<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/items/browse?collection=78&amp;output=omeka-xml&amp;page=7" accessDate="2026-05-16T16:25:27+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>7</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>316</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="21851" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21455">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/af79b7615f317a61915157e7004637e7.pdf</src>
        <authentication>a401fbec50e6a2e42ca71a846c8d1f91</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218199">
                    <text>G lo r ia A im s F o r C a ro lin a C o a s t

WILMINGTON. N.C. (UPI) - Hurri­
cane Gloria took aim at the Carolina
coast today, sending thousands of
people fleeing the storm's 130-mph
winds.
The National Hurricane Center In
Miami posted hurricane warnings from
Cape Romaln. S.C., to Cape Henry. Va..
Including Albem arle and Pamlico
sounds.
Dr. Nell Frank, director of the Na­
tional Hurricane Center, said the storm
was expected to come ashore sometime
before midnight.
At one point. Gloria's sustained
winds topped 156 mph. making it one
of the most powerful storms of the
century, but by Wednesday night as It

churned northwestward toward the
coust. It had weakened to 130 mph.
"When a storm gets over cooler
water, it starts losing some of Its fuel."
said hurricane forecaster Gil Clark. "It
doesn't have as much energy."
But Clark said Gloria was a "major"
hurricane and warned. "It’s still a
potent force to be reckoned with."
At 6 a.m. EDT, the center of
Hurricane Gloria was located about 600
miles south of Cape Hattcras. N.C.,
near latitude 29.5 north, longtltudc
75.5 west.

Government and military officials
from South Carolina to New York City
reviewed emergency plans and made

residents boarded their homes nnc
stocked up on hurricane supplies.
The National Park Service closet
campgrounds on the Outer Banks nnc
tourists and residents Jammed tht
highway off the vulnerable North
Carolina barrier Islands and packed the
Terry from Ocracoke Island to the
mainland.
Dare County ShcrlfT Bert Austin said
most oT the Outer Banks' 25.000
permanent residents had evacuated by
Wednesday night but some refused to
abandon their homes and businesses to
Gloria.

There ain't a soul here now but I
aln t going to leave." said Dave Esham.

Hotel. "This won't be fun."
Nathan Spencer rode the ferry back
to Ocracoke late Wednesday to be with
his 61-year-old mother. Zenla. who he
said has stayed on the Island through
every hurricane since 1933.
•
"I'd be a fool If I wasn’t scared but It's
home and I guess my mother wants to
slick It out again. I'm going to stay with
my mother." Spencer said.
The 65.000 Marines at Cherry Point
and Camp Lcjcune. N.C.. were told to
Wcdcsday to expect damaging winds
within 48 hours. The Navy sent ships
to sea or safer harbors from Charleston
S.C., to Norfolk. Va.
"It's safer for the ships to be at sea

Airport Gets
$850,000 For
Expansion
The Sanford Airport Authority
has received a 8702.000 grant
from the Federal A via tion
Authority and $148,000 from
the State Department of Transportatlon to expand the airport's
northslde facilities. J.S. "Red"
Cleveland, aviation director
announced today.
The contract has already been
let for the $850,000 project and
work Is scheduled to get underway In 60 days, he said, and
Is scheduled for completion In
six months.
Jim Sheppard. FAA district
manager from Orlando, and Dale
Jcmlgan. deputy manager, will
be at the airport Friday to
present the FAA check and Dick
Prine will represent the P-DOT
district office.
Located on a six-acre site, the

S a n fo rd P o lic e C h ie f S te v e H a r r ie t t ,
r ig h t , s c a n t t h e w r e c k o f a S a n f o r d
p o lic e c a r a r o u n d 4 a . m . a lo n g w it h F H P
t r o o p e r H . K . W e a v e r , le f t , a n d a S a n f o r d
o f f i c e r . U p o n I m p a c t , t h e p o l ic e c a r s p u n

Babies Pulled From Rubble;
Official Fears Toll 10,000

•m i
• "Tifl B.
1
■*§» i. iViiicsnfii

4

9

Action Reports .....2A
Bridge............. .
Calendar.......... .... 5A
Classifieds....... 4B.5B
Com ics............. .... 2B
Crossword.......
Dear A bby.......
Deaths....’........
Dr. Gott ..........
E d ito ria l ........

[Vt * r X V« / ..
F iW A c

trd

F lo rid a .......... ........ 6A
Horoscope..... ...... 2B
H ospital........ ...... 2A
Nation.................. 2A
People............
Sports............ .0A-11A
Television .... ...... 3B
W eather ....... ...... 2A
W orld ........... ...... 2A

r'

V

C h ief Trum ps O fficers
G uarding P o k e r G a m e
CLUTE. Texas (UPI) - A police chief has
dealt reprimands to three veteran officers for
moonlighting as security guards at highstakes poker games.
Chief Fay M arkwardt said letters of
reprimand were placed In the files of the
officers and they were told not to ucccpt
second Jobs without her approval.
"They have been doing this for so long
that they didn't see anything wrong with it."
Markwardt said. "M aybe they still don't."
Private card games are legal in Texas
provided organizers do not get a cut of the
winnings.
"The games are the least of my worries."
Markwardt said Tuesday, adding the poker
players are "Just a group of good old boys
having fun. but I don't want any fingers
pointed at my officers."

Lee Esky. the emergency services
coordinator for Virginia Beach. Va
urged the area's 328.000 residents "to
be on their toes" and stock up with
flashlights, portable radios, batteries
and canned goods.
In New York. Long Island Deputy
Police Commissioner Hugo Mutz said
auxiliary police were put on call,
emergency fuel tanks were topped and
plans were completed to evacuate
residents of Fire Island If necessary.

Sanford
Police Car
Destroyed
In Wreck

project will Include additional
ramp space, ramp lights, taxtway and lights, an cntranccway
ofTof State Road 46 and fencing,
DOT'S share will go toward the
entrance road and fencing and
part of the expense for the ramp
and taxiway.
This will provide space for
more cargo buildings and Is
expected to bring more In­
dustrics to Sanford. Cleveland
said.
Cleveland said the money for
the project does not come from
tax funds, but Is from on Avia­
tlon Trust Fund generated from
an 8-ccnt per dollar tax on all
users of airports. Sanford Airport
has to com pete with other
airports around the country for
these funds, he added.
—Jane Casselberry

MEXICO CITY (UPI) — The
earthquake death toll nenred
Predicting Quakes, 5A
5.000, but rescue teams con­
tinued to find survivors — In­
cluding five babies — burled for
Rescue workers pulled three
nearly a week beneath tons of infants Wednesday from the
concrete and twisted steel from mountain of broken concrete
collapsed buildings.
that was once the government's
Six Americans were among Juarez Hospital.
the 4,652 people the Mexican
"Viva Mexico!" — long live
govemmnet listed as dead. U.S. Mexico! — shouted one volun­
Ambassador John Gavin said teer as the eight-member Mex­
Wednesday 28 Americans were ican rescue team pulled out the
missing and feared dead. Gavin third Infant, who survived more
said he still believed the final than 124 hours buried In the
death toll will reach 10.000.
rubble.
Almost 9.000 people were in­
The volunteer crew discovered
jured and some 2.000 were still a fourth baby alive Wednesday
listed as missing today.
night after pulling out the three
Rescue teams pulled at least Infants. Rescue worker Samuel
14 s u rv iv o rs from quake- Ramirez Miranda said he could
shattered buildings Wednesday not predict how long It would
while olher workers recovered take to free the child from the
the bodies of 56 more victims, debris.
police said.
See Q U A K E , p age 0 A

and to avoid the storm than to have
them In the harbor and risk damage to
the ships and to the piers." said Cmdr.
Dugalt Gillies of the Charleston Naval
Station.

a r o u n d a n d h it a s ig n p o le . A p r i s o n e r In
t h e v e h i c l e r e c e i v e d m in o r l n | u r i e s . T h e
a c c i d e n t I t t t l l l u n d e r I n v e t t lg a t l o n ,
a c c o r d i n g to W e a v e r . D r i v e r o f t h e
t e c o n d v e h i c l e w a s n o t I n ju r e d .

A Sanford police car was de­
stroyed early today In a two-car
crash at U.S. Highway 17-92 and
State Road 46. No one was seriously
Injured.
T h e p o lic e c a r . d r iv e n by
patrolman Alvin B. McGill, was
northbound on 17-92 crossing the
Intersection at State Road 46 {25th
Street) when It was struck by a car
westbound on SR 46. according to
Florida Highway Patrol Investigator
H.K. Weaver.
Weaver said a 1982 Dodge being
driven by Sharon Carver. 23.
Crystal Drive. Sanford, struck the
police vehicle in the left rear,
spinning It around to the right
where It struck the pole of a Fina
gas station sign at the southwest
com er of the intersection and came
to a stop facing south.
Officer McGill was uninjured but
a prisoner he was going to transport
to the Seminole County Jail was
taken to Central Florida Rrglonal

Sem inole To A dd 21 Voting Precincts
Lon g v o tin g lin es have prom pted
Seminole County commissioners to okay
plans for 21 new voting precincts.
Supervisor of Elections Sandy Goard said
present precincts will be spilt in an effort to
attain a maximum of 1.700 registered voters
per precinct. However, there will still be
about 16 precincts that exceed that Ideal.
The additional 21 precincts would bring the
county's total up to 93.
Although new precincts would not go Into
effect until at least 1986, Ms. Goard
suggested the county commission begin
changing the precincts now because of the
amount of work involved and a state statute
that prohibits any changes between Jan. 1.
1987 and the 1990 census.
When new precincts are finalized the
county plans to mall out new voter
identification cards that will Include the new
precinct number.

'People don't want to welt
In line an hour to vote.'

Streetman said.
"It's a logistical problem. If you have a
precinct with 3.000 people then It gets
difficult to handle them when It comes
election time." Streetman said. "T h e lines
get long and it’s hard to find a building large
enough to handle them."
Ms. Goard agreed with him. "People don't
want to wait In line an hour to vote." she
said.

There arc 96.058 registered voters In
Seminole County, an Increase of 30.5
percent over the 1981 figure of 73.609. A
23.226 Increase is projected for 1990
bringing the totul number of voters up to
119.284 by that date. A projection for 1995
Only two snags have been hit In the
shows 136,606 voters In the county.
" If we're going to huve more precincts, relatively smooth process, according to Ms.
Goard. "There are 80 people who live In
we're going to have to do It by the next
(countywldc) election (In 1986)." Commis­ Winter Springs in District 5 who have to go
to Oviedo to vote." she said. "W e 're going to
sioner Fred Strcctman said. " If not then we
•
move
the district line so they'll be In District
can’t do It before the next census."
2
."
and
won't have to travel so far to vote.
A request to split the precincts was
Initiated by Ms. Goard due to the difficulty
The other problem is an unclear boundary
line between precincts 48 and 69 that Ms.
some precincts were having In handling the
Goard and her office are working to discern.
number of voters assigned to that precinct.

South A frica Doctor Testifies

Court Halts Prisoner Torture
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (UPI) A
Supreme Court Judge ordered police to stop
beating prisoners Jailed under state-of-emergency
powers in eastern Cape Province after a doctor
who examines Inmates testified she could "no
longer stand by and do nothing."
The Judged Issued the order in Port Elizabeth
Wednesday following the urgent appeal of Wendy
O it . a white, government-employed surgeon who
examines Inmates In eastern Cape. She said there
was "overwhelming evidence" the prisoners were
being "systematically assualted and abused after
their arrest."
In Queenstown, north of Port Elizabeth, racial
violence that has claimed nearly 700 lives during

the past year continued Wednesday. Police In
Pretoria said a black man and woman were
burned to death.
Orr. who cares for inmates at the St. Albans
and North End prisons, told the Judge, “ My
conscience told me I could no longer stand by and
do nothing."
Orr said that, of the prisoners she examined
from July 22 to Sept. 16. 60 had facial Injuries,
eight had perforated eardrums and 48 had "such
a multiplicity of Injuries they could not have been
Inflicted In a violent attempt to arrest a man or
disperse a m ob." Eksteen ordered authorities to
respond to the allegations by Nov. 26.

Sheriff's Captains To Switch Jobs
Another administration shuffle
Is In store within the Seminole
County sheriffs department as
of Nov. 1.
Capt. Jay Leman. 39. will
become the administrator of the
S em in o le C o u n ty Jail, said
Sheriff John Polk. Leman is
currently In charge of the de­
partment's division of support
services and before that was
head of criminal Investigations.
Capt. Luke Stallworth. 45. in
charge of the Jail, will return to

y

running the support service
division, his position before he
took charge of the Jail.
The shifts will not change the
captains' salaries. Leman earns
$37,648 and S tallw o rth
$37,081.
Polk said the changes are to
broaden the experience of his
officers. In A ugu st POlk re­
assigned two other captains.
"Over all Its pari of my moving
my captains around and giving
them broader experience." Polk

said today.
Capt. Roy Hughey. 38. In
charge the patrol division was
placed In charge of criminal
investigations and Capt. Beau
Taylor. 39. who was In charge of
support services before Leman,
replaced Hughey in the patrol
division. Hughey and Taylor
both earn $37,648.
Polk said he’d like lo keep the
men In the positions for about
two years.

—Da ana Jordan

+

�JA -Evenin g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thuroday, Sept, at, IWi

NATION
IN B R IEF
Shultz-Shevardnadze Meeting
Produces Lower 'Decibel Level'
NEW YORK (UPI) — Administration officials say the first
of a new series of top-level U.S.-Soviet meetings failed to
yield new arms control proposals from the Kremlin but the
"atmospherics" are decidedly Improved.
"The decibel level, 1 would say. Is considerably lower."
said one U.S. participant In Wednesday’s meeting between
delegations led by Secretary of State George Shultz and
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze.
The meeting, held at the Soviet U.N. mission, lasted four
hours and 22 minutes and was devoted for the most part to
preparations for the Nov. 19-20 summit between President
Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva. Switzerland.
Shultz and Shevardnadze emerged smiling. Shultz called
the talks "useful."
"The atmosphere was frank: the capacity for conversa­
tion was easy," he said.
Shevardnadze, speaking through an Interpreter, called
the meeting "Interesting, frank and useful."
One U.S. official said the session was "frank and more
conversational than such meetings have been In the past,
easy to communicate."
The Soviet news agency Tass Issued a dispatch
describing the meeting as "businesslike, frank and
according to both sides useful."

Group Cries Foul Over Ads
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A consumer group has a bone to
pick with McDonald's over the latest Chicken McNuggets
advertisements and wants the government to sink Its
regulatory teeth Into the restaurant chain.
The Center for Science in the Public Interest charges that
although McDonald’s claims Chicken McNuggets contain
only chicken breasts and thighs, the fast food also Is laced
with fatty skin and grease.
In a complaint filed Wednesday with the Federal Trade
Commission, the non-profit organization accused
McDonald's of "false and misleading advertising" and
asked the company to halt the new ads.
“ The charges are ridiculous." said Bob Keyser. a
spokesman at McDonald's headquarters In Oakbrook, 111.
"Everything we say In our ads Is true and we stand by It."
Keyser did say Chicken McNuggets contain akin. "But It
Is substantially less than there Is on the chicken you buy In
the store."
He also said. "We use beef and vegetable shortening to
cook Chicken McNuggets and we think It Is the best
available."
The consumer group, which tracks health concerns,
noted that the New York state attorney general's office
recently began an Investigation of McDonald's new ad
campaign in response to similar complaints about their
validity.

Sun, South, Blue Eyes Aid Cancer
BOSTON (UPI) — Exposure to the sun. being born In the
South and having blue eyes Increase a person's chances of
developing eye cancer, but wearing visors or sunglasses
while outdoors may reduce It. doctors reported today.
A team led by Dr. Margaret Tucker of the National
Cancer Institute said a recent study suggests exposure to
ultraviolet radiation from the sun Increases the risk of
Intraocular malignant melanoma — a tumor that tends to
spread to other organs.
Their findings, reported in the New England Journal of
Medicine, add to other research that shows the Incidence of
melanoma of the skin rises with exposure to the sun. Both
types of melanoma develop from the same type of cell, that
produces melanin — the pigment of the skin, hair and eyes.
Intraocular malignant melanoma is the most common
primary intraocular malignant tumor in adults In the
United Slates and Europe. It typically affects older people,
almost exclusively whites, and is a serious cause of death
and vision loss.
The disease strikes individuals at a rate of 4.9 to 7.5 per
million.

W O RLD
IN B R IEF
Second Terrorist Bomb
Explodes On Posh Via Veneto
ROME IUPI) — Tourism officials expressed fears of
declining revenues and a politician called for expulsion of
some Arabs after a bomb injured 14 people and wrecked a
British Airways office near the U.S. Embassy.
The bombing Wednesday was the second terror attack
on Rome’s famed Via Veneto area in 10 days. Police
arrested a 16-year-old Lebanese-born Palestinian youth.
Hasan Aatab. Authorities were seeking a second suspect
seen fleeing the scene of the bombing.
Four of the 14 people injured in the attack were listed In
serious condition.
Police chief Marcello Monarca said Aatab Identified
himself as a member of the Revolutionary Organization of
Socialist Moslems and admitted he hurled the bomb at the
British Airways office — located about a block from the
U.S. Embassy.
In Paris, a man claiming to represent the group
telephoned a western news agency and claimed responsi­
bility for the attack.
The Revolutionary Organization of Socialist Moslems
also claimed responsibility for a Sept. 16 hand grenade
attack on the popular Cafe de Paris on the Via Veneto.
Another Palestinian was charged in that attack, which
injured 38 people. Including nine Americans.

Israel Warns O f Retribution
NICOSIA. Cyprus (UPI) — Israel, responding to the
slayings of three Israelis by gunmen who boarded their
yacht in Cyprus, warned. "The killers and their senders
will not go unpunished."
The men boarded the yacht in fashionable Lamaca
harbor shortly before dawn Wednesday — Yom Klppur. the
holiest of the Jewish holy days.
First they shot and killed Esther Palzur. 50. leaving her
body, clad only in a nightgown, slumped over a guard rail.
Her husband. Reuvcn Palzur, 53. and their friend.
Avraham Anvery. 55. were found dead in the cabin.
Both had been bound, blindfolded and shot at pointblank range.
Their bodies were discovered after the three gunmen
surrendered to police, ending a 10-hour stand-off.

Sanford Man Lured Man From His Home
Then Raped His Girlfriend, Police Say
A man suspected of luring a
rural Sanford man from his
home and then returning to rape
the man's roommate has been
★ F ire s
charged with sexual battery and
★ C o u rts
was being held without bond in
the Seminole County Jail,
★ P o lice
j
The rape reportedly occurred
at about midnight Sept. 4 after sherilfs department.
the Sanford man answered his
James Campbell. 26. of 3064
door and was told by the suspect Washington St.. Sanford, has
that he was needed at the scene been charged in the case.
of an accident on State Road 46
FONDLING CHARGE
to make an Identification, a
NO-SHOW
sheriffs report said.
A 37-year-old Sanford man
Shortly after the man left his charged with sexual battery to a
home the suspect returned,
15-ycar-okl boy has been
knocked on the door again and charged with failure to appear on
when the man's female room­ the fondling-related charge.
mate answered, the suspect re­
The man was first arrested In
portedly grabbed her. threatened the case on April 13 by Sanford
her and forced her to the rear of police after reportedly assaulting
the building where he allegedly the boy on several occasions,
raped her. the report said.
once in front of his mother, a
When the Sanford man was police report said.
returning to his home he told
Roy Joseph Murphy of 311
deputies he saw the suspect Park Avc. was arrested by
leaving and was able to give sheriffs deputies at the Jail at
deputies the last name of a 8:11 p.m, Tuesday and was
suspect, the report said.
being held without bond.
The man arrested reportedly
BURGLARY ft COCAINE
contacted sheriffs investigator
An Orlando man who was
and told them he knew* he was spotted allegedly burglarizing
wanted and came to the sheriffs two vehicles in a parking lot at
department for questioning, the 551 E. Scmoran Blvd., Fern
report said.
Park, has been charged with two
The man alleges he paid the counts of auto burglary and
woman to have sex. The victim possession of cocaine and drug
denied his claim and the suspect paraphernalia.
was charged with sexual battery
Witnesses reported to sheriffs
at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at the deputies that they saw a suspect

Action Reports

enter two vehicles. When depu­
ties searched the man. a sheriffs
report said, they found a small
packet of cocaine in his wallet
and u rolled dollar bill. He also
reportedly had a packet of ciga­
rette rolling papers.
Jeffrey William Koslck. 31.
was arrested at 7:12 a.m.
Tuesday and was being held In
lieu of S5.000 bond.
WARRANTED ARREST
A 24-year-old Sanford man
arrested by Sanford police on a
Volusia County warrant for fail­
ure to appear on a resisting
arrest charge was also charged
with possession of less than 20
grains of marijuana after police
reportedly found some pot seeds
and four partially smoked mari­
juana cigarettes In the ashtray of
his vehicle.
Joseph Charles Baker. 24. of
701 E. 8th St., was arrested
Tuesday on 13th Street and was
Jailed at 4:45 p.m. He has been
released on $500 bond and is
scheduled to appear in court Oct.
2.
BATTERED WIFE
Sanford police responding to a
disturbance call charged a San­
ford man with battery/spouse
abuse after noting the man's
wife, Onnlc Shaw, had a bloody
nose and scratches and bruises.
Michael Wayne Shaw. 29. of
2440 Grandview Avc.. was ar­
rested at his home at 11:23 p.m.
Tuesday. He has been released

on $500 bond and is scheduled
to appear in court Oct. 9.
BURGLARIES ft THEFTS
The principal of Forest Lake
Elementary School. 2801 Sand
Lake Road. Longwood. reported
to sheriffs deputies $250 worth
of gasoline was stolen from a
school bus parked at the school
between Sept. 15 and 24.
Londa Fac Tuttle. 20. of »9
Wekiva Park Drive, Sanford,
reported to sherilfs deputies a
$350 engine was stolen from a
1972 Chevrolet while the vehicle
was parked in her yard Monday.
Record albums, and jewelry
with a total value of about
$2,000 were stolen from the
home of May S. Morris, 24. of
121 B Jergo Road. Winter Park,
on Tuesday, a Seminole County
sheriffs report said.
Andrew William Marshall, 17.
o f 1850 Crowley Circle E..
Longwood. told deputies stereo
gear worth $250 was stolen from
his car parked at Lake Mary
High School. Lake Mary, on
Tuesday.
A thief took two gold rings
with a combined value of $800
and $10 cash from the home of
Jimmy R. Cliatt, 40, of 931
Longwood Markham Woods
Road, on Tuesday, a sheriffs
report said.

Dealer Charged With Altering Odometers
LAKELAND. Fla. (UPI) Raymond L. Barnes. 38, a used
car dealer from Summerville.
Ga., was arrested Tuesday and
charged with altering odometer
readings on used cars he sold to
unsuspecting dealers through
the Lakeland Auto Auction.
Barnes was arrested at the
auction by Polk County deputies
and FBI agents, and was held in
Polk County Jail in Bartow
Wednesday in lieu of $100,000
bond on a charge of violating
Florida's Racketeer Influenced
and Corrupt Organization Act.
Officers seized more than 40
vehicles at the wholesale auction

house in what they said was a
massive interstate scam to roll
back mileage on cars, which
then were being sold to dealers
from Maine to Florida.
They said Lakeland Auto
Auction is a "legitimate busi­
ness" and not connected in any
way to the scheme.
The arrest warrant specified
11 cars which Barnes allegedly
sold fraudulently, but the proba­
ble cause statement said those
11 were a small portion of the
vehicles actually handled In this
manner by Barnes Used Cars of
Menlo. Ga.
"This was an ongoing scheme

to defraud buyers out of monies
that would not be paid for higher
mileage vehicles." the document
read.
Polk County Detective Ed
Warren said Barnes has done
about $9 million in business at
the auction house since July
1983, but said it has not been
determined how much of that
business was fraudulent.
According to the court docu-'
ments. Barnes Used Cars would
buy relatively high-mileage cars
from vurious dealers, then sell
them to Apeo Leasing, formerly
of Reno. Nev.. in n paper trans­
action without moving the cars.

"A p c o Leasing is a front
company being used to launder
titles, as the state of Nevada
rquircs no mileage statement on
their titles," the probable cause
document said.
Apco aaction to remove the
mileage from a title and prepare
a new title, while the odometer
on the matching car was being
turned back.
Authorities said the cars then
were sold back to Barnes Used
Car and were brought to Lakela n d w it h t h e i r a lt e r e d
paperwork to be sold through
the auction house.

j

Falwell Says He Will Not Pay Fine |
PENSACOLA. Fla. (UPI) - Moral Majority
Falwell denied the 1984 sermonized
leader Jerry Falwell. ordered by a Judge to attack of the homosexual-oriented Metropol­
honor a $5,000 offer to a former schoolmate itan Community Church and offered Sloan
whose church he allegedly attacked, said $5,000 if he could produce a tape recording
of it.
Wednesday he has no Intention of paying.
Municipal Judge Michael Ullman Tuesday
Falwell. in northwest Florida to speak at
the 10th anniversary of a local church, Issued a written opinion ordering Falwell to
claimed the "traffic" court In Sacramento. pay $5,000. interest and court costs. The
Calif., ruled in favor of Jerry Sloan because Judge said Sloan produced the tape and
Falwell was bound to "h is unilateral
Falwell-wasn’t represented at the hearing.
"It’s Just a typical kind of harassment and contract."
"He produced a tape after he had edited it
we appealed It Immediately and have no
Intention of paying him anything," Falwell ... we sent the bonlflde tape out there." said
Falwell. who claimed he wasn't notified of
said at an airport news conference.

WEATHER
AREA FORECAST: Today partly sunny with a slight
chance of showers or thun­
derstorms. High near 90. Wind
north 10 to 15 mph. Rain chance
20 percent. Tonight — partly
cloudy. Low in lower 70s. Light
northwest wind. Friday — partly
cloudy with chance of showers
and thunderstorms. High mid
80s to near 90. Wind becoming
north 10 mph by afternoon. Rain
chance 30 percent.

nesday night, and Houston got
more than an Inch of rain In one
hour. Early today, showers and
thunderstorms were scattered
from the lower Ohio valley
across the lower Mississippi
valley to southern Texas. Rain
also fell over the Great Lakes
and the Texas Panhandle. Fair
skies were common over the
western third of the nation early
today. Mild temperatures pre­
vailed over C aliforn ia and
Arizona, with readings generally
in the 60s and 70s.

the hearing.
In another matter. Falwell said his
fund-raising efforts suffered because of his
controversial statements concerning South
Africa five weeks ago. but he said he won
the national debate.
"In the past five weeks wc probably lost
$1 million from persons who misunderstood
what wc were saying," Falwell said at a
news conference. He blamed the media for
the misunderstanding.
"W e’ve won the national debate on the
Issue." he said. "It was really the hottest
issue we ever tackled."

Home Resales Soar
Under Strong Demand

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Lower 1983. larger increases were re­
interest rates and a continuing corded in September 1980. July
strong demand pushed August 1980 and A p ril 1970. the
sales of used single-fam ily association said.
"Clearly, the demand for hous­
homes to their highest level in
nearly six years, the National ing remains strong, and today's
lower interest rates are allowing
Association of Realtors reports.
an Increasing number of families
Lust month's 9.2 percent in­ to realize the American dream of
crease In the annual rate of
ownership." said David D. Rob­
home resales, over the July rate erts. association president.
of 3.14 million units, was the
"Mortgage interest rates have
largest month-to-month increase fallen about 1.5 percent during
NATIONAL REPORT: Freeze
since January 1983. when the the last 12 months, giving many
warnings were posted for parts
rate Jumped 13.5 percent.
AREA
READINGS
(B
a.m.):
families the affordability break
of the Plains and the upper
Mississippi valley as tempera­ temperature: 76: overnight low:
Based on the gain trom July to they have been walling for." said
tures again dipped into the 30s 73: W ednesday's high: 89: August, if the month-to-month Jack Carlson, the association's
early today. In the South, strong barometric pressure: 29.84: rela­ increase continued for a full year chiefeconomlst.
thunderstorms carrying high tive hum idity: 87 percent: it would translate Into 3.43
Carlson also noted that home
winds and hail swept across winds: northwest at 9 mph: no million used homes being sold. prices have risen only modestly,
Louisiana and eastern Texas rain: sunrise: 7:16 a.m.. sunset
Only four times have there giving buyers another leg up In
Wednesday evening. Elsewhere, 7:17 p.m.
been Increases larger than last the market. The median price on
high pressure over northeast
FRIDAY TIDES: Daytona month's In the 17 years since used s in g le - fa m ily h om es
Colorado brought fair skies and Beach: highs. 7:52 a.m., 8:14 the association began keeping dropped $300 from July to
cold temperatures to the Plains p.m.: lows. 1:28 a.m.. 1:43 p.m.: figures. In addition to January August, following the pattern for
and the upper Mississippi Valley. Port Canaveral: highs. 7:44
a slight decline oh home sales in
late summer and early autumn
a.m..
8:06
p.m.:
lows,
1:19
a.m..
Early morning readings were in
as many sellers seek to close
the 30s over northern and 1:34 p.m.: Bayport: highs. 1:04
their home sales before school
western Minnesota, the Dakotas, a.m.. 1:10 p.m.; lows. 7:10 a.m.,
starts.
7:43
p.m.
and most of Nebraska and
Nationwide, the median price
w e s te rn K a n sa s. F re e z e
BOATING FORECAST: St.
for a used home in August was
warnings were posted for parts Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
4.9 percent above the previous
of northern Wisconsin and miles — Small craft should not
August price of $73,500.
northeastern South Dakota as venture far from port. Wind
Central Florida Regional Hotpllel
well as for most of Nebraska. becoming north 15 to 20 knots
Wednesday
ADMISSIONS
Frost warnings were issued for today then northwest around 15
Sanford:
Su tan M Leach
southeastern South Dakota, knots tonight decreasing to
Even in g H erald
Fonde F. Noble*
southeastern Nebraska and around 10 knots or less Friday.
Carol A. Smith
extreme northwestern Kansas. Sea 4 to 6 feel with moderate to
(USPS Ml ISO)
Kimberlae F. Vanwinkle
Lewi* A. Worley
In Louisiana, a wind gust of 50 large northeast sw ells o c ­
T hursday, Septem ber 24, 19*5
M eyela E. Spencer. Altamonte Spring*
Vol. 7 i, No. 30
to 60 mph was reported at casionally breaking across inlets.
Edwin J. Swank. Deltona
A fe w s h o w e r s o r t h u n ­
Linda M Abel. Fern Park
Published Deity and Sunday, except
Pioneer Wednesday evening and
Herman K. Albritton. Geneva
Saturday by Tha Senterd Herald,
nickel-size hail pelted Morehouse derstorms.
Chariot J. Chappell. Winter Spring*
Inc. 100 N. French Ave., Senterd,
E
X
T
E
N
D
E
D
F
O
R
E
C
A
S
T
:
Parish. Shreveport, hit with
John M . Stewart. Winter Spring*
Fla. 1177).
OISCHAROES
pea-size hall and winds of 35 to Saturday through Monday —
Sanlord
Second Clat* Pottage Paid at Sanford,
45 mph. was drenched with chance of showers and thun­
T re ttle M Hamit
Florida 11771
nearly 1 'A Inches of rain in derstorms mainly north half
E lm ira Mowton
Jo h n M Rader, DeBary
about 30 minutes, causing street during the weekend and all
Home Delivery: Week, t l. t l ; Month,
Theo V. Motley. DoLand
flooding. Marble-size hall and sections Monday. Not so warm
S4.7S; 1 Months, S14.ll; « Months,
W. G ail Faten, Deltona
M7.M; Year, M i.00. By M a il; Week
high winds hit Jackson Parish. north Saturday. Lows averaging
Steven T. Onuler. Deltona
01.10; Month, 10.00; 1 Months,
Lathunda D. H arttliald and baby boy.
La., downing tree limbs. In mid and upper 60s extreme
0)0.00; 0 Months, 011.10; Year,
Texas, thunderstorms dumped north and 70s elsewhere. Highs Senlord
140.00.
Antlonetle William* and baby boy, A lta ­
mostly
mid
to
upper
80s
but
nearly 2 Inches of rain at
monte Spring*
Phone (MS) 111-Mil.
Loretta L. Moul and baby boy, Orlando
Wildwood in 25 minutes Wed­ near 80 extreme north Saturday.

