported.
R E C KLE SS CYCLE
D U IA B B E E T
from the store.
Herbert Augustine McGill, 20,
A 21 -year-old Sanford man has
The following person has been '
A radio, cassette tapes, a o f 1406 W. 16th St., was ar­
camera, film, makeup and Jewel­ rested at 5:03 a.m Sunday. He .been, ch arged , w ith reckless arrested tn Seminole County on
ry were among the Items the was released on 81.500 bond drivin g, fleeing and elu din g a charge of driving under the*
suspects reportedly smuggled and is scheduled to appear in police and driving without a Influence:
out o f the store In their pockets court Feb. 18.
license after he reportedly fled —Marcia Louise Jones, 29. ofand shoes, the report said.
from Sanford police who were 2100 H ow ell Branch Road.
EX-6POUSE ABUSE?
Investigating a complaint o f a Maitland, was arrested at 2:05
Joseph James Smith, 20. and
A L o n g w o o d m an to ld a reckless driver.
Clifford Olen Couchman. 20.
a.m. Wednesday after her car.
Police spotted the suspect on waa seen traveling on state Road:
both o f Orlando, were charged In sheriffs deputy that his former
the case Tuesday and were being wife broke his finger.
Mattie Street, Sanford, at about 436, C a s s e lb e r r y , w ith Its
The deputy notes In the Inci­ 8 p.m. Tuesday. They reported headlights off.
held In the Seminole County Jail
In lieu of 85,000 bond each.

Action Reports

A Sanford man who reportedly
threatened a Sanford woman
with a .32-callber pistol during
an argument has been charged
w ith c a r r y in g a co n ce a le d
firearm and driving with a sus­
pended driver's license.
Sanford police reported that
Joyce Miller accused the suspect
o f pointing a pistol at her and
trying to force her Into his car at
about 5 a.m. Sunday on 13th
Street In Sanford.
After police were called to the
scene, they reported finding a
loaded. .32-callber pistol under
the seat of the suspect's car. He
was arrested on the weapons
charge and after hla identifies-

Lung Cancer Will Be No. 1 Killer
NEW YORK (UP11 - More women will die of
lung cancer than breast cancer this year because
more women are smoking cigarettes, the Am eri­
can Cancer Society said today.
Estimates are that 38.600 women will die of
lung cancer this year, compared to 38.400 who
will die of breast cancer — the previous No. 1 fatal
cancer, the 1985 edition o f the society's annual
publication "Cancer Facts A Figures" reported.
" T h e tim e Is at hand for the National
Organization for Women, the National Wom en's
Health Network ... all concerned women ... to
speak out against the manipulation o f young
women by cigarette manufacturers and against
cigarette smoking In general." Dr. Arthur Holkb.
vice president for medical affairs, wrote In an

accompanying editorial.
Cancer Society President Robert J. McKenna
said the organization la calling for a congressional
Investigation o f cigarette advertising and market­
ing practices aimed at young people.
"T h e rising number of women affected by lung
cancer la a direct reflection o f the Increasing
numbers o f women who became hooked on
cigarettes during the years since World War II."
said Lawrence Garflnkel. the society's vice
president for epidemiology and statistics and Its
director o f cancer prevention.
About 144.000 Americans — 98.000 men and
46,000 women — will be told this year that they
have lung cancer and 125,000 o f both sexes will
die of the disease, the report said.

The Justices did not say when they will rule on Cave's
automatic appeal.

Escapee Pleads Guilty; Killer's Defense Bill OK'd

In o ra l a rgu m en ts W e d n e sd a y , la w y e r W ayn e
McDonough conceded hla client had taken part In the
robbery and abduction but said Cave had not known Slater
waa to be killed and did not fire the shot that ended her life.

One of two brothers who escaped from the
Seminole County Jail and remained at large
for two months has pleaded guilty to escape.
In a separate case, a man now serving a
34-year prison sentence for murdering his
girlfriend's daughter had payment or his
defense bill approved.
Jed Allen Chyle, 19. of Tampa, entered
the escape plea before Seminole Circuit
Judge Robert B. McGregor who set senten­
cing for April 29Chyle, originally puled on charges of
burglary, faces up to 15 years for the escape.
Chyle and his brother Michael are awaiting
trial on the burglary charges.

Tw o other men were sentenced to death for their roles In
the slaying: another accomplice drew a minimum 20-year
sentence.

Drinking Age Bill N ot Dead
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - The chairman o f a Senate
committee that stalled action on a bill raising the legal
drinking age from 10 to 21 says the controversial measure
will come to a vote early in the 1985 session.
Senate President Harry Johnston. D-West Palm Beach.
Intervened Wednesday and notified Commerce Committee
chairman Mattox lialr. D-Jackaonvlle. that he does not
want the bill to languish on the committee calendar all
year. Hair's committee had voted Tuesday to Indefinitely
at pone a decision on the bill by Sen. Don Childers.
West Palm Beach.

E

Hair said he doubted the Childers bill, making the legal
drinking age 21 on Oct. 1. would have passed If It had been
pul to a vote this week. The chairman said the committee
staff had prepared some amendments phasing In the
drinking age. so people now 19 and 20 years old could
continue to drink.

STOCKS
in* tm

I .
4i

HwiM n W *y Orasary OVmi

GUNMAN CHARQED

IN BRIEF

bill's prospects for passage this spring
"excellent."
The measure would make it a crime to
smoke in an area posted as non-smoking. A
first conviction would carry a possible fine
o f up to 8100. Fines for subsequent offenses
would range up to 8500.
The bill would exempt restaurants and
bars with capacities o f under 50 occupants
and local ordinances. If stronger, would take
precedence over the state statute.
"T h e tobacco lobby will still be- In the
hallway but I think Increasingly the public Is demanding that this be done." Bell said.
Sen. Jeanne Malchon. D-St. Petersberg,
noted that many elderly people m ove to:
Florida for their health and many o f them
suffer from lung-related problems. "W e feel,
that In this state we cannot afford not to:
protect these people when they are in pu blic.
places or the workplace." she said.
T h e measure Is being pushed by a :
coalition of health groups. Including Florida
chapters of the American Lung Association, t
the American Cancer Society and t h e '
American Heart Association.

The brothers slipped out o f Jail Aug. 23
and were captured Oct. 26 after a crime
spree In Tennessee.
In making thetr escape, the pair scaled a

20-foot wall, slipped under a razor-sharp coll
o f barbed wire atop the wall and fled from
an outside volleyball court at the Jail. The
wire has since been towered.
Al the time o f thetr escape, the Chyles
were being held on charges o f two counts
each of burglary and were scheduled to be
transferred to DeSoto County to face
additional charges.
They also face charges in Tennessee.

eparste case.
i
In a separate
Circuit Judge C,
V ernon M ize
ile Jr. Monday approved a
•1.804.65 bill for the defense of Donald
Glenn McDougall. 27. convicted killer of
Ursula Sunshine Assaid, 5.
The bin was submitted by special public
defender Leon B. Cheek 111. or Casselberry.
The blU w ill be paid by Seminole County.
McDougall was sentenced to 34 y ea n Nov.
4. 1963 for the torture death of the girl.
Susan Barrett Assaid. mother of the child
and McDougaU's girlfriend, pleaded guilty to
manslaughter March 25 In connection with,
the girl's death and waa sentenced to IS
years.

AREA DEATHS
CHARLES W IL LIA M S
Mr. Charles Williams. 33. a
former Sanford resident, died
Sunday In Pearson, Oa. Born
July 21, 1961 In Sanford, he
moved to Pearson a year ago. He
waa employed by the city of
Pearson.
Survivors Include his wife,
Mary Williams. Sanford: two
sons, Charles Jr. and Charles
Emanuel: daughter. C herelie, all
o f Sanford: three sisters, Minnie
Cashe ,n|i
f-"iitp». both of
Sanford. Janie Ruth CoUlns,
Compton. Calif.: three brothers.
J o e . J o h n n y , a n d A lv in
Williams, all o f Sanford.
Funeral arrangements are in­
c o m p le t e . S u n r is e F u n eral
Home. Sanford, la In charge o f
arrangement*.

Mrs. Mildred Elizabeth Peavy.
92. o f 989 Oricnla Ave., Alta­
monte Springs, died Wednesday
at Life Care Center. Altamonte
Springe. Bom Sept. 12. 1692 In
Reading. Maas., the moved to
A lta m on te Springs from St.
Cloud several years ago. She was
a homemaker and a Methodist.
She la survived by a sister.
Marion Thayer. Orlando.
Flak Funeral Home. Si. Cloud,
la in charge o f arrangements.
Mr. Joseph A. Martnsk Jr.. 55,
o f 116 Country Club Circle.
Sanford, died Mooday at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. Bom
Aug. 11. 1929 in New York City,
he moved to Sanford from Or-

la n d o In 19 84 . He w a a a
stockman for an autom otive
supply company ana a member
o f St. Joseph Catholic Church.
Orlando.

Service. Union Park, la in charge
o f arrangements.

He la survived by a slater.
Victoria Slone. Orlando: slater.
Catherine Steuerwald. Blthlo;
three nieces; three nephews.

tu rn 4«i m i
Thursday. February 7, Its*
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WtarSay by Ths b * M Har«W.
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Ws. urn.

Union Park Chapel Funeral

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�Evening HsrstS. toaterd, Ft.

A ll G et Lengthy Prison Terms

WORLD

Priest's Killers Sentenced

IN BRIEF
Communist Party Blames
Troubles On M itterrand
PARIS (UPI) — Delegate* to the 25th national congrea* of
France’* Communist Party faced a debate today on a
resolution aimed at halting the party’s declining popularity
and uniting Its members.
Opening the congress Wednesday. Secretary General
Georges Marc hols blamed the loss o f some 100,000
members and nearly 50 percent o f the party's electoral
support In three years on President Francois Mitterrand's
ruling Socialists.
The Communists left Mitterrand's government last year
over the Socialists' economic austerity measures.
Marc hats, party leader alijce 1072. acknowledged there
was growing discontent among the rank and file, but
warned he would not tolerate any move to undermine the
party structures and "divid e the party Into different
currents."
His remarks come on the eve o f the debate today on a
draft resolution that calls on the party to maintain Its
pro-Soviet policy and centralized structure.

Vatican Workers Threaten Strike
VATIC AN CITY (UPI) - Pope John Paul II. bock In the
Vatican after hla tiring sojourn In Latin America and the
Caribbean, faced troubles at home today after civilian
employees threatened the first strike In the tiny city state.
A statement Issued Wednesday by the Association of
Vatican Lay Dependents announced a "state o f agitation to
the bitter end" to presa the Vatican to keep what the
civilian workers' union claims is a promise o f a pay
Increase.
Union leaders sold, for the moment, the Industrial action
will take the form p f a series o f meetings o f employees of
the Vatican’s 45 administrative sectors.
The statement, however, clearly Indicated leaders would
use strike action If the Vatican continues to stall on
Implementing a pay increase, which the union sold It
agreed on during pay talks held lost year.
In the past, the pontiff has repeatedly spoken In favor o f
workers' rights to organize themselves In labor unions, but
It Is believed to be the first time he has been faced himself
with a serious threat o f a strike.

A partm ent Building Collapse§
CASTELLANETA, Italy (UPI) — A six-story apartment
building collapsed In the Italian hill town o f Costellaneta
today, burying up to 20 families under tons o f rubble,
officials sold.
Firemen, police and hundreds of troops sent to the scene
had dragged six dead residents from the huge pile of
masonry by 10 s.m. (4 a.m. EST). Rescue officials sold the
death toll could go as high os 70.
Seven Injured residents, one of them In very serious
condition, were rushed to a hospital at Taranto, an Italian
naval base and seaport 25 miles southeast o f Costellaneta.
Firemen and other rescuers managed to evacuate around
100 residents from an Intact portion o f the building.
The ala-story apartment building collapsed shortly after
4 a.m. (10 p.m. EST). Fire brigade experts sold first
indications were that the structure hod been weakened by
water seepage from recent days o f torrential rain marking
Italy's severest winter In 29 yeoifs;.......................
The building was constructed on the edge o f a steep slope
on the outskirts o f the hill town.

HOSPITAL NOTES
FreSwkkW.

NUUrsS S. I

M K N M S It

a o m iu w m

Henry Oswillsn

TlwreeeM. Olsen

VsnSerSHt Nktonan
lers K. Vewng

Mery J. McOenM. OeSery
GlMerS Sreem, Oenere

l * * K PettM

WEATHER

(0 sa .| &gt;
temperature: BO; overnight low:
55: W ed n esd ay 's high: 80:
barometric pressure: 30.15: rela­
tive hum ldltyi '100 percent:

...Reagan
ia

hla key
future.

roadm ap

T O R U N . P o la n d (U P I) — G r z e g o r z
Ho trow ski. ringleader of a group o f four
secret policemen convicted In the kidnap-murder o f a dissident priest, was
sentenced today to 25 years In prison, the
official state news agency PAP said.

Pletruszka had pleaded Innocent and
lawyers for the other three officers, who
m aintained the priest’ s death was an
accident and that they only wanted to
Intimidate the cleric, had demanded the
murder charges be dropped.

The Judge also sentenced police Col.
Adam Ptetnisxka to 25 years for Inciting the
killing o f Rev. Jerzy Popleluszko and
handed out prison terms o f 15 years to Lt.
Leszek Pekala and 14 years to Lt. Waldemor
Chmielesrski.

The four have the right to appeal the
sentence — first to the Supreme Court and
then to the Polish president for clemency.

lo r

the

winds: north at 9 mph: rain: .52
Inch; sunrtoe: 7:10 a m , sunset
6:10 p.m.
F R ID A Y T ID E S t D ayton a
Roachi highs. 10:50 a m . 11:24
p m : lows, 4:27 a m . 4:52 p m ;
P art C u m n f a highs, 10:50
a m , 11:16 p m .: Iowa, 4:10
a m , 4:43 pm .; Baypeeti highs.
3:19 a m . 3:40 p.m.; Iowa. 9:42
*m ., 10:24 p m
B O A T IN G FOOBCABTi St.
Augustine to Jupttar Inlet out 50
miles — Wind north around 15
knots continuing through to­
night then increasing to 20
knots Friday, Sea 5 to 5 feet but
higher In the G ulf Stream in­
c rea sin g F rid ay . Scattered
F O aSC A BTi Pahvery cool north and cool
south through Monday. Lows
mid 30a to low 40s north and
50s aouth except low 00a In the
north to low 70s aouth.

For the first Ume.
endorsed most parts of the
Treasury Department's ]
to scrap the •
m t a n and adopt a Mm
flat-tax m ethod, with

The trial began with the prosecution
saying the plot resulting In the priest's
death originated In high levels of the
government, but the defendants later said
Pletruazka was the highest official Involved
In the crime.

Prosecutor* had demanded the death
sentence for Plotrosrakl — the ringleader In
the Popleluszko kldnap-murder — but Judge
Artur KuJawa ruled against it.
Popleluszko. on outspoken supporter of
the outlawed Solidarity union was kid­
napped Oct. 19. beaten and gagged and
then dumped In a reservoir. Hts body was
retrieved Oct.30.

...County
IA
The county commission re­
ceived Frederick’ s letter earlier
this week.
M ean w hile, annou ncem ent
has been made that Orlando Is
preparing to sign a consent
agreement with the federal and
state agen cies p ledgin g the
pollution problems at the plant
will be solved.
After negotiations over the
past nine months, the federal
and state agencies have agreed
to let Orlando add new custom­
ers up to the plant's dally
capacity or 24 million gallons If
Orlando will sign a "consent
order" promising to moke Im­
provem ents to the plant to
remove the nitrates over a three
yea r period a cco rd in g to a
specific Ume table. Hooper said.
When Frederick's intention of
turning Seminole County's ca­
pacity over to the transmission
authority was brought to the
county commission's attention
this week. Commissioner Dill
Klrchhoff said: “ No. that capaci­
ty belongs to Seminole County,
not the transmission authority.
" Frederick apparently doesn't

...Pact
C oatiasad from page IA
B o th H a w k e a n d S h u ltz
sought to m inimize the action.
Hawke said the administration
made Its decision to monitor the
missile test through other means
before his meeting, although he
"conveyed the concerns that
have arisen in Australia."
A ustralia's com m itm ent to
A N Z U S " r e m a i n s un-

■ _

Polish authorities maintain the evidence
that emerged during the proceedings dem­
onstrates that only the four officers on trial
were involved In the murder.
Military leader Gen. Wojcelch Jaruzelskl.

know on agreement exists be­
tween Orlando and Seminole
County. W e are Just trying to get
this straightened out. Tt (the
agreement) Is apparently some­
thing he overlooked."
Hooper said, "W e will ask
Mayor Frederick to release the
capacity to Seminole County
dlrecUy."
F r e d e r i c k w a n t s the
transmission authority to decide
“ who has how much capacity
left." Hoojwr said, but adding
Seminole County knows how
much capacity It has left — the
1.4 million gallons a day.
" I f necessary, the county will
take legal means to protect Its
Interests.” he said.
In the meantime. Hooper said,
at least four Seminole housing
projects have been held up from
developing because there was no
sewer capacity available.
If the unused capacity Is re­
leased for S em in ole County
t h e s e d e v e l o p e r s w i l l be
permitted to proceed with their
projects, he said, and so will
other developers who have al­
ready completed work necessary
for various approvals by the
county. Including appropriate
zoning and platting o f their
projects.

diminished.*' Hawke sold.
"It would be totally mistaken
for any conclusion to be drawn
that the decision o f the United
States to monitor the MX teat In
another way has any Impact In
the ANZUS relationship. It has
none.'* he oald.
Hawke also praised Reagan for
progress on nuclear anna con­
trol. Three Australian newspa­
pers reported Hawke would
voice opposition lo Reagan's
" S t a r W a rs " m issile-defense
plan.

who assailed the murder as a provocative
act that opposed the Interests o f Poland,
assumed Immediate personal control o f the
Interior Ministry, which controls the secret
police.
Lawyers representing Popletuszko's fam i­
ly have Implied that the plot to kill the priest
was hatched In a communist country and
maintain that a murder plan could not have
originated In Poland as It was against the
state's Interest.
Chief prosecutor Leszek Ptetroslnskl has
dismissed the suggestion, but said a new
Investigation was underway to establish
whether Plotrowskl had links In the West
and acted os a possible double agent.
Autospsy results revealed Poptelsuzkn
was dealt at least 14 club and fist blows by
hla kidnappers. The priest, whose bound
and gagged body was retrieved from the
reservoir, suffocated, the results showed.

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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION A T NO COOT OR OBLIGA­
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»1MI

OAKLAWN'S VETERANS' DIVISION
I P.0. Bet V2B, lake Mary, FL 2274a
1 Name
1 Address
1 City

"

Ph.

_____

1
Stats

Zip

1 Yaar Of Discham
I Type af Discharge

I

Aft

HOUR* MON.-SAT. • A.M.-5:30 P.M.

STERCHI S FEBRUARY

IA

Longwood avenues.
The forces met no resistance,
but one suspect nabbed at 110
DeSoto Avenue fainted when the
lawmen, with warrants In hand,
dressed In cam ouflage gear,
confronted him In hla home,
Seminole SW AT Commander Lt.
Marty La Bruactano oald.

i cM

• PENSION

U N S. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FL

...Raids

N A T IO N A L REPORT! A Pacif­
ic storm expected to produce os
much os a foot of snow plowed
Into the Northwest today, while
on Eastern storm that dum(
up to 14 Inches of snow
out to sea and was replaced by
cold a ir Invading from the
Midwest. Early-morning temper­
atures In the Tennessee Valley
feU below 32 degrees
A R R A F O R E C A ST ! Today
variable cloudiness and cooler. A
20 percent chance of showers.
High mid 00s. North wind 10
mph. Tonight much colder. Low
near 40 to mid 40o. North wind
10 to IB mph. Friday partly
sunny and rather cool. High near
00 to mid 00s. Northeast wind
10 to 15 mph.

Thvrutoy, Ftk f, IWS—1A

r v -jlh

HOMEFURMISHIMOS SALE
SUPER VALUE!
Warm, Honey Pine
Look!

At least two of the suspects
had firearms In their possession
when they w ere taken Into
custody, shertfTa spokesman
John Spoteki said.
The operation eras coordinated
with the aid of a Volusia County
helicopter from which oflteem
watched for suspects who might
try to escape the ground forces,
occupants of the houses,
a pregnant woman,
not arrested, lawmen oald.
The crackdown came. Polk
said, after complaints by realdents of tbs area north of state
Road 430 and east of state Road
427. It follows the redeveopment
of a situation that eras curbed to

*% sW I

thetr
:h* neighborhood, he
"R 'a an a n a w h an they think
they can prt away with M (open
d ru g d e a lin g ).
Polk said .
"There w e many good
n*
In iin t an a, some aided In our
investigation, and there ore
are who don't have anything
do. ao they asy they11 ecu

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�Evening Herald
(Usps m m )
300 N. FRENCH AVE . SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2011 or 031-0993
Thursday, February 7, 19*5—4A
Wayne D. Doyla, Pwblittwr
Thom*i Olordano, Managing Editor
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Year, to o OO

Poor
Losers

DONALD LAMBRO

Deep Budget Cuts Sunder GOP Unity
W A S H IN G T O N F ea r a m o n g H ou se
supply-aiders that President Reagan and Senate
Republican leaders are leading their parly down
the road to political disaster by pursuing
"draconian budget cuts" has split the OOP’s
otherwise-unified ranks.
While Senate Republicans, led by Roben Dole
o f Kansas, seek deep, across-the-board spending
reductions, their House counterparts shudder at
the thought o f passing an austere "no-growth"
budget that strikes at Social Security cost-ofllvlng Increases and rrvenue-sharing grants to
poor localities.
in a Jan. 24 letter signed by Reps. Jack Kemp
of New York. Jim Courter o f New Jersey and
Newt Gingrich o f Georgia, among others, the
disgruntled lawmakers privately warned Reagan
that loo much political capital was being
Invested In "draconian budget cuts and not
enough In the central program of your fall
campaign: economic growth, opportunity and
Jobs."
The supply-alders urged Reagan to reject the
counsel o f Dole and other GOP senators "that
deficit reduction should be the top priority of the

R esid en ts o f Indiana’s 8 th C ongressional
District a re b ein g den ied representation In
W a sh in gton In a blatant abu se o f p ow er by
D em ocrats co n trollin g the House o f R ep re­
sen tatives. Richard D. M cIn ty re w as elected
to th e H ou se from th e 8 th District last
N ovem b er, but he still Is on the ou tside
look in g In.
T h e election w as a close one. Mr. M cIn tyre
w as certified the w in n er o v e r D em ocrat F rank
M cC loskey b y a scant 34 vo te s In D ecem ber.
SCIENCE
WO
Mr. M cC losk ey dem an d ed a recount, w h ich
w as not u nexpected.
N ow th e recount has been com p leted — b y
cou n ty co m m ission s that w ere dom in ated b y
D em ocrats In 11 o f the 15 cou nties co m p ris­
ing th e 8 th District. Mr. M cIntyre again
em erged the w in n er — but b y the m ore
substantial m argin o f 435 votes.
T h e D em ocrats are tu rn in g out to be poor
losers. R ep . T o n y C o e lh o o f C a lifo rn ia ,
ch airm an o f the p a rty 's congressional c a m ­
paign co m m ittee. Insists th e returns still are
not con clu sive. He points ou t that 1,000
MANHATTAN. Kan. (U^l) -n If
ballots w ere ruled Invalid In a precinct w ith a
you are an average American, you
heavy pro-M cC loskey vote, but co n ven ien tly
eat fcUnn*G4fiuunda of poultry each
Ignores TK e fact that thou sands m ore w ere year and spend one-third of your
ruled Invalid In precincts that favored Mr. food dollar away from home, which
M cIntyre.
means you probably eat a lot of
E lection officia ls In In diana are satisfied fast-food chicken.
T U T * U . S . D e p a r t me ill o f
thnt th e election o f Mr. M cIn ty re w as on the
up-and-up. but the D em ocratic leadership In Agriculture wants to make sure you
the H ouse Is Insisting that the seat rem ain are rating right, so the agency has
open u ntil the H ouse A d m in istration C o m ­ g.ven Kansas State U niversity
almost $94,000 to find out If chain
m ittee. w h ich It controls, has had a ch an ce to
store fried chicken, a
"In v e s tig a te " this cose. T h e Investigation, o f $250-m illion-a-year business. Is
course. Is a last-ditch effort to find som e good for you.
reason to g iv e the scat to Mr. M cC loskey.
The Kansas State researchers are
T h is Is b elieved to be th e first tim e the In the final stages of a year-long
House o f R epresen tatives has ev e r refused to study to determine the vitamin,
srut a person w h ose e le c tio n w as d u ly mineral and fat control of fried
certified by sta le election authorities. I f the chicken from six fried chicken
D em ocratic m ajo rity Is a llow ed to Im pose Its chains across the country.
The findings are still preliminary,
I w ill In this m anner, the Im plications ore
but Prof. Jane Bowers, head o." the
frigh ten in g. W h y botficr to h ave election s If
school’s department of foods and
the jm rty co n trollin g C ongress can overru le nutrition, said overall that fast-food
the results?
fried chicken Is all right to eat.
W ith Mr. M cIntyre not seated prom p tly,
"It's as good for you to rat as any
voters In Indlunu should seek an ord er fro m a fried chicken Is." Bowers said.
fe d e ra l r o u r t g r a n t in g th e m th e r e p r e ­ "Som e people have the Idea that
sentation In C ongress that Is being denied to fast food Isn’t nutritionally good for
them b y the losing side In the N ovem b er you. That Isn't true."
The Agriculture Department look
election.
five breast-wing and five thigh-leg
sam ples from K entu cky Fried
Chicken. Church's. Pioneer. Jim
Dandy. Bojangles and Popeye's In
cities that Included San Francisco.
P resid en tia l counselor Ed Mcese, w h o ’s
Los Angeles. Dallas. Houston. St.
w orked hard these last four yea rs to kill the
L o u is . C h i c a g o . N e w Y o r k .
federal legul services program for the poor. Is
Washington, Atlanta, and Tampa.
b illin g In c g o v e r n m e n t fo r m o re th a n
The Kansas State researchers
•7 0 0 ,0 0 0 to pay his lawyers.
have found that dark and light meat
varies somewhat In vitamin and
It's all w ith in the law. T h e L egislation that
set up the process under w h ich the m iscon ­ mineral content, and that some of
the chains had differences In fat
duct ch a rg es against M cese w e re Investigated
content, probably due to different
p r o v id e s fo r such reim b u rse m e n t if the
frying methods. Bowers said.
subject o f the churges Is cleared. In M eeae's
"W e're hard-pressed to explain
case, h o w ev er, there are so m e questions
the differences In fat content,
about th e am ou nt. T h e R eaga n adm inistra­
because the companies are reluc­
tion. m ea n in g Mcese him self, nas been try in g
tant to give out their recipes,
to lim it reim bu rsem en t o f la w y ers In sim ila r
especially Tor the batter. We think It
may have something to do with the
cuses to a rate o f $75 an hour. M eese’s
flour they use In the batter.
la w yers billed at 1325 an hour, the g oin g rate
"T h e findings won’t be released
In lea d in g W a sh in gton firm s. In addition. It’s
according to chain." Bowers said,
not certain that e v e ry th in g th at's been billed
"because the findings did not vary
was. In fact, fo r M eeae's defen se In the special
significantly from chain to chain.
prosecu tor's Investigation, or w h eth er som e
Tne differences we found were
also w en t fo r personal business. T h e court
significant to us, but to the average
ex a m in in g the claim is now a skin g for m ore
consumer, practically, there Isn't
docu m en tation .
that much difference."
It’s all a little aw k w ard, particularly sin ce
S im ila r stu dies o f fast food
the Ju stice D epartm ent, w h ich Is supposed to
burgers have been done In previous
m ake certa in that the cla im s arc fair, w ill
years, and an Arizona University
probably b e run by Mcese h im se lf In an oth er
research team is completing a study
lew w eeks. A n d con sid erin g M eese's position
of chain Mexican food.
on legul se rvice s and on that $75 lim it, It Is. to
put It m ild ly , n ot a little Iron ic. T h a t
•7 0 0 .0 0 0 w ou ld support o n e fair-size legal
services office w ith 15 la w y ers and su pport­
ing staff for u year. S om e b o d y ou ght to ask
him how he feels about legal services n ow —
for the poor, an d for Ed Mecac.

new Congress, in the absence ol robust
economic growth."
Instead, they urged him to "put forward an
agenda to reach the stated goal o f the 1984 GOP
platform: tax reform and further marginal
tax-rate reduction to boost output, economic
and Income growth.”
Th e deflclt-reducllon-flrst strategy being
pushed by Senate Republicans, they warned, "la
an economic and political trap set by opponents
o f your defense build-up and tax cuts.”
Last week, as Republican leaders emerged from
a meeting with the president. Oregon’s Bob
Packwood. chairman o f the tax-writing Senate
Finance Committee, said that OOP members o f
his panel and the Ways and Means Committee
want no tax reform until Congress cuts the
deficit. That would mean no action on tax-rate
reduction until 1906 at the earliest.
"Spending cuts, spending cuts, spending
cuts." was the myopic fiscal advice they gave
the president, said Packwood.
But forecasts o f no tax-reform this year may
be premature. After all. Reagan got spending
cuts and tax reduction through Congress in

1981, and this time around he enjoys an even
larger mandate for change than he did In 1900.
In fact, tax reform Is already in the works. The
administration Is planning to sit down with
Kemp and Sen. Robert Hasten Jr.. R-Wls.. who
are pushlng their own tax plan, as well as with
Sen. Bill Bradley. D-N.J. and Rep. Richard
Gephardt. D-Mo.. co-sponsors o f a sim ilar
Democratic alternative.
White House strategists say Reagan Is com ­
mitted to sending tax-reform legislation to
Congress this year, but first wants to work out a
bill that has a reasonable chance o f passage.
But the White House knows there’s more at
stake here than merely keeping Reagan's word
on tax reform. Failure to send Congress a reform
proposal could mean losing critical congressio­
nal support for the admlnstratlon's politically
difficult deficit-cutting efforts.
Indeed, the supply-aiders bluntly warned
Reagan that they "cannot support any further
social spending cuts unless and until a
growth-oriented" tax bill la sent to Congress.
That threat alone Insures that a tax-reform plan
will go to Capitol HU1 early this year.

DON GRAPF

Fast Food
Chicken
Is Okay

Ed’s Legal Costs

An Able
Advocate
For U.S.
Whatever else la to be said about
her — and there la plenty — Jeane
J. Kirkpatrick certainly made them
sit up and pay attention.
There are a number of words for
her performance the past four years
as ambassador to the United Na­
tio n s — fo r c e f u l, b lu n t, u n ­
compromising. abrasive and coura­
geous. Just for starters.
No one could be In any doubt — or
at least not much — as to what she
thought o f the institution to which
she was accredited — not much.
She made that outspokenly clear at
the very start, and repeated herself
frequently on the off chance that
someone might have missed or
forgotten her point.

--- - — m
" P i idpa»a
y newv h1t w
M S iS

MICHAEL K. EVANS

Trade Deficit Woes
WASHINGTON (UPII - The trade
deficit Iasi year totalled $123.2
billion, almost twice as high as
1903, which Itself was a record at
the lime. Furthermore, economists
are virtually unanimous In agreeing
that the deficit will soar even higher
this year, exceeding $ 130 billion.
The four major Implications of
thin hugh trade deficit are as
follows:
1. Consumers are getting more
bargains. W hile some Imported
goods, such as cars, continue to rise
In price along with U.S. Increases,
most other consumer goods are
cheaper than they were a few years
ago. Foreign travel is as much as 50
percent cheaper than In 1900. 2.
The strong dollar, which la the
primary cause o f this huge deficit. Is
widely credited with keeping Infla­
tion st least 2 percent per year
below the rale otherwise. 3. In the
ores o f consumer hard goods and
capital equipment. Imports have
soaked up about 2-3 o f the growth
In the past three years: these are
sales that otherwise would have
gone to domestic producers. In
addition, our export markets are
stagnating. The trade Imbalance
cost approxim ately 1.5 m illion
domestic lobs last year. 4. The flip
side o f the huge trade deficit Is
almost an equally large Inflow of
capital Into this country: close to
• 100 billion last year. The interest
and profits earned on this capital
flow back to their foreign Investors.
As this debt to foreigners keeps
accumulating, the historical surplus

o f Income from capital that the U.S.
has enjoyed will be reversed, and by
1906 we will owe foreigners more
than they owe us.
Thus depending on whether you
are an Individual who likes foreign
products and enjoys traveling In
Europe, or whether your Job used to
be manufacturing machine tools,
the effects o f the trade deficit are
completely different.
But in spite o f the virtual doubling
o f the trade deficit last year, some
steps were taken to try to reduce the
flood of Imports.
One way, o f course. Is to have the
Fed Intervene in foreign currency
markets and drive the value of the
dollar down somewhat. The Fed has
rarely used this weapon. The other
w ay is to press for Increased
protectionism.
The auto, steel, and textile In­
dustries have already been suc­
cessful In reducing the growth of
Imports Into this country.
Rather than actually diminish the
am ount o f Im ports, they have
argued for quotas that effectively fix
market share near Its present level.
This permits domestic manufac­
turers to raise prices without having
to worry about losing market share.
Because o f this Increased protec­
tionism. some decline In the value
o f the dollar this year, and the
slow er growth o f the domestic
economy, the trade deficit will only
Inch up Instead o f exploding as It
did last year.

In her opinion, the world organi­
zation was not a solver of problems
but Itself a problem.
She put dow n not on ly the
established critics of the United
Stales but Its putative friends If she
thought they had gotten out o f line
on an Issue o f Importance.*
She has the courage o f her
convictions, sometimes to a diplo­
matic fault. She came to public —
and Ronald Reagan's — attention as
the author ol a trrallse on the
r e la tiv e v ir t u e s o ( r ig h t-w in g
"authoritarian" governments o f the
Latin military type In contrast to
left-wing "totalitarian" regimes.
So what could be more natural
than that she keep a dinner date as
guest of honor at the Argentine
Embassy In 1902, precisely as the
U.S. government was siding with
Britain in the Falklands business.
To. also naturally, the utter con­
sternation o f the State Department.
She describes herself as an Intel­
lectual In a world of bureaucrats.
"After a shaky start." thr New
York Tim e* observed editorially the
other day. "Dr. Kirkpatrick became
an able advocate for Mr. Reagan's
foreign policy and won the some­
times grudging respect o f advrrsas»
lea.”
But respect is not agreement.
Jeane Kirkpatrick will not soon be
forgotten at the United Nations, but
how much o f a lasting Impact she
may have had Is another matter.
Still, she will be missed, especially
In those ferven tly conservative
circles where she has acquired
symbolic stature as a preacher o f
the true faith in an administration
heavily Infiltrated by pragmatic
Infidels.

JACK ANDERSON

Soviets Routinely Violate Arms Terms

BERRY’S WORLD

WASHINGTON - The Reagan
administration Is putting on a great
show of willingness to reach an
arms-control agreement with the
Soviet Union. But the president's
negotiators are laboring under a
heavy burden o f distrust, born of
the Soviets' past responses to com ­
plaints o f treaty violations.
The negotiators know all too well
the secret history o f Soviet vio­
lations o f the S A L T I and II treaties.
Though S A L T II was never ratified,
both countries pledged to abide by
Ita terms, and the United Slates has
tried to hold the Soviets to their

i

"hm bean thinking and

i ** # r.*ds. Fwfe i«'es

/Vs

I l M M lI O

- «. • -•

I can Illustrate the U.S. frustration
by drawing on a highly sensitive
National Security Council report on
the verification attempts of recent
years. The report was reviewed by
my associate Dale Van Alls. Keep in
mind that this Is Just a single
example of the problem.
One provision of SALT II was
Intended to restrict the proliferation
o f Intercontinental K* |1&gt;*1Lr misslira
by allowing each side to develop

only one new missile. The U.S.
choice was the MX, as the Soviets
were duly Informed.
On Oct, 26. 1902. the Russians
first tested their SS-24 missile. They
secretly informed the United States
that this was their permitted new
But four months later the Soviets
tested still another new missile.
S B 25. This violated the SALT U
agreem ent. The United States
Issued a secret, sharply worded note
of protest to Moscow. A second,
more detailed objection followed.
The Soviets responded that the
SS-25 wasn't really new. but simply
a variation of their old 88-1S. U.S.
diplomats pointed out significant
dlfcrcnces: The SS-13 was a silob a se d m is sile w ith a sin g le
warhead, while the SS-25 was
mobile with multiple warheads.
Most Important of all was the
SS-25's "throw -w eight". By the
SALT H definition, a missile with
more than a 4 percent difference la
throw-weight constitutes a
missile, not a variant.

And the CIA had determined that
the SS-25's throw-weight was any­
where 1.000 to 1,200 kilograms,
compared to the 88-13'a 500 kilo­
grams. "Even the lower boundary of
the SS-25's throw-weight Is 20
percent above the S S -lS 'e throwweight." the NSC report points out.
The Soviets reptted by simply
denying that the 8B-2ft'sw-wctght
exceeded the 86-13's by more than
5 percent.
Since the Soviets have never
agreed to oo-ette Inspection of Its
missiles, the CIA has to rely on leas
direct means of estimating the
SS-25's characteristics. An Impor­
tant part ef tH * complicated in­
telligence gathering depends on the
radio signals, or telemetry, that
issue from Soviet missiles being
tested. By the BALT fi terns, ouch
signals are not to be in code.
But in July IM S . the United

o f Its re-entry vehicle (warhead)
telemetry consistently (have) been
encrypted since the test program
began. It adds that “ except for the
first teat, virtually no Information
useful or relevant to verification has
been transmitted in the d ear."
The Soviets again denied vtotaling
anything, suggested the U A figures
w ere the re su lt o f " a w ro n g
approach" and noted that informa­
tion on any aspects of SALT II “ are
provided as a gesture of goodwtIL"
not obligation, because the treaty
was not officially In effect.
The CIA went back to Its com­
puters and rechecked Us figures for
the SS-25. It concluded that its
original estimate was correct.
On Oct.

12.

1903, the U .S.

"until this matter ta
J P
resolved, the Untyed States requests
that the Soviet Union suspend
•testing of the SS-25. "

HBE

mm

�Despite Big Claims For Meditation,
Guru Business Not What It Once Was
By Leon Daniel
UPI National Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Maharishl Mahesh
Yogi, whose devotees lo Transcendental
Meditation once Included the Beatles, still
grins slyly, as If he had captured the
Meaning o f Life In a ju g and had his thumb
firm ly on the cork.
The old guru said he had come to
Washington — which he has designated
“ the Continental Capital o f the Age of
Enlightenment Tor North America" — to
achieve no less than world peace.
Toward that end. he has Just Inaugurated
the Maharishl Vedlc University In the
m ovem en t's W ashington headquarters,
housed In the old Annapolis Hotel six blocks
from the White House.
Th e plan, the Maharishl explained In an
exclusive Interview with UPI. Is Tor his
followers to meditate simultaneously In a
single group In the U.S. capital, creating a
“ unified field o f enlightenment" which will
solve all the world's problems.
T h e guru, sitting on a raised divan
surrounded by a dozen devotees, said he
could get the Job done with Just 7.000
meditators, a number he arrived at by
working out the square root o f 1 percent of
the world's population.
“ This would be a permanent solution for '
all the Ills o f the world,*' said the Maharishl.
bearded, balding and dressed In the simple
white dhoti of his native India. "It would be
heaven on Earth."
The guru business Is not what It used to
be. but the name o f the Maharishl (which
translates from the Hindi to "sacred on e")
would be right up there at the top In a
current listing o f Who's Who In Gurus.
The Maharishl's claims o f the benefits tliat
will accrue to those who practice his brand
o f m e d it a t io n h a v e b e c o m e m o r e
extravagant than they were In the 1060s,
when he attracted a following o f white
upper-mlddlc-claas college students.
After the Beatles sought enlightenment at
hts ashram In India, the accompanying
publicity made the Maharishl the world's
quintessential guru. Hls meditation tech*
nlque. dubbed TM by the press, swept
across America and much o f the world.
But TM promised more than It delivered
to many who tried It. The movement Tailed
to hold those who were only mildly curious
In their search for Improved health and
relief from stress.
Some o f
twice-daily.
are today's
w ho run
machines.

the dropouts from the simple,
20-mlnute meditation sessions
fitness buffs, men and women
and w ork ou t on e x e r c is e

As If lo compete with such single-minded
dedication, the TM movement now makes
Increasingly grandiose promises.
Th e Maharishl claims hts simultaneous
meditation technique — practiced at hls'
M aharishl In tern ation al U niversity at
Fairfield. Iowa, and elsewhere around the
world — already has eased world strife,
decreased traffic fatalities and Improved the
. stock market.
If all that is not enough, practitioners In
advanced stages o f TM still claim to be able
lo levitate ofT the door they meditate on.
rising and floating In the air.
They describe the levitation phenomenon
as "hopping." or even "flyin g like Peter
Pan." but they do not provide demonstra­
tions. contending that skeptics Interfere
with the meditation process and create a
"ctrcus-llke atmosphere."
Anyone who wants to learn to levitate

This would bo a pormanont
solution for all tho Ills
of tho world. It would bo
hoavon on Earth.'
-M a h a ris h l M a h a sh Yogi
must ante up 0400 for TM lessons. There Is
a $200 rate for college students.
The Maharishl claims 3 million meditators
worldwide, more than 1 million o f them in
the United States, about 800 o f whom
attend hls university In the Iowa com bell.
The university and the m ovem ent's activ­
ities have received a cool — and sometimes
hostile — reception In heartland America,
but TM boosters now claim relations with
the 9.000 Fairfield townsfolk "o re good and
getting better."
"W hen they first came In 1974. we had
lost Parsons College and had an empty
campus, so the community was- pretty
receptive to somebody buying the campus
and coming In." said Fairfield Ledger Editor
Dean G rabbed.
" T h e n som e o f the fu ndam en talist
churches got concerned about whether TM
was a religion ... there was some, well,
feelings within the community, always has
been. But It's certainly gotten better over
the years.
"... There's a gulf certainly. The towns­
people don’t understand why they want to
go lo the (Goldenl Dome twice a day and
'fly.' But the best relations are one lo one
and everyone from town has met someone
from MIU they can relate to.”
The movement also ran Into opposition
when It recently expanded Its operations In
the predominantly Roman Catholic Philip­
pines. But not from President Ferdinand
Marcos, w ho accepted the Maharishl's
appointment as "Founding Father o f the
Age o f Enlightenment In the Philippines.”
Asked w hy he chose the Philippines,
which Is still ruled under a form o f martial
law. to expand hls movement, the Maharishl
said. "Because of the greatness o f Its leader.
ITesIdent Marcos Is a great statesman."
Asked about opposition to hls movement
led by Cardinal Jaime Sin. leader of Filipino
Catholics, the Maharishl grinned and said,
"Cardinal Sin? Hls name suggests what he
Is. Skeptics, the Maharishl added, "find It
hard to belleVe life can be free from
suffering."
The guru’s public relations people ofTer
the media copies o f testimonials from
ministers, priests and rabbis who state that
practicing TM does not conflict with their
religious beliefs.
Among the Maharishl's more stunning
claims was that when hls 7.000 followers
start meditating together In Washington
they will eliminate famine In Africa and
hungar everywhere else.
Mark Havlland. 32. Harvard graduate,
looked hls Interviewer In the eye and stated
' emphatically that he levitates dally.
But what Is more Important than levitat­
ing. he said, ia that when people meditate In
a group ol 7.000, experiencing a state of
restful alertness, they can have a global
efTect.
"It's a simple mental technique." said
Havlland, who teaches TM and serves as a
"m edia coordinator" for the movement. " A
child can learn It."
Havlland acknowledged that fewer people
arc learning the meditation technique these
days, but he said at least 3 million people In
the world practice TM.
'T h e quality o f meditation Is better now

and the world Is better o ff." he said. "T h a t's
the bottom line."
Havlland. a volunteer who works full time
without salary but gets room and board at
the movement's Washington headquarters,
speaks reverently o f the Maharishl but
Insists TM Is not a religion, despite Its Hindu
roots In Vedic teachings.
"1 regard Maharishl with great deference,
love and respect." he said. "H e's a great
teacher. He's many other things — a
scientist, a brilliant speaker. Most of all. he
ts an educator o f consciousness."
Th e Maharishl. who holds a B.A. In
physics from India's Allahabad University,
said hls new university In Washington will
organize "prevention centers offering to the
general public a program for perfect health
and the prevention o f disease."
Although the m ovem ent's leaders claim
TM slows the aging process, they do not
d isclose their gu ru 's age. A sm iling,
diminutive man. he appears to be healthy
and tn hls 60s.
When he speaks, surrounded by floral
bouquets, he uses flowing hand gestures.
“ Seven thousand people practicing the
Maharishl Technology o f the Unified Field
together In the U.S.A. Is enough lo make
world consciousness absolutely coherent."
he said, and then handed hls departing
Interviewer a rose.
Later, over a vegetarian lunch. Havlland
tried to explain what the Maharishl had
meant.
It has to do. he said earnestly, with the
Lagranglan theory, which he said "only 100
people In the world understand" and which
"Is the complete matheme‘ teal expression of
the Unified Field, comprising all the laws of
nature responsible for all activity in the
universe."
Th e all-vegetable main course was de­
cidedly easier to Ingest than the theory
attributed to Joseph Louis Lagrange, a
French mathematician and astronomer who
died In 1813.
Also at the lunch was Mike Thompklns.
35. a Harvard graduate whose title In the
movement Is as grandiose os TM 's promises.
Thompklns is "Minister o f Information and
Inspiration for the World Government for
the A ge o f Enlightenment."
Thompklns said he had participated in
TM groups that traveled around the world to
ease tensions by meditation In such trouble
spots as El Salvador. Tanzania and Iran.
" In every case." he said, "violen ce
subslsded while we were there."
Thompklns described such missions as
"fire fighting." which he said would hot be
nearly as effective as setting up groups of
7.000 simultaneous meditators on each
continent.
K u rlelgh D. King, u trustee o f the
Maharishl's university In Iowa and a former
secretary-general of the Caribbean Econom­
ic Com m unity, counts him self a true
believer In "the technology." which Is what
devotees call TM.
"It makes life better wherever you are,"
said King, a native o f Barbados and one of
th e fe w b la c k s at th e m o v e m e n t 's
Washington headquarters.
*
Havlland took another stab at explaining
to the reporter how slmulatanrous medita­
tion can solve the world's problems.
" It 's like the ripple effect you get when
you throw a pebble In a pond." he patiently
explained.
"Consciousness Is the Unified Field and
the brain Is the broadcaster o f conscious­
ness," he elaborated. The reporter's own
brain fogged.

Evening Hersid, Seniord, FI.

Thursday. Feb. 7. 1HS-IA

Russians Said To Be M ixing
Flu Virus And Cobra Genes
RALEIGH. N.C. (UPI) - A
conservative political group is
soliciting money to make a
television m ovie accusing the
Soviet Union o f producing a
“ h o r r i f y i n g n ew s e c r e t
weapon" by m ixing (lu virus
and cobra snake genes.
A letter being circulated by
the National Congressional
Club's Coalition for Freedom
alleged the Russians were
using genetic engineering "to
c r e a t e s i l e n t , in v i s i b l e
killers!"

the plot In a television docu­
mentary featuring Helms that
w o u ld be c a lle d " G e r m
W arfare: T h e Com m unist
Secret Weapon."
"U sing 'genetic engineer­
in g.' Soviet scientists are
creating a new kind of '(lu*
virus or bacteria by mixing
the genes of poisonous snakes
— like the Central Aslan cobra
— with common (lu virus."
the letter said.
"T h e result — a new strain
o f flu that once inaide the
human body producea deadly
cobra venom, paralysis and
death."
The letter said the coalition
needs $55,000 to start pro­
duction of the expose and
another $ 100,000 to buy tele­
vision time.

The coalition, a branch o f
the political organization o f
Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C.. said
three Soviet labs are Involved
In the "devilish germ warfare
plot."
The group wants to expose

J E S S V . B A R B E R S , M .D .
I» pleated to announce the opening
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G E N E R A L P R A C T IC E
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�SPORTS
(A-Erasing Harald, iiirftrt, Ft.