HOSPITAL
NOTES

j
|

|

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thundey, Sept. 2*, l f l i —3A

| 3 6 0 E A S T S .&amp; 4 3 ^ 1

R / i

LONGW OOD

i

: 0 W h ^ i^ o

I

919
XV
nle

&amp;

W h ite
R o se
CRAFTS &amp; N U RSERY

(EAST O F 427— W EST O F 17-82)

fo&gt; « • £ &amp; .
A&gt;
,* * l"

ASPARAGUS FERNS

ri i : i

&lt;HT ACQUAINTID
LANDSCAPE OPFIR

SPHAGNUM PEAT
long fibred peat... will
improve sandy soil... helps
retoin moisture and acts asa
' reservoir for plant nutrients.

FROMTHEGROWER... DIRECTTOYOU! ifiS"**
Our entire MlKtion of hardy...
proven favorites... and hard to come
by varieties. . . EVERYTHING IS O N
I A U . . . NOTHINO HELD 1ACKI

H A R D Y S P R E A D IN G
JI1 M ID E B C
_____

O N LY

p a r s o n ii

O O U&gt; C O A S T -W IL T O N

Q U A U TY K A N T S IN TOW N.

Ct 5 5 ? ™ H S ! S l ^ S U I
P FIT Z IR - S A N J O S i
1 go. containers
O N LY A
j t
—

Nature's richest plant food.,
innoculctes the soil with miirions of living
organisms... rich in complex trace
elements.
40 lbs. bag

enm t i

|large specimens in 2 go. containers
O N IY
- y
j

29

1

W IK

mg. &gt;4.75 j w o q g r a

FlNtSTFlOM STOUAUni
o&lt;MWctionfrom... CACTUS... ORCHIDS...
MOMBtADS... etc.... etc.... fromI in. toI ft. tol

plus many, manymorel

ONLY
YOUR CH OKE

A’-S* tall Tropicals... Quality
you will only find at White Rose.

L M 10 tom]

4 Lbs. or 1 Bushel bogs

IRON PUIS
PLANT!

Large plants
* ga. containers

DECORATIVE
PLANTERS

GCTACQUARfflDOfml

r* w 2

to &gt;3.75

W

7 I to 4
I B

■

Cwtowdwtotos*...nmr
ONCi...rtodetototoM«_l

,

7A - .

10" DIAMETER... ItautiM
modtm colors focomplimgot

todi to m t s . S toi tomOtognto |

to &gt;4.75

S A V I $ 1 .S 0 p f pkm t_________ SA V I $2.00 p f plant

DECORATORTROPICALS

ARECA PALMS TOURCHOKi
SCHEFFLERA o n l y
KNJAMINAS
^ 9 0

TOR SOIL
POTTING SOIL
CYPRUS MULCH

FLOWERING SHRUBS

~ -3

Nw

COMPOSTED
COW MANURE
I

*SA1IA - OARDMIA - HIIISCUS
-OUAN D B-SM O KITRM -AN D &gt;
M ANY.M ANY M O R I...

**.$3.25

*&gt; *•

,« s r

reg. &gt;3.75

&gt; « „

O N LY

reg. &gt;9.95

&gt;&amp;

4cu . ft.

. m in t ju l e p -

2 5

ON LY

1 ga. plants

2 cu. ft.
i

*M W n « tU T

...
Mn ,
NANDINA •PfTTOiPORUM - IlIX
- C O FFB U A F • AIIAMANDA PYRACAWTHA - TEXAS SAO&lt; VIBURNUM - AND MANY, MANY
M O R I...
1go. containers

10" Hanging baskat

lf*&gt; « ’ .

- 2 S 2 2 &amp; ™ !. ™ ..,
A M n ^ m

rThe most versatile plant in Ihe Florida landscape. Used os a hanging
basket... ground cover... etc. Will grow indoor or outdoor... in sun
' or shade. Kg, bushy plants... QUALITY... WHITE ROSE con be proud ofi
...UNHEARD OF LOW PRICES!

_

- J-J^ O w

fha ctaor of vour homa or
office.

WHITE ROSE DELUXE QUAUTY PATIO FURNITURE

ONLY

Come tee our complete selection... Rum. fibn
Wrought Iron... Vinyl Strap and Cushion Stylos
Classic European Designs...
Quality American Manufacturers

BROADCAST TtpOvrftyWMs
ISPREADER jSSgT GNOMES

POIMN0 C H A P ... Meet heme

v«r&lt;Ss«R...)CPM

W H in ROSE QUAUTY

PLANTINGURNS

torywnofwrvic.,

R a. - i

2 5 %

ONLY

i.
— 1«_
e_*— 1 jL - — At----wnpvjfwaiw
wpiVRCill
IGOOIiw pOww

o ff

jym i,

mI
ft n
powHOi pormng.

Tout to «to* to«n|OTSwm

'LA tO E
14” wide

y m tocaw. Sturdy...
navtoWwU* vinyl... inbright

V»y Stop... Am i U w i

Sped

■
I. .1... X
iu a a w (
nwo-in
rHftf&gt;
o Ari
o n gii c—o*m . rsc*. from
ODseni

1 7 “

MtotafOw to

12" high

Gnaw*... Animal*.

SALE P J A ”UP

T V ,'...It*
TntoMlhtorUU

10" wide
14" high

Ftwm.SCMv i

CRAFTS

BURI A N D RATTAN FURNITURE
FABULOUS SELECTION ... SENSATIONAL SAVINGS!
P E A C O C K C H A IR S

TABLES

A N D MUCH

DESKS

SHELVES

Comeiee all thenewFoil line* includingWoodcraft...
Needlecraft... Dollcroft... Yami... Art Suppliesandto
muchmore... Crafts foreveryoge.

M UCH MORE

POLY-SILK
FLOWERS

FINEST FLORIST QUALITY

DECORATOR
RIBBON
Choowhamourselectionof pre-cutgrantor ribbon.

M A H A tU K A CHAIR
reg. &lt;19.99

Auartodpattorwandcolon. 6 yardi per(pool.

TWinTABU

EACH

reg. $19.99

m

A

CHAIR reg. $29.99 ■

V

MINI PEACO CK
D ATU CH AIR
reg. $25.99

« 0 4 9
■ « P

SH EW S

SMALL

reg.135.00

MEDIUM
lANLY

3 /1

9 9

DuPont
ACRYLICYARN
rar oaoumwnona inn or aacntiaa

1^- i----- t ' i I

n o w iryiR B . u iiia P B v y u u i a u a n a o&gt; r

✓

reg. 169.00

anUNKUEVAIIEIOWMKE.
regutorto
Sl.lOeadi

LARGE

reg. ire.ee

White Rose

1st. PHza

W INH

CRAFTS A N D V NURSERY

10 YEARS

Open 7 Days A Week...

O P O A R M N IN O
SU PPU U

$ 3 0 0 0 .0 0

Mondor-Salvrday9MAM-9M NA
Svndoyt 9.-00AMMFM

t-•ft- T
1-- C

w

endnetordasthereal thing... Oecorator

L_J* _ _ ------L . *. J

germento... 12colontochoowfrom
...301.(1*0-4 ply...at an
unboftoroblo lowprut.

O w n bemever 200/000«tow&gt;... 12
ilylM...40colon.. indudmgTigarliy...
d U * hL*J
aJLja | u g u
MgsnKlw••*Fnrr^
rwgiriMflwl
•••p
MMwmpfy

VALUE

#»*»l&lt;9**

&gt;300.00 ingiftcerMcatot ewry year
until 1905.

2fHLPriza
&gt;200.00 Ingiftcertificotweveryyear
until 1095.

3rd. Prise
&gt;100^00IngiftcMlifcotMeveryyear
until 1995.

LUCKY DRAW RUiXB
N . p o r c h * .• m e m o r y .
Comptoto otWriwd entry ton. and
. * p w » Rto tody tow* to* to 340
Cm* SJL 434. UrnoMd to fw n
FrUw. Sm*- 37th end Oct. I.
1915. Draw w ill k i m .d .
Wadnwdw. Octofcw 2, \ H i to
10i0 0 *.m. Winner* will 0*
n .llll.d by
* * t mu»l

|VytllteR|pse
Nome: ............................
Address:..........................
Sltod

CRT

Phone: ............................

�Evening Herald
(U S P S 411-210)

300 N. FRENCH AVK.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-261 1 or 831-9993
Thursday, September 26, 1985—4A
W ayne D. Doyle, P u blish er
Thom as G iordano, M anaging E d ito r
M e lv in A dkin s, A d v ertisin g D irector
H om e I&gt;« llvi-rv W e e k. S I 10: M onth. S-l 7 5 : 3 M onths.
S 1 4 .2 5 . 6 M onths. $ 2 7 0 0 : Y e a r. S 5 I OO l iv M ail W eek.
S I . 5 0 : M onth. S li OO 3 M onths. S I K . 0 0 . fi M on th s. $ 3 2 50:
Y e a r. $ 6 0 0 0

When Scientists
Lobby The Hill
Forty years ago. laments MIT physicist
Bernard Feld. " I would go to the office o f a
congressman or a senator, walk in and say.
T m Bernard Feld. I’ve Just come from Los
Alamos,* and the red carpet would be spread
out. W e were great heroes then."
The red carpets rolled out on Capitol Hill for
the scientists who worked on the first nuclear
bomb at the New Mexico desert laboratory
have been rolled up. Feld notes In a recent
interview.
Now the Federation of American Scientists,
o f which Feld is a founding member, has to
fight its way into the offices o f Congress In a
crowd of other scientists, representing a vast
number o f issues.
For every Federation mem ber descending
on W a sh in g to n to d en o u n ce P resid en t
R ea ga n 's space-based defense, there is
another scholar backing the program that has
come to be called "S tar W ars."
"T h e number o f scientists lobbying has
grown enormously. Forty years ago, the only
issue that seemed to matter was nuclear.’ *
comments University o f California at San
Diego physicist Herb York, director of the
Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation.
Elected officials now review scientific pro­
posals with more skepticism than would have
been possible four decades ago. York notes.
Back then, the public and Congress viewedthe bomb project scientists as wizards.
To sort out the contradictory demands o f a
multitude of lobbyists can't be an easy job for
the n a tio n 's law m ak ers. M a in ta in in g a
healthy dose o f skepticism toward scientists'
recommendations must be even harder, since
they are masters of highly technical and
arcane knowledge.
Without a doubt, science has immeasurably
Improved life In the 20th century. But
scientists, though perhaps more learned than
the rest of us. are Just as fallible. A m ong their
ranks are bound to appear a few who will try
to pass o ff their particular brand of snake oil
as good, solid science.
Science and technology have given us the
greatest gifts o f all — lon ger life and
resistance to disease. But this century has
also witnessed the lethal by-products o f
progress — the wreck o f the Titanic, the
efflency of German death camps, the chem i­
cal leakage at the Union Carbide plant in
Bhopal. India.
Forty years ago. the Manhattan project
Merlins conjured up a mushroom cloud in the
southwestern skies. W e are still debating the
merit of that scientific advance.
Congress is correct to have warehoused its
red carpets.

Sm ell O f Victory
There is. am ong the imaginary worlds o f
science fiction, a planet inhabited by ptaavs.
whose society is organized around a single
central virtue, cowardice. This does not.
however, place the ptaavs at the mercy of
their enemies. In the stories, they are feared
far and wide as the masters o f the offensive
retreat.
It's a notion that must have intrigued Dr.
Jack Scaff. a real-life cardiologist from
Hawaii, who has invented the most ptaavllke
weapons for the person afraid to use fist, gun
or even Mace to defend him self from attack.
It's a capsule o f genuine skunk stink, easily
cracked open in an em ergency, which makes
the attackee smell so incredibly awful that the
attacker sim ply can't stand to be there.
A t le a s t t h a t 's th e t h e o r y . S c a f f 's
"Sku n kgu ard" hasn't yet been tested in
practice — unless you count the time a
leaking capsule contaminated Scaff's office,
necessitating the evacuation o f two adjacent
floors. Nor are all the glitches in the skunk
defense yet worked out, like the problem of
getting a cab home afterward and the need to
destroy whatever clothes one was wearing at
the time. As a matter o f fact. Skunkguard
buyers seem to find even the thought of
dousing them selves with skunk perfume
repulsive. But that's the whole idea, isn't it?
Maybe it takes a ptaav to appreciate it.

BERRY'S WORLD

“Now, tonight's business report: Rumor has it
that TED TURNER is interested in taking over
our country.... '*

DICK WEST

1 Don't Brake For Anything On Four Legs'
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Paul Harvey, the news
commentator, calls them "bumpcrsnickcrs."
But, considering the amount of blood shed In
the cause of privacy, there obviously is another
side of the story.
Even so-called comical buttons and bumpcrstlckcrs reveal enough about a person to
classify as Indecent exposure.
The courts have entertained many celebrated
"freedom of information" cases down through
the ages. But as far as I know the right of
"freedom from Information" has never been
tested.
Docs not a motorist have the right to drive
down the street without being apprised of the
political, religious, sexual and recreational
preferences of the owner of the car Just ahead?
I think so. Ergo. I would support my local
lawgiver If he introduced a bill to require that
exhibitionists obtain special licenses before
plastering their autos with printed confessions.
Any unlicensed stickers would have to be
applied to front bumpers. Such legislation
should slow down the voluntary unburdening

trend if It didn't stop It entirely.
I have a friend who contends the ultimate
bumbcrsticker or button would disclose abso­
lutely nothing. In olher words, one's lapel, or
the part of one's car that first feels the impact
when rear-ended, would be covered with blanks.
I can sec where a non-committal approach
might be an Improvement, particularly In the
field of name tags. But 1 question whether it
goes far enough.
To be truly dlaingcnious. a button, bumpcrstlckcr or name tag should be erroneous, not
just circumspect.
If, for example, a Mrs. Thermal Longstream of
Farthing's Gap. Miss., were attending a conven­
tion In Freebee. Mont., she would not merely
wear a blank nnmc tag.
Her name tag would Identify her as Mable
Upperfloss of Clods. N.M.
By the same token. If she supported President
Reagan for re-election In the 1984 presidential
election, her bosom would sport a button
reading: "Don’t blame me: I voted for Mondalc."
Misinformation also could be used to advan­

tage on such bumperstlckcrs as " i brake for
penguins" and the many variations of "Think
Snow" and "I'd rather be ... "
Confirmed misanthropes could cover their
vehicles with bumperstlckers exhorting fellow
travelers to "Honk if you love all mankind."
Male homosexuals who hate the smell of
tobacco might have fun with bumperstlckcrs
that read: "You girls who smoke throw your
butts in here."
And tender-hearted drivers who wouldn't
dream of running over small animals could stick
on warnings that "I don't brake for anything on
four legs."
Such misinformation likewise would maintain
privacy on bumperstlckers that substitute
symbols for words. As In. "I (red Valentine heart
cartoon) my neurologist."
The above, of course, is only recommended for
motorists who have never had so much as a
CAT scan.
The other side then is clear In this story.
Buttons and bumperstlckcrs don't have to give
you a laugh to be funny.

DON GRAFF

ROBERT WAITERS

Laws
Won't Aid
Farm ers
WASHINGTON INEA) - With an
increasing number of farmers
locked in a hopeless struggle
against bankruptcy, politicians here
arc haggling over agricultural legis­
lation that doesn't even pretend to
solve the growers' fundamental
problems.
In one of its few attempts to deal
with an Issue on a multi-year basis.
Congress traditionally has fashioned
omnibus agricultural legislation
covering four- and five-year periods.
In theory, such long-range planning
Is commendable. In practice It
doesn't always work.
For example, the 1981 bill (which
expires this year) was written when
the country had experienced almost
a decade of spectacular growth In
inflation, farm income and agricul­
tural exports. The legislation
wrongly assumed that all three
would continue to grow at a phe­
nomenal pace.
This year’s bill, governing dozens
of federal farm programs for the
next five years, attempts to neither
forecast future trends nor deal with
a situation that has led to financial
calamity for many of the nation's
farmers.
Instead, the Democrats who con­
trol the House and the Republicans
who dominate the Senate have
sought to Impose upon each other
the responsibility for the reductions
in price and income support pro­
grams required by federal budget
constraints.
At the same time, the White
House and Congress are feuding
over a provision in the House bill
that would allow wheat and feedgrain farmers to vote for higher
government price supports if they
agreed to reduce production.
The unseemly haggling is occur­
ring at a time when as many as
43.000 family farms (approximately
1 of every 16 In the country) are
technically Insolvent because their
debts exceed their assets. The
owners of another 93.000 farms owe
$7 or more for every $10 worth of
assets.
Compounding those problems are
a series of related adverse trends —
Including plummeting exports,
excess production capacity, higher
dcbt-to-lncome ratios, shorter loan
terms, declining asset values and
decreased liquidity of those assets.
The Farmers Home Administra­
tion. the lender of last resort for
growers, reports a five-fold Increase
In delinquent payments during the
past four years. Its 267.000 bor­
rowers currently owe $5.4 billion —
but many of those loans may never
be repaid.

Avoiding
Nuclear
Holocaust

ROBERT WAGMAN

W ill Reagan Resign?
W ASHINGTON (NEA) — It's
autumn in Washington — and as
the temperature Is cooling, the
political rumor mill Is heating up —
most of the political gossip involves
Vice President George Bush and ills
presidential ambitions.
The hottest rumor Is that Presi­
dent Reagan will step aside some­
time In early 1987 so that Bush can
take center stage and run as an
Incumbent In 1988.
According to this rumor. Reagan's
health is worse than anyone lets on:
Nancy Reagan Is very concerned
that he won't survive another three
years; and Reagan will resign for
health reasons sometime after the
1986 elections, probably In very
early 1987.
By then, the top two items on
Reagan agenda — tax reform and an
arms-control pact — will be either
underway or defunct: The taxreform Issue will have been decided:
and the president will have met at
least twice with Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev.
Two recent occurences are adding
some fuel to tills Rcagan-Bush
rumor:
Mrs. Reagan spent much of her
August vacation looking for a new
house in Los Angeles — reportedly
for immediate purchase. If the
Reagans won't move back to the
W est Coast until 1989. this
househunting seems premature. In
addition. In several Interviews and
private conversations. Reagan has
expressed his already-growing
frustration about being a lame duck.
T h a t fr u s t r a t io n w ill g r o w
enormously after the 1986 elec­
tions. when the nation's political
attention becomes riveted on
Campaign '88.
Of course, the White House is

denying all of this in the strongest
terms, but those denials only
strengthen the rumors.
It can't be denied, meanwhile,
that Bush's presidential campaign
is already getting into high gear.
Bush now seems preoccupied with
wooing two groups — conservatives,
who he'll need to capture the GOP
n o m in a tio n ; and m in o ritie s ,
especially Hlspanlcs. who he'll need
to win the general election.
Bush and his wife. Barbara, re­
cently com pleted a week-long
coast-to-coast trip that had all the
trappings of a major campaign
swing.
His main topics were his loyalty to
Reagan and his unwavering support
o f e v e ry th in g Reagan backs,
especially free enterprise, free trade,
no new taxes; and his opposition to
ihc Soviet system — an effort to
counter conservative fears that
Bush would be soft on communism.
Bush especially tried to reach
Hlspanlcs in California and Texas,
where he boasted of his Mexican
daughter-in-law and his Mexican-Amcrlcan grandchildren — ref­
erences that were well-received by
his Hispanic audiences.
Earlier this summer. Bush added
Craig Shirley, former spokesman for
the National Conservative Political
Action Committee, to his personal
staff. It's also reported that his
growing political action committee
will be headed by former U.S.
Treasurer Angela Buchanan (sister
of White House Communications
Director Pat Buchanan) and former
White House political director Ed
Rollins — both well regarded by
conservatives. Ms. Buchanan and
Rollins are expected to occupy high
places in the 1988 Bush campaign.

Imagine a spontaneous uprising
in East Germany.
The communist regime threatens
to collapse. Soviet troops move In to
restore order but can’t. Fighting
spreads. West German volunteers
cross over to aid the rebels. The
Soviets blockade Berlin. The West
responds with an airlift. Soviet
fighters Intercept the transports and
down several. NATO armored units
attempt to open the land routes to
Berlin. Soviet forces resist and move
toward the West German border. To
block their advance and as a
warning, the NATO command takes
out key bridges across the Elbe
R iv e r w ith lo w -y ield nuclear
explosions.
At this flash point, could ail-out
nuclear war still be avoided?
A number of the nation's foremost
scholars in the area of war and
peace are trying to answer that
lifc-and-dcath question for the
human race. They are participating
in a study project under the
auspices of the Carnegie Carp,
called, simply. "Avoiding Nuclear
War."
At this point. It Is an entirely
non-governmental endeavor. Most
of the work since Its inception two
years ago has been done at
Harvard's John F. Kennedy School
of Government.
The project is only peripherally
concerned with the big political
issues such as arms control and
superpower relations. The focus Is
the ultimate worst-case scenario:
Once the two superpowers are
launched on a collision course, how
do you prevent the unthinkable
from happening?
What makes the project of special
interest — even promise — Is that It
periodically brings American and
Soviet experts together to think
about the unthinkable. Two such
meetings have been held and a third
Is set for early next year. The
meetings may continue for years.
And so far, reports Frederic A.
Mosher, a Carnegie staffer who Is
functioning as chairman of the
working group, so good. The Soviets
tend to look for grand schemes to
prevent crises while their American
counterparts arc more inclined to
focus on the practical details of
crisis control. But, Mosher says,
there is unquestionably a shared
concern about nuclear war and Its
prevention.
The current study goes one step
beyond, assuming that the brakes
haven’t held and that forces are
involved, or about to be. At that
point, decision makers on both sides
may perceive nuclear war as almost
Inevitable.

JACKANDERSON

France Asks AIDS Research Credit
Bjr Jack Anderson
And
Joseph Spesr
WASHINGTON — Scientists at
the prestigious Pasteur Institute in
Paris claim that U.S. researchers
have stolen credit for the French
discovery of the AIDS virus and
Illegally patented a blood-testing kit
that identifies the presence of the
deadly virus.
At stake may be a Nobel Prize, not
to mention millions of dollars in
royalties from the sale of the
patented test kits. The French want
their share of both glory and money.
The French, threatening court
action, have sent documents but­
tressing their claims to the Health
and Human Services Department,
demanding recognition of U.S. re­
searchers' reliance on the Pasteur
Institute. The documents, seen by
our associate Corky Johnson, pres­
ent a powerful case. Here are the
highlights:
— In tfie spring of 1983. Dr. Luc
Montagnler of the Pasteur Institute

reported his suspicion that a virus
was the cause of the dread disease.
American scientists were eager to
learn more. An article Montagnler
wrote for Science magazine was
edited and endorsed by Dr. Robert
Gallo, chief AIDS researcher at the
National Cancer Institute.
Montagnler met with Gallo and
his team to discuss the virus.* and
subsequent correspondence was on
a first-name basis.
— Letters from Gallo to Mon­
tagnler asked for virus samples and
permission to clone them. A receipt
for two samples of the French AIDS
virus was signed by a Gallo re­
searcher on Sept. 23. 1983.
— The French stipulated that the
samples not be used for commercial
purposes. Other samples and In­
formation were given to U.S. scien­
tists. All this was long before Gallo
filed for a patent. The French claim
Gallo used their Information to find
the AIDS virus and develop a test
kit. which was then patented.
In an Interview. Gallo disputed

the French claim, asserting that the
two viruses were not the same. He
said the French have not adequately
isolated the AIDS virus.
— The French filed patent
applications in Europe and the
United States several months before
Gallo's group. The U.S. Patent
Office granted Gallo's patent, but
has yet to act on the French
application.
— In a letter to a colleague after
Montagnler had identified the AIDS
virus, Gallo acknowledged that he
had not yet succeeded In isolating
an AIDS virus himself.
— The French charged that U.S.
doctors allegedly broke American
and International patent laws by
falling to disclose the French con­
tribution to their AIDS research.
The French say their documents
present a "prima facie case that the
Montagnler team was first" to
discover the AIDS virus, that the
Gallo patent Is based on information
"d e riv e d from the Montagnler
team" and therefore is not valid.

The French charge further that
Gallo breached a contract with the
Pasteur Institute by using the virus
samples the French sent him in
developing a commercial product.
The French mude three demands
that must be met If the United
States is to avoid court action:
1. Public recognition of the Mon­
tagnler team's "Invaluable con­
tribution In first finding and Identi­
fying" the AIDS virus.
2. Freedom for the French to
market their own blood-test kit
"without any legal problems."
3. A share of the royalties from
sale of the U.S. kit, in return for
which the French would allow it to
remain on the market without legal
action.
Footnote: In a series of memos to
each other. Health and Human
Services officials slated they can
successfully defend the U.S. patent
in court and raise the question of
why the French, if their claims are
accurate, haven't marketed their
own test kit In Europe.
i

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thuriday, Sept. 26, 1985— JA

Earthquake Prediction Still An Uncertain Science
By Lidia Wasowlcz
UPI Science Writer
SAN FUANC1SCO (UPI) - The fledgling field or
earthquake prediction has come a long way In
Just five years — but not far enough to say when
the next major temblor will lilt, experts say.
Recent data had pointed to the vicinity of last
week's disastrous Mexican quake as an area due
for a major Jolt, for example, but lacked the kind
of specificity that could have spared lives through
timely evacuation.
Scientists doubt such precise predictions will
be forthcoming any lime soon.
"Within the past five years, we have made
significant progress so that the quake olT the
Mexican coast was no surprise," said William
Ellsworth, chief of the Branch of Seismology for

the U.S. Geological Survey In Menlo Park. Calif.
"The quake fulfilled the long-term prediction
that had Identified this area as a major seismic
gap, but we had no short-term Information that
could have been used as an immediate warning."
The concept of seismic gaps is based on the
Idea that all parts of an active earthqunkc fault
must give way sooner or later. The prognosis for a
temblor Is most likely for that area which has
gone the longest without one.
"W c'vc learned a lot about the recurrence time
between one quake and the next on a segment or
a fault. We would expect, for example, a repeat of
the 1906 San Francisco earthquake within a
century and a half." said seismologist Kate
Hutton of the California Institute of Technology In
Pasadena, Calif.

"But I don't sec earthquake predictions ever
having a certainty even as lax as that of a weather
report."
Relying on long-term forecasts, scientists nine
months ago placed measuring Instruments
within the vicinity of the Mexican temblor.
"W e anticipated the quake, and we've got
enough equipment there to say It will be the
best-recorded major quake ever, in terms of
recording the strong-motion waves." said Univer­
sity of California geologist James Brunc nt the
Scripps Institution of Oceanography In San Diego.
The data could prove Important because
Mexico's active volcanoes and frequent shakers
make it as "tectonically active" as Central
America, the Pacific Coast of South America,
Alaska and Japan, said Karen McNally, head of

Second Suit Filed Against Dog Owner
A second civil suit has been filed in circuit
court against the owner of a welmaraner
that has been accused of biting customers at
an auto dealership.
J. Paul Benoit, of Longwood. has filed suit
against J.R. Auto Ranch Inc. and John
Daniels or Longwood. Benoit is seeking
unspecified damages In excess of $5,000.
Another suit, filed in January and in­
volving the same dog. is ready for trial,
court records show.
Accused In each case ts "Blnky," watch­
dog for the auto ranch.

In the latest suit, Benoit states he was
attacked while legally at the business on
July 9. He states the owner should have
known the dog was vicious and should have
protected him from the dog. He said there
was no "bad dog" sign at the business.
He states he suffered disfigurement from
the bite, mental anguish and medical
expenses.
The case has been assigned to Circuit
Judge S. Joseph Davis, No trial date has
been set.
In the awaltlng-trlal case. Thomas Watson
of Sanford Is also suing the auto ranch and

Pouchcr said the 16-acre nursery, owned
by Richard Polk, has about 500.000 trees.
One sample Irom the nursery had been
found to he infected by the highly contuglous bacteria which kills trees but Is

harmless to humans, and the second sample
was confirmed as cankerous.
Two cankerous samples must be found In
a nursery or grove before the state will order
destruction of all the trees In the Infected
facility.
The only known means of eradication of
citrus canker is to burn infected and
exposed trees.
Pouchcr said destruction of the trees will
begin by the end of the week, or possibly
Monday.
It is the 14th nursery found Infected since
the outbreak was discovered In August

To date, most quake studies have focused on
temblor-prone California, where the ground
ruptures arc easier to study than the less
accessible, underwater Mexican faults, said
Caltech geophysics professor Hlroo Kanamori.
Of particular interest is the central California
farming town of Parkficld, where for 100 years
the notorious San Andreas Fault has ruptured
with a quake of 5.5 to 6 magnitude on the Richter
scale once about every 22 years.

Yellow
Pa
Deadline

Daniels for an unspecified amount of
damages In excess of $5,000. Watson's
complnlnt is similar to Benoit's. He accuses
Blnky of biting him on Nov. 15. Davis Is
hearing that case as well.
A Welmaraner Is a fearless hunting dog
usually standing 25 to 27 inches high and
weighing 70 to 85 pounds, according to
references sources. They are easy to train
and make forceful and aggressive watch­
dogs but arc also good with families and
gentle with children, according to the
reference source.
—Deane Jordan

C a ll N o w 628-5000

C a n k e r C onfirm ed In Polk N u rsery
LAKE ALFRED. Fla. (UPI) - Plant
pathologists confirmed Wednesday the dis­
covery of citrus canker nt Polk Citrus
Nursery in southern Polk County and
Charles Pouchcr. director of the Joint
stale-federal citrus canker eradication pro­
gram. said destruction of its trees will begin
as soon as possible.

the Charles Richter Scismologlcal Laboratory and
geophysics professor at UC. Santa Cruz.
"Mexico has roughly five times as many large
earthquakes as we do In California." she said.
"The faults are slipping more rapidly, and the
fault zone Is wider."