Seminole
Tunes Up
For Clash
With Pats
By C hris M a la r
H erald Sports W riter
Every game becomes Impor­
tant as the girts prep basket bail
season winds down to the dis­
trict tournament. Three teams
are slugging It out for the Five
Star Conference title and the top
s e ed In th e 4 A -0 D is t r ic t
Tournament.
Lake Brantley's Lady Patriots,
ranked fifth In the 4A State Poll,
have remained on top o f the
conference the entire season but
only by one game over Seminole
and two over Lake Mary.
T h e L a d y P a tr io ts , 30-3
overall, stand at 13*1 In the Five
Star and 11*1 In district play.
Lake Brantley will try to break
the school record for victories In
a season (30) tonight when It
hosts A p o p k a 's La d y B lu e
Darters (varsity only, 6:13).
Lake Brantley, which will hoot
the district tournament (Feb.
20-33) Is coming o(T a close
victory oYrr-?!a(it«ttd tn which
three starters were playing with
the flu. The Lady Patriots hope
to be at 100 percent Friday In a
big confernce matchup with
Sanford's Lady Semlnoles at
Seminole High (Junior varsity
6:15. varsity 8).
Seminole. 18-3 overall, stands
at 11-2 In the Five Star and 0-2
In the district (discounting two
wins over Seabreexe). The Lady
Tribe (ravels to DeLand tonight
at 7 lo try to avenge one o f Its
conference losses. But that loss
came when the Bulldogs had
All-Am erica center Brldgette
Oordon who has since been lost
lo grades.
Klghl behind Brantley and
Seminole Is Lake Mary. The
Lady Rams. 14-7 overall, are
10-3 In the conference and 10-2
In district play. Lake Mary has a
non-confernece game tonight
ugalnat 2A power Euatls at
Rustle (Junior varsity 0:18,
varsity 8 ). T h e Lady Ram a
return to Five Star play Friday
as they host Seabreeze's Lady
Sand Crabs.
Of (he three top teams. Lake
Brantley has the toughest re­
maining schedule as II still has
tn (ace Seminole. Seabreeze and
Lake Mary. The Lady Rams
toughest remaining games are
against Seabreeze and Brantley.
After playing Brantley. Seminole
finishes o(T with some of the
weaker learns In the Five Star
Including Lake Howell, Mainland
and Apopka. So a victory Friday
would put the Lady Semlnoles In
the drivers' seat.
Sem inole, however, almost
took the back seat Tuesday but
escaped with a narrow 73-89
victory over Spruce Creek's
Lady Hawks at Spruce Creek.
The Lady Semlnoles had Just
six players In that game and
another showed up with three
minutes left In Ihe game. Scor­
ing. assists and steals leader
Mona Benton and center Bea
Smith missed the bus to the
game while reserve guard Revonds Wallace was out with the
Du.
S e m in o le 's s t a r t in g f i v e
Tuesday all scored In double
figures with Catherine "K itty "
Anderson's game-high 28 polnta
and 35 rebounds leading the
way. Temika Alexander tossed
in 13 points while Kim "B ig
W heel" Johnson. In her first
startin g role, pum ped In a
season-nigh 11 points. Andell
"S ou l" Smith and April Peterson
added 10 each.
Seminole built a 13*7 lead
after one quarter and took a
30-23 halftime lead. But Spruce
Creek came back within taro at
the end of the third quarter and
took a two-point lead early In the
fourth. Smith fouled out tn the
fourth quarter, leaving Seminole
with four forwards and one
guard. But Merthte moved An­
derson to guard and Seminole
came back to pull out the
victory. "K itty (A n d e rso n )
handled It w ell." Merthte said of
the move to guard. *
"W e were just trying to avoid a
forfeit." Merthte said. "For a
while 1 though are weren't going
to have enough players. We had
to play very cautious with only
six players and Spruce Creek
played very well. We Just had to
tough llo
I uL"
The county's boys return to
action Friday aa Semloots trav­
els to DeLand. Lake Mary, which
upendsd Wymore Tech Wednesdav, 65-65. boats No. 1
ranked Seabreeze, lym
.yman goes
to M a in la n d , L ak a H o w ell
jo u rn a y a to B p ru e a C reek.
Apopka plays at Laka Brantley
and Oviedo Ira

I.M I

Theriday, Fa*. 1, iff]

S a n t a F e J o lts
SCC T itle H o p e s

HlfiM M ill

By C hris F lstsr
H srsld Sports W riter
GAINESVILLE — Seminole Community Col­
lege's Mid-Florida Conference championship aspi­
rations took a Jolt Wednesday night.
Th e Raiders could never boost their lead over
one point and Santa Fe used a four-point play late
In ihe second half to take the lead for good en
route to a 62-57 victory at Santa Fe Community
College.
Th e Raiders now stand at 19-9 overall and 8-3
In the conference while Santa Fe Improved to
14-13 overall and 5-fl In the conference. Florida
Junior, which nipped St. Johns River. 60-59.
moved Into first place with s 9-2 record with three
gomes to play. Lake City also fell back another
game, losing. 65-61. to Central Florida. Lake City,
which hosts SCC Saturday is 7-4. Daytona Beach.
8-3. pulled Into a second place tie with the
Raiders by pounding Valencia. 85-61.
"W e got a one-point lead a couple of times but
we never had the lead and the ball.” SCC
assistant Dean Smith said. "W e could never take
control and It came down to Santa Fe making
their free throws In the end while we didn't.”
Santa Fe led by three. 25-22. at halftime and
maintained a three-point lead most of the second
half. The Raiders capitalized a couple of Santa Fe
turnovers to come back to take a one point lead

1

SCC assistant Terry Woods points out a mistake to coach Bill
Payne. The Raiders made a lot of mistakes wltti their
shooting Wednesday night en route to a crucial conference
loss to Santa Fe. The Raiders fell ono game behind Florida
Junior with just three to play.

Basketball
midway through the half.
The big turnaround In the second half came
with SCC holding a one-point lead and Santa Fe
shooting one and one at the free throw line. Tony
Lusts made the front end to tie the score but
missed the second. But John Yonge came up with
a big rebound for Santa Fe. made the followup,
and was fouled. Yonge converted the free throw
ss Sants Fe went from a one-point deficit to a
three-point lead.
SCC missed a chance to pull within one with
three minutes left when Llnny Grace missed a
pair o f free throws.
Grace was high for the Raiders with 16 points
and the only other player In double figures was
Robb Brantley with 12. Greg "S lim " Johnson
added eight points and ripped down a game-high
18 rebounds.
tCC (171 - l« o &lt; rS 74 •« 4. Iw to ll 1 1» « 4. Mufltot IS 1-1 *.
Oraca S M S ] 14. SranlMy ] If 14 I t A. Jtfmaan 1414 4. Bryant U
S 1 1 Balee 17 SS 4 .0 . Jehnw &gt; I I 14 1. Baird S 1SS fc Unifier H
SSS Total!: 2J44 I S \ I 7 17 (41 « &gt; S7
SANTA SB 1*1) - Lutl* IS 11 7. HamMM SSSSS Bakar I I 44
M. Batflat 7-I4IS 14. Baylat 17 M II, Sudivan IJB S 4. Nall 11 M S
Yawn* 4414 N Totot: 144a (M « ) » » ( « % ) * ! .
Marnona - lanla Fa » . KC n Fawli - SCC II. Santa to 17.
FawMd awl - Yawnaa Tadmkai - nana A -JO

District: Tribe Tackles Lyman, Lady Rams Battle Brantley
The District 3 Girls Soccer Tourna­
ment resumes tonight with semifinal
action at Lyman High and Lake Brantley
High.
Lyman, the (op seed In Ihe tourney,
hosts Sanford's Lady Semlnoles at 7
while Brantley hosts Lake Mary's Lady
Rams, also at 7. The two winners
advance (o Saturday's finals.
Lyman. 18-0 on the season, advanced
Ihe semifinals with a 8 0 rout o f Lake
Howell on Tuesday. Junior standout
Sheila Mandy led the way with four
goals. Other players lo watch for (he
L a d y G r e y h o u n d s In clu d e Ju n ior
goalkeeper Lisa Chatman, Junior m id­
fielders Dawn Boyraen and Alyson

Soccer
Barnes, sophomore forward Kim Mitchell
and s o p h o m o r e d e fe n d e r K a r e n
Abernethy.
Seminole rode the three-goal perfor­
mance o f senior Beth Nelson to a 3-1
victory over Oviedo's Lady Lions Tues­
day. Other players lo watch for the Lady
Tribe Include senior forward Janet
lla u c k . a o p h m o r e fo r w a r d V ic k y
" S p u f f y " I 'a k o v l c . a o p h o m o r e
g oa lk eep er-forw a rd S h erri R u m ler,
Junior fullback Angela Freeman and
freshman fullback Cindy Benge.

Lake Brantley piled up an 11-0 victory
over Luther Tueaday to advance to
tonight's semifinal action. The Lady
Patriots, 15-2, are led by sophomore
goalkeeper Leall Hobek. Junior defender
Pam A n derson , freshm an defender
R cenle D eaver. sophom ore forward
Kristin Paine and freshman forward
Colleen Llevertx.
Lake Mary pulled out a 2-1 thriller over
Trinity Prep's Lady Saints to advance to
the semis. Kristen Jones and Jodi Gall
scored the goals for the Lady Rams.
Other players to watch for Lake Mary
are Junior goalkeeper Laura Hellegaard.
senior defenders Marianne DtTuccI, Jodi
Thom as and Debbie W innie, senior

Tuttle, McCullough Settle
For Each Other In Opener

No Contest: Lake M ary
Tramples Lyman, 47-14
Bv Bam Cook
H erald Sports Editor
The Lake Mar y - Lyman
w restling m atch Wednesday
night was billed as a battle
b e tw e e n tw o te a m s . M ore
appropriately, It was an en­
counter between one very good
team. Lake Mary, and several
very talented Individuals.
As expected Lake Mary did
very well team-wise, running
away with a 47-14 victory over
Lyman before 250 fans al Lake
Mary High School. But Ihe
Greyhounds received sparkling
performances from several Indi­
vid u a ls. p a r tic u la r ly D erek
Smith who la returning from a
serious Injury to his right knee.
So the Rams picked up their
12th dual meet win In 13 tries
and will focua their attention on
Lake Howell Friday before get­
ting down to serious business,
which Is winning their second
district tournament Feb. 18*16
at Lake Mary High School.
"Everything went Just about
as expected." said Lake Mary
coach Frank Schwartz. "Lym an
has a couple o f good Individuals
who we knew w e'd have a tough
time with and (Chad) Dubln was
one of them.
"D erek Sm ith looked good
against (David) Kingsbury. Even
though he's been out awhile,
he'a still awesome. We knew Pat
Bell would give us trouble, loo.”
Those three Greyhounds and
Victor Navarro, who surprised
Mark Lindquist at 149 pounds.

forward Fran Oordon. senior midfielder
A m y Fluet. sophomore forward Kelley
Broen and Junior m idfielder Marjkn
Stnnerock.
Lake Brantley has beaten Lake Mary
three times already this year and coach
Debbie Shave said her Lady Patriots
have Improved In each game. "W e know
Lake Mary very well, too w ell." said
Shave. "Th eir goalie (Hellegaard) does a
good Job o f stopping the ball on the
ground but If you can get It In the air.
you have a good chance to score."
Shave said Broen. who had four goals
In a game last week, concerns her.
"Broen has some speed." said Shave.
" W e 'll have one of our best girls on her."

Byl
H trald • porta Editor
Allen Tu ttle and Bob Mc­
Cullough couldn't find anyone
else to schedule, so they decided our belt before our tournament
to play each other. And that's next weekend."
Both schools have some of the
how the baseball oeaaon will
open for Lake Mary and Lyman top players In Central Florida.
tonight at 7 at Lyman High L y m a n r ig h t h a n d e r D erek
Ltvemola la w ill atari on the
School.
"W e're not treating It like a mound and throw 50-60 pitches.
regular gam e," said Tuttle. Lake
W h i l e t he R a m a and
Mary's second year coach who Greyhounds hit the diamond
broke In with a line 20-8 record tonight. Oviedo's Lions and Lake
last spring. "But It's a good Brantley's Patriots will square
chance to look at everybody."
off Friday at Oviedo High School.
L y m a n 's M cC ullough, the First pilch la 4 p.m.
dean o f county coaches, said he
Oviedo opened the season with
la approaching the game the an 8-6 loss to Satellite Tuesday.
tame way. " It 's kind o f an "W e had a lot o f chances to
exhibition." he said. "Bui It's a w in." said Mable. "B ut we made
good way to get a game under some mistakes at critical times."

Baseball

Wrestling
combined for Lym an's 14 points.
Dubln. Ihe conference champ at
109 pounds, used his ability lo
work on lop lo lake care of
Johnson again. Chad Dubln
must have C raig Johnson's
number. That's the second time
he beat him. 6 -0 ."
Bell, a quick 123-pounder who
nilaaed last season, look care of
Dale Relsenhuber. 14-2. He look
a 4-1 lead In the first period with
a pair of takedowns and waa
never headed.
Smith showed no effects of his
knee Injury but tired toward the
end o f his 9-3 victory over
Kingsbury. He was most Im­
pressive In (he second period
when he turned a 2-0 edge Into
an 8 0 bulge with an escape,
takedown and near fall.
Lake Mary settled most of Ihe
matches with monotonous pre­
cision but the crowd finally
warmed up when ihe heavier
welfthta came around. Lake
M a r y 's W a lte r W h it e and
Lyman's P.J. Madraza. a pair ol
a g g re s s iv e fo o tb a ll p layers,
squared up with several head
slaps to open their 189-pound
bout.
"H e (Madraza) waa a brawler."
said While. "T h a t's what he
wanted to do. I lost my head,
too. for a Utile while but I got It
back."
White built a 3 0 lead before

Chad Dubln, Lym an's confaranca champion, had Craig
J o h n so n 's n u m b ar a g a in
Wadnasday, posting a 6 0
victory ovar tha Laka M ary
109-poundtr.
Madraza scored a takedown to
d ose the gap. White, however,
dominated the second period
and finally pinned hla foe at 3:56
with an arm bar.
A n o t h e r p a ir o f g r id ir o n
players. Lake Mary’s Billy "Bang
B ang" Caughcll and Lym an's
Pal Perkins, hit the mat next.
The two 223-pounders slugged It
out In linebacker-center fashion
aa Caughcll finished a tired 8-4
winner. A quick 7-2 atari In the
first period made the difference.
in - I . Corbto ILM) a. No. I S i m m M, 1U - I. CafSM
(UN I a- B«aw. I S ; in - B*4I &lt;U S
SiMatouSir, u i, in - BrsBsrs ILM ) a
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H ) M l — B lU rtim p ILM) «to to SHm M,
141 - Ntoorrs (L I i U to feM . 41, W Bom (LM ) * M a s *, i n , in - 0 torn*
(L) a Klfettory. &gt; L W - WHS ILM ) ».
t o m . &gt; m. nt - Cofetwa ILM ) a
to rt Mm . S4. um - JactMfl ILM ) ton By

Dvtoi ID a M m

Jackson Sparks Rams
Chris Jackson Is starting to
come around, and It's Just tn
time, according to Lake Mary
basketball coach WUlle Rich­
ardson. Jackson, the Rams’
6-3 forward, came off the
bench to toaa In 12 points and
collect 10 rebounds as Lake
Mary walloped Wymore Tech.
6 5 -6 5 . a t W y m o re T e c h
Wednesday night.
"Th at was definitely Chris'
best gam e o f the year."
Richardson. "H e played really
good defense and rebounded a
lot better.
b
He started to take

strong shots Inside Instead of
that fadeaway J (Jumper).
"H e's concentrating more
on doing the things we need
him to do. which are defense
and rebounding."
Lake Mary. 11-9 overall,
used nine polnta by senior
Darryl Merthie and six points
by senior Donald Grayson to
take a 18-13 first-quarter
edge. Jackson took over tn the
second aa hla eight points,
and six more by Andre Oray.
pushed the bulge lo 46-30 at
halftime.

ln|vryaW4wM

Abernethy: 50-Catch Fish Limit Is 25 Too Many
Dell Abernethy has never been against
catching fish. As the owner of the Osteen
Bridge Fish Camp, he encourages It.
Because, what's a fish camp without
catchable fish?
For the past week, however, some­
thing has been bothering Abernethy. He
has seen too many people coming In
with their limit o f 50. And some do It tn
record time.
"There's been too many limit catches
the past three days," said Abernethy.
"Fifty fish la Just loo many. They should
cut U back to 25. That's enough, then
the fish have a chance to spawn.
"Maybe 50 years ago. there weren't
enough ftahermcn to hurl the supply,
but there are now. I think It's time lo do
something about It."
Dell did aay that the reason the anglers
have been ao successful la that the fish
are feasting. "The Specks arc biting like
crazy." ha said. 'T hey're catching Bass
on wild river shiners. The Shad fishing

Sam
Cook

has also been very good."
Abernethy aald one o f hla regulars.
Wilbert Williams, la making a comeback.
"H e thought he had to work for a living
for awhile." aald DeU. "H e waa too busy
making money and not fishing."
WUbert showed he hadn't loot hla
touch, though. One day last week, he
came In with 20-30 fish Including 20
Specks, a Striped Baas and some Blue

GUIs.
Dell waa particular? impressed by the
Striped Baas. "W e 'v e had some real rip
snorters o f Stripers," he aald. " I f you
don't have soma strong line, they'll buet
It ri^htoff.
methy aald the best place to find

the Specks la at the 7- Marker of the old
river and near the Ullipade In one to
three feet of water. "They're moving fast
up lo the beds lo spawn." DeU added.
Do you ever yearn to return to the
"good old days?" Well, for the next 11
days, archers and muzxkloadlng gun
hunters can play Daniel Boone In the
Northwest region of the Mate as the
primitive weapon# season opened Sun­
day and will run through Feb. 17.
For two weeks, hunters will take to the
woods tn the Florida Panhandle In
pursuit o f deer and wiid hogs armed only
with the sreapona of our forefathers.
Legal game also Includes rabbits,
equine! and quail. These three
may also be taken by modem 1
In the areae of tha state where
season la Mill open.
ng with primitive
not have modem

K

A muazlrinadtng gun la

firearm using black powder or pyrodex
and Bred by wheel lock, flintlock or
percussion cap Ignition and which la not
adaptable to the use o f any selfcontained cartridge ammunition.
Archers are remtnoed that croaaDowa
are not considered archery equipment
and arrows with explosive components
and drug-injecting devices are not
allowed at any Ume.
Primitive weapons hunters must have
either an archery or m uuleloadlng gun
P*null In addition to a hunting Ih t p t
during this season.
The following wildlife management
areas will be open for primitive weapons
hunting this winter: Apalachicola.
(Backwater. Edward Ball. La Ploreata
P c rd id a . M o o re's P a stu re “ -----Washington. Robert Brent and 8
Consult individual wildlife -

aa a

l
i ammt*3m

!

- r •&gt;*a* »-to to. to

�Evnlng Hjrtlj, Szntord, FI.

Thurtday, F*b. 7, m J - 7A

Generals: Time Was Ripe To Trade Sipe
JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - Now both
Doug Flutie and Brian Slpe can start
alongside Helsman Trophy winning
running backs in the USFL.
The New Jersey Generals made
Coach Walt Michaels' toughest de­
cision for him Wednesday by trading
12-year veteran quarterback Brian
Slpe to the Jacksonville Bulls. The
move paved the way for Doug Flutie.
the 1984 Helsman Trophy winner
from Boston College, to start as the
Generals' quarterback.
Slpe was traded for a high-round
1986 draft choice and future consid­
erations Just hours after Flutlc com ­

pleted his first workout with New
Jersey at the clubs Orlando training
camp.
"There was going to be an awkward
situation In New Jersey." Slpe said.
"T h is is one solution. I prepared
myself all the way up until about three
hours ago to be battling Doug Flutie. I
would not call this a relief. I would call
this a great opportunity."
The Bulls last week signed 1983
Helsman Trophy winner Mike Rozler,
the former Nebraska running back
who became a free agent when the
Pittsburgh Maulers folded. The Gener­
als' top running back Is 1982 Helsman

Pro Football
winner Herschel Walker, who signed
as an underclassman out o f the
University o f Georgia In 1983.
With Flutie earning more than SI
million a year and Sipe. 35. making an
estimated $700,000, Michaels was
faced with the prospect o f having to
bench one o f his star quarterbacks.
New Jersey owner Tonald Trump
formally signed Flutie Tuesday in a
fan fare ce re m o n y In N ew Y ork ,
culminating weeks of negotiations. In

unloading Slpe. the multi-millionaire
real estate developer made clear It was
essential for Ftutle to start and thus
Increase ticket sales and television
ratings.
Slpe said he Is looking forward to
playing for Bulls Coach Llndy Infante,
who has a reputation as a passing
coach.
"I'm the type of quarterback who
likes to throw the ball,” Slpe said. "For
professional reasons. I'm very happy
to be down here with Llndy and hls
type of football."
Si pc's best pro season came In 1980
when he led the NFL In passing while

throwing for 4.132 yards and 30
touchdowns. He was named AFC
Player of the Year that season.
.Jacksonville genera] manager Larry •'
Csonka said he has been trying to .
acquire Slpe for at least eight months.
"A s soon as they found out that we
got Boston College as a territorial
school (in the USFL draft), the Bulls contacted us." New Jersey President &lt;
Jason Seltzer said.
Slpe joins a crowded quarterback 1
scene In Jacksonville. The Bulla now
have five passers. Including former
Duke quarterback Den Bennett.

Lady Raiders
Seek Playoff
Berth Tonight

conference and we could finish as high as fourth If we win
or as low as seventh If we lose." Lake Mary coach Larry
McCorkle said.
The Rams rout of Father Lopez Wednesday came as a
surprise to McCorkle. Lopez had upset Daytona Beach
Seabreeze, a team that beat Lake Mary and tied top-ranked
(4A) Lake Howell, earlier In the year.
Lake Mary took 55 shots on goal Wednesday compared
to 14 for Father Lopez. Along with the goal scorers. Holmes
and Louis Rosen added two assists each.

Brick Kicks Lions To Ea»y Win
OVIEDO — Greg Brick kicked In two goals as the Oviedo
Lions routed Leesburg. 8*1. at Oviedo High School.
Oviedo finished the regular reason with a 6 4 record. The
Lions will open the district tournament Tuesday.
Along with Brick, Mike AmRheln. Mike Chester. Jeremy
Mason. Steve Nelson. Tim DeZego and Jon Breedlove
scored for the Lions.
Oviedo bolted to a 7-0 first-half lead and never looked
back. "T h a t's about the best game that we played." said
Oviedo coach Chris Hall. "But we have to rsahgg Leesburg
Isa one-year team."
Hall said he Is hoping to get seeded in the district
tournament. "Bishop Moore wifi be on top and Montvcrdc
will be second." said Hall. "But If we play Uke we played
against Montvcrdc last Thursday (54) win). I believe we can
do w ell."
Gordon King. Oviedo's sophomore keeper, had an easy
day with three saves.
In one other game Wednesday, Lyman Improved to
12-8-2 with a 4-0 victory over DeLand. Keith Young kicked
two goals for the Greyhounds while Pat Howard and Brian
Ocaaek had one each.

S em in o le C om m unity Col*
legc's Lady Raiders can clinch a
berth In the state tournament
with a victory tonight over Santa
Fe Com m unity College. The
Lady Raiders host the big MidFlorida Conference showdown
tonight at 7 at the SCC Health
Center. Admission Is free.
SCC Improved to 13-8 overall
and 3-2 In the conference with a
76*43 rout of Florida Junior
College Tuesday. A victory to­
night would tie the Lady Raiders
for first place in the conference
with Santa Fe and force a playoff
for the confemce title.
Th e top two teams In the
confemece go to stale which
SCC Is hosting Feb. 28 through
March 2. If the Lady Raiders lose
tonight they will probably have
to play FJC again to determine
the second team from the con­
ference to get a state bid.
" It 's a big one." SCC coach
tleana Gallagher said o f tonight's
game. " It would be nice tf we
had a big crowd. Everybody who
comes should bring about three
or more friends."
T h e Lady Raiders crushed
Florida Junior Tuesday night as
Tam m y Johnson popped In 20
points and Juana Coiettl added
17 points and nine rebounds.
Freshman Kim Lemon tossed In
16 points while Pam Lee chipped
In eight with 10 assists.

Merthie's
Lift JV Rams
EATONVILLE - Oscar "B ig
O " M e r t h le m a t c h e d h la
season-high of 29 points Wed­
nesday and he also pulled down
11 rebounds to lead Lake Mary's
Junior varsity to a 87*54 victory
over Wymore Tech's Bobcats
Wednesday night at Wymore
Tech.
The JV Rams improved to
14-2 with the win. Lake Mary.
13-1 in the Five Star Conference,
hosts Daytona Beach Seabreeze
Friday. "W e're In the drivers'
seat If we keep playing tough."
Lake Mary coach Charles Steele
said.
Before Merthle for the Rams.
Terry "T h e C at" Miller added 10
points and four assists and
Jim m y Stewart tossed In eight
points and grabbed 10 rebounds.
Five players scored In double
figures for the JV Bobcats led by
Dale Marcus and Sean Tim m s
with 12 each while Larry Mack.
W illie Spurllngs and Dorian
Leach contributed 10 apiece.
Lake Mary's varsity
W ym ore Tech. 85-85.

Pam Lee. SCC's quick guard, moves down the baseline

SCOREBOARD
WUIIm m CW.1
W M U S w I lt *
Sw Tvt a
«»»■

NHL

Parson's 39, FTg D o rall Gators
GAINESVILLE (UPI) - Carey Holland burled eight or 10
crucial free throws and Chuck Person scored 39 points to
lead Auburn to an 81-78 overtim e SEC win against the
Florida Gators Wednesday.
Holland's free throws accounted for eight of Auburn's 10
overtime polnla.
Florida. 15-5 and 7-4 In the SEC. lied for the Icaguue lead
as Mississippi fell to Louisiana State, setting up a three-way
split o f the top spot.
The win puls Auburn, 13-7 and 5-6 In the conference.
Into the eight-team race two games out o f first.
"T h is hurt us a lot. not only because o f the conference
Implications but because were in a position to w in ." said
Florida Coach Norm Sloan, who watched the Gators blow a
15-point lead In the second half and then let another
opportunity slip away In the final seconds o f regulation

Christy
Davis
H erald BMX
W riter

Moten led Florida with 24 points and five assists. Eugene
McDowell had 16 points and 12 rebounds, followed by
Darryl Gresham with 11 points and Maxwell with 10.

Christy Davis* Bicycle Motocroti col­
umn has movsd to Friday in ths
Evsnlng Harald. Ssa tomorrow's
Herald for a look at tha "Common
Mistakes" of some BMX riders and
how to correct them.

Pottlt, Groono Lasso Kowboys
KISSIMMEE — John Pettit poured In a game-high 24
points and Allen Oreene tunneled in 22 Wednesday night
as Oviedo's freshman closed out their most successful
season ever with a 00-83 victory over Osceola Klaalmmee'a
Kowboys.
The ireshman Lions ended the season with a 19-5 record
and 8-0 In Orange Belt Conference play. It eras the first
time an Oviedo freshman team ever went unbeaten In the
conference.
Oviedo raced to a 19-12 lead after the first quarter and
took a 41*22 lead by halftime. Behind Pettit and Oreene.
Chris Fbre popped in 14 potato. Fete Ltngard added 12 and
J.D. O'Neil contributed eight for coach Bcrnle Barbour's
Lions.
Barbour said that all four of hla freshmen starters will be
moving up to either varsity or Junior varsity for the last taro

TAM PA (UPI) The Tam pa Bay Bandits traded
quarterback Wayne Peace to the Portland Breakers
Wednesday for two future USFL first round draft picks.
Peace w as a territorial draft selection by the Bandits last
^
- * • University of
He started two games during bla rookie year, completing
18 of 43 passes for 218 yards and one touchdown.

Fans Help Nasty Hogs
Slither Past SAIL/, 69 66
U nited Freee InternaU ennl
Hog Country has never been
kind to visitors.
And tf No. 4 Southern Method1st needed any such reminders,
W ednesday night’s gam e in
Fayetteville. Ark. was more than
sufficient.
The Hogs of Arkansas, coming
off a blowout by Georg etown
over the weekend, got downright
nasty this time with a 69-66
victory over the Mustangs In a
Southwest Conference game.
Barnhill Arena traditionally is
one of the least hospitable places
to play on the road. No exception
was made Wednesday nlghL
"Believe me. all of our great
tana helped win this basketball
gam e." Arkansas Coach Eddie
SutUan said. "They ought to get
a letter sweater or something at
the end of the season."
Said SMU Coach Dave BUso
“ Arkansas Is. of course, a great
team at home."
Tw o free throws each by

H t l fc lt t h lll
s z w n n u su n z i
move within a game of the
Mustangs In the league race.
Elsewhere. No. 2 Georgetown
crushed Florida Southern 79-31:
No. 5 Duke loot to No. 7 Georgia
Tech 81-71: No. 9 Oklahoma
beat Nebraska 83-74: No. 13
Iowa defeated Minnesota TOSS:
No. 14 Kansas took Oklahoma
State 84-72: No. 17 Tulsa was
upset by Ulnots State 73-72 In
overtime: and No. 19 Maryland
edged Woke Forcet 64-02.
At Washington. Georgetown
limited Florida Southern o f
Division 11 to 14 points In the
first half In a breather bom Its
Stg E ast sch ed u le. R eggie
Williams and Ferry McDonald
bad 12 points each for tha
Hoyas.20-2.
At Atlanta. Mark Prtca'a 22
(glad Georgia Tech ta the
Atlantic C o a t Conference jam s.

topped

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PEOPLE
Evening HcrsM, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Fab. 7, 1H J - 1B

Concealment Law Trips Up Youth
DEAR A B B Y : I'm a 17-year
old senior In a Christian high
school and m y problem Is this:
Recently I was stopped In a
department store for shoplifting,
but I did n 't steal anything.
Here's the whole story. OK?
I went Into that store to buy
some cassette tapes when I saw
a rack of sunglasses. I tried some

L A D IE S , A

on. found a pair I liked, and for
some stupid reason I stuck It In
m y pocket. (Oh. maybe I should
mention that I had been caught
stealing In that store before, but
was let off.)
W ell. I found the tapes I
wanted, and while paying for
them. I kept thinking about all
the trouble I got Into wtth my

F R E E G IF T F O R

YO U !

A T L A S T ...

Coffee w ithout
B ollingI

AUTOMATIC DRIP

How would you llk t to rscalvo a
booutlful its in lm tfsel automatic
cotfoamaksr (valued at ttOf.fS)
and dinner lor yourself and four
other couples — Alt Absolutely
Free? No (Ingles to write, or puz­
zle to work. First 10 coupons will
qualify.

TOWMCRAFT
22 Saatlags M.
DtSary, FL 32713

ADDRESS

PHO NE

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.Z IP .

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All Styles Feature
leather Soles A
Fine Calfskin Uppers.

W o m a n 's E n ric h m e n t
Clinic, form erly W om an's
Worry Clinic, will celebrate
Its 12th anniversary. Friday.
April 12. with a program
featuring one of America's
best-known personalities. Dr.
J o y ce B roth ers who w ill
speak on "Unlocking Your
Hidden Powers."
This year's clinic will offer
nine sessions, beginning with

D EAR ABBY; Please set me
straight. If my credit cards are
stolen or lost. Is It true that once
I report the loss or theft. I am not
responsible for the charges on
my card?
I was also told that under
federal law. regardless o f how
much the thief charges on m y
credit card. I cannot be held
responsible for more than $50
per card.
Did I hear right or not?
M AC IN THE BIO A P PLE

llneral

'

■
‘

Florida authors are Invited to
submit entries and compete for
cash awards In Wordart ‘85. the
third annual poetry competition
at Aria on the Park, the Lake­
land Center for Creative Arts.
Each author may submit a
handling fee of $5 covering up to
10 works. Manucripts should be
typewritten with name, address
and telephone number of the
author appearing on each page
and must be received at Aria on
the Park. 209 E. Main St.,
Lakeland 33801 on or before 4

KNKHTS SHOE STORE
m s
uw IMi t u
mill
Fn If

p.m. Feb. 24.
This year's winning poems
will be forwarded to the National
Poetry Competition In California.
Judge's selections will Include a
first prize winner with three
merit awards and discretionary
honorable mentions.
Award will be announced and
winners are Invited to read at a
reception at Arts on the Park,
March 8 at 7-9 p.m. For further
details contact Arts on the Park.
813-683-0022. Tuesday-Friday.
10a.m. to4p.m .

-■

-

V*
'TynnHPinPM
• H| • «

.AS)

I I A . t *,

I

• , I ■ll t-fi (

*M M tr&lt; I/' a

r

e

e

Mew Spring
m— « . »
Fashions
From

J 1 H M L l i t It .
a »

i «

3 2 2 -3 5 2 4
HOURS:
MON. SAT.
fS:X

W o rd art P o e try C o n te st

MAUI

Dr. Brothers' talk at 9 a.m. at
Orlando's Expo Centre.
The $10 cost Includes reg­
istration. keynote speaker,
three topics, refreshments
and lunch. Deadline for the
limited reservations Is April
5. Mall check to University of
Central Florida. P.O. Box
25000. Orlando. 32810. or
phone 275-2824. UCF. for
Information.

Tlrtd Of All THo m Hidden
Chsrgss Whan You Oo To Tha
Beauty Salon? Not At Head-

DEAR ABBYi What do you do
D EAR ABBYi The bom-ugnln
when
the grandparents forget
Moravian Baptist lady (signed
"Curious In Dayton") asks whut their grandson's birthday?
W AB ASH . IND.
" lo w ch u rch " m eans to an
Episcopalian. Let me assure her
D E A R W A B A B H t G e n tly
that Is has nothing to do with "rem in d" them of the oversight.
(Better late thun never.) And
how tall the building Is.
A ctually the difference be­ next year remind them about
tween high, .church and low two weeks In advance of the
Church Is tfte degree o f pomp date.

SAVE

ON ALL STYLES BY
AMALFI IN STOCK

family when I was caught shop­
lifting. and I thought to myself.
“ I don't want to go through that
again.** so I headed for the
sunglasses rack to put the sun­
glasses back when I was stopped
by a security guard. He asked If I
was going to pay for the sun­
glasses I had In my pocket. I told
him no. I was putting them
back.
Well, he took me Into his ofTlce
and asked me a lot of questions,
then he told me they had me on
"concealment.** I asked why I
was in trouble when I hadn't left
the store wtth anything I didn't
pay for. and he said that under
Maine law, concealment was the
same i s stealing.
Now I'm In big trouble with
m y family and m y a* hool ad­
ministrator, too. I don't think
this Is fair. I didn't steal any­
thing.
How do you feel about this
law, ^bby? I think a person
should have to leave the store In
order to be caught for stealing.
INNOCENT IN M AINE

D EAR MAC! You heard right.
But In order to protect yourself
against credit card fraud, you
should have a neat little booklet.
"W ho's Got Your Number?'*
It's put out by the Consumer
A ffa ir s O ffic e o f A m e rica n
Express Co. and the Federal
D E A R IN N O C B N T i How 1 Trade Commission. It explains
" fe e l" about a law makes no how to guard against credit card
difference. And regardless of fraud. It also explains ihe legal
whether or not the law Is ''fair.'* r ig h ts and p r o c e d u r e s fo r
you broke It. And maybe I victims o f fraud.
should mention that because
This valuable little booklet can
you had been caught stealing In l&gt;c obtained for free by writing
that store but were let olT. you to: Consumer Affairs Office, 19th
may have a tough time trying to F loor. D ept. DA. A m erica n
prove that you had no Intentions Express Co.. 125 Broad St.. New
o f stealing the sunglasses. How­ York. N.Y. 10004. Please enclose
ever. If ’ ’concealment" la the a s ta m p e d , s e lf- a d d r e s s e d
same as stealing In Maine, you envelope with your request.
are In a lot of trouble, my friend.

M A IL TO:

NA M E __
C IT Y ____

Dear
A bby

and ceremony In the ritual. The
more formal the service, the
" h i g h e r " the church. High
churches use holy water, prayer
bells and a lot of fancy trappings.
Low churches are more laid
back, and their rituals are as
plain and unpretentious as any
llaptlst service.
However, please tell the Bap­
tist lady that If her country club
friends regard "lo w church" as
inferior to high church, and
Baptists as "w orse." she should
look elsewhere for lunch, and
friends.
NO T A F F IL IA T E D IN D A YTO N

Dr. Joyce Brothers To
Open Woman's Clinic

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THERE'S A LITTLE
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L M 0 H ( (on E L « )

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Is It Memory Loss Or
Lack Of Concentration?
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a
64-year-old female. I feel fine and
am In good health, retired and
loving It. However I have a
problem remembering thlnga. I
go Into the other room for
something and when I get there.
I have forgotten what I went for.
I think of something while doing
the dishes, and by the lime I dry
m y hands I have forgotten what
It was.
A m I losin g m y m ind? I
understand that there Is a
vitamin that helps to Improve
memory. Which one la It? I am
extremely concerned about this
and feel that If I don 't do
something. It will only get worse.
DEAR READER - With the
current concern about the effects
o f age on the mind, one would
think children never forgot their
books, left a coat behind or
forgot anything. I'm afraid that
Is not the case. Youth la not a
guarantee o f having a good
memory, and getting older Is not
necessarily associated with a
decrease In memory.
What do the child and the
older person have In common?
Most often, they both tack con­
c e n tr a tio n . A c h ild h a s n 't
learned to concentrate yet and Is
easily distracted, while you may
be "w o o lg a th erin g '' partially
because you are retired and
don't have the same degree of
responsibility you once had. You
may Improve markedly not by
taking vitamins, but by training
your memory and Improving
your concentration.
People usually do not have
significant changes In brain
function until their late 70s or
60s. Then they usually retain
verbal memory, and many o f
them have memory functions
that are as good as those o f
young people who were tested
the same way.
Acetylcholine la Important In
brain chemistry regarding Im­
pulses that are related to memo­
ry. However, one can’t count on
getting It Into the brain by
taking lecithin, choline, vitamins
or minerals. This Is why recent
studies have used a pump to
gradually Infuse acetylcholine
directly Into the brain In the
hope o f alleviating Alzheimer's
disease.
Yes. aging does cause changes
In the brain, but most o f the
people who have significant
changes also have some medical

disorder — and I don't mean
Alzheim er's, which has been
over-emphasized. I have dis­
cussed some aspects o f changes
In the brain with aging In The
Health Letter 14-2. The Aging The studies also suggest that the
things one does to prevent heart
Mind.
attacks and strokes — such as
Recent studies show that m e­ eating a proper diet, controlling
tabolism Is decreased with mild weight and blood pressure, and
amounts o f atherosclerosis (fat­ not smoking — also may be very
ty-cholesterol deposits In the useful In preventing changes In
arteries) or very mild high blood the brain with Increasing age.
pressure (which Is detected by a
Send your questions to Ur.
PET scan). All of this suggests
that brain stowing and dysfunc­ Lamb. P.O. Box 1531, Radio City
Station. New York. N.Y.. 10019.
tion can be related to disease.
ACROSS
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49 Shoe parts
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By J u n ta Jacoby
The Jump to three spadra by
North was not 100 percent
forcing, but ll was strongly
Invitational. The South hand,
although minimum in hlgh-card
strength, was strong dlatrlbutlonally. Knowing that North had
four-card trump support and
about 10 hlgh-card points made
It easy to go to game. But
making the game was a little
tricky.
The opening lead of the club
Jack was covered by dummy's
queen and the king from defend­
er East. South won the ace and
noted that he seemed to have a
club loser as well as the three
lop spade honors to give up. The
key to making the game was to

compress the defenders' trump
suit so that three potential tricks
would become two actual ones.
A diamond to the queen and a
diamond back to his ace allowed
declarer to play the third high
diamond. West could see that
dummy’s club loser was about to
disappear, so he ruffed with the
spade three. This was overruled
by dum m y's six. Now a low
heart was led and trumped, and
still another diamond played.
W e s t d i s c a r d e d on t h i s ,
dummy's small club was stuffed,
and East ruffed with the spade
five. Later, when trumps were
first led. the queen and ace fell
together. The defenders made
two trump tricks, plus the earlier
spade five, but that was all.

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HOROSCOPE
teamwork. The wrong allies
could cause complications.
TAURUft (April 20-May 20)
Neglected, distasteful chores
that you’ve shoved aside are
about to catch up with you.
TO U R B IK TH D AY
Begin today to rid yourself of
FEBR U AR Y 9. I M S
This coming year you will put th e s e t a s k s or th ey m ay
a lot more energy and imagina­ overwhelm you.
OEM Dfl (May 21-June 20) Do
tion into satisfying your personal
not
let yourself get Involved
ambition. These extra effortb will
be the Ingredients that will bring today with groups or cliques
Including In divid uals with
you success.
whom you feel uncomfortable.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-reb. 1B)
Stick close to true pals.
Everyone Is entitled to his opi­
CANCER Pune 2y 22) It will
nion. Keep this In mind today
prove wise today not to let
and don't overreact when friends
outsiders become too Involved In
express viewpoints contrary to
your family's personal affairs.
yours.
Confine your discussions to
m e n
(Feb. 20-March 20) members of your household.
Move cautiously today In your
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today
business d ealin gs. M istakes
you may feel templed to level a
made at this time could have
few choice unsaid comments at a
lingering negative effects.
certain Individual who bugs you.
A im
(March 21-Aprtl IB) However. It's best to leave them
Make It a point today not to unspoken.
T M O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be
associate with anyone who
doesn't understand the values of extremely cautious and prudent

What Tha Day
Will Bring...

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today (h your financial affairs.
Don't let anyone talk you Into
buying something you can't
afford at this time.
L IR R A (Sept 23-Oct. 23)
S o m e o n e y o u a re c lo s e ly
associated with Is not satisfied
with the way the relationship la
going. Do all that you can today
to establish harmony.
•C O R PIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Others may make your day more
difficult for you than necessary.
You might have to take steps to
* cover up their Ineptness.
EAQ ITTAR IUE (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Be extremely tactful and
tender today when dealing with
a touchy friend. Think before
speaking so you do not wound
his sensitivities.
C A PR IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
IB) Your peers will have unfa­
vorable things to say about you
today If you try to take too much
credit for som ething others
p l a y e d a b i g r o l e tn a c ­
complishing.

by Laonard Starr

ANNIE
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5.35
12 LEAVEITTOSEAVEN

N*:W Y O R K (UP1) - ABC
finished In first place In the
prtme time network ratings race
for the second week In a row —
this tim e without the Super
Bowl.
It was only (he second time In
the 1984-85 season that ABC,
struggling to get out of third
plsce, tvaa won the week. And It
was close. CBS and NBC tied for
second place — or for last place,
depending on how you look st It.
The A.C. Nielsen Co. prime
time ratings for the week ending
Feb. 3 gave ABC a 17.9 rating
and a 26 percent share of the
audience. CBS and NBC each
had a 17.3 rating with a 26
share. A week ago ABC led.
primarily on the strength of the
Super Bowl.
Bill C osb y had the mostwatched program, beating out
Alexis Carrington on No. 2 show
’ 'Dynasty” and J.R. Ewing on
third place "Dallas.”
For CBS, not only was It
bumped from the lead for last
week, but Ha "Robert Kennedy
and H it Times'* was a disap­
pointment. The first part of the
mlnlserlea was Included In the
previous w eek’ s ratings and
ranked 17th. Parts 2 and 3 aired
last week and ranked 43rd and
32nd. respectively.
"B erren ger'a" on NBC had
another dismal week. It scored
64lh on a Nielsen list of 64
shows, repealing Its cellar posi­
tion of (he previous week.
On the season to date. CBS
leads with a 17.2 rating and a 27
share, while NBC has a 16.2
rating and a 26 share and ABC a
15.6 rating and a 25 share.
CBS Evening News with Dan
Rather" was still the No. 1
evening news show, with a 15.2
rating and 24 share. "N B C
Nightly N ew s" came In'second
with a 12.7 rating and a 20
share, and ABC'a "World News
Tonight" had a 12.4 rating and a
20 share.
The top prime time shows for
the week ending Feb. 3, accord­
ing to (he A.C. Nielsen Co., were:
1. The Cosby Show (NBC)
2. Dynasty (ABC)
3. Dallas (CBS)
4. Family Tlea (NBC)
5. American Music Awards
(ABC)
6.60 Minutes (CBS)
7. The A -Te«m (NBC)
B. Knots Landing (CBS)
9. Simon &amp; Simon (CBS)
10. Hotel (ABC)

ATLA N TA (UPI) - CBS execu­
tives. after lengthy meetings
with civic leaden, have agreed
to air disclaimers prior Io the
presentation o f a television
movie about the Atlanta child
murders.
Atlanta c iv ic leaders said
Tuesday the disclaimers will be
read at the beginning o f the
two-part movie. "T h e Atlanta
Child Murders," to be broadcast
Sunday and Tuesday and during
commercial Intermissions.
At the beginning o f each of the
tw o segments, the following
statement will be shown and
read — "T h e following pres­
entation la not a documentary,
but a drama baaed on certain
facia surrounding the murder
and disappearance o f children In
Atlanta between 1979 and 1961.
Some o f the events and charac­
ters a n fictionalised for dramat­
ic purposes. Certain scenes may
be disturbing to young viewers.
Parental discretion la advised."
During commercial breaks, the
following statement will be read
and shown — " T h is drama
contains some scenes which
m ay be disturbing to young
viewers. Parental discretion is
advised.”
Mayor Andrew Young and four
other Atlanta city officials met
with CBS executives Monday at
the network's headquarters In
Manhattan to discuss Uw televi­
sion movie that questions the
Investigation into the murder of
22 black children.

5:35
O ANOYOMFYITH

6:30

B X ANYTHPMFONMONEY

ABC Leads
Ratings Again

in

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Satin Robes
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VaimodC Nylon
Cover Coals
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Nylon Sleepwear
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SatinJacquard
Sleep Shirts
orig.*29.
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legal Notice"

Legal Notice

n o n c e OF
PUSLIC NEARING
THE BOARD OF COUNTY
C O M M I I t lO N M t O F
SEMIMOLE COUNTY w l«1 hold
■ public hearta* In down W I JO
r t Iho I smlnata County M n rk n
Building.
Sorter d. F lo . on
FCBBUANY H . M U ot T OO
P M , or o t loon thereafter o$
p e r . lb I t . lo c o m ld o r o
S P E C IF IC L A N D U S B
AMENDMENT to Iho Seminole
County Comprohonolvo Flonond
R ! IO N I NO of Iho doocrlbod
property.
AN ORC
IOINANCE AMEND
IHO OR01 NANCE 7711 WHICH
AM ENDS THE D E T A IL E D
LANO USE ELEM ENT OF
THE SEM INO LE COUNTY
COMPREHENSIVE FLAN
FROM LOW DENSITY RESI
OENTIAL
TO INDUSTRIAL
FOR THE PURPOSE OF RE
ZOMIMO
FROM A I AGRICULTURE
TO C -J GENERAL COMMER
C IA L ANO W H O LE S A LE
DISTRICT,
Iho tallow ing described pro

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
A N O F O R S E M IN O L E
COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NO .Sem tCAO O G
STANWICK B.V . f/k /a SIC
(N E D E R L A N D ) B .V ., a
Netherlands Corps.
P la in tiff,

Tho W U ot Iho NE Vk e l the
S W It U oM lhoE l«J t« fl o llh o
N M l ond Iho E Vy ot Iho NW I I
d IN IW I t d Section » n s
TIE. Sonilnot* County, F lo rid *
ID IS T .F londM )
Furthor described o t X acre*
locotod on Iho touih M o ot
HIMvIew Or I vo, ot M olhowi
APPLICATION HAS BEEN
SUBMITTED BY BOB HATTAWAY INVESTMENTS lit )
Additional In lor motion may
bo obtained by contacting Iho
Land Monogomanl Manager Ot
H M D S . E ll. 441.
F orto n t w M o to attend the
hearing who w ith to common!
on Iho prepoaod action* may
submit w ritten ilotom ontt to tho
Land M onogom anl D lv itia n
oner to the ochodulod public
hearing. Fortont appearing of
Iho hearing* may submit w rit
Ion statement* or bo hoard
o ra lly.
F ortont ore odvttod that. II
they docldo Id appeal any do
cltlo n mode ot ttw tai meotk
Ihoy w ill need a record ot the
proceeding*, ond. fo r iu ch
purpose, they may need to
ensure that o vertw llm record ot
the proceed ing* It mod*, which
record Include* the testimony
and evidence upon which Iho
appeal I* lo be based
Board of
County Cemmltalenert
Sem inole County, Florida
B yt Sandro Glenn, Chairman
Attest:
A rthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish: February T, HOI
DEC-41
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S U L B
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
that by virtue at that certain
W rit of E locution Issued out at
and under Iho tool ot Iho County
C o u rt a t Somlnele County.
Florida, upon a final judgement
rendered tn the aforesaid court
an iho 14th day of A p ril, A O
l*B4 In that certain case on
title d . W ottlngheute E lectric
Supply Com pany, P la ln tllf,
- v e - W illiam Hatpin d /b /a
Am erican Lighting Company,
&gt;, which aforesaid W rit
of E locution was delivered to
mo o * S h e rlfl at Seminole
County, F lor Ido. and I have
tevtod upon iho IW hMtog do
scribed p ro p e rtyW illiam Hatpin, so
-----being
- ------locotod
--- ...In to rn ! no I*
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , m a r *
p a r tic u la r ly d o tc rlb a d as
HMIqws ■
On* 1(71 Chovrelet M ont*
Carlo, lig h t blue In cater ID f
iw u tK s m s e bomg *t*r*d at
Altamonte Towing Sorvlc* In
Altam onte Spring*. F lorid *
and Iho undersigned as Shorlft
et Somlnele County, F lo rid *,
w ill at It.SO A M . on the IHh
day ot February, A O IIU .
after for is b and soil lo the
high**l bidder, for cath. subject
te any ond a ll o ilstln g isms, ot
Iho
w Front
E rr- * (West)
------- “Door■ *1 “Iho
stops of tho SomlnoN County
Courthouse In tan lord. F lorid *.