THE

UONNf III V

(PHONE L I
BOOK * '

1984. In addition, canker has been found In
one small grove of newly planted trees.
The disease has not been found In any
commercially productive grove.
More than 14 million citrus trees and
seedlings have been destroyed since the
outbreak began.
Pouchcr said destruction of an estimated
3 million trees at the Adams Citrus Nursery
near Haines City was 99 percent completed,
and said crews moved into the 40-acre
Coca-Cola Foods Citrus Nursery near DeSoto City Monday to begin eradication
burning there.

I t l H I I l l III \ I )IU

(

l()l

I B United
I B Telephone

\

|B System

EH

1

« ' 1bx-1*

CALENDAR

I

.

THURSDAY. SEPT. 26
International Trulnlng in
C o m m u n ic a t io n G r e a t e r
S em in ole Club (p revio u sly
Toastmlstrcss), 7:30 p.m., Alta­
monte Chapel Education Build­
ing on State Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.
S w eet A delines (w om en 's
barbershop chorus). 7:30 p.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N. L a k e T r ip le t D r iv e ,
Casselberry.
Sanford Jaycccs general meet­
ing. 7:30 p.m.. clubhouse. Fifth
Street and French Avenue.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St..
5:30 p.m.. dosed discussion, and
8 p.m.. open, speaker.
Impotence Anonymous Florida
Hospttal-Altamnnle Chapter,
7-8:30 p.m.. Florida HospltalAltamontc. 601 E. Altamonte
Avc. (SR 436). Dr. Jack Baskin
will speak on diabetes, a major
cause oT Impotence. For In­
formation call 767-2218.
National Action for Former
Military Wives special meeting.
6:30 p.m. Call 628-2801 for
place and details.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed.
First United Methodist Church.
Overeaters Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m.. Community United
Methodist Church. Highway
17-92. Casselberry. Newcomers
meeting. 7 p.m. Call Jean at
830-0995. Also. 7:30 p.m.. In the
annex conference roam behind
Florida H ospital-Altam onte,
State Road 436. Altam onte
Springs.
FRIDAY. SEPT. 27
Book sale by Friends of the
Library of Seminole County. 9
a.m. to 9 p.m.. Altamonte Mall
center court.
C an dleligh t Dinner-Dance
Fund Raiser for Golden Age
Games. 6-9 p.m., Howell Place
Sanford. 200 W. Airport Blvd.
Limited reservations call 3237306.
Central Florida Kiwanls Club.
7:30 a.m .. Florida Federal
Savings and Loan, State Road
436 at 434. Altumonlc Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Kiwanls
Club. 7 a.m.. Airport Restaurant.
Sanford.
O p tim is t C lu b o f Sou th
Seminole, 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road, Altamonte
Springs.
Centrul Florida Blood Bank
Florida H ospital-A ltam an tc
Branch, 601 E. Altamonte Avc..
P a.m. to 5 p.m.
Central Florida. Porcelain
Artists "Show &amp; Sell." north end
of Colonial Plaza Mall, during
Mall hours. Open to the public.
Gentle Exercise for seniors.
10:30 a.m.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
U nited W ay of S em in ole
County golf tournament. 12:30
p.m.. Sabal Point Country Club.
For Information contact Bob
Walkoat 834 3131.
Wcklvn AA (no smoking). 8
p.m . W ck lvn P resb yteria n
Church. SR 434. at Wcklva
Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling

Hills Moravian Church. SR 434,
Longwood. Alanon, same time
and place.
Tanglcwood AA. 8 p.m., St.
R ichard's Episcopal Church.
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same
time and place.
Sanford AA Step. 8 p.m.. 1201
W. First St.. Sanford.

SATURDAY. SEPT. 28
Central Florida Chapter Ole
M iss A l u mn i party for the
Tulane game, home of Peggy
and Earnest Hardin. W inter
Springs. For information contact
Chapter President Larry Furlong
at 339-2324.
Diaper Derby for babies 6 to 15
months old. 10:30 a.m. to noon.
R obinson's. Altam onte Mall.
Prizes. Registration opens Sept.
21 at the store.
Book sale by Friends of the
Library of Seminole County. 9
a.m. to 6 p.m.. Altamonte Mall
center court.
Cent r al Fl ori da P orcelain
Artists "Show &amp; Sell." north end
of Colonial Plaza Mall, during
Mall hours. Open to the public.
Humane Society of Seminole
County volunteer recognition. 2
p.m.. Seminole County AgriCent er auditorium . S peaker
Mayor Bettye Smith.
W e Care's 20th anniversary
International Smorgasbord, 7
p.m.. Camelot Condominium
Clubhouse, 5400 Hansel Avc..
Orlando. Folk dancers, music
and international cuisine. For
information and tickets, call
425-4636.
East-West Kiwanls Club. 8
a.m., Sanford Airport Restau­
rant. Sanford.
South Seminole Community
Hospital Emergency Medicine
Health Fair. Loehmann's Plaza.
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. CPR certifica­
tion class 1-4 p.m.. cost $5. To
register call 843-4277. Free
health screenings and Informa­
tion.
Sanford Womens' AA. 1201
W . First St.. 2 p.m., closed.
Casselberry AA Step, 6 p.m.,
Ascension Lutheran Church,
Overbrook Drive.
Rebos and Live Oak AA. noon.
Rebos C lub, 130 Norm andy
Road, C a s s e lb e rry (clo sed ).
Clean Air A A for non-smokers,
first floor, same room, same
place and time.

h ail 7 1

If Too Don't Naad
2 Of These Comfortable
Rediners...Bring A Friend
And Shire The Sevingsl
NOW ONLY
2 FOR

6-PIECE
PINE GROUP

Alanon meeting. 8 p.m., 1201
W. First St.. Sanford.
MONDAY. SEPT. SO
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30
p.m., closed. 8 p.m., step. 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Reboo at noon, closed.

Buy This Style And
Receive Matching
Recliner FREE!

Include! Sofa. Chair. Rocker, 2 SolidWood
End Tables &amp; Cocktail Table.
RED.'599
SOLID 2x4
PINE IUNK
Bed Has Guard
Rail &amp; Ladder

$299

SOLID 2x4 PINK BUNK BID
CONVERTS TO TWINS J L

CAPTAIN'S
QUARTERS

Built To Be To

*119

Solid Pins • w/Chest

(itrl

M Itidki

*239

• Shar* 111tS US
a M O a t ilt S M i

MWaafliS

SOLID WOOD TRESTLE
TABLE A FOUR CHAIRS

QUEINI
ANNE

CHAIRS
In Assorted Colors.

*169
R E G .1299

SPECIAL PURCHASE
BUT THE SOFA AHD
$ - 0 Q
GET THE LOVESEAT FREE
Y

—Jdai.

s fu t

*69B H

eao,,/»,

]i T J

SUNDAY. SEPT. 29
Emergency Medical Services
Week exhibit by Florida Hospi­
tal. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.. Altamonte
Mall runs through Oct. 2. Free
blood sugar and blood pressure
testing.
Ce nt r a l Fl or i da P o rc ela in
Artists "Show &amp; Sell," north end
of Colonial Plaza Mall, during
Mall hours. Open to the public.
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p.m.,
open discussion. Florida Power
and Light building. N. Myrtle
Avenue, Sanford.

Buy One,
G st O n e ..

* T*
In Dark
Pine Or
Maple
Finish

m bo th sto bes I
DEDUCED FOB THIS SALE! \

evebytw bb

9 Or. Only
IIB

In Nylon Fabric.
REG. 1 149.95 Ea. Pc. As Shown

4 -P IE C I
COLONIAL BEDROOM
Orssssr, Mirror, Chest, Full Qumo
Headboard. Dark Pine Or Maple

rmn
Plus FREE Night Standi

*299

IA . PC.

NOW 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU BETTER

Uriry SampleI .1.l l

Plseeaet FarattareV

W lr lB lin

1401 S. FRENCH AVENUE
SANFORD, FL

409 N. HIGHWAY IS A
DelAND, FL
731-4162

MOK-FRI. 9 AM-7 P.M.; SAT. 9 AM-6 P.M.; SUN. N00IF6 P.M.
n s tu r + m v m n iti

&amp;

�6 A — Evening H erald, Saniord, E l.

Thursday, Sept. 36, 1935

...Quake

Continued from page 1A
One volunteer said six sur­
vivors had been located In the
ruins of Juarez Hospital and that
crews were chipping away at the
reinforced concrete to reach
them. Rescue cfTorts continued
through the night.
One of the six. who Identified
herself as Luplta. asked the
rescue crew for a beer, the
volunteer said
Earlier, at the General Hospltnl. where an Interns' residence
MIAMI (UPI) — Dlack Muslim leader Louis Fnrrakhnn.
and the Gynecological Hospital
who raneelrd his scheduled speech In Miami, wanted 150
were destroyed, workers found a
armed supporters to frisk everyone coming to listen to him
baby girl and rescued an Intern.
Saturday as well ns police.
The Intern's leg had to be
City authorities said the request was a factor behind Its
amputated to free her from the
decision In ask Farrakhan to pay S3.200 for extra security.
concrete and steel.
Farrakhan canceled the engagement at the Gusman
Gavin said that 28 missing
Cultural Center because of the city's decision.
Americans were believed to have
"Even if you think we were being unreasonable, they
been tn seven hotels that col*
apparently felt there was some kind of serious securitylapsed.
problem." Roger Carlton, director of the parking authority ‘
“ Time is running out but we
In Miami, said.
arc still trying to find people
But Abdul Akbar Mohammed. Farrakhan's assistant,
alive." he told a news confer­
criticized the city Tuesday. Implying they Increased the
ence. "By Thursday we will have
number of police and demanded the money to try to force
very slim hopes of rescuing
the cancellation.
anyone alive."
"W e refuse to pay ... the outrageous sum of $3,200 for 16
The U.S. Embassy identified
additional security personnel when we have a history of 55
the Americans killed as Bruce
years of peaceful public meetings." said Mohammed.
Sloan of New Market. N.H.: Mary
Elizabeth Vallejo. 34. of Cozad.
Neb., and her two children:
Georgiana
Merry Yunez, 31,
According to Sanford police
originally
of
San
Antonio, Texas,
department records. McGill was
involved In an patrol car acci­ and her Infant son.
In Golden. Colo., the U.S.
dent In June 1984. In that
Continued from page IA
Geological
Survey upgraded the
incident the patrol car received
magnitude of last Thursday’s
S3,500
worth
of
damage
and
Hospital at 4:05 a.m.
McGill was suspended for one earthquake from 7.8 to 8.1 on
the Richter scale. That made It
Melvin Murphy. 22. DcLand day.
was treated for lacerations and
Weaver said today’s accident the first "great" earthquake —
muscle strains and rcalcased. is under investigation and as yet one with a magnitude of 8.0 or
more — since July 1980. when a
said hospital spokesman Kay he does not know who Is at fault.
Bartholomew.
He said it would be a few days quake of 8.0 magnitude struck
Murphy was arrested on a before he could get all the facts the Santa Cruz Islands In the
Lake County charge of failure to silled through to make a deter­ Paeific Ocean. • The major af­
tershock that Jolted Mexico Fri­
carry a driver's license and a mination.
day
evening was also upgraded
Seminole County charge of no
"I haven't figured out who ran
from a magnitude of 7.3 to 7.5.
driver's license. He was being the red light." he said.
held today in lieu ol S200 bond.
Brigades from the Health
—Diane Petryk
Ministry Intensified fumigation
of quake-devastated buildings to
Assistant Attorney General p reven t ep id e m ic s . C rew s
W illiam Bradford Reynolds, sprayed garment district build­
head of the Justice Department's ings where 200 hundred gar­
Civil
Rights Division, said more ment workers — mostly young
Continued from page 1A
than 150 people. Including at women — were believed to have
"This is the SrtCjuavc of what least 84 klan members, have
we've working on. said Robert been prosecuted for such vio­
Pence, chief of the FBI in North lence since 1979. when Presi­
Carolina.
dent Carter set up a special unit
"This harrassment and depri­ to combat the racial activity.
vation of civil rights goes right to
"W e will seek indictments In
the heart o f basic human every case where credible evi­
rights." Pence said. "We're In­ dence is developed and suspects
vestigating as many as two Identified." Reynolds said.
dozen indictments."
The 20-count indictment re­
Civil rights leaders hailed the turned in U.S. District Court tn
arrests as important in stopping Asheville charges
the defen­
civil rights violations.
dants In 1982 and 1983 willfully
"W e have always felt that conspired to "Injure, oppress,
vigorous law enforcement Is the threaten and Intimidate" racially
best way to keep the law in mixed couples.
It said the conspirators and
check." said Bill Stanton, head
of Klan Watch, a Montgomery. "would shoot firearms into, and
Ala., group that monitors white in front of. residences ... and
construct, place and ignite ...
supremacist activities.
The Ku Klux Klan has shown crosses in front of residences" of
renewed strength since 1979. the couples living in Iredell and
holding more marches, rallies Alexander counties.
Also indicted were Tony D.
and cross burnings than ut any
time since the civil rights pro­ Earp. leader of the Klan In
A l e x a n d e r C o u n t y : and
test soft he 1960s.
"This kind of activity in to­ Klansmcn Jerry Henderson.
day’s world should not be toler­ Michael Chambers. Rodney
ated.” Pence said. "I think this Is Pope, and Dan Pritchard.
Pence said agents still were
going to tell people Inclined to
trying
to find Klansmen Kenneth
this type action that no matter
how long it takes and no matter Blankenship, who is believed to
what it takes, we’re going to be in North Carolina, and Alfred
follow them until we get It Childers, who Is believed to be In
Texas.
solved."

FLORIDA
IN B R IEF

Farrakhan Wanted To
Frisk Police , Authorities Say

...Wreck

...Klan

died. But one mother stood
watch at a factory, refusing to
believe her daughter was dead.
"I won't leave here, no matter
what happens until 1see that my
daughter is rescued. She is alive,
I am sure," she said. She s&amp;ld
she had been looking for her
daughter since a survivor re­
ported scclng^thc girl alive.
Thousands of tons of relief
supplies have reached Mexico
but diplomats and Red Cross
workers said, rescue work has
been hampered by theft, short­
ages and government red tape.
"W e have had reports of goods
disappearing." Gavin told re­
porters.
"Tons of supplies have arrived
and we arc having difficulties
getting any of it." said Blanca
Gutierrez, a Red Cross volunteer
in the hard-hit Roma barrio.
Meanwhile, residents of some
o f emergency shelters com­
plained about their treatment.
"It seems that you'd get better
food In Jnll than we cat In the
rescue centers." said Fernando
Miranda, a resident of the lowincome Tcplto neighborhood In
central Mexico Clly.

CENTRAL FLORIDA COIN CLUB
1985

COIN SHOW
ORLAND O CEN TRO -PLEX
SOO LIVINGSTON STREET
ORLANDO, FLORIDA

Friday, Septem ber 27 — 10 00 a m. to 0:00 p m.
Saturday, Septem ber 28 — 10:00 a m. to 6 00 p m.
Sunday, September 20 — to 00 a m. to 5:00 p.m.

BUYING/SELUNG
HOURLY DOOR P R IZ ES
C en tra l F lo rid a C o in C lu b It a not lor p rofit
S tate C h a rte red O rgan isation

FR EE
ADMISSION

FR E E A P P R A ISA LS
EX H IB ITS

tmiiniiimiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiitimtnimiiiiiJp

T H U R S . - FR I. - S A T .
4 -DRAWER

BDRM. CHEST

•48

ea

5 -DRAWER

, p cl,c,rlluilt..

.

I

BDRM.
CHEST
_

‘58

"W e are forgotten here. There
are no police, no Red Cross
workers, nothing." Miranda
said. "They want to forget about
us."

STOCKS
These quotetIons provided by members ol
Ihe National Association of Securities Dealers
ere representative Inter dealer prices as ol
m ld m ornlng today. Inter dealer markets
change throughout the day. Prices do not
Include retail markup/markdown.
Bid Ask
Atlantic Bank........................
371*
Am erican Pioneer S A L ........
»».
Barnett Bank..........................
14).
Florida Power
&amp; Light................................
73
Fla. Prog rett.........................
35!*
Freedom Saving!................... ......... 11l«
12La
H C A ................ ' ..............
39
Hughet Supply........................
221a
M o r r lw n 'i...............................
IS1
N C R C orp...............................
P le iie y ..................................
21 711,
S c o tty !....................................
13&lt;.
Southeeil Bank......................
29}4
SunTrukt..................................
3117

1100 S. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FL.
M on.-Sat.
9 A M - 5:30 PM

322-7953

one in iie c i i u«
it m t. o m
&lt;J* Lari), hat m ha

AREA DEATHS
LORELLE MARLOWE
Mrs. Lorclle Marlowe. 64. of
600 E. Ridgewood Ave.. Alta­
monte Springs, died Wednesday
at her home. Born Jan. 29. 1921
in Amissvlllc. Vu.. she moved in
A lt a m o n t e S p r in g s fro m
Daytona Beach in 1960. She was
a retired executive vice president
and general manager in radio
communications and a Catholic.
She Is s u r v iv e d by her
husband. Paul: a son. Paul
Marcil Marlowe. Canada: four
brothers. Amiss Walter. Byrne
Walter, both of Warrenton. Va..
Leluiul Walter. Culpepper. Va.
Sherwin Walter, Roanoke. Va.:
s is t e r . K a t h e r in e R i l e y .
A tn i s s v i 1 1e : a n d f i v e
grandchilren.
Bald win-Fairchild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.
JOHN H. THEE SR.
Mr. John H. Thee Sr.. HO. of
1021 C reek 's Bend D rive.
Casselberry, tiled Tuesday at
Florida H ospital*Altam onte.
Born Jan. 5. 1905 tn Germany,
he moved to Casselberry from
Windermere in 1984. He was a
founder and president of a bakIrfg company and a member of
the Church of Christ. Ocoee. He
was a Mason and Shriner.
Survivors include his wife.
Carolyn: two sons. John H. Jr.,
G a in esville. Stanley Murk.
Casselberry: a daughter. Eleanor

• FUNEIAl MOW • C U K T U Y • FLM tST
IS YOUR O U T CMOtCt
Om Im I O n w T U n Cara 01 EearytMaf

4 M At UMfcart M .

SwriwO/Uka Mary

1224263

F ractal Mw*

C O N T E S T

ROSALIE MORONESE
Mrs. Rosalie Moronese. 74, of
901 E. 25th St.. Sanford, died
Wednesday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Born
in Casteldaccla, Sicily. Nov. 21.
1910. she movco to Sanford in
1970 from Plainfield. N.J. She
was a retired seamstress and a
member of All Souls Catholic
Church.
She is survived by a son.
Joseph. B ridgew ater. N.J.:
daughter. Rose M. Dolfi. Or­
lando; four brothers, Pete
T o m a s e 11o . H a w t h o r n e .
Dominick. Salvatore and Joseph,
all of New Jersey; two sisters.
Josephine Stawlcki and Cecilia
Melnick. both of New Jersey; five
g ra n d c h ild re n : one greatgranddaughter.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary. Is in charge of arrange­
ments.

M O R O N E S E . R O S A LIE
— Catholic Funeral M a tt for the Repote of
the Soul of Rotalte Moroneie, 74. of SOI E
JSih St , Sanford. Mho died Wednetday. M ill
be held Saturday. Sept }(. at 10 a m at All
Soul! Catholic Church, Sanford, M lt h the Rev.
F a th e r L y le D anen. ce le b ra n t
B u ria l
Oaklaw n M em orial Pa rk
V io la tio n for
fam^y^nd friend! M i ll be held Frid ay 2 4 and
d4t&gt;.m&gt;OaftteMn Funeral Home lit charge.

BMS.". 323-1204

You may enter as many of the weekly categories as
you like.

T Y P E or PR IN T your recipe giving full instructions
for preparation, cooking time and temperature. (Ap­
proximate number of servings also helpful).

All recipes received will be published in November
for the Evening Herald's fifth annual cookbook
contest.

C A T E G O R I E S A N D D E A D L IN E S

WEEK 1
• Appetizers
• Salads
• Vegetables
October

6-12

WEEK 2

WEEK 3

• Poultry
• Seafood

• Meat
• Casseroles

October

13-19

October

20 - 26

WEEK 4
• Breads
• Rolls
• Desserts
October

FESTIVE FOODS FORI
Mail
Recipes To: Cookbook
• *

Evening Herald

sr

( f io llin a

on: m

Anyone can enter except Evening Herald employees
and their immediate family.

R U LES

Lim it two (2) recipes per category each containing
Name, Address and Phone Number,

Fun«ral Notice

h'luw crs S c r n l W ith L o v e

OAKLAWN

Sara** 4 1 C m tn t flW tft

Calif.: and a sister, Johanna
Mueller, Germany.
Woodlawn Funeral Home. Or­
lando. is in charge of arrange­
ments.

P.O. Box 1657
Sanford, Fla. 32771
* :

.1

V4'

^

E*.

27 - Nov. 2

�Review Plans Must Be In Sooner

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI. . Thursday, Sept. 7b, IMS—7A

Longwood Plan Agency Requirements Changed
B y Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
Applicants going before Longwood's Land
Planning Agency will have to submit their
requests 45 calendar days prior to the next
regular meeting instead of 30 days to give the city
planner more time to review the plans and obtain
stall recommendations.
The city commission voted unanimously for the
change at Its last meeting. City Clerk Don Terry
filled in as acting city administrator In the
absence of vacntionlng Greg Manning.
In other business, the city commission voted
3-2 to grant a conditional use request by Dannie
Lewis for permission to operate an automobile
dealership for used car sales at 427 N. Highway
17-92, where lie formerly operated a pizza
business. The lot is located between AAA Auction
and Max’s Pools.
Commissioners Larry Goldberg and June
Lormunn voted against granting the request
because of reservations they had on the size of
the lot and possible traffic hazards. Mayor Harvey
Smcrilson and Commissioners Ed Myers and
Perry Faulkner voted in favor.
A site plan for Friendly Ice Cream Restaurant to
be built on a 1.2 acre site on the north side or
Stnte Road 434 between Ariza Pools and La Petite
Child Care was unanimously approved. City

Planner Chris Nagle praised the developer for
planning to conserve so many of the large trees
on the heavily-wooded property. He said plans
call for retaining 75 percent of the trees on site
and if trees arc replaced to do it with 12-14 foot
high trees instead the required eight-foot trees.
The developer has agreed to pave Pine Avenue
behind the restaurant, but wants to keep the
40-inch-in-diamctcr oak tree that Is growing in
the middle of the right-of-way by creating un
Island In the paved street. Light traffic and slow
speeds arc anticipated on the street and measures
will be taken to keep drivers from running Into
the tree.
The commission voted unanimously to approve
the site plan for Chevron USA Maxi Mart to be
located on the northwest corner of the State Road
434 and County Road 427 intersection. Action on
the site plan had been continued from Sept. 17 on
a vote of 3-2 when Mayor Harvey Smcrilson and
Commissioners Lormann and Goldberg had
questions about drainage and water recycling
procedures at the car wash.
Nagle told the commission drainage from the
Chevron station into the Department of Transportion's dralnugc system would not worsen
Hooding problems west of the railroad and might
even help by stopping some of the debris that
washes into lhe~road and slops up the drain

Annual Zoo Auction Scheduled
Central Florida Zoo will hold Its sixth annual
Wild West Auction and Musical Jamboree
Saturday beginning at 6 p.m. at the SheratonMaitland Hotel.
Tickets for the fund raising event are S50 per
person. The chuck wagon will serve up barbecue
chicken and beef ribs, corn-on-the-cob and baked
potatoes.
To be auctioned off arc such items as a
Colorado ski trip for four, seven days and nights.

a Las Vegas round trip airlines tickets for two,
one-year Nautilus membership, two foursomes
with lunch at Heathrow Country Club, one week
vacation at Oceans Landings resort, a corn and
beer party for 50, sailboards and computers.
Bids may also be placed In the silent auction
prior to the main event. There will be music with
a country western beat.
For tickets or additional Information call
Central Florida Zoo at 323-4450.

causing tloodlng.
An ordinance restricting commercial vehicle
and truck travel on some of Longwood's
residential streets has been passed unanimously,
but not until after the maximum gross weight
allowed was raised from 5.000 pounds to 12.000
pounds.
The public hearing and final action on the
proposal was continued from Sept. 17 to Monday
night's meeting after it was pointed out the figure
was so low that It would make the ordinance
difficult to enforce.
Exceptions arc: emergency vehicles, local
pick-up and delivery trucks and vans, city
maintenance vehicles, and trucks or commercial
vehicles having prior written permission to do so
by the police chief or mayor in national
emergencies,
Appointments were made and approved by the

commission Monday to fill vacancies caused by
expirations on the Code Enforcement Board.
Fred Kilter of 930 E. First Place was re­
appointed on the nomination of Mayor Harvey
Smcrilson. Ritter has been on the board as the
district 1appointee since Sept. 14. 1982.
Norman Jacobs. 931 Wavcrly Drive, was
named as the district 5 appointee by Commis­
sioner Larry Goldberg replacing Walter Fleck who
was appointed in April of 1983. Appointed
at-large was Lewis Warren of 1 10 Silver Cluster
Court to rcplnce Anthony Taddeo, who was
appointed in 1983. by Commissioner Ed Myers.
Also appointed at-large was Charles Heffner. 1503
Meadowlark St., who was reappointed on the
nomination of Commissioner June Lormann. He
was appointed In July to fill the vacancy left by
the resignation of Charles Kennedy, whose term
will expire in October. Taddeo and Fleck said
they did not wish to be reappointed.

Federal Benefits for
Veterans and Dependents
ELIGIBILITY • SOCIAL
• PENSION
Wt*k i ia i Nwtomtt C w m M
SECURITY
MEDICAL
p p r n iT C
• These end Many More Federal

WWN. Mni. VMM*

Wn«t ««4sm tmk«

v n t i / i IO

Benefits

Non

Available

*»vk*4 Sm A M rf Veteran benefltt recently peMkhed by Am V tttten Mmiastritt** "•* eviiUMe
U M w ir y 4a cK ir|H V ftirM l at M u lt .
J O * fV*T*» l*f 0*iNATIONJf^^W TJ^im itATW ^nu OUTJOUfM KIOWXW JAIIT^

M lil)

O A K L A W N 'S V E T E R A N S D I V I S I O N
P. 0 . Box « •
Lake M a ry , F lo rid a 3374*

Stitt.

.71*.
.‘ I*.

V tir Of Diutwr|t _
Type Of D i t t h i r | t .

V o n Bulow R eceived $1 M illio n
Loan From G e tty For Legal E x p en ses
after he was convicted of the
charges in 1982.
Von Bulow was found guilty of
attempting to murder his wife,
Martha "Sunny" von Bulow,
with insulin shots In 1979 und
1980.
The state Supreme Court
overturned the conviction on
constitutional grounds and he
was tried a second time on the
charges earlier this year in
Providence and was acquitted.
Von Bulow hus been a long­
Von Bulow used the money to time friend of the Gettys and at
pay for his bail, lawyers' fees one time worked for John Paul
and to help finance his appeal Getty Sr.

PROVIDENCE. R.l. (UPI) Socialite Claus von Uulow used a
$1 million loan from oil magnate
John Paul Getty Jr. to pay for
the legal costs of his two at­
tempted murder trials, a maga­
zine reported.
Vanity Fair magazine quoted
Getty as saying he gave the
money to von Bulow to help pay
for his legal expenses because
th e
D a n is h - b o r n
defendant
'would have been broke.

"The fact is that a friend
needed help and I was able to
give it." Getty Jr. told the
magazine. "It's no heroic thing. I
am certainly not going to ask for
it back.
"I have always told him I
wanted it to be applied to the
legal bills, otherwise he'd be
broke." Getty said.
Alan Dcrshowitz. the Harvard
lawyer who engineered von
Bulow's successful appeal and
retrial, has written an Inside
account of the case.
Random House will publish
the book in March.

Hospital Slates Medicine Health Fair
South Seminole Community
Hospital will hold an Emergency
M e d ic in e H e a lth F a ir at
Loehmann’s Plaza on Saturday
from 10 a.in. to 4 p.m. in
observance of Emergency Medi­
cal Services Week.
The fair will give Seminole
County residents an opportunity

to update their knowledge about
steps to take at the scene of an
emergency, as well as methods
for preventing emergencies.
South Seminole Community
Hospital und CPR for Citizens
w ill o ffe r a C PR (c a r d io ­
p u lm o n a r y r e s u s c it a t io n )
certification class from 1-4 p.m.
at the fair. The fee will be 85.

Advance registration Is required.
Those interested should call
843-4277 to register.
In addition to emergency med­
ical Information, some free
health screenings will be offered.
Call South Seminole Community
Hospital at 834-1200 ext. 895 for
more information.

,
Nv '* v

My Mommy Likes Me.
liUlENTJ N( i
A n I'tlutnlion n l jm ig n v n
fo r p w i i h l i i m ' x h a h *
H e doesn't talk yet, but he's
communicating. A n d he's learning
many im portant things. He's
learned what love is. A n d
discipline. A n d confidence. He
already know s the meanings of a
few hundred words.

A child's education begins at home.
Concerned, loving parents are the
teachers. The lessons learned in the
(&gt;reschool years influence all future
&gt;ehavior and success.
There is a course that helps parents
make the most of their roles as
teachers. Registration for Parenting
is lim ited. Call for more details
today.
Sponsored by:

Central Florida
Regional Hospital

The new Check-Credit Account loan from
Household Finance is important news for homeowners.
Now at the introductory rate of 9.5%...W ith no points
chained. A nd no prepayment penalty.
Your Check-Credit Account gives you a personal line of credit
hased on the equity in your home. It provides you with checks to use
anytime, anywhere, just like a regular checking account. Open a
Check-Credit Account for any amount from $5,000 to $150,000
or more. Beginning January, 1986, interest will be comX v
puted monthly at the low annual percentage rate of
only three points over the prime rale as quoted in
The Wall Street Journal A one-time loan participation fee and standard closing
costs are charged when the loan
is approved.
We’ve extended our business
hours. Saturdays 9:00am to 1:00pm,
and evenings by appointment.
m
F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n call the H F C o ffic e nearest you.
O r 1-800-621-5559 a fte r n o rm a l business hours.
1195 E Altamonte Drive
(Highway 43b)
Altamonte Spring!
(305) 830-9216

2 « tc Shopping Center
943 N.Wth Street
Leesbura

812 Dixon Boulevard

Brevard M ill
1396 S. Babcock Street

Coco*

Hwy. 17-92 on

(305)727-0555

.121-4501) 66*-»44l 62* *797 Ext 607

U f t A H M p U C CarpreMon
g
U A a tA u m

n **n

I

D e le s: O c t. 3. 10. 14. 17
T im e s: 7;00 - 9:00 P . M .
Fee:

S I D per person

I

J5w 7H7*5220

(305)636-4351

Lake Monroe, Sanford

S I S per couple

113 Vahnfa Avenue
Dnykma Bench
(904)255-5316

2122 E Colonial Drive
Orlando
(305) 894-8131

I N E F n l Avenue

CkaU

(904)622-5110

K-Mart Shopping Center
7901S. Orange ffiomon Tkiil
Orlando
(305)859-7720
Zayre Plata
2954 Orlando Drive
Sanford
(305)323-890

�SPO R TS
8 A — Evenin g H erald, Sanford, Ft.

i

Thursday, Sept. 26, 1985

rria a y s ro e s
Lew is G iv e s E a rn est
Effort F o r S em in o les
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
The parents of Earnest
Lewis sure knew what they
were doing. Earnest, meaning
serious in Intent or purpose. Is
the perfect description for
Seminole High's determined
defensive end.
The 16-ycar-old sophomore
could be making life misera­
ble on the Junior varsity level
this fall but he Joins a select
group of 10th graders who are
lo g g in g p la yin g tim e as
varsity performers for coach
Dave Mosure.

It didn't take long for Lewis
to move Into a starting spot at
defen sive end. alw ays a
strong point at Seminole
High. All-Americans Clifford
Marlin and Dallas Brown
started the Institution of great
defensive ends at Seminole. It
was later passed on to Greg
Pringle and Charles Riggins,
who plays with the Orlando
Renegades.
"A ll four of those guys
played varsity since their
sophomore year," La Marr
Richardson, Seminole assis­
tant principal, said. "That

S ch n itk e r G e ts Big
Yarda ge F o r H o w ell

Earnest Lewis Is a key
m e m b e r of S e m in o le 's
defense.
was an important part. too.
They were bookends. tough to
See LEWIS, Page 11A

By Tim Horn
Special to the Herald
At 5-11 and almost 190
pounds. Mark Schnitker has
the right kind of size and
determination to fill a key role
for coach Mike Bisccglia’s
Lake Howell Silver Hawks'
football team. He gains valu­
able chunks of yardage up the
middle.
P o w e r in g his w ay up
through defensive lines and
then practically running over
op p osin g secon d aries at
almost will, Schnitker has

bulled his way to among the
current rushing leaders in
Seminole county this year.
,He’ll attempt to continue
this trend Friday night when
Lake Howell hosts Seminole
in the first Seminole Athletic
Conference encounter for
both schools.
But Ironically, when It
comes to football, his size has
not always been beneficial to
the senior fullback.
"1 couln’t make the weight
lim it In m iddle sch o o l,"
Schnitker said about the

SPORTS
WRITER

Laughlin Turns
Meteorological
Gaze To Gloria

tt tt tt

Robin R ogers. Mike M ohlcr and Nick
Radkewich finished 1-2-3 Tuesday as Lyman's
Greyhounds claimed a dual meet victory over
Lake Brantley's Patriots on a sweltering evening
at Lyman High.
The Greyhounds finished with a team score of
22. compared to 33 for Lake Brantley.
Rogers obliterated the rest of the field as he
finished first with a time of 16:44. "He ran and
awesome time for the way the heat was today,"
Lyman coach Fred Finke said of Rogers. "He was
only eight seconds off his time at Edgewater. He
dominated the race from the first mile on."
Following Rogers was Mohlcr who was second
at 17:05 and Radkewich was not far behind as he
took third at 17:07. "Mohler and Radkewich ran a
good team race." Finke said.
Lake Brantley then had the fourth, fifth and
sixth finishers but Lyman's Kevin Quinn broke
up the Patriots’ pack as he finished seventh at
18:01. Wade Jacobson, in Just his second meet
lor Lyman, was 10th at 18:52.
"Jacobson Is coming on strong." Finke said.
"He ran the last half mile in 2:25. He's one to look
out for."
Tuesday’s girls meet was called off because
some ol the runners were Involved In the Yom
Klppur holiday.
u u a

Lake Howell High's girls team, currently
ranked third in the stale (4A). will compete In the
Jacksonville Sandalwood Invitational Saturday.
The meet will give the Lady Hawks a ci.rncc to
see what the competition in another area of the
stale Is like
Coach Torn Hammontrec said last season the
Lady Hawks didn't get to go against the top
competition during the regular season and were
surprised by a few teams at the state meet.
Hamtuonirce is making sure that won't happen
this season.
Fort Walton Beach Choctawatchec is the top
ranked 4A team followed by Largo. Lake Howell
and Winter Park. In the individual rankings.
Winter Park's Kim Bovls, the defending state
champion is number one with a time of 11:33.
Lake Howell's Lisa Samocki is sixth at 12:01.

Seminole

Youth

Sports

A s s o c ia tio n f o o t b a l l
See SCHNITKER. Page 11A

Lake Mary
Dominates,
Seminoles
Drop Times

Chris
Fister

A few people watching hurricane Gloria almost
as closely as the weathermen are the Seminole
County cross country coaches.
Most of the county teams will run in Saturday's
Jieabreeze Beach Run at Daytona Beach. That is.
if hurricane Gloria stays on Its current path
toward North Carolina Instead of shifting toward
the Florida east coast.
"You never know." Lyman girls coach Joe
Laughlin said. "It might Just sit off the coast for a
couple ol days. If it did. we wouldn't be running
Saturday." Laughlin teaches meteorology at
Lyman High.
If Gloria has any adverse effects on the Florida
weather, the Beach Run will most likely be called
off. And that's bad news for some runners,
because the next meet, for seniors and Juniors,
wouldn't be until Saturday, Oct. 5. That would be
a wait of 16 days between meets. It wouldn’t be
as bad for the freshmen and sophomores since
the Lyman Freshman-Sophomore Meet is set for
Thursday. Oct. 3.

M a r k S c h n it k e r Is th e
b re a d -a n d -b u tte r L a k e
H ow ell back.

HtraM PtMte by Eric Kllnsantmltb

S em inole's Ja im e Bojanow ski extends w h ile
com ing off the platfo rm . The T rib e sopho-

m ore won the 200 free and 500 free. He also
helped the 400 free re la y team to second.

Oviedo Whips Scrappy Rams
By Chris Fister
Herald Sports Writer
OVIEDO — Oviedo's Lady
Lions had their hands full with a
scrappy Lake Mary team Wed­
nesday night. In fact. Lake Mary
had a 14-11 lead and had the
serve in the opening game.
Oviedo, which stayed close but
didn't do much hitting in the
early going, needed some kind of
spark to turn the tide on the
Lady Rams. The Lady Lions got
Just what they were looking for
when Stephanie Nelson got a
nice set from Kim Verne and
drilled a spike past the Rams'
defense to return the serve to
Oviedo.
The Lions went on to score five
straight points to wir. the first
game, then came back from an
early deficit in the second to
claim a 16-14. 15-9 victory over
the Lady Rams in Seminole
Athletic Conference action at
Oviedo High.
"S tep h a n ie's spike really
spurred us on." Oviedo roach
Anita Carlson said. "She's been
hitting the hall really well this
week."
Nelson's sizzling spike seemed
to Instill a little fear in the Lady
Rams.
"The girls have to learn to
accept a good hit like that and
keep going." Lake Mary couch
Cindy Henry said.
Oviedo ran its record to 4-1
overall and 1-1 in the SAC with
its third straight win. The Lady
Lions. 3-0 in the Orange Belt

V o lle y b a ll
Conference, take on OBC foe
Kissimmee Osceola tonight at
Kissimmee.
Lake Mary. 0-2 overall and 0-1
in the SAC. travels to Spruce
C reek to n ig h t for a nonconference match.
Neither team could take con­
trol early in the first game as
both teams went through an
entire rotation with only seven
points scored, four by Oviedo
and three by Lake Mary.
Betsy Perry then took the
serve and the Lady Rams put
together a short rally for a 6-4
lead. Kathy K odak's spike
highlighted the rally.
Oviedo came back with three
points on Verne's serve and then
the teams took turns scoring
until the score was tied at 11-11.
Perry then came on to serve
again and this time the Lady
Rams reeled off three points for a
14-11 lead The second point
was an ace by Perry.
Oviedo then culled a timeout
and. when play resumed. Nelson
nailed the spike that ignited the
Lady Lions. Verne went on to
serve three points, the last
coming on a nicely placed dink
bv Nelson, to tie the score at
14-14.
Lake Mary regained the serve
hut couldn't score and Barbara
Malone then served the final two

points of the first game. The first
point was on another dink by
Nelson and the second on a Lake
Mary net foul. Malone got all five
of her serves in Wednesday to
run her streak to five straight
matches without missing a
serve.
Lake Mary took the early
advantage in the second game
when, with the. scored tied at
1-1, Apquenette Whack, who
played a fine all around match
for the Lady Rams, served three
points for a 4-1 lead. Marcie
Dalzlel's spike and Kodak's hit
led the way.
The Lady Rams went on to
take a 9-4 lead but they couldn't
hold on as Verne came on to
serve eight straight points to
give Oviedo a 12-9 lead. A
service ace and a spike by
Nelson highlighted the rally.
Lake Mary did not return six of
the eight serves by Verne.
Lake Mary had the serve three
more times without scoring
while Oviedo scored one point
each on the serves of Trudy
Ferguson. Cindy Wood and
Nelson with Nelson’s point clos­
ing out the match.
"The setting by Kim (Verne)
and Cindy (Wood) was really
good." Carlson said. "That's
what makes the offense go.
W e 'r e s t a r t in g to g e t It
together."
In Junior varsity action Wed­
nesday, Lake Mary opened the
season with a 15-5. 15-6 victory
over Oviedo.

» tt tt

1985 Fall Road Racing Calendar:
• On Saturday. Sept. 28, the University of
Central Florida will host the seventh annual "Run
for the Kids" to benefit Threshold. Inc., the local
Coach Beth Corso and her
treatment program for dysfunctional children. Lady Seminole (tellers started did a real good Job on front row,"
"Run for the Kids" is the first race in the 1985-86 the season in fine fashion Wed­ Corso said about her first-year
player. "Christy Gonzales also
Track Shuck Grand Prix Series.
nesday as they travelled lo New played real well in that first
The Saturday morning event will feature five Smryna Beach and upset the
runs plus early bird cross country races pitting defending 3A district champion game."
In game two. Corso pointed to
UCF's men's and women's teams against those Lady Barracudas. 17-15. 15-12,
Jackie Furr and Cindy Hogan as
from Rollins College.
in prep v o lle y b a ll at New making the difference. "Jackie
The cross country meets between UCF and Smyrna Beach High School.
got us buck in the game and
Rollins will get under way simultaneously (men
Junior Yolanda Robinson then Cindy carries up ahead,"
five miles, women three) at 7:10 a.m.
provided the crucial hit in the Corso said. "Finally. Sherri
The men's 5.000 meter race starts at 8 a.m. opening game as the 6-0 lea per Peterson wrapped It up for us.”
with the women following at 8:45. There will be a spiked the 17th point us
Farr went to the line with the
one-mile fun run at 9:30 and a one-mile team race S e m in o le p u lle d out t It e Tribe trailing. 8-2. and promptly
for fraternities, sororitltcs and clubs 15 minutes overtime victory.
put it into contention with five
later. A quarter mile kiddie run at 10 will wrap it
"Yolanda didn't start Lul she straight points. Hogan took over
up.
came in about the fillh point and after that and rattled off seven

Lady Seminoles Open With Victory
more for a 14-12 edgp. Peterson
needed Just one serve to com
pletc the sweep.
Corso. though, said her girls
had to improve In two areas to
be ready for a dem anding
schedule of Oviedo (Monday).
Lake Howell (Tuesday) and pow­
erful Lyman (Thursday) of next
week.
"I'd like to see us move u little
quicker on the lloor," she said.
"W e were moving well as a team
but we have to be stronger on
the block and move our feet a
little bit better."
— Bam Cook

By Chuck Burgess
Special (o the Herald
W hile Lake M ary's R nm phlblcns were
dominating the water Wednesday al Sanford's
Sanora pool In a tri-meet against Seminole and
Oviedo, the 'Noles and Lions were putting
together impressive showings of their own.
Lake Mary, which practically controlled tinboys' meet from the start, won eight out of the 11
events. Coach Walt Morgan was extremely
pleased with his team's performance. "W e have a
pretty strong team this year," Morgan said.
The Rums, while amassing a whopping 130
points, had some fine performances by their
tough boys’ team. Winning for the Rams were
Karl Kuchma (200 Individual medley). Tracy
Selbold (50 freestyle). Steve Kostowitz ( lOO
butterfly). Joe Rosser (100 free). Rob Baker (100
backstroke). Todd Rayburn (100 breaststroke),
the 200 medley relay team of Selbold. Rayburn.
Kuchma, and Miller, and the 400 freestyle relay
team of Todd Slebbins. Issues. Kostowitz. and
Rosser,
Also with some fine swims were the second
place finishes of Brian Cook (100 breast).
Stebhins (200 free). Vincent (200 I.M.). Isaacs (50
free). Large (100 free). Wes Simecek (500 free),
and Purkcrson (diving).
While the Rams were splashing to victory, a
new kid on the block was also doing some
splashing. The kid's name was Oviedo.
Without nationally ranked Andy Gill leading
the way for the Lions, the team had to depend on
something they thought they never had. Depth.
Coach Scott Nolan was happy to see his team
overcome Its lack of experience to pull a
second-place finish In the tri-meet. "They did a
great Job today considering It's only our second
year out." Nolan said.
The Lions, who scored 77 points, had good
swims by many of their athletes. Scott Hunt won
the diving and the 200 medley relay team
consisting or Gary Gotwalt. Merrcll Poole. Jason
Maddox, and Don Palmer placed a surprising
second.
Even though her boys fell to both teams.
Donalyn Knight, head coach or the Fighting
Swlmlnoles. felt the team's performance was a
strong one. "All of our times are dropping and the
team has twice as much confidence as last week."
Knight said.
Jaime Bojanowski. a sophomore, led the way
for the Tribe by scoring 14 of their 53 points.
Bojanowski won the 200 free with a time of
1:53,51 . the 500 free in 5:18.88, and was on the
second place finishing 400 freestyle relay team.
Other members of the relay were Jay Adcock.
Scott Lewis, und.Kirby Swinehurt. Swinchart also
placed second in the 100 butterfly und Lewis
finished second In the lOO backstroke to finish
the scoring for Seminole.
The girls’ meet looked somewhat similar to the
boys* in that the order was the same. Lake Mary
finished first with 122 points. Oviedo second with
73 points, and Seminole with 60 points.
Although the 'Noles had some trouble scoring
in the early going. Kristi Keeling look care of their
problems by winning the 100 free and Just
getting nipped at the end of the 50 free.
Stasl Bojanowski. who won the 500 free and
placed second in the 100 Dy, and Chris Sparrow,
who won the diving competition, were the other
top two finishers for the Lady Seminoles.
Oviedo, which had to change Its lineup on the
way to the meet because or a mix-up. was led by
Alicia Whitehead and Paula Murphy. Whitehead
won the 200 free and Murphy won the 100
breaststroke.
Nolan was Impressed with the way the team
pulled together in the midst of the last-minute
changes. "Our team did u great Job considering
the mass confusion." Nolan said.
The Rams, on the other hand, hud absolutely J
no confusion at all on their side. Led by senior 1
Kelly McKeel and freshman Kelly Wise, the Rams
went on to win six of 11 events.
Winning for the Rams were McKeel (100 back
and two relays). Wise (100 Oy and one relay).
Elisa Maher (50 free and one relay), and Jamie
Brosnan. Alice Reese, and Danielle Poncina. who
were all on winning relay teams.
Seminole and Lake Mary will swim again this
weekend In the Sharidan Invitational, while
Oviedo's next meet Is against Seminole next
Wednesday at Sanora.

�Evaning Herald, Sanford, FI.

SCOREBOARD
TV/RADIO
TMartday N tftt'i TV/Xadi* Sperti
TrtrrtUM
AUTO RACING
• pm — ESPN, Wo»ld champ,pnihip
drmplilipn derby and Iiguft tight comp, Mipn
tp m - ESPN. IMS A Summer Nalanal*
U m -E S PN . USACHul Hundred
J B ern - ESPN Aerogel* Rally
I0XING
MtaugM - ESPN NABF Featf»r»ei)H
Championthip
Radi*
• A 1 IIA L L
I1 U pm - WIIET AM lir a , Aiipnta
Sr a m al Cincinnati Rtdt
I » pm - Wk ISAM OKI. Pbiiadaipbia
PhiMNtatSI Lourt Cardinal*
TALK
I Id pm - WKIS AM Hall IporMaik &lt;n'h
Ctvittopber Rirtio

JAI A LA I
Al Orlande Seminole
Wrdnetday mghl
HI pa me
IZugaraArana
I I 00 I K I N
J Ricardo Agumr,
i K IK
• Fau»ieC*ii*eofta
IH

o [i h u m , p n n m m . T i n i) h im
Indptme

IZug*i«

lad led )H

• Oiea
100 1 70
• Foruna
lac
Q (l l) H M ; P (III H IM , T (1A 4 IIIIS ;
O D I lllB H
Irdpame
• Ftut&lt;oC*i|*cori*
U N lOH leO
• ZufaiaAfuirre
IIP )M
1 RicardoOyan
ICC

0(41) OX; PHI) 14*M;T&lt;14IIMH
am pome

a Jew*
I Rem

tB

II &lt;0 a 00
in IK
lift
loo
0 (1 4 )H U , P (4H U M , T U I IIM l M
U ptim e
a Jew* Ca'ucoria
a aO la c I K
1 Bilbao Foruua
an an
ICabmia Tumaya
IN
0 0 4 ) m m , p (at) a) m . T m i l Mlaa,
0 0 04)114) t l H
am tame
1Pile Aguirra
IIaO I N a ac
aUmarCa'iaroria
IN IK
IJe M O y a n
IK

0 (41) aa M, P 0 4) IN Ml T 0441 SIT *
nbiarne
ILeruteAnpei
la K ION I K
IC a lia la ra
an ik
lA r re ll Irait4l
IK
0 (1 0 1 4 M, P O I) III M, T (1441 I4I.K
M gant
) Durango Kid Ang,i
IIN I B I K
UadaTom ai
a H 100
I Garay Area
in
Q O 1)44M. P U llH I M ; T i n i la M M
imparne
aCbarpla Far an
11 H i n I B
1 Ether a Angel
jn an
IGaiiaTomai
in
00 o m a . p la i) to ». t le t n h i h
limtame
a Rene Iraiabal
IIK IIK IN
l Lerube Reye*
I K 1K
IDurengo Kid Iub&gt;ll
IB
0 1141 M M; P (4 1) 11 M, T (41 1) M l M
I Ilk tame
iC aiirsT om u
IK IN an
lA r r a il ie r i
n n an
1 GornNla Area
aB
0111) II M; P I I I I I 4 M ; T (111) R IM ,
Pit a 0 1 1 4 4 1 1 4 0 1 yad 141M; tarryerer
tlIJ M .K
in k tame
lAremayO
IIH I B I B
iG eiie
in in
a GornNla
in
0 O i l m u . P (I D n n , T 1410 la in ,

00 (i a) im it

I Kb tame
1 Gaha Far eh
l) n I N I K
lArem iyeTub'll
a n IN
lEtheraToma*
10 K
0 0 0 11.N, P (II) 111 M, T l l t l l M IN ;
O O O II O I I H M
A - M ll , H-IIII.Na

NFL
NATIONAL FOOTIALL LEAGUE
A m e rlc e t C e e le re a ie
Eeil
w l T Pci. f t
1 1 0 aa? u
Miami
NY JtH
I I 1 aa) u
Nrw England
2 1 0 44) so
1 2 0 111 JO
Indianagoltt
0 2 0 sen 2*
Bullaid
M r il
Pilttburgh
2 1 0 aa) 22
1 2 0 HI 41
CHrtland
1 &gt; 0 ra w
Houtlon
Cincinnati
0 ) 0 000 •2

PA
W
II
M
II

n
n
u
M
II)

Weal
Dfn»tf
) 1 0 aa) •a at
Saam,
I .1 0 aa) 101 ta
Kant** City
) 1 0 44) •1 n
San D ago
1 I 0 aa) •) n
LA R a ld t'l
1 2 • n i i l )0
Natmal Caarttrtaca
Eait
W L T Pel PF PA
Dana*
1 1 0 aa) u a)
NY Glanlt
J 1 0 44) 41 K
SI Louit
) 1 0 aa) l i )l
1 &gt;i
Philadaiphia
i l l 1) ai
Wainmgion
1 &gt; 0 m 14 ta
Ctutral
Chicago
1 0 • io n *1 1*
Minnttola
J 1 0 aa) 1) )0
Detroit
&gt; 1 0 aa) u i)
Gtttn Bay
1 1 0 ID aa n
Tamp* Bay
• ) 0 ooo 1) It
Wart
LA Ram*
1 0 • iooo n aa
San Franclac*
1 1 g aai *0 Sa
N»« OrHan*
l ) g m
10 la
A Mania
D J 0 ooo at 15)
lvnday’1 Garnet
SeeWe el Kan*** City.' P m
Tempe Say al Detroit. I p m
Watkingaon al Ckttago. I p m
Dane* al Horn lor*. I p m
Green Say al SI Laurt. I p m
LA RaKert at Hen England. I p m
Mnwetofa al Buffalo. I p m
NY GianH al PMipmpkie. I p m
Alldnla al LA Him*, ap m
Cleveland at San Dago, ap m
IndienapoJii al NY Jett, a p m
Miami al Denver.apm
He« Or leant al San Frpnciito. a p m

ODDS

SOFTBALL
Startled Me*’i Fall Sefltell League
Team
Wen let* GS
Tim ReinetConnetnen
1 o —
Stttxmt Well Drilling
I
I
I
Thome Land Clearing
a
1 1
Geyter SyiHmi
a
1 It
Sunni lend
1 a at
Brown Borer i Elec trie
1
I
I
McKee Development
1
I
I
Cardinal Indutlriet
Wednetday nagbri reteRH
Smteni Well Drilling I. Thorn* Land Cltaring
1
Tim Rlinet Connection I. Breen Boren
Electric I
McKee Development ;g Card nai Induttnet •

SP O R TS
IN B R IEF
Daytona 200 AAotorcyle Classic
Will Have Record-Setting Purse
DAYTONA BEACH---- Officials at Daytona International
Speedway have announced a record-setting purse of
S I55.000 Tor the 1986 Daytona 200 Motorcycle Classic for
Superbikes on March 9.
The S I55.000 includes $50,000 from a pair of 50-mllc
qualifying races, each carrying a $25,000 purse.
The S52.0OO purse Increase maintains the tradition of
the 45th unnual American Motorcyclist Association
200-mlle race as the most prestigious and most lucrative
two-wheeled competition In the world.
In addition to the purse Increase, Speedway officials
announced a revamped qualifying procedure for the Camel
Pro event.
The twin 50-mile qualifying rarcs. In udHItlon to timed
practlve, will be used to set the 80 motorcycle gred for the
200-mllcr. The twin qualifiers will replace the 100-mile
Formula 1 race that was held on Friday last year.
"Running the qualifying races on Friday gives the fans a
chance to see the entire field of machines In racing action,"
said Speedway General Manager John Riddle. "It provides
a sneak preview of Sunday's action plus It gives the
competitors a chance to check their bikes out under race
conditions."

Slims: White Surprises Garrison
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — Anne White outserved Zina
Garrison lo upset the No. 3 seed 6-2. 6-2 Wednesday at the
SI 50.000 Virginia Slims of New Orleans.
Garrison of Houston missed many first serves and White
slammed back the second shots to take the match. White.
Newport Beach, Calif., said she was better prepared for this
tournament than any other, working toward It all year.
In other mutches at the University of New Orleans
Lakefront Arena, No. 7 Peanut Louie of San Francisco
defeated Lori McNeil of Houston 6-2. 7-6 and No. 5 Wendy
Turnbull of Australia beat Wendy White of Atlanta 6-4. 6-1.
In doubles. Californians Terry Holladay and Heather
Ludlolf upset No. 2 seeds Candy Reynolds, Knoxville,
Tcnn., and Paula Smith. La Jolla. Calif., 6-4, 3-6,6-3.

I 1 1

RENO Ner IUPI) - Weekend NFL end
college odd* et petted by Herrin t Reno Tehoe
Sport* Bool
NFL
Fererrte
PH
Sen Frenriuo
NenCkitant i| ,
Denver
Miami I
Seetie
Kama* City 1 ,
DeMet
HouUon n
NY G.enti
PtiiitdeipWA a
Chit ego
Wathingtpn a
i&gt; LOu'l
Green Bey 1
Ne* England
L A Radert I
Detrp.1
Tampa Bay 1
M.nneio'*
Buffalo 11
NY Jett
tnd.anapoi’t I
Sen Dego
O ert'anl a
LA Ramt
Atlanta •
Maude y Night
PifHburgn
C.nntinatl a .
COLLEGE
Q»l*r*ma
Minrmota H y
UCLA
Wathingtpn l ' i
use
Anypna St 1
Ttiat
Stanford 1
Mam, iFial
Boiton Cot leg* l ' i
Virginia
Nary 11 1
Iowa
IM I St l l ' l
Notre Dame
Purdue 1
Clemton
Geo Tech | i
Penn St
Rutger* 1
Michigan
Maryland l ' i
Wett Virg.nie
P'ttlburgh 1
George
So Carolina I
Baylor
Teit* Tech »
Auburn
Temniee l ' i
On« St
We*h ngton St 11
Kentucky
Cim m ati I)
Vugmn Tech
Syracute l ' i
Mi Hour i
Indan* it
Ntbretha
Oregon ll'y
Witcontm
Wyoming a
Houtlon
Lou'luHt &lt;0
Temple
EailCarptina I'y
F iw "da
M ntSI I t
T l l l l AAM
Tuita T
Alabama
Vanderbilt I)
Miu'tiippi
TuHno )
SMU
TCU 10
(Nebutt: Army Penn. Colgate Corr*n
Kenu* FloridaSl. NeoMencoSt Art
Air Force NroMteico. Coloredo
Arlnne. Cow Si San Dago Stale
Long Beech St UNLV. Uteh SI P a o lo

Thursday, Sept. 24, 1*15—*A

Ueberroth Pitch: Players Can
Test Positive Without Penalty
NEW YORK (UP!) - Standing
at the lectern In one of the
Waldorf-Astoria's huge banquet
rooms, Peter Ueberroth, a man
with a burdensome problem,
found himself flanked by an
American flag on one side and a
Canadian flag on the other.
He wasn't about to sing The
Star Spangled Banner or for that
matter. O Canada.
That wouldn't solve his pro­
blem. Nonetheless, the flags of
the two nations formed a perfect
background. Together, they
somehow called silent but strong
attention to the gravity of the
crisis facing Ueberroth in his
first year as baseball commis­
sioner plus the need for him to
do something Immediately about
It.
That was why he had called
Tuesday’s news conference. To
announce what he plans to do
about baseball's drug problem,
one which he. himself, openly
admits Is threatening the very
fiber
and foundation of the
game.
Basically, Ueberroth's pro­
posal is quite simple.
A few months ago. he In­
stituted a policy whereby all
baseball front office pcrsonnal

and all minor league players had
to submit to urinalysis so it
might be determined whether
they had any drugs In their
systems.
That’s mandatory.
What Ueberroth Is proposing
now is that the major league
players voluntarily be tested
three times during the season
between spring training and the
playoffs.
The key word there Is "volun­
tarily." Under the existing policy
betw een the m ajor league
players and the owners, the
players do not have to submit to
such tests. Their union, the
Players Association, has vigor­
ously and stridently opposed the
Idea of mandatory testing with
the claim It's an intrusion of the
players' privacy.

TRC's Late Power Show
Turns Back Boveri Bid

Ueberroth Is offerin g the
players his personal guarantee
that even If they test positive,
they will suffer no penalty.
Instead, he's saying, they will be
offered all possible help. He's
also assuring them of complete
confidentiality. In other words
they will not be held up lo public
criticism or scorn because their
transgressions won't be re­
vealed.
If walking the extra mile will
help persuade the players lo
agree to Ills plan, Ueberroth Is
doing that. too.
By the authority vested in him
as com m issioner, he could'
possibly suspend or ban for life
lhe seven players who have
testified with immunity from
prosecution In the Pittsburgh
drug trials, but he has decided
not lo lake any action against
them. Not now. anyway, because
he says he'd like to talk to them
personally and maybe hold his
own hearings later.
Dave Parker, Keith Hernandez.
Dale Berra, Lonnie Smith, Enos
Cabell and Jeff Leonard are the
active players who testified.
John Milner also has but he's no
longer playing.
See PITCH, Page 11A

P.J.’S C Y C LE C E N TER

BEACH
CRUISER

If Brown Boveri Electric had
more than two hits Wednesday
night. It might have pulled off
one of the biggest upsets In
Sanford Men's Softball League
single. Other key hits in the
history.
Inning included a two-run dou­
But two hits Just weren't
ble by Terry Russl and RBI
enough as the Tim Raines Con­ singles by Tracy Walker. Mark
nection claimed a 5-1 victory In Whitley and Bob Ordazo.
Sanford Men's Fall Softball
In games this Monday. Geyser
League play at Plnehurst Field.
Systems
takes on Sunnlland at
Brown Boveri had tied the
score at 1-1 in the top of the 6 :3 0 p .m .. B row n B o v e ri
fourth but Ned Raines' Jn- Electrics plays Sessions Well
stde-thc-park homer In the bot­ Drilling while Thorne Land
tom of the fifth broke the tic and Clearing meets Cardinal In­
dustries.
J o e B e n to n and B u r n e tt
W a s h in g to n c ru sh ed so lo
homers In the sixth to sew up
B F G O O D R IC H
the win.
W /M H IG H T E C H
The Connection ran Its record
1 / M F A C IA L S
to 7-0 with the win while Brown m
Boveri fell to 2-5.
W E M A K E C A R S PER FO R M
In other games Wednesday.
Sessions Well Drilling stuck
close to the Connection by up­
ending Thome Land Clearing,
5-2. and McKee Development
won Its second straight. 10-9.
over Cardinal Industries.
In the win over Thorne Land
Clearing, Sessions Well Drilling
scored three times In the first
then added two Insurance runs
HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS, _____
In the sixth. RBI singles by Ray
B o w l i n g and Jo e Er v i n
highlighted the first inning while
Don Causseaux's double and
Pete Harrison's single provided
the runs In the sixth.
Session's Well Drilling, which
A b o v e P ric e s G o o d F o r
Improved to 6-1 with the win,
M o st C a rs &amp; L ig h t T ru c k s
held Thorne Land Clearing (4-3)
to four hits.
In W ednesday's nightcap,
A O K TIR E M A R T
McKee Development rallied for
M o n f r i 8 1 jo
So*
H II Noon
seven runs In the bottom of the
seventh for a come-from-behlnd
322-7480
___ _
victory over Cardinal Industries.
Bcrnle Von Herbulls drove In
the winning run with a two-out

S o f t b a ll

*99
f IAVI
£ ' » ‘ S0
r,

ON
M\|trf

IN BOX

RALEIGH BICYCLES
SKATEBOARDS
5 POINTS PLAZA 17-92 LAKE MARY
FLEA WORLD (fri., Sot, Sm .)