T
That
IT sold
- l i l t Is being m ad*
to Satisfy the term * * | to ld W rit
a) Elocution
John B Folk, th o rltl
SomlnoNCeunty, F lorid *
To bo odvortltod January M . SI.
February f. is. with tho soN on
February If. IMS
O BBHS
FICTITIOUS NAME
N olle* I t hereby glean that I
am engaged in business *1 t i l *
C la lrm a n t A * * , S s n la rd .
SomlnoN County. FNrtdo H ill
under Iho ttctiiN u * name *4
FOUR SEAS IMPORTS, and
M ai I Inland N rog ltto r told
name w ith the Clark of iho
C ircuit Court. SomlnoN County.
Florida In accordance w ith tho
provisions Of Iho F N IIIN u *
Nam* Statutes. to *11: SoctNn
•S IM F lo rid * K a M e t IM7
/s / Karon A. RalllH
Publish January I I &amp; February
f, IA 1 I.1 IB I
DEBUS
FIC TITIO U IN AM B
N olle* N horoby gtvon that
Dovtd Jones ond Lind* M oth
o r* ongogod In b u ll nets t l t in
Spring Centro South, SulW A,
Altam onte Springs, Somlnele
County, F lo rid *, under the
ttctltN us nomo *1 DOROTHY
MORRIS ADM INISTRATIVE
SERVICE and that wo Intend M
ro g ltto r to ld nemo with the
CMrh ot lb * C ircu it Court.
SomlnoN County. F tarld* In
of lb * F N tlttou* Norn* Statute.
NwH : SoctNn SOI *4. F .l. I«S1.
/ * / Dovtd Jom *
/% /Linda M oth
FuMNh January 14 I I A Fobru
ary 7.14 IM A
0 1 B IN

BA R EN T VAN B U R E N .
C IT IC O R P P E R S O N TO
P E R S O N F IN A N C IA L
CENTER OF FLORIDA. IN C .
endMYEHSVAN BUREN.
NOTICE OF SUIT
TO: BARENTVANBUREN
MYERSVANBUREN
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that an action to
loreclete mortgage covering the
follow ing real and personal
property In Seminole County.
Florida, lo w it
Let 1001. Block A ', of the
p o r p o r ly d e s c rib e d a t
Jamestown village. U nit On*,
according M the plat thereof o t
recorded M Plot Boob JO. at
Fagot • and f, of Iho Public
Records of Seminole County.
r w KM, IQ fn n lf wITn | pVfpCI
n ilf MnwarliMJid
aaunlanl
W
nBnoHIVWn BwoBW
IBCn loo
.***
Ingres* and ogress ao dsscrlbod
In paragraph 1 and pursuant to
G rantors' reserved rig h t a*
provided tor In paragraph 4 of
that certain quitclaim deed re
cordtd In O fficial Placards Boob
IMS. at Fag* P la t Iho P vbfk
Records of lo m lnot* County,
H
UUT.IJ
. a_-_j_.. O
a_t__
rB
M . - eu
I Vm
T
*ub|ecl to lanlng requirements
ond oosemont* in osNtonco a* of
iho dot* hereof: Slot* of facts a*
Alfc
ubOiSti P
nnI HFI re f O
iAT
ihR
llld
wE * ■—
IB
fWPII
Pl^U
•ember It . i n , prepared by
Janet, Wood A Gentry, Inc., a t
rosurvoyed and recertified on
M arch t l. Iff* ond Iho term s
and cw vlltlen* of the Daclora
flan of Easements, commnonts
and ro o lrlctla n t recorded In
O tnclai Record*booh IMS, Page
1177. of tho Public Records of
SomlnoN County. F lorid *
hat boon filed against you and
you o r* required to servo a copy
of your w ritten defenses. If any,
to tl an C. VICTOR BUTLER.
JR., ESQ. t i l l East Robinson
Street, Orlands. F lo rid * IJS0I.
and III* the original w ith the
Clerk of the above styled Court
on or balers the lllh day of
M a rch . I t l l , o th e rw ise , a
Judgm ent m ay bo entered
against you N r the re lie f de­
manded In Iho Complaint
WITNESS my hand and *0*1
e l said Court on Iho Mh day of
Fob., I H i
(SEAL)
OAVION. BERRIEN
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: SusonE.Tabor
Deputy Clark
Publish: February 7. is, t l. M.
DEC I I

STATBOF FLOBIDA
DIFABTM BNTO F
ENVIRONMINTAL
REGULATION
NOTICE OF FROFOSBO
AGENCY ACTION
T h * O s p a r I m s n t *1
Environmental RoguloINn glvot
notice of IN Infant to Issue a
perm it (FIN No m r t U A ) N
Sanlord boslwork * and M arin*
to construct J*t linear tt *1
vortical cancrsto bwlkhaad and
to bM S rgct a m « . ton# by a t l .
w ta i (tottin g dock *d |*c *n l la
Iho south m f». of lha bulkhead
Th* pr*|a ci it Nested in iho Si
Johns River, noor Indian Mound
SNugh *1 SioN Road 411 ond Iho
O slo o n B rld g o , S a m ln o l*
County, SocINnt 17 ond 14.
nehto 1* lawlh. Rang* J1
East,i, not In an oquollc
prooorvd.
i
Clots III W aNrt.
Th* UN Is avallabN tor pu b lk
Inspacllan Monday through
Friday, sicsq l tor togs I to ll
days, S a m , to 1 p m . at IN
Department *1 Environments!
Regulation, &gt;400 G lair Sion*
Rood. Twin Towers O ffice Build
In g , T a lla h a sse e , F lo r id *
n x it t t t .
F ortont who** substantial in
lo ro tN ora allotted by the above
pro* 1**4 agency action have a
rig ht pursuant to SoctNn IM S ).
Florida Statute*. to petition tor
on adm inistrative dolorm lnolNn
I hearing l on lha &gt;rsgi»a&lt; ac
1Nn. Tho petition must contor m
to Iho requirements qt Chapters
I7-M7.1U ond M I-M I, and must
bo filed (received) w ith Iho
Deportm ent'* O tlk * of Goner el
CduhbOl, MM B lelr Stone Rond.
Tsllahstsoo, Florida » M I MSI
w ithin tourtoon I la) days of
publication of this notice F all
urq to tlto a petition w ithin the
tour toon ( It) day* constitutes a
wdivor of any such person hue to
an odm lnN kotiv* dotorm
l
m lnolNn
(hearing) pursuant I*
N Section
1M I7. Florida Sloluto*
Tho adm inistrative hearing
I Is Mslgnod N torm yloN
ogoncy action. Accordingly, II *
poll Hon N filed. Iho Doper l
m onfs tln o l action may bo
ogoncy a c tio n . T h o ro to r*.
person* who may not w ith to tlto
* pahtton may wish to Intorvon*
In lha proceeding A poliIN n tor
In lo rv o n lld n m ust bo fllo d
pursuant la Rule M 1.7*7, of
tonal ffvo I I I day* boto rt th *
iin * i hoofing and must ho file d
ring officer. II ana
hoe boon assigned, a t
D iv is io n *1 A d m in is tra tiv e
M oo rin g s. IPS* A p slsch o o
Fork way, Tollahaoaao. F lo rid *
M M I. II no hearing o ffk a r ho*
sw p O T i ™ w in p i ft i f
bo riled w ith b * Ooportmsnt t
o rtlc * of General Caunesl. stag
B la ir Sfana Rood. Tallahaoaaa.
Florida M M I 1141. Failure la
patttN n la bitorvono w ith in fh *
•Hawed Hma from * cansiiiwtoo
a waiver of any rig h t such
parson has to rogues! * hearing
u n rtr lection IM 17, Florida

legal Notice
County COuri
Oranga County, Florida
Cosaf SSM-S1I
Froodom ta rin g s and
Loon AssoclotNn. ofc.
FIO M tff
Robsrl G Lev Ing to t*
and L ite Lovlngtott.
Defendant
County Court
Orongo County, F lo rid *
C**S 4 I I PS-Ml
Bornatl Bank of
Control FN rtdo, N A.
F io im ifi
V*.
RobertG Lovlngtott.
Dttondant
NOTICE OF SNEBIFF’ I SALS
NOTICE IS HEBEBY GIVEN
Ihal by v irtu * of Ihot corloln
W rits of Esocuflon. o t tfyN d
show, ond mar# po rtio n o rty
m at corloln W rit of Esocuflon
Issued out of and under tho tool
of tho County Court of Orongo
County. F lorida, upon * final
ludgem enl rendered In tho
* tores* id court on Iho JOfh day
el November. A D tog*. In the!
certain coto entitled. E rtnoff
Bonk of Central F tor Ido. N A P letnflft, —v*— Robert 0 Lev
In g fo ts . O o fondanf. w hich
efereseto W rit of Esocuflon wo*
delivered to mo os Sheriff of
SomlnoN County. FNrtdo. ond 1
dsscrlbod property owned by

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR IE M IN O L I COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Csto Number M IN C AM P
CIRCUIT C IVIL
LINCOLN FINANCI AL COR P .
PM N il H
vs
G.CHAPMAN R E E D .JR .
t lU i. t l ol
O ffondant
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO ABE FICHENY.
"w ho** last (mown
Lana
I. NY
YOU ARE NO TIFIED that an
action to torectoto a mortgage
on the following property in
Seminole County. F lor Ids. to
w it:
L o t 1 . C L U S T E R E.
WILOWOOO. o Planned Unit
Development, according to th*
Plat Ifwroof a* recorded in Piet
Book 1*. Paget F. S. *, end W.
Public Record* * f SomlnoN
County, Florida
hoe keen filed o g o ln tl you end
you ore required N servo a cdpy
of your w ritten dston sol. If any,
la It on Barry M E lkin, Esquire
p la ln llf t 'l a tto rn e y , whoso
o d d r e s t Is s io o K o fo r
B o u le v a rd . S u lf* IIS . SI.
P tfo rtb u rg . FL JJ707. (ID )
US 00)4. on or baton March 1.
IN I. and tIM th * o riginal with
tho cMrh *1 th lt court either
baton service on ptelntlH s at
tarney or Immediately m ore*I
to n othorw lio e default w ill bo
roIM t demanded In the cam
rp B flf
WITHE t t m y hand end
tool a l mis Court on January 7f,
(U A L )
DAVIDN BERRIEN
Clerk of tho Court
B y: 7 */Cheryl R. F ranklin
Deputy Clerk
FiMlIWi:
•v b llih : JJanuary ) l A February
7, IS. II. IN I
D IB in
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
T N I EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT . IN A N D FO B
IE M IN O L I C O U N T Y .
FLOBIDA.
CASE NO I4 M II CA 00 F
PIONEER FEDERAL
SAVINOS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.etc .
PieinlHt.
v*
MARC E lN N E TT. o l ua . ot e l,
CLERK'S NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
that pursuant to • Summery
Final Judgment of FaroeH turt
entered In Iho above entitled
cause in the C kcull Court of Me
Elgntoonth Judicial C ircuit. In
and to r S o m ln o l* C ounty.
FN rldo. I w ill ta ll at public
auction N lha highest bidder N r
cosh at Iho Wool bant dm r at
lha Caurthouso In lha City at
SoRlord. Ssm inolo C ounty.
FNrtdo. at to* hour *1 II 00
A M on M arch A 1ML lh a l
corloln parcel at real property
described e t Milows
Let &lt;0. SPRINO OAKS, t
carding to tho P u t thereof os
rocordodtn Plel Book I * Page*
04 and M. Public Record* ol
Sam mole County, Florida
IS IA L I
DAVIO BERRIEN
CLERKOF CIRCUIT COURT
Byi /* / Cheryl R. Fronkim
Deputy Clerk
PuMtoh: February f, is. IMS
OBC-41

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 t e d ....................... «7C • I
HOURS J cpRsacvthr* te a t SIC a I

• 4 0 M L - 5 *4 3 M l.

7 crru cbUyo teas S2C • I

MONDAY tin (TODAY 10 cppsacstha t e n 4SC • I
SATURDAY D -H rgr

Contract Ratos AtpHrM#
1 Urrs I

DEADLINES
Noon The Day B efore Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
M onday -1 1 :0 0 A .M . Saturday

23—Lott 4 Found

REWARD!

S3—Business
Opportunities

Hack Ia ct yellow gold chain
w ith 1 diamond*, to t! to
downtown area, or Dr Rap* A
Rosamond a ttic* Groat tan
Hm ontal kaopsakat Am yls
reward C all JM 111* ____

NBW SMYRNA BIACM
W# hava Thro* thriving
b u s ln a ts a t Ilf.BO B p rlc *
rang* Smell Oown Payment
Owner w ill hold a mortgage
to r Mia rest.
B aachtidt Realty, REALTOR!
BBMTIJ 7U. Owm 7 Days I

23—Special Notices

• • • IC fl P • • •

perry being Ncofod In So^nlnoN
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , m o ro
p a rtic u la rly d e s c rib e d a t
One 1M0 Detsun 11*. Broom In
Color. 10 4 FHLAM RM I4. being
Stored e l fponky'S In Longmod
F Nr Ido
ond tho undersigned ao Sheriff
of lom lnoN County, FNrldo.
w ill a l 11:00 A M . on Iho n th
day of February, A D l**S.
offor N r son and soil N Iho
highest bidder. FOR CASH,
:t N any and e ll a im in g
subloci
H int. of the Front I Wet 11 D tor
a l Iho slop*, of tho SomlnoN
County Courthouse In Sonlord.
FN rldo. Iho above described
personal property.
That sold soN It being mode
to M H tfy iho term s of sold W rit
o l Elocution
JahnE Folk. ShorlH
SomlnoN County, Florida
To b t advertised January is, ) |,
February 7, Is. w ith tho taN on
February 11.1M l
DEB M l

Orlando • Winter Park

Ct'UIATE
AIIRTHI
m a b a tto r* Htorims
*1 m emeries. gifts A t i l l
c *n Lind* m a m

27—Nursery 4
Child Cere
• A iV U ffiN O to ^ r f» h ic tfi7
or mghi A lta by th* hour

m iti)

Free or Reduced Child Caro
It you qualify
m istg or m M is
W ill do babysitting to my ham*
Dependable and rotpontibto
Call M ary 771 (IS*
AH
k fta rlP M

3 3 - Reel EstetB
Courses
A1IOCIATES NEEDED NOWI
FREE REAL I1TA TB
ICHOOLI
Th*
oppe. tunily to a *l a- much
from your lob 0* you pul .'111.
II. And on* o l th * m oil (w n
prohentlv* Irolnlg programs
In Iho Industry. T h e ft whs I o
carotr w ith our CENTURY ) l
O ltlc* moons Bui to order to
tok* odvantag* at a ll w* have
to oltor, you have to Is k t th*
llrs t I top Call now lor on
appointment, otk for Donne
Clark *1 )) I 00s I or IN tooo
CENTURY I t
K ltH REAL BITATE
SIS W. U lh llr t s t
REALTOR
ItlOOSt
POBM. BALL JR.
SCHOOL OF REAL ESTATE
171 S ille r 111 71*4

lego! Notice"
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I t horoby given that I
am engaged In b u tln o tt ot joo
Persim m on A v * , Sanford,
SomtoeM County, F lorid * under
Iho flc tllto u t nomo ot KOOER'S
TRUCK REPAIR, and lh a l I
Inland to register said nomo
w ith th* Ctork ot tho C ircuit
Court. Somlnol* County, FNrldo
to sc cordonee w ith th* pro
visions ot th * F lc tlflo u t Norn*
Sloluto*. to w it: lo cllo n le io t
F lorid * Statutes IBS)
/•/H e rm a n W Kogar
Publish January J l 1 February
7.14.11. I t t !
OEB ITS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
■ IO N T E K N T M J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT , IN AN O FOB
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLOBIDA
CASE NUMBER t l 111 CAB* K
IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF
OILES ALFREO WEST,
Petitioner/Husband.
C A T H R Y N N E W IL L IA M S
WEST.
Respondent/Wife
NOTICE OF ACTION
YOU ARE NO TIFIED that e
Complaint tar Olyore* ho* bean
Iliad agatotl yew and a prayer
contained w ithin the Cemplelnl,
requests the Court to award to
lha Petmanor, a DieeaMMn of
M arriage A Vtocuta agatotl lha
g u irtd to serve a copy ot yeur
answer or pleadings to th*
Complaint, an lha PeWlener's
Attorney. ABBOTT M. HER
RING. F A . 1M1 Weal F lrtl
Street, la n ia rd . Florida 11771,
and HM th* o riginal Answer or
pleadings to lha Offtce of lha
Ctork of Pa C ircuit Court, on or
befere th* 17th day of February
INS. I) you ta ll to de ea.
judgment by default
Isben ogalr
you tor to * rebel
I to toe Cempletot
This nrttoe shell he puhlished
•nee each wee* tor tour ( i)
consecutive weeks to the Sen
Rf
Slay
k^d IB fw ip i
BTWW^
n *f K
BH
per. tentord. Ftorlda
D A T10 THIS IBM dey e l
January, t m
O AVEO BER R IIN .
Ctork ef to * C ircu it Court
By: IIgeW allace
Deputy Ctork
Publish
►wbilsh.,January U St
February f , 14 IMS
D B B 1J1

SEMINOLE
COUNTYM O VEA BLE!
M M M down. EscstNnt form s
on
baUncsl F lrtl F lo rid *
FragarHas 771*114

Al—Money to Lend
Business C s p lls l 1) 0,000 f*
11.000.00* end ever F. O Bos
&gt;41). W inter Pk FN T77SB.
MO**M A FOReCLOtUSC- A
mortgage ce won't accept
y e u r p a y m e n t s ) C a ll
NkTaggart tor solution u s

4MO

71—Help Wanted
A crylic Applicators needed to
apply protoctlv* coating on
cor*, beats and pianos u to
t i l par hour W* train Far
work In Sanford ere* cell
Temp* ID *0*7111.
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
ACCOUNTING CLERK
SECRETARY
KEY PUNCHER
WANG OPERATOR
CLERK TYPIST
CRT OPERATORS
Im m ediate assignments avail
sbto In Lsk* M ary and San
lord A re* Call Abtotl Tempo
tory Services l i t MSB
A S tilton I P etition with bonuses
and bonaflts E ■parlance nee
eatery Apply In person Ace
Beauty Supply I eyres P lu s
A irp o rt B ird end 17 t l
AVON BEAUTY COMPANY
F u ll/p e rl tim e/E arn to 11* hr
Call Immed. m i f l l , m -tr n .
la p * Canaveral firm aapandmg
In Samlnoto I workers pro
during * more needed UM
P/T Is to fu ll lim e Career
Only ever i t
P ull fram ing
S U IT *), be tore*

legal Notice^
FIC TITIO U IN AM B '
Natlca It hereby given that I
am engaged In business e l 4M S.
17 f t . Longweed. S tm ln e le
C ounty. F le rld e under the
flctlIN u s nems et CUSTOM RV.
end that I intend to register said
name w ith the Clerk e l toe
C ircuit Court, SomlnoN County.
F lerlde in accordance with the
previsions e l the F ictitio u s
Name Statutes, to w lt Section
M l Of F tor Me Statutes IM7
/s/Je ckto K Elem
Publish January 17. 14 SI 4
F ebruary). INS
DC 6 74
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
A N D FO R S E M I N O L E
COUNTY, FLORIDA
C A S IN O I * 11S7CAB4B
In Re: The M arriage e l HENRY
L. FARTIN.
Husband.
C H A R M A IN IH . FARTIN.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: HENRY L FARTIN. c/a
RsuM S. B at 4110. Orlande. FI
NOTICE N hereby *lven that
M ar* N ponding to to * C ircuit
C ourt in and to r la m in a !*
County, Florida, an action on
tltto d In re to * m arriage e l
Henry L F ortin. Husband, and
Charm * In * M P srlin . W lto.
wharato lha re lie f sought Is a
dttoelutton at lha m arriage. I
prim ary residential control ef
to * tw * ( 1) m iner d lltd re n *1
la id m arriage, and ether reitof.
You ere hereby ro p d rti to
Hto yeur w ritten ratpene* to
said pelitten wfto to * Clerk al
to * abav* tfyto d court and to
serve * copy thereof net N tor
then toe jlto d a y e f March. MBS
an to * p *f 11tenor's attornoy.
Garden V. Frederick, IN N.
Fork Avenue, lontord. FI M771.
Should yeu to ll to d a w a detoull
court proceed as port*.
DATED this Sto day at Febru­
ary. A D tW 4 .
(SEAL)
OAVION G IR R IIN .
C LIR K O F THECOURT
By: Dion* K. Oak toy
A* Deputy Ctork
Fubitoh February 7, 14 I t .

71-HGlpWantGd

71—H«lp Wanltd

AVON EARNINGS WOWI11
OPEN TERRITORIES NO W III
m » n * r m a 4 if

FRONTOCSK_____ 11)320

WAREMGU1E

Employer w ill pay top la lory tor
lha rig h t parson Light typing,
process term s, heavy phone
Friendly craw.

L ift M ib*. must hava cor,
n o *d id im mediately Perma­
nent position Haver • Fee

contrect work Must hove
truck, torts and tip e rta n c r
Applications being taken at
JOO S M yrtle Coil tor appi
1 )0 to * ce AM m 11)7
CLERKS-WHI tra in . M elt stork
Oeedpeyl Call Futures.
CONSTRUCTION WORKERS
Skilled end helpers A ll
phases Cell Fu tures *74 4J00

CURTAIN R ill
STOREFRONT ESTIMATOR
A well etlebiithed window man
(/lecturer to espending end
has an urgent need tor on
individual stperlonced
In
Curteln W ell and Storefront
estim ating Th* successful
candid*to w ill currently be
estim ating Curtain W all end
Store Front System* or re
tatod motor 1*1* WHI caneidtr
Individual with good d riftin g
or lo ka e tt background tor
If 1
qualities end ere interested to
lelntog a progressive ergon I
rational loom ptooso coil m
M I4 o r sand re tu rn *' to:
H o n o r Aluminum Products.
PO Drawer S, Sontard. Flo.

ani

DELI VERY WORKERS- Lecel
W ill train Call Futures
STS 4I0B

DCUVERT_________ 3200
1 spots open

D eliver to con
stru ctlo n sites P lenty at
overtim e Permanent
E m ploym ffit

f ib

323-5171

111) French A rt.
Designer wanted, must be tam il
lo r w ith Needle work Crafts
end have pond a rtistic *b ("h Ws con use yew fu ll tim e or
pert tim e Salary open Coil
MATS**
D riv e r: A ggressive R e ia ll
ing M otorlsl ere
Building
Center firm , seeking further
growth, ties created on oppor
I unify tor S Driver ■Yardmen
Willingness end enthusiasm s
m utt I Knowledge of building
m aterial not essential but w ill
be recogniied C all A lvin
K i l p a t r i c k al O r a g a r y
)nt “ '
FACTORY N ILFE R S- Good
starting pay. Full bonaflts
Call Futures STB SMO
F a r m 4 w arehouse h e lp .
Tractor 4 mechanical ta p eri
once halpfwl High school edv
cstlen m OOSs
F ront desk ctork. F rie n d ly,
nest. personebM Apply In
person Men F rl 10 e m to 1
p m Peltone Inn
OBHERALOFFICB f e o f l e
WANTED Goad pay Im
mediate Call Futures STS OOO

GLAZE*— -----------3220
Light •&gt; par tones only wins this
• top spot with eserttont com
pony Benefit* end overtim e

4 b

323-3173

H I) French Are.
H e ir S ty lis t E xp e rie n ced .
M otivated) Lake M ery.
H eeling 4 s ir conditioning
mechanic. Salary baeod an
o ig a rla n c *. plus benefits
11)41*1
Immediate opining* to r toM
phono work Students end
housewives welcome
Mornings end evening hour*
Cell DIO S*) _________
m m e d l a t e o p e n i n g t er
teles/service
Well
established company looking
to r Individuals who have •
desire to be the success fliey
know they can be Com pen so
Hen plan Vehicle furnished 4
company ban*fils Apply t i l l
1141 Fork Or _____________
LABORER!
ASSEMBLERS
WAREHOUSE WORKERS
Assignments avallabto In la n ­
i a r d . La k e M e r y and
Long wood tre e
No toe
A blest Tem porary Service
S it MSB. ___________
LABORERS- Strang reliable,
general laborers nssdsd Im
m ediately D ilto rtn l tocetient.
Phone and transportation a
must Never a toe. Apply

RHJLVSCIYKES

71—MBljfWanlRd

TEMP PERM774-1341

4 b

323-3173

M l) Frewck A rt
NEEDED A prefessienei ca­
reer oriented h a ir try M l tor
buty salon 711 4)s 7
New hiring R N . dey shift.
Apply st to N Highway 17 « ,
Debsry, or ca ll MB *0 4
OFFICE CLERK
Type. Ilia , o ltlc * eapertencs
Permanent position Never •
Fee

TWP PERM 774-1341
Fart Time A uditor Help Ap­
proxim ately M hours • week
Apply a t toe following Handy
Wey Feed Store. M l E IHh
SI Sanford
Fart Tima Secretary Ganaral
e lite * duties w ith ftoslbto
h eurtl Sanford Area Call
to lly ............. ...... - ....... 77)0170

PEOPLE HEEDED
f t tip e rla n c * necessary No
w ilin g . Conduct b rie f In
torvtows In yeur area to up
dele In tor m elton tor the San
terd C ity D irectory Salary
plus Incentive bonus Reply In
yeur own handw riting includ
ing telephone to Bos l i t c/a
Evening Hereto
F. OSes
1417 Sanford. F la 7)777 1417.
Equal O pportunity j
M /F. R. L. Polk and Campsny

PUNCH OUT MAN
Fer Apertm in i Cemptos. Most
have eem teats and trensper
Is Hen. Cell B7B4I7A or *117.
Me«. to r* F rl.

RECEPTKMIST_____ 4225
Like to deal w ith peeptoT Can
yeu type accurately? It to cell
tl

Efliploymsnt

323-3173
M l) French Ay*.
ROAD D R I V B R S i O wner
operator* etpertonced in re
trlgeratod commodities, w 'er
without tra ile rs tor plant Or
liv e r 1s t In M ld w e tls rn A
N arttisattom slates EtcelM nt
o/o peckege. Please ce ll
7 t l 7)7 B ill, 171 IW S .IM
ST) 1U4 Auk tor Bob
Seles Feapls needed tor uied
Cor Lot. E ip helpful good
potential te r rig h t person
Cell Ren 771 sB7S
SALESLADY E ip e rle n c e in
ladles reedy to- weer Pert
lim e Apply in person only t l
ReJey. I l l E . 1st St. No phone
calls.
SECURITY WORK- F ull tim *
Good benefits A ll shift*
Call Futures................... S7| u o
T elephone S e iic lfe r*
Fer
Ap p t . c e l l 777 B ill. I l l 4SS4UNFORQ JAYCEES
TITLE INSURANCE OFFICE
W in te r S p rin g s. Docum ent
proper aliens end warehousing
eiperlence C all 717 7470
Top Hatch M aid Service needs
reliable help M usi have car
end phene E ice lle n t pay I
G v.»l twvwlii» Cell Lie OOP#
TRUCK DRIVERS-Local
W ILL TR AIN I
Call Future* .................. STS SJOO
Wanted Nurse* Aides
II pm f am and 7 am J pm
E tp tritn c td ce rtifie d only
Apply In person a l Lsk tv lew
C e n '.f * 11E TndSt
______ Santera
Wealed. E iperw ncrd Sewtng
M ecklne O perators on e ll
•perettont. We o ile r • seel lent
piece work rates. peM hell
dsyv end health insurance.
Modern s ir conditioned b u ild
Ing Sun Del M anufacturing.
Inc.. » « Old Lake M ary R d ,
Apply bafwaM 1 1 1
AA rw~k,d e 11 BBto-i
lu*i e u
rtotommirty
s**e
e■ riRf
y
Ih ru
FfrrlW—
WA N T E D P B O F L B WHO
WANT TO WORK TO REF L A C B F E O F L E WMO
D ID N 'T . F a r l- tlm * o n ly,
Thursday nights from S pm
1* I ] am . M ust have Fla.
rttvw r's lic e n rt, b t I I years or
• t o r t , sbto t o d rive stick sh llt.
Apply In parson Sontard Auto
Auction. » IS W. I f f S I. ta n
WE LO IRS-G oad*
IPOT Im
C llH R lB ,
Call Ftourab........ ........ ST* &lt;740

WAR EHOUSB WORKERS- Full
tim e No espeerlence neces­
sary. Call F utu re s..-----47B4MB

73—Employment
Wantod
We con and w ill de
tewing tor yew.
m 7 )t)
or » 1 1*14

91—Apartmants/
House to Short
Casselberry 1 bdrm /1 both
clean hem*, need 1 females to
share w ith seme Employed
Call before l AM or sfto r g
PM tr s o o )
la d y wants fa m ily or tingle* to
•here heme. Port, laundry,
cable 1JM month plus 1/1
u tilitie s, negotiable. Attar I
pm and weekends 171S1*4 or
ITT ID S between I 1 Pm
RespewetoN lemew to Share
new J bdrm heme w lto 1
bachelors. L ocsttd In the
Sanford Lake M ary A re*
1171am# 4 1 /1 u tilitie s
__________ M 14M I
la n ia rd - Lakesi de A p t. 1
bdrm n both. pert. Iennl4
laundry. A m orel Ref n i l
plus » se lll 7)1 i
Sgi Lady to shore 1 bdrm spt
w lto soma term s negetitbU
m s a c a o r iji star
SI. Johns River Large country
home, fire p la ce, nen smekers.
USOme 44P-SB47
4 bdrm . 7 bath, fireplace, on S
•era let. U tilitie s A meals
m iiw /n h o n to 7714171

93— Rooms for R«nt
Christian Apt*. A Hemes
TV. kitchen, laundry, meld, IM
w k.upO rl ST) MOt/477 M l*
U N FO R D Furnished reams by
Ms to service Cell TO *M f
17 PM SIS Palmetto Am
SANFORD. Rees weekly A
M onthly rite s U til Inc. eft
IOCOak
A dult* I S t! 7W7.

97—Apartments
Furnish*d / Rant
A L L A R IA S
Furnished, and unfurnished, 1,
7 .1 A 4 bedroom*. KMt. pets.
UCO and up. STB7MB. Fee 171
le v On Rentals Inc. ReaHer
Elderly man or tody tor I bdrm.
a n stm
Pern. Apts, to r I
711 Palm etto Ava.
J. Cowan Ne Phene Celle
Furnished I Bdrm . apt 1 blocks
from town. A ll uHlIHet paid,
tin g le * o nly. Ne p e lt or
children. 11)0 me put Pspesit.
M l Oak Ave. 11) an. A lta r l
WB N A V I IT
B eautifully furnished I bdrm.
end studio apartm ent. Ranch
styto. energy efficient. Rustic
f e n c e d p a l l * * , b u lll- ln
Just bring your linen* and
dishes Also I Bdrm. avail|§R|R| S^fltSF
C lllie n * discount ia n te rd
Court Apartments. T P 7MI.
I bdrm. M obile Heme- adults, ne
M)8 Magnolia Ave . Ventord

ApRfimtnts
n lih i
Unfurnished
/ Rtnt
BAMBOO CO VI APTS
M E A irp o rt Blvd
Ph s n a o o Efficiency, from
U M Mo A
discount tor
SentorCmsene
1 Adrm ., t-e r lb e tb f

R|IIIH
j iN
l l rrt-M
m,
W
im - •■ bAtpwT
W s sb sr/Oryrt Need op

________ 7711*11
LU XURY A PARTM EN TS!
PrtbRy R J
P r t N t d i.il
Metier C ortA p rt I

3342)13
LIVE IN
M ature woman to care to r man
In whaei chair. Haweewgrk.
Bead home, permanent, sola
ry M usi have car. Local
ra le ra n c a *. Nan tm a k a r.

SA LES EXECUTIVE

m

tra s la te
I Tampa.

te lie g * p ic k ups
Oaf Ray,

cau r ig i* la apply aha Coll
MS m B ill i l l BIB* IBB 411
L o o ki n g lor L i c e n s e d
Journeyman Flumbar Salary
M BrtiaBH. F u a t* ca ll Be
Maks m working at hornet Rush
U S B b O S i m l Santord
A re . la n ia rd . Fla M77I
M ir f Kay C iw u ttc i
Recruiting, tkln co rs cl wees.
Mature Christian lady te w a rt In
retirem ent h^t^^s^t a^t^! i
G Saturdays.» SIM.

F u ll tim e Hospital Modi cal
■•cords Dept IC O *C M cad
Ing asp required Goad salary
A bonaflts Apply personnel
W. Vrtueia Mem orial ftespi
tat. T it W. FtI mawto A v *.

WITH A WINNER!
DtHona's Itadlng hoiYMbuiktor #*•
panding salts staff te meeting
strong m arket demand. Yeu w ill
tern with a professional model
center sales environment* plus e
proven product. Upscale commis­
sion program. Send Resume with
eemlngs history to:
Lorry Kent Homes
•40-K Deltona Blvd.
Deltona. FI 3272S

=itef ^ - i?

** *. f

�1

1 *

♦♦—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

141—Homes For Sale
JUST RIGHT TOR TOO
I te rm . IV , b *m M ic k hom e it
ra e d y an d p rice d righ t at
taa WO R ecen tly redecorated
L a rg e lot C a n t a t a *

141—Homes For Salt

C T U l C m 3WF A 5 M I 0 N * T I P

DELTONA

CALL BART

231-Cars

T h u rtda y, Fob. 7, I M S — SB

233 -T ru c k s/
Buses / Vans
t h ill. P a n e lle d , c a rp e itd
lira s *7* Jeep CJT Renegade,
package, hardtop I cylinder

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

0CARDINAL
N « • •*!

I and 1 bdrm A lta furnlthed
efficiency tram H I weak hoc
depoalt. No p e tt. Call W a n t
»ZPM 411 Palm etta

31*—Wanted to Buy
Paying CASH N r:
Aluminum. Cant. Capper.
B re tt. Lead. Newipaper.
G iett. Geld. Sliver
kotom o Tool, fIIW It t
a io iS e t a im in *

Q cardinal
8 3 1 -5 6 7 6

Santord Grand new 1 bdrm ]
bath on Oak A y* at Park Or
Scroaned p a rch , w ether
dryer, m ini M lndt From MO
a m e B r i t l t h A m erican

E v e n in g Herald. Sanford. FI.

K IT ‘H ’ C A R L Y LE • by L arry W rig h t

h *» »l '

( H I 3671,

AIRPORT ROAD. NEW highly
energy e tfk ie n l. expandable
affordable 1 bdrm Cardinal
Heme Only I d lM win, Im
mediate availability M lg II
n a n cln g a itltta n c t. C a ll

2JS—Trucks/
Buses/Vans

back
g u a ra n tte Tuckar t
Farm A Garden Cantor. San

321-075P E v e 322-7*43
BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
F rom I I t N U» or more
Call m la ja m o n

J bdrm . | I
financing

m p a n u 7 7 .tx T .a w

141—Homes For Sale
Rebuilt KIRBY/ til*.W A up

Qc \HI)l\\l

Gearanfoad. Kirby Co,

mW.UfW.ttl-HN

- Hi t -

Friday NI|Ms~.7 PM
CALL HALL.

OSTEEN 1 A lo ft. I MM down.
Tonne. Lake P rlvlla g a t No
m ebllet K erry I. D riggan
Realtor SOMm.__________

323*6593

..lim it

215— Boats and
Accessories

323*5774

U20 S. SMford 12I-407S

★ DAYTONA AUTO*
★ AUCTION ★
Hwy *1............Daytona Beach
*

• a a a HeMta a a a a a

PUtUC AUTOAUCTION

0 ( M(DII\AI

(v a ry Wad Ntta at 11» PM

* Where Anybody *
♦ Can Buyer Sell) ♦

t Rdrwt/ 1 Rath Oafy U M M . f i t
up and ta re Swnkan fam ily
ream w ith Iraa ita n d ln g
flra p la c a , a a l In klfchan.
fenced Country Club.

IDS—Duplex*
Triplex / Rent

PRICES,
REDUCED

BadICrMNtF
NdCrtditF
7C U n taR f____ $100 DOWN
REFINANCE
RATIONALMJiOSALES

Par mare Bala lit

_____ in tm u n

___

*6995

DebaryAute A Marina Salat
Ac root th * rive r, lap ol h ill
tta Hwy I t H Dabary tea «S*«

PRICE REDUCED 1 b drm . 1

d is c o l / n t
l / l b ric k heme Zoned far
duple&gt; Perfect floor plan.
Ream for anather
dupWa Ownor financing Only

M ite » l S 4th SI. Lake Mary.
behind Elem entary School
OARAGE SALE FB I A SAT.*
FURNITURE A STUFF. IW
ROSALIA DRIVE._________
Glganic M oving In Sale Thurt in . A F rl - Z /l horn * to 1
Corner ot l*th A Palmetto

0 1 ARniNAj

*8495

COURTESY
PONTIAC

nanclng. A d u tli.
m tk U n d W W I

NO MONEY DOWN

323-2121
NQBQDY
429-5090 WALKS AWAY ^
3211 HWY. 17-92 SANFORD

MOONEY APPLI ANCES

CONSULT OUR

AHDINAI

127— O ffice R e n t a ls

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

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

T I M I 1HPHM,

Q( MiDIMM

0 ( \m iiw i

Accounting A
Tax Service
camputorlaad financial tla l
Nm ent Q u a rte rly ro lu rn t
rooead A te lo r Prana i l l

■ AJBiaCTBIC
Tired of hMi pr Watt Cali RAJ
Electric N o lM too large or
email Proa. Etflmalat la Hr.
tarylca I nilailed “ paddle

W H i n f i r a rtw r
F ill d in and lend Ooorlng

OBNIRATOR

B A L lio iA lilC e m m Rat.

VERY R IL IA B U - M A W em t

01 \l(l)l\ M
T aTTTmZSTTnX

01 MdllWI

nr

Oaad hama anfy m v r r
t i l N a Cdrtng hama.

SiSSsSlea^
MmilRjaaTajtw

322-2420

PepaS.— p M aM M E E l
EMORY'S PLURIRIHG

/!nLr'T&gt;i r 11 n,

-

i
m » N L e e v *m m e a »

* *

�f « /

it —ivulm HtrtM, Utifacd, FI.

T»»n&lt;&gt;r&gt; N&gt;.

1HS

A ll Agree, Reagan's Speech 'Good Show Biz'
WASHINGTON (UP!) - While Democrats and
Republicana differed over the impact of President
Reagan's State of the Union address on a "second
American Revolution." most agreed with Rep.
Les Aspin. D-Wla., that It was "good show biz."
Members of Congress lined up along party lines
Wednesday night praising or criticizing Reagan's
address to a Joint session o f Congress, where he
talked about budget deficits, taxes, social Issues
and military aid.
While most lawmakers agreed the president
said nothing new. Reagan's critics maintained he
had Uttie grasp on the problems facing the nation
today.
“ Only Ronald Reagan could have made that
speech." said Rep. BUI Alexander. D-Ark.. one o f
the House Democratic leaders. " I ’m amazed
people continue to believe him ."
Alexander said there were no new Ideaa. no
convincing arguments and. "In a way. It waa
shameless the way he tried to take credit for

Reagan's address showed his commitment to tax
reform.
Rep. Jack Kemp. R-N.Y.. author of one leading
tax reform proposal, said Reagan "laid his
reputation on the line to bring about tax reform In
1965."
Senate Republican leader Bob Dole of Kansas
agreed Reagan had "said It all before" but had
"challenged the Congress and the American
people" to meet the goals he had outlined.
Sen. Barry Goldwater. R-Artz.. chairman o f the
Armed Services Committee predicted Congress
will approve the production o f 21 MX missiles in
March " i f the president keeps pushing.”
Sen. Strom Thurmond. R-S.C.. said Reagan's
address showed he Is committed to making
America safer, stronger and freer In his second
term.
But other politicians were not as generous with
their praise.
Rep. Les Aspin. D-Wls.. chairman of the House
Arm ed Services Committee, called Reatfan'a

speech, “ good show biz. that'sall."
Rep. Claude Pepper o f Florida, broke Into a
rendition o f "M y Country. Tts o f T h ee" when
asked about the speech.
"It waa a fine Fourth of July speech." Pepper
said. "W e were Inspired. W e were made more
patriotic. W e were lifted up and we felt good
because he soared Into eloquence. Of course, he
didn't say anything very helpful to solve any of
the problems o f this nation today."
Rep. Jamie Whitten. D-Mlas.. chairman o f the
House Appropriations Committee, said. “ John
Wayne couldn't have done any better."
Whitten said It was "hard to get around a good
speech like this and look at the facts, which are
frightening."
House Speaker Thomas O'Neill called Reagan's
address " a night o f eloquent generalities."
"Tom orrow, he must begin to Inform people as
to the sometimes difficult realities o f the Reagan
revolution.” O'Neill said.

Georg* Nunnery, left, of Chuluota, bastes
several pieces of chicken with the BBQ
sauce he w ill enter In th e'S tate F a ir In
Tam pa next weekend as part of the 4-H
poultry contest. Nunniery Is pictured with

some of the members of the Sanford Mighty
Clovers and Lake M ary Dolphin 4-H clubs
during a recent trial barbecue to perfect his
culinary creation.

Lavish Historical Pictures
Dominate Oscar Nominations

Water Shortage
In 5 Counfiat
BROOKSVILLE. Fla. (UPI)
— Mandatory controls on the
use o f water will go into effect
at 12:01 a.m. Monday in a
fiv e -c o u n ty area or w est
central Florida.
The governing board o f the
S ou th w est F lorida W a te r
Management District, which
oversees the use o f water in
an 11-county district, issued a
severe w ater shortage de­
c la r a tio n W e d n e sd a y fo r
Sarasota. Manatee. Charlotte.
DeSoto and Hardee counties.
The severe water shortage
declaration provides strict
mandatory controls on the
use o f w ater In the fiv e
counties and violation is a
second-degree misdemeanor
punishable by a MOO fine and
60 days In Jail.
Even though the controls go
into effect Monday, the gov­
erning board has scheduled a
public heating for 7 p.m.
February 25 In Sarasota to
discuss the water situation
and regulations with residents
of the affected counties.
Spokesman Bob Bryant said
the restrictions cover all areas
of use — domestic, sanitary,
liv e s t o c k . In d u strial and
emergency use — and vary
according to the designated
pie.
Rain fell over most o f the
affected area Wednesday but
waa far too light to alleviate
the water shortage.

helping the poor and handicapped."
House Budget Committee Chairman William
Gray. DPa.. said Reagan offered a "vision most
Americana share" but. "1 question the president's
grasp of the reality of America today. ... His
budget doesn't articulate that same vision."
Kansas's Democratic Gov. John Carlin, head of
the National Governors Conference, criticized
Reagan for downplaying the federal budget deficit
and said the president stands little chance of
getting everything he wants in his budget.
"H e gave the deflct little more Importance than
school prayer." Carlin said. "H e started with tax
reform, which w ill be important, mentioned the
deficit, but quickly skirted I t "
And as for things like “ a giant defense budget
and doing away with social programs to fund It.
he can probably kiss It goodbye."
With the debate running high in Congress over
cutting programs to reduce the budget deficit and
Increasing military spending. Republicans said

HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Lavish for "Places In the H eart:" Jessica
historical films dominated the Lange for "C ountry;" and Sissy
57lh Academ y Award nomina­ Spacek for "The R iver."
tions with "Am adeus." the story
Field, Lange and Spacek all
o f a rival composer's Jealousy o f s ta rre d In film s a b ou t the
Mozart's musical brilliance, and hardships o f rural life.
" A Passage to India." the epic
A surprise nominee for best
tale of waning British colonial director eras W oody Allen for
rule In India, each receiving 11 "Broadway Danny R ose." Other
Oscar nominations.
nominees were Milos Forman for
t Another true story. "T h e Kill­ "Am adeu s." Roland Jofle for
ing Fields." about an American "T h e Killing Fields," David Lean
reporter's friendship with his for " A Passage to India" and
In te rp re te r se t against th e Robert Benton for "Places In the
bloody backdrop of war-tom Heart."
Cambodia, and "Places In the
Nominees for best supporting
Heart." the saga of a widow's actor were Adolph Caesar, the
struggle to keep her Texas farm tough sergeant in " A Soldier's
In tne Dustbowl 1030s. picked S t o r y ." John M alkovlch for
up seven nominations each at "Places in the H eart." Norlyukl
Wednesday^ accouncement.
“ Pat" Morita for "T h e Karate
All four films were nominated K id ." Halng S. Ngor for "T h e
for best picture along with " A
Killin g F ields" and the late
Soldier's Story." a story of rac­ R a l p h R i c h a r d s o n f o r
ism and a murder Investigation "O re y s to k e : T h e L eg en d o f
In a black unit at a Southern Tarzan. Lord of the A pes."
Army base during World War II.
Supporting actress nominees
The co-stara o f "Am adeus"
w ere Peggy Ashcroft for " A
were nominated for best actor —
Passage to India." Glenn Close
T o m H u lce as the y o u n g ,
fo r " T h e N a tu ra l." Lindsay
tormented Wolfgang Amadeus
Crouse
for "Places In the Heart."
Mozart, and F. Murray Abraham
C h ristin e L a h ti fo r " S w in g
as the Jealous Salieri. A lso
S h ift" and Geraldine Page for
nominated for best actor were
" T h e P o p e o f O r e e n w lc h
J e ff Bridges for "S ta rm a n ."
Albert Finney in "Under the Village."
Volcano" and Sam Watcrston In
T h e Oscars w ill be presented
"T h e Killing Fields. "
March 25 during a nationally
Best actress nominees were televised program from the Los
Judy Davis for " A Passage to Angeles Music Center. The host
India:" Vanessa Redgrave for w ill be former Oscar winner
"T h e Bostonians:" Sally Field Jack Lemmon.

New Test Makes Rape Detection Easier
BOSTON (UPI) — A new test that detects small
am ou n ts o f sem en up to 48 hours a fter
Intercourse will help prove cases of rape and may
help get convictions In sexual attacks, a group of
doctors reported.
Th e test is more sensitive than current testa
and will allow police to document rape cakes
when very small amounts o f semen are present or
48 hours have passed. The test does not require

the presence o f sperm, which means rapists can
be caught even if they have had a vasectomy.
The problem with the current tests for semen,
which are used to document cases of rape, is that
they look for an enzyme called proetatlc acid
phosphatase, which Is present In semen at high
levels but is also present In vaginal fluid at low
levels. After 14 hours the level from semen haa
dropped below normal vaginal levels.

Legal Notice
«

Legal Notice-

Legol Notice

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PukiNk January II a PaSruary
t u t , Man

TOUCHTHEIRHEARTS
with

VALENTINE LOVE LINES
Send that someone special in your Ilfs a message of love this Valen­
tin e's Day. The sentim ental memories It will create will last much
longer than flowers or candy I
Create your V alentine's Day Love Unas message on the lines provid­
ed, then call d aaslfled to place your orderl Deadline la Feb. 11. Coat
la $3.60 per Inch. The samples shown hers will give you an Idea of how
your ad will apear on Valentine's Day.
8am plsads:
Margarst,
Rosas are rad,
Violets are blue,
There's no one on earth
quits Ilka you!
Love, Robert

Huggy Bear,
You Tight up my life!
Happy
Valentine's Day.
Sweet Pea

MukwiHueis
A IL U IU G K w S r
m aadi

m am

�</text>
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                    <text>77th Year, No. 143-W tdnwday. February A, 1915— Sanford, Florida

Evening

Herald

—

(USPS

4*1 280)

-

Price

25

Cent*

Shopping Center In Over Protests
On a 3-2 vote over resident!' strong
protests, the Seminole County Com ­
mission approved a zoning change for
35 acres to allow the construction of
another shopping center on state Road
436 near Casselberry.
T h e c o m m is s io n a p p ro v ed th e
change from an agricultural classifica­
tion to a planned unit development
(PUD) so a 300,000 square-foot shop­
ping center could be built.
Area nomeowners
homeowners packed the com ­
mission chambers and protested the
proposed center and criticized the
commission for allowing uncontrolled
growth In the county.
The reclassification from agricultural
to PUD. rather than to commercial,
allows the county to have more control
over the development o f the site -&gt; such
as height restrictions. Richland Pro-

perltles. Inc., o f Tampa, planners o f the
shipping center, wanted the land des­
ignated commercial but county staff
suggested the r i f f ) designation.
The land. In the vicinity of state Road
436 and Lake Howell Road, is In a
corridor along SR 436 designated In the
county's comprehensive plan for offhighw ay com m ercial develop m en t
such as shopping centers. The plan,
however, recom m ends com m ercial
development not Intrude Into nearby
residential areas which are set back
from the roadway.
Commissioners Bill Kirchhoff and
Sandra O lenn cited the sh opping
center's Intrusion into a residential area
aa their reason for voting against the
rezonlng.
“ If Richland didn't have quite as
much shopping center on the site It

Arbor Ordinance Brings
Property Rights Concern
By Donna Batas
H arald S t a ff W rite r
Sanford's proposed arbor ordi­
nance, designed to preserve city
trees. Is not yet formally adopted,
but already the city commlsalon ta
concerned about violating private
property rights. Th e city co m ­
mission on Jan. 28 gave Its prelimi­
nary approval to the ordinance
which would ban the destruction o f
trees three feet tall and six Inches in
diameter or larger, unless they are
diseased. Injured or within 30 feet of
a bulldable area, or unless a permit
Is obtained from the city. In the
event of a dispute between city staff
and the homeowner or developer, an
appeal could be made to the city
commlsalon.
Final adoption of the ordinance Is
scheduled after public hearing at 7
p.m.. Monday. The d ty 'a woman's
elub, garden club and Sanford's
Interested Sarahs to Encourage Re­
juvenation (StSTERa) have endorsed
the ordinance.
Commissioners at a workshop
earlier this week, however, mkt they
have received letters and telephone
calls from constituents opposing the
ordinance.
Commissioner Robert Thomas,
prefaced his remarks by saying. " I
love trees." adding developers are
“ ravishing the land (of trees and

should be stopped), but “ we should
back away from private property
owners."
Commissioner Milton Smith said
the city should act In an advisory
capacity w ith private p rop erty
owners as far as trees are concerned
and Commissioner John Mercer said
Indlvldla) homeowners do not cause
problems with destroying trees.
Commissioner David Farr, who
has opposed the ordinance because
“ It Interferes with resident's pro­
perty tights." said he Is afraid the
ordinance can be misused.
C it y M a n a g e r W .E . " P e t e ' '
Knowles said problems can develop
whereby the city could get Involved
In a dogfight among neighbors. He
said If neighbors are squabbling and
one happens to cut down a tree, the
city may be dragged Into the fray.
Knowles also said If the ordinance
Is enforced with common sense as
the city commissioners have In­
dicated they desire, there should be
no problem.
T h e discussion began after a
memo from Knowles reminding It
will cost the city sbout 828.000
annually to enforce the law and to
Issue permits.
Knowles said a new car would
h ave to be purchased for th e
TR EE S, page 6 A

might have been all right." Kirchhoff
said.
He said Richland designed a " v e r y
nice” shopping center but It Is to be too
deep, reaching too far from the road
Into residential areas.
He said there Is not sufficient buffer
ares between the planned development
and nearby residences.
The rezonlng carries the proviso that
Richland develops the shopping center
with a 50-foot buffer of trees between It
and the residential area and a masonry
wall along Lake Howell Road. There are
to be no exits from the shopping center
onto Lake Howell Road, no trash bins
on the Lake Howell side o f the center,
and the developer agreed to built a
100-foot park along Howell Branch
Creek which flows through the pro­
perty.
— D sana Jordan

Police Crash Probe:
The Findings A n d The Results
B y Tom O lordaao
H a ra ld M anaging E d ito r
Although a Sanford Police Depart­
ment Investigator Is convinced two
officers whose police cars crashed
head-on In early January were playing
"hide and seek " with each other Just
before the collision, he apparently can't
prove It.
That's because there were no wit­
nesses to the accident, and one of the
two officers Involved denies It. while
the other says he can't remember,
according to Police Chief Ben Butler. It
was Chief Butler who originally ordered
an Internal Investigation Into the acci­
dent because, according to Internal
documents, the chief was suspicious
about how the two police cars collided.
And. there's much more resulting
from the Internal Investigation than
was originally reported. Here's what
the Investigation reveals, according to
those Internal documents, and what
resulted from those findings:
• Tka fin d in g s: At least one officer.
Patrolman Paul Little who was working
the same shift when the accident
occurred shortly after 6:30 a.m. on Jan.
6 . admitted to firing off a “ bottle
rocket", a firecracker attached to a
12-Inch stick, at the lieutenant. R. J.
Nooney. whose car was Involved In the
pre-dawn accident. The firecracker

On Jan. 6 tv o Sanford police cars were
Involved In a predawn crash. Injuring
two officers. Details on the accident
were released today. They are:
W H O : Ditvers: Lt. Richard Nooncy and
officer N.J. Raby.
W H A T i Head-on collision.
W H E R E : Myrtle Ave.. and 7th St..
Sanford.
W H E N: Jan. 6.6:42 a.m.

H O W : Nooney waa rust bound on 7th
St. traveling about 20 mph. He looked
th ro u g h the rear w in d ow , drove
through a slop sign, turned south onto
Myrtle and drove uboul 35 feet when
his car rammed Kabv'a patrol car.
northbound on Myrtle. The Investigat­
ing officer said the officers were playing
"cat and mouse" gam es and "hide and
seek " with their cars' headlights off.

Incident occurred about 15 minutes
before the accident, according to the
reports. Little Is a six-year veteran of
the force, according to Butler, who said
the In v e s tig a tio n c o n c lu d e d the
firecracker Incident was not related to
the subsequent accident.

off. according to officers' sworn state­
m ents. However, w h ile the officer
conducting the Internal Investigation.
D el. Sgt. Bill Hasson, says he Is
convinced the headlights o f both cars
were turned off before the accident
occurred, and that the officers were
“ ...playing hide and seek on the streets
w ith their lights out prior to the
accident." Butler says that can't be
proved. That's because the other officer
Involved In the sccidenl. Patrolman N.
J. Raby. who sustained a head Injury,
claim s he cannot recall anything that
occurred prior to the accident and
d o e s n 't r e m e m b e r I f h is c a r 'a
headlights were off. "T h ere's no way
for us to prove It, or disprove Kaby's
sta te m e n t," Butler said, although
Hasson says In his report he doesn't

• T h s resu lt: Chief Butler says he
has placed a written reprimand In
Little's personnel file "an d that will
stay part o f hi* record throughout his
professional career." T h ree written
reprimands filed against an officer may
result In dismissal. Butler said.
• T h e findings: The headlights of
not one. but both, police cars were
turned off when they collided; and It
apparently has been common practice
for night-shift officers to patrol In their
cars — sometimes for os much ss three
hours at a time — with the headlights

8« « PROBE, paga 8 A

Military Retirement A Scandal
Stockman Tells Senate Panel
W A S H IN G T O N (U P I) Budget director David Stockman
angrily criticized spending In
areas with broad constituencies,
charging that the military re­
tirement system la a "scandal"
and farm price supports are
merely a taxpayer bailout.
Stockman came to the Senate
Budget Committee Tuesday to
m ake the case for President
Reagan's new 8973.7 billion
b u d g e t, w h ic h c u ts m an y
domestic programs but Includes
a 830 billion Increase for the
military.
Congressional Budget * Office
director Rudolph Penner was
scheduled to see the senators
today.
Stockman walked In step with
Reagan when It comes to farm­
ers. aa the fiscal 1966 budget
calls for slashing farm programs.
But he broke with his boss when
he went after military retire­
ment.
“ It's a scandal. It's an out­
rage." Stockman said. "T h e In­
stitutional forces o f the military
are more concerned about pro­
tecting their retirement than

'•••♦ho military are mor# con*
corned about protecting their
retirement than they a rt about
protecting the security of the
American people.*
-OmvM Stock mmn

***** * re
protecting the budget on military retirement hi
aecurlty o f the American people.
fiscal 1966.
When push comes to shove,
D efen se S ecretary C aspai
they give up on security before Weinberger, told of Stockm an'i
they give up on retirement." he com m ents, said the military
,__
,
. .
r e t i r e m e n t p r o v i s i o n s Ir
Stockman later said he was Reagan's budget are "proper.'
expressing his personal opinion and said. "There's no scandal
on military retirement and said that I know of."
Pr e ,ld fnt does not agree
Reagan's farm proposal would
with him.
cut spending for farm aubsldlea
D espite a proposal In the by *hnost 50 percent over the
budget for a one-year cost-of- next five fiscal years,
living freeze in most retirement
The proposal would phase
programs. Including veterans down government Involvement
benefits, the president's budget ln agricultural pricing so farm
envisions spending 818.3 billion Prtce* w ould be set In the
o f Its 8313.7 billion Pentagon
Bm SC A N D A L, f a g s B A

Broulstts; Eddie Groan, 8, aon of Gladys
•nd Emory Groan; and Shundralla Bucknsr,
8, dauflhtar of Vicki and Tyrona Bucknsr. all
of Sanford. Colgato's 4-foot radio-controllad
robot It on a national anti-cavity crutads.

Reagan Readies State O f Union Address
W ASHINGTON (UPI) President Reagan,
celebrating his 74th birthday today. Is expected
to present a conciliatory blueprint for the first
year o f his second term In his State o f the Union
»d d fessat9 p .m .
The address will be covered by all three
television networks.
With Congress. Including many Republicans,
taking pot shots at h it domestic budget cut
proposals. Reagan wtll lay out a broad view o f his
hopes for 1968 on both national and International
Issues, a senior official said.
The Stale of the Union address, a constitutional
requirement traditionally delivered in the House
chamber to a Joint session o f Congress with the
Cabinet and diplomatic c o m attending, usually
comes before submission o f the budget
This year, however. It follows the budget and a
week of posturing by congresstonal leaders and

"T h is wtll be a little broader in scope, a little
more open In appealing to all Americana" than
the laundry Uat o f programs a president usually
presents In his annual message to Congress, the
official said.
R e a p n wtll express “ a strong commitment to
tax reform ." supporting the concept of a modified
Hat tax — a single rate paid by all taxpayers In
se ve ra l different bracketa — and w ill re­
emphasize his determination to slash the deficit
by cutting government spending, except In
defense, the official said.
The speech also will emphasise "the search for
peace with arms controL" the official sold. The
president likely will call for renewed aid to rebels
offleft wing rebels.

D am an.
Chief o f staff Donald Regan told reporters
Tuesday. " I think you'll find It’ll be a good
speech."
’j j *
- W . “ The speech will be a very
statesmanlike review of the state o f the union and
won't indulge icUlr criticism " o f congressional
opponents of his severe domestic budget cuts and
At a ceremony Tuesday when he signed the
Economic Report o f the P rea id cn L F fea g a o

t o d a y

Cloaslfteda
Comics.....

�7A— Irani * f H*raid, tsMerd, FI.

Widmidey, Feb. *, 1WS

NATION
IN BRIEF
'O ld Men, Women A n d Children '
Took Toll O f U.S. Troops In Nam
NEW YORK (U P!) — Up to half the U S. soldiers killed tn
the Vietnam w ar died at the hand* o f “ old men. women
and children" Gen. William Westmoreland refused to
count as enem y troop*, a senior American Intelligence
officer aaya.
Col. Donald Blascak. now chief of U.S. Intelligence for the
A rm y’s Fifth Corps In Frankfort. West Germany, testified
Tuesday at Westmoreland * *130 million libel trial against
CBS.
At Issue In the 17-week-old trial la a documentary
entitled "T h e Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception."
T h e program accused Westmoreland o f reducing the
estimate o f communist troop strength to make It appear
the United States was winning a war o f attrition and
convince President Johnson to commit more U.8 . troops.
A major argument In the trial has been whether the Self
Defense and Secret Self Defense forces, or “ home guard" o f
the Viet Cong, should have been counted In the official
estimate o f enem y strength.
Westmoreland refused to count these Irregular forces,
regarding them as “ old men, women and children" who
did not play a m ajor role In combat.
Blaacak said "th e y (Irregulars) lived with them (regular
troops). They were considered a military threat."

Reagan's Cabinet Shaping Up
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Edwin Meese and two other
nominees for Cabinet posts have glided through Senate
committees and a fourth. Education Secretary-designate
William Bennett. Is due for certain approval today.
Senate committees approved the nominations Tuesday
o f Meese as attorney general by a 3-1 ratio, and Donald
Hodel (or Interior and John Herrington for energy
unanimously.
Bennett won committee approval last week and the
Senate was to consider his nomination today.
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole said he hoped the
Senate also could act on the Model and Herrington
nominations today.
Meese * nomination, which went through two seta of
confirmation hearings a year apart, likely w ill be
considered within days after the Senate returns Feb. 18
from the President's Day recess.
The Senate has not rejected a Cabinet nomination since

lo s e .

Bragging Gets Thief Jailed
BOSTON (UPI) — Frances James knew she recognized
the story of a purse snatching and shooting she overheard
a teenager boasting about on the subway. Her daughter
was the victim.
"H e was telling the story verbatim like my daughter had
told m e," said James. 55, whose 31-year-old daughter
Mary was mugged and shot In the back Thursday In a
holdup outside a subway station.
The bullet only graxed her back, passing through several
layer* o f clothing but leaving her uninjured.
"It's Incredible but It's true," said James, a guard at
Charles Street Jatl for seven years, w ho taterpolnted the
suspect out to police.
James followed the youth, 14. off the train at a
downtown stop and called police, but he disappeared. She
later scouted around, spotted him and grabbed another
officer to arrest him.

Teen Tried As Adult For Rape
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W rite r
Trial began today In the case o f a
16-year-old Longwood boy charged with the
rape o f an 18-year-old Longwood woman
and the burglary o f her home.
The caae U* not being held In Juvenile
court because the boy. Williams R. Dukes
Jr., la charged as an adult. T h e caae is being
tried before seml-retlred Circuit Judge Voile
Williams and a two-man. four-womanjury.
According to sheriffs Investigators, the
victim reportedly recognized a man who
entered her bedroom at 3:30 a.m. Oct. 23.
The suspect closed and locked the door o f
the woman's bedroom, pushed her down on
the bed and held a screwdriver to her throat
as he raped her, deputies reported.
The woman told deputies she frightened
the suspect by screaming and he jumped
out a bedroom window and fled.
When deputies arrived at the woman's
home at 3:30 a.m., she gave them the
suspect's name, description and a descrip­
tion o f his car.
A Longwood officer spotted the suspect's
vehicle and stopped him on E.E. Williamson
Road. Longwood. at 3:35 a m. A screwdriver

and a pair o f bloody men’s underwear were
found tn the car.
If convicted. Dukes faces 4Vi to 5 Vi years
In prison.
In other court action, a Longwood man
was found guilty o f lewd and lascivious
assault on a child. And In a separate caae an
Orlando man pleaded guilty to committing a
lewd and lascivious act In the presence of a
child.
A Jury took about an hour to convict John
Sessums W orlln g o f the assault on an
11 -year-old girl.
During the trial, the girl testified that
Worllng. 51. o f 318 Heather Drive, fondled
her repeatedly on two occasions — Dec. 26.
1983. and Sept. 3.1984.
The girl was composed as she stood up lri
the witness box and Identified Worllng. She
told the court and seven Jurors that on those
dates the and her younger cousin went to
Worllng'* house to play with computer
games and use a swing. Her cousin lives In
Longwood.
It was while she, her cousin and several
other kids took turns swinging on a swing
near his house that the assaults occurred.

Conservatives Cheered
By Buchanan's New Job
W A S H IN G T O N (U P I ) Patrick Buchanan, a firebrand
conservative and architect o f the
Nixon administration's blister­
ing attacks on the press, wilt be
plotting media strategy for Pres­
ident Reagan as White House
communications director.
Reporters winced and con­
servatives cheered Tuesday as
W h ite H ouse ch ief o f s ta ff
D o n a ld R e g a n a n n o u n c e d
Buchanan, a feisty columnist
and television commentator, will
take control of speechwriting
and presidential Image-shaping.
" I was looking for a good
communicator and he fit the
bill," Regan explained.

Buchanan will be only one of
se ve ra l a d v is e rs w h o h a ve
Reagan's ear, "and his opinion
may or may not hold."
Conscious o f the criticism
Buchanan has been quick to
dispense toward administration
.officials — Including Secretary of
State G eorge Shultz — and
policies he found loo moderate.
Regan said he pursued the
' matter of loyally with Buchanan,
who promised to support ad­
ministration policy once the in­
ternal debate was over.

The Buchanan appointment
sparked Immediate speculation
of rougher waters ahead for the
White House and the press. Also
Buchanan w ill direct longto be seen Is whether a more
range media planning — derid­
ing what messages to convey combative Reagan — one re­
flective o f Buchanan's style —
and how best to sell the presi­
emerge*.
dent's programs to Ihe public.
Deputy press secretary Larry
Com plaints that Buchanan
Speakes will handle day-to-day dealt with the press with a heavy
contact with reporters.
hand d u rin g the N ixon a d ­
But the appointment Installs m inistration did n oth in g to
Buchanan a* the leading con­ dampen the excitement o f con­
servative voice In the White servatives who saw his ap­
House os the president adapts to pointment as a victory — and as
an exodus o f longtime aides and evidence the Ideological scales
surrounds himself with a staff of within Ihe White House have
relative newcomers headed by tipped back In their favor.
Regan.
"Conservatives are tn a better
" T o th e e x te n t th a t Pat position In the White House
Buchanan has his views, he will today than they were six months
represent them strongly," Regan ago." said Burton Pines o f the
told rep o rte ra . He stressed Heritage Foundation.

she said.
T h e girt, from Orlando, testified that each
time she took her tum at the swing. Worllng
put his hand under he, and "tickled" her
even though she told him to stop.
W orllng testified he put his hand there to
protect her from the single-rope swing.
She told the court that she mentioned the
Incidents to her m other after the two
watched a television show about child
abuse.
Worllng. a realtor, could receive up to a
year In the county Jail when sentenced. He
also faces numerous charges Involving
sexual acts with other children.
In a separate case. Danny Edwards, now
o f Orlando but formerly o f 517 Eldorado
W ay. Caaselbeny. pleaded guilty to a lewd
and lascivious act In the presence of a child.
According to court records, he prompted a

10 -year-old girl to touch him In the genital
area.
T h e incidents occurred In his home
between Sept. 13 and 20.1983.
Edwards could receive up to a year In the
county Jail when sentenced by Circuit
Judge Dominick J. Salft.

M urder Suspect Captured;
Companion Still A t Large
ORLANDO (UPI) - One of
two Indian River men charged
with first-degree murder was
in custody today, but his
companion remained at large
after escaping from a police
dragnet.
Steven Wonder. 20. and
Carl Edward Schuck. 18. both
of Sebastian, a small town
north o f Vero Beach, were
charged with the Saturday
night slaying of a service
station attendant during a'
robbery at Dunford in north
Indian River County.
Wonder was captured by
O rla n d o p o lic e T u e s d a y
morning after he was sur­
prised by a patrolman re­
sponding to a report o f a
residents! burglary.
A police spokesman said
patrolman J.R. Smith did not
see S c h u c k but he w a s
believed to have been with
W onder at the tim e and
escaped as Smith was caplu r in g W o n d e r a n d a
14-year-old fem ale, com p a­
nion.

Police said Wonder almost
killed Sm ith, missing him
with a shot fired at his head
from point-blank range.
Sm ith s a id he s p o tte d
Wonder when he arrived at
the house In an older residen­
tial area near downtown Or­
lando. and ordered him to
stop.
He s a id W o n d e r sp u n
around and Bred at his head
but missed, then started to
run.
Smith gave chase but b y
the time he caught up with
Wonder, the fugitive had no
weapon.
Wonder and the girl, who
was not Identified because o f
her age, w ere taken to a
nearby fire station and police
cordoned oft a two-squareblock area In the search for
Schuck. T h ey thought they
had Schuck cornered In a
house, but when the stormed
the residence. It was empty.

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY • A.M. •6 P.M.

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M .P .O .

321-2398

D E L I x u n ia u

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SA N FO R D FLA.

A R EA DEATH S

FLORIDA
INBRIEF
Bureaucrats Dressed Down;
Cabinet Backs Teachers
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - With a blast at the state
education bureaucracy, Oov. Bob Graham and the Cabinet
have come to the aid o f more than 4,000 teachers whose
applications to take the new master teacher's lest were
rejected for omitted zip codes and like technicalities.
Silling as the state Board of Education. Graham and the
Cabinet Tuesday Instructed the Department of Education
to take steps to g ive the rejected applicants another chamce
to compete for the extra pay master teachers will receive
under the new program.
Education Commission Ralph Turlington defended his
agency, saying Its hands were tied legally by the language
or the rule adopted by Graham and the Cabinet last Tall to
Implement the master teacher program. That rule requires
a "com plete application."
Other education officials said they have been hampered
by a lack o f tim e for processing application* and
developing the master teacher tests. They also said they
had only two permanent staffers a n d jw o telephone lines to
handle a potential pool a t40.000 applicants.

Killer Escapes Chair Again
STARKE (UPI) — Condemned killer Carl Ray Songer,
w ho was scheduled to die at 7 a.m. today, will escape
Florida's electric chair a third time, believed to be the only
man to do so.
The U lh U.S. Circuit Court o f Appeals In Atlanta
Tuesday granted Songer a slay to give It time to consider
the similar appeal o f another Florida death row Inmate.
James Ernest Hitchcock. Songer, convicted of gunning
down a rookie highway patrolman In 1073, had escaped
execution with last-minute reprtves twice before under
previous death warrants.
Hitchcock's caae, like Songer's, testa whether a 1978
Supreme Court ruling broadening the admissibility o f
mitigating evidence In sentencing hearings should be
retroactive. The Judge who sentenced Songer to death
ruled the Supreme Court decision was not retroactive and
had no effect on his decision to bar certain evidence
favorable to Songer from the sentencing phase o f Songer's
1974 trial.

ABO ENIA CONSTANTINE
Mrs. Argenla P. Constantine.
75. o f 1109 S. Park A v e ..
Sanford, died Sunday at Life
Care Center. Altamonte Springs.
Bom Nov. 19. 1909 In Halki.
0 recce, she moved to Sanford
from Tarpon Springs In 1944.
She was a homemaker and of
the Greek Orthodox faith.
She la survived by two daugh­
ters, Mrs. Constance Fox, San­
ford. and Mrs. Maria Leonls.
Daytona Beach: two g ra n d ­
daughters; a brother. Criatos
Papadakis. Athens.
O ra m k o w Funeral H om e.
Sanford, Is In charge of ar­
rangements.

3237 Black Ptnc Ave., Winter
Park, died Feb. 4 at Orlando
Regional Medical Center. Bom
Nov. 3. 1982 In Winter Park, she
is the daughter o f John D. and
Colleen K. Fakesa.
Other survivors Include a sis­
te r, M a r ie s , W in te r P a r k t
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Anthony Fake**, Sanford:
paternal great-gran dm oth er,
Mrs. A lic e Fskeas. O rlando;
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene L. Conrad. Sanford;
m aternal great-grandm other.
Mrs. E.B. Vest, Becldey, W.Va.
Carey Hand Guardian Chapel,
Orlando. Is In charge o f ar­
rangements.

WINDOW ft DOOR
GUARDS
THE BEST PROTECTION
AGAINST INTRUDERS!!!

FABRIC ATiING
IN I 6.

IT.

HA.

HABIB A. DOONEY
Mrs. Marie A. Dooney. 84, of
609 Maine Court, Longwood.
died Monday st St. Vincent
Medical Center, Jacksonville.
Bom May 8 , 1900 In Paterson,
N.J., she moved to Longwood
Tram Massachusetts In 1941.
She was a homemaker and a
m e m b e r o f S t. A u g u s t in e
Catholic Church. Casselberry.
She was a member of Augle's
Elder*. Caaaelberry.
Survivors Include two daugh­
ters, Wanda Jane Lamb, Or­
lando. Barbara A. Grant. Boone,
N.C.: tw o slaters, M argaret
Young, Jacksonville, Eleanor
Stevenson. Hawthorne, N.J.;
seven g ra n d c h ild re n : th ree
great-grandchildren.
G ard en C hapel H om e fo r
Funerals, Orlando, Is In charge
of arrangements.

Funeral Notice

Specialising In Funeral Dtalgna

(Hulling
- T iW

t f f c 'J

3 2 3 -1 2 0 4

BBIAC.PA EBM
Mias Brta Caltlln Fakes*. 2, of

W .L O RAM KOW L .F .D .
E v e n in g Herald
IU1SS 411 IK)
Wednesday, February 4. II
Vol. 77. No. ID
UiUwS D*Uy
0*Uy «M M m
I stwSay Sy TSs l **t»*d
l(K, MS NFia. n n i.

Fire Splits Up Student Body
INVERNESS (UPI) - The 1,300-member student body o f
Citrus High School will be split up with students attending
school In four separate locations as a result o f a fire that
destroyed one-third o f the classroom*.
Th e students received an unexpected vacation as a result
o f the fire early Tuesday, but will resume classes Monday,
School officials huddled over the
Tuesday and cam e up with a plan that w ill Include busing
extra hospital rooms as

t» cm * CUm FstUf* Paid at
“ “ uni

Do you know everything you need to about
funeral m t v let? IT not. W .L Oramkow It the
man to tum to. H«*a a licensed funeral direc­
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tions. Stop In and talk to him any time. He's
here-to help.

GRAMKOW
FUNERAL HOME
m wist AMFoer aouuvxxo
SANFORD, FLORIDA
TflKFHONl s m a l l
WILUMI L. OAAMKOW

a

�Erasing Herald. totrtwd. Ft.

^ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * J_

Wadnraday. F*b. 4. 1WS-1A

City Manager Review Committee Seeks
Guidance, Comes Away With Applause
By Donna E i t u
H e ra ld S ta ff W r ite r
A special citizens’ advisory
committee went to the Sanford
City Commission for help in
reviewing applications o f city
manager hopefuls, but came
away with none. Instead. It
received applause for Its work so
far.
After nearly an hour m eeting
with commissioners, the com ­
mittee's three women — Sara
Jacobson. Shirley Schilkc and
Eliza Pringle — and two men —
former City Commissioner Eddie
Keith and Circuit Ju dge S.
Joseph Davis Jr. — left city hall
with few answers to their ques­
tions.
They also left with a "no'*
response to their suggestion that
they be allowed to check out
references o f the most qualified
applicants by using city tele­
phones.
; Commissioner Milton Smith
said the commission will handle
it chore after the rom m lttee
Dmmends the 10 top appli­
cants.

agreement from his colleageus
th a t th e c o m m is s io n w i l l
" th u m b t h r o u g h " all 1 0 1
applications for the Job after
receiving the committee's rec­
ommendations.
Ms. Jacobson said the new
m an ager m u st be " a lm o s t
g o d lik e, fle x ib le and
foreslghted."
She explained how the com ­
mittee has placed each applica­
tion In the category It seems to
fit. The first category Includes
those who fill the advertised
requirements o f a master's d e­
gree In public administration or
a related field and four years top
experience. S om e 46 of the
a p p lic a t io n s fa ll In to t h is
category.
The second contains applica­
tions from those with a master's
degree, but w ho are not city
managers or administrators. She
said most o f these 13 are assis­
tant city managers.
T h e th ir d — th ose w ith
master's degrees, but who have
not been a city manager, city
administrator or who have less

The group asked for guidance
on "In-depth criteria, specific
field experience and talent'* the
commission Is looking for In a
new city m anager who w ill
replace 32-year veteran W.E.
"Pete" Knowles who Is retiring
April 30.
All they got were comments
from Commissioner David Farr
who said the manager should be
an adm inistrator and not a
teacher and Commissioner John
Mercer w ho said the manager
should h a ve com m u nication
skills, both verbal and written.
In response to Ms. Jacobson's
report that the committee Is
meeting daily and may have a
report o f Ita 10 recommenda­
tions by next week. Mayor Betlye Smith asked commissioners
whether the city "would spring
fo r th e c o s t o f p r o v i d i n g
sandwiches" for the group to eat
as they work.
Before any answer could be
given, h o w ev er. Davis said,
" W e 'l l buy our ow n
sandwiches."
Meanwhile. Farr got nods o f

than four years experience —
contains 14 applicants.
The fourth category of 20 have
related experience and the fifth
category o f 8 have no degrees
and unrelated experience.
Ms. Jacobson said most of the
hopefuls fall Into the 35-to-35year age group and most are
"heavy In background experi­
ence."
Farr commended the group for
Its scientific approach to the
screening process. Commission­
er John Mercer said he also
com m en ded th e group and
would give It his vote of con­
fidence.
T h e job o f screening city
manager applicants fell solely to
the advisory committee after the
Florida Association o f City and
County Management pulled out
o f the process. The association
had agreed to name three expe­
rienced city managers to screen
the applications and recommend
the top 10 . but declined to
participate, apparently Insulted
that its work would be reviewed
b y a d tlzcn s group.

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The Best-ForLess!

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Taylor Realty SVC., Inc k DavM J.
lundborg. LI US AAeadewRidge,Uf.aOO
DavM H. Surdetto 4 wt Joan k Jieyh O
Andanon at N UP ot NWk at SCk ot eat
I* II lt.ua.MO
FRC Inc. M Gory Kroltkr 4 Wt Tamara
J . IMS. Huntort Gkn. MMOO
Fmt Beyl Church *1 Orl., Inc. k Joeoyh
H Hughe*. Jr. 4 Wt Baler**, Eh *1 IWk *|
SWk lac IP1MI N of RR. 4 E at It. Rd.
Ooyt. PriamCorny Rd .UL WO
Winter Saga. Dov. tg bonchmark Entr.,
Inc. LI IA Tuacoortllo. Un I), nUM
Thermal Energy Comoro Haro* Syv to
Jerry M Twttard 4 Wt Carotyn. Lt J4 Sobel

label Vbtnt Prop k Bk» Wrayai Haa In*..
,1*11M at SMga at h a * Mnt. ua,*ae
- Galllmar Hwnn, ln«. fa Walter m
4 Wt IM a M . l*t» i«rlng Valley
Cheee. tltaxao
! Jeeeyh Weleenteld. Tr le Lynn G. lyane 4
Wf Haney W . LI If The Trail* At Country
!Creak. Hiatt
' Aiks IW cM a I* Pawl t. Mlnlett*. 4
Tereee K. 0rawer, LI 4 Blk • Beyl. Pari at
Teonelte HeHh ChvWe. U7.M*
GknnMW.lg.Mm 0 MeTTH4 W1AM* Sue.
LI k. Verne Chaney. I7S.M
. Patt H. K|allman 4 Wt Nancy to R**a L.
BraSghton 7 Makhle I. Lei II. ilk » .

F

(BACK ON) 5 LB PKQ.

J TURKEY THIQHS. . . .

lb.

E

A f t £

O V

Gkn at Sabai Paint. MM.WB
Regency Canetr. Cary k Leonard M * USDA PREMIUM GOLDN-FRESH
COMBO PAK
C
Molten 4 W1 Elk.. LI I Langwaod Hill*. Un.
Tom. 1111*00
lb
Perry Dlmttron 4 Wt E Patrick k Atgk
V
Grabnlckat 4 Wt AAJIda. Lt IL Sktyy Hallow. 1 FIRST CUT HAM OR SHOULDER 3-4 LB. AVQ. TWIN PAK

} CUT-UP FRYERS . . . .

maos

Dacca**■in* Conttr to Robert A. Jena*. Jr.
4 Wt Evelyn. LI 1*. label Troll at Sabai Ft.
IIRUH
Pkrr* L Lombort 4 Wt Iron* k Yatmgran
Rooo Kim 4 Juliana H. Kim. Lt 1M

A

* !

S

7 0

PORK SAUSAGE H l f R W m

TENDER

l
| »

1

S LB. PAK

BEEF LIVER............ . . , • # •;

M

J

A B I

Harrk Young 4 Wt Marilyn k William L.
lb
LovoH 4 Wt Undo L . LI II. Rlk H. Winter
Wood* Un A tat too
EXTRA MEATY PORK
5 LB. PKG.
4% A A '
Community Homo* Co to Skvon F. Token
4 WtCairwflne. Lt 7. ilk E. Oakcrttt. HUM
Community Ikmo* Co. k Glenn C Hum
FAMILY PAK
,| | 4 | !
mar,ton 4 Wt Nancy S. Lt A Blk E. * USDA CHOICE CENTER CUT
Oakcrotl. S7SAM
Lakewood Vonturo, Inc. to Victor J.
Raguccl 4 Wt Joann* P . LI II. Croonnood 1 USDA CHOICE
FAMILY PAK 4 OR MORE % g % Q | J [
Lake*. Un MVI MO
lb
Maelm Bldg. Cary to Glenn l Drake,
portIon* of Lk lAA 4 tl. tlk t Kathryn Pork
t
USDA
CHOICE
CENTER
CUT
S
LB.
PKG,
| J
5 q !Add No On*, ttl.no
lb
Govomer* Point. LM M Doboy Aaaoc . Lk
14 M. Governor* Point. Ph. J. Sac I, not
USDA CHOICE BLADE CUT
FAMILY PAK
S 4
1 • ?
Relyh E McCumbor 4 Wt Barbara to
Ralph E. McCumbor. Lt 1S7 Wrenwood Hk
w
lb
Un S.IM
5 LB. PKQ.
$ ^
f 9 J[
Richard Bat#*. Tr. M Monk E. Taylor Jr. * EXTRA LEAN
,8 AyE ep'.LB,
4 Larry Luce* 4 Wt Joanne. Lk 14 1 Blk t
4 Lk 141. Bk A Falrlano Rato. S*C 1row!..
J ‘ IOWA WESTERN LEAN, EXTRA MEATY
5 LBS &amp;UP 0
0 * 2
Hoathrow Land 4 Dov. k Chrk H Johneon
4 Wt Vlctk L . LI M Choetnut Hill. Hat.***
■abort C- Hewman 4 Wt Lorraln* to
IOWA WESTERN FIRST CUT. EXTRA LEAN
5 LB. PKG.
William L. Howard 4 Wt Dottk L.. M IIP.
CountryClubVillage. Un Two, tetJtt
EXTRA LEAN
5 LB. PKG.

; NECK BONES, FEET.

.i*. O a f

!:

J SIRLOIN STEAK . ffllWMWff.W .to. dC

!•

» T-BONE or CLUB STEAK MXf .*lt'.W. . X

&gt;:

CHUCK STEAK .........MK7-v-L.B. . .
* CHUCK ROAST......... . , . Lt. 1

J;
*;

1

t GROUND BEEF

SPARE RIBS............MV/Vrt. .i&gt;. O O "

PORK CHOPS . . . . . . &gt;WVH'. .i». 8 8 *
GROUND CHUCK . . . .W P M . * • 1 ••si

WEDmtBDAT, nea. O

f t

r9

10 LB. PKG.

CHITTERLINGS........ WWtM .
USDA GRADE A TURKEY NECK OR
5 LB. PKG.
DRUMSTICKS.......... save sr le?.

A

USDA PREMIUM GOLD-N-FRESH

i &gt;
i-

WHOLE FRYERS . . . . MWrM-. ,Li. 5

^ U q c t&amp; i

USDA PREMIUM GOLD N-FRESH LIVERS

SAVE SO* LB.

DRUMSTICKS or LEG QTRS..................lb.
In

t i

QWALTNEY GREAT SMOKIES BUY 1, OCT 1 FREE
$ J Q
.
. lb .

GWALTNEY LEAN PORK

L o c a te d

!

O

. . .D O

* PORK LOIN ROAST......tWaWW .

C A LEN D A R

T h e

GROCERY

COUNTRY CLUB SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER
2477 AIRPORT BLVD. PH 323-1896 SANFORD

Ij;

GENERICS
TE A BAGS.

• 1 "

HEIN2 32 OZ.

tooct

1-

GENERIC

,1 IS H

H

KEGOKETCHUP

COFFEE ..

HEINZ STRAINED 2 OZ.

GENERIC 10 OZ.

BABY FOOD .. « / » 1

INSTANT COFFEE.. • 2 M J:

MUELLER SPAGHETTI Of _ _ „

GENERIC LONG GRAIN

ELBOW MACARONI.6 9 *

a Smirnoff 80Vodka

8*
4 8 **

GENERIC

BLACK LABEL
BEER ta oz. • PAK

OPEN M O N D A Y TH R U S A TU R D A Y 10 AM * 8 PM
______________ SU N D A Y 1 PM ■ 8 PM______________
Prices Good Wed. Feb. 6 Thru Tues. Feb. 12

T V. 5 LB. BAG

*

a m

. _____ _.
.

RICE....... b i b s a o M

- __
”

GENERIC 7.23 OZ.

FLOUR...............8 B *

M ACARONI k
CHEE8E DINNER 4 ^ 1

VAN CAMP PORK i BEANS,
QJL RED TOMAWES,
DOUBLE LUCK CUT

GENERIC PURE 4 OZ- BOX

____

B U C K PEPPER . . 7 5 *
GENERIC 100S PURE 24 OZ. m

VEGETABLE 0 I L . . # 1 t # !

GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS
GREEN HEAD

SPAGHETTI SAUCE. 9 7 V

C A B B A G E .....LB.
li
1 8*

QENERIC JUMBO
...i

YELLOW

ONIONS

TOWELS

89*

3 LB BAD

_

_

PEPPERS ..........

BATHROOM TISSUE 7 9 * !

SWEET JUICY

GENERIC 42 OZ.

^ _

PEARS........... u

GENERIC

88*5

BLEACH

98*

LB.

.

.

LAUNDRY DETEMENT 9 9 * ! I

FANCY RED
GRAPES

■I

r o ll

GENERIC 4 ROLL PAK

OREEN BELL

FROZEN FOODS DAIRY
TITTT.T
P O T P I E S .............9 1 * 1

KCNNETT EXTRA
RICH 4
S CREAMY
CREAMY Vk GAL
RICH

- -

[tC E C M A M .
:c o «ib O N

b h h

BANQUET 11 OZ. PKQ.
T .V . D IN N E R . .
ORE-tOA CRINKLE CUT

• l&gt;

S X V j t i AMO

| A | | g

R » T A T O « ..i *

Ls

h

.

m

iK i.R U M

o*

» ^ :

R K D IM R T IO N i S u a
COUPON

COUPON

LYRE'S OAK CREEK
o y y j T P A Y i o w

MILWAUKEE'S BEST

■ are

t A O

* DELMONICO STEAK..............11. 3

* CUBED S TEA K ...................... u. $ 2 ” !i

REALTY TRANSFERS

8 p.m.

No Fancy Names
No Needles
Just U.S.D.A. Choice
Beef, Naturally
Tender, Well
Flavored.*'

SUPERMARKETS

$ BEEF

C O PE S u p p ort G ro u p o f
S e m in o le A re a . 7:3 0 p .m .,
Sem inole Com m unity Health
C enter. C ranes Roost O ffice
Park. Suite 377. Pelican Build­
ing. Altam onte Springs. Open
free to famlUea and caregivers o f
the long-term mentally disabled.
For fu rth er Inform ation call
Marty HeU at 831-24I I .
n U M D A T .m .7
S e m in o le Chapter F lo rid a
Audubon Society brunch. 10
a.
m., Blue Springs State Pork.
Orange City. Bring place setting
and field glosses. Manatee pro­
gram conducted by the pork
•toff w ill begin at 11 a m.
F ree b lo od p ressu re
screenings, 10-11 a.m.. West
Volusia Medical Services build­
ing. 1681 Providence Blvd.. De­
ltona.
[ Free Income tax help for re­
tirees. B a.m. to 1 p.m.. Hacienda
Village Mobile Home Park. BOO
bongwood-OvIrdo Road. W inter
April 15. Bro f last tax return,
the current year and
Hhcr relevant materials.
S o u t h 8 e m ln o le C o u n t y
(1wants Club. noon. Quincy's
tesUuront. Highway 17-02 and
.Ive O aks B o u le v a rd .
ItiMlbeTTVt
Centre! Florida Blood Bank
km lnole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.m.
0 7 p.m . Florida H oapltalUtamonte Branch. 601 E. AJtanonte Ave., 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Winter Pork Alzheimer Family
kipport Group, Inc., preaenla a
migrant b r the public. 7 p.m..
Vinter Pork Care Center. 1B70
leaflet Rood. Winter Park. Edufilm. AUblmer’t : The
Goodbye, will be shown.
po r In fo r m a t io n c a l l th e
fELPU N E 678-3334.
1 Free seminar on Physical Fitpeas for Beginners for all ngea. 7
b. ro.. W est Volusia Medical
Servlcaa building. 1661 Pro­
v id e n c e B l v d . . D e lt o n a .
George E. Woodring,
athletic trainer and
at Daytona Beach
unity College, and
M .Y M C A director.
Community
film series. 7:30 p.m..
C o n c e rt H a ll, fe a t u r in g
Moobrnfur. the Vampire, in
pennon with English sub-tlUea.
and Un CfiMa AmfcJou. a ourFret to the
..
'•

»
*
*
*

* 1 .6 8

r w

p w

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COORS/LT.
an * 3 .1 0

PRivI

uttirt *3

AA. 12Dl W. Farm St..

wkY

a

S L IC E D

3
!

BACON
JS:
4m
UMlWtHkMUWWIMMVeM

!

FLORIDA GRADE A

, LB

0

4

T.V.
SUGAR

OOt

Z

w ^ a -t,«e w * w M iS »M

COUPON

COUPON

45 LARGE
EGOS

bao

0%

__

A #

COUNTY PAIR

BREAD
20 OZ.

IV V fflV V V fflV R lrillflllV IlV V V ITA 1
w&gt;|iMri

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%

Evening Herald
(UIF* MI-MI)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2011 or 831-9993
Wednesday, February 6, 1W 5- 4A

Wayne D. Doyle, Publiihsr
Thorns* Olerdeno, Managing Editor
Melvin Adklp) Advertising Director

tlomr DrItvery: Werk. 11.10. Month. *4 75: 3 Month*.
*14 25: 0 Mpnths. *27.00: Year. *51 fXi Hy Mall Wrrk
* 1.50: Month. *0 00:3 Month*. * 1H00: « Month*. *32 50
Year, *00,00,

Moderation
In Quebec
F iftee n y e a rs ago. F ren c h Canadians rioted
In th e streets, a g o v e rn m e n t m inister w a s
k id n a p p ed a n d m u rdered b y separatist te rro r­
ists, a n d It looked then, a n d fo r m any y e a rs
a fterw a rd , as If Canada m ig h t literally be t o m
apart b y th e m ost d iv is iv e issue ever to fa c e
this c o u n tr y 's northern n eigh b or.
T im e s h a v e c h a n g e d . Q u eb ecers h a v e
turned stea d ily aw ay fr o m confrontation w ith
C an a d a 's cen tra l g o v e rn m e n t, which long has
been d o m in a ted b y A n g lo p h o n e Ontario. T h la
c h a n g e re fle c te d In a n e a r ly tw o -th lrd a
d e clin e In m em bersh ip o f th e governing P a rti
Q u ebccols, and by a rec en t p oll show ing o n ly
4 p ercen t o f Q uebec's French-speaking v o te rs
fa v o rin g Independence — has com e a b ou t
p a rtly because co n tin u in g econom ic h ard
tim es h a v e caused p e o p le to concentrate
m ore on bread-and-butter issu es and less o n
such q u e stio n * as w h e th e r m erch ants sh ou ld
be a llo w e d to advertise th eir w ares In E n glish
as w e ll a s French.
In a n y case, the Parti Q u ebccols, which w a s
fou n d ed on the sin gle Issue o f creating a n
In depen den t Quebec, h a s pu lled back from a
p a rty resolu tion adop ted last yea r a n n ou n c­
in g U w p u ld cam paign In the n ext provincial
election (exp ected In 1086) principally on th e
laaue o f Q u ebec so v e re ig n ty . Instead, th e
p a r t y c o n fe r e n c e , w h ic h m et r e c e n t ly ,
w atered d o w n the resolu tion to a statem ent
that In d epen den ce Is a "fu n dam en tal o b ­
je c t iv e " bu t w ill not be m ad e the "ra iso n
d 'e t r e " o f th e p a rty's ca m p a ig n .
Iron ica lly, this m od erate shift, which w on a
better than 2*1 m ajority, w as led by p ro v in ­
cial P re m ie r Rene L evesqu e, once the m ost
h ardline separatist o f all. T h a t doesn't m ea n
that L e v e s q u e and h is fo llo w e rs are a b a n ­
d o n in g independence a ltogeth er, or that th e
rank and file w ill necessarily fall m eekly In to
line. A la rge group o f d e leg a te s storm ed out o f
the pa rty conference d e cla rin g that " o u r
party has been stolen from u s ."
S o lo n g as s u b s ta n t ia l n u m b e rs o f
Q u ebecers see th em selves as second-class
citizen s, th e threat o f a sep a ra tist resurgence
rem a in s. B u t clearly, C a n a d a , thanks la rg e ly
to th e effo rts o f form er P r im e Minister P ie rre
E lliott T ru d eau , h im self a bilin gu al Q uebecer,
has tu rn ed an im portant co rn er in recon cilin g
the In terests and deep e th n ic diversity o f th e
c o u n try 's tw o principal grou p s.

Veil Over Vail
O n e e x p e c ts to see s m o g In Los A n geles o r
D en ver. T h e cities are k n ow n for their a ir
pollu tion. B ut It Is frig h ten in g to learn there Is
s m o g e v e n In Vail, CoTo.
V a il Is a beautiful g e m o f a co m m u n ity
nestled In a deep v a lle y under the h igh
R ockies. In winter, th e fam ou s ski resort
look s lik e a scene In an Idyllic p ictu re
postcard.
T h e p e o p le o f Vail banned through-traffic in
their to w n and have a su p e rb free bus sy stem ,
virtu a lly elim in atin g v e h ic le pollution. A p ­
p aren tly, th e sm og Is ca u sed by a plethora o f
w ood -b u rn in g fireplaces.
I f y o u g o to the lop o f th e ski lifts, s o m e
10 ,2 50 fe e t high, v ie w o f sn o w -c o ve red
m ou n ta in s a re m agn ificen t. O n a clear d a y
you ca n a lm o st see fo re ve r. But on a recen t
visit, so m e w ere shocked to see a thin cloud o f
sm o g o v e r distant m ou ntains.
f
A lth o u g h far aw ay. It w as a distu rbin g
sight. It m ak es us rea lize th at even A m e ric a 's
Isolated m ountain co u n try air, once so pu re,
now la b eln gp ollu ted .
U n less stron ger rules a re en acted to p rotect
our a ir, soon there w ill b e no place in th e
U nited S ta tes outside o f A la s k a where v ie w s
w ill b e unobstructed a n d w h e re air w ill b e
clean fo r breathing.