321-2004

ju m

.

Y e llo w

Paqes
Deadline

FRONTBRAKE108*44.95

REARBRAKEJOB *44.95
ALIGNMENT
*14.95
OIL CHANGE A LUBE*9.95

C a ll N o w 628-5000
THE

INSTALLED(aacli) *12.95
FRT.C.V.
BOOTREPAIR *44.95

D U N N ! I 11 *

CPHOME L I
BOOK M
I Itllll ll III \ I till l ll&gt;l N
ISH

U r u t l- . l
Tok*|rt*&lt; ***•

Syslwn

-

Oviedo Hosts Fall Little League
Oviedo Little League will host a fall baseball program for
children from 5 to 8 years of age on Saturdays during the
months of October and November.
Registration will be held at the Oviedo Little League
complex on King Street In Oviedo on Saturday. Sept. 21
from 11 a.m to 4 p.m.. and Tuesday, the 24th from 7 to 9
p.m. A donation of $20 per player will be requested and
volunteers to coach are also being sought.
There will be two division: Boys and girls ages 5 to 7 who
will not be moving on to the minor league division in the
spring will play T-ball. And boys and girls 7 to 8 who plan
on playing minor league ball.
Pfay will begin on Saturday. Oct. 5 and conclude on
Saturday, Nov. 21. Games will be held at 10 a.m. and noon.

Wacker: TCU Expects Probation
FORT WORTH. Texas (UPI! — Texas Christian Universi­
ty expects lo be put on probation by the NCAA because of
recent revelations that football players accepted cash from
school boosters.
NCAA Investigators met Wednesday with coach Jim
Wacker and Athletic Director Frank Windegger and asked
the TCU officials not to comment on the Investigation.
TCU turned Itself in to the NCAA and suspended seven
players — Including All-America running back Kenneth
Davis — who admitted taking money front boosters.
Wacker told the school's booster organization that as
many as 29 current and former players took Improper
payments ami he expects the NCAA to place TCU on
probation.

B EFO R E Y O U FIN A N CE
A N Y C A R , FIN D O U T W H AT'S B EST
A B O U T O U R B EST LO A N .
ied for any make or model o f any foreign or
omestic new or used car.
Com pare our Best Loan to any financing
lywhere. C a ll our toll-free financial hotline at
1- 800- 342- 2705. You’ll see
A t la n t ic B a n k

A ny lender can give you an auto loan, and some
may look like bargains. B ut our Best Loanswhas
no pre-payment penalty. Interest is charged only
on the unpaid balance. So if you sell your car or
pay it o ff early, there is no extra fee or interest.
And best o f all, our Best Loan can be

wp

T1*k R a c k R a n k A rm a n rl’"

Atlantic National Uank of Florida
With 120 Branch Office* Statewide

Mcmix-r FDIC

AAcEnroe Easily Defeats Arias
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - John McEnroe, playing with
some reservations about the status of his game, easily
defeated Jimmy Arias Wednesday nlghl at a $227,000
tennis tournament.
"I hope I don't tire out before the weekend like I did In
my Saturday match with Wilandcr In the Open and then
have to come out and meet Lendl," said McEnroe, who lost
to the Czechoslovakian in (he U.S. Open finals.
McEnroe's quick victory was In sharp contrast to the
previous mulch In which fourth seeded Ellol Tcltscher
narrowly avoided an upset outlasting veteran Davis Cup
performer VIJay Amrttraj 6-4. 6-7 (9-7) 7-5 to reach the
quarterfinals.
»

ln n k h e st.

i

�10A— Evening Herald, Santord. FI.

Farr Bails
O ut Royals

Thursday, Sept. 36, teas

Cards Run Lead To 4
United Press International
The St. Louts Cardinals picked up another name on
the New York Mets Wednesday. But as the race winds
down. Vince Coleman says the Cards must keep
running.
"We have to keep aggressive." said Coleman alter St.
Louis defeated Philadelphia 6-3 to Increase the
Cardinals' lead In the NL East lo four games over New
York. "No one can think about relaxing yet."
Coleman, who has been a burst of energy since being
recalled from Louisville In April, refuses to slop
running. A top candidate for Rookie of the Year.
Coleman stole three bases against the Phillies, giving
him 105 for the season. That Is the second highest total
In history for a National Leaguer. He surpassed Maury
Wills' 1962 total of 104 and Is 13 shy of Lou Brock's
NL mark which he set In 1974. Rickey Henderson
holds the major-league mark of 130.
"When I’m on. you can expect me to go." Coleman
said. "There's never a minute when I'm on that I'm not
thinking of stealing. 1 go out and try to put myself In
scoring position for the Cardinals."
The 24-year-old speedster has certainly done that
enough times this year and he is a major reason why
the Cardinals are In first place.
"He really helped us to turn It around." St. Louis
manager Whltcy Herzog said. “ He's gol a bright future.
He'll have a game sometime when he'll get six Istolen
bases). That’s cause he can steal third."
The Cardinals, who have won six In a row and 13 of
I heir last 14 games, lowered their magic number for
clinching the division to seven. The Mets fell lo
Chicago 5-4. Both St. Louis and New York have 10
games remaining. Including three against each oilier
next week In St. Louis.
Danny Cox. 17-9. struggled through seven Innings,
but earned the victory. Jeff Lahti pitched the final two

N.L. Baseball
In n in g s to e a rn Ills 18th s a v e .

Tommy Herr ripped a three-run homer for the Cards.
At Chicago, pinch-hitter Chris Spelcr singled off
reliever Jesse Orosco, bringing home Davey Lopes with
two out in the bottom of the ninth. The Mets wasted a
4-1 lead provided by Gary Carter's grand slnm. Lee
Smith. 7-4. worked two Innings of scoreless relief to
earn the triumph.
Willi two out. Lopes walked and stole second and
third before Bob Dernier wnlked. Speler then stroked a
2-2 pilch lo left field.
Pirates 8. Expos 2
At Pittsburgh. Rick Reusehel, 14-7. threw a
five-hit ter and Tony Pena drove In three runs to lead
i lie Pirates. Reusehel struck out seven and walked
none in his ninth complete game. Montreal starter Bill
Laskey fell to 5-15.
B ra v e s 4, R e d s 2

At Cincinnati, rookie third baseman Wade Rowdon
committed back-to-back two-base throwing errors In
the I lih inning, sending Atlanta past the Reds.Gene
Garber. 6-6. picked up the victory and Ted Power. 7-5.
took the loss.
A s tr o s 6, D o d g e rs 4

At Houston. Kevin Bass hit a two-run homer In the
bottom of the lOlli to pace the Astros. Despite the loss.
Los Angeles' magic number for clinching the NL West
dropped lo six. The Dodgers lead Cincinnati by six
games.
P a d r e s 7, G i a n t s 4

At San Diego. LaMarr Hoyt scattered seven hits over
seven Innings to pick up his 16th victory and Steve

Vince Colem an
... 105 stolen bases

Chris S p eler
...hit beats M ets

Garvey and Greg Nettles each drove in a pair of runs to
lead the Padres.
BERRA. MILNER PLAY SAME ROLE
PITTSBURGH (UPI) — Ex-Pirates Dale Berra and
John Milner, chief witnesses in the pending trial of
Robert "R av" McCuc. will be forced to play the same
role In the government's third cose against baseball's
alleged cocaine connections, according to court
documents filed Wednesday.
The jury in McCuc's trial deliberated 7 l/i hours
Wednesday without reaching a verdict on the 13
counts charging the 38-ycar-old part-time Pittsburgh
disc Jockey and fired Easter Seal Society comptroller
with selling cocaine to Berra and Milner between June
1983 and January 1985.
The non-sequestered panel of 10 women and two
men was sent home and ordered to return this
morning to resume deliberations.
Jury selection Is scheduled to begin Friday In the
(rial of Jeffrey Mosco, 30. of Pittsburgh. He is charged
with 12 counts of selling cocaine to major-leaguers in
Pittsburgh between August 1981 and December 1985.
Berra. Milner and another cx-PIrate. Rod Scurry,
were named as potential witnesses In government
documents listing questions to be asked during Jury
seleetlon.

BASEBALL R O U N D U P
STANDINGS
N A TIO N A L
E**t

A M E R IC A N
E a st

LEAG U E
GB
W L Pet.
—
94 56 637
4
93 40 605
79 73 530
17
34
7t 79 473
3 4 'l
71 80 470
43
57 96 347

St L o u is
N ew Y o rk
M o n tre a l
P h ila d e lp h ia
C h ic a g o
P ltH b u rg h
W est
Lo* A n g e le s
C in c in n a ti
Houston
San D iego
A tla n ta
San F ra n c is c o

89 43 564
—
6
B? 6* 547
11
78 74 513
77 75 507
I?
6? 89 4tt
36' j
30
59 93 388

W e d n e sd a y's R esult*
C h ic a g o } . N ew Y o rk t
P itts b u rg h *, M o n tre a l J
A tla n ta a. C in c in n a ti 1 . 11 Innings
St L o u is a . P h ila d e lp h ia 3
Houston a. L o s A n g e le s a. to Innings
San D ieg o 7. San F r a n c is c o 4
Thursday'* Game*
A tla n ta IB e d ro sia n 7-131 at C in c in n a ti
(M c G a ttig a n } 3). 12 35 p m
H e * Y o rk (Gooden 73 a) at C h icag o
1Abrego I 0), 3 70 p m
M o n tre a l (G u tllck so n 13 i l l at P u ts
b u rg h (R h o de n * la ). 7 35p m
P h ila d e lp h ia IK . G ro s s la tt ) at St
L o u is (T u d o r t t l ) . * 3 5 p m
Friday's Games
P h ila d e lp h ia at Ch icag o
St L o u is at M o n tre a l, nigh t
N ew Y o rk at P ittsb u rg h , nig h t
San D ieg o at A tla n ta , night
Houston at C in c in n a ti, nig h t
San F ra n c is c o at Los A ng e le s, night

LEAGU E
GB
L Pet.
—
95 54 679
89 6? 589
6
79 71 537
IS’ J
79 73 570
1 6 'j
19' 1
76 76 500
67 84 444
78
4t&gt; J
55 99 357
W

T oronto
New Y o rk
B a ltim o re
D e tro it
Boston
M ilw a u k e e
C le v e la n d
W est

C a lifo r n ia
86 66 566 —
8 5 66 563
•l
K a n s a i C ity
70 73 517
7 'i
C h ic a g o
74 78 483
1?
O a k la n d
71 01 467
15
Seattle
70 8? 461
16
M in n e so ta
57 94 ,377
78'9
Te«a*
W e d n e sd a y's R esu lts
C le v e la n d 7. O a k la n d 7
Boston a T o ro nto 3. 13 Innings
New Y o rk 10 D e tr o it?
M ilw a u k e e ? B a ltim o re 0
M in n e so ta 5. Te«a* I
C a lifo r n ia 7. C h ic a g o 4
K a n sa s C ity 5. S e attle 4
T h u rs d a y ’s G a m e s
Boston
(S e lle rs
1 0)
at
T o ro nto
( A le ia n d e r la 8 ) 7 3 S p m
D e tro it ( T e r r e ll )3 101 at N ew Y o rk
(S h irle y J 4 t, * p m
B a ltim o re
(D
M a r t in e i
13 9)
at
M ilw a u k e e (H a a s 8 71. 8 35 p m
M in n e so ta (S m ith so n 14 12 ) at T e v a s
l&amp; u im a n 131. 8 :3 5 p m
K a n sa s C it y iL e ib r a n d t 15 8 ) at S e attle
( S w ift} 9). 10 35p m
C h ic a g o ( B a n n is te r 7 14) a t O a k la n d
( C o d ir o ll 13 13). 10 35 p m
F r id a y 's G a m e s
C h ic a g o at O a k la n d , nig h t
Boston at D e tro it, night
B a ltim o re at N ew Y o rk , night
T o ro nto at M ilw a u k e e , night

RESULTS
WrennAir'i Mj|*r L il|a t teukali
R e s e l l s
■r Umtfd Prei* Inltmahtut

NltWUlU4tM

N » Turk
IM IM N C -III
Chum
iM M im - m
Dl'iing McDoet i 111. O n to (II I'M
C * -r ' i " e i a i Bt t (71, S'* •* III I K
04.1 W-Smit" 1741 L-O-3M0 &gt;• II
N#-he« Tori, C*nf" (It)
Menlrtll
Pittltaritl
l*»e&gt;

Luc«

MO MC tw - 1 II
144 MJ Mi - I I I I
III
II)

0Conner l 4-d You (tfvK-e e-dP***
* - Ot.ictiii i l l J| l - L i i t t r II
"S Uo'-'rj W olliekllll

(It m
w.ngsI

41141114
CUKmull

til

MlM
O«M17- « ’ I
MClMtMM-m

Me*** Sort*- (ll C4-"p lilt o*d
Benejict Cef c"»
T e ti Hjn-e III.
S'*"cc

li

Poet-

HOI

o-o

Dot

B'■*'!&gt;* 0 VO" Ooraw A-Gl-ber lit I
L-Po*w it 11
Philadelphia

711100 MO - I tl I

51 Lovit

It) MO M i - I I I 1

Hudson C&lt;"drtti Id 4"drten (i)
S" 04"0“ I Tolu »« III 4*6 Virj.I Co.
14*1, III 4*0 Portr IK-Coi (11 *1
l-Hudson It lit HR-51 Louis Mr* IT)

Saa Fraacitra
I M I lim - l t l
Saa Defa
111 170 Mi - t III
(Alton Rob.nwn ill. Mutton (f). Ward
HI Moor* i ll and No*as. Troumo Hoyt
LtHrrti III. Gotsag* i ll and ktnnidr
W-Hcyt H il l L-Maion 1011 MR-Sa*
Francnco Lw njrdlltl

O r . t iW
]«IMM0 - n i l
Oakland
I I I MOI M- 1 I t
Creel Von0ni*n It) and Bando Jonn
Vvra (71.Conroy 141 McCarty III and
r*m*ton 0 Bren W-Creel IMl L -Jo h n

14 Id
Detroit
I N I N M l - I 41
Nee Tirk
1U 1I I III - II 111
Worr.t Scterrr III. Stoddard Itl and
Paw.ih, M el." J Nekro Fis*er II). Scurry
Id and Massey A - J N eiro (I II L Mcrr.t (IS 11) H R-Ne* Tort M jltn ] r
III]
bltim ara

Flanagan and D*r*ps*y Cocancer
a*d Moor* W-Cocanoe&lt;r (S tl
LF'anaganiiSl

MO 1M MO I - I * I

Hondo*
000 OX «O0 ] - 111
Vi+*ij*l4 S t d r 'u r HOI n d Sc-os t-j
Pro* 04**r (71. Ci *ou* HI So(4*0 ltd
4*d 4i*t, Be *, A - So one (371 L h t d r t x - . t l HRt-Hjvtto* Da.s lit)
Bass i l l i

111 no M7 - 1 1 1

Tom
MO I t l OM - 111
Btytoytn and Salas Russnu SeOrt ill.
Henry III and SHugM W - t ly e r M (IS III.
L-R usieii (II) H R -T e n s Me Do eon lt d

llliMmfi)
Las 4 *0*1*'

M O M M -III

111w III - ] 11

Mlr e t a il

lettoe
Troirta

111.

Cttkagi
mi d im - o i l
Calitaraia
ell 111 OCi — t i l
Burns Sp-Hnr III, Tomer Id and
Fuk. Romanics Moor* it) and Boon*
W-Rofltan'Ck (ta ll. L - Burnt ( 1| Id
HRt-Chicago HuNtl (SI. Fnk (IT). Kittle

Bradley. Saa
letauU la m
Molitor. M&lt;l
119 SM 99 119
Hu m Rais
Nat oral League - Murphy ATI
G u rrro
LA 77 C r t r . NY
Schnudt. Phil. 30. P arkr, Cm 71
4mr'Can League - Erans Del
Fisa. Chi 37. Rjtxyv KC 14 G Thomas
17. Matt.ngiy. NY a"d Murray Balt 71

Hansel City
9 M I3 IJK -IH I
Siam*
M I N N 7 - 4 II
Satirhagrn Farr III and Sunmrg
Toung Vande B rg Itl. R Ttomas Itl and
Scott W-Saorhagrn (III), L - Young
It} It) HR-Seatte. P*»)ps(II

Nat«nai League - Parte- Cm til.
H rr. StL 19). Murphy Alt 197 C r t r h
Brooks. MH and Moreland Chi It
Amncan League - Mattingly. NY IT)
Murray Balt lit. Banes Chi 'M Wmle'd
NY I9t Rm Bos and Ripken Bt" &lt;97

l»l, CaliforniaBanquetII

4mtncaaLtafu*

Mileaukn

Boston. Etani (lit Green e ill
Toronto lorg (It. Burroughs (II

(II Mimes)

M0M07IM
OI - IIII
MI1INI MI-1 III

H url1. Cranford 1191 Trujillo (111
Loitar l i lt and Su'l&gt;ran Sj i Key A c i r
id Caudii (7i C a rla Itl F . r Id M*ni*
(III Cerytti 111) and tdfh.tt Hcosa w Crantord O il. L - C r u fli (81) H « l-

LEADERS
Ma|ar L a a ia t Leadirt
ly United Prtsi latiraahaaal
I a I I I a g
11 *ted an 1.1 N all aogaafaacts i m at
g a m ti ta ck loom k it ylayedl
Natwiallaafw
r k pel
« a
U3I7) 113 306 1*6
McGee SH. _
Gjerrere L*’
117 4JJ HUT 17)
Hemet. Mil
147 549 104 If) lit
Perker Cm
IffSfl 10 1*4 111
Herr. SH
150 k) W itt 111
141171 19*117 ro
Stndber} Clu
Geynn. 50
145 5*4 71111 no
Outer Cm
141400 U 1*1 70]
Mwelend. CM
151 US U IM m
Crvi. Hew
114 SH *4 1*4 w
kmencea Uefw*
r k pc'
1 *
6099*. Be*
111 010 180 777 J77
Brett. KC
US sis 1® 173 134
tttndermi NY
147 n*
D3S13
M4t1rng1j. MY
14* 111 19119 134
Berne* CM
141 SH UIM J1I
Bw’ ie*. CM*
144 541 161 173 X7
Cooper, Mil
145 S»3 D ID 30
ik « u S3 141 391
Ged-non. 601

Id
bo
It
Ji
and
Sea

Ruetlettedla

SMta lasts
National League - Coleman StL (OS
Rimes Mil IS. Sandberg Chi and
McGee. StL S3 Lopes Chi and Redut Cm it
Amrican League - Henderson NY tl
Pettit Cat Si Butir. Cle* u Wilson. kC
it 5m,th KCl*

RAINES GAUGE
RAINES GAUGE (through Sept IS)
Citegary-------------- --------------- M
Gomes
tit
ai

t in

Mitt....................
RBI
GW RBI

Aver 09*

I)
tl)

S77 541
in &gt;04
\ m in
I?
k
i]
4
17 Jl
s
n
1
i
71 7| U '74
4
3
313 i n

Tim Runes ntumed to t*e i nevp tut nrtO
tor i at the E*pos lost to Pittiturgn A rt*'
ago. R amet nentt tor 4and tide hn 11tt base

Florida State Plans To Correct Oversight
United Press International
With Miami of Florida winning l he
national championship In 1983 and the
University of Florida winning a tainted
Southeastern Conference title in 1984.
there's been a tendency of late to
overlook the other major college football
learn in the Sunshine State.
Hut Florida State has been busy this
fall correcting that oversight.
The Scmtnolcs are currently No. 5
after a 3-0 start that included a 17-13
victory over 14th-ranked Nebraska in
Lincoln. Neb., and they've gol an
opportunity to enhance that position
Saturday night when they host un­
b e a te n . 2 Ol h -ra nked K an sas in
Tallahassee.
"It has been harder for us to gain
national recognition than for some of the
more traditionally big-name schools,"
says Bobby Bowden, in his 10th season
as head coach of the Semlnoles. "Thai's
why it was extremely important for us to
get off to a good start.
"Our first three games were seen
coast-lo-coast and that sel tIil* stage for
the rest of the year. The networks paid
us a great tribute and I'm happy we were
uble to meet the challenge."

Football
Visiting Nebraska, ranked No. 3 or
belter in each of the three previous
seasons, loomed as an awfully big
challenge. But Bowden, who hits seen Ills
team pull off some pretty big road upsets
In the past, said lie never doubted the
Semlnoles' chances.
"This team is so young. 1 felt all along
that they were capable of rising up and
pulling ofl a big upset like they did ill
Nebraska." said Bowden. "But. by the
same token, the problem with all dial
youth is that they are just as capable ol
falling down somewhere along the line."
That almost happened two weeks later
when the Semlnoles had to come from
behind in the second hall last Saturday
lo down Memphis State. 19-10
"That didn't surprise me us much as it
seemed lo surprise some other people."
said Bowden. "I said beforehand that we
had to he wary about Memphis Slaic
(which tied the Semlnoles in '84). I knew
they were a darn fine lootball team, one
I h;it has caused problems for a lot of

teams.
"The secret to that win. Just like the
win at Nebraska, was our ability to shut
out our opponent In the second half."
said Bowden. "Had our defense not
played as well as it did. we would have
lost."
Florida State quarterback Danny
McManus had a miserable afternoon
against Memphis State. Not only was he
knocked unconscious for the second
game In a row (he suffered a mild
concussion last Saturday but is expected
to start against Kansas), he completed
only five of 15 passes for 68 yards.
"W e wanted to throw on Memphis
State." said Bowden. "But every time
our quarterback cocked his arm. they
knocked him down. They totally abused
our offensive line. If we are lo have a
good season, our defense is going lo have
to be our salvation."
If Florida State plays Saturday like it
did the first three games, Kansas, which
Is averaging 37.3 ppg. better pour it on
in the first half since the Semlnoles
haven't given up a second-half point this
season.
"The difference between this year's
defense (which has given up an average

Elliott: 10 W ins, $1 M illion A re Enough
NORTH WILKESBORO. N.C.
(UPI) — Bill Elliott has a quick
come-back for ihc skeptics who
wonder If the Georgia redhead
has used up all his luck in
winning a $ 1 million bonus.
If Darrell Waltrip Is closing in
on him in the race for the
NASCAR points championship,
so what?
"What’s the points champion­
ship w o rth ? " Elliott asked
Wednesday. "I've got the SI
•million. I've won 10 races.
" I ’ve had a hell Of a year, no
mailer what happens from here
on out. No one can take that
away from me."
__ Waltrip gained 180 points on
Elliott with a win and two
second-place finishes in the past
three NASCAR races and is now
only 23 points back. That's a
razor-lhin margin with the
Mello-Yellow 400 coming up
Sunday at North Wllkesboro.
H a v in g his T h u n d e rb lrd
tangled In a wreck cost Elliott
some points last Sunday at
M artinsville, where W altrip
finished second behind Dale

NASCAR
Earnhardt. With 3.523 Winston
Cup points to Waltrlp’s 3.500.
Elliott said lie's looking for u
c h a n g e o f l uck at N o rth
Wllkesboro.
"You've gol U j have some
luck." he said. "I hud Darrell
down a lap lor the first 60 laps.
And look at what happened.
That's all part of it. You Just do
the best you can and keep
going."
Elliott, who leads the NASCAR
circuit in earnings and wins,
said North Wllkesboro was Im­
portant to him. but not so much
that he was going lo lose any
sleep over It.
"I'm Jusl going lo approach it
as any other race." Ellloli said.
"Last week I was in the wrong
place al the wrong time. I've
been a victim of someone rise's
mistakes. Now. I’ve Just gut lo go
on from there.”
Elliotl has won a record 10

races in 23 starts tills year,
earning nearly SI.9 million in
ilie process, lie's carved one
niche in the history books by
becoming tin* first driver to top
SI million in a year and is
assured of crossing Ihe S2 mil­
lion threshold with post-season
awards.
As far as Elliott was con­
cerned. any pressure hud to be
on WaltiIp. Waltrip himself ad­
mitted after the Old Dominion
500 he'd rulher be In front
looking back at the puck in the
{joints race.
"The pressure is on Darrell to
do good Jusl as much as it is
me." Elliott said. "I think we're
in pretty good shape right now.
I'm Jusl going to go oul this
week and do what I do best."
YARBOROUGH WINS TRIALS
HARRISBURG. N.C. (UIM) C alc Y arb orou gh o verto o k
first-round leader Geoff Hodine
to win the Miller Performance
1rials and $10,000 Wednesday
at t h c C h a r l o t t e M o t o r
Speedway.

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.
U IHS CA 9I E
SOUTHEAST M ORTGAGE
COM PANY
Plaintiff.
V I.

EUGENE WILLIAMS.•lal ,
Defendant*
NOTICE OF SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that on IS* llth day o( October
Iff}, al 11:00 a m ai ttia Watt
Front Door ol tha CourthouM ol
Sttninola County, Florida, at
S a n to rd , F lo r i d a , tha u n ­
d e r lin e d Clerk will otter for
tale to the highest bidder lor
cash tha following described
real proparty :
Lot HO. SP R IN G O A K S UNIT
4, according lo tha Plaf thereof
a* recorded in P lal Book 17,
Page* *5 and M , o l fha Public
Racord* of Seminole County,
Florida.
T o g a t h a r w it h a l l lh a
tlru c fu rtt and Improvamanti
now o r h a ra a tta r on la id
land.amd the rent*, ittuat. and
profit* of tha above detcribed
property, and all fixture* now
or hereafter attached lo or u*ed
In connection with the premise*
herein detcribed and In addition
thereto fha following detcribed
houtehold appliance*, which

of 11.7 ppgl and last (which have up an
average of 21.5) Is maturity," says
Semlnoles linebacker Paul McGowan.
"W e’re not making the same mistakes
we did last season."
While they didn’t heal the likes of
Nebraska in '84. the Semlnoles. who
wound up 7-3-1 and then tied Georgia In
the Citrus Bowl, won their first four
games — including a 42-16 victory at
Kansas — and didn't suffer their first
loss until Game No. 6 — a 42-41
shootout with Aubum.
Winning has become a way of life
under Bobby Bowden. His first season at
Tallahassee, after switching from West
Virginia in 1976. was 5-6 — but there
hasn't been a losing season since. His '79
team was 11-0 before losing to 3rdranked Oklahoma In the Orange Bowl
and his '80 team was 10-1 (the loss by
one (mint at Miami) before losing by one
point (18-171 (o again 3rd-rankcd
Oklahoma, again in the Orange Bowl.
"Everything I do is optimistic," says
Bowden. "I'm an optimistic person. I
always figure something good will
happen. I don't know how — but it will."

Legal Notice
are, end »hall be deemed to be,
future* and a pari of lha re a lty :
Thl* tale I* made pursuant lo
a Summary Final Judgment In
Forecloture entered In C ivil
Action No U I M 5 C A 0 9 E now
pending In the C ircuit Court In
a n d lo r S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Florida
D A T E D thl* 16th day of Sep
(ember. Ift5.

(SEAL)
O A V ID N B ER R IEN
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
By: Diane K. Brum m etl
Deputy Clerk
Publish: September 19.16, IMS

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
P R O R A T E DIVISION
File Number U S91 C P
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
E L I Z A B E T H E. S E Y M O U R .
Oecaaied

NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The a d m ln ltlra tlo n ol the
e s ta te o l E L I Z A B E T H
E.
S E Y M O U R , d e c e a ie d . F ile
Number 85 593 C P . I* ponding in
the Circuit Court lor Seminole
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , P ro b a ta
Dlvltlon, fha a d d re n of which It
Samlnola County Courthoute,
Sanford. Florida.
Tha name* and ed d rettei of
tha pergonal representative and
lha personal representative's
attorney are sat forth below.
A ll interested parson* are

United Press International
With Kansas City In danger of
falling 1 Vx games behind the
first-place California Angels In
the AL West, Royals manager
Dick Howscr made the logical
move, lie brought in Sieve Farr
lo hall a ninth-inning Seattle
rally.
Sieve Farr"?
With ace Dan Quiscnberry
mired In a latc-scason slump,
Howscr summoned Farr after
the Mariners closed within 5-4 In
the bottom of the ninth on a
two-out. three-run homer by Ken
Phelps.
Farr, after w alkin g Jack
Pcrcontc and watching shortstop
Buddy Hiancalana boot a routine
grounder, fanned plnch-hitlcr
Danny Tartabull to preserve the
victory and keep Kansas City
within a half-game of California.
Earlier, the Angels defeated the
White Sox 7-4.
"I was a little bit nervous,"
Farr said after his 13th appear­
ance and first save of the season.
"But Ibis Is my ninth year in the
gam e, so I b etter not get
hysterical.
"Qulsenbcrry is struggling a
little and needs some time off."
Tonight, the Royals complete
their three-game scries In Seattle
w hile the A ngels arc idle.
California, which plays Us final
10 games on the road. Is at
Cleveland on Friday.
A t the K ln g d o m e , B re t
Saberhagcn, 19-6, scattered nine
hits over 8 2-3 Innings for the
victory but departed after Phelps
pounded his ninth homer of the
year.
At Anaheim , Calif., Juan
Beniquez cracked a thrcc-run
homer and Pcltls stroked a
two-run double for the Angels.
Ron Romanick. 14-8. scattered
six hits, including three homers,
over 6 2-3 innings for the
victory. Donnie Moore finished
for his 29th save.
Chicago's Carlton Fisk deliver­
ed his 37th homer of the season,
tying Dick Allen's club record
established in 1972. It was
Fisk's 33rd homer as a catcher,
establishing a league mark.
In the AL East chase, the New
York Yankees defeated Detroit
10-2 to move within six games of
first-place Toronto.
Red Box 4, Blue Jays 2
At T o ro n to , rook ie Mike
Greenwell hit his first majorleague homer — a two-run shot
In the 13th — to lift the Red Sox.
The Blue Jays had tied It 2-2 in
the ninth when pinch-hlttcr Jeff
Burroughs belted a solo homer
off starter Bruce Hurst.
Yankees 10, Tigers 2
At New York. Don Mattingly
drove in four runs — two with
his 31st homer — and Joe
Niekro posted his first AL victory
since 1972 to spark the Yankees.
Mattingly went 3-for-5 and In­
creased his major-league leading
RBI total to 135. Jack Morris,
15-11, took the loss.
Brewers 3, Orioles O
At M i l w a u k e e , J a i m e
Cocanowcr fired an eight-hitter
for his first career shutout and
Randy Ready singled, doubled
and scored twice lo lead the
Brewers. Cocanower. 5-7, hurled
his third complete game of the
season.
Indiana 7, A ’a 2
At Oakland, Calif., Benny
Ayala and Chris Bando each
drove in two runs to Ignite
Cleveland. Keith Creel, 1-5, pit­
ched 6 2-3 innings for the
triumph. Tommy John. 4-10,
look the loss.
Twins 5, Rangers 1
Ai Arlington, Texas, Bert
Blylcven threw a five-hitter and
Roy Sm alley contributed a
two-run single as Minnesota
snapped the Rangers' five-game
winning streak. For Blyteven,
15-16, H was his fifth complete
game victory over Texas this
year.