H im

WORLD

DICK W EST

A VIP C an Be Spotted By His Scraw l
WASHINGTON |UPI) — National Handwriting
Day. which I customarily observe sealed at a
typewriter, came and went this year without my
being aware o f it.
Perhaps this was Just as w ell, for my
afle’rtbought was that the celebration was
slightly o ff base.
Where Frank King, a vice president of the
Writing Instruments Manufacturers Asaocatlon.
went amiss. In my Judgment, was In urging
national leaders "to set a good, clear example
for our children" by writing legibly.
II may be true, as he pointed out. that John
Hancock had a clear signature. It also should be
noted, however, that two o f the most legible
presidential signatures belonged to Gerald Ford
and Jim m y Carter.
Most presidents are manufacturers o f what the
association characterized as "Indecipherable
scrawls, scribbles, scratches and squlggles."
Since neither Ford nor Carter w as returned to
the White House after they became chief
executives, perhaps their handwriting was too
good.

The voters have com e to expect our presi­
d e n tia l to exhibit poor penmanship. It Is
generally taken as a sign they have better things
to do than sign their names legibly.
The problem was brought home to me by a
government worker I met at a party. W hen he
first took the Job. every time the poor guy signed
his name, people could read It. That handicap
almost wrecked his federal career and I don't
need to tell you what the political Implications
would be.
"It took me awhile, but 1 finally conquered the
weakness that was holding me back in public
service.” he confided.
"W hat was the m atter?” I asked. "W ere you
drinking too much, smoking pot. pinching your
secretary or something like that?”
"N o . nothing that simple.” he replied. "M y
trouble was 1 formed the letters In my name so
clearly, people could readily read my handwrit­
ing. This put me at a horrible disadvantage.
"W hen you reach a certain level In goverment. your Inter-ofDce memos are expected to
resemble a doctor's prescription. This stamps

you as an Important bureaucrat who Is too busy
making vita l decisions to waste precious
seconds writing In a way that Is readable.
"Generally speaking. Illegibility becomes nec­
essary for advancement when you get your own
secretary. As long as a stenographer from a pool
takes your dictation. It's OK to sign your name
so people can read it.
"But once you have a private secretary, you
want her to be able to exchange your inter-office
memos for a bottle o f antibiotics.
"I Just couldn't get the hang o f It. I tried
scrawling m em os real fast with my eyes shut,
but people could sUll read them. Consequently,
nobody took them seriously. They figured that if
the memos were legible. I couldn't possibly
swing any weight.”
I asked how he finally overcom e that
shortcoming.
"I simply quit signing my name and began
marking m y Inter-olflce memos with an *X ."’ he
explained. "Am ost Immediately m y superiors
pegged m e as a bureaucrat with a brilliant
future In politics."

SCIEN CE W ORLD

ROBERT W AGMAN

Powers
Locked
In Plants

Radio
Marti
Silent

By A m a n d a Sharp
MEMPHIS. Tenn. ( U n T - Consid­
er the purple periwinkle. It toils not,
neither does It spin, but locked
Inside the Innocent-looking plant la
one of the most powerful anti-cancer
extracts known to medicine.
Testing of the periwinkle resulted
In the d ru g s v in c r is tin e and
vinblastine, both used to fight
leukemia. Hodgkins Disease, lym ­
phoma and testicular cancer.
The creation or many cancer
drugs from low ly organisms one
would never suspect possess such
p r o p e r t i e s s e e m s p a rt o f a
mysterious and fortuitous science —
a proposition even researchers
grudgingly admit.
While many drugs are found by
methodical Investigation, some are
the result o f folk remedies and
many are found by luck.
" I f you look at how these things
come about, serendipity probably
plays as big a role as anything,"
said Dr. William E. Evans, director
of the pharmaceutical division at St.
Jude Children's Research Hospital.
"Som e of It has been attributed to
things like folklore."
Because o f stringent criteria In­
volved In drug testing, less than 50
anti-cancer drugs are commercially
available In the United Slates, but
more lhan 700,000 substances have
been screened for anti-cancer pro­
perties.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Florida's
Cuban community — one of the
strongest pro-Reagan voting blocs In
November — Is up In arms, charg­
ing that (he administration has
dragged Ita feet on a key promise.
At issue is Radio Marti — the
Voice of America station that was to
beam anti-Castro programming to
Cuba from powerful transmitters
based In Florida. The White House
denies that It has put the Idea on the
back burner.
The Reagan administration pres­
ented (he Idea for Radio Marti
nearly three years ago and Congress
approved It 14 months ago,' after
more than a year o f sharp debate.
Technically. Radio Marti has been
ready to go on the air for more than
six months. VOA sources say the
station could Immediately begin aa
m any as eigh t hours o f dally
broadcasting. But — for unex­
plained reasons — the station hasn’ t
started operations. Thla has angered
Its backers Including members o f
(he Florida congressional delegation
who are under a great deal o f local
pressure.' and other legislators and
officials, mostly conservatives, who
have worked on the project since
the start.

Of that number, 100.000 extracts
came from plants.
Anti-cancer compounds com e
from almost any source — plants,
fungi, marine life and synthetic
chemicals.
About 500 to 1,000 of the 20.000
compounds tested annually show
some effectiveness, Evans said.
They move Into further lab and
animal testing, including tests on
xenografts, human tumors grown In
rodents.
Enzymes extracted from bacteria
are one source o f anti-cancer com ­
pounds. Th e most common. Lasparaginase. Is an enzyme taken
from bacteria.
Other compounds, such as d ox­
orubicin and daunorublcin. which
treat a number o f cancers, are
produced by the fermentation pro­
cess In fungi, he said. Even certain
vitamins have been identified os
having cancer-fighting properties.
Although It’ s now synthetically
produced, the drug methotrexate
originated from folic acid, which la
found In fresh green vegetables,
liver, yeast and some fruits
"That's a drug that's been around
for over 30 years, and It's one o f the
m ost w id e ly used an ti-can cer
drugs," he said.

" There's four government branches, dummy ...

Executive, Legislative, Judicial and Nancy Reagan."

WILLIAM RUSHER

Who Voted How
NEW Y O R K IN E A ) - T h re e
months have now elapsed since
Election Duy, and we are not
n o tice a b ly fu r th e r forw ard In
ascertaining how various key blocs
voted. Everybody tends to talk as If
we knew precisely what percentage
o f blacks, or Catholics, or those
between 18 and 24. voted for Isay)
Walter Mondate; but of course all
the official statistics tell us is how
many of the total number of voters
voted for a particular candidate.
Anything else Is more or less
guesswork, aided by exit polls or by
In-depth Interviews conducted still
longer after the event, when the
outcome Is known. Even If those
questioned nre completely truthful
In their answers. It may still lie
debated how accurate a cross sec­
tion of the electorate they con­
stituted.
Nevertheless, the matter is an
Important one, w ith potentially
serious consequences. Take the
problem of how Jewish voters
divided between Reagan and Mon­
dale. Broadly speaking. Jews were,
o f course, loyal members of the old
-"Roosevelt coalition." costing their
votes overwhelmingly for the Dem­
ocratic Party In election after elec­
tion. But In recent years growing
numbers of Jew s have been voting
Republican, and In 1980's threecornered election (remember John
A n d erson ?) R o n a ld Reagan Is
believed to have received the sup­
port or 33 percent or more of Jewish
voters — a remarkably high figure
under the circumstances.
Last November, the Republicans
hoped, with reason, that the figure
m ig h t go e v e n h ig h e r. J e s s e
Jackson's own scarcely veiled an­
ti-Semitism, not to mention hts
refusal to repudiate Louis Farrakhan. had understandably o f­

fended many Jews, and It was
u nclear w h eth er M ondale had
managed to offset the loss by his
warnings that Jerry Falwell and
other bom-aguin Christians would
be a p p o in tin g Su prem e C ourt
Justices If Reagan was re-elected.
According to some post-election
analyses, however. Reagan's share
of the Jewish vote dropped In 1984.
It held ut 35 percent according to
NBC's exit pollsters, but was put ut
32 percent by T h e New York
Tlmes-CBS survey, and at 31 by
ABC News. Jewish liberals were
overjoyed, and Sidney Blumenthal.
national political correspondent for
The New Republic, promptly deliv­
ered a funeral oration for such
Jewish neoconscrvatlves as Norman
Podhorelz and Irving Krlstol (who
had barked Reagan), declaring that
" th e ir Im age as self-appointed
brokers (between Jews and the
GOP) has been shattered."
Or, consider the rast-growlng
Hispanic bloc, which by the year
2000 Is expected to replace blacks
us America's largest ethnic minori­
ty. Reagan's percentage of the 1084
Hispanic vote la variously estimated
at 32 by NBC. 33 by the Tlmrs-CBS.
and a whopping 44 by ABC. A
further breakdown by NBC and ABC
o f the Ilia panic vole In key states la
even more confusing. In Florida,
w here strongly antl-com m unlal
Cubans predominate, Reagan's per­
centage of the Hispanic vote Is given
as 68 INBC I and 73 (ABC). In New
York, bailiwick o f the far more
liberal Puerto Klcana. It waa un­
derstandably less: 40 percent, a c­
cording to ABC. (NBC for some
reason omits the category.)
Among the Mexlcan-Amertcans of
California it was either 42 percent
(ABC) or only 24 (NBC) — somebody
Is clearly wrong.

The station was named after
Cuban hero Joae Marti, Ihe 19thcentury patriot who fought Spanish
rule. Its official purpose waa to give
the Cuban people an alternative
source of information. Since the
revolution, all Cuban media have
been under strict government con­
trol. Radio Marti waa to be modeled
after Radio Free Europe, which
broadcasts to Eastern Europe and
the Soviet Union.
Radio Marti waa to offer a mixture
o f Latin and U.S. pop music, news
and commentary. The commentary
la especially Im portant to anllCastro Cubans, since It would cover
Issues not openly discussed or
publicized In Cuba — Issues like
Angola, where more than 20,000
Cuban troops are stationed, and
p rob lem s In o th e r S oviet-b loc
countries. Including Ethiopia and
Poland.
Antl-Caatro Cubans fear that the
station la stalled because the United
States la Involved In secret talks
with Castro regarding Cuban In­
volvement In Central America, and
they suspect Radio Martl'a atari-up
la pari of those negotiations. They
also worry that the White House la
backing away from Radio Marti due
to p ressu re fr o m c o m m e rc ia l
broadcasters In the United States.
Castro has threatened to retaliate
against Radio Marti by using power­
ful Cuban transmitters to Jam U.S.
commercial stations.

JACK ANDERSON

Superpowers M ay Find Peace In Space
WASHINGTON - In a move that
could lead to better Sovlet-Amertcan
relations. President Reagan and
Chairman Konstantin Chernenko
h a v e a p p r o v e d t h e Id e a o f
establishing ties between America’s
Young Astronauts and Russia's
Young Cosmonauts.
Thla raises new hope that by
exch a n gin g v is its and sh arin g
dreams. Y ou n g Astronauts ana
Young Cosmonauts might lead the
way to peaceful cooperation In
apace.
In behalf o f the Young Astronaut
C o u n c il. I w r o t e a le t t e r t o
Chernenko proposing the affiliation.
I pleaded that w e are passengers
together on a great spaceship called
Earth, which cannot be broken Into
pieces, with the Soviet Union and
the United S u tr a assigned separate
orbits. The letter was hand-carried
to Moscow last month by m y
daughter Tbnya.
Two weeks later, the Soviet Em ­

b a s s y c a l l e d to r e p o r t t h a t
Chernenko had read the letter and
that hia response waa "positive."
Then the Soviet diplomat Inquired
cordially. "Did Tanya enjoy her visit
to the Soviet U nion?"
I said she had a glorious time and
had come h om e favorably Itnpressed. "T o o bad she doesn't write
the column." retorted the Ruaalan.
with a chuckle.
What are the next steps?
First. I have Invited the Young
Cosmonauts, w ith W hile House
approval, to send a delegation to
watch a apace launching and tour
our apace faculties. "From thU
small beginning,” I wrote. v'l look
fo rw a rd to th e d a y that ou r
astronauts and your cosmonauts
w ill e x p lo re th e va st co sm os
together. We are merely scratching
the surface o f knowledge so pro­
found. to Illimitable, ao beyond our
present u nderstanding that w e

should waste no time nor energy on
petty disputes."
Second, each Young Astronaut
wtU be encouraged to write a letter
to a Young Cosmonaut, explaining
why they should become friends
and what th e y m ight hope to
accomplish together In space. Those
who write the beat letters wUI be
selected for future exchanges, all
expenses paid. Other exciting prizes
will be offered.
Th ird , the In tern a tion al
A e r o n a u t ic a l F e d e r a t io n h a s
adopted the You ng Astronaut pro­
gram aa the beat way to achieve
"peace through apace." Under the
federation's auspices, the Young
Astronaut program wUI be offered to
other nations and ties will be sough I
between Y ou n g Astronauts and
You ng Cosm onauts around the
world.
Every generation. I f It la to fulfill
Itself, needs a dream to Inspire 1t. an
adventure to ennoble It. Seldom

have young people had the Incen­
tive that space now offers.
For half a millennium, the spirit of
maximum adventure has awaited
new Columbuses and MageUans.
Now. for our children. It Is at hand
and on a scale far more vast.
Footnote: The Young Astronaut
Council is recruiting 6-to-16-yearolds for future space exploration. All
who sign up w ill be eligible to
participate In ihe "L etter to a Young
C o s m o n a u t " c o n te a t. F or
particulars, write to the Young
Astronauts. 1015 16th Street. N.W..
S u ite BOS, W a s h in g to n . D .C ..
20005.
If the Young Cosmonauts accept
our Invitation to attend a apace
la u n ch in g , th e ir h ost w ill be
Pepsi-Cola, one o f Ihe sponsors o f
the Young Astronaut program.
Another sponsor. Disney World, will
Invite the Young Cosmonauts to Ita
Florida resort.

�Evvnlitf H r aid, Ssnlsrd. FI.

Wtdmrdsy, Fsh: 4. 1 IU -S A

Radar Adapter From Wrong Store
Action Reports
★ Fires
* Courts

it Police Beat
was stolen between 1:30 a.m.
and 2:15 p.m. Monday, but the
cash in the safe wasn't touched,
a sheriffs report said.
• portedly Identified the stolen
; detector. It Is reported to be one
; o f several stolen along with a
citizens band radio by a burglar
who threw a concrete block
through the front door of the
store on Jan. 31, a sheriffs
report said.
A deputy arrived and the
suspect was charged with dealIng In stolen property and on a
Volusia County warrant for fail- UIl t o , FFf* r ln court.
Tyrone Simpson. 20. of 347
Longwood Ave.. was arrested at
3:48 p.m. Tuesday. He was
being held In the Seminole
County jail today In lieu o f
$8 .100 bond.
■H O T O U T T I M
A 61-year-old Maitland man
has been released on $8,000
after being charged for allegedly
shooting a tire on an Orlando
woman's car at a Kmart parking
lot In Fern Park Sunday.
As Seminole County sheriffs
deputy M.E. Simpson was Inv e s llg a tln f 62-year-old Pella
** Louise Marr's complaint that a
. man had fired a single shot from
a pistol Into the left rear tire o f
her car at about 6:20 p.m.
Sunday, the suspect reportedly
returned to the scene.
Simpson reported questioning
the man who appeared tntoxtested and spotted a pistol and a
box of ammunition on the front
seat o f the suspects car. No
• reason for the shooting was
given In a sheriff's report.
Simpson reported the gun held
five spent sheila and one live
round.
Jessie Lawton High, of 2126
Michigan Trail, was charged
• with shooting Into a vehicle at
6:26 p.m. Sunday. He Is sched' uled to appear in court Feb. 18.
nn,
' A W ir w
mnn w u
: r h ir J S
fnh" £ d.
residence*^ *
*
j

According ,0 a police report.
the owner o f ths Krugerrand

Henry Keller o f Route 3. state
Casselberry police roadblock In
Road 427. Sanford, reported to
Casselberry at about 3:20 a.m.
deputies he left his 1966 Pontiac
Tuesday,
Winter Park policeman Brett
C . Ralley reported spotting the
suspects In the parking lot of
w in ter Park Com ers Shopping
Center on Lakemonte Drive at
Atoms Avenue, W inter Park,
A s Ralley approached the susp e cts* 1076 B u lck he saw
c lo th in g h a n gin g ou tside a
closed passenger side door o f the
car. As the car sped away Ralley
pursued it onto ILLS. Highway
17 .9 3 , through Maitland and
into Casselberry. Ralley reported
his patrol car reached a speed of
125 mph In the chase.
The run ended at a police
roadblock on U.S. H ighw ay
17-92 at Lake Triplet Drive, s
Casselberry,
Lawmen reportedly found In
the suspects' car 51 jogging
suits worth a total o f $2,226.
w h ich had re p o rte d ly been
stolen from Athletic Attic In the
shopping center where Ralley
first spotted the suspects, a
police report said. There were
also glass fragments In the car
that police believe came from a
broken glass door at that store,
the report said.
Terence M. Blankenship. 22.
and Larry Willis, 25. both of
Orlando, were arrested In the
case at about 4 a.m. Tuesday,
Blankenship was charged with
burglary, fleeing and eluding
police and driving without a
license. Willis was charged with
burglary and on an outstanding
Orange County warrant for retail
petty theft. Both were being held
ln lieu o f $5,000 bond each.
DRTVS-Df FO R A R M 8 T
A 29-year-old Sanford man
who reportedly drove his vehicle
t h r o u g h a fe n c e In to th e
backyard o f a Sanford home,
chased his girlfriend from his car
then entered the home at
2526 Laurell Ave.. through a
^

worth $5,400 to be painted at a
body shop on Sanford Avenue at
25th Street on Jan. 4 and when
he went back on Feb. 4 the shop
wasn't there and neither was his
car. a sheriffs report said.
Almost $2,000 worth of Items
were stolen from the storage
bins of two vehicles belonging to
Mickey Isler. 31. o f 232 N.
Weklva Springs Road. Apopka.
The Items were stolen while
p a r k e d b e h i n d G r a n n y 's
G r o c e r y , s t a t e R o a d 4 19
Chuluota. The theft occurred
between 4 p.m. Friday and 6:15
a.m. Monday, a sheriffs report

said and Items taken Include two
radios, a generator, tools and
hoists.
Walter Jerome Bachelor. 34. of
363 S. Oleander St.. Longwood.
reported to deputies his $ 1,000
car and $400 worth o f tools and
other Items were stolen when
the 1973 Oldsmobllc was parked
at 1541 N. Carol wood Blvd.,
Fern Park, around 3 p.m. Mon­
day.
The thief who took Margaret
Sara Banghman's wallet from a
locker at Holiday Health Spa.
Butler Plata. state Road 438.

Casselberry, got $150 cash and
about $160 worth of other Items,
a s h e r iff s - report said. Ms.
Banghman. 18. told deputies the
theft occurred around 6 p.m.
Monday.
A team of female thieves stole
a wallet containing $93 from the
purse of Cheryl L. Brooks. 28. of
E. Main Ave.. Longwood. Ms.
Brooks reported to deputies one
woman distracted her while the
second look her wallet from her
purse while It was on a counter
at A rlia Pool Supplies. 610 Hunt
Club Btvd.. Apopka, at about 4
p.m. Monday.

The
Shoppers
Center

AMERICAN

GREETINGS

W.»kjf

iHijkie

^
.hr

T
h icoin
r L wwas
n . valued
va n lld T
a im 7 R0 ’
The
at/$491.75.

h*ohrohen
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Um , atitems
lhe Including
home 0?

m
t f d ^amman
an^h
o 'w was
a s ^ oworking
r k in t f
rested
who
in the area rem oving mud. The
irrrM ied Friday at the

Am y Burrows, where he was an
u
In v ,te
d ' u n ex p ec te d , un^ nown
intruder.
Kevln D Cook 2 g of
W o n l A vc.. WM
tt

. . . . . r about 2:40 a.m. Tuesday. He
Monday J” **cu. °* was charged with burglary to an
$ 5 J X » bond was R o b e r t o c c u p i e d d w ellin g , crim inal
BarTett. 28, of 208 Flamingo m i»chlef and reckless driving.
, A ve'
He was being held ln lieu of
TM M ATEM SD W M A M D
$8,000 bond.
A 31-year-old Sanford woman
S K A T DV B AU D
who reportedly threatened her
S em in ole C ou n ty s h e r iffs
husband with a knife has been deputies report charging two
charged with aggravated assault, suspects with burglary after one
Sanford police reported Larry man was spotted crossing state
Bradley, was restraining his wile Road 436 ln Altamonte Springs,
and was holding her lor police carrying a car seat and the other
when they arrived at their home was found In a vacant building
at 64 Masters Grove Apartments, next to a car lot.
at about 10:30 p.m. Saturday.
The arrests came at about
Police reportedly took a knife 12:54 a.m. Tuesday after the
'* from the woman and Bradley suspects were stopped at a used
told them she had threatened o r lo t n e a r U n c le J o n e s
him.
Barbecue on state Road 436 at
Barbara Elaine Bradley was Lake Howell Road,
charged in the case and has been
Deputies reported finding a car
, released on $1,500 bond. She la at the lot with a missing seat of
scheduled to appear In court the type one suspect was seen
Feb. IB.
carrying andthey reported find_____________
Ing bolts in the pocket o f the
CLO TM AM M T
second man and a wrench was
A woman told sheriffs depu- lying at his feet when he was
" ties that three men shoplifted caught.
• five articles o f clothing from her
The name o f the car lot was
store valued together at $5,003.
not given ln the arrest report.
«; Te men entered the store,
r A t t » Lee Butler. 22. o f 392
. Gray European Fashions. 1889 L o n g w o o d A v e .. A lta m o n te
W. state Road 434. Longwood at Springs, has been charged with

Sheila Pacheco. 32. of *234
2500 Howell Branch Road.
Winter Park, reported to depu­
ties $3,329 worth of Items in­
c lu d in g a v id e o re co rd er,
clothing and Jewelry were stolen
from her home around 6 f&gt;.m.

A $400 heat pump waa stolen
from a construction site at Fox
HU1 Circle, Apopka, between
F rid ay and M on day. Doug
Schutt. 21, of Orlando, reported
the loos of the Item which
belongs to Oxford Construction
Co.. Apopka, a sheriffs report

to deputies. Ms. Murphy, a
hostess, reported her Up money

51 (Hljklf1

SJUI n§. t lf . t t

Cuddly 'leu
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Full 26" lolll Com**
complete with hat ft
liny ke cream cone.

V f e l n i w n s $ i l l ---W iio iftn i t w i v

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»A —Evtalaf H ifiM , teaN H . Ft.

WBd w tdBy, Ftb. 4, tn t

...Probe
Continued from page 1A

WORLD
INBRIEF
Rebels Have Proposition
For Tho Sorlous Investor
WASHINGTON (UPIJ - For “ soph lit lea ted Investors”
with ideological faith and a little extra cash. Nicaraguan
rebels seeking to overthrow their country's Marxist-led
government plan to offer Interest-bearing bonds.
Officials of the rightist Nicaraguan Democratic Force,
which has turned to private donors since Congress cut off
U.S. aid In June, liken the Idea to Israeli bonds sold to
American Jews and other supporters of Israel.
The b o n d s , c a u tio n e d FD N sp ok esm a n B o sc o
Matamoros. are not for everybody.
"They are for sophisticated Investors." he said.
Since U.S. funding was halted. FDN officials say they
have raised about $1 million a month from private sources
to cover expenses of about MOO.OOO. They reportedly also
have received considerable aid from El Salvador. Honduras
and Israel.
The Reagan administration has begun an Intense
campaign to persuade Congress to approve $14 million In
new aid set aside In October, but Congress Is expected to
deny any more funding through the CIA.

...Scandal
Continued fr o m page 1A
m a r k e t p la c e r a t h e r t han
bolstered by price supports.
Sen. Bob H asten, R-Wls..
questioned Stockman about the
reductions, saying It would not
lie fair to "balance the budget by
singling oul for disproportionate
cuts any one single area ...
especially a gricu ltu re where
p e o p le a re a lr e a d y h a rd pressed."
Stockman, who until then had
been giving mostly restrained
answers, grew agitated.
"For the life o f me. 1 can’t
figure out why the taxpayers of
this country have the responsi­

headlights off. according to his
statement. He drove his car
through a stop sign and turned
In the Intersection, then rammed
his car Into Raby's. Investigators
speculate a game o f "cat and
m ouse" was being played by
both officers Just before the
accident, according to Hasson.
• T h e resu lt: Butler says all
department personnel will be
warned that horseplay o f any
kind, day or night, will "b e
severely dealt with In the future.
This matter's settled now. but
any such activity will not be
tolerated In the future."
Butler today defended hls de­
cision to give Lt. Nooney and Ptl.
R a b y a 10-day su sp en sion
without pay as their punish­
ment. He said he took Into
con sid eration the len gth o f
service o f both men — Nooney's
got 19 years and 11 months with
the department and Is scheduled
to retire soon: Raby has been

believe Raby.
• The result: Butler says he
has researched the statutes and
determined It Is illegal for any­
one to drive an auto during
hours o f d a rk w ith the
headlights turned off. "so I'm
Issuing a memo In the depart­
ment that no officer Is to drive a
patrol car with the headlights
o f f . e x c e p t In s p e c i a l
circumstances such as when
they're Just arriving at the site o f
a burglary In progress, or the
site of a prowler or trespasser
report."
• The findings: Sworn state­
ments by night-shift officers
Indicate police In patrol cars
often drive around the streets
with their vehicle's lights turned
off and try to evade each other In
a hide-and-seek fashion. It had
first been reported that Lt.
Nooney had been distracted and

Paul •'Barry” Little
...He fired firecracker
was looking Into his rearview
mirror when his car rammed
head-on Into Baby's. In fact.
Nooney had been looking over
his shoulder and through the
rear window w ith his car's

M.P.O.
FISH MARKET

321-2398

vehicle. Randall l.cr Allen, of P.O. Box 363.
According to F ill' Investigators, the p.ilr
was riding In a stolen truck on Murkhum
Woods Road between 12:01 and 6:99 a m.
when II left the road twn-tenihs of a mile
north of Arres Court.

W n H U T R N fD

CRAB
STICKS

e r n m e n t. but the E P A 's
Carcinogen Assessment Group
reviewed their findings.
Th e group questioned the
conclusion that second-hand
smoke could kill as many as
9.000 non-smokers a year. EPA
spokesman Dave Cohen said
Monday.
But he added that the review
"tends to adhere to the part o f lt
that supports the possibility of
900 Heaths per year."
William Toohey of the Tobacco
Institute criticized the docu­
ment. saying Repace, a physl
cist, was "out of hls area of
expertise here."
"Even the surgeon general has
not nsserted that a m b ien t
tobacco smoke causes cancer In
non-smokers." he said.

Killed tn the crash was the driver of the

...Trees
Continued fro m page 1A

employee In charge of arbor
enforcement und an employee
would have to Ik- hired to fulfill
thul function.
lie reminded that Sanford will
have no rlly engineer lo Issue
jk-nulls on May I. Knowles, a

civil engineer, has been acting as
both city manager and city
engineer for some lime. Hr Is
scheduled to retire on April 30.
K n ow les nuld there Is no
m onry allocated In the city
budget for arbor enforcement
and creating n new budget
would clean out Ihe contingency
fund.
Mayor Detlyr Smith, who has

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(lushed for adoption of the ordi­
nance, asked If her colleagues
Intend to vole H down Monday
night.
Thumus did nol answer the
question. Furr remains np|xised
to Ihe prnposul. liul Commis­
sioner Smith and Mercer In­
dicated they still will vole for Ihe
proposal.
Knowles also said the city
commission can budget funds
for Its e n fo r c e m e n t In Its
1985 80 budget.
When the former city com ­
mission attempted last summer
tn adopt an Idrnllrul urlxir ordi­
nance. co m p la in ts thut en ­
forcem ent could Infringe on
private homeowners' property
rights killed the proposal. It also
had received preliminary ap­
proval.

A R E A P O R E C A R T i Today miles — South wind 10 tn 19
(tartly cloudy and warm. A few knots iH-comlng variable near 10
afternoon showers. High near knots early Thursday. Sea 2 lo 4
HO. South wind 10 mph. Rain fe e t. S ca ttered s h o w e rs or
chance 30 percent. Tonight and th u n d erstorm s to n ig h t and
Thursday variable cloudiness Thursday.
und cooler. A chance of some
ruin. Low near 90 to mid 90s.
FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T IO N
High upper 60s. Wind becoming
north 10 mph late tonight and
WARREN SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES
northeast 10 mph Thursday.
1. Frequent H eadachea
Rain chance 90 percent both
Low Back or Hip Pain
tonight and Thursday.
Dizziness or L o s s ot Sleep
Numbness o l Hands or Faal
ARE A RKAD1NOE (9 a.m.)i
Nervousness
temperature: 60; overnight low:
Neck Pain or Stlffnaaa
6 0 : T u e s d a y ' s h i g h : 84 :
Arm and 8 houlder Pain
banmirlric pressure: 29.98; rela­
tive hum idity: 100 percent:
winds: southwest at 12 mph:
*M m is M*i ueM*
L*| Till, Start Ana fast M TsR Ntth Dectsr.
sunrise: 7:11 a.m.. sunset 6:07
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u.m.. 9:43 p.m.; lows. 2:40 a.m..
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highs. 10.15 u.m.. 9:39 p.m.i
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lows. 2:31 a.m., 3:09 p.m.:
■ejrporti highs. 1:41 a.m.. 2:49
p.m.; lows. 8:40 a.m.. 8:48 p.m.
■O A TIN O F O R E C A S T : St.
A
N U M B I R
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 90

H O SPITAL
N O TES

the

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323-5454

The accident wus not discovered until
6:59 u.m. because fog hid Ihe demolished
truck from passershy. A school bus driver
saw the cru m pled tru ck und called
authorities.
of

SANFORD, FLA.

TJUTU U R R E CtAB LEM

Allen was found under Ihe truck. Brooks
crawled from the vehicle. Investigators said.

The vehicle, a 1983 Ford pickup, lit)
several large oqk trees and traveled 136 feel , D e t a i l s
uvallulbe.
before com ing lo a stop.

321-2398

In Roar O f Village Flaa Market

1$00 FRENCH AVE.

Boy Fair After O ne-V ehicle Crash
A lb-year-old Apopka boy was hospi­
talized following u one-vehicle accident that
killed an Apopka man Tuesday.
Taken lo Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal where he was In fair condition today was
John Puul Brooks. 16. o f 10 Ajxilia Drive. He
was being trenlrd for severe leg and head
Injuries, according to Ihe Florida Highway
Patrol.

(Reporters Deane Jordan. Rick
Brunson and Donna Estes also
worked on this story).

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY 8 A.M. •5 P.M.

EPA: Where There's
Smoke, There's Cancer

W ASHINGTON (Ul»l| An
E n v ir o n m e n t a l P r o t e c t io n
bility to refinance the bad debts
Agency spokesman says Its own
willingly incurred by consenting analysis supports some o f the
adults who went out and and conclusions of an Independent
bought farm land when the price study that found hundreds of
was going up because they could people die o f cancer caused by
get rich, or who went und breathing other people's tobacco
bought machinery and produc­
smoke.
tion assets because they made a
The stu dy by EPA policy
business Judgment that they
an alyst J a n ie s R rp ace and
cou ld m ake som e m o n e y ."
chemist Alfred Lowrey o f the
Stockman said, barely pausing Naval Research iMlxirulory con­
for breath.
cluded that second-hand tobacco
"S o It turns out that land smoke Is one of the most deadly
prices didn't go up forever." he Indoor air pollutants. T h e y
said. "A ll kinds of loans have estim ated betw een 900 and
gone bad and (he collateral 1m s 9.000 non-smokers die each year
collapsed. Why should the tax­ o f l u n g c a n c e r caused by
payers have the responsibility to breathing second-hand — or
ball oul loan guarantees that will "passive" — smoke.
The two condurled the studies
create a loss down the road lor
Independently, not for the gov­
that kind of speculation?"

with the department about 5V9
years. "N ot only that', neither o f
them has ever had any problems
before, or ever had a reprimand.
They have clean, outstanding
records with the department."
Butler noted. He said the sus­
pended officers will lose a com ­
bined "roughly $2,000" In pay
during the suspension.
B u t le r c o m m e n d e d S g t .
Hasson " fo r hls candid and
professional Investigation and
hls results. It's a tough Job to
Investigate your own colleagues,
and Hasson did an outstanding
Job."
Butler said an accident review
board has agreed with Hasson's
findings, and limited their con­
clusions to "w h a t could be
p ro v e d , n a m e ly , that th ey
(Nooney and Rabyl were careless
and negligent, that's about It."

'

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�SPORTS

EvMlrtf Herald. SaMarti, FI.

Wadnaadar. Fab. I. ItSJ— TA

Tribe's 5-Minute Offense Can't Overhaul Spruce Creek
B y Bam Cook
H erald Sports Editor
PO RT ORANGE C oach
Chris Marlette said his Fighting
Seminotes played five minutes of
basketball Tuesday night. Unfor­
tunately. they were held ac­
co u n ta b le for the o th er 27
minutes, loo.
The result was another sput­
tering offensive display en route
to a 56-47 setback to the Spruce
Creek Hawks In Five Star Con­
ference basketball at Spruce
Creek High School. Seminole fell
to 12-6 for the year. 7-6 In the
conference and 7-4 In the dis­
trict. Spruce Creek Improved to
7-6. 12-9 and 7-4.
Jon Fedor. Spruce C reek's
multi-talented Junior, was the
differ cnee. T h e 6-8 forw ard
tossed In 27 points and pulled
down 10 rebounds. " I lost count
on the dunks Fedor had." said
Marlette. "But our defense didn't
do a bad Job on their big men

(Fedor and 6 -10 Mark Nichols). It
was our offense which let us
down."
Spruce Creek, which starts
four underclassmen along with
senior Nichols, opened an 11-5
lead In the first quarter and
Increased It to 23-13 at halftime.
Fedor tossed In eight points but
was Just warming up for the
third quarter.
In that elght-mtnute span.
Fedor threw in 12 points and
although the Hawks couldn't
Increase their lead. It didn't
decrease either as they headed
Into the fourth quarter with a
42-32 edge.
Seminole, which had double­
figu re s c o r in g from K e n n y
Gordon (16). James Rouse (13)
and Hod Henderson (10). re­
ceived just eight points from the
rest of the team. Point guard
Mlckel Wright, who had been the
catalyst In recent victories, waa
held scoreless.

W illiam Hill made one o f the two
free throws to push the lead to
50-47 with 48 seconds left.

Basketball
"W e Juat couldn't get anything
going offensively." said Martettc.
“ The offense waa Just lethargic.
W e were telegraphing our passes
and didn't have any Intensity."
Until (he final five minutes.
Sem inole went to a furious
man-to-man pressure defense
and baskets by Gordon and
Rouse pulled the Tribe within
six with two minutes to play.
After a missed free throw and a
turnover, Gordon and Rouse
each scored again to pull San­
ford within 49-47 with 59 sec­
onds to play.
Another mloaed Spruce Creek
shot gave Seminole Its chance to
tie. Rouse fired away from Just
below the key and mtosed. After
a scramble for the loose ball.
Henderson was whistled for a
foul — his fifth . Tin y (5-0)

double figures. Johnnie Bennett
added nine points and Kenny
Southall added seven.
In the Junior varsity game.
Th e Tribe still had a chance to
S e m in o le d rop p ed a 69 -6 6
pull within one but Marlette said
o vertim e victory despite 30
I m p a t i e n c e cost It a ga in .
points and 12 rebounds by
Freshman Andre W hitney tossed
freshman Craig Walker. The 6-6
one up from Ihe outside but
center tcammed with freshmen
missed. Fedor grabbed the re­
Waller "D unkm an" Hopson and
bound and fed to Hill who was
Ernie Lewis to rally the JV from
fouled.
13 points down, but Spruce
W ith 38 seconds left. Hill Creek prevailed In the overtime.
cashed In both free throws to put
"T h e three freshmen brought
the game out of reach. 52-47. them b a c k ," said M arlette.
Spruce Creek added four more "T h ey did a good Job on offense
free throws In the final 30 but they gave up a lot o f easy
seconds for the final nine-point shots on defense."
difference.
Joe Holden tossed In 12 points
"W e didn't take good shots at for the Tribe and Hopson added
the crucial times." said Marlette. eight.
“ W e should have been more
ptMIMOt.f &lt;p*) - WMfeay J. Afeeamfer 4.
Rw m IX R k h M m X Gordon IX Mon
patient. But It would have been a dtnon
IX Maawoll X Wright X Patrick 0. Hill
different game If we'd played the X Graham x Jana* X McCloud X Total*: II
w hole game like the but five M M 0 .
IPR U C I CRICK IM&gt; - Oorthord X Hill
minutes. It took us too long to
X Factor n . Southall T. Nkhola 1. Bomeott f.
start playing."
HollomanX Total!: II la TIM
Fedor was the only Hawk In
Halttlmo — Struct Crook TX Somlnofe IX

Sand Crabs
Bite Down
On 'Hounds

By Chris Fistar
H erald Sports W riter
The sign said. "W atch the
Stars fa ll." And they did.
Florida Junior College's Lady '
Stars fell so fast that they didn't
have tim e to wish for a com ­
eback.
T h e s c a r in g of T a m m y
Johnaon and Juana Colettl In
the drat half, and Kim Lem on In
(he second, along with a stub­
born defense enabled Seminole
C o m m u n ity C o lle g e 's L a d y
Raiders to build a Llg !~\£ :arly
and they never looked back cn
route to a 76-43 thrashing of the
Stars Tu esday night In Mid
Florida Conference action at the
SCC Health Center.
SCC. 13-8 overall and 3-2 In
the conference, can clinch a
berth In the Stale Tournament,
which SCC Is hosting, with a
victory over Santa Fc Thursday.
The Lady Raiders host that
fa m e at 7 p.m.
It wasn't surprising that SCC
played so well Tuesday. When
the Lady Raiders arc on they can
beat anyone. What was surpris­
ing la how bad they beat FJC by
after losing to the Lady Stars by
two. 66-64. In January.
"I'm shocked." SCC coach
Ileana Gallagher said. "1 thought
It was going to be a tough game.
But the defense did an excellent
Job tonight. We pushed them
(FJC) and they fell apart."
J ohn son led the balanced
Lady R a id er attack w ith a
game-high 20 points as she
continually used her quickness
to get by the FJC defense. The
fre sh m a n p o in t guard a lso
pulled down aeven rebounds.
:,We w ere really relaxed to­
night,” Johnson said. "W e play
well when w e're relaxed."
C olettl. a 5-11 sophom ore
forward, pumped In 17 points
and ripped down nine boards
while Lemon connected on B of
10 shots from the door for 16
points and the freshman center
also g ra b b e d 10 rebounda.
S op h om ore guard Pam L ee
chipped In with eight points,
dished out a gam e-high 10
assists and nabbed seven re­
bounds while freshman forward
Rayaha Roberla matched
L e m o n s ’ gam e-h igh 10 r e ­
bounda.
Sharon Nicholson's 14 points
were high for FJC and Brenda
Holland added 10. The Lady
Stars hit lust 19 of 71 shots from
the floor for a frigid 27 percent.
SCC raced out to a 6-0 lead In
the first two minutes of play as
Colettl hit the first two baskets
and Johnson made the third.
The Lady Raiders built a 10point lead, 160. with 13:02 left

"Their outside shooting hurt."
s a id Lymarn c o a c h T o m
Lawrence about his team's 14th
loss In 19 games. "But we hurt
ourselves the moat. We tried to
hold the ball and we couldn't.
We Just threw it away. Too
many turnovers."
Seabreeze built a 14-8 firstquarter lead as the Johnsons
each scored four points. Sopho­
more Robert Thomas, who led
the 'Hounds with 12 points,
tallied four for the Greyhounda.
Seabreeze started to find the
range to the second quarter aa it
bull! the lead to 10 and then 15
points by capitalizing on the
Lym an turnovers. " I t 's
fru s tra tin g ." said Law rence.
"W e play a good tight zone and
they throw up a 20-footer than
goes In.'
"Then, we go down, take our
time and work for a good ahot —
and mlaa It.
"Good shooting can make up
for a lot of mistakes. They Just
ran the ball up and down the
court but they hit their shots.
They've got a lot of talent.
They're tough."
T.J. Scale! ta waa the only
other Greyhound In double fig­
ures with 10 points. Lyman
p la y e d w ith J u n ior B r e d
Marshall, who injured his ankle
against DcLand. Lawrence said
hla status to unknown for Friday
at Mainland. — SaaC eofc

SCC'* Juana Colattl float up for a
lumper between Florida Junior CoIIoqo
Brenda Nicholson (23) and Sandra Saymon
Colattl, a sophomore forwadI, pumped
points and pulled down nine reboundsi

Lady

state tournament
Thursday.

Hartsfield's Salt, Merthie's Pretzel

a a m a MflfMlInfl b M k lt to to o

ftgosfcs. Lite Mary trsvsts

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Spruce Crook M. Seminole O
Loka Mary SX Apopka IT
la aero*re r». Lyman 41
Mainland TX Lake SrantfeyU
DoUnd IX Lako Hawaii 44
Grappa Sail Confer anta
Janet 71 Oviedo 41
(Oviedo I IT: OSC 4 4)
Friday*! Samoa
Pfea Ifer OaoOaronco
Somlnafe at Da Land
Sookreaie at LokoMory
Lyman at Mainland
Lake Hawaii at Iprwca Crook
Apopka at Lake Brant fey
Ortag* Salt Conference
Ov lada al Oaceola Kltalmmee

Lady Raiders
Shoot Down Stars

LONGWOOD - When It comes
to the family tree. Terry and Pat
Johnaon are several branches
a p a rt, but put them on a
basketball court together and
th ey p erform like Id en tica l
twins.
The Johnsons, a pair o f doeverythlng guards, each tossed
In 18 points as the Seabreeze
Sand C rabs burled L y m a n .
78-41, In Five Star Conference
b a s k e tb a ll at L y m a n H i g h
School before 200 fans Tuesday
night.
Seabreeze, the No. 1 ranked
3A school In the state, did
nothing to tarnish that exalted
position. The Crabs rolled up a
32-17 first-half lead, then blew
the Greyhounds oft the track
with a 25-4 tear tn the third
quarter.

30
Darryl Mtrthto
joints Tutsdsy night
cam* through with tho

Poult — Somlnofe IX Struct Crook IX
Foufed o«d - Hondtraon Tochmcol - nono
A — TOO

APOPKA Darryl Iterthte
x&gt;krd more like a pretzel than a
basketball player. There he
all lariated up near the out of
bounds line way underneath the
Lake Mary baaket. There were
Juat aeven aeconda left to play
and Lake Mary waa losing by
one point
Quite a predicament. For any­
body but Darryl Menhie. that la.
Well. Darryl, how are you going
to get Ihe Rama out of Ihla ouc?
After all. even the best high
school players have trouble
■coring from the wrong aide of
the backboard.
"1 waa juat too far under the
baaket." admitted the Lake Mary
arntoi.1' i»u I tiled to Jump back

to draw the foul mod make the
baaket.'*
He succeeded on one of the
two. which was good enough for
the Rama. Merthie's off-balance,
leaning, lunging baaket some­
how found nothing but net with
Juat ala aeconda to play aa Ihe
Rama pulled out an exciting
53-52 Five Star Conference vic­
tory over the Blue Darters at
Apopka High School before 200

“1 can't believe how lucky we

dkwwa **

aalrl

I air a

h la m

an a a k

I f
Merthie's final two points gave
him 30 far the night as the 0-1
swtiigman turned In one of hie
best outside shooting perfor-

B a s k e tb a ll
mancea of the year. Menhie
consistently swished soft Jum­
pers from the baseline, several
c o m in g with B lu e D arters
hanging all over him.
Aa Important aa Merthie's shot
waa to the outcome, the aaalst
which came via a cross court
pass from Ray HartaAeld waa
equally crucial. Hartafleld, who
finished with 11 points, waa the
salt to Mathis's prctael move.
" D a r r y l waa p la y in g (he
wrakslde," said Hartafleld as he
set the scene. "Eric (CxemieJewakft started to drive, then he
•nw me onto, so he tfc/ew the
ball toward me."

Basketball
In the first half and FJC never
got closer than 10 points the rest
of the game.
The Lady Raiders went on to
lake a 32-17 halftim e lead
behind Johnson's 12 points and
Colctll's 10.
SCC continued to dominate
Inside In Ihe second half and got
even stronger on defense aa tlir
Lady Raiders rce!:d off the first
15 points o f the half.
Lemon started it oft with a
layup on an assist by Lee and
Johnson's baseline Jumper gave
SCC a 36-17 lead. Lemon hit a
short Jumper for a 38-17 lead
and the 5-10 Lym an High grad­
uate came back to convert a pair
of layups a fter offensive r e ­
bounds to make It 42-17 with
16:35 left to play.
Coletll made one o f two from
the line and Johnaon dropped In
u tuyup at Ihe end o f a fast-break
for a 43-17 lead. Lemon com ­
pleted the run when she hit a
layup after a nice shovel paaa
from Colettl as the Lady Raiders
took a 47-17 lead with 13:45
remaining.
While S C C w as m a k in g
baskets right and left. Ihe Lady
Stars were shooting alrballs on
layups and hitting tne aide of the
backboard on baseline Jumper.
FJC Just couldn't hit anything In
the first seven minutes of Ihe
second half.
SCC's lough defense In the
second half added to FJC's woea.
The defense was keyed by Coleltl who didn't lei the Stars g e l
anything Inside. SCC also did a
ood Job o f blocking out unemeath and holding FJC oft the
offensive boards.
"The last tim e we played them
(FJC) I was sick and got In foul
trouble early." Colettl said. "W e
knew (hey were tough, but If we
played hard enough and solid on
defense we could beat them."
After putting the game away
early in the second half, SCC got
a chance to clear Its bench and
everyone got into the scoring
colum n. F resh m a n forw a rd
E lisabeth D ie tr ic h , a L a k e
Howell High graduate, hit 3 o f 5
shots from the floor for six
p o in ts . S a n f o r d 's A n d r e a
Johnson, a Lake Mary High
grad, had two points and made
two excellent passes that re ­
sulted In SCC baskets.
Thursday's gam e will be a big
one for ihe Lady Raiders. Santa
Fe leads the conference with a
4-1 mark and has already clln-

S

M s SCC. Pag* • A

Up Apopka

C ie rn le je w a k l. who R ich ­
ardson credited with turning In a
n o d floor game at point guard,
had his paaa Upped, however,
and by the time HartaAeld could
corral It. he waa balancing pre­
cariously on one leg.
"I Juat turned to face the
basket." he aaid about his move
which came with Juat nine
aeconda to play. ”1 didn't think
about shooting. I waa too far out.
It waa Just a desperation paaa
uui Darryl
t s u jr i got It.
it.
but
Even though Met
Merthie’s subsequent tangled-up .
put
Lake Mary
ahead by_ _ . l t waa
____ __________
far from o v a . Apopka tried to
hurry the ball up (he court, but
Hartafleld Interceded and Upped
the h a ll 1,11 of ImhithH juat past
half court with three seconds to

play.
Apopka coach Earl Stokes,
who watched his aquad fall to
12-fl overall. 7-6 In the confer­
ence and 0-5 to the district,
called a Umeout and set up a
play for Earl Clayton. The move
came off perfectly and ''Clayton
waa open for an 15footer. His
shot, though, caught the (root of
the rim and bounced harmlessly
away atthe busier.
Although Lake Mary had to
pull It out at the end. a few
converted free throws might
have made the task much easier.
The Rama lad by aa many aa a U
points In tha first hair before
settling for a 27-23 halftime

�!A—Evanlw Herald, toitlsrd, PI.

W iln iliiy , g f c t, i m

H a w k s C la im C o n fe re n c e T itle

SPO R T S
INBRIEF
Atlantic Bank Trims Fodoral;
McCoy'§ Cloanors Bops Tip Top
Brian Orayaon scored 10 points and Eraklne Howard and
Dementry Beamon tossed In six apiece aa Atlantic Bank
held o(T First Federal, 30-32, Monday In Sanford Recreation
Department baaetball action at Westslde Center.
Atlantic Bank took a 10-4 lead after the first quarter and
Increased It to 2 0 6 by halftime. First Federal roared back
in the third quarter and pulled within six, 22-16, going Into
the fourth quarter. But Atlantic Bank outscored First
Federal, 8 -6 , In the final period to seal the victory.
JefT Ingram’s game-high 13 points led the way for First
Federal while Adaryl Jones contributed seven.
In other action Monday. James Jackson and Joseph
Wiggins combined for 26 points aa McCoy’s Cleaners took
II to Tip Top Supermarket. 47-13.
Jackson's game-high 18 points led the way while
Wiggins loosed In 11, Travis Perkins netted seven, Ossie
Faison added six, and Ray Perkins and Edgar Baas chipped
In with four apiece.
Demetrius Miller had six points to lead T ip Top while
John Jones added four and Johnell Brewlngton three.

By C hris F lstsr
Herald Sports W riter
Top-ranked (4A) Lake Howell added the
Five Star Conference championship to their
list of accomplishments this season aa the
Silver Hawks of coach Norm Wight finished
out the regular season by dismantling
Seminole. 5-1, Tuesday night at Lake
Howell High.
The Hawks Improved to 19-1-2 overall and
7-0-2 In the Five Star while securing the top
spot In next week's district tournament with
a 7-0-1 mark (d lcou n tin g tie against
Seabreeze). Lake Brantley, at 6-1-1, will be
the second seed In the district tourney.
"W e lost the conference by one game last
year." Wight said. “ So the kids worked
really hard this year. Th ey feel great to have
won the conference and hope to keep up the
ranking."
The Fighting Semlnoles showed they are
continuing to Improve aa they stayed wtthln
a goal. 2-1, o f the top-ranked Sliver Hawks
after the first half. Jim Morrissey and Mike
Serlno scored the goals for Lake Howell and

Lake Brantley, which has won 11 straight
matches and Is 9-0 at home this season,
concludes the regular season Friday as It
hosts Orlando Evans.
The Patriots scored four goals In the
opening half Tuesday and added seven
more In the second w hile outshootlng
Apopka. 43-7.
Mo Moghaddam. Steve Earl and Aaron
Guttman scored two goals each for the
Patriots while Rick Williams. Chad Marten.
Fred Rash and Chris McManus scored one
apiece. The 11th goal was and own goal,
that la Apopka scored It for Brantley.
Goalkeeper Scott McCollough had six
saves tn recording his third shutout of the
season. Brantley's other keeper. Aaron
Kindle, has eight shutouts and the two
keepers combined for one more shutout.
“ Aaron (Kindle) has played the majority of
the games because he's a little older and
more experienced." Lake Brantley coach
Jim Brody said. "Scott (McCollough) was
Injured earlier in the year but we try to get
him In as much as possible."

Soccer
Tim Roberts scored the Tribe's goal.
Lake Howell's defense held Seminole In
check the rest o f the way while the offense
tacked on three more goals in the second
half. Jeff Schlcker. Eric Rcesman and Bryan
Droze scored the second-half goals for the
Hawks.
Lake Howell took 26 shots on goal
Tuesday compared to Just four for the
Semlnoles.
The Sliver Hawks will host the first round
of the district tournament Tuesday against
either Seminole or Apopka.
In other action Tuesday, Lake Brantley's
Patriots shelled Apopka’s Blue Darters,
11-0, In Five Star Conference action at Lake
Brantley High.
The sixth-ranked Patriots Improved to
16-2-1 overall and 7-1-1 In the conference.
Brantley will be the second seed In the
district tourney with a 6 - 1-1 district record.

Lady Hatton Hoot Lady Gators

Stetson, 8-12 on the season, dropped a tough one to the
University o f Central Florida's Lady Knights last Wednes­
day before losing to Howard University Monday.
Freshman center Dleldre Hlllery, a Sanford Seminole
High graduate, led the Lady Hats against UCF with 18
points and 16 rebounds. Hlllery had a season-high 19
points In a win against Davidson prior to the UCF mathup.
Joining Hlllery (10.8 points per game, 10.1 rebounds) In
the starting lineup are 6-2 Junior center Dallas Boychuk
(18.0 points, 10.2 rebounds), Robin Williams (7.3). Terri
Cain (6.4) and Mlchaell Reilly (8.7).
Florida, which has beaten two top 20 teams (Miami and
Kentucky) la led by 8-4 senior center Tammy Jackson who
averages 12.9 points and 8.4 rebounds per game. Joining
Jackson In the Lady Oatora' lineup are Kelurah Bell (11.0),
Margaret Peters (13.1), Susan Stoddard ( 8 .8 ) and Sharlene
Byrd (8.4).

Ram Froshmon Thump St. Cloud
Kelly McKinnon pumped In 18 points and Corey Prom
added 14 aa Lake Mary’s freshman finished the season
with a 74-29 rout of St. Cloud Tuesday night at Lake Mary
High.
The Ram froah ran to a 16-4 lead after one quarter and
led by 24, 34-10, at halftime. Lake Mary took a 86-21 lead
intq the fourth quarter.
Eight players got into tha scoring column aa. behind
McKinnon and Prom, Chad Gay added 10 points. Brad
Compton and Mike Mandevllle tossed in eight apiece. Chris
Cornelius and Jason Reid contributed six each and Todd
Wright netted four.

SCC coach llaana Gallagher ysi Is out Instruction!.

M M

See

CowUasad from 7 A
c h e d a s p o t In th e s t a t e
tournament.

■;SaMa Fe beat us the first
time, but we were flat In the
second half." Lee said. "It'a a big
game and w e want to repeat our
performance tonight Thursday.
light now. we're working hard
and talking more on defense."

BOSTON (UP!) - The Big East
will hear from Boston College,
after aH.
With Michael Adams hitting 2
free throws with one second left
Tuesday night, Boston College
ran up Its first victory against
one of the league's heavyweights
with a 67-66 decision over No. 8
Syracuse.
T h e o u t c o m e at B o s to n
Garden raised the Eagles* record
to 16-8. But until Tuesday night
they had yet to beat any of the
conference power brokers — St.
John’s, Georgetown, Syracuse
and Villanova.
T h e O ra n g e m e n went up
66-68 with 20 seconds to go on a
pair of Tout shots by Wendell
Alexis. Boston College's Stu
Primus then missed from the
outside with eight seconds left.
Syracuse's Ron Sclkaly was
fouled on the rebound but
missed his foul shot. Trevor
Gordon rebounded and sent an
ou tlet paas to Adams. T h e
waterbug guard was then fouled
30 feet from the basket by Andre
Hawkins with a second left.
"It was a strange case because
we were so far away from the
b a s k e t , " BC c o a c h G a r y
Williams said. "But It was a
blocking foul and that's what
counts."
Said Adams: "It's unfortunate
for Andre to get called for a foul
with that much time left on the
clock. But there was contact and

Kareem
Destructs
Rockets

muLsss;
W HY?

HOUSTON (UPI) Playing
against the Tw in Towers meant
•ingle coverage for Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. That translated into
a season-high 40 points for the
7-foot-2 center and a 113-104
victory for the Loa A n geles
L a k e r s o v e r the H o u s to n
Rockets.
Jabbar hit IB-of-29 field goal
attempts and B-of-9 from the foul
line to help the Lakers to their
12 th straight victory over the
Rockets in Houston.
"Tonight felt like the '70a
•gain ," Abdul-Jabbar said. " I
waa single-covered a lot. I can
usually get m y shots off against
one-on-one coverage.

SCOREBOARD

For Syracuse. 15-4. Dwayne
Washington had 17 points. He
missed a desperation buzzer
shot fo llo w in g A d a m s ' free
throws. Adams and Roger MeCready scored 16 points each for
the Eagles.
"H e's our leader
not going to let us uown. i k .
guard Dominic Pressley said of
Adams. " I knew they were going
lo g o In."
In the onl&gt; other Top 20 game.
Vi ll anova b eat C on n ecticu t
79-71 at H a r t f o r d , C o nn.
Dwayne M cClain scored 23
points on I 0-of-12 shooting and
Harold Pressley added 19 lo
carry the Wildcats. 15-5. Earl
K elley's 22 points led Con­
necticut.
In New York, a bomb scare at
the Fordham-Army game forced
evacuation of 2,000 spectators.
Police did not discover a bomb.
The game was suspended with
Fordham ahead 26-20 and will
be continued Feb. 18.

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alow all night."
Abdu l-Jabbar'a three-point
play enapped a 98-96 tie and
James Worthy dropped in two
free throws to make tt 103-96
and Houston never caught up.
"K a re e m can make that
sky-hook all night," Sampaon
said. "You can sometimes win
games in the last few minutes,
but tonight, we couldn’t stay
close enough to them. They were
definitely the better learn to­
n ig h t"

N

In other games Tuesday, New
Jersey edged Detroit 119-117,
Kansas Ctty crashed San An­
tonio 135*116. Boston shaded
C h i c a g o 1 1 0 -1 0 5 . D a l l a s
d u m p e d A tla n ta l i a - 1 0 3 .
Phosnta nicked Denver 106-103,

MU

sasa

e t s e r s w ia

S

"W e were never ready to help

It was a foul.”
"I thought (the foul) was two
shots but Ihrn when I got lo the
line I knew It was 1-and-l. I tried
m y best to stay away from the
foul line and keep m y con­
centration."

i

" I still feel competitive In this
type o f gam e."
it waa the type o f game played
primarily Inside, way above the
r im . H o u s t o n 's 7-4 R a lp h
Sampaon (33 points and 18
rebounds) and 7-0 Akcem OlaJuwon (30 points) had AbdulJabbar outnumbered but only
one o f the Rockets' young giants
could guard the 37-year-old vet­
eran at a time.

Basketball

H!

DELAND — Stetson's Lady Hatters will try to break a
two-game losing streak tonight, but will have a tough time
doing It aa they host Florida’s Lady Gators at 7:30 at the
Edmunds Activity Center on the Stetson University
campus. ,

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Balanced Jones
Crushes O v ie d o

Bucs Control Inside,
Overpower Brantley

ORLANDO — Eight players
scored six or more points Tues­
day as Jones’ Tigers used their
b alan ced a t t a c k to eat up
Oviedo’s Lions. 78-45. In Orange
Belt Conference action at Jones
High.
Oviedo, which was playing
w i t h o u t p o i n t g ua rd Cary
Justice and lost center Janies
Stewart (ankle Injury) In the
early going Tuesday, fell to 8-12
overall with the loss and
in
the c o n fe re n ce . Jon es now
stands at 15-7 overall and 8-0 In
the Orange Belt.
"Jones hit from everywhere
and they spread out their scor­
ing well." Oviedo coach Dale
Phillips said. " W e were Just

B y Chris Plater
H erald Sports W riter
A L T A M O N T E SPRIN G S With 6-8 center Greg Courtney
In foul trouble most of the game.
Mainland’s Bucs were able to
dominate Inside Tuesday en
route to a 73-55 victory over
Lake Brantley’s Patriots In Five
Star Confem ce action at Lake
Brantley High.
The Bucs. who Improved to
15-5 overall and 7-5 In the
conference, led by Just one. 9-8,
after th e firs t quarter, but
Courtney picked up hts third
foul m idway through the second
quarter and Mainland went on to
take a 25-16 halftime lead.
"It stayed close when Greg

Basketball
outmanned."
Jones bolted to a 25-9 lead
after one quarter and ran the
lead to 43-21 by halftime.
Mark Stewart's 12 points and
15 rebounds w ere high for
Oviedo and the Junior forward
also hit 6 of 10 free throws
Including six In a row after
m issing his first four. Allen
Unroe contributed 11 points but
hit Just 3 of 16 shots from the
floor.

James Stewart went down
wllh an ankle ln|ury early In
the first quarter Tuesday
night for Oviedo.

OVIIDO ( « ) - Cam*to*ll A, M. Stewart II.
Fsryuton J. Hugtwt J. J Stewart t. Uiw** II.
K t e M U C i w i I Trtali 1*1)23 0 .

Basketball
(Courtney) was In there," Lake
Brantley coach Bob Peterson
said. "But It changes a lot o f
things when, he’s not In.
Mark Moser's 16 points were
high Tor Ihe Patriots who fell to
3-16 overall and l - l l In the Five
S t a r . R e x B l a c k a dd e d a
season-high 13 points and six
rebounds while David Hardwick
con trib u ted 11 points, five
assists and two steals and Wade
Wlttlg chipped In with eight
points.

By the middle o f the quarter, though, both
teams seemed tired and the game slowed
down considerably, and the Intensity the
Hawks had In the first period was beginning
to burn off. Brooks only scored three
buckets equaling Johnson for high scorer In
the period.
After the halftime break, the tempo of the
game began to pick up until the Bulldogs
(tied unsuccessfully to bring Lake Howell
Into a man-on-man defense. "It was like a
cat and mouse game between the two
coaches." said Zeoll. "N o one got ag­
gressive."
Lake Howell held the lead. 38-35, at the
buzzer despite Kevin Wctckel’a last second
swish giving the Bulldogs their sixth point
o f th e q u a rter. The H a w k s had Ihe
oportunlty to build their lead, but like
DeLand. It was the lowest scoring (eight
points) eight minutes all year.
Ever since the atari o f the half. Brooks'
shots weren’ t going down. " I shot the ball
on the way down. That's w hy 1 fell short."
said Brooks.
DeLand’s high scorer. Welckel. added
points consistently throughout the game. "I
was sh o o tin g average t o n ig h t ." said
Welckel. Average, however, average was

Trib e Trium phs
A t Indoor M eet
By Chris F ilte r
Her B id Sports W rits*
GAINESVILLE - Coming off a
successful cross country season,
six Seminole High runners made
the transition to track and did It
In a big way Saturday In the
Florida Indoor Mcrt at Ihe Uni­
versity of Florida.
Seniors G l e n d a Bass and
Katrina Walker. Junior Debbie
Coleman, sophomore Jennifer
Roberts and freshmen Shonda
Martin and Dorehclle Webster,
w h o c o m p r i s e d the La d y
Sem lnoles' top six In cross
country, combined for three first
places, one second, one third
and two fourth places In the
m eet Including a new meet
record In the 4x400 meter relay.
Bass. Martin. Webster and
Walker teamed up to set the new
record wllh a time o f 3:58.2 In
the 4x400 relay. The old record
was also held by Seminole at
4:05.
Bass turned In an Impressive
p e r f o r m a n c e f o r the La dy
Semlnoles Saturday as she also
won Ihe 400 m rters with a lime
o f 58.2 and was second In Ihe

Track
300 meters with a time o f 42.0.
Bass was selected the Qulcy's
Reataraunt Award winner for the
first week of Ihe track season.
Th e Quincy's Award la a new
one this year for Sem inole High
track athletes.
T h e Lady Semlnoles also came
away with first place In the
4x800 meter relay. That team
Inclu ded Colem an. W ebster.
Roberts and Martin.
Walker alao took fourth places
In the 400 and 300 meters while
Webster placed third In the 800
meters.
Seminole will take some o f Its
team to Ihe Hl-Y Games this
weekend In Winter Park.
"W e 'll only lake a few girls
because we don't want loo many
meeta this early In the aeaaon."
Seminole coach Emory Blake
said. "W e want to concentrate
on practices until the whole
team is together and then con­
centrate on compel tng. **

L A K t BRANTLIY (Mt - Kordokk II.
Motor U. Orotodoto 1. Block 13. Cogrhwy A
Wlttlg* Total* 3* II 23 U
Moinimo — Mainland 23. Loko Branttey 14
Foul* — Mainland I*. Laka Branttey 1*

$4095
P

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FOB Bin
IIVBOOtl

■

The Hawks came within two once more
when Brooks slolc the ball to take It In for a
layup bringing the score to 48-46. but with
15 seconds remaining. Lake Howell had to
resort to fouling se n io r guard T e r ry
Williams. Williams hit both complementing
DeLand’s 10 of 12 from the line In the half.

Wllltemt 13. Pattey 3. WtkUl It.
A fte r400 T. to tm m It. R iw g gr*. Talalt 1114 1112
LAX I HOWILL 1441 — Anterior! 4. Broo4i 3) fitolry 0
Steal*. Idga 3. Ltenrd 4. Hkkt I. i *.n* 0 Lew* 0. Uhnllhr
9. Total* Its 1*44

I I 11 n

Designed aid engineered lor n
smooth ride and long mileage

Both teams came out slowly. Johnson’s
Juniper and Welckel's 22-footer from the
corner broke the Ice. Then. G-3 Hawk Fred
Hicks countered with a shot from Inside the
key leaving 4:47 on the clock. From there
. (40-39) began a scoreless back and forth
race until Anderson hit both free throws to
gain a one point advantage. Deland began
Its spread offense running more than a
minute when Welckel added (o the score
with a three-point play for a 43-41 lead.

Anderton took the final shot for Lake
H ow ell but it bounced away and Into
DeLand hands for Ihe Hawks last gasp. A
coast-to-coaat score by Williams ended the
battle. 52-46.

•v

1 Site. 4. Aitdtnan *. Polite 14 To««l» 12

U P G o o d rich

Just enough to out score the challenging
Hawks In the final quarter.

Basketball

Rex Black hit a season-high
13 points.

MAINLAND 1231 — 0.
t i. H#*&gt;ry
II. M*&lt;l*f*r I. Anthony *. McCloud » . John

DeLand Overcomes Stubborn Hawks
John Nelson
H erald Sports W riter
DeLand coach John Zeoll said It would be
different the next time the Bulldogs played
the Lake Howell Silver Hawks, but he didn’ t
expect the narrow 52-46 Five Star Confer­
ence victory his Bulldogs escaped with
Tuesday night at Lake Howell HlghSchool.
The last time the Bulldogs met the Hawks,
they were at home where they cruised to a
58-32 victo ry. Lake Howell, how ever,
missed Its star player Efrem Brooks because
o f Illness.
At Lake Howell, wllh Brooks back In the
line-up, Ihe Hawks came very close lo
pulling off an upset from the sixth-ranked
(4A) Bulldogs, but free throw shooting and
calm play down the stretch helped the ’ Dogs
dodge the bullet.
"They Just didn’t miss." said Zeoll while
watching his team fall behind IB -8 In the
first quarter. Once again the Scott Anderton-Efrrm Brooks combination broke
through the defense lo build (he lead.
Brooks came out firing lo score 12 In the
first eight minutes. Meanwhile. Anderton
picked ofT two passes selling up Brooks on
the breakaway layups.
In (he next period, DeLand made some­
what of a com eback behind powerful
offensive boards by 6-6 Randy Anderson
and 6-5 Marcus Johnson but the Hawks still
held a a 30-29 edgw

Wednesday, F*»: •. I W -F A

• Fu*l Mvtoq* with km rolling
isoistADCs compound*.
• ExcsUsnt Irad km, Iona
mllsags, quite rids with
uniqu* l read daaign.
• Extra teiwogth and aUbtlity
from two MssI btep, sad
•turd* polrstesr cord body

A O K

O f LAND (It) -

T IIC i:
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Halftlma - Lata Hew*ll 30. Daland 21 Fault - Del arte
11, LakaHowal! 14 F*uteO owl — Hon* T«hnkall - Non*.

&gt;1 A l t |

11 V III V i! 11 I (III
, *&gt; v \ 1 1 m u

. 5 2 2 - 7 IJtO

9 OUTOF K&gt;HOMES
NEEDH.E.L.R

Ram Natters Victorious
Lake M a r y 's g irls swept
Mainland while the double team
of Shea Whlgham and Mike
Rcnaud pulled out a narrow
victory for the boys aa Lake
Mary opened the aeaaon wllh a
pair of vlctory’a of the Bucs in
prep tennis action Tuesday at
Lake Mary High.
The Lady Rama won all seven
matches Including singles victo­
ries by Suxy Stewart. Gina
C ap u to, R a e le n e Ryeraon.
Bernadette Peters and Erin Hig­
gins and doubles triumphs by
the Stcwart-Ryeraon duo and the

Caputo-Peters team.
The boys took three of the five
singles matches and clinched
th e v i c t o r y w i t h the
Whlgham-Renaud doubles win.
Singles winners for the Rams
Included Kenaud. Trey Sir bold
and Robbie Shakar.
The Rams return to action
Thursday at 3:15 p.m. (girls
followed by boys) when they
boat Orlando Evans.
In other action Tuesday. Lake
Howell swept all 14 matches aa
both Ita boys and girts teams
rolled over Evans.

H O M E E N E R G Y L O S S P R E V E N T IO N .

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�UA-Kvsalag HsraM, gaafsrd, FI. Wsdassday, FsS. t, INS

Cheers For Bayhead
Congratulations are In order
fo r Bay he ad R a q u e t C lubs
Bronze league team on Its recent
success In winning the champi­
onship In the Central Florida
Tennis League.
The decisive win came on Jan.
15 when the Bayhead team
defeated Sw eetw ater Country
Club of the score o f 4-1. This win
enabled Bayhead to move Into
first place and ultimately claim
the championship.
The five teams that repre­
sented Bayhead were. "1 Rick
Moreland and Eddie White, "2 Al
Nejaikc and Jerry Webb. *3 Ron
Hunt and Bob Gregory. *4 Andy
Adcock and Robbie Robertson,
and *5 Mike Pelton and Steve
Baker. The team o f Robertson
and Adcock had a really great
season as they won all their
matches finishing with a 16-0
record.
The new league starts Feb. 12
and the Bayhead Bronze Team
will now move Into a higher level
and participate In the Silver
League. Again, congratulations
for a job well done and good luck
In the new season.
I

Sanford's John Holt, one of the
top young players In the area,
has decided to take his tennis
talents on to the college level.
John will enroll at JefTerson
S l a t e J u n i o r C o l l e g e In
Birmingham. Ala. He plans to go
there In March so that he will be
eligible to play this coming
spring. JefTerson Stale has one
of the top Junior college pro­
grams In the nation and John
will be a strong addition to their
program.'
I spoke with the JefTerson
Slate coach. Bal Moore on the
phone this past week and he Is
delighted that John has decided
to accept the scholarship at his
school. Coach Moore said, “ John
was a fine prospect with lots of
potential and a very bright
future."

Larry
Castle
Herald Tcnnla
W rite r

, Britts

dedicated tennis players In Sanford are Lillie and Roy Britt. The
Britts, longtime Sanford restdents, play at least three or four
times a week and work very
hard at their tennis as well as
staying very fit.
Even though both have been
playing tennis for many years
they still have a desire to learn

321-2398

m ore a bo u t t he gam e and
become better players. In fact.
both are taking the advanced
tennis course at the college. Hats
ofT to this hard working husband
and wife tennis team, we admire
them for their hard work and
their love o f the game. By the
way the Britts are both In their
70s.

H um anities D ivision. Is this
year's winner. Levin finished In
a tie for Drat place with Russ
Calvet. Both has 16-1 records
and had a playofT to determine
the champion. Levin defeated
C alvet In straight sets thus
claim ing the championship.
Calvet, o f course, finished sec­
ond. Tony Begley was third and
L a r r y McAdam w as fourth.
Eighteen faculty members at
SCC participated In the league
and are now ready to m ove Into
the doubles part o f the schedule.

M.P.O.
In flaar O f Vlllmg* Flms Marks f

RV TRACTION

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Discount Liauor

Th e S em in ole Com m unity
C ollege Fall Facult y Single
League has been completed and
there Is a new champion. Dr.
Boh Levin, chairman of- the

321-2398

BEST PRICES
BEST SERVICE
TRY US!

01 SAWOPD

Bayhead Raquet Club is get­
ting a facelift. For sometim e now
(here has been a need at the club
to have extensive work done on
Its courts. For the post week or
so. under the watchful eye of pro
Colvin Mclk. workers have been
resurfacing the courts and build­
ing up the composition courts to
a very high standard.
Bayhead, of course. Is an old
and established clay court club
and the owners are always
willing and anxious to provide
the best In facilities for Its
members. If you have never
pl a y ed on the c o m p o s itio n
courts at Bayhead. I think you
would love It. and I know your
feet will.
Tw o of the more avid and

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY S A.M. *5 P.M.

if

t 1

t r t r t r t v n

A m e r ic a n
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W ednes­

d a y , F eb . 13, 4 P .M . t i l 6
P .M .

Lou nge

r e g is te rs

lo c k e d , a ll sales d o n a te d .

Baseball Boosters
Will M oot Tonight
The first meeting o f the
Seminole Baseball Boosters
Club will be held tonight at 7
at the Grace United Method­
ist C h u rc h o n A i r p o r t
Boulevard, a c c o r d i n g to
Seminole b a s e b a ll coach
Mike Ferrell.
"W e'll lie playing most of
our game s o n the road
because w r don’t have u
home fie ld ," said Ferrell.
"W e need to get things orga­
nized Tor the u pc o mi n g
season."
The Semlnoles will open
the season S a t u r da y at
Titusville at l p.m. against
Astronaut.

M O U L I N ROU GE
CHAMPAGNE
2 . 6 9

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* » • • * * » HtraM. Sanford. FI.

Cook O f Th e W e e k
Now that sho hat •

Retiree Shares Secret
In Making Her Award
Winning Potato Salad
B y Dorothy O m a a
H erald Correepoadeat
If there were 12 more hour* In the day. It still
wouldn’t be enough for one busy took o f the
week. Claudlne Milano.
Originally from Ohio. Claudlne and her family
moved to Hollywood. Fla. when she was 3 years
old. She worked for Southern Bell In Hollywood
for 30 years. " 1 0 years as an operator, then 20
years as a repair service clerk. All this time In the
same office building." A grandmother three
times. Claudlne has a daughter In Hollywood and
a son In Atlanta
Enjoying retirement to the fullest. Claudlne
tries to do all the things she never had time to do
before, like cooking, canning and gardening.
A two-time Blue Ribbon winner for her potato
salad recipe. Claudlne and her husband, Jim,
have lived In Sanford for four years. Jim , who Is a
former chef. Is now In restaurant management.
Claudlne says that Jim occasionally cooks up
home marvelous dishes In his wok. but for the
most part, the kitchen la her domain. She says,
"H e gets very Inventive srlth chicken breasts and
then I've got the rest o f the chicken to make soup
srlth. Then I clean up the kitchen after him .”
Among her m any Interests. Claudlne enjoys
sewing "beach blankets.” These are colorful
patchwork quilts, without the quilting, that she
Funs up on the sewing machine and are made
from scrap pieces o f material that her friends save
for her. Many o f them she sells at yard sales.
. Walking and bicycle riding for exercise help
keep her slim and trim. Taking an Interest In the
environment and the beauty or our city. Claudlne
Will often collect cans and bottles she spots on the
tpadslde and turn them In for recycling.
A member o f the St. John's River Life Member
Club, which la a chapter of the Telephone
Pioneers o f America, Claudlne Is actlvciy involved
with "people helping people." She Is a group
representative and keeps In touch with about 15
people to Inform them of monthly meetings and
to check on their well-being. Claudlne explains.
" A lot of people live alone and have no one to look
after them. W e call to ask you they are doing, ftnd
out If they've been 111 or need anything, if we
don't get an answer, and their phone hasn't been
put on temporary disconnect, we send someone
to check on them ."
A recent project o f the "Pioneers" was to raise
funds to send to the Statue of Liberty restoration.
They also mstn i n i sgltlng and Christmas
baskets of food for the needy, and all this Is a very
rewarding outlet for Claudlne.
A plentiful garden grows at the MUanoa and
Claudlne and Jim plant "Just about everything."
A special attraction In the garden Is their "tomato
ring." which is actually a compost pile about four
feet In diameter. After carefully preparing the
compost for about two months with peelings,
coffee grounds, eg g shells, etc. from the kitchen,
allowing It to **roL" Claudlne puts a circle of wire
fencing around It. about four feet high. On the
outside of the fencing. In a circle, she plants
tomatoes. As the tomato plants grow taller, she
ties them to the compost pile. Kitchen peelings
are added regularly and every so often a shovelful
or two of sand Is added then watered to pack It
down. The nutrients from the compost are
continuously fed Into the ground and this makes
for a healthy crop.
Claudlne plants xucchinl. broccoli, eggplant,
yellow squash, potatoes, onions, and. of course,
tomatoes and many more delectable*. Claudlne
says that she "cans everything that comes out of
the garden. If we don’t eat tt then we ahare with
the neighbors, and they share with us." Her
kitchen cupboard holds a fine display of canned
fruits, vegetables and relishes.
Claudlne and Jim have a camper and enjoy
visiting all the state campgrounds. A lover of the
outdoors and also a very frugal homemaker,
Claudlne says she tries to save energy any way
she can. To cut down on heating costs, they pyt
their lovely fireplace to full use. Claudlne says.
"W e love to go to the Ocala National Final where
we are given a permit and are allowed to cut
down certain designated trees for firewood. I pack
a lunch and we really make a day of U. The
permit Is valid for atx months, so we really keep a
good supply of firewood on hand. I also collect
ptne cones which are excellent fire starters. Two
or three in the fireplace really get a good fire
Claudlne has, always loved lo cook and now
that she has the ume to try her expertise, she
very often win lake a basic recipe and Improve on

retired from Southmrn
Boll after 30 yoart of
torvlco, Claudlne
Milano tayt sho
onjoyt doing thlngt
sho novor hod too
much tlmo for boforo

It. She uses her own canned pears In the Pear
Cake recipe below, but you can substitute your
favorite store brand.
Although her recipe for Southern Fried Chicken
Is not unique, Claudlne uses one Ingredient that
Is a must, and that's bacon grease. This Is
Important to the flavor, she says, along with a
heavy iron skillet.
Another staple In the Milano household Is
Capalatlna. which can be eaten cold aa an
antipasto. Claudlne keeps a Jar o f this In the
refrigerator at all limes, and Jim reminds her
when it is time lo replenish it.
Follow ing are some o f Claudine's favorite
recipes. Enjoy!
C A F A L A T tN A
2 medium eggplant
2 medium onions
1 cup diced celery
1 No. 2 can tomatoes
Vi cup capers
2 tablespoons sugar
Vi cup wine vinegar
1 cup pitted olives (black or green)
Salt and pepper to taste
Do not peel eggplant. Cut Into one Inch cubes.
Sprinkle with salt and let stand In colander (wo
hours. Heat enough olive oil In skillet to cover
bottom. Drain eggplant and brown very slowly.
Remove wtth slotted spoon and put In large pot.
Add celery and chopped onion to skillet, adding a
little more oil If necessary. When celery la tender,
add tomatoes, capers and olives. Keep stirring
lightly over low heat for another ten minutes.
Heat sugar and wtne vinegar until sugar Is
dissolved. Add this lo eggplant, then add celery
mixture, cooking slowly another 20 minutes. Add
salt and pepper to taste. Makes two quarts. Eat
hot or keep refrigerated and use aa an|lna*m.
SOUTHERN F R IE D CHICKEN
1 whole frying chicken, cut up
% cup flour
1 teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon pepper
Vi teaspoon paprika
A t least one cup bacon grease
Combine flour, salt, pepper and paprika In
sugar sack or brown paper bag. Place chicken
pieces, one or two at a time. In bag and shake
until well coated. In a cast iron skillet with bacon
grease, over medium heat, fry chicken pieces
untU golden brown, turning only once. Drain on
absorbent paper towel. Serves four.

such as cooking,
Sho dlshos up a bowl
ofhor
mouth-watering,
steaming and savory
original Kitchen Sink
Soup,
Hm i M mote by Timmy VIM.nl

(A great way to use leftover vegetables)
1 cup Navy beans, rinsed and soaked overnight
1 soup bone
3 stalks celery, chopped
3 carrots, cut Into bttc-aUed pieces
2 large onions
1 can tomatoes (16 ox.) with liquid
Vi head cabbage, chopped
1 bay leaf
Salt and pepper to taste
Any leftover vegetables such as coni, peas,
green beana, etc.
In large pot. combine all Ingredients, using
water which Navy beana have been soaked In to
reserve nutrients. Cook slowly over medium
eat. adding water from time to time, for about
one hour. About 15 minutes before soup Is done,
sdd your leftover vegetables from the refrigerator.
Including Juices. Serve with Itsllsn bread or
homemade biscuits.
BLUB RIBBON POTATO IA L A D
0 boiled potatoes, diced
4 hard cooked eggs, diced
1 cup salad olives, chopped
1 medium onion, chopped
1 stalk celery, finely chopped
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
1 cup mayonnaise
1 teaspoon sweet pickle Juice
Mix all Ingredients, adding mayonnaise last,
and tom llghuy until thorough]]y combined.

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In A n d A ro u n d Th e C ounty

Pankhurst To Meet Feb. 14;
Rep. Grindle Guest Speaker

Cottmm Honors Bota Sigma Phi Valontlno Girls
Tha alght V a l«n tln e Girl candidate* for
Bata Sigma Phi's Vatentln* Quofln were
honored at a coffe* Saturday morning at
the homo of Batty Jack. Raprasantetlvas
from the Daytona Baach City Council
evaluated the candidates. The quoen will
b« announced at th« annual Valentin*

Charity Ball Saturday at the Sanford Civic
Center, beginning at 8 p.m . Brenda
Elswlck, center, ball chairman, Is sur­
rounded by candidates, from left, Laurel
Rodgers, Cheryl Wright, Cheryl Burch end
Joyce Dyer.

The February luncehon meet­
ing o f Pankhurst will be on
Valentines Day. Feb. 14 at noon
al the Holiday Inn. M and S.R.
46 near Sanford.

teer drivers are needed for a
30-passenger bus used for senior
citizen transportation. Training
Is provided by the Red Cross and
Tri-County Transit.

The featured speaker will be
Stale Representative Art Grindle
discussing what la ahead for the
198S legislative aeaaton, and
how the legislation will affect
liv e s and our p ocketb ook s.
G rindle was recently elected
c h a i r m a n o f t he S e m i n o l e
County delegation.

Also In Orange Qounty. volun­
teers are needed one flay a week
to work with both the baby
safety seat program and the
Dlal-A-Frlend program where
phone calls are made to elderly
shut-ins.

According to Marilyn Denton.
-Pankhurst members are honored
to have two state representatives
speak, as Representative Fran
Carl to gave an excellent talk to
the group In January.
Also, at Pankhurst monthly
m eetin gs, tw o ou tstan n d ln g
Seminole County high school
girls are honored at the lun­
cheon. These girls are selected
b a a e d on t h e i r a c a d e m i c
achievem ent, school involve­
ment and leadership ability.
For February, the students are
Becky Baker and Dana Ray from
Seminole High School.
Discovery '85, a one day con­
ference for county high school
age girls la scheduled for March
16. This fourth annual event will
provide high school glrla a day of
enrichment workshops and ac:ry '85 s
will agsl
akre Mary
lg
Mary IfHigh
S c h o o l from 8:30 -2:0 0. A ll
Pankhurst m em bers will be
participating. Interested girls are
to watch Tor registration an­
nou nc eme n t s at their high
school and every high school girl
Invited to attend.

2

A ll meetings, fund raising and
fellowship activities and special
e v e n t s h elp to fu r t h e r
Pankhurst's goal o f working
toward the growth development
and education o f women.
Members and any other Inter­
ested women wishing to attend
the noon meeting on Peb. 14 are
asked to call Norma Ragsdale or
h er se creta ry at 831-4025.
Casselberry Eelmentary School,
by noon, Feb. 12 for reserva­
tions.

Betty Jack, center, hostess, servos quoen
candidates, from left, Lessle Paulino,
Vlcklo Hall, Cathy McNabb and Lgls

Smith. For Information on th* ball, call
Brenda Elswlck. Proceeds will benefit.the
Missing Children Center Inc., Longwood.

In S e m i n o l e C ou nt y, the
Longwood office needs volunteer
caseworkers as well as typists
and receptionists. In all cases,
training Is provided by the Red
Cross.
For further Information, call
the Red Cross In Orlando at
894-4141 or In Longwood at
831-3000.
T h e Longw ood Elem entary
School LSAC and administration
Invite parents and Interested
citizens to come to the school
auditorium at 7:30 p.m. on Feb.
13. to discuss the re zoning of
students currently attending
Longwood Elementary School.
On Feb. 12 the Casselberry
Woman's Club wtll host a lun­
cheon and Fashion Show at the
clubhouse on Overlook Drive
(next to the Casselberry Golf
Course Clubhouse).
The time will be al 12 noon
and there will be a 84 donation
requested, with proceeds going
to the Bahia Shrine Crippled and
Bum Hospitals.
T ickets may be purchased
from club members, or at the
door, and there will be lots or
door prizes.
Modeling will be done by club
members o f clothes furnished by

Elya Fashions ol Casselberry
Square.
The Welcome Wagon Club of
Seminole County Invites women
who have recently moved to the
county to Join Its social club.
Monthly meelngs and special
Interest groups are available to
the 200 members.
A membership coffee will be
held Feb. 13. For further In­
formation on the coffee and dub,
call Ellen A ngerm ann. 8625313. or Audrey Karwandy.
831-2745.
Sweetwater Oaks Garden Club
w ill hold a lu n ch eon / t
Sweetwater Country Club on
Feb. 11. Everett Huskey, devel­
oper o f Sweetwater Oaks and
president o f the Huskey Com ­
pany. Is hosting the bufTet for
garden club members.
Huskey will present a history
o f the community and share hls
expectations for the future of
Sweetwater.
The Central Florida Quitters
Guild will sponsor a workshop
by Jean Eltel, the prize wlnnln
qullter and noted quilting teach­
er from North Palm Beach.
She will conduct a workshop.
"C o n te m p o ra ry C h in tz ." on
Saturday. Feb. 9. at the First
U nited Methodis t C hurch
Fellowship Hall. 419 Park Ave.,
Sanford.
The workshop wtll focus on
the contemporary appraoch to
design Incorporating traditional
quilt patterns.
Cost ts $20 for guild members
and $30 for n on -m em bers,
which Includes your chuXe o f a
yard o f decorator chintz.
For Information, call Mary
Arseneau, 322-5407.

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT MONDAY 8 AM . •8 P.M.

M.P.O.
321-2398
MEAT MARKET -JSiSr.,

321-2398

In Roar Of Village FIam Maritat

1BOO F M N C H AVB.

SA N FO R D FLA.

T h e A m erica n R ed Cross
needs volunteers for a variety of
duties. In Orange County, volun­

W e d d in g Ring Could Be
Fatal To Som e W o rke rs
D B AB A B B Ti The letter from
the bride who Instated that her
husband wear a wedding band
prompts this: 1 am a superin­
tendent at an Industrial plant In
Macon. Oa. After two accidents,
both caused by rings. I posted an
order that no employee was to
wear a ring while working.
This rule was enforced until a
mechanic was assigned from the
general m aintenance depart­
ment. He was not under my
control, but I saw a wedding ring
on hla finger and asked him to
remove It—and I explained why.
He skid, "M y wife put that ring
on m y finger, and I Intend to
wear It until the day I diet"
Well, he didn't die. but two
days lalcr he came close. An
electrical circuit on a welder was
completed when he accidentally
brushed against It with his ring.
Maybe branding Is the answer.
JOHN B. NAFtKJt
D B A R JO H N i If B randing
would aave a life, I'm for brand­
ing. Many years ago I had a
letter form an electrician's wife
who said that her husband had
worn a wedding ring for years,
had gained weight and couldn't
get It off. It seems his wedding
rin g had w orn a liny hole
through hla Insulated glove, and
a fatal contact was made. When
hla lifeless body was wxamlned,
the only sign of Injury was a
small bum where hla wedding
ring had encircled his finger.
N ow I tell w ives: I f you

Mother, som e de nt i s t s are
"Doctor” to their patlenta. but
"M am a" to their children.

Otar
Abby
husband w orks around
machines or electricity, if you
really love him. Insist that he
leave hla wedding ring at hornet
Semtlment Is a poor excuse for
wearing a ring if It can cause the
loss or a finger, hand, urc or a
life.
DBAB A B B T i D o I ever have a
bone to pick with you! Now you
say that dentists whose practice
Is limited to school children
should work from 3 p.m. to 9
m. and all day Saturday, so
ds won't have to miss school
for dental appointments.
You sure have your nerve!
Dentists are people, loo. They
get married and have kids o f
their own. When are they sup­
posed to sec their own kids — on
Sunday afternoons?
The dentist may be "D octor"
to hla pa ti ent s, but he Is
"D addy" to hla children.

Problem *? W hat'* bugging
you? Unload on Abby. P.O. Box
38923. Hollywood. Calif. 00038.
For a personal reply, please
e n c l o s e a s t a m p e d , sel f addressed en velope.

E LE C T R IC ]
SH AVER
C L IN IC

B

DBAB W lF B i A person who
chooses a specially should be
prepared to practice during
hour* that wtU accommodate his
patlenta, A n d b y the way,

g flO Q

ONE POUND ELM ER 'S
CHOCOLATE HEART BOX
FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
a
iRt EP
E rA
n IR
iR
R A ZO R

TUNC4JP
SPECIAL
q s tifU

...Cook O f

• Week

C e e tle e a d r r a e i IB
Nut Topping, below
Combine egg, sugar, oil, milk
and vanilla until smooth. Com ­
bine Hour, baking powder and
salt and add to egg mixture
stirring only until combined.
Pour Into greased BxS inch
baking pan. Sprinkle half o f nut
topping over batter. Arrange
DMT lUcCS
pear
slices on top. then add real
rest
o f nut,topping. Bake at 375* far
30-38 minutes or until wooden

pick Inserted in center comes
out dean.

J* J

Net Topping!

* 2 *8

HOKELCO•KEBIHSTOH
SCHICK•SUHBEJUK
ELTKOH
W E D N E S D A Y

U cup flour
Wcupsugar
M teaspoon cinnam on (or
nutmeg)
M cup butter
M cup chopped nuts
Com bine flour.
_____ sugar and
cinnamon. Cut In butler until
crumbly. Add nut*. Makes about
one cup topping.

is

FEUUUARY

10 A M

to

6 th

3 PM

■4i« y v it iT W

W O

V1**

COUNTER
POINT
i
TOWELS
HANO TOWELS............1.90
W ASH CLO TH S..............."1

1 .8 8 *

M ARCAl PAPER TOW ELS
U n i t 1 R olle.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Gourmet Gala 1985

Wednesday, Fob. 4. IMS—3B

Celebrity Couples Share Recipes To Benefit March Of Dimes
Salt (If desired)
Combine stuffing Ingredients,
except salt, tn a mixing bowl and
blend thoroughly. Add salt If
desired, however. Roquefort ts
salty. Refrigerate stuffing for at
least 20 minutes.
Pat fish dry with paper towel.
Spread about 14 cup chilled
■luffing on skin side [darker
side) of each fillet. Roll up fillets,
carefully tucking In both ends.
Dip fillets In egg arid mil In
bread crumbs. Place fillets In
shallow, buttered baking dish
Just large enough to hold fillets
tn one layer. Top with remaining
stuffing. If any, and drizzle with
melted butter.
Bake at 375* for approximate­
ly 20 minutes, or until sole ts
white and flaky, but not dry and
crumbly. Check often after 15
m inutes. T o p with sauteed
mushrooms tf desired. Bight
servings.
If 10 -oz. fillets unavailable, use
5- or 6 -oz. pieces and overlap
them. Fillets may be prepared
without dipping In egg and
rolling In bread crumbs.

Fifteen celebrity chef couples
were In competition on Jan. 26
for awards In the First Annual
Gourmet Gala 1985 to benefit
the March o f Dimes toward
conquering children's birth de­
fects.
The Gourmet Gala was held In
the Grand Cypress Ballroom at
tho Hyatt Hotel. Orlando. About
• 100.000 was raised with 600
persons contributing $250 per
couple for the dinner and other
festivities.
C entral Florida C elebrities
submitted and prepared their
favorite recipes for Judging. The
hotel chefs prepared the 15
winning recipes to serve to the
600 guests.
Some of the winning recipes
are as follows:
M AYO R ** BE V1CHE A L A
KEY WEST
M ayor Bill and Joanne
Frederick
2 Concha, meat cubed
Fresh time Juice
14 can* onion, chopped
Vi can* celery, chopped
1 18-ox. can stewed tomatoes
Marinate cubed meat In lime
Juice to cover for 30 minutes.
Mix In remaining Ingredients.
Serve In small chilled bowls, or
drain conch cubes, using slotted
spoon, and serve on crackers.
•tomato can measure — boat
style! Equivalent to one cup.
R O T E R T LO UISIANA
OYSTERS A L A
Dr. And Mrs. John R. Royer
3 doz. oysters, freshly opened,
on the half shell
6 Tb lightly salted butter
6 Tb fresh spinach, minced
3 T b onions (preferably
Vldalla) minced
3 Tb fresh parsley, minced
3 Tb celery leaves, minced
5 Tb fresh white bread crumbs
Dash hot p e p p e r sauce
(Tobasco)
1 tspHerbaalnt*
1 Rock salt
Melt butter In saucepan. Add
all Ingredients, except rock salt,
and stir constantly over low heat
for 15 minutes or until mixture
la soft. Place In food processor
and cool. Puree with metal
blade.
Place rock salt In 6 pie tins.
Set oysters on top o f salt, six for
each Un. Place a spoonful of
.topping on each oyster. Broil
.under medium heat until salt
browns (about
minutes).
Serve im m ediately;"
. If oysters arc part o f a buffet.
they are served directly from the
pie tins, garnished with parsley,
If served as an appetizer, two
oyater shells are arranged on a
lettuce leaf and served with
lemon wedge and parsley.
. Can be prepared up to 24
hours In advance and placed
under broiler Just before serving.
•Hcrbsslnt Is s Liqueur D'Ants
(anise liqueur) produced In New
Orleans. Louisiana; and la renowned aa "The Spirit o f New
Orleans." Pem od's Aperitif Ants
(anise aperitif), an exclusive
product o f France, can be sub•tinned.
________
HOT ARTICHOKE DIF
: Mr. and Mrs. James H. Fenner
; 1 14-os. can artichoke hearts.
drained
*&gt; 1 cup mayonnaise
1cup Parmesan cheese, grated
1 tap garlic salt
I Pepper to taste
. Tortilla chips
. C om bine a ll In gred ien ts,
^except tortilla chips. In food
•processor. Blend well. Place In a
! 1* or 2-quart casserole. Bake at
: 370* for 15 minutes. Serve
warm (In chafing dish) with
: tortilla chips.

T o serve, spoon a small dollop
o f the sour cream-mustard sauce
In the center o f warmed dlitner
plates and place a chicken breast
on top to completely cover the
sauce. It will be a flavor surprise
to the diner. Three-four servings.
• Pour off any excess oil
V E A L PA PR IK A W ITH
HALUSHBY
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Duda. Jr.
1 lb boneless veal
2 Tb butter
1 cup onion, chopped
2 Tb paprika
Vi tsp salt
V4 tap pepper
2 Tb water, tf needed
2 tsp flour
Vi cup milk or.tlght cream
1 cup sour cream
Buttered noodles or halushby*

crumbled
Vi cup (1 stick) butter, melted
2 Tb lemon Juice
Mushrooms |lf desired) sauteed
2 tsp Pernod or Anisette
Stuffing!
1 cup (2 sticks) butter., soft­ desired)
I tsp parsley, chopped
ened
I tsp chopped chives
4 ozs cream cheese, room
I green onion, minced
temperature
Vi tsp hot pepper sauce
6 ozs ray shrimp, cut Into
Vi tsp Worcestershire sauce
small pieces
Pepper to taste
3-6 ozs Roquefort cheese.

FREEMAN PECAN PIE
Dr. Norton and Alene Baker
1 cup pecans, co arse ly
chopped
1 cup brown sugar
Vi cup white sugar
3 Tb all purpose flour
3 eggs
3 Tb milk
1 tsp vanilla
1 stick real butter, softened
Whole pecans
I 9-inch unbaked pie shell
With a fork stir together In­
gredients except whole pecans.
Never use an electric mixer.
Pour Into pie shell. Decorate top
with the whole pecans. Bake at
300* until a crack forms In
center o f pie, approximately one
hour. Six to eight servings.