Legal Notice
required fo flit with thl* court,
W IT H I N T H R E E M O N T H S
FRO M THE DATE OF THE
FIR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O T IC E : i l l ell claim s
against tha atfale and (?) any
objections by an Interested
person to whom notice was
mailed that challenges the valid
Ity of lha w ill, the qualification*
o( the personal representative,
or the venue or jurisdiction ol
the court.
A L L C LA IM S A N D O B J E C
TIONS N O T SO F I L E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Publication ol this Notice has
begun on September 16. IMS
Personal Representative
C H E S T E R
L Y N N
S E Y M O U R . JR
P O Box MO
Winter Park, F L 13790
Attorney tor
Personal Represen tally#
JO H N DeM. H A IN E S O F Win
derwoedle, Haines, Ward. A
Woodman, P.A.
ISO Park A ve. So , PO Box MO
Winter Park, F L 17790
Telephone (105) 664 6312
Publish: September 36. October
1. IMS
D E J 174

NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue of that certain
W rit of Execution Issued out ol
and under the seal ot tha County
C o u rt o l Sam ln ola County,
Florida, upon a final lodgement
rendered In the aforesaid court

Legal Notice
on the 19th d^y ol October, A .O
'M l, In that certain cate en
titled, Atlantic National Bank ol
Santord, Plaintllf, - v s — M artin
M c L a u g h lin &amp; D o ris Jo a n
M cLaughlin, Defendant, which
aforesaid Writ ot Execution was
delivered to me as Sheriff of
Seminole County, Florida, and I
have levied upon tha tallowing
described property owned by
Doris Jean M cLaughlin, said
p ro p e r ty b eing lo c a te d In
Seminole County. Florida, more
p a r t i c u l a r l y d e s c r ib e d a t
follows:
O n e 1979 P o n tia c 4-door
Automobile. Maroon In Color. ID
* ZNG9Y9PI3992S. being stored
at T r i- C o u n t y T o w in g ,
Long wood. Florida,
and tha undersigned as Sharllf
ol Seminole County. Florida,
will at 11 00 A M . on tho 17th
day ol October. A D. IMS. otter
lor sale and sail to tha highest
bidder, lor cash. sub|ect to any
and all existing tains, a l lha
Front (West) Door at tha steps
ol the Seminole County Court­
house In Sanford. Florida, tha
above described personal pro

porty.

Thai said s a lt Is being mad#
lo satisfy tha terms of said Writ
ol Execution.
John E . Polk, Sharllf
Seminole County, Florida
To bo pUillshed September 34,
October 2 . *. 14, with the sale on
October 17, IMS
D E J 1M

l

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

. . . Lewis
Continued from 8A
get around."
And Lewis, the son of San­
ford's Julia Mae Lewis, plans
to fit the mold, which was
further enhanced last year by
Fred Brinson and Walt Lowry,
both of whom made the AilCounty first team. "My main
goal Is be an All-American,"
he said following a 20-13 loss
to Titusville. It's a big goal,
one achieved by only Dallas
Brown and Clifford Martin.
But with a goal like that, one
d o e s n 't need any oth er
motivation.
Lewis took a step in that
direction against Titusville.
The 6-1, 180-poundcr col-

...Pitch

Herald Photo by Tommy Vlncont

Disqualifying News

Continued from 9A

C ra z y Lu ke G ra h a m slip s between the ropes as Bugsy
M c G ra w a p p lie s the pressure in pro w restlin g action
W ednesday at the Sanford C iv ic Center. Ju st under 100 fans
w itnessed M c G ra w w in by d is q u a lific a tio n . In the tag team
battle, p ittin g R a vish in g R a n dy Rose and P re tty Boy Doug
Som ers a g a in st G olden Boy C h ic D onavan and Cowboy B ill
M a c k , it ended in double d isq u a lifica tio n .

Leave It to Peter Ueberroth. He
doesn't make too many wrong
moves.
Politically or public
rclatlons-wlsc. In this latest one.
all he has to do Is win over the
up-to-now adamant Players
Association and he may pull It

Thursday, Sept. 36, 1915— 11A

lectcd 6 tackles. 5 assists and
a quarterback sack to earn
Optimist Club of Sanford
co-dcfcnsivc player of the
week honors with linebacker
Brian Brinson.
Lewis, too. seems to have a
ferocity which Is sometimes
lacking In (he high school
player. Often, the prep player
can’t turn on the meanness
on the football field and turn
It off out of uniform. So many
times the dividing line be­
tween All-American or AllSlater versus All-County Is
bridged by that tenacity as
well as ability.
Lewis said he knows the
d iffe re n c e and he made
Titusville quarterback Bobby
Guthrie his first example.
Sem inole trailed, 14-0.
Guthrie faded to pass as the

second quarter opened. Lewis
muscled past his defender
and headed straight for the
t}B. Guthrie, was, trapped,
overwhelmed by the quick­
ness and strength of Lewis.
The big sophomore engulfed
him and p r o m p t l y put
Guthrie on his backside.
It wus his first varsity sack,
one he recalled with relish. "It
was the 72 flex." Lewis said
about the defensive align­
ment. "It hod been clogged up
all night but this time It was
wide open."
Even more Impressive than
the sack was the way he went
about It. "1 wanted to hit him
soooooo hard," Lewis re­
counted. "But I couldn't...this
time. I wanted to make sure
that 1got him first."
But there was a next time.

Later In the quarter. Guthrie
again faded to throw. Lewis
unloaded on him as he re­
leased the ball. A good, clean
hard shot. Guthrie didn’t play
the second half. "The next
time." Lewis said with Just a ■
hint of a smile, “ I got him
out."
It's this tenacity and deter­
mi n a t i o n w h ic h a llo w s
Mosurc to speak of Lewis In
glowing tones despite his In­
experience at the varsity
level. "He's definitely as good
as any sophomore I've worked
with." Mosurc said. "That
Includes (Chicago Bear wide
receiver) Dennis McKinnon.
He can be a tremendous
player by the time he's
through here.”
He s p o k e w i t h g r e a t
earnest, of course.

off for several reasons.
Maybe the most Important one
Is that his plan avoids turning
this situation Into one of those
we-agalnst-them confrontations.
He’s using the soft approach,
hoping he'll catch more flics
with honey than vinegar.
"Although there has been
great demand for me to take
dramatic action. Landls-llkc. If
you will, I'm not going to do that
today," Ueberroth said In an

obvious reference to the lifetime
ban Imposed by baseball’s first
commissioner. Judge Kencsaw
Mountain Landis, on eight of the
Black Sox players even though
they had been acquitted by a
court of throwing the 1919
World Scries.
Ueberroth quoted Landis as
once saying "1 want every player
to feel I'm behind him and I'm
Ills friend — so long as he's on
the square." and Ueberroth said

he feels the same way about the
players.
More to the point, he also told
them that If they don't go along
with his Ideas voluntarily, they
may have to do so Involuntarily
In the long run. He said he
already has been given notice by
members of the Senate and the
House that baseball could be
subject to future governmental
intervention If It doesn't solve Its
own problems.

...Schnitker
Continued from 8A
guidelines. "You had to be
under a certain weight to be
able to play and I was always
too big.”
So after being unable to
play

in

middle

school,

S ch n itk er also bypassed
playing football during his
freshman year. He waited
until entering his sophomore
year at Lake Howell to begin
playing.
He began his high school
career as a starting linebacker
and fullback for the Silver
Hawk Junior varsity during
the 19H3 season and helped
lead them to a 3-3 record.
‘ Although starting at the
fullback position. Schnitker
was used mainly ns a blocking
back though for the team's
fleet-footed halfback. Terry
Gammons.
Last year us a ju n ior,
Schnitker moved up to the
varsity squad and was one of
th e t e a m ' s s t a r t i n g
linebackers. He was also a
backup fullback. But It wus
not until the eighth game of
the season against Lake Mary
that Schnitker showed how
valuable of a runner he could
be for the Silver Hawks.
With the team's starting
fullback out with an Injury,
Schnitker got the starting
assignment. He ran effectively
against a strong Lake Mary
defense and scored the winn­
ing touchdown as the Silver
Hawks handed the Rams their
only regular-season loss. 10-7.
He also started in Lake
Howell’s final two games of
1984 against Lyman and
Winter Park and performed
well.
Heading Into this season.
Blsccglla was counting on
Schnitker to play a major part
In the Silver Hawks offensive
attack and the big fullback
has responded with 269 yards
in two games — Including a
177-yard and 2-touchdown
performance in the team's
opener — to place a close
second to Oviedo's Andrew
Smith (276 yards) In the race
for the county rushing title.
Lake Howell has gotten off to
a 2-0start.
"Mark came into his own
toward the end of last year."
Blsccglla said. "And so we
were counting on him and
Terry Gammons to give us a
good running game this year.
But with Terry's Injury and
now Derlngton possibly being
out (Gammons replacement
at halfback who has dcvcldped a sprained wrist), every­
thing has been put on his
shoulders."
But under those or any type
of clcurmstunces. the success
of Schnitker will not surprise
Bisceglla.
"Mark's heart Is bigger than
he Is." Dlsccgliu said. "He Is
Just a real good competitor.
He will give me 100 percent
all the time.
"I believe one of the most
important ussests In a player
Is their competitiveness. And
Mark Is just b o competitive In
' all sports."
Schnitker. who 'also plays
v a r s i t y b u s k e tb a ll and
baseball, has a few goals In
mind he would like to ac­
complish during the 1985
football season for himself
and the team.
"I would really like to gain
1,000 yards." he said. "I want
to Just go as hard as I can and
be a team leader on olTensc.
"Winning the new (SAC)
conference would be great. I
think we have the ability to
win it."

1

Gumout
Jet-Spray
Carts
Cleaner

Partm &amp;

Accessories
Catalogue
• New Low Pricesl

.99

• Larger Selection!

M l IT
A il or

• Fast Delivery!

A ft e r $1.10 Factory MaOH

Prestone
Super Sealer
or
Super Flush
sale Price MJ9
3.49 atiqi
•FIT IMC UJOO&lt;totort

Prestone Super Radiator Cleaner

V
J

Q

/

indudes ratchet
a extension
1

5.99

5.99

Heavy
lliy i
Duty
Shock
Absorbers L-JW 1

wtlmar 40 Piece
:ketSet

Autovalue made bv
Gabriel.
Sites to fit
Most Domestic can

DISC

Brake

Most trucks
-tp e m c a r

import Cert l Ti

rm

S u re S to p V 1
■ ra k e S h o e s

79.95 * .

49.95

d u n g s to s F rim
E x tra U fe A T Filter

M allory I
D ual-P ointi
D istributors

lasts 30* longer
stops SOX more a r t |

2 .9 9

29.951

sparkom atlc
Pick-up T|
Shifter

Fram Air
Filters

W e lo n d
In ta k e M a n ifo ld
Fits most smM block Chevrolet v e t

improves performance t gas nweage
Sues for Most V B1

ip irt ovation and more
c o n time for a notter
-

• M t _____

109,95

e m gnM octnc cap
_
w rot0f« Yl Series Chevrolet V-»

:ars

. -192. &gt;24*.

29.95

H A * » » 1- A m

36 M on th
A u to su re
B atteries

m A ir Fitter*

E x c e p c 8 7 43 6

I-S3S, M W . « 0 A »2■5434. -M2*

3 2 .9 5

Holley 4 Barrel
Carburetor

I s o M o n t h B a t t e r i e s 3 7 .9 5
16 0 M o n t h B a t t e r i e s 4 4 . 9 5
I an Batteries with exchange

4- I l i -f -|— j

PafteBta
A

M W v nave

V

O RLA N D t
1311 F a irb a n k s Avo.
®
a l E d g e w a te r D r.

629*8790
4 060 O a k R id g e R d .

351-6766

meso

600 cfm

prices good through October 3. -tys .

APOPKA
M T. D O R A
W IN T E R G A R D E N
123 W . M ain S I.
G o ld e n T ria n g le C tr.
W est O ra n g e S h o p p in g C e n te r
6 8 6 -8 8 2 0
3 8 3 -8 1 3 5
606 So u th D illard St.
LEESBU RG
SA N FO RD
8 7 7 -2 8 6 1
6 1 6 S o u th 14th St.
6 0 S W . 25th St.
3 2 3 -4 4 7 0

w

»

Hedman Headers!

r

r

13rd.

c«« i n n

�12A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday. Sept, jt^ m s

7'A" Heavy-Duty

Utility WHEELBARROW
3 cu ft capacity No K S-3

Circular SAW
2 '/3 h p , 10 amp burnout
protected motor Double
insulated for safety. Blade
included No 5 3 5 0 /5 5 9 .

S tq tL S A W

TUFF-LITE
i

\

HAND TOOLS

a

Workmaster™ LEVEL

Reinforced
Garden
HOSE

24" alum inum . No 4 2 -2 4 0

Thrifty -MITER BOX
45° and 90° cutting angles
Saw included No 19-600

5 / 8 " x 50'
No R X 5 8 -5 0

Reg. 6.88

Handyman" Crosscut
HAND SAW
26". 8-point No 15-526

Pulsating
SPRINKLER HEAD
Covers up to 75' Full or part
circle Plastic construction
No 9 53 0 C ^
^

Storette STORAGE AREA

t A

-------- ■

W OO

185 sq in table-top grill S in g le burner rated 11,000 Btu
fold-over w ire legs No L505

Law n M ower TOOLS and PARTS

4 ’ x 2' with lift-up lid for easy access Galvanized steel
construction No ST-42

"

Portable
GAS GRILL

• Blade Sharpener, No M S -52; • Blade Balancer,
No. B B A -2 02 C , • Starter Handle, No H -101C • Muffler,
No M 1 0 7 C
Bonds in seconds
O ne drop holds up
to 5.000 lbs Use
.
w ith metal,
\
plastic, glass, or
P \
alm ost any
non-porous
m aterial 3
gram tube

Ifour Choke

Decorative MARBLE CHIPS
STONES or PEBBLES

Hamlet® STORAGE BUILDING

r

1m
1
___

10' x 6', No H M 10 6 -5 H

»4

W hite 50 lb bag

r

UM£RS

Stan dard S a n d and Silica

Vout Choke:

l \i

10' x 9'. No H M 10 9 -5 H

Reg. 188.00 $

168

w

Fiberglass SHINGLES
Three-tab in white and colors.
20-year lim ited warranty
Bundle

flBI UOIAS

We guarantee our prices to be
low or lower then any local
competitor a advertised price*.
It you Imd an advcrtned price that
i* tower than Scotty *, bring ut the
Jocal. current ad and we ll match
their price and give you an
immediate, additional. IDS discount
off the competitor'* price on the
item1IMaiimum discount of 150 00
per store visit.)
This otter applies only to Identical
items with me same manufacturer
end model number and we must
have the item in stock. No
rainchecks. No ad errors, no
clearances, and no closeout* will
be honored. Scotty s reserves the
rtghl to limit quantities. Available
only tor cash end carry sales.

,

DEXTER LOCKS
A n y b o d y ’s A d P r i c «

• No Hassle!
• No Cards! ,

Em pire style knobs in antique brass rv
finish.
hv
• Bathroom Privacy Lock Set
No. SP3511ES 7 A x26
Wed- « • « ................................... » . « •

• Bedroom Lock Set
No SP3511ES 7A Rig.
• Passage Knob Set

12.29 . 8 .8 8

• Entrance Key Lock
No S P 35 3 2E S 7 A x K A 5

#*!

1 /2 " x 1 / 2 ” m esh in handi-rolls for all Ihe
sm all jobs around the house 3 6 " x 5'.

l i t ! ..14.SS

Chlorinating CARTRIDGE
Type E chlorinating tablets in a throw
aw ay cartridge 4 lb No 7426

1• . .•
■

»
*
*

Wr i g h t

i

OPEN

ORANGE CITY

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

2323 S. Volusia Ave
Highway 17 and 92
Phone 775-7268

1029 E. Altam onte Dr
(Highway 436)
Phone 339-8311

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
875 Wesl Highway 436
Phone 862*7254

OPEN

•
•
SANFORD
700 French Avenue
Phone 323*4700

'l
\

Each With Coupon
Limit 2. pltr.isit

11
Coupon E x p irn September 28

�PEO PLE

Evening H erald , Sanford, f t .

Briefly

Thursday, Sept. 26, 19BS-1B

Great Day In The Country

Festivities At SCC Launch
Universal Children's Day
Music, folk dancing, clowns, and Informative displays will
launch Universal Children's Day on Oct. 1 at Seminole
Community College. Afternoon festivities will begin at 4 p.m..
continuing at 7 p.m. with guest speakers and more
entertainment. The Bahu’ls or Central Florida and the
Seminole County Task Force oti Child Abuse Prevention arc
the sponsors.
In the afternoon, watch dancers from countries around the
world and regional America or roam through displays from
local organizations who serve the needs of the children In
central Florida.
In the evening. Glenn Rlnkcr or VVCPX-TV will speak on the
plight of the children ol Africa and hopes for their future.
Children's author Dr. John Hatcher and Florldu folklorist Dr.
David Closson will also speak. More music und refreshments
will follow.
Instituted In 1950 by the Baha'is or the United States.
Universal Children's Day was adopted In 1972 as an
International event by the United Nations. Its purpose is to
promote the physical and mental well being of the world's
children.
Some of the agencies from the Seminole County Task Force
on Child Abuse Prevention Joining the Baha'is in promoting the
day's observance arc Missing Children's Center. Ursula
Sunshine. UNICEF. CHARLEE. U.N.-U.S.A. Central Florida
chapter. Dividends. Children’s Home Society. West Lake
Hospital and We Care.

Pen Women To M eet
The National League of American Pen Women will hold a
luncheon at the Langford Hotel in Winter Park Oct. 5. Speaker
will be Sol Malkoff. printing designer, calligrapher and
typographer presently teaching Advertising Design at UCF and
Calligraphy at the Maitland Art Center.
Malkoff was associated with leading printers, publishers, and
typographers in Chicago. Atlanta, and New York In designing
books, magazines, advertising and commercial printing. He Isa
member of the Type Directors of New York and the Society for
Italic Handwriting, London. He Is past president of the
Typographers Association of New York and the Atlanta Club of
Printing House Craftsman.
Reservations must be made by noon. Oct. 3. For information
and reservations phone 999-5510.

Cake Show Open To Public
The Seventh Annual Cake Exhibition, sponsored by the Cake
Arts Society ol Sanford, will be held Saturday. Sept. 28. at
Holiday Inn. Interstate 4. Sanford.
According to coordinator Joan Cameron, as In the past the
show will benefit the Meals on Wheels Program for elderly
shutins.
The show Is free and open to he public from 1-4 p.m. for
viewing the cakes. Door prizes will be given during the
afternoon.

4-H Breads Fair Saturday
Seminole County 4-H Is sponsoring a special youth “ Breads
Fair" on Sept. 28 from 9:30-11:30 a.in. at the Seminole County
Agricultural Center at Five Points. The workshop Is open to
youth 8-18 years of age.
This special workshop will teach a fun new way to make
yeast bread in a bag. Each participant will make one loaf of
bread. Cost for the workshop Is $1.50 per person. Registration
deadline Is Sept. 20. To register call the Seminole County 4-H
Office at 323-2500 Ext. 183.

PWP Membership Night Set
The DeLand-Sanford Chapter *284 of Parents Without
Partners Is having a membership drive. Single parents are
asked to attend "Membership Night" at the DcLand Chamber
of Commerce on Oct. 3 at 7:30 p.m. Refreshments will be
served.
Contact Judy at 736-9406. Dottle at 668-5132. or Pat at
734-0187 for Information.

Dinner-Dance For G A G
Howell Place of Sanford will host a candlelight dinner-dance.
Friday. Sept 27. from 6 to 9 p.m.. at the facility on 200 W.
Airport Boulevard. Proceeds will benefit the Golden Age Games
of Sanford. The donation is $10 a couple to attend the
fund-raiser.
For Information and reservations call 323-7306.

Spaces Available For
Arts And Crafts Fest
Great Day In the Country, a
fall arts and crafts festival
sp o n so red by the O v ie d o
Woman's Club to benefit local
charities, has been set for Nov. 9
on the picnic grounds behind St.
Luke's Lutheran Church on
route 426 near Red Bug Road.
Chris

Great

Brochures have been sent to
area artists and craftsmen who
will be selling handmade wares
and competing for cash prizes. If
you arc an artist or craftsman
and h a ve not r e c e iv e d a
brochure, please contact the
following for Information: Great
Dav In the Country*. P.O. Box
1607. Oviedo. FL 32765 or call
(305) 365-5496 or 365-3483.

Day

Chairman, has been planning
since early spring to add a
variety of special demonstrations
of old and new crafts that should
be of Interest to all ages.
Many applications are already
In for the 100 available booth
spaces. Applications will be ac­
cepted until Oct. 1 or until all

T h is soft scu lp tu re fa m ily m ade a b ig hit In the O viedo
W om an's C lub 1984 fa ll festival.

'Man In The G lass'
A Priceless G ift

&lt;0^

DEAR ABBY: Many years
ago, when I was a young boy. I
memorized a poem titled "The
Man In the Glass." Since then. 1
Dear
have Included It with my gift to
many boys on their 13th birth­
A bby
day. (According to the Jewish
religion, a boy officially becomes
a man at 13.)
I have been told by many who
have received It that the poem heartache and tears
Itself was a priceless gift. I am
If you've cheated the man In
enclosing the poem and hope the glass.
you feel It Is worthy of printing.
— AUTHOR UNKNOWN
MILTON R., TRENTON. N.J.
DEAR ABBY: How do you tell
DEAR MILTON: It Is. and I u middle-aged man who Is going
bald that letting the few re­
thank y o u for It.
maining strands of hair grow
THE MAN IN THE GLASS
When you get what you want long, then w rappin g them
around his head, docs not give
In your struggle for self
And the world makes you king the Illusion of having hair? ll
Just makes them look ridiculous!
for n day.
I know that everyone has the
Just go to a mirror and look at
right to wear his hair the way he
yourself
And sec what that man has to wants to. but I’m sure If men
knew how bad they look when
say.
For It isn't your father or they try to cover their baldness
In this way. they wouldn't do It.
mother or wife
I love this man dearly, but
Whose Judgment upon you
there Is no way I can tell him
must pass.
The fellow whose verdict what I've told you. So please
print this. Abby. Not only for the
counts most In your life
Is the one staring back from man I love, but for other men
who make this ridiculous efTort
the glass.
Some people might think at covering the obvious.
SPLITTING HAIRS
you’re a stralght-shootln' chum
IN F L
And call you a wonderful guy.
But the man In the glass says
DEAR SPLITTING: Here's
you're only a bum
If you can't look him straight your letter. Don't keep it under
your hat.
In the eye.
He's the fellow to please, never
mind all the rest
DEAR ABBY: Please help set­
For he's with you clear to the
tle a family dispute. Do you or
end
And you've passed your most don't you peel a banana from the
stem?
dangerous test
GOING BANANAS IN
If the guy in the glass is your
SEATTLE
friend.
You may fool the whole world
DEAR GOING: To my knowl­
down the pathway of years
And get pats on the back as edge. there Is no "correct" way
to peel a banana, but I peel mine
you pass
But your final reward will be from the stem.

JAY'S HAIRSTYLING
#
DEN
J

HWY. 17-93 S A N fO ttO
C tN T tK MALL

323-5227
A U LONG HAIR EXTRA
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
W A L K -IN S W E L C O M E
E x p ir e s 1 0 -1 0 -8 5

FRIDAY
Sfudeti
P.M. TIL P.M. ONLY
6

8

20% OFF STOREWIDE
“Collectables’*
Make Great
Christmas Gifts

EMMETT

ty ifo

'Jt*K

PH. 3 2 1 -0 7 ( 0
2 2 0 E. FIRST ST. HISTORIC DOWNTOWH SANFORD

NATURALIZED CELEBRATES...
r

IIKMiNMU

l

NATIONAL
SI101 Cl 11ISKAI ION
&amp; SW EEPSTAKES
s| |»|.

FRIDAY'S

Free Seafood Preparation Demo

Reid.

spaces are filled. Church groups,
youth groups, civic clubs and
service organizations arc en­
couraged to participate if they
wish to raise funds for their
needs.

«H l it.

Win prizes valued up to $250,000!
No Purchif NocosmyCmo In And RtgisttfTodgy

A foods demonstration on Inexpensive ways to prepare
seafood will be held on Oct. 8. from 1-3 p.m. and 5:30-7:30
p.m. at the Seminole County Agricultural Center in Sanford.
Home Economist Joy Sheffield from the Florida Department
of National Resources will give this free program to the public
at the Extension Service. 4320 S. Orlando Drive. Sanford.
For more Information contact Home Economist Barbara
Hughes. 323 2500. Ext. 179or 183.

Com e in now and celebrate the new season for quality
footwear by Naturalizerl Grand prize is a 21-day
‘round the world vacation! Other prizes include
Hawaiian holidays and mini-getaways. It
you've been putting off getting Naturalizer
shoes, now is definitely the
X
time to buy!

STOREWIDE
SPECIAL

M A R IO N
A v a ila b le In G r e y ,
B u rg u n d y , and
B la c k . A II
L e ath er
S h o e s.

•45.00

BUY - SELL - T R A D E
Auto-Boa t-R.V.'s-T ruck-Cycle
Every F R ID A Y S A T UHD A Y K S U N D A Y H
t&gt;0 100 In / *» 1)00 t’ r o p l r I v t 'iy W r i S i -m i I •

mi

A rtm

~ y ------ --

PM

*.

\

*•-

r/t mIt /. . /.►
« .1 t 7/.MM 1 IIUIM M 1

FL
EAM L H f K
FLEA
A /o . /

“'

.........

..........-•

Matching Handbags Available!

FRIDAY, SEPT. 27th
6 p.m. to 8 p.m. ONLY

NATURALIZER®

218-220 E. 1st St.
Downtown
Sanford

20t E. FIRST ST.

322-3524

MUM: H M -T han. 8 M . 8 -fcS t. f t i

Hoars:
loa.-Thurs ft Sat. 9-8:30
Frl. 9 8

Auttxxu*di

t

l

auortwt lev tt» NqtKXV3l Sr&gt;Q8 C^Wtxaton a n a Sw—

i

I

�2B— Evening Htreld, Sanford, FI.

BLONDIE

Thursday, Sept. 24, 1f«J

by Chic Yoifng

YOU MAO VDU(? COULISON

OUT HERE

Or*

m

I M U S T HAVH IND IAN

TP A C K EP 8 IN MV PAMILV
THEE

j^CS^
y~2(i
b y M o rt W a lk e r

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

I WEIGH
THE SAME.
IT'S MY
NEW
EXERCISE

YOU
LOOK
T H IN N E R ,
C O O K IE

,

I 'M P R A C T IC IN G
H O L P /N G M Y
S T O M A C H IN

BUT WHERE
POES ALL THE
WEIGHT G O
r

~ v

&lt;0

TH E BORN LO SER

b y A rt S a n s o m

HDWEVEP,AAV PEAR
FELLOW, HAP I MOT
EEEM BORN,,,

c o n c e it e d !
M E * COWXITEO*
CERTAINLY

,r AM FIRMLY CONVINCED
THAT PEOPLE WOULD
PEMAMPTD KNOW
WHY!

F

w

3 s *

A R C H IE

b y B o b M o n ta n a

OH,ARCHIE, I HEARP
THAT SOT T £ A * m t £

LET'S SO SEE THAT
AlOVlE, STILL LIFE."

EEK A M EEK

o*

/
/

fA

O

7^
/

&lt;$&gt;

M EA LS/

C 'MON, ARE YOU
ALWAYS GONNA
BELIEVE THOSE
REVIEWS?