COCA COLA
P R O D U CTS
S*18 OZ.
BOTTLES

ro c s

cola

2690 S. ORLANDO DR., SANFORD, FL
LOCALLY OWNED A O ff RATIO IT DENNIS A KATHY QMNSTEAO

323*4950
PM CtS IN THIS AD 0 0 0 0 PROM THUNK FIS. T THRU WED. FEK It. IMS

OPEN: 7 DAYS A WEEK 6 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

' A ‘ZkitfiU Smdt 9*

94U"

WE WELCOME FOOD 8TAMP SHOPPERS.

f hull while
J1* * 1,
‘ "rough, stin t
“ “ onlngs to
no&lt;xj c* or 111
..
• ‘ Halushby!
: cgg*-beate;
2 cu p. flour
!\ cu p ,T* 'e r1
* *■£ " “ for 1
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needed) until I
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tn stevr
cool water. Ad&lt;
the bowl until r
FRESH M USI
M r. a n d h
Dowman. Jr.
2 whole eggs
1 egg yolk
1 chicken bouillon cube,
crumbled
14 cup all-purpoae flour
Vi cup milk
WITM MUSTARD SAUCE
V4cup water
Joseph Harm and Barbara Hars
Few drops vegetable oil
2 whole chicken breaata,
White pepper to taste
aklnned, booed, and halved
Combine Ingredients In a
6 Tb butter
blender and blend about lVi
2 Tb Dfjon mustard
m inutes or until batter Is
i 60s. pecans, ground fine
smooth. Refrigerate at least one
; 4 T b butter
hour. Cook on inverted crepe
; 2 Tb safflower oil
pan or a lightly greased 6-Inch
(or S-inch) skillet. To remove.
44 cup aour cream
1 Tb Dijon mustard
; I tsp salt
: V4 tap pepper
i Vi lbs fresh mushrooms,
. Between two pieces of eras
'.paper. Ugbtly flatten chicken
lore seta with a meat pounder or

f Melt butter (6 Tb) tn small
•m u c s pen over medium heat
Remove from heat and whisk In
m u s ta r d (3 TbJ. D ip each
chtehen breast In the butter and
mustard mixture; Ihen heavily
•eat each with the pecans by
petting them on by hand.
• Mdt butter (4 Tbltn a 12x14"

ORLANDO'S ORANOB CAKE
Rep. Art and Phyllis Grtndle
Cakst
2 large oranges
6 eggs
1 14 cups ground nlmnnds
1 pinch of salt
I cup o f sugar
1 tsp baking powder
Oarnlsht
1 orange, peeled and sliced
thin

Confectioners sugar
Cinnamon
Whipped Cream (If desired)
Raspberries (If desired)
Boll the two oranges. UNPEELED. In water to cover, until
very soft (25-30 minutes). Drain,
cool, and cut Into quarters.
Remove seeds. Puree In food
processor.
Beat eggs in a large bowl until
thick. Then add all remaining
cake Ingredients. Mix well. Pour
Into a buttered and floured deep
9-Inch cake pan. Bake at 400*
about one hour or until done.
Before serving, garnish cake
wi t h orange s lic e s on top.
Spri nkl e with c o n fe ctio n ers
sugar and cinnamon. May be
served also with whipped cream
and/or raspberries. 8 servings.

Seasoned salt to taste
1Vi cups aour cream
Nftu» m uohwwia and
in melted butter until onion la
soft. D rain off liquid. Add
p a rsle y , lem on Juice, an d
seasoned salt. Cooh over mcdl*
um heat for 10 minutes. Fold in
the a o u r c rea m a n d heat

DUTCH
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S A V E O N T H I S W E E K ’S D O U B L E D I S C O U N T S P E C I A L S

FROZEN DAIRY

C ftS S M * U ? 1 s 1 9

4

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A

�&lt;•—Evening Herald, Sanferd, FI.

Wedweday, Feb. $ , 1W5

Casual Entertaining
Plan An Open-House Buffet To Fit Today's Busy Lifestyle
Opening your home to friends
and family la a wonderful way to
express your affection, yet to*
day's fast-paced living leaves
little time for elaborate enter­
taining.
One so l ut ion Is a casual
open-house buffet that offers
guests light foods and a variety
of tastes and textures. There Is a
wide selection of frozen and
prepared foods to use as a base
for the menu, and many o f
today's popular recipes are de­
signed for simplicity. Team up
easy-lo-prepare dishes with
versatile appliances, such as a
toaster oven, and you have the
formula for a delicious bufret
dinner Ihe host and hostesses
can enjoy ns much an the guests.
The Mena
The buffet featured Includes
fried chicken, dressed up with a
choice of three dipping sauces.
The warm chicken Is co m ­
plemented by the Saucy Apple
Crunch Salmi, which combines
th e r e f r e s h i n g t a s t e o f
applesauce with a hint of tangy
cinnamon. This apple salad Is
easily prepared ahead so It's
ready for serving when the
guests arrive. Fresh Western
New York apples nnd red cin­
namon candles give the salad a
warm, rosy glow that adds color
lo your buffet table decor.
To save time nnd the fuss of
washing, cutting und frying,
used frozen fried chicken Ihnl
bakes In a crisp golden brown In
40 mlnulrs In u toaster oven and
remains moist and lender after
huklng. A two-pound box con­
tains pairs o f meaty breust

halves, drumsticks, thighs and
wings and ts enough to feed a
parly of six nnd gives guests a
choice of the chicken pieces they
like best. For smaller parlies the
chicken can be combined with
vegetables or apples.
Three flavorful dipping sauces
add a new taste dimension to the
chicken. Very Berry Applesauce
Is n tangy mixture o f cranberry
and applesauce. Cranberry gives
It a vibrant color and applesauce
lends a deliciously fresh flavor
that is enjoyed by both children
and adults. Applesauce Is a

wholesome food and a versatile
Ingredient that adds zip to
almost anything — entrees, de­
sserts, breads, and even soups.*
Blue Cheese and Dill Dipping
Sauce blends the rich flavor and
texture of sour cream with tangy
blue cheese. A spicy Salsa made
with roasted green and red
peppers brings a vibrant Mex­
ican flavor to the party. All three
sauces are easy to prepare.
T b s B u ffet T a b le
Place the dipping sauces and
the Saucy Apple Crunch Salad
In decorative platters on the

buffet table along with your
toaster oven. When the first
guests arrive place a batch of
chicken In the toaster oven to
bake — It will be ready to eat
when your guests are. When the
next group arrives, simply place
another batch of chicken in the
oven to bake.
This buffet menu Is Ideal for
casual e n te rt a in in g . Ke ep
easy-to-use Ingredients on hand
and add festive gingerbread
cookies and fresh fruit for a
finishing touch. This simple
menu can be served for an

after-work gathering o f friends or
extended to an afternoon open
house. The chicken and rolls can
be kept warm In the toaster oven
and chilled salad brought out
cold from the refrigerator. Even
with a minimum of free time,
there's always enough for good
food and good friends.
•For additional applesauce
recipes, write Western New York
Apple Growers. Dept. FF. Box
350. Fishers. NY 14453. Request
th e f r e e r e c i p e l e a f l e t
“ Applesauce Tem ptations: A
Garden of Appletlzlng Ideas."

SAUCE A P PLE
CRUNCH S A L A D
2 3-ounce packages lemon
gelatin dessert
V* cup red cinnamon candles
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 cups boiling water
1 3-ounce package cream
cheese, softened
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
2 cups u nswee t e ned
applesauce
1 red apple, cored and diced
W cup thinly sliced celery
W cup chopped walnuts
8 m OPEN HOUSE, SB

Tomatoes
A n d Fish
Com bine
In Stews
T h r combination nf fresh
lomulors und fish bus led to
some world-fumuus soups and
stews, such as thr French
Iroulllnbalssc. Dalian clopplno nr
New Orleans gumlsi.

A tomato lish slew I'rovrnrnlr
or a CurlhlxMii fish stew ID
nicely Into ihr soup and salmi
menus of iliosc who urr eating
more lightly and healthfully
these days
TOM ATO-FISH
STEW PR O V E N C ALS

T H I VALENTINE ITEMS LISTED
BELOW ARB AVAILABLE FOR
YO U A T TH E DANISH BAKERYt

Publlx Beef •Gov’t.-Inspected

Htarl Shaptd Cakss, Valentina Cookies,
Cupcake* and a Variety of other Iteme.

Standing Rib R o a s t * 2 * 7
Publlx Beef •Gov’t.-Impeded

1 Wi pounds Florida Initiators
2&lt;*U|m rhlrkcii-hrnlh

Eye Round Roast...... ? *2*T

2 cups zucchini, cut in Mr-Inch
slices, halved

Publlx Boef - G ov't.-Inspected

Key Club Steak........ 7 »317

I cup green pcp|icr, cut In
1-Inch squares

Publlx Beef •Gov't.-Inspected

1 cup coarsely ehnp|H-d onion

Short Ribs.................7 *1'T

2 teaspoons p.iptlka

h teaspoon thyme leaves,
crushed

teaspoon minced garlic
I bay leaf

Rockingham

I pound fresh nr frozen and
partially thawed fish fillets cut In
I-Inch pieces
Use tomatoes held at room
irutperuture until fully rq&gt;e. Cut
out stem ends of tomatoes. Chop
tomalocs (makes altoul II '«

Roasting
Chicken

cup*)
In a large saucepan place
tomatoes, chicken hroih, zuc­
chini. grern pepper, onion,
paprika, thyme, garlic and bay
leal llrlng to a ImiII; reduce heal
and simmer, covered, fnr IS
minutes.
Add fish Simmer, covered,
until fish Is opaque, altoul 3
minutes. Itemove bay leaf. Serve
with rice. If desired. This hitchru tested rrcljrr makes 4 |tnt ■
lions, II cups.
C AR IBB E AN FISH BTEW

I IV [ton11da Florida lomulors
I ruprhopjtcd onion
Mi teaspoon minced garlic
I tv teasjHsms salt
I tras|Mion oregano leaves,
crushed
1 Vi cups chicken broth
2 rups diced celery
I cup sllcrd carrots
1 pound fresh or frozen and
partially thawed Itslr fillets, cut
In l-lncli pieces
2 trus|Nsms (ruprlku
V* cup dry shrrry
I tablespoon white vinegar
Use tomatoes held at room
irmperatiirr until fully ripe. Cut
out stem ends nf tumuloes.
Coarsely chop tomatoes
In a large (Mil place lomutoes.
onion, garlic, suit, oregano und
chicken broth, bring to a boll.
Deduce heat und almmrr. cov­
ered. lor 10 mlnulrs.
Add celery and cumita. Sim­
mer. covered, until vegetables
are alm ost len der, about 9
m inutes. A dd fish, paprika,
shrrry and vinegar. Simmer,
covered, until fish turns opaque,
about 3 minute*. This kitchenIrsird rrcl|&gt;r makes (I (Millions.

Zeety

Cola Slaw.
Sleeked
Ham Sandwich...
Boneless Beef or Pork

Publlx Meat or Beef

Hot and reedy to sett

S m o ked
S ausage............

Deli Oriental

Clam Chowder.

liceCreammbs

Shrimp logrolls

Freah-Beked
\ Strawberry Rhubarb or

( ’£

Publix

Ice Cream

„ .

Sandwich.............. 'St *1 «f

■ ff

iV

f

MZ

C o d S te a k a ........

•gee

Haddock Fillet ... ..

Large S h rim p .....

Dalrl-Freah

m

Sour g g i
C re a m
16*ox. cup

T itty Medium

-*i

H 4**»

Hot from the OeN or Heat i Serve

W hiting F ille t ..... ..
Peeled A Deveined

P m m H M * ............................. » 1 » -

Hamburger RoNs..

Freeh Frozen

Flo under F ille t...

SI
•»
SI *i*M

Freeh, S-tnch

Freeh

Freeh Frozen

»2«V

Cheddar Cheese.. t; 88*1
Baked fresh dally In the Dekt
Sausage S
Biscuit................ •£* 79 *S

ISeafood
Fresh

7

»1 «
M*
M*

&lt;2»

TMMQHT
TOUOXT

ouAirrmes

•7»
Breekfeet Club
White

89*

Sandwich
Breaf »•
L

Beet Clew KMMtllil f

&gt;’

�Evsnlrvg H*raM. Ssntwd. FI.

Wsdastday. fsb. t. 1W5- 1B

...Open House
Continued Prom 4B
((antiah: lettuce leaves, apple
Alices
In small bowl combine one
package gelatin, two tablespoons
cinnamon candles, one tables­
poon lemon Juice and one cup
boiling water. Stir until gelatin
and candles are dissolved; set
aside.
In medium bowl with mixer
set at low speed, beat cream
cheese and mayonnaise until
s m o o t h ; be at In o n e cup
applesauce and gelatin mixture.
R e fr ig e r a t e until m ixture
mounds slightly when dropped
from a spoon, about one hour.
Gently fold in apple, celery and
walnuts: pour Into 6 -cup mold;
refrigerate until almost firm,
about two hours.

Frozen fried chicken
with talta and Saucy
Apple Crunch Salad
make entertaining for
a crowd easy with
minimum clean-up.

r

Natural Light or

Busch
Beer
6-pk., 12-oz. cans

$-183

Reg. or Light Beer

O ld
S tyle
6-pk., 12-oz. cans

(Limit 4 Plata*, With Othar Purchase* o f
$7.50 or Mora, Excluding all Tobacco Items)

$J99

C I1 r u »T O r «n e * »L s k S i

Seminal*, Otc*ola C*.

(Phis Tax A Deposit),
Reg. or Diet Ginger
Ale, Club Soda or
Reg. or Sugar Free
Tonic Water

(Umlt 4 Plaase, With Othar Purchasaa o f
$7.50 or More, Excluding all Tobacco Items)

Canada
D ry

THIS AO EFFECTIVE:
THURS., FEB. 7
THRU WED.,
FEB. 13, 1 9 8 5 . . .

3 $1
Betty Crocker Assorted^

SuperMoist
Cake Mixes

IDairy

reg. pkg.

M idgee Candy

Ballard Buttermilk
Dean

Breakfast Club

Sunshine Fudge, Mint or

H a m b u rg e r o r
H o t D o g Buns.

French Onion Dip,. '.V.' 89* Peanut Butter

Borden Individually-Wrapped
Cheese Food

C hips ‘N M iddles.. W/ *14®

Sliced American....

*1*®

Wisconsin Cheese Bar M U Cheddar.
C olby Halfmoon, Monterey Jack or

2

Scl.
***•

Rich ‘N Chewy Chocolate Chip,
Fudge or Pecan A Chocolate Chip

89*

E n glish M uffins.... ’i?.1 *2°®
Lager or Light, In 12-oz. Cans

O ld T a p B e e r.........X

FRIED CHICKEN
WITH GLAZED
SWEET POTATOES
AND APPLES
I package (1 pound) fried
chicken or 14 package 2 -pound
sice
1 cup cubed cooked sweet
potatoes
1 red cooking apple, thinly
sliced
14 cup packed brown sugar
2 tablespoons butt or m arga­
rine
Dash cinnamon
Place frozen chicken In single
layer In oven pan positioning
largest piece directly o v e r *
sensor.
In small oven proof casserole,
com bine sweet potatoes and
apple. Sprinkle with sugar; dot
with butter and season with
cinnamon. Cover casserole with
foil.
Place casserole In oven with
chlckenk. Bake at 375° F. for 30
m inutes. Remove foil; baste
potatoes with syrup. Continue to
bake for 15 minutes or until
chicken Is hot and potatoes uitglazed. Makes 2-3 servings.

PRIED CHICKEN WITH
POTATO-CARROT BUNDLES

Thomas' Reg. 12-pack

G ra n d m a 's
*1*® C o o k ie s .................. ,0p £ '»1 4»

Mozzarella.............

'°£V 89*

Tootsie Roll.

Biscuits.............. 4 SS 79*

Meanwhile. In small bowl dis­
solve remaining one package
gelatin, two tablespoons cin ­
namon candles and one tables­
poon lemon Juice In one cup
boiling water; stir In remaining
one cup applesauce. When first
layer o f salad Is almost firm,
gently spoon gelatin-applesauce
mixture on top. Cover and re­
frigerate until both layers arc
firm, about four hours.
To serve: Unmold gelatin salad
o n t o c h i l l e d s e r v i n g d i s h.
G ar ni sh wi t h crisp l et tuc e
leaves. Top with fresh apple
slices. Makes 8 -12 servings.

*1**

^ T ^ IT o ^ s te r ^ ^

IProduce
Crisp, Juicy New England

M c In to s h A p p l e s ... 3 &amp; 9 9 *
A Summertime Treat In Winter, Tasty Juicy, Fresh

N e c t a r i n e s ...........................................s 6 9 *
F r e s h B r o c c o l i ............... as, 9 9 *

Servo With Cheese Sauce, Tender

Excellent Baked or Candied, North Carolina

S w e e t P o t a t o e s ........... r 3 9 *

1 p a c k a g e ( I pound) fried
chicken or V* package 2 -pouud
size
2 small baking potatoes
1 m e d i u m carrot, cut In
Julienne strips
4 thin sllcrs onion
2 tablespoons butter
I tablespoon finely chnp|&gt;cd
parsley
Dash salt
Dash pepper
Place frozen chicken In single
layer In oven pan positioning
l argest piece d i r e c t l y o v e r
sensor.
Wush. dry and cut potatoes In
half lengthwise, then cut each
half Into four long w edges.
Arrange on center of two 12 -lnch
squares or double-thick fall.
Add half ol the carrots and
onion to each square. Dot with
butter; season with parsley, suit,
and pepper. Wrap securely.
Place bundles In oven with
chicken. Bake at 375* F. for 43
minutes or until chicken Is hot
and potatoes and carrots are
done. Makes 2-3 servings.

BALBA
14 medium green pepper
14 inrdlum red pepper
I tablespoon salad nil
14 cup chop|&gt;ed onion
1 medium clove garlic, minced
1 cup tomato sauce (Bounce
can)
14 cup chicken broth
1 teaspoon chill powder
Place peppers skin side up on
roasting pan. Broil about four
Inches from top heating clement
until peppers ore charred. Place
hot peppers In plastic bag; seal
and let stand IS minutes.
In small saucepan over m edi­
um heat In hot oil cook onion
and garlic until soft but not
brown. Stir In tomato sauce,
chicken broth and chill powder.
Peel akin from peppers; chop
peppers and add lo sauce. Heat
together about five minutes.

D R *.

VERT RERRT APPLESAUCE
1 cup applesauce

1 cup whole berry cranberry

Onions............. 3

sauce
Combine sauces; chill. Makes
two cups sauce. Serve as u
dipping sauce with chicken.

90®

Florida Grown, Flavorful Fresh

Mushrooms.........^ M 11

CHOCOLATE APPLESAUCE
CAKE

Excellent Stsemed, Fresh Tender

Brussels Sprouts.. «T 69*

214 cup* all-purpoae flour
14 cup baking cocoa
2 teaspoons baking soda
14 teaspoon milk
1V4 c u p s s w e e t e n e d
applesauce
14 cup buttermilk
% cup shortening
1H cups sugar
3 eggs
114 teaspoons vanilla extract
Preheat oven to 350* F. Grease
and Dour I3x0x2-lnch baking
pan.
Sift together flour, cocoa,
baking aoda and salt. In small
bowl, mix applesauce and but­
termilk. In large mixing bowl at
low speed, cream shortening and
sugar. Beat In eggs and vanilla.
A d d d ry I n g r e d ie n t s lo
creamed mixture alternately
with applesauce-buttermilk mix­
ture. Mix four minutes until
w e ll-b le n d e d , o c c a s io n a lly
scraping bowl.
Pour batter Into pan. Bake
35-40 minutes or until cake
tester Inserted Into center comes
out clean.
When cool, lop with favorite
frosting. Coconut-Almond tastes
great)

"Marion" Brand

Stir Fry
Vegetables..........£?H®"
Super Pop Brand, White oj Yellow

Popcorn.............. *** 89*
PubAx AM Natural
100% Pure ChUted

_

Apple Juice......... £ M*»

For CxceAent Cooking!
Crisp Virginia

York M

i l ....J

£ BO®

K S S S S W S S ... 7 **•

(OranS Mesas, friars, LaraSas or Nubian**)

f * 1 .0 0 O F F
l

a

l

i

�i t —Ivswtm Herald, towford. FI.

Wednesday. Feb. I, IWl

D i e t e r 's A l m a n a c
'
If Your Prefer Not To Eat Breakfast Daily, Then Don't
„

it) |

v_-f-

(Editor's ftote: T h r follow ing
rolum Is excerpted from "The
Dieter's Alm anac" by Theodore
lierlsnd):
You’ve been listening to all
those ads telling you and your
children to eat breakfast every
day, preferably a hot one. And
diet gurus have been telling you
breakfast Is the most Important
meal of the day.
Yel you may hate breakfast.
C onf us ed? Sm a l l w on der.
Well, here are the fact*.
First, not everyone fasts from
dinner to dawn. In fact, most
people eat a snack before turn­
ing In. If you go to bed late and
rise early, there still may be food
In your stom ach when you
awaken.
Second, you have plenty o f
energy reserves In your body.
Glycogen, a starch, la stored In
liver muscles. Your body quickly
ronverts it to keep blood-sugar
levels up. Then there Is fat. oh,
so much o f It, to be burned or
converted to sugar.
Most su pporters o f hearty
b r e ak f a st s q u o t e the I owa
Breakfast Study conducted al
the University o f 'Iowa In the
llMOs and 1050s. It was sup­
ported by generous grants from
Gener al Mills, a mak er o f
breakfast cereals, and from the
Cereal Institute, a promoter of
breakfast ccrenls.
The Iowa research team, led
by W.W. Tuttle, reported In
1040 that subjects who ate a
light breakfast did belter on a
alutlonary bi c y cl e and had
quicker react ion times and
smaller tremors o f the fingers In
the morning than when they ate
heavy breakfasts or Just drank
coffee and cream.
The light breakfast consisted
o f fruit, a slice of buttered toast,
u glass of milk and coffee — n
total of 400 calories. The heavy
breakfast consisted o f fruit, cere­
al and cream, an egg, a slice of
bucon. two sllcrs of toast and
Jam. milk and coffee — a total of
800 calories.
In studies reported In the
1050s, the lowans said that
when men did not cat anything
from 8 p.m. until noon, they had
larger Ircmors and did poorly on
the static bicycle, compared to
days when they were allowed a
basic breakfast o f 740 calories
(fruit, cereal with sugar and
milk, two slices of buttered toast
and Jelly),
Yet another study, sponsored
by the Cereal Institute, found
that a cerral-and-mllk breakfast
prndured the same favorable
results as a bacon-and-eggs
breakfast. (No surprise there.)
H o w e v er , the research ers
found that the om ission of
brrukfust bothered men more
often than women.
And unloved? The main effect
o f b r e a k f a s t s e e m s t o be
psychological. Unfortunately,
the Iowa study did not lest for
nutrition. It tested style of eat­
ing. The researchers should
h a v e s i m p l y s u p p l i e d no
nutrients, some nutrients and
more nutrients for breakfast If
they really wanted to test pure
physical reactions.

A Spicy
Touch Of
The Bayou
Creole and Cajun cookery are
s p r e a d i n g t h r o u g h o u t the
country. Many dishes are pre­
pared with rice, tomatoes and
peppers, and repreaenl a melting
pot of French. Spanish. Am eri­
can Indian and black Influence#.
PICKLED PEPPER CREOLE
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
3 medium-size onions.
3 stalks celery, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
3 tablespoons
chopped uandey
4 whole cloves
14 teaspoon dried basil
14 teaspoon cumin
H-V4 teaspoon
cayenne pepper
M teaspoon dried thyme
4 sweet pickled pepper*,
chopped
3 hoi pickled peppers,
chopped
I can (38 ounces)
whole tomatoes,
drained and chopped
1 pound scallops or
chopped tofu
4 cups rice, cooked
Heal oil In large akUlet. and
saute onions, celery, garlic and
parsley for B minutes. Add
cloves, basil, cumin, cayenne
pepper, thyme, pickled peppers
and tomatoes.
Cook, covered, for IB minutes;
add scallops or tofu and cook for
an additional 10 minutes. Serve
over rice. This kitchen-tested
recipe makes 4 servings.

L

%

,ir-r“* *

Li st en to Dr. W i l l i a m F.
Kremcr and Dr. Laura J. Krcmer
o f Maryland. They say that "thin
nutritionists who like breakfast"
tell us e v e r y o n e must eat
breakfast. The couple says that
“ all that talk about breakfast
being necessary to start the day
ofT right la Just a lot o f hogwash.
As a matter of fact, If you are
overweight, breakfast Is the

iJyj

_*

■,» :

worst way to start the day."
The Kremers maintain that
you are far better off exercising
In the morning than eating. It's a
better way to boost your metabo­
lism. tone your muscles, sweep
the cobwebs from your brain
and whip up your blood circula­
tion. J o g Instead o f eating
granola.
Typical breakfasts are high In

I

*

carbohydrates and fats. The
c a r b o h y d r a t e s are r a p i d l y
absorbed and boost your blood
sugar. But then the blood sugar
plummets, and you get hungry
again. This occurs about mldmornlng. when you want a
doughnut. The caffeine In cofTee
or tea adds to this efTect.
As for the benefits o f hot cereal
vs. cold — again, they are

• *..-

f

psychological. Hot cereal, cold
cereal and bread have an almost
identical nutritional content. A c­
tually. the milk added to cereal
has more nutrillon. Together,
cereal and milk about equals
bacon and eggs. (If you use skim
milk, you save lota o f fat and
calories.)
This Is all by way of em­
phasizing that a diet has to fit

your lifestyle. Unless It does. It Is
doom ed to fall. A fter a few
weeks, you’ll be back at your old
habits. Better to adjust a diet to
you than you to a diet.
What counts are the day’s
total calories. If you prefer not to
eat breakfast, don't. If you prefer
to eat a light breakfast, do It.
Don’t let any diet push you
around.

POUND

U.S.D.A. GRADE A

Lots of
Chicken

SHANK PORTION

TENDER HICKORY

Sm oked

Hams

GROCERY!
| Campbell’s
Tomato Soup
Tomato
^iU O U F^

U &amp; D A GRADE A

10.7502

■

-

W

CAN
LIMIT 2 \MTH A 11000 Oft MORE FOOO ORDER

SAVE Z f PER LB

PER POUND

Hens
CUMBERLAND OAP

Chicken o f
The Sea

Sm oked or Polish

Sausage

u c K rT u n a

SAVE V

12-02 PACKAGE

Sliced
Bacon
U .S.D A TOP CHOICE

CHUCK

FAMILY SIZE PKG

PER
POUND

W aldorf

HALF POUND

Corned
105QZ

Grandma’s
M c h ir O m y

Cookies
Juke

LOAVES

�Microwave Magic

No More Fuss,
Muss To Make
Great Sauces

If you ha v e n' t used you r
microwave for the preparation of
sauces and puddings you are in
for a pleasant surprise. No more
scorching and no more pans that
are difficult to clean. No more
constant stirring to ensure a
smooth, lump-free product.

until tender. Stir In flour, salt
and white pepper. Blend In Half
A Half. Reduce power to 50%
microwave 5-6 minutes, or until
thickened, stirring after each
minute with a wire whisk.
_____
A good sauce to serve with
beef Is a Beamalse. It Is a rich
sauce and a little goes a long
way.
BEARN AISE SAUCE
3 egg yolks
1 teaspoon white vinegar
1 teaspoon white wine
V* teaspoon tarragon leaves
Dash o f salt
Dash o f white pepper
Vi cup butter or margarine
1 tablespoon finely minced
onion or chive
Combine egg yolks, vinegar.

M y e o ff
Home Economist
Seminole
CommimJtj^oUeji

S a u c e s a r e e a s y In t h e
microwave because Ihe energy
penetrates from all directions so
they cook fast. Clean-up is even
easier if you measure, mis and
microwave In a glass measuring
cup. Inexpensive glass measures
of 1,2.4 and 8 cups are valuable
utensils for microwave cooking.
Some of these sauces you may
not have tried because they
appear difficult. See how easy
they can be.
This sauce Is versatile In that
It can be served with vegetables.

pasta, and poultry.
M ICROW AVE BECHAMEL
SAUCE
2 tablespoons butler or marga­
rine
2 teaspoons minced onion
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
14 teaspoon salt
Dash of white pepper
1 cup Half A Half
Place butter and onion In a
2-cup measure. Microwave on
100% power l - l Vi minutes, or

COUPONS
GOOD THURSDAY, FEB. 7,1985 ONLY.
PER POUND

WASHINGTON STATE
EXTRA FANCY

Del Monte
Tomato Sauce

Red Delicious
LUNCH BOX SIZE

Navel
Tangerines

Fab
Detergent

FABRIC
SO FTENER

Jum bo
| Celery
j
•

HALF
GALLON

9

NORTH CAROLINA

Sweet
Potatoes

9*

^
i#

1SOZ JAR

1SQZ PACK
SNO WHITE

Fresh
Mushrooms

Borden's
Ice Cream

9*

C

^

8 |89
■

Generic
Peanuts

$ ‘ 179
.

TrucMoad
of Good
Foods!

ICECREAM

2/89*

2/89*

A

___________

Vi cup butter or margarine
2 teaspoons lemon Juice
2 egg yolks, beaten
2 tablespoons evaporated milk
Vi teaspoon salt
Melt butler In a 2-cup measure
for 30 seconds. Stir In lemon
ju ic e , e g g y ol ks and milk.
Microwave on 100% power for
15 seconds, stir and microwave
15 seconds more, or until m ix­
ture begins to thicken. Let stand
a few seconds, stir and serve.

Sauces can also make a good
dessert better. Lemon sauce is
especially good with bread pud­
ding and gingerbread.
Vi cup augar
1Vi tablespoons com starch
1 cup water
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
Vi teaspoon grated lemon
Dash o f sail
C o m b i n e aug ar and co rn
starch In a 4-cup container. Stir
In water. Microwave on 100%
power for two minutes, stirring
twice. Blend In butter, grated
lemon, lemon Juice and salt.
Microwave Tor 30-60 seconds
more to blend Ingredients.

Apples

CRISP

The next time you prepare
fresh broccoli tn the microwave
take a few seconds and prepare
this Hollandatse Sauce to serve
with It.
H O LLAN D AISE SAUCE
IN SECONDS

The sauce that Is used moat
frequently Is a basic white sauce.
It can be used to cream vegeta­
bles, os a basts for a creamed
soup and to serve with fish and
poultry.
BASIC W H ITE SAUCE
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
2 tablespoons flour
V4 teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon pepper
1 cup milk
Melt butter In a 4-cup measure
on 100% power 30-45 seconds.
Stir In flour and seasonings.
Blend m ilk into flour mixture.
Microwave on 100% power 6-8
minutes, or until thickened.

M A N U F A C T U R E R ’S

i l l GROCERY

wine, tarragon, salt and pepper
In blender or food processor.
Blend about five seconds, until
smooth. Place butter and onion
In ■ 2-cup measure. Microwave
on 100% power for 45 seconds.
or until butter Is melted and hot.
Continue to blend egg yolks at
low speed, adding hot butter and
onions In a stow steady stream
until sauce thickens.

lt.Ht.MJ

What's Ice cream without Hot
Fudge Sauce? This recipe ta
ea a ily m a d e from c o m m o n
things found In the cupboard.
H O T rU D O B S A U C E
1 cup sugar
4 tablespoons cocoa
1 tablespoon flour
Vi teaspoon salt
H cup milk
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons light com syrup
Vi teaspoon vanilla
Combine dry Ingredients In a
4-cup measure. Stir In milk, add
butter and ayrup. Microwave on
100% power 3-4 mlnutca, tU
smooth and thick. Add vanilla.
Stir. Will thicken more aa It
cools.
A cube steak la a cut o f meal,
usually from the round, that la
mechanically lenderUed by the
butcher. This recipe la quick,
colorful, and lower In calorics
than the traditional ways to
prepare a cube steak.
CUBE STEAK PLOB1DA m
4 cube steaka
*
1 medium sweet Florida onion,
cut Into 8 wedges
1 medium xucchlnl, cut Into
Vi-Inch sTrtpa
1 medium tomato, cut Into
wedges
2 tablespoons white wine OR 2
tablespoons apple juice
Vi teaspoon dill
Place steaks on roasting rack.
Microwave al 100% power for
6 8 minutes, or until meat la no
longer pink. Drain and set aside.
In a medium mlcrowavc-safe
bowl, combine onion, xucchlnl.
tomatoes, wine and dill. Cover
with plastic wrap. Microwave at
100 % power for 6-0 minutes, or
until onion is translucent and
xucchlnl la tender. Stir several
times.
Pl ace m i xt u r e on Bleaks.
Microwave at 100% power for
2-3 minutes, or until steaks are
heated thoroughly.

�IB — Evening HeraM, Saitlard. f t .

BLONDIE

Wadttraday, F i t . I , m »

by Chic Young

by Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY
I 'L L GAY.

THE CHAPLAIN REALLV
MAKES A RITUAL OUT
'O F TEATIME

AUSTEN
y TOMlS
H TPA
^KETTLE

THE BORN L08ER

by Art S«naom

r . __________________
•DTH6 EWOOF
THBUIJEl d

^ (J C T .C E A R ? 5DME (CIO'S ALREACV^
S T A U W fc J M E R E .^

MPS.OOOfce

Added Calcium Helps
Offset Bone Crumbling
DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm 36
and was told that I have os­
teoporosis. How serious Is this,
and Is there a cure? Can one live
a relatively unpalnful life by
receiving the right treatments?
Can a young woman get this
disease early and not know It
until menopause, especially If
she was nutritionally deprived
during childhood? Will removal
of the ovaries bring this on
faster?
DEAR READER - Estrogen
seems to be an important key to
osteoporosis (dissolving bones).
Estrogen in creases calcium
absorption from the digestive
system. If one doesn't have
enough estrogen, one may not
absorb enough calcium, and
then calcium Is robbed from the
b o n e s . W h e n t h e r e Is a n
estrogen deficiency, one can
help compensate for this by
getting more calcium every day.
Removal o f the ovaries at an
early age can cause osteoporosis
at an early age. After all. that Is
technically a surgical m eno­
pause. This complication can be
avoided by replacing the loot
estrogen Immediately after sur­
gery and continuing It thereaf­
ter.
Your question about a nutri­
tionally deprived childhood Is a
good one. A woman who develfl good strong skeleton Is less
ly to have serious problems
with osteoporosis. Therefore. It
Is Important to have good nutri­
tion
and plenty of calcium
during the years In which the
skeleton Is developing. The skel­
eton doesn't mature until the
early 30s. Young girls who go on
fad diets and overemphasize
excessive thinness may be set­
ting the stage for osteoporosis
after menopause.

K

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE

//

P*&gt; YOU 911 TH A T

s u p e r - e o ro c o o s
■IO W P THAT JUST
passcpp

„

__ -a

00
%i ftt'ii
0PTCMITR6T

f

by Howl# Schnaldar

EEK A MEEK

WE RE LOOKING, F0 KPEGRX
WHO WO DOIOATt SOME TIME

5CW W ..1 GAVE.
AT HOME

TO PROVIDING CDMFAMIOWWlP

TO THE IO U L V

It Is Important to have cither
estrogen replacem ent or In ­
creased calcium Intake at the
.very onset o f menopause. Some
think It Is a good Idea to Increase
the calcium Intake In the years
preceding menopause to help
protect bones.
With p rop er management,
tnosl women can prevent bone
degeneration from osteoporosis.
You need not be crippled hy this
disorder.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a
40-year-old woman and jog three

days a week for about 35
minutes each time. If I were
unable to Jog. would I to bum up
the same number o f calories by
using a rowing machine? Would
the same muscles be exercised?

oxygen.
»&gt;
N o . by u s i n g a r o w i n g
machine, you will not use the
same muscles In the same way
or to the same degree as you
would by jogging. However, you
will be using other muscles that .
you don't use In jogging.

DEAR READER — How many
calories you use depends on how
much oxygen you need for an
exercise. The amount of addi­
tional oxygen required depends
on the amount o f muscular
effort, regardless o f the exercise
you perform. Jogging and run­
ning use very large muscles, so
such e x er ci s e s use lots of

Send your questions to Ur.
Lamb. P.O. Box 1551. Radio C ity
Station. New York. N.Y.. 10019.
Answer to Previous Punts

4 Day (Hetw |
5 Centamstibie
f Orowtng aid
1 Wharf
7 Pithy saying
B Hardhearted
Hannah, far ana I Befere (pref.)
• Strike
• Cave
12 Hair atria
13 Cameoaer
10 Before (le t)
Stravinsky
11 River in lurepe
14 Orsdvata ef
17 Circlet
I I Plead
22 Campese pourt
4
IS Part statist
24 Efg part
11 Atria to read
28 long time
IS Put an
26 Waste
1 S S if-----allowance
20 Daman read
27 Corroded
21 Undivided
21 Turn outward
23 Dancsr Vardan 30 Beverage pot (2
21 Sudden pain
wdt.)
2 t Sind
31 Small Island
33 Want By ear
32 Summers (Fr)
34 Coneeitod
3S Pertaining to
34 Superlative auf(•uffj

ACROSS

Its

37 Period ef
historical time
38 Oreen (Pr |

□nnn nnen nnn
nnnn QDQC] nnn
□□no nnnonnnn
□□HODGE) nnnn
nnn non
□□□og nnnnnnn
□□no nnnn non
nnn nnnn
nnnnnnn nn
nnn non
□nnn nnnnnnn
□nnnnnnn nnnn
□nn nnnn nnnn
□on nnnn nnn
SI Russian veto

39 Solemn pledge
41 Take on cargo
43 Symbol of

13 Electric Iwh
84 Diurnal periods
IS Ondder group

48 Cries
47 Jest

labbr)

44 Pakistan longue

38 Horse doctor,
for short

48 iscitad

17 Sonorita s aunt
IS Author Flammg

31 Dali
40 Sank employee
42 Summons
44 law ,ir (abtrr.)
44 Ovine mama
47 Campua area
SO Compete point
S2 Scatter newmown hey
■ ■

. ■,,1 -rd ■
09 rK\fO
BAfngly

SS Virginia widow
SS Artificial ton50 Manicuring tool
51 Confederate
52 Breed of dog
53 Characters in a
ploy
44 Coastal
prelection

DOWN
1 Tobacco chaw
2 Capable ef (2
wde)
3 Of note organs a m

Idlest by NIA IX

W IN A T BRIDGE
by Hargraavaa A Sollara

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MI88

&gt; / SHEfc PCDJ m
(M a S P U ? / ) PFFEREPA
I M A S 7 5 A K V CAMEO fCPLE

r

WHATfc
AGAAAEP
r ple r

- __ " i IN A NEW ,
V AV^VIE/ y

by Wamor Brothora

BUGS BUNNY

®

/ M Y MOfiNiNS
i cu po f
C A R cerr
ju iC E N E V E R
Q A k / E M ff A
U P T LIKE
*MiS BEFORE

w te

CHUS

By James Jacoby
overtrumped with the
Today's deal demonstrates an spade see and a spade
urtcommon m ethod o f co m ­ dummy enabled declarer
pressing the defenders’ four still another high
winners Into only three. North through East. T ills too
was a trifle aggressive to go right ruffed low and overruffed by
to four hearts after his partner's South. Declarer's third spade
one-level overcall. It was up to was trumped in dummy and the
South to Justify North's con­ last diamond was led. It did not
fidence.
matter whether this card waa
The opening club lead Im me­ trumped by East or West, since
d i a t e l y p l a c e d d e c l a r e r In declarer waa now able to discard
Jeopardy o f losing two high a losing club.
trumps and two club tricks. A
It would also have been possi­
chance did exist In the diamond
suit. If diamonds were divided ble for South to lead a trump
£l 3. a club could be shed on the after the second overrufT and
third diamond. Accordingly de­ have the pleasure o f seeing the
clarer won the club see, played a ace and king fall together, but
diamond to dummy's ace and that play would fall If either
continued with K-Q of diamonds. defender waa left with the A-K
The third diamond was trumped alone In the trump ault at that
lo w b y E a s t , a n d S o u t h point.

SOUTH

♦ A ll
VQJI 0I 4
♦ It
♦ A ll
Vulnerable Both
Dealer East
Wnt
Nurtk Eton
I#
Pais

«♦

I#
Pus

Pass
Opening lead: #10

HOROSCOPE
------------------- -

J . 'M

p o t U O V V i N 'f i

—

r —

•_'

JA

TH E

# . REAGAN ftuW ET W B I6H T* LOSS
1 E A T * M fT
A $ MUCH AMP cuf O o w N
o N f y tf t C lf B V o L o s e
W Fl E H T
r
i

What Tha Day
Will Bring...

T x x v a j 2 -fc
f « hS* •»

by Jim Davis

Y O U * B IR T H D A Y
FEBRU ARY 7 .1M B

Any unique or original Ideas
you get this coming year should
at least be given the chance to
prove Ihetr merit. One or more
could contain the seeds o f sucA Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
A friend who la Indebted to you
may renege on his obligation
today because he knows If he
gives you a aob story he'll be
able to wiggle o(T the hook.
Looking for Mr. Right?
PIECES (Feb. 30-March 30) Be
careful In partnership arrange­
ments today so that you don't
bank too heavily upon an un­
dependable ally who haa let you
down previously.
(March 31-Apetl 19)
Unleaa you are patient and

methodical today, you are likely
to experience more frustrations
than usual at work.
TAU R U S (April 30-May 30) Do
not confute wishful thinking
with positive thinking today and
count on something that has not
yet happened as if It were a fait
accompli.
OEMDfl (May 21-June 30) Do
not spring any changes on your
family today without first talking
them out with all members.
Unexpected alterations will dis­
turb domestic tranquility.
CARCSR (June 3 1July 33)
You may find It necessary today
to rush around from place to
place. Don't ba in such a hurry
that you're tempted to drive
carelessly.
LEO (July 33-Aug. 331 You
could be a shade too extravagant
today. Hide your checkbook or.
better yet. avoid places where
you're tempted to splurge.
Y 1ROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 33)
Normally you think your moves

through rather carefully, but
today your customary caution
could desert you and you may be
tempted to lake Imprudent
chances.
URSA (Sept. 33-Oct. 33) Your
hunches today may not be all
that awlft. Acting Impulsively
without thinking things through
could provide a bitter Icaaon.
(Oct. 34-Nov. 33)
N ov el or fad d ish types o ( { .
'm erch an d ise could have ar-^
special appeal for you today. Be •
careful that you don't buy a l
while elephant you may never!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 33-Dec.!;
31) Little of value will be ac-!j
compllahed today If you lack!:
consistency. Have a definite'!
ne plan and don't attempt to.
things In fits and starts.
*»
CAFRICORJf (Dec. 33 Jan.
19) Usually you're a self-reliant
person, but today you may look
to others to do things you should
be taking care of yourself. *

S

—WU*

by

A N N II

■asgAVtO
by T. K. Ryan

SUB.

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Atlanta Officials

T O N IG H T 'S T V

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{

SX &amp; 'S S X "**
11.00

(BCD WHEEL OF FORTUNE

A T L A N T A (UPII - A CBS
mini-series based on Atlanta’s
m lu ln g and murdered children
suggests convicted killer Wayne
Williams was framed, a conten­
tion that angers city officials,
who call the film entertaining
but inaccurate.
Civic leaders have asked the
network for free air time to
counter the claims of the twopart docudrama scheduled for
airing Sunday and Tuesday at 8
p.in. each night.
"T h e Atlanta Child Murders"
portrays Williams, a would-be
record prom oter and media
hound, as a man unwittingly
caught between fearful citizens
and a police department trou­
bled by Its Inability to crack a
aeries o f baffling child murders.
The film depicts a city coming
apart at the scams as children
disappear and then turn up
dead. Police are baffled until
finally finding threads of evi­
dence — fibers. In fact — that
connect Williams to the killings.
T h e five-hour presentation
says Williams was "a sacrificial
lamb on the altar of Atlanta."

Wayne Williams, played by Calvin Levels, left, talks to
members of the press In "The Atlanta Chi Id Murders."

SPECIALS

"M y personal reaction Is I
think It Is well done (but)
u n f o r t u n a t e . ” said Fult on
County District Attorney Lewis
Slaton, c h i e f prosecu tor In
Williams’ trial. The 26-year-old
free-lance photographer was
c o n v i c t e d In 1982 fo r the
murders o f two o f the 29 missing
or slain children.
" It la unfortunate because of
the general slant that the man
was railroaded." he said. " I
think It Is real Important that
people realize that -It Is not a
documentary
11 1s a
docudrama."
Former Georgia Gov. George
Busbec has requested a meeting
with CBS officials "to see If we
can mitigate somewhat the
damage that will be done to
Atlanta" by the film ’s nlrtng.
T h e docudram a depicts
Atlanta’s police department us
frustrated and sharply divided
by racial conflicts. Detectives at
one point face angry black cltlsens who have armed
themselves with busrludl bats

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.

B ^ W o jd T h M fr t s

FICTITIOUS MAMS
Maks It haraSy flvan that «**

S W N I" Main— SI 111

Appltwsad Or., Lanfwoad.
Jamlnate County, Florida unOar
Ik s f i c t i t i o u s n o m a s f
EUROCAR IMPORTS, and Mai
«*• intend to remitter told aama
» l t i Itte Ckm ol Ms Circuit
Court. Ism mate County. Florida
In Me ordone* oils th* pro

;£ tftfT E R M IN A T 0 R
TO: JOHN I . IKOMARS. a
ilngk man
t/a Pan Amartean Alnaay
Llfhten TafSl 100 Sorim U
Carmany
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED Ikal an action ha*
Soon cammoncod to teroclooo a
mortfot* on tho tetlooVif root
propsrty. lyln# and Saint and
tlluata In laminate County,
Florida, mors parlkirfarty da
K'lSod at tel low*
Lai tt, Block " A " . CAR
RIAOE HILL UNIT NO. I,

County. Flartda. mar* cam
manly known SO. 0 HltcMnt Fott
Lana, Cattalkorry, Florida

am.

and you ara rapulrad te asrvo a
copy at yaw written oaten**, it
an y. to It an W IE N E R .

ON S.R. 4S4, NEAR 17-92
In Thd Park Squart Shopping Clr.
Longwood, FL 32750

WHY?

C H A N G E Y O U R MAIN C O U R S E
T O F A M O U S RECIPE
?

Compsn For Youroolt And 800 Tho Rooson Why Wo Soy Thol
Fomout Roelpo9 “Hoo Tho Toolo Thol Koopo You Coming Book.

^

W EDNESDAY^*
FAMILY SPECIAL
Thrt« Pltc« Chlcktn
Dlnntr

r1 — *
1

4t e

&gt;

\

Eight Piece
Thrift Pack

....

t«g

phrmai akl

•sub *

£$

'CywhigyLggwwif

"•war*

�.-—■•"■Ex'* —
•

rr

*, . i

10S— Everting H erald, Sanlord, Ft.

W ednesday, Feb t, 1MJ

7 1 - H e l p W a n te d
5 5 *- B u s in e ss
O p p o r tu n itie s

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322*2611
I

Orlando - Winter Park
031-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 t b s # .....................07C ■ ltd#
HOURS
3 CM M Cntiv* tld *** S IC « lint

S;30 A .M . • 5:30 P M .
M ONDAY (hra F tlO A Y
SATURDAY »

7 ctffttctrtht tim tt S2C « lint
c t o m iit h t tiM tt 4CC • Hm
Ctntract R a in Available
3 Lin t* Minimum

••• 4 C 0 P •••
Ucenee SEMINOLE
COUNTYM O V B A E L II
M IAN Beam. CiceNeof terms
aw belewcel First FWrIda
Progenies ttiatM

* 1 — M o n e y to L e n d
Business Capital 1M.0M to
11.000 000 and over. P O Bos
1411. Winter Pk Fla n m
HOME * FORECLOSURE A
mortgage CO won't accept
y our p a y m e n t ! ? C e l l
McTaggert tor solution LU
SUM

2 S -$ p «l»l Notices
C C U 1M TE
A BIRTH)
Mr. Itork's visit
i m Iim far i IIM I i m
•I HBGRB46FiBB*
*•111

3 3 -R ta l E tta ft
C o u rs a s
ASSOCIATES NEEDED NOWI
F R B IR IA L ESTATE
SCMOOLI

111 MMgr *»♦*)&lt;

Independence Freedom The
opportunity W oat at much
tram your |ob as you psrl InW
tt. And ana at Itw most cam
prohentlve trelnlg programs
In the Industry. That's what a
career with our CENTURY II
otllca means. But In order to
take advantage at all wa hem
M otter, you have M taka the
first step Call now tor an
appointment, ask Mr Donna
Clark alR I 0041 or Mf MM

3 3 -Reel Estate
Courses

CENTURY II
KISH R IA L BSTATB
SIS W. Mth Street
REALTOR
MI-M4I

BOB M BALL J ».
SCHOOL Of R IA L I I T A T I
(ju n io r
71M

55— Busintss
Opportunity*

legal Notice^

NEW SMYRNA REACH
Wo hove Throe thriving
businesses SIO.OOO price
range Small Down Peyrrwnl
Owner will hold o mortgage
Mr ttw rest
BaacbsMa Realty. REALTORS
MM1F-U1I. Open J Days I

_til!J&gt;Mal»t|ir

27— Nursery A
Child Core
BABYSITTING m mr home day
or night Altt by the hour.
M l M il.___________________
Free or Reduced Child Cart
II you quality

IN T ill CIRCUIT COUNT
INAND FOR
SKMINOir fO | i-fw
FLORIDA.
CASE NO; M 1I1ICA t l
WILLIAM RIZZUTO.