$ x

b y H o w la S c h n e id e r

5H£.‘S REFERRING
"ID THE KIW EW

Diuretics Capable
Of Producing Gout
DEAR DR. GOTT — My cousin
tells me she has gout. I thought
this disease went out with the
Dark Ages.
DEAR READER — Plague was
more characteristic of the Dark
Ages; gout Is still very much
with us. for an interesting reason
I’ll describe In a minute.
Whe n human bodies
metabolize protein, they produce
a chemical called uric acid. Uric
acid rem ains d issolved In
s lig h tly acid flu id and Is
normally excreted by the kid­
neys. Some people however,
have a genetic tendency to
manufacture more uric acid
than normal. (I'm simplifying
the description to make a point.)
Under certain circumstances,
when body fluids become less
acid, uric acid leaves the solu­
tion and crystallizes in the form
of tiny barbs. This crystallization
process tends to take place in
Joint fluids and in parts of the
kidneys. The crystals of uric acid
are then free to puncture, lacer­
ate and irritate Joint linings and
kidney tissues. Although the
Joints are very sensitive to this
Injury — and produce pain — the
kidneys do not. So when we
think of gout, we usually think
of acute and very painful arthri­
tis. People have been developing
gouty arthritis for mlltenla.
Here’s the hitch: Many people
today have high blood pressure.
One o f the m ost com m on
treatments for hypertension Is a
class o f com pounds called
diuretics, which are kidney
stimulants. Diuretics have a
tendency to produce gouty ar­
thritis In people who arc suscep­
tible. Therefore, more people
today have gout that la due, in
part, to modem treatment of a
separate disease.
Gout is entirely controllable by
the use of a drug that blocks the
formation of uric acid. Although
humans have suffered gout for
centuries, they no longer have to
put up with the symptoms.
DEAR DR. GOTT - I read that
microbiologists at Tulanc Uni­
versity have had success in
treating common warts with
dally applications of Vitamin

C-enriched cod liver oil. They
disappear In four to 12 weeks.
Would ordinary cod liver oil do
the same thing?
DEAR READER — Many bocalled “ folk remedies" arc safe
and may produce results.
Cod-llvcr-oll treatment for warts
Is such a remedy. Boosting the
ACRO SS

1 Habrew [attar
5 Japanese port
9 Energy unit
(abbr.)
12 Rake
13 Iranian money
14 Allay ____
15 Regarding |2
wda.)
16 Fixed rigidly
18 Small fiah
20 Bealdea
21 Adversary
22 Sandwich type
(abbr.)
24 East wind deity
2 7 ____ S. Grant
31 Bargaload ol
coal
32 Part of the lag
33 Medical suffix
34 High note
35 Female servant
36 Make a
awaatar
37 Taka off
39 Bora
40 Royal Mail
Service (abbr.)
41 Not good
42 Tropical nut
45 Hospitable
49 Entirety (comp,
wd.. si.)
52 Tennis player
____ Maltese
53 Cuckoo
54 Lyric
55 Sevan deadly
56 Atomic particle
57 Nervoua
58 Darbiea

5
6
7
8
9
10
11
17

oil with vitamin C may or may
not cnchancc Its activity. To the
extent that cod-livcr oil cures
warts, the addition o f the
vitamin is probably superfluous.
Send

q u e s tio n .*

to

D r.

i.iiu l- O h io . 4 4 101
Answer to Previous Puule

Danish coin
Franch river
Stocking! (Fr.)
Biblical
charactar
Seethe
Foot tipi
Hairstyle
Pool playar
Minnesota

19 Island of the
Aegaan
22 Ooiad
23 Caustic
substance
24 Squaated out
25 Rivar in the
Congo
26 Enlarge a hole
27 Entity
28 Poem
29 Moslem prince
30 Cloy
32 Midwest state
(abbr.)
35 Flower
36 Prayer

sour

Hull ni n o . liox ! I I 4 2 ». C le w

M

M

X

! 1

1

1

L

L

L l ■U■

U s T Y
O L U E
Ih 1 N O
T A o

M M

E

M

O

R

Y

A

L

1

B

1

R

K

S

V

O

|E

A

S

T

38
39
41
42

Spoken exaht
Play by
Marshy
Bridge on the
River
43 Exclamation ol
horror (2 w d s)
44 Meat cut

45 Viet
guerillas
46 Hipbones
47 Am not (si.)
48 Minus
50 Compass pt
51 Coal scuttle

10
II

is
18

14

IS

IB

IB

11

IS

IP

II

34
31

DOWN
1 Actor ____
Kriitofferson
2 Eugene
O'NeiN’i
daughter
3 Make a
contented
sound
4 Caring

41 4]

44

47

4f
SI
SB

26

(C)&lt;9RS ti, NI A ini

3TA M H P

(OHO*ACTS

£

WIN AT BRIDGE

A/6HTLV

1-i i.
b y H a r g r e a v e s A S e l le r s
a

M R . M E N A N D L IT T L E M IS S

re s , i

c a n

let yo u

have

&lt; A M 5 RCXVA FO R $ 2 0 ,
IF y o u P R O M I S E N O T TO
y

T H E

LO O K •

!

By Jun e* Jacoby
It was not surprising that the
bidding got as high as it did on
today's deal. That usually hap­
pens when both sides have a
good fit and the high-card
strength Is evenly divided. That
five spades was not doubled was
unusual, but logical. East's Jump
to four hearts described a hand
with great playing strength In
hearts, but not necessarily great
defensive values. So when North
and South were forced to play
five spades, the opponents were
happy enough to have them that
high. Fine if South went down,
but if he was going to make it. it
would not be tn a doubled
contract.

by W a rn e r B ro th e r*

BU G S BUNNY

South can make the contract if
he applies bridge logic. West led
the club acc and switched to a
heart. East won the king und
tried the ace. but declarer ruffed.

PAFFV a l w a y s

FLYS F/CST-O.ASS.

M r

South could now draw trumps
and make a diamond play, but
that line Is both simplistic and
lazy. Whenever there Is a key
play to be made in a side suit,
you should search for more
Information to lead you to the
right decision. Here It was best
for South to trump a second club
In dummy, play the spade acc
and a spade to the queen, and
then trump the last club. West
would reveal that he had started
with the A-Q alone of clubs.
Thus East had started with
seven clubs. Surely East had
four hearts for his four-heart
Jump over North's takeout dou­
ble. And of course East had
followed to one spade play.
What's left in diamonds? Only
one.
Declarer can now play his
diamond king and lake the
marked finesse against the
queen Inland his contract.

NORTH
t-It-lt
♦ A K 10 9 4

*62

♦ A J B7 5
♦ 7
WEST
♦ J3

EAST
♦ 5
V A K 76

f Q J 95 43

♦6
4K J 10 9643

♦ Q 10 9
♦ AW

SOUTH

♦ Q B7 6 2
V 10
♦ K 132
♦ B52

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
Wait

North

i a
5Y
Pass

I)bl
sa

Eait
14
4a
Pass

South
Pass
44
Pats

Opening lead 4 A

HOROSCOPE
FR A N K AND ER N ES T

by Bob Thaves

TELEPHONE CO.

IT ^ AN “EN T^TAIM M ffN T
CtiAFGE” Fof* THE M u fiC
THEY P L -A Y ^ P W HEN
C U /T b M S R

PAV BILLS HEREp ^h

Y f^ V IC E

p a r

m e

on
* **••**-* T*-iAvtj 9-at
b y J im D a v ie

G A R F IE L D

HEv T )

POME A
FAVOR,
WILL VOL

opv

C^rAA

i mi UrmtdIseUf Sfrakiit tr%

^ H A N K 9 )“

9 - it o

RB$t)UT5,1AKBA
C L A W fifc P A P

by T. K. Ryan

i n i m b p w b i *r

^PBNoOfJCfKl

\

I

K P B M O U M c tn Y

AMP MOB/

YOUR BIRTHDAY
SEPTEMBER 27. L88S
A financial upswing is in the
offing for you in the year ahead.
An enterprise that starts off with
a trickle will gradually Increase
into a gusher.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If you
are a poor collector today re­
garding something that Is owed
you, considerable time could
elapse before the debt Is finally
settled. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find It. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker set
Instantly icveals which signs are
romantically perfect for you.
Mall $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper. Box 1846. Cincin­
nati. OH 45201.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22) Sit­
uations that are a trifle too
difficult for others to manage
will be dumped on you today.
Fortunately, they picked the

right guy.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.
21) Even if It costs you a degree
of Inconvenience, It’s best today
not to leave an important matter
dangling. Seek It through to the
end.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
This is a good day to get together
with an old friend you've been
neglecting lately. Don't let this
valuable relationship wither.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Positive measures can be taken
today to shore up your economic
foundations and enhance your
material security. Think money.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your greatest asset today is your
mental fortitude. If you set your
mind on a specific goal, you'll
figure out ways to achieve It.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
You are finally going to be
rewarded for something you did
for a friend, which you thought
was never acknowledged or ap­
preciated.

A N N IE

TU M BLEW EED S

r FOR OOlCK

W hat T h e D ay
W ill B rin g ...

I

cw mS h w a

^ I

WwmiMMrTiJ

losskpi

MV MftMFS ANNIE. 0H, THAT'S
I'M- EB- SOflflY IF QUITE AU.
6 ANPY WWPEREP RIGHTONT'WUff nT

w e v w r v l 1*

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Although you’ll he In a social
mood, you're still nol apt to feel
at ease being part of a large
group. Seek quality compa­
nionship. not quantity.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Something special you will do
today will win respect from your
peers and enhance your reputa­
tion. It won't lie easy to pull off.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) A
matter aliout which you have
been doubtful will work out
smoothly toduy. You'll be reI I e v e d to l e a r n y o u r
upprehcnsluns were groundless.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do nol
be resistant to changes today,
even If they arc not of your own
doing. Shifts In conditions will
prove to your benefit In the long
run.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In­
sist today that the person with
whom you made an arrange­
ment honors the terms originally
agreed upon.

b y L e o n a rd S ta rr
- 0 0 VOJ LIVE

MEAR8Y,
ANNIE?

OH, HOW LOVELY.•
YOU MUST COME
TO PLAY ANNIE/

PLEASE? PLEASE'?

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

You've Crossed The Border

Thursday, Sept. 18, 1M5-3B

T w ilig h t Z o n e : M elo d y Lin g e rs On
B y Joan Hanauer

UPI TV Reporter
NEW YORK (UPI) - Everyone
has done It at one time or
another — unthinkingly dialed
home Instead of to whomever
they wanted to reach.
That's what hnppcns to Jay
Novlns — he calls his own home
by mistake. And someone an*
swers — another Jay Novlns.
The switch from the everyday
world to ceric unreality signals
that you have crossed a border
and entered "T h e Tw ilight
Zone."

Their Pal Val
V a l (Joan Van A rk , center) has found her m issing tw ins and
now, w ith the help of her m other (J u lie H a rris , rig h t,) and
her frie n d K a re n (M ich e lle Lee, left,), m ust figh t to keep
them, on "K n o ts L a n d in g ," a irin g T hursday, Oct. 3on CB S.

“ The Twilight Zone" makes
Its reappearance on CBS Friday,
8*9 p.m. Eastern time, after 20
years In limbo, and It’s nice to
hear the familiar opening music
that ushered In the old Rod
Scrllng show. The Grateful Dead
and Mcrl Saunders have adopted
the old eight-note signature for
the new show.
This Is an all-new anthology

and CBS promises scripts by
such masters of the exotic as
Ray Bradbury, and the series’
creative consultant, Harlan
Ellison. A number of scripts are
based on stories by the likes of
Arthur C. Clarke and Stephen
King.
The first show offers two
stories, a dandy called "Shatterday" by Ellison and a seem­
ingly frivolous second episode
called "A Little Peace and Quiet"
that has a terrifying ending.
"S h atterd ay" Is the story
about Peter Novlns. played by
Bruce Wi l l i s of A B C 's
"M oon ligh tin g." Novlns has
more than a split personality —
he has split Into two separate
but Identical bodies. The one
who answers the telephone at
home Is his better self, which
Novlns has suppressed for years.

ou t-of-body exp erien ce, or
perhaps It had to do with an
attempt to photograph Novlns'
aura. No matter. If it didn't defy
logical explanation, it wouldn't
be at home in "The Twilight
Zone."
Since two bodies cannot oc­
cupy the same space, someone's
got to give and the two editions
o f Pet er Novl ns conduct
psychological warfare. The day
that the issue Is decided Is called
"Shatterday."
The second offering on "The
Twilight Zone" premiere con­
cerns a harried housewife —
good-natured, pretty, slightly
dltsy Penny, played by pretty
Melinda Dillon. Her husband.
Greg Mullavey. their four kids
and dog all drive her bats with
their noisy demands.
In the morning, the crescendo
of cacaphony builds as the bacon
sizzles, kids bicker, dog barks,
radio blares, clothes dryer rattles
and husband yells. Saint Francis
of Assisi would have yelled,
"Shut up!"
L a te r in the day. whi l e
gardening to the backdrop rasp
of a neighbor's power saw. she
finds a buried casket which

Som ehow the better half
escaped from repression Into a
body of his own — maybe It was
a matter of astral projection and

Soap Viewers Deserve New Plot Lines
attracted the Imaginations of
By Jon Michael Reed
NEW YORK - If you watch dally TV viewers.
There's a distinct audience
only one daytime soap opera,
you may believe that most of the allure In such talcs. Lovers
plots are wonderfully fresh and escaping from parental authority
Interesting. If you view more or legal Jurisdiction or a crime
than two shows, however, you’re lord’s revenge can encounter
apt to notice that plots seem to a d v e n t u r o u s b a c k d r o p s
be dupllrated from one show to (carnivals, movie studios, trop­
another, and that they can be ical paradises, etc.) that aren't
the usual soap-opera settings.
terribly stale and boring.
The most disconcertingly re­ Although none of the "G H "
peated afternoon soap plot In­ Imitators has totally succeeded
volves “ love on the run." Ever In capturing the original magic
since "General Hospital's" In­ of Luke and Laura's fanciful
credibly popular version of flights, soapland continues to
"Luke and Laura on the run." churn out variations, most of
every other soap on the air. them wretchedly ill-conceived
Including "G H " Itself, has tried and woefully executed.
Soap opera writers, who often
to copy the formula that first

aren't given total freedom to plot
their own stories, are often
p r e s s u r e d by p r o d u c e r s ,
sponsors or network executives
to copy already-proven suc­
cessful stories. The truly tal­
ented writer will maintain a
degree of Integrity and creativity
by giving his plot a different
angle that makes the motives of
the characters and their actions
unique to them, so that they are
not carbon-copy Lukes and
Lauras.
Recently on "Another World,"
for example, Jake and Marley
took off on a road adventure that
was based on the Luke and
Laura formula, but which was
unique unto itself because of the

TONIGHT'S TV
THURSDAY!
EVENING

6:00
© ® ® O ® O

new s

H (15) JEFF ESS ONS
CD (10) M A C N E IL / L E H R E R
NEWSH0UR
d )(l| HAPPY DAY8AQ VIN

6:05

son) that Diane (Shelley Long) is
working m a convent (In Stereo)
(ID O LADY BLUE (Premiere) Katy
Mahoney (Jamie Rose) is a tough
but Ian detective who manages lo
solve crimes in spite ol being at
cross purposes with her by-thebooks boss (Danny Aiello) Tonight
Katy takes on an ei-contncl who's
terrorising the city Z}
ill (15)QUINCY
CD (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

0:30

11 ANDY ORIFFTTH

6:30
D CD NSC NEWS
&lt; 1 )0 CBS NEWS
7.’ O ABC NEWS Q
IX (35) TOO CLOSE FOR COM.
FORT in* return* to San Francisco
to renew har romanca with Paul Davaraaui
0 ) (I) LA VERNE 8 SHIRLEY

635
11 C A R O L
FRIENDS

BURNETT

AND

7:00
O (411100.000 PYRAMID
T ) O P.M. MAGAZINE Holly­
wood • raaclion lo AIDS, tha under,
water world oil Cabo San Luca* ai
the lip ol Baia Calilomia
J J O JEOPARDY
U (15| BARNEY MILLER
CD (10) CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE:
WHAT YOUR CHILDREN 8HOULD
KNOW High school students dis­
cuss actual assault and tha way* lo
anticipate and minimise risk* Q
0 ) (•) CARSON S COMEDY CLAS­
SICS

7:05
11 MARY TYLER MOORE

7:30

0 ® ENTERTAINMENT TONKJHT
Interview with James Stewart
|}IOPRICEISRIOHT
I O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
I t (35) BENSON
0)1*1 a l l IN THE FAMILY

7:35

11 SANFORD AND SON

O
(D NIGHT COURT (Season
Premierel Alter many problems, the
courtroom cranes welcome a new
bailiff (Ftorenca Haiop) and a legalaid lawyer (Markie Post) Stars Har­
ry Anderson and Richard Mon

10:00
O ® HILL STREET BLUES (Sea­
son Premiere) Funllo (Daniel J. Travanti) attempts to prevent the vio­
lent ouster ol a selt-prolessed
messiah from a run-down building.
LaRue and Renko challenge one
another in a car race. Beiker (Bruce
Weill) hides out in a trash bin.
(I) O KNOTS LANDING (Season
Premiere) Val (Joan Van Ark) strug­
gles to regain custody ol her ba­
bies. Greg is determined to win
back Laura. Gary (Tad Shackeilord)
mourn* Bobby Ewing s death, g
(D O 20 / 20 (Season Premiere)
Geraido Rivera eiammes the emer­
gence ol AIDS among heterosexu­
als. Sylvia Chase lakes a look at
some unanswered questions about
the l,te and death ol Marilyn Mon­
roe g
1 1 (15) INDEPENDENT NEWS
CD (10) NEW YORK’S MASTER
ch efs

a ) I*) POLICE WOMAN

10:05
11 MOVIE California Gold Rush"
&lt;19811 Robert Hays John Dehner
Based on stones by Bret Hart* An
aspmng author heads west in the
late 1840s in search ol adventures
to write about

8:00
O
ID COSBY SHOW (Season
Premiere) Alter three months ol
household turmoil. Clift and Clair
welcome the beginning ol the
school yaar Stars Bill Cosby and
Phyticia Ayers-Alien (In Stereo)
(D O MAQNUM, P.l. (Season
Premierel In London lo oversee the
security operations and stalling ol
Robin Masters recently purchased
English estate. Magnum and Hig­
gins (Tom Selleck John Hillermanl
get involved m a murder investiga­
tion with political overtones
® O FALL QUY (Season Prem­
iere) Colt and Howie arrive in Las
Vegas to took lor a Iorgar among a
horde ol Elvis look-alikes but end
up protecting a reclusive billion­
aire* lile Country singer Mickey
Gilley make* a guest appearance

&amp; (15) HART TO HART

0 (10) WILD AMERICA A look at
the ways a variety ol lish adapt lo
their environment m North Am-rican waters g
(D (I) MOVIE "Johnny Belinda"
(1982) Rosanna Arqueti*. Richard
Thomas A VISTA worker meals a
deal mute and eipand* her world
by teaching her sign language

6:05
U MOVIE Coward Ol The Coun­
ty" (1*81) Kenny Rogers. Fretylc
Lehne At the beginning ol World
War II. a young man who promised
his dying lather lhal he would never
light is taunted by his leilow towns­
people lor his pacifist ideals

6:30

■ (D FAMILY T its (Season Prem­
iere) Ales dale* the ideal girl, but
things go haywire when he Ia** M
love with her roommate (Tracy Pol­
lan). a coed who can t stand him
Stars Michael Gross and Meredith
Bailer Birney (Part I ol 2) (In Ster­
eo)
S) (10) THIS OLD HOUSE Root
drainage problems
0 :0 0

0 (D CHEERS (Season Premiere)
Cheers gets a new bartender (Woo­
dy Harreison) and a visit trom a pil­
ed Frasier who tells Sam (Ted Oan-

10:30
(1L' (15) BOB NEWHART
0 ( 1 0 ) FANTASY OF FLORIDA

11:00
e a u D O c rjO N c w s
I]!’ (15) ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE
0 ( 1 0 ) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
0 ( 8 ) HOGAN'S HEROES

11:30
O (D TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson
Scheduled
actor* Olivia
Brown and Tim Conway, opera
singer Marilyn Horne
(J) O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
CD O ABC NEWS NIQHTUNE
ill (15) HAWAII FIVE-0
O ) (8) HOGAN'S HEROES

12:00
(1) o n i g h t HEAT (Season Prem­
iere) 0 Brian and Giambon* (Scott
Hylands. Jell Wmcotl) investigate
when a senes ol murders create ha­
voc in the city
CD O
COMEDY BREAK WITH
MACK AND JAMIE
0 (I) MOVIE "Tulsa" 119491 Susan
Hayward. Robert Preston

12:16
U ) HEY. ABBOTTI Many classic
comedy routine* by Bud Abbott
and Lou Costello are recaptured m
this salute to the popular duo host­
ed by Milton Berie. Steve Aden and
Pha Silvers

2:00

01 (15)OUN8MOKE

2:30

ID O CBS NEWS NIOHTWATCH

2:50

CD

O MOVIE "The illustrated
Man" (19691 Rod Steiger. Claire

300
(IX (38) ILOVE LUCY

3:30

IX (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

IS

3:45

WORLD AT LARGE

4.00

OX (35) RHOOA
a LUCY SHOW

CD O

1:00

MOVIE "A walk m The
Spring Rain" (1970) Ingrid Berg­
man. Anthony Oumn
(IX (15) BIZARRE

1:10
(D a
MOVIE "Tm Man" (1981)
Timothy Bottom*. Deana Jurgen*

1:30
0X(38)BCTV

1:45
OX M O VK ' Moramtuque" (t*S5)
Steve Cochran. HJdegard* Knelt

i

1005
QX MOVIE

10:30

S

® SALE OF THE CENTURY
(V0)3-2-1 CONTACT g
(8)000 COUPLE
11*0

WHEEL OF FORTUNE
PRKEMRK5HT
THREE'S A CROWD (R)
) (34) DALLAS
(10) WFRE COOtONG NOW

S

4:30

11:30

OX(35) RHOOA

i f HOGAN'S HEROES

_) ALL-STAR BLITZ
IdOIFLORKIASTYLE
AFTERNOON

12*0

MORNING

5:00

( D O THE 8AINT
(IX (35) NEWS
02 GET SMART

5:30
0 ® r s COUNTRY
92 BEVERLY HILLBIUJE8

6:00

O ® NBC NEWS
CD o CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
( D O EYEWITNES8 DAYBREAK
OX (15) OOOO DAVI
~ NEWS
(8) BATMAN

6:30
O ® NEWS
CD O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
(D O ABC'S WORLD NEWS THIS
MORNING g
OX (35) TOM ANO JERRY
® FUNTIME
0 (8) SUPERFRIENOS

6:45

) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
)(10) A.M. WEATHER

7.00

)TODAY
|CBS MORNING NEWS
I GOOD MORNING AMERICA
ax (35)01. JOE
(tO) FARM DAY
(8) VOLTRON, DEFENOER OF
THE UNIVERSE

8

7:05

® ALVIN SHOW

7:15
0 ( 10)A.M. WEATHER

7:30
OX (35) OOBOTS
«(10) SESAME STREET (R)g
0(*)ROBOTECH

7:35

!

® INOOAY
O®0 NEWS

(35) BEWITCHED
(10) JACOB BRONOWSKt LIFE
ANO LEGACY
0 (8) MANMX

6.-00

OX (38) JET
JETSONS

0 (8m) iHEATHCUFF

6*5

0 ® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
® O ALL MY CHILDREN
(IX (36) OICK VAN DYKE
0 (10) FLORN1A HOME GROWN
0 (8 ) MOW

1*5
ax m o w

1:30

® O AS THE WORLD TURNS
OX (18) OOMER PYLE
0(10) PAINTING CERAMICS

2*0
ANOTHER WORLD
ONE LIFE TO LIVE
' *S)ANDVOR*F!TH
(10) PA1NTWSQ WITH KONA

8

2:30
) 0 CAPITOL
) (35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
(10) MAGIC OF WATERCOLORS

3*0

|® SANTA BARBARA
! Q OUIOMQ LIGHT
)OGENERAL HOSPITAL
D(3S)SCOOSY DOO
) (10) FLORIOASTYLE
) (8)CARE BEARS

3*5

ax BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENOS

3:30
OX

(15) JAVCE

8:30

0 (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
0 (8 ) FAT ALBERT
8 :3 6

0 BEWITCHED

0*0

DIVORCE COURT
DONAHUE
TIC TAG DOUGH
WALTONS
10) SESAME STREET (R)g
8) BRADY BUNCH
OX HAZEL

0*6

AND

THE

w h o l e s w arriors

(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
m M JLSK.

8

OX IDREAM OF JEAHNIE

OX(35) FUNTSTONES

"A ll My Children's" current
Tad and Dottle on-the-run plot is
also unique, although the reason
they went into a moveable feast
of hiding and assumed Identities
was the rather standard one of
slipping through a crime syn­
dicate's clutches. The Innovative
fun In "A M C 's" episodes derived
from the fact that the two
characters were not rom an­
tically. sensuously wrapped up
In each other. Or. at least, they
aren't aware of being drawn to
each other throughout their
daring escapades.

S E A F O O D and SPIRITS
C O M E TRY O U R H APPY H O U R

2 For 1
COCKTAILS

In contrast, and by far the
worst offender of the soap-opera
copy-cat syndrome, is "Days of
Our Lives." Increasingly, this is
a show that seems determined to
boast the fact that It has no
scruples when it comes to pick­
ing off another soap's plots.
"D a y s" steals from old "G H "
shows without even attempting
to cover-up the theft of not only
plots, but also of settings and
secondary characters.

1 D R IN K C O C K T A IL P L U S 1 S H R IM P C O C K T A IL
4 P.M. T IL 7 P.M.
A d | a c e n t T o T h e H o lid a y In n
A t T h e M a r in a

4*0

AMERICA
D^TREKT STROKES
MERVORMFW
] (35) THUNDERCATS g
) (10) SESAME STREET (R)g
(S) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS OF
THEUNWERSE

§

A year ago on "D ay s," there
was a crashed plane-load of
survivors on a deserted island,
controlled by a mad dictator.
The story was more than re­
miniscent of the ship-wrecked
folks on a secret island who
encountered the crazy Cassadlne
clan on " G H . " Back then.
"D ay s" had the decency to alter
its character relationships so
that an argument could be made
that it was merely a descendant
of "G H ." not a twin sister. But
no more.

YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

0 ® LOVE CONNECTION
®0 JOKER'S WILD
0 (8 ) MY THREE SONS

0:35
® I LOVE LUCY

10*0

0 ® YOUR NUMBER'S UP

m utrum

T
IN f U t A M

I A

Y

casbaltt

n ic .

4 1 3 W . F irs t t t .
Mi* 3 2 2 -S 7 4 2
W illia m H . ••B in " W lflh t C .P .C .U .
O a r a ld W . M a y a r
P r a a ld a n t
__________ A c c o u n t R a p r e s a n t a t lv a '

X

The similarities of characters
and scenes are endless. For
example, who is Tod on "D ay s"
if not another Hutch on "G H "?
“ D a y s 's " Victor has a pre­
d e c e sso r In " G H ’s " Fr ank
Smith. When Pete and Melissa
found refuge on a farm, it was a
blatant imitation of Luke and
Laura's sojourn with the Whit­
takers in Beecher's Comer.

E

B

ty te u td O fo w itty
Thursday, September 26th

EAST
*OCEAN
*
3 ^ RESTAURANTS
&amp; LOUNGE

And the comparisons carry
over to other plots. "D a y s'" Miss
Peach, an agent pal of Shane's.
Is a facsimile of "G H 's " O'Reilly,
the I mp i s h l a d y w h o w a s
S c o r p i o ' s a g e n t al l y. A n d
Shane's computer-filled secret
spy room looks as though It was
reconstructed, piece by piece,
wall by wall, from Scorpio's old
digs.

Featuring . . .Chinese Cuisine
And Specializing In Cantonese,
Szechuan, and Mandarin Styles

Argue all you want that imita­
tion is the slncerest form of
flattery, or that mimicry is a
standard soap-opera ploy to
duplicate the ratings success of
another show. There may be "no
more original soap-opera plots."
as one network executive re­
cently stated. "There can only
be variations and repetitions of
what has already been done."

GRAND OPENING SPECIAL

FREE PINA COLADA
WITH EVERY DINNER PURCHASED
DINE-IN ONLY LIMIT ONE PER
PERSON THUR8. &amp; FRI. ONLY

4*6

SERVING
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

0 FUNTSTONES

4:30

SHE-RA:
FRMCESE OF
^ 0 THRtt-S
COMPANY

MON. • TH UR8. 11-10. FRI.-SAT. 11-11, SUN. 12-10
POWER

E AST OCEAN R E S T A U R A N T
A LOUNGE 2920 South French A**., Sanford

4:36
0:30

Sanford

323-1910

"D ay s's" Pete and Melissa's
l o v e - o n - t h e - r u n s t o r y is
practically a Xerox version of
12*5
Luke and Laura's. The only
02 PERRY MASON
discernible difference Is that Pete
12:30
0 ® SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
is married and has a baby boy
® O YOUNG ANO THE REST­
back In Salem. U.S.A., whereas
LESS
Luke had left his bride-to-be a t O LOVING
(35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
the altar before he ran o(T with
Laura.
1 *0

(Q FUNTSTONES

12:30
0 (D LATE NIGHT WITH DAV10
LETTERMAN Scheduled: |*u gui­
tarist Stanley Jordan. Charo.
tswriler Mike Lupica
) 0 AT THE MOVIES
) (18) CHICO ANO THE MAN

(1) Q HOUR MAGAZINE
CDOBARNABY JONES
(15) BIG VALLEY
(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
(8) CAROL BURNED

circumstances that made the
lovers run. The development of
that story took on variations that
couldn't be compared to Luke
and Laura's adventures.

contains an amulet. That even­
ing. when the family decibel
count gets out of hand, she
finally explodes and hollers for
quiet. Silence. They are frozen in
place and time literally has stood
still.
When she says "Okay, talk."
they pick up where they left off.
apparently none the worse for
being turned Into temporary
statues.
She has fun practicing her
new-found talent — on her
family, at the supermarket, with
an obnoxious pair of door-todoor do-gooders.
"A Little Peace and Quiet" is
good fun until, suddenly. It takes
a horrifying twist and reveals the
dark side of "T h e Twilight
Zone."
"T h e Twilight Zone" Is a
quirky, unpredictable, enter­
taining mixture of fantasy and
fun and serious intent, and It is a
welcome addition to the sched­
ule. Among the anthology shows
new to this season, it has a good
chance to succeed — It is the
lead-in show for "Dallas." and
its com petition is "K n ig h t
Rider" on NBC and "DlfTrent
Strokes" and "Benson" on ABC.