Legal Notice"

PlalnltH

vl
ERNEST J.LEE.JR .

Dafondant

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO Ernest J. lee. Jr
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action lor fraud and mlsrtpre
Mnlallon hat batn (dad agalmt
you and
aro required to
Mrvo o copy ol your written
dofontot. It any. to It on Eric A
Lanlgtn. Plelnllff't attornoy.
whose addrau li Ilia Eait
Mobmtnn Slraal. Orlando.
Florida. 1IMI on or bofora
March t. iv«l. and Ilia tha
original with Itw Clark of thli
Court ollhor bofora itrvlct on
Pltlnllft't attornoy or Immodt
attly thoroattorj othorwlM a
dofoult will bo onltrod ogamit
you for Itw roHol demanded In
ttw Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and tha
teal ol thli Court on February I,

ms

\ \U

IS (A L)
DAVIDN BERRIEN
ASCLERKOF THE COURT
BY /»/ Dorothy Norton
At Doputr Clark
Public!) ftbruery t, I I JO. IF,
IN I
DEB tl

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT SEM INOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA
CIVIL DIVISION
CASE NO; S4 IJJICA 0* K
F ED E R A L N ATIONAL
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION, a
corporation orfanned under tha
law* ol ttw United Stalat at
Amor lea,
Piomtitt,
V*.

MARILYN t QOEHRINO and
T U S C A N Y P LA C E CON
DOMINIUM ASSOCIATION.
INC.
Defendant!
NOLICE OF SALE
Nolle# l» hereby (Ivon that
purkuant to Itw Summary Final
Judgment at Foreclosure and
Saw dated January M, IMS. and
antefed In tha cauM panding In
tha Circuit Court of itw Elgh
loonth Judicial Circuit, in and
Mr Sammole Caunly. Florida.
C i v i l Ac t i o n Not
14 IlfS CA 0k k, Itw under signed
Clark will Mil Ihe proporty
situated In Mid County, do
scribed at
Unit 10. TUSCANY PLACE. A
Condominium. FStei* On# OC
cording M ttw Ooclorollan of
Condominium Itwreot rtcordod
In OtllcWi Records Book m i.
Pago lt d end at emended In
O llldal Records Book 1114.
Pago SB4i Public Nocards el
Ssmlnalt County. Flsrlda.
together with til appurtenances
Ihsrata, Including Limited
Common Elements and an un
divided Interest in Itw Common
Elements of Mid Condominium
ot Ml forth In ttw Declaration
at public sole. M the highest end
bolt bidder Mr etth ol II M
O m, on Itw Mth dey ot Ftbru
ary IMS. at tha Watt Front
Door ot ttw SemifwW County
Courthouse. Santord. Florida
DATED Ihlt lElh day Ol
Januory, IMS
(COURT SC AU
DAVIDN BERRIEN
CWrk at Pw Occult Court
Byi Virginia Jackson
Dtpgty
ity iClerk
Publish Januory M February t.
IMS
DEB 111

NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TOWHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Notice Is hereby given that ttw
undersigned pursuant to the
"Fictitious Name Statute",
Chapter HI Ok, Florida Statutes,
will raglsWr with the CWrk ol
Itw Circuit Court. In end lor
SemlnoW County. Florida upon
receipt ol proof ot the publico
tlon ot this noble, ttw IlctltWut
Nome, to wit
ELITE CONSULTANTS
under which I am engaged In
buklrwss at U ll Acre Court.
Lake Mary, Florida JVtt
That ttw corporation Interest
ad In sold business enterprise is
os follows
MING INCORPORATED
By Ming Yen
President
Doted at Santord. SemlnoW
County. Florida. January II.
IMI
Publish January 11, M * Ftbru
oryt. II. IMI
DEB Ilf
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIOHTBENTH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN B FOR
SIM INOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. M (111 CA W K
AMERICAN SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION, f/k/e
STATE SAVINGS * LOAN
ASSOCIATION, a California
corporation.
Plaint lit,
vs
D A N I E L M A R L E S and
DONETTE J MARIES, his
wIM and ADVENTIST HEALTH
SYSTEM/SUNBELT. INC .
il’li a FLORIDA HOSPITAL, a
Flor Ida carport bon.
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
TO WHOM IT MA Y CONC E NN
YOU ARE H I R K E Y
NOTIFIED the! under the
power of saw In tha matter now
ponding In the Circuit Court ol
Sentinels County, Stale el
Florida, pursuant m a linal
decree In loracleaure In the
above styled cause, signed ttw
llrd day ot Jonwary IMI. the
under signed Clerk will etNr Mr
MW at public auction te Itw
highest bidder lor cosh, al Itw
Wasl Irani door of Itw SemlnoW
County Courthouse. Sanford.
Florida, on the IJnd day al
February IMI. at II M a m . a
parcel ol land dascribad as
follows
Lot FI rsplat at WYNOHAM
WOODS PHASE ONE. accord
Ing to ttw plot Itwreot rtcordod
In Flat Book *U ", pages Ft and
JF, Public Records ol SemlnoW
Caunly. FWr Ida
ALSODEtCRIBEOAS
lot FI WYNOHAM WOOOS
PHASE ONE. according M tha
plat thereof, recorded In Plot
Book "tt". pages M and 14.
Public Records ol SemlnoW
County. FWr Ido
Togolhsr with oil Improve
menlt. tenements, heredlla
menls. and appurlsnaniei
thereto belonging or apporteln

I aud

ihit lain day m

January IMI
(SEAL)
DAVIDN BERRIEN
CLERK. Circuit Ceurt
ly . Virginia Jackson
Deputy CWrk
Publish January X * February

A.ILM, IMS
DEB I FI

LABORERS- Strong Tollable,
general laborers needed Im
mediately Different tocetWns
Phone and transportation a
must Never a tea Apply

66A2331
LIVE IN
Mature woman M cart Mr man
In wheel chair. Housework,
good Stoma. permanent, sal#
ry. Mutt have car Local
ralarancas. Non smoker
JM JSSS

CUUII_____________ $220
Light osperWnco only wins thli
Mp spot with escelWnl com
pony. Benefits end overtime

7 1 - M o l p W a n te d
Acrylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coating on
-ore. boots and pianos Si M
III per hour We train For
wort In Santord arid celt
Tempo 111 MO Jilt.
Assistant PositWn with bonuses
and benefits Experience net
essary Apply in person Acs
Beauty Supply Zoyres Plato
Airport Bird and IF SI
AVON BEAUTY COMPANY
Fvll/porS time/ Earn ta ils hr
Call Iasneed. Miters
AVON IARNINOS WOW! 11
OPEN TERRITORIES NOWIIt
111 WSorm-MFS
Babysitter Needed Mr f yr aid
girl for otter school car*
Immediately Musi have own
transportation, depondebW. *
honest References required
Cell 11I44SJ after* PM
Capo Canaveral firm •■pending
In SemlnoW I workers pro
during, t mors needed (ISO
P/T. *410 lull tlrrw Career
oriented peopW Only ever II
Full training
in ito;,twloves.
Carpenters needed ter tub
contract work Must have
truck, toots and oiporWncs
Applications being token at
no S MyrfW Call tor appt
MEMO MAM 111 MW
CLIRKS- Will Sexto. Mj't work.'
Oood poyl Call Futures.""'
___________ 4FO-OM__________
COMPUTI R OPERATOR
Notional Feed Service Co. has
Imrvwdistt opening Mr com
putsr operator with t* key
oapovloncs Jnd shift 4 p m to
l o r n . EscolWnt salary *
benefits Coll tor appointment
m o m ____________________

cumin wau
STOREFRONT ESTIMATOR

We con and will da
ring tor you
n nn
or m m e

91— Apartments/
Housa to Short

Coll HI arc_____________

teuvsemets

10

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

Healing * air candltlanlng
mechanic Salary based on
• sperienco, plus benefits
X PkM l____________________
Immediate openings tor lew
phono work Student! end
h o utew lvet wefcome
Mornings and evening hours

Casselberry ] bdrm/J bath
clean homo, need 1 Mmolot to
shore with tom* Employed
Call before I AM or etfor S
p m s w a m ________________
Lady wants family or tingles to
store homo Pool, laundry,
cab** SMS month plus 1/1
utlllllos. negotiable After I
pm and week ends JJJ AIM. or
HT P I* between I ■1Pm
Retpontibl* Mmol* to there
new 1 bdrm homo with 1
bachelors Located In the
Santord Lake Mary Area
I IF* a mo *1/1 utiiiiios
___________HI AM)__________
Saslard- L f k t t l d o Apt. 1
bdrm rt bath, pod, tennis,
laundry. 4 morel Ref t i l l
piue vs utii m Mot__________
Sgl Lady
there 1 bdrm apt
with tamo- Mrmt negotiable
HI 440B, or Ml 40*1__________
tt. Johns River- Largo country
hem*, fireplace. non smokars
sub mo sat agai,____________
a bdrm . l bath, fireplace, on I
aero la* Utilities 4 meals
tl/S par month JJJ *JJJ

HU Fronds Are
Heir Stylist Esporisncod.
Motivatedl LakeMary

___________a m n __________
Local Drivers need tor In
Irattato foliage pick ups
(Tempo. Apopka. Dot Ray,
Miami lOsmor operators on
ceureged M apply oI m Coll
MS 111 0111 M l ItOt S00 41]
*0 4 ________________
L o o k i n g l or L i c e n s e d
Journeymen Plumber Salary
negotiable Fleas* call bo

93— Rooms tor Rtnt
Oirtsttoo Apts. 4 Nomas
TV, kitchen, laundry, mold. Sit
wh upOrl 411 lag*/ansa 10
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the wash Reasonable rates
Maidsorvk* Coll m am ;
SFPM 4IS Palmetto Av*
SANFORD. Reas weekly 4
Monthly rotas Util Inc *M
MOOak
Adults 1*41 FtU

hooon* 4. m m tu a ______

Make u working at homol Rush
SASE to O l WM S Santord
A v o . Santord. Fla. UFfi
Mary Kay Catmetks
Recruiting. M In care clessas.
reorders 1714411
NEEDED A professional ca
rear oriented hair stylist tor
busy salon HI «1«J
Part Tima Auditor Help Ap
proilmeMly M hours a weak
Apply al tha following Handy
Way Food Store. Ml E Jim
St SaMo. d
FROOUCTION WORKERS

97—Apartmants
Furnished / Rtnt
ALLARIAS
Furnished, and unfurnished. 1,
1. 1. 4 1bedrooms Kids. pots.
IMOsntfup UPFMB PoolFS

1st end Jnd shifts U 40 per hr
Lift jn jb s
Santord area
Permanent Position Never J
*Vvb

Lav On Rentals Inc Ree’for
Elderly man u&lt; lady lor 1Oitv.i
apartment. No pots I d par
« J J/S0
Furn Apts. Mr Senior Cltlians
111 Palmetto Avs
J Cowon No Phono Colls

TEMP PERM 774-1146

PUNCH OUT MAN
Far Apartment CemyNi. Must
hast awn Mali and Hamper
tat ten Call IM4IH. er II1J.
Man, thru F r l . ________ ___

NOT MAGIC
BUT FACT

WANT AOS WORK WONDERS

RECEPTIONIST......................$225

( f ib

CONSTRUCT ION WOR KIRS
Skilled and holpors All
phases Call Futures &gt;F» OOP
Designer wanted, must bo Itmll
lor with Needlework Crafts
and twvo good erfltlk obillly.
We con use you M l lime or
perl lime Salary span. Coll
_ _________o a n w __________
D river: Aggressive Relall
Building Meter lol end Heme
Center firm. Making further
growth, has created an agger
■unity Mr a Driver/Yardman
Willingness and enthusiasm a
mutt I Knowledge ot bunding
malarial not essential but will
bo recognised Call Alvin
K i l p a t r i c k at G r e g o r y
Lumber 1I1MM. Mr bn ap
FACTORY NBLFBRS- Good
starting pay Full benefits
Col) Futures gig 4100
Farm * warekoue* help
Fleeter * mechanical tsporl
one* helpful High school sdu
cation m a m _____________
Fast growing Publication roods
Sows Rapt ImmedlaWly Full
* port time Prolev "Health
Conscious" individuals! CAM
FFa a m Fla am

Front doth dark. Friendly,
neat. portonobW Apply In
parson Men Frl Mem Ml
pm Dqttonolnn__________

FRONT DESK— ...."to $370
I mpWyer will pay Mp salary Mr
the right person Light typing,
process terms, heavy phone
Frwndtycrow

f ib

373-5176

HU FrenchAvo.

BENBRALOFFICB FEOFLE
WANTED Goad pay 1ns
mediate Coll Futures. o ff am

BAMBOOcove APTS
WEE AirportBlvd
Ph U1 A4J0 EHklancy. Horn
SIM Mo SX discount lor
Senior Cltlians_____________

LUXUBY APARTMENTS
Family 4 AdotH Melton
Pootstdo, 1Bedrooms.
Matter Cevs Apartments

OpenHm
N

F

0

I

HUH*
&amp;

1HSHUSTK
M YLUCKYW
\
-

HHOne
h o lm c

)€U*

14 1— H o m e s F o r S a le

103-Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

BATEMAN REALTY
Lk. Real Estate Broker
last Saoford Av*.

a a a IN DELTONA a e a
a a HOMES FOR RENT a s
a • 17*104 s e ______
OVIEDO 1 Bdrm . 1 both. dan.
fenced, ail appl. dbt far ago
extras *145 00 MS M il Eves

321-0759 Eve 322-7643
DELTONA

4 Bdrm. 1 bath, screen porch,
fenced yard, dstechod gfrag*
and workshop SUlMo

^CARDINAL

0

COM3 AND SEE the Brand now
I bdrm/1 balk Units.

Tutkawlll* i bdrm /I bath
0J1-%7(&gt;
POOL, Family Room,
scroonod porch. W garago CRIMSON LN. NEW 1 bdHQ
with oponor SIS* mo
Cardinal Ham* ties w*&lt;*
Loot* Option available
saving taucat*. GE S f
British American Realty
•* penod tvi*
ha#t/alr,
_________tttllFl_________
ck InsuigdoE.
dows and ihkk
only
S4S.TM
For morr It
1 Rdrm.. 1 both. 1 years aid
SMS month First, last *nd formation coll: Ml MFS. I f f
MF or your broker
security TO JM*
■NTIRPRI1E St. Johns *c
cos* 1 Bdrm , ] both. Owner
will help finance Cell now I
Lendtfock Brokers lal l f a

1 Bdrm . Ito I
*44# security. No loot,
i Broken MSI Ft!

1 bdrm.. 1 both cam*lately

rt modeled with new carpet DELTONA
Ing. drapes, and appilancot
Rant Includes us* at pool,
sauna, recreations! program,
etc. ot ad|scant campground
•»
*• • N •*' M l
Adultsonly MFS b t lW

CARDIINJAl

dryer, mini Hind i. From |4M
a me. Latatod tn Oab Av*. at
Park Or. baMnd Oaky
■ •UilLdlki A R . . M -

■fTUSII MHOCM RHfiJ
n i n n ________ _— ut-m s

nil-

IDS— DuplexTriplex / Rent

Csitttt6«rTHtheCmsinp

TUNISIA OR. Quiet living In o
now 1 bdrm Cardinal Homo
Thick Insulation, i

Lorg* 1 bdrm. utility
laundry room, appilancot
reduce utilities bills, only
SaO.et* For more Information
taoo per mo Call 1J&gt; IMS
call: IW aM M TJ. EXT.SJF
LONOWOOD Unfurnished 1
Bdrm. 1 bath, tall month KISSIMMEE
plus dsposM D t SSCJ

IBdrm, larlbatk Canda's
Prlvafo Potto4 Carport
WatRor/Oryor Heakvp
BaoetIM Country lotting
CMtdrgn, imalt pelt wetcemed
u n til
RIDOBWOOO ARMS APTS.
1 and t Bdrmt IIM security
deposit IM0 oft 1st months
rent m * O 0 _______________
Small 1 bdrm. apt ■ *1/ condl
Honing, carpets SIM/mo plus
dspostt.W PM ____________
1 end 1 bdrm Also furnished
efttekney from BIBweak SJOO
deposit No pots Coll m 4MF
SFPM alSPolmotfo

CARDINAI

107— Mobile
Hemes / Rent
Lot* Model Mobil* Homo Air
condlllon. super clean and
furnished Located on Coll
Course Near Santord Rant by
woak. or tell tor 1400 down.
S1SS par month
Owner tl
nonclng Adults, no pot*
m e w and nestis

PATRICK ST. NEW J bdrm./l
bath highly anergygHkknt
Cardinal Home Uf.aao Large
matter bdroom with dotfoia
mirrored dotal doors Within
walking distance of otofnontry
and high school. Call
i sot an nn. EXT M&gt;.

To List You/ Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
—h

Accounting A
Tex Service
For Small businesses Monthly
computerltod financial slot
lament Quarterly returns
H I Mao Atk Mr Frank III
Sami retired 1st accountant will
prspor* lasas In your home
Ceii/smaa

TEMP PERM774-1346
SECURITY WORK- Full time
Good benefits Alt shifts
Call Future*.............. -OF* 4300
Telephone Solid tort For Ap
pointmont call JJJ IU&gt; before

Air Conditioning
A Heating

TITLE INSURANCEOFF ICE
Winter Springs. Document
preparations end warehousing
Qsportonco Coll MF MF*
Tip Notch Maid Service needs
reliabl* help Must have cor
end phone Eacelforit poyl
Groat benefits Cell US 0QW
TRUCK DRIVERS- Local
WILL TRAINI
Call Futuros_________ SFtOOO

WANBOPERATOR
Shorthand necessary Mhrt per
weak No fo* Ablest Tempo

rory Service 111 W

Used Ito ton heat inf and air
conditioning unit MM Ml
IIS*

Appliance Repair
t*kr. Service Ms Eatr* Charge
^ d jN ju g jM S a a ijn fo M tt

Building Contractors
ADDITIONS REMOOtLIND*
Bill Shipp CustomBuilder
SlatoLk............RROOIIW

____

Wanted Nutms Aides
II pm F am and F am } pm
Csporlancad car tilled anly
Apply In parson at lekevlew
Center USE bid It

8 9 B -7 4 I1

Carpentry
RBM00BLIN4.... REFAIRIND
Feaeliag/Trim/Daars/Windews

Bsperienctd tewing
Macklne Oearaters an all
operations W* etfor ascollont
place work rales, paid hall
days, and health Insurance
Modern air condltlenod build
mg Sun Ool Monutocluring.
Inc . 1140 Old Lok* Mery Rd .
Sanford Apply between * * 1
Monday thru Friday_________
W A N T E D PROPLB WHO
WANT TO WORK TO RE
P L A C E P I O P L I WN O
DIDN' T. Part lim e only,
Thursday nights tram 1 p m
fo 11 &lt; m Mutt have Fla.
driver s license, be I* years or
outer, able fo drlvw stick shiH
Apply In parson Sanford Auto
Auction, t i l l W 1st I I . Son
Med.
WAREHOUSE WORKERS- Full
Hm*. No sapsenance rwets
sory Coil Futures.
e ft c m

VERT^ELIABULJMttbllM

Firewood/Fuel

Handy Man

HMDS-If-Ortn

CMlMOIH33Mm
Electrical
R41IL1CTRIC
Tired at high prkat? Call R 4 J
Electric N* |«b foe large er
small Fr*a. Einmates *4Hr
service Installed ‘
alarm*, tarvka change, remadtimg. addm

WILDER*Goodpay Im
medial* openings Certified
Coil Future*............ate a m

homes •m IS*J

Christian Brat.

NAH&amp;SOtUM
meisotuM.
)OOCPOST'

HOUDID

sa g »

i fif&amp;s iv
o S ix ? ™

W N0IM ? A fBUQLBSnONt*
v

^

CwBptto I n . Car* J
RgawMbto Batts
X te3 7 ^ 4 4 0 1

Taylor BrpPwrt Lawn Service
and rafo tilling af gardens
Ml M il Rut* Tartar

Ham# Improvement

Masonry

FAFEHINO.......... DRYWALL
RaSarences 4 Raatanabfo:
VERY RELI4RH-sgattbttJt
Painting Interior and e*tortor
and window glailng and
caulking Rest rata* Fra*
Est Ml ISM Gary, Bill Oavla
etc Give your prabfom* I* ut
WE CARE Qualify war*. »
yr* h s MF ns! Lk cant

Paper Hanging
FAFERNANOINO
Aayfyp*
IM*

Plastering
■ALL Fhaaasaf Flaoforinga
Repair stucco. Hard Cool.
Simufofod Brkk Ml MSI

BEAL Centres* ] man quality
aparatlan. Pdffo*. driveways
Days U l FMJ Ives JJf im i
O N Baby CancreSt
Heat* slab* a Drives * Fettes
0*4* Dradfo*....... ....... USllM

Ng Jab1
Tat la*#a
H I Barton Lae*. SanNrd
»t-a w
Fans to Fence*. CakloeN to
C*M (ttad*t. F air g fU a *.

CARPENTER
Repair* and
ramtailing Na |*b fo* tmall
Call m **41
Jim's (Mat* Repave carpentry.
electrical, ptumbing. painting
If yfosdMl M*Nk«N m -M II.
4j4- l—ft- .——- l#
nTi to"!
iMwiFi^moncg
Cifpifflfyi p#i
a 4 M rk m m i
Raswfoca T«b*4SMbt Inyaur
horn* ail cafor* F (f Info 4
•pts Call Caifocf IB* I t * 14*4

Ckaxllnoss I* neat To OadNn***
Cab Hk kaSparsI
Oostamaed tarvka.. Law Rates

14* lots

TOWER * BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY Harriett * Beauty
Naak. SIS E. 1*1 It m SFai

Homo Repairs

Head Carps! CMania# Living.
Dining Room 4 Hall Mttt
late 4 Chair, PS m WE

Lawn Service

Health A Beauty

Cleaning Service

Painting

■ 4 * SOD SALE* Camas. Rat.
SI Augutlhw 4 Bahia
MOOS Sanford Avs Ml 41J1
Lawn Maintenance
Landscaping Bush Hag Mowing

■ tp. Needy (nee. Rtl Reliable
Fra* Btt. mast any tab Bast
Rata* Ml #111. Call Anytime
RELIABLE HAY- lip . all types
maintenance 4- hasting. Very
degandabtol m i l l *

A L ^ r n R Ic e T T a m m a r c fo r
R**id, including strip, wax all
IMorS m OSM 14S Mas

I

LANDCLEARINO
FILL DIRT. BUSHOGGING
CLAY 4 SHALE t t l S4U

General Services
and ruth teal weaving Reason
able price* Call JJJ 4«cf

—T____ _

Landclearing

FIREWOOD FOR SALK
CALL AFTIR 4F.M
SUM

Nursing Care
IF N will sit with your akdtrty *r
ditobfod relative In yaur ham*
woakdays Hour, day Exp
References a t lilt.
OUR NATE* ARE LOWER
Lake*lew Nursing Cantor
f lf E le c e n d t f . Sanford
m a rw

Painting
'w W i 7 m n i 6 ~

Landclearing

h e lM d E ed CbH m P M i a i
tarumg Central Fla I v 11 yr*
wfdi templet* gteHfy pamt
Ing tervka* OuaPty a Musi
lp6*W oeN seotiig. )1J M il
CUNNINGHAM 4 WIFE Int. 4
gal. pa'nHng 4 pretiurt
waabSng Lk 4 m» Ml MSI

CARUTNiitTRUCKINR
Fill dhf and fond clearing
M P ttn
e i N E V A L4NDCLEARIN4
Let and Land clearing,
fill dirt, and haulm#
Ceil SOBMiar 14MJU
f

Lnrnaw e . 1

m ms

__________ gsaaa I___________

ra-rtw
Opeo On Waekawds.

6

LAKE MARY- HIDDEN LAEE
1 bdrm.. 1 both vtltg (All
amenities, phis many
n i is o
' •'J

] Bdrm house parity hwnlshed
taeo a menth plus saOOdamage

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

S

121— Condominium
Rontals

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

u tu s tte .
route ih t
Ktw iren n xi 's m w
\t*soum *.w n a k n m :
Munrout
ML
'm m

IPA C t FOR RENT: office,
retail, ond worthowM storage
Cell m a w

CONSULT OUR

Top office and communications
skllli. well orgamisd 111.000
M 114.000 Santord area Per
morient Position Never a Fat

D oonesbury
g m m u tn

I end 1 bdrm Also tumlNwd
efficiency from P I week MOO
deposit No pets Cell U14MF
SFPM allPatmttto________
1 Bedroom. Ibalh fownhousa
MM 00 Month
Eve* MldFIS________

Lika to deal with people! Can
you typo accurately! It so call

DELIVERY__________ $200

Empioymsnt
3735176
till French Aet.

117— Comrtiercfai
Rentals

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

Sbr4«t Neeb •4

A wall established window man
Employment
ufecturer Is upending and
323-5176
has an urgent need Mr an
individual etpevWnced In
t i l l French Ava.
Curtain Wall and SMretrent
ROAD DRI VERSi Owner
estimating Tha successful
operators •■perl*reed in re
candidate will currently bo
Nigerated commodities, w/er
animating Curtain Will end
without traltars tor plant da
Store Front SytMmi or ro
llvorlat In Midwestern *
lotod materials Will consider
Norths#Stern slates Excellent
Individual with good drafting
o/o package Pleas* call
or take oft background Mr
ies i l l g in . t n i t o i too
training It you possess these
4 » 1*14 Ask tor Bob
qualities and are interested in
Solee People needed Mr Used
leinlng a progressive erganl
Car Let Exp, hetpfui good
rational Mam pWoM call JTI
potential Mr right parson
HIS or tend resume * to:
Coll Ron W-4EF*
Horcar Aluminum Products, i
SALESLADY Eaporlence In
PO Drawer S Sanford. Fla
ladlot ready lo wear Pari
w m ____________
lima Apply In parson only al
OR LIVERT WORKERS- Local
Relay, 11# E 111 SI No phono
Will train. Call Futures
colls
________
___________4M41M__________
SECRETARY
1 spots open Deliver to con
strultlon sites Plenty ol
overtime Permanent

WE NAVI IT
Beautifully furnished 1 bdrm
and itudto apartment Ranch
Stylo, energy officiant Rustic
f e n c e d p o l i o s , bul l l -l n
bookcases, abundant storage
Just bring your linens and
dishes Also 1 Bdrm avail
ab*a Flexible leases Senior
Cltlians discount Sanford
Court Apartment! ttSHDI
I Bdrm . 1bath hall duple&gt;
SJ00 tecurIty deposit
U l i Month rent n i law
1bdrm. Atobii* Home adults, no
pots, references IMS a mo
Wtt Magnolia Avo. Sanford

to

323-5176

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

97— Apartments
Furnished / R»nt

73— E m p l o y m e n t
W a n te d

llafo Cf »CF f __
Ml Ha* Laavor

Tile

Tree Service
S C N 6im iltllv.fi
Frg* l*ttmafo*l Law FrtcEtl

Lm ine4. insured/HI Pie

_:.LMM.FrgN .(N o.bR * rJOHN ALL ISM LAMFNRTeSS
Dead free remevel. LK. 4 In*

Freeopt Ml *W
i f UN? DRIN Ol NR Fry.
as11mate*I Ml lilt day or
MgMI IdMfo Trgg larvtaB.

Shopping Far A
Hew
OrUsed Corf
Pms c m always fled Id#
Baal deals Im 14* Ceaask *
NeraW'a CMaaOTad aacffoct.

Far Ibe beat e*Mcffoc*».

Evening Herald

■Is
J.

. ..

w. a i p J k l

w (wax riw -i- v

�141— Hom«s For Sal*

Ml-Hornet For Solo

OELTOMA I l M n i M n
'tar voeag caagto *r rettr

CtoM to M eM mftvto

III 10U NE10
TO &lt;hOn

»• : H A

OHw M i IIM .M

J

Ik

Ik M l {Stitt

WALL ST. COMPANY...nil
KlltlMMER

CARDINAL
Y

“ •

to «M*.

STENSTROM
REALTY«REALTOR
S M ifarfi Silts UaOti

B 31-567(»
AIRPORT ROAD. NEW Mgttly
energy efficient. ergaMebk.
. eHorBebk 1 Mrm Cardinal
Hama Only M l ! ) *im im
mediate availability M g n
noticing aul i l anc a Call
I K »4 H l«ry EXT t v
fo r Vala by Owner lantord
Nka I bedroom hama with
living ream, fining room,
panalad family room, laundry
roam, werkttvop and largo
•' kcraanad porch Call tar In
1 ;*ormallan m HO* SO.no

ATTRACTIVE I Mrm . 1 baft
buna wtm Wraolaca, naw cab
Mot*. larga tcroanad garch.
largacaraar k
EXCELLENT POTENTIAL 4
hdrm.. j bait. 1 rtary bama.
wttb 4 tlraptocaa. waM Naira,
parcb. tabmlt all altort.

u i.tn

AFFORDABLE and aa await
lying. 1 Mrm. hama In nka
aroal FaneadI Oraat tor toveitor*. U4.W4.
CALL MALL............... .n &gt; in a
ASSUME NO OUALIPYINOI 1
, Mrm.. IVy balk, largo knead
yard I tMM fawn. U lf aw.
iT-MTI • IIVApprea M yra.
J.'Meve rtgM Ini (M.M*.
CALL MALI__________ . m m i

CALL HALL
323-5774
.

WILL EUILD TO SUITI YOUR
LOT OR OURSI EXCLUSIVE
AOSNT FOR WINSONO
DEV. CORF., A CENTRAL
FLORIDA LEA DERI MORE
HOMS FOR LESS MONEYI
CALL TOOATI
aOENEVA OSCEOLA RO.P
IOMID FOR MORILCSI
I Acra Caantry tract*.
Wall traad an pavad Rd.
la \ Dawn II Y r*atli% l
FrontllMWI

today al m in t

Evanlngt

soMHWT.iT-n

CALL ANY T IM E

LAKE MARY

322-2420

LOCH AREOA
1 Mrm . &gt; bam poa

WALLACE CRESS REALTY,
INC.
REALTOR littf* l

m i I. Part, latoard
44IU. Mary Rtvd.Ul Mary
ORLANDO

Q ( AHDINAI
fn i -

RESIDENTIAL LISTINOS
Why Ranff Dan mil 1 Mrm
block homo, nlca aroa. UMW.
Datlrabla Caaafry Mama an
IraMVi aero Only t O « g
Ratow M ortal} bdrm/J bam
aplt plan villa No QuaiUylng
aaaumo morlg......... I*4.t0*
Pool Mama Fla. rm. Mr/potto* &gt;
I bdrm/lMfh nice area I44JM
i Haw Dapka-tufly rented, pool
' llvacaahttaw MakaOfkrl
'a ta a a a a a a a a a a a a a
MULTI FAMILY LOTS
Oak St. at Part Ave.-J k k ktl.
City tawor a motor p u l 000
W. tad St. Ianod lar apla.
wakr/ywar 1 krt*......SU.9U0
TYaad * P k i lel/tewer (14.400
Airport Rlvd naar ll/n- l i e
Aeraa. larwf m unit*/acre I
aaaaaaaaaaaoaaaa
’
COMMERCIAL LISTINOS
LMa MaryOtlka/Cammartlal
building, prlma Wk IOS.OOO
l-Hwy 4M a apatura
r Ipdrlng* Plate IH7.000
Crocary Skrot
pay bar |I14 004 wat *141.000
Cantor Silo............ II

★u s fro i‘iiss'i*
WE WILL LIST. AOYSRTISI.
SILL YOUR NOME FOR 0%.
WMV PAY MORIf

MILL TOP RD. QUIET LIVING
In NEW &gt; Mrm Cardinal
Hama Lat in twlp you qualify.
All anargy taring toaturat tor
tow utility Wilt Only (44.100
For moro Intormollon call
H i k lt t . i (77_____________
Tutkawllla ) bdrm./ 1 Mm
POOL. Pof f lliy
Roam,
tcroanad porch, dbl garaga
wim Dptrwr Laaaa/ Option
availabk Rrlllth Amarkan
Realty (141171_____________

KIStIMMIE

£J( ARDINAl
M 1I
AIRPORT RO. NEW I
avpandabla Cardinal Hama
only t o l d Lat ua halp you
quality tor tha mtg and anlay
low aioctrlc bllla an thla
highlly anargy atfktanl homo
can i m m 1(77. e x t . an
Ida tama monthly paymtnttOwnar will aitltl wttb Hnanctog an IM* attractive 1 Rdrm.,
1 Rath earnor tot wHh Part
and Tomtit naar by. Only
IIU N . Call Sandra Mandla,
Realtor Aatoctoto. t t H W ar
Rarbara Maebalb, Realtor
Attack k. ttsaati.

WALL ST. COMPANV...MI MRS
Largo
homo m a teal km aroa Wan
mainlainM GaM llnanctogl
Ownar mallvatod HURRYI
|7t.tM IMikd Land Raaitor.
U t R U TO Malar (14 1141

. CaM USA Tadayl

321-3833
loa W. Lab# Mary Etod.

ORLANDO

g jt \ h d i \ \

i

M il '.l,'),
pyprttongl
Md, NEW Ibdrm./l
Cardinal Hama. Only
. (pi, top tor M o anargy offt.{knt homo orim Mcb tomla
(ton. * 1 . pan# window*, Eta'll
tw»p you duality. For mart
totormlton. call all MM, oat.
at;
____________

Option Araa

Muti M ill

It t acrao with accatt la
’ * favoly lidd a acra Laka
* &gt; lt o y . Hat pond. lancing.
P ngldco. luaury opplUnroi
and padfto tana Trada can
Oldarad. O P E N T H IS
WEIKENDI

m
• Aatr

-s ro ifC iM ca c TiK I RDm / 1 Rato Only M M *. Fla
\0 and m w StaWon tomNy
aaam with Iran (landing
diraplaca. pal In kllcban,
tawend Country Club
jh lic a BE SLICED I bdrm.. |
• bam. MN acra M . LaadM
! w/aatraa Maw only tAi-OOR.
• b&gt;w down. Ownpr will aaakt
t I d m in b o * M U M oat in
fcJfUteflo flsncatf o r H f W .
toa I ■ 11 I — *•- g ,, it
rwIVSCfP pVn*vf ioW* TTWto W

CALL AMYT MAR
REALTOR1
WRNRE0LISTI44O44

OSTEIN S A toll n o n down
Torrn* Laka Prlrilagat No
mewkt tarry I Oraggart
Raaitor Mb im .
Otlaaa- S acrat high, dry.
ck arad an haiih atd irontaga
1 ml. bom ttore* STOODdown.
Mttmp. Ry Qwnarl» WM
10 acrat In Ottaan Carnar Guita
Rd A Catlltn Or (71.000
IIJM dawn. 10 yr» to pay Ml
Contact: Thamat I . Rurtnon.
F O. Raa SOA Otkan. FL

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale
Sandalwood vuiaa. I bdrm. 1
dwbhauM. watbar. dryar,
catling lane, amor aatrat

mono

15 7 —M o b ile
H o m e s / S a le

COUNTRY VILLAGE

Matt MoMt Hu m Put
MOOCLSOR OiSPLAT
• to A Man. Ibralal.

M
'/dryar book vpa and
Inaloa utility room, attic
Id WON carpal
Ing. only SfR.fSR. Col l
ito d c o IW7.EXT.U t.
ORLANDO

NI4MHIN C l* . NSW TO
ARIA? Cardinal t a l l

____

W* have Iba cur* IOO\ monay
back
guaranlaa Tuckart
Farm A Cardan Cantor. San
lord, and Poland____________

217— Garage Seles

Micrawava. Rapar c/maat
marmemator E ecaiknt can

Gtganlc Moving In Sato Thun
1/7. A Frl
|/| h*m a to I
Carnar ol Itth A Palmoito
A VO Piano, dining roam labia
A hutch. Move top 4 oven, t
more him , A moromltc_____

dlllen SITS m T ill_________
P I A N O Dat dnl n Sp i nal .
E X C E L L E N T condition
Ni t e r abuetd SlaOO 47»
iioi ar al* soe(______________
PIANO Spinet, good cond MOO
or bast oltor Call before S

219—W a n te d to B u y

U m HI m i______________

■aby: k d i. ttrvlkn. Ckltwe.
Playpant. Etc. Pa pa'back
Raabt m u n m i m
Paying CASH tort
Aluminum. Cant. Capper.
Brae*. Lead. Ni».&gt;p«P»r.
Glaee. GaM. Silver
KakamoTaol.tllW. HI
• 1 00 Sal 11 US 1100

U k lllk TV Syikme

100X

Financing No monay down
*1 JMOOUnivartalkJI 17*4

----------- BBTTBRnZ----------RUT FACT
WANT AOS WORK WONDERS

GENEVA CAJtOENS
APARTMENTS
0PCN tATNMAY
• Adult A Family
Socllani
• W/D Connection*
• Cable TV. Fool
• Short Term le a r n
Avotioble
1 .1 1 •&gt;. Ifto. I It. TJL

'(5 Mustjnf- GoodStiape

Fer mere details
________i t e a m t i i i_________
Debery Auto 4 Marina Sake
Across the river, top at hill
174Hwy 17 41 Dabary 4(4 (K4

11744 Firm......... 17(7114 aftor &gt;
a a a -n Cougar...... •*** • • •
Wa Ftoaacel.......Wa Buy Cars)

243— Junk Cars

ORCorral Can.___ 3231921

DISCOUNT
A U TO
SALES

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From HO to iM or more
Can 1171*74 H14J17
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A
Ulad cart lr uck• A he* vy
equipment H I 1440__________
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOH
JUNKCARSANOTRUCKS
CBS AUTO PARTS 141(10*

235— Trucks /
Buses/Vans

WE FINANCE

147$ El Camino Good condition,
topper SLIM er bail otter
174 7717
__________

1M1 French Ava............H i 14(1

1984 C“K?”
SALES EXECUTIVE
EARN AND GROW
WITH A WINNER!

1971 VW

•ses

IM S JEEP

•!«*»

1(77 GEEMUN

Deltonp's leading homebuilder ex­
panding sales staff to meeting j
strong market demand. You will
earn with a professional model
center sales environment, plus a
proven product. Upscale commls- j
slon program. Send Resume with
earnings history to:
|

•iaes
1971 FORD
rw.
reva.
1*71 CUVETTE

•iaes
1*77 PACER

•iaes

Larry Kant Homas
B40-K Daltona Blvd.
Daltona, FI 32725

1545 W. 2SHi SL

SANFORD
M O T O R CO
A M C JEEP
104 S F f *nch A vw
177 4JI)

Celebration The 75th
Anniversary Of Our
Boy Scouts . . .
Ily working togrihrr to lit-lji otlirrh. ilt«- llm S ’mith
o f o u r ro m m u n il) ure hrlping Iro liiiild 11 heller

Amerirti mid n lM*iler world, lltipps Annisennirst
Seoiiu! We online all of soil during so u r Oiuuioud
Jubilee on Fehruur*

Sana

113— Television /
Redio / Stereo
COLOR TELEVISION
RCA IS" Cantata color tokvl
lion. Original prka ovar MM
■aknea dua SIMM cadi or
laka over paymantt UO par
rnanm SHII to warranty NO
MONEY DOWN. Froq bama
trial iMtilHt|Miitll«

1W— Mectilnery/Tools

*J ' « *•I1

A S C O U T IS

A S C O U T IS

i TRUSTWORTHY

mw

SIM JM ajPim .

Iff— Rets A Supplies
Tabby)
bto. Frootoi
tog! M U M
SMapch. i n Mtlar

anim____________
FREE CAT. Pgttto gray

hMA
0aMmHhar.CdU

_____ Ml

Pip For Slit.
m tan

FOR ESTATE
Cammarclal ar Ratldanllal
Aucttono ft Appraktk CaU
Oadt Auction SSIdSA

LAENJCnON
Fridat E U H a - 7 FN

mem

FRIENDLY

COURTEOUS

A Scout it a friend to everyone
he meets and •brother to hit fellow
Scouts.

•oy Scouts are polite to people.
They practice good manners which
makes • Scout a better person.

TNI GOLDEN LAMB

A J . LOSING
TRANSFER A STORAGE

SANFORD

u n til

W I FIN I AVI.. IANF0RD

A S C O U T IS

OBEDIENT

m-Mii

A Scout tries his best to have a
positive outlook. He performs hia
duties with ■ smile.

JCPsnney

SANFORD, FLA.

"Hsedewerlen
irt*fi Fer ley Icevt Apparel"
SANFORD PLAZA
1211111

A S C O U T IS

BRAVE
Scouts stand up for what they
believe kt despits what others may
eey. Scouts have couragel

W-W09

m 3572

IANF0N0, FLA.

KIND
A Scout lo gentle. He does not
deliberately hurt or mistreat anyone.

FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF COD
JS4 W. irtti ST.

«

A S C O U T IS

THRIFTY
A Scout seves his money to pay
for things he needs and to halp
othari. Ha uvea f o r tha f uture.

THRIFTY SERVICE STATION
390 I . M IT.

SANFORD, FLA.
321-4471

A S C O U T IS

CLEAN

SANFORD, FLA.

mmi

CHEERFUL

HERALD ADVERTISER

SANFORD, FLA.

A S C O U T IS

A S C O U T IS

9

He obeys the rules o f his family,
school, Troop leader and his country.
m N. M IN C H A V I.

300 N. FRENCH A V I.

m ain

A S C O U T IS

1107 5. M IN C H A V I.

3234593

EV EN IN G H ER A LD

SANFORD, FLA.

A S C O U T IS

31911. FRENCH A V I.

A Boy Scout !■ willing to h«lp
othsri in a time ot need. Ha doss
thing* without pay or reward.

BIO DIP
JOt FRENCH A V I.

U K M CYCU CORRECTION

EXT 077ar your

H ELPFU L

Boy Scouts sre faithful to their
familial, friends and their nation.
They help make our country strong.

A J . L0SSINC
TRANSFER A STORAGE
m-W7

GENERATOR

A S C O U T IS

LOYAL

He It hortest and keeps his
promises. A scout it reliable.

1171. PINK AVC.. SANFORD

Call I
Aanatoii
bama baa 1bdrma . tom aat to
kllcban. tg anciaaad lotKtalM. I wa tor 1

PLEAS?
NO MORE!

Kanmaro Parte. Sarvtca
UtadWatharv aVOOft
MOONEY APPLIANCES
aR IN TTO O W N a
Cakr TVt . tkrooa. watbart.
dryar A rafrigarator, traaiarv
lurnllura. vtdM racardart.
Spaclai Itl waaktranlyk
ANaroattva TV R Appt. Rantok
Zayrot Shopping
ro-M N
Slaraaphonlc. high lldallly
tpaahar. now RMX bay'i dirt
bkytk. amall counkr wim
wtdto tormka top P I HOT
THE UIEO STORE
WaRuy Sail
Appllancaa Furnllura
Wa Flnanca Anyona
a HO R. Snd tlmat n ia t lt a
WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
111 SUE. FIRST ST

r sM ill..'S r s ,;

i,

__AS5S*ISElt*—
F IB E R G L A S S CANOE
Eacaiitni candllian Valua
U00 Will map lor outboard
motor of comporobk value
Call ns Tree
_____
II It. aluminum V bottom boa* A
7.1 h p . motor U00 tor bom
HI IIW

FOH SALE I* It Scotty travel
trailer Sleeps S. stove, sink.
Ice boe Coll 111 7I0«
1071 14 It mini motor home
Generator, dual air. awning
new solid reel, good condition
*4700 Phone HI 17*4_________

JM tot.

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223— Miscellaneous

241-Recreational
Vehicles /C am pers

COUCH R CHAIR Harculon
cuahlont Eat. condition SSOO

CORRETT ROAD Hoar U C F.
and Woallnghouoo
OMy
Ma w s tor mit NEW i

i

* Can Buy or Sellle

fma

only n s s m

Largo
lol
tor
futuro
u p anaability Far mart
tolar motion call............. Ml**74.4.1(17
S Rdrm. baawty. Law dawn

* W h e re A n yb od y *

111— Appliances
/ Furniture

wtm c

M 1I

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

m att I

ODxER Pu p s ?OR Sa l e

0 ( MiOINAI

BOB DANCE DODGE
Hwy 17 41...................H I 77to
1474 Z M Camara T tap. loaded
Good condition 1M00 or bast
otter 174 7717______________
1401 Cadillac &gt; door Coup Da
Villa Ilka newt 1(000 mile*
I1I.S00 1114111 11IM7(.
H I S744____________________
‘(1 Jaguar Mark II I I Auto,
look* and runt beautifully
m OAertradt Ml IN*

Every Wad. Nl toaltiNPM

Gatling Divercad trantkrrad.
kretoaura. naM quick tak t
Call Dak IT I a«E7
Fytvato party
lar I hadmam

woott stag FIRM Pouian

CALDWELL ST. La
poymanfa NEW t kdm Car'

M 1I

•41 MONTHS FINANCING!*

Mery 41..............Daytona Beach
a a a a a HMdia a a a a a

1ST-Reel Estate
Wanted

Chaw

01 \ r u i w

OR TRAM *44

CASH FOR YOUR CARS
Martin Motor*

2 1 5 - Boats and

CHEVY VAN'S............
14tt
C 74 1 ...........
411.7*4
FP E NC HI IS CUSTOM VANS
H14I17.........
110-474*
ttoo Ford 1 4 ton pick up dump
truck Naw painting uphei
ttery. tuna ip and front and
ollgnmanl kppie pk condl
Hon Vourt tor (4100 Dump
truck feature alone It worth
UP 00 a day 301 174 i m
7t Dodge Van cyl . standard
th ill Panatlad. carpeted
ItT fl ’74 JeaeCJt Uanagade
package, hardtop a cylinder
1 spaed 4e4 AM FM radk
ere oaoo or &gt;es {woo

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•« StatiouRafora ••
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• 10% DOWN•CASH•

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1120

• nwt.«a.»

235-Trucks /
Buses/Vans

•1914 DODGE ARIES•

7 i Mirttsnf.___ $100 DORN
WE FINANCE
NATIONAL AUTO 5AUS

SUJ47dM7--------- 4M-77SU71
not I Orawt
Oranga City

Induttrlal Modal. Uaad S

M il ',1,7,,

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•Sfitet Front Owt 100*

* DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★

C m n iO M .D T tr n liM

DELTONA

g j( \H D IN M

FREE COMPVTERIIID

Rabollt KIRSY/1114.40 A vp
OwaranNed. Klrty Ca
714W. Itt SI. HI S(4f

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SSS-MBL

&gt;|Ofrm . } bam. Iwga tel. Good
■»hanclng.

231— C a rs

231-Cars

CALL BART

II yaa art kaklng kr a we
catttol caraar In Raal Ettok,
Sknatram Raalty la kablng

. . . Wa bora many albaril

■
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w 1

■EAUTIPUL 4 barm., tuy batb
bama la NaMvar Waada.
Eat to biteban, cant, air and
haat, itana liraplica, (ranch
daort. catling tana. gaol, graal
raam, wat bar. lift jgg.

It MORS |IPSRI «l

MOST FOR THE MONET No
btttar buy 111 Lorgo 1 bdrm, 7
bom condo with pool and
many avtraa hiking only
SHOW, but ownar wanti ac
lion I Callnowlll

223— Miscellaneous

701 S French m TtM

-r*T------------------------------------------

H A LL

etfka or homo To ba movM
UJ00HIQ741___________

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR
m 7100

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANTONS IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

CHARMING I

Evgnlng Horakl, Satiiord. FI. Wadiwsday. Fab. 4, ItE J -lIB

KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE ?by Larry Wright
141— Hom es F or Sale

ta
4

A S C O U T IS

REVERENT

A Scout keeps himself clean in
both body end mind. He does not
use foul lenguege.

Scouts sre faithful to their
religious obiigetions. They also
reaped the beliefs of othere.

JCPenney

FIRST UNITED
MCTMOMST CHURCH

"HaeSewerten Far Bay Scant Apparel"
SANFORD PLAZA
m-1119

419 PARK AVI.

331-4371

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r

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J .R J T E IIM A X M C
R IA L T O !
U VI TV or I

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♦, 1H 3

early' bird

® f t rariJ£{!fil
coupon

coupon

f llP U l O N V t

tS P EC M lj

scon TOWELS

WESSON OIL
$499
wessoni
nt
■■
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PRESDCI

MIL COFFEE COFFEE

ASSORTED FLAVORS

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�</text>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on February 06, 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>
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, February 06, 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>
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