(DBRADV BUNCH

6*0

I® NEWLYWED GAME
) | m ' a *s *h
)0HEADUNE CHASERS
(38) WHAT'S HAPPEMNOIt
(10) ART OF BEMG HUMAN
I (S) IDREAM OF JEANNE

TAKE OUT AVAILABLE
j i i

- ' I I W

)

u D

i r r f i r

3 2 1 -5 9 4 0 j
t i—; ,

zj

6*5
OX LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

t

1

4

i

�4 B — E ve nin g H eraltf, Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice

Thursday, Sept. 26, 1985

Legal Notice
F IC T I T IO U S N A M E
N o tic e Is he reb y g iv e n that I
a m en gaged In b usin ess at P O
Boa 37. Longw ood. S em ino le
C o un ty. F lo r id a 32750 0037 under
the fic titio u s n a m e o l D A T A
F L O W , and lh a l I Intend lo
re g iste r said nam e w ith Ihe
C le r k ot the C ir c u it C o u rt.
S e m in o le C o u n ty, F lo r id a In
a c c o rd a n c e w ith Ihe p ro v isio n s
o l the F ic titio u s N a m e Statutes.
To w it
Section 865 09 F lo r id a
Statutes 1957
/*/ N in a D e V a n g u a rd la
P u b lis h Septem ber 19. 26 A

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T A
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C I R C U IT
FO R S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y ,
FLO R ID A .
C A S E N O .: *5-155) C A 09-K
SUN B A N K . N A .
P la in tiff,

v*.
JO S EP H
L
A B R A M S and
M U R I E L B. A B R A M S , h it w ife.
TO M D O U G L A S S d /b /a
D O U G LASS P LU M B IN G . L A M
I N A T E D C A B I N E T S . IN C.,
D efen d ants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
that the un d ersig ne d D a v id N
B e rrie n , C le r k of I he C o u rt,
Sem in o le C o un ty, F lo r id a w ill on
the 25th d a y of O cto b e r. 19*5. at
11:00 a m ., at the west door of
th e S e m in o le C o u n ty C o u rt
house, S a n lo rd . F lo r id a , o ile r
lo r ta le and t e ll at p u b lic o u lc ry
to the h ig h e st and best b id d e r
fo r cash , the fo llo w in g d e sc rib e d
p ro p e rty In Sem inote Coun ty.
F lo r id a to w it:
L o l 34 , N O R T H W O O D S U B
D I V IS IO N , a c c o rd in g to the P la t
th ere of as re c o rd e d In P la t Book
17, P a g e s s i and 47, of the P u b lic
R e c o rd s o l S e m in o le Co un ty,
F lo r id a ;
p u rs u a n t to S u m m a ry F in a l
Ju d g m e n t en te re d In the ab ove
s ty le d p en d in g cause.
W I T N E S S m y hand an d the
te a l o l sa id C o u rt th is 17th day
of Se p te m b er, 19*5.
□ A V ID N B E R R IE N
C le r k of the C o u rt
B y : D ia n e K . B ru m m e tl
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h : Se p te m b er 19. 74. 191S
D E J tJS

tN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY.
F LO R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
F ile N u m b e r *5 567 C P
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
P H IL LIP
D A U G H ER T Y
READ,
D e cease d
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S OR
D EM AN D S
A G A IN S T
THE
ABO VE
ESTATE AND ALL OTHER
P E R S O N S I N T E R E S T E D IN
THE ESTATE
YO U
A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D
th a t th e ad
m in is tra tio n of the estate ol
P H IL LIP
D A U G H ER T Y
R E A D , deceased. F ile N u m b e r
*5 547-CP. It pending lr, tne
C i r c u i t C o u r t to r S e m in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , P r o b a te
D iv is io n , the a d d re ss o l w h ich Is
P . 0 D ra w e r C. S a n lord . F lo r id a
J777706J9 T he p erso n al re p re
t e n t a t iv e o l th e e s t a t e is
GARNETTE
L O U IS E
READ,
w h o se a d d r e s s is B o x SSS.
Flahw oo d t. K Y 47739 The nam e
a n d ad d re ss ot the p e rso n a l
re p re s e n ta tiv e 's a tto rn e y are
te l fo rth below
A ll p erso n s h a v in g c la im s o r
d e m a n d s a g a in st the estate are
r e q u ir e d . W I T H I N T H R E E
MONTHS FRO M THE DATE
O F T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N
O F T H IS N O T IC E , to M e w ith
the c le r k ot the ab ove co u rt a
w ritte n sta te m en t ot an y c la im
o r d em a n d th ey m a y have E a c h
c la im m u st be in w ritin g and
m u lt In d icate the b a s is lo r the
c la im , the n a m e an d ad d re ss o l
the c re d ito r o r h is agent o r
a t t o r n e y , a n d th e a m o u n t
c la im e d . It the c la im i t not yet
due, th e d ate w hen It w ill
b e c o m e due s h a ll be stated It
the c la im It co n tin g en t o r unit
q u id a te d . th e n a tu re ot the
u n c e rta in ty s h a ll be sla te d If
the c la im Is secu red , the se c u ri
ty s h a ll be d e s c r ib e d
The
c la im a n t sh a ll d e liv e r s u tflc ie n t
co pie s ot the c la im to the c le rk
to en a b le the c le r k to m a ll one
co py to ea ch p erso n al re p re
te n ta tiv e
A ll perso ns Interested In the
e state to w hom a copy of th is
N o tic e ot A d m in is tra tio n has
b e e n m a ile d a r e r e q u ir e d
W IT H IN T H R E E
M ONTHS
FR O M THE DATE OF THE
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N OF
T H IS N O T IC E , to tile any ob
le c tio n s they m a y have that
c h a lle n g e the v a lid ity o l ihe
d ece d ent's w ill, the q u a lillc a
tio n s ot the p ersonal re p re
s e n ta tiv e , o r th e v en u e o r
ju ris d ic tio n ot the co u rt
A L L C L A IM S , D E M A N D S
A N D O B J E C T I O N S N O T SO
F IL E D W ILL B E F O R E V E R
BARRED
D a le o l the fir s t p u b lic a tio n ot
th is N o tice o l A d m in is tra tio n
Sep tem b er 74 19*5
G a rn e tte L o u ise R ead
A t P e rs o n a l R ep re se n ta tiv e
o l Ihe E s ta te of
P H IL LIP
D AUGH ERTY
READ
D e cease d
A T T O R N E Y FOR PER SO N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
R O B E R T A W O H N .J r
S u ite 70S. 96 W illa r d St
C o coa, F L 37973
T elep h on e. (3051639 7001
P u b lis h Se p te m b er 76. O cto b er
3. 19*5
D E J 117

O c to b e r 3. 10. T98S

D E J 132
N O T IC E U N D E R
F IC T I T IO U S N A M E
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
N o tic e is h e reb y g ive n that the
un d ersig ne d intends lo re g iste r
the fic titio u s n a m e o l T H E
S A N D W IC H B O A R D , w ith the
C le r k o l S em ino le C o un ty. State
o l F lo r id a
Sa id r e g is tra tio n
s h a ll fo llo w n o tice g ive n at least
once ea ch w eek lo r lo u r consec
u tlve w eeks in a c c o rd a n c e w ith
F lo r id a law
D ated th is Jk lh d ay c l A,.gust.

IVtti

R O B M A R E N T E R P R IS E S .
IN C
B y R o b e rt L F a r r
P re sid e n t
P u b lis h Sep tem b er 12. 19, 76 A
O cto b e r 3. 1985
D E J 75
N O T IC E O F S H E R I F F ’ S S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
that by v irtu e o l lh a t c e rta in
W rit o l E x e c u tio n issued out ol
and under the seal ot the C oun ty
C o u rt ot O ra n g e C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a , upon a fin a l lod g em en t
ren d ered in the a fo re s a id co u rt
on the 28th d ay ot Ju ne, A D.
1985. in that c e rta in case en
title d . B arn e tt B an k ot C e n tra l
F lo r id a . N A a na tio n al b an kin g
assn,. P la ln lilf . — v s — C a rm e n
M e lo n e an d W a lte r M e lo n e , De
le n d a n l, w h ich a fo re s a id W rit of
E x e c u tio n was d e liv e re d to m e
as S h e riff o l Se m in o le County,
F lo rid a , and I have le v ie d upon
the fo llo w in g d e sc rib e d p ro p e rty
ow ned b y C a rm e n a n d W a lte r
M e lo n e . sa id p r o p e rly being
lo c a te d In S e m in o le Coun ty.
F lo rid a , m o re p a r tic u la r ly de
sc rib e d as follow s
V a rio u s and a sso rte d house
hold lu rn ltu re a n d ap p lia n ce s.
In ven to ry m a y be vie w e d a t the
C iv il D iv is io n ot Ihe S em ino le
C o un ty S h e r iff s D e p a rtm e n t.
Item s to be sold In a lot. b ein g
stored at D ave Jones W re c k e r
Se rvice . F e rn P a r k , F lo r id a
and the un d ersig ned as S h e riff
ot Se.-ninole C o un ty. F lo rid a ,
w ill at It 00 A M on the 17th
d ay ot O cto b er. A D 1985. o tter
lo r sa le and sell to the hig h est
b id d e r, fo r cash, su b je ct lo an y
ano a ll e x istin g ie lm
at the
F ro n t (W est) D oor at the steps
o l the Sem in o le C o u n ty C o u rt
house in S a n lord . F lo rid a , the
ab ove d e sc rib e d p e rso n a l p ro
p e rly
T hat s a id sale is b eing m ad e
to sa tisfy the te rm s o l said W rit
o l E x e c u tio n
J o h n E P o lk S h e rltl
Sem in o le C o un ty, F lo r id a
T o be p u b lish e d Se p te m b er 26.
O cto b er 2. 9. 16. w ith the sa le on
O cto b er 17,1985
D E J 154
IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC I A L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A .
C A S E NO. *4-2H I-CA-09-P
IT A L A S IL V E S T R I IN V E S T
M E N T S . L T D IN C .
P la in tiff.
vs
R IC H A R D J
M U R P H Y and
S H E R R IL L A M U R P H Y,
D e fen d ants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
P U R S U A N T TO
C H A P T E R 45
N o tic e is g ive n th a t p u rsu an t
to a F in a l Ju d g m e n t d ated
Se p te m b er 24. 1985, In C a se N o
84 2161 C A 09 P o l the C ir c u it
C o u rt o l the E ig h te e n th J u d ic ia l
C ir c u it. In and tor S e m in o le
C o u n t y , F l o r i d a , in w h ic h
IT A L A S IL V E S T R I IN V E S T
M ENTS
L T D . IN C
Is the
P la in t i f f a n d R I C H A R D J
M U R P H Y and S H E R R I L L A
M U R P H Y a re the D e fen d ants, I
w ill se ll lo the hig h est b id d e r lo r
cash in the lobby at the w est
door ot the Sem in o le C oun ty
Courth o use In Se m in o le, San
lo rd
F lo r id a , at It 00 A M
( lim e ) on tne 2 1 s! d a y ot
O cto b er. 1985. the fo llo w in g de
s c rib e d p ro p e rty set lo r lh in Ihe
o rd e r ot Ihe F in a l Ju d g m e n t
Lot 10. H O W E L L E S T A T E S ,
Isl A d d itio n a c c o rd in g lo the
p la t thereof as re c o rd e d In P la t
Book 23 P a g e 37 P u b lic R e c o rd s
o l Sem inole County, F lo r id a
D ated th is 24th day of Sep
te m b er. 1985
(S E A L)
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C le rk of C ir c u it C o u rt
B y D ia n e K. B ru m m e tt
D epu ty C le rk
P u b lis h Se p te m b er 26. 19*5
D E J lit

C E LEB R IT Y CIPHER

CW brity Cipher cryptograms are created from auotxt&gt;on»
famous
people, peal an ) preaeni
Each letter m in* cipher Hands tor
another Today a ckra i aguaix r
by C O N N IE W IENER

"LMPOLU

DB

QBURKYOI8
M U ’K
MDB

Y JO

POPCVHU

CMU

VYK

TPCMUT

RBUB
OYC

OP8U.“

JMUO

BDVO
-

ETPOLU.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The rich may not live longer,
but it certainly seem* so to their poor relations." —
Anonymous Author.

so. They s ru

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A
C I V I L A C T IO N N O .:
t S - H ll'C A - 0 9 'G
A M E R IC A N
S A V IN G S A N D
L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N .
P la in t llt ,
vs.
R O B E R T
S T E P H E N
G A R D N E R , et al..
D e fen d ants
N O T I C E O F A C T IO N
TO R O B E R T S T E P H E N
G A R D N E R an d LE S LIE
R G A R D N E R , h is w ile
A D D R ESS KNOW N
P O B ox 1731,
A lta m o n te S p rin g s. F L
32715
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D that an
a c tio n to fo reclo se a m o rtg ag e
on Ihe fo llo w in g p ro p e rty in
S e m in o le County, F lo r id a .
L o t 16, B lo c k " A " . C O A C H
L I G H T E S T A T E S , a c c o rd in g to
Ihe p la t th ereof as re co rd e d In
P la t Book 21, P a g e s 30 and 31,
P u b lic R e c o r d ) o l S e m in o le
Co un ty, F lo rid a .
h a s been file d ag a in st you and
•'Cu a te re q u l-e d to verve a copy
o l y o u r w ritte n d elen ses, It an y,
to It on G r a c e A n n e G la v fn .
E s q u ir e , P la in t i f f s a tto rn e y ,
w hose m a ltin g ad d re ss is 1079
W. M o rse B lv d ., Suite B. P O
B o x 1177. W in te r P a r k . F lo r id a
32790 1177. on o r before the 151h
d a y o l O cto b e r 19*5 and tile Ihe
o rig in a l w ith the C le r k o l th is
C o u rt e ith e r before s e rv ic e on
P la in t if f s atto rn e y o r Im m edl
a le ly th e re a fte r; o th e rw ise a
d efa u lt w ill be en te red ag ain st
you for the re lie f d em and ed In
Ihe C o m p la in t o r P e titio n
W I T N E S S m y hand and seal
of th is C o u rt on the 10th d ay ot
Septem ber, 19*5.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C L E R K OF THE COURT
B y: Je a n B ritle n l
D e pu ty C le rk
P u b lis h : Se p te m b er 17. 19. 26.
O c to b e r ] , 19*5
D E J *4
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C I R C U IT ,
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY,
F LO R ID A
C I V I L A C T IO N N O .:
*5-0029 C A 09-G
THE
W ILL IA M S B U R G H
S A V IN G S B A N K . etc..

P la in tllt.

vs

A N TH O N Y JO HN A R T IS T , et
ux,
Defendants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E Is he reb y g iv e n lh a l
p u rsu a n t to Ihe F in a l Ju d g m e n t
ot F o re c lo s u re and S a le en tered
In the cause pen din g In the
C ir c u it C o u rt of th e E I G H
T E E N T H J u d ic ia l C ir c u it, in
an d to r S E M I N O L E County,
F lo r id a , C iv il A c tio n N u m b e r
*5 0079 C A 09 G the u n d e rsig n e d
C le r k w ill se ll the p ro p e rty
situ a te d In sa id C o un ty, de
s c rib e d as
T H E E A S T 12 F E E T O F L O T
3 A N D A L L O F L O T 4. B L O C K
H , L O N G W O O D P A R K , AC
C O R D IN G TO T H E
PLAT
T H E R E O F A S R E C O R D E D IN
P L A T B O O K It, P A G E S *, 9,
A N D 10. P U B L I C R E C O R D S O F
S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y .
F LO R ID A
a t p u b lic sala. lo the hig h e st and
b est b id d e r lo r cash a l 11:00
o ’c lo c k A M ., on the l t l h d a y o l
O cto b e r. 19(5. at the W E S T
F R O N T door of the S E M I N O L E
C o un ty C ourth ouse, S A N F O R D .
F lo r id a

insist tm

1HP1HPP'

THAT'S WHAT
1 THIN K.

w rm rr/
'ft

F IC T I T IO U S N A M E
N otice is h e reb y g ive n lh a l I
a m engaged in b u sin ess at 508
P a rso n B ro w n W ay . Longwood,
Sem in o le C o un ty F lo r id a 37750
under the fic titio u s n a m e of
D U N R IT E H O V E S E R V IC E S ,
and that I intend to re g iste r said
nam e w ith Ihe C le r k o l the
C ir c u it C o u rt, Sem in o le County,
F lo r id a In a c c o rd a n c e w ith the
p r o v is io n s o f Ihe F ic t it io u s
N a m e Statutes. T o w ll Section
865 09 F lo r id a Statutes 1957
t\ •' D o rothy P a r k e r
P u b lis h Sep tem b er 19. 76 A
O c ljb e i' 3, iC. 1985
D E J 131

IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C I R C U IT ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY.
F LO R ID A
C A S E NO. *5 1511 C A 09-K
F R E E D O M S A V IN G S A N D
L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N , a F lo r id a
c a p ita l s lo c k asso cia tio n , f/ k / a
C o m B a n k S e m ino le.
P la in tiff.

vs

M A R K E S E L I N G E R an d T H E
U N I T E D
S T A T E S OF
A M E R IC A .
D e fen d ants
AM ENDED
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO M A R K E S E L I N G E R
176 H e a th e r HIM
Longw ood. F lo r id a 37750
and
AM p a r lie s c la im in g to h a ve
an y rig h t, title o r Interest in the
p ro p e rty d e sc rib e d he rein
Y o u a r e n o t if ie d th a t a
m o rtg a g e fo re c lo su re a c tio n has
been file d ag a in st you and you
a re re q u ire d to se rv e a co py of
you r w ritte n d elen ses. It an y. on
F ra n k M
W o lft. E s q u ire , of
D ean. M e a d . E g e rto n ,
B lo o d w o r lh , C a p o u a n o A
B o ja r tii. P A . w hose ad d re ss Is
P o st O lflc e B ox 7346. O rlan d o .
F lo r d la 37(02. on o r b e fo re
O cto b e r 15. 1915 an d file the
o rig in a l w ith the C le r k of this
C o u rt e ith e r b efore s e rv ic e on
P la in t if f 's atto rn e y o r Im m ed l
a le ly th e re a fte r, o th erw ise, a
d e fa u lt w ill be en te -ed ag ain st
you lo r the r e lie f d em a n d ed in
the c o m p la in t o r p e titio n
T he p ro p e rty w h ic h Is the
su bject of the fo re c lo su re actio n
is d e sc rib e d as fo llo w s
L o l 14. B lo c k B. T H E M E A D
O W S. U N I T 1. a c c o rd in g to the
p la t th ereof as re c o rd e d In P la t
B ook 15. P a g e s 66 an d 67 ot the
P u b lic R e c o r d s o l S e m in o le
C o un ty. F lo r id a
D A T E D th is 91h d a y o l Sep
te m b er, 19*5.

(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C le r k of the C o u rt
Susan E T ab o r
D e pu ty C le r k
P u b lish : Se p te m b er 12. 19. 26.
and O cto b e r 3, 1985
D E J (3

(C O U R T S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT

B y : Diane K Brum m ett
Deputy C lerk
P u b lis h : Se p te m b er 19. 26, 19*5
D E J 136
IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
O F T H E 1*TH
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F LO R ID A
C I V I L A C T IO N NO .
*5 2021-CA 09 P
A m e r iF I r s t F e d e ra l S a vin g s and
L o a n A sso c ia tio n
P la ln lilf .
vs
F r a n c e M R ic a r d . e t a l .
D e fen d ants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
lh a l on Ihe l lt h d ay ot O cto b er
19*5, at 11 00 a m at the W est
F ro n t D oor o l the C o u rth o u se ot
S e m in o le C o u n ty, F lo r id a , a l
S a n lo r d , F l o r i d a , Ih e un
d e rslg n e d C le r k w ill o ile r lo r
sale to the hig h est b id d e r lo r
c a sh the fo llo w in g d e sc rib e d
re a l p ro p e rly
L o t
6 , B l o c k
B.
S W E E T W A T E R C L U B . U N IT
T H R E E , a c c o rd in g to the p lat
th ereof as re co rd e d in P la t Book
75. P a g e s 14 and 15. P u b lic
R e c o rd s o l Sem in o le County,
F lo r id a .
T O G E T H E R w ith a ll Ihe im
p ro v e m e n ls now o r h e reafte r
e re c te d on the p ro p e rty , and a ll
e a s e m e n ts , r ig h t s , ap
p u rte n a n c e s. ren ts, ro y a ltie s ,
m in e ra l, o il an d g as rig h ts and
p ro fits, w a te r, w a te r r ig h ts and
w a te r stock, and a ll llx tu r e s now
o r h e r e a fte r a p a r t o l Ihe
p r o p e r ly . In c lu d in g r e p la c e
m e n ts and a d d itio n s thereto
T h is sale is m ad e p u rsu a n t to
a S u m m a ry F in a l Ju d g m e n t in
F o re c lo s u re en te red in C iv il
A c tio n N o *5 2021 C A 09 P now
p en d in g in Ihe C ir c u it C o u rt In
a n d l o r S e m in o le C o u n t y ,
F lo r id a
D A T E D th is 16th d ay ot Sep
te m b e r. 19*5
(S E A L)
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K OF THE
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y D ia n e K B ru m m e tt
D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h Septem ber 19. 26. 19*5
D E J 133

M M R B e o m L K ,
Hm W O HABM PCO N
H tS A M im A C M P

IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T .
E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F LO R ID A
C A S E N O . *5-1207 CA-09 G
IN R E SH AR O N S F R IC K E .
P la in t llt .
vs
R A Y B A N W ELL. JR .
D efen d ant
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
th at p u rsu an t lo F in a l Ju d g m e n t
ot fo re clo su re re n d e re d on the
l l t h d ay o l S e p te m b er, A D ,
19*5, In that c e r la in cau se pend
Ing in Ihe C ir c u ll C o u rt in and
tor S e m in o le Coun ty. F lo rid a ,
w h e re in S H A R O N S F R I C K E is
P la in t llt , a r i R A Y B A N W E L L .
J R , is D efendant. C iv il A c tio n
No *5 1207 C A 09 G. I, D A V I D
N
B E R R I E N . C le r k o l the
a fo re s a id C ir c u it C o u rt, w ill at
II 00 a m . on the 16th day o l
O cto b er. A D . 19*5 u lle r lo r
sate and se ll lo the hig h est
b id d e r tor cash at the W est door
of the C o urth o use in S em ino le
C o un ty. F lo r id a , in S a n lo rd .
F lo r id a the fo llo w in g d e sc rib e d
p ro p e rty , situ ate d an d b eing in
S em ino le Coun ty. F lo r id a , to
W it’
A p a rc e l o l land In L o is 53 and
54. B lo c k
B. O F
LAKE
BRAN TLEY
IS L E S S E C O N D
A D D I T IO N . S e m in o le Coun ty.
F lo r id a , a c c o rd in g to Ihe P la t
th ereof as re co rd e d in P la t Book
II. page 5. o l the p u b lic re co rd s
ot S e m in o le County. F lo r id a ,
b o u n d e d a n d d e s c r ib e d a s
fo llo w s B e g in at a p oin t 121 65
le e l South 45*7415 W est ot Ihe
N o rth e ast c o rn e r ot s a id L o l 53.
ru n thence South 45*24' 15" W est
a d ista n c e o l 127 78 leet to a
p oin t on the W e ste rly lin e o l said
Lot 54. thence E a s t a d ista n c e o l
170 60 l e e t , t h e n c e N o r t h
44*I 2 ' 2 I " W est a d ista n c e of
119 78 leet to the p oin t o l begin
ning
S u c h s a le w i l l b e m a d e
p u rsu an t to and In o rd e r to
sa tis fy the te rm s of sa id fin a l
lo d g m e n t
D ated Se p te m b er 13. 1985
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K F O T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
B y D ia n e K B ru m m e tl
D e pu ty C le rk
P u b lis h Se p te m b er 19. 26. 1985
D E J 121

» s t m n that
fteTTY MUCH 60€S
WITHOUT 5AYl\'b.

m ompy m tKRx/i

c%

v m A z rr

ON HIS
NOSBff
v

VI

I

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o tice is h e reb y g iv e n th at I
a m en g ag ed In b usin ess a l 995
S R
434. A lta m o n te Sp ring s.
S e m in o le C o un ty, F lo r id a under
Ihe lic t ltio u s n a m e o l M E D I C A L
D I E T C L I N I C , and lh a l I Intend
lo re g iste r said nam e w ith Ihe
C le r k o l the C ir c u it C o u rt.
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a In
ac c o rd a n c e w ith the p ro v isio n s
ot the F ic t itio u s N a m e Statutes.
Tow n
Se ction 84 5 09 F lo r id a
Statutes 1957.
/*/ K a th y N o r r is
P u b lis h Sep tem b er 12 . 19, 26 A
O cto b er 3 1985
D E J 74

by Berke Breathed
QMtFMm. TO men

BLOOM C O U N T Y
A-AP€H(MN. U€U. /
S0R£ KNOW KHfT I
1HMKA30VT THAT ■'

Legal Notice

m

M

71— H e lp W a n te d

Legal Notice
IN T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT C O U R T ,
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A
C A S E N O . (5'29f2'CA-04-G
IN R E : T H E M A R R I A G E O F
W ALTER EU G EN E
B A IL E Y .S R .,
H usb an d ,
and

C L A S S IF IE D A D S
Seminole
322-2611

W ile.

N O T IC E
U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
N AM E STATUTE
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
N o tic e Is he reb y g iv e n th a t the
un d ersig n e d, p u rsu a n t to the
" F ic t it io u s N a m e S ta tu te ",
C h a p te r (65 09, F lo r id a Statutes,
w ill re g is te r w ith th e C le r k ot
ih e C ir c u it C o u rt, In an d lo r
S e m in o le Co un ty, F lo r id a , upon
re c e ip t o l proof of th e p u b lic *
tion ot th is N otice, the lic t ltio u s
na m e, to w ll:
F R A N K LIN ARM S
APARTM ENTS
un der w h ic h we a re en g ag ed In
b u sin e ss a t 1120 F lo r id a A v e n u e
S a n lo rd . F L . S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a 32771.
T h a i the p a rty Interested In
sa id b u sin ess e n te rp ris e Is a s
fo llo w s :
R O L A N D G E N T E S and
R E N A G E N T E S . M s w ife, a s
tenants b y the e n tire tie s.
DATED
at C a s s e lb e r r y ,
S e m in o le C o u n ly , F lo r id a on
A u g u st 28. 1985
R o la n d G en tes
R e n a G e n ie s
P u b lis h Se p te m b er 5. 12, 19, 24.
1985
D E J 21
N O T IC E O F P R O C E E D IN G
F O R C LO S IN G .
V A C A T IN G A N D
A B A N D O N IN G A S T R E E T .
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
Y o u w ill ta ke n o tic e lh a t Ihe
C ily C o m m is s io n o l the C ity o l
S a n lo rd , F lo r id a , a t 2:00 o 'c lo c k
P M on O c to b e r 14, 19*5, In the
C ity C o m m is s io n R oo m at the
C ity H a ll In the C ity o l S a n lo rd ,
F lo r id a , w ill c o n sid e r an d d e ­
te rm in e w h eth e r o r not the C ity
w ill clo se , v a c a te en d ab an d on
an y rig h t o f ih e C it y a n d the
p u b lic In and to a p o rtio n o l
D epot A v e n u e ly in g betw een
W y lly A v e n u e a n d v a c a t a d
L e m o n S tree t an d ab u ttin g the
W e ste rly R ig h t of w a y lin e of
S e a b o a rd C o a s tlin e R a ilr o a d
R ig h t o l w a y fu rth e r d e sc rib e d
as fo llo w s
T h a t p o rtio n o l D epo t A v e n u e
ab u ttin g the E a s te r ly lot lin e ot
Lo ts 5 and 1, B lo c k 10. A .B
R u s s e ll's A d d itio n to F o rt R eed,
P la l B ook 1 . P a g e 97. P u b lic
R e c o rd s o l S e m in o le C o un ty.
F lo r id a
P e rs o n s in te re ste d m a y ap
p ear an d be h e a rd a t the tim e
and p la ce sp ecifie d .
A D V I C E T O T H E P U B L I C : If
a p erso n d e c id e s to ap p e a l a
d e c isio n m ad e w ith re sp e c t to
an y m a tte r co n sid e re d a t the
ab o ve m e e tin g o r h e a rin g , he
m a y need a v e rb a tim re c o rd ot
the p ro c e e d in g s. In clu d in g the
te stim o n y an d e v id e n c e , w h ic h
re c o rd Is not p ro v id e d b y the
C ity o l S a n fo rd (F S 7 8 4 0I05)
C ity C o m m is s io n at the
C ity of S a n lo rd , F lo rid a
B y H N. T a m m . J r ..
C ity C le r k
P u b lis h Se p te m b er 26,19*5
D E J 180
N O T IC E O F C LO SIN O .
V A C A T IN G A N D
A B A N D O N IN G A P O R T IO N
OF A STREETS
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
Y o u w ill ta ke n o tic e that Ihe
C ily C o m m is s io n of the C ity ot
Sanford. F lo r id a , on Se p te m b er
23 1985 passed an d ad op ted
O rd in a n c e N o 1275. to c lo se ,
v a c a te an d ab an d on a p o rtio n ot
A m e r ic a n a B o u le v a r d ly in g
E a s t o l O rla n d o D r iv e (H ig h w a y
&lt;7 &amp; 92) a n d b a lw e e n th e
E a s t e r ly e x te n s io n o t L a k e
M a r y B o u le v a rd an d A ir p o r t
B o u le v a rd , m o re p a r tic u la r ly
d e sc rib e d a s fo llo w s :
C o m m e n c e a t the N orth w e st
c o rn e r o l Ihe Southw est 'm of
Section 12. T o w n sh ip 20 South,
R a n g e 30 E a s t , S e m in o le
C o u n ly . F lo r id a , r u n th en ce
02*45 07" W est a lo n g the W est
b o u n d a ry of s a id Southw est V»,
324 31 le e t to Ihe P o in t of
b e g in n in g , s a id P o in t b ein g on a
c u rv e c o n c a v e d S o u th w e ste rly ,
h a vin g a ra d iu s ot 440 00 feet, a
c e n tra l a n g le J3*S9'S0” ; th en ce
So u th e a ste rly alo ng the a r c o f
sa id c lr v e . an a r c d is ta n c e ot
272 95 feet lo th e en d ot sa id
c u rv e , th en ce South 57*42'04"
E a s t 304 t i lee t to the b eg in n in g
ol a c u rv e
c o n c a v e d
N o rth e a s te rly h a v in g a ra d iu s o l
488 3* teet, a c e n tr a l a n g le o l
08*29'4S"; thence S o u th e a ste rly
alo ng ih e a rc of s a id c u rv e , an
a rc d is ta n c e of 77.42 le e t; th en ce
N o rth 06*52’ 17" W est 94.47 feet
to a p oin t on a c u rv e co n ca v e d
N o rth e a s te rly , h a v in g a ra d iu s
of 40* 3* le e t. a c e n tra l a n g la o l
01*34'29": th ecn e N o rth w e s te rly
alo ng the a r c o l s a id c u rv e , an
a rc d is ta n c e of 11.77 le e t; th en ce
N o rth 57*42 04" W est. J 0 4 .il fe el
to the b e g in n in g of a c u rv e
co n c a v e d S o u th w e ste rly h a v in g
a ra d iu s o l 540 00 fe e l, a c e n tra l
a n g la o f JJ* * 2 0 T 4 "; th e n c e
N o rth w e s te rly a lo n g lh a a r c o l
sa id c u rv e , a n a r c d ista n c e o l
314 20 le e l to a p o in t on sa id
West b o u n d a ry ol said
S o u th w e st U ; th e n c e Sou th
02*45 0 7 " W e st a lo n g s a id W est
b o u n d a ry , H II ta et to the P o in t
o l B e g in n in g ;
C ily C o m m is s io n o t the
C ity o l S a n lo rd , F lo r id a
B y H .N . T a m m . J r . ,
C ity C le r k
P u b lis h Se p te m b er 26. IMS
D E J 179

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT
HOURS
RATES

B E V E R L Y ANN B A I L E Y ,
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO B E V E R L Y A N N B A IL E Y
227 L a k e M a r y B o u le v a rd
L a k e M a r y , F lo r id a 37746
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D that an
a c tio n fo r d isso lu tio n o l m a r ­
ria g e and o th er r e lic t h a t been
H ied a g e ln st you end you a re
re q u ire d to se rv e a co py o l y o u r
w ritte n defenses, It any, to It on
R O B E R T M . M O R R I S , E s q u ire ,
P e t it io n e r 's a t t o r n e y w h o se
ad d re ss Is s e tlo r lh h e re in b elow ,
on o r b e fo re O c to b e r 4, 19*5. an d
tile the o rig in a l w ith the c le r k o l
th is c o u rt e ith e r b efore s e rv ic e
on P e titio n e r 's a tto rn e y o r Im ­
m e d ia te ly th e re a fte r; o th e rw ise
a d e fa u lt w ill be en te red a g a in st
you lo r the r e lie f d em a n d ed In
Ihe P e titio n .
D A T E D a l Sa nford . S e m in o le
C o u n ty, F lo r id a th is 3rd d a y o l
S e p te m b er, 19(5
0 8 V ID N B E R R IF N
A s C le r k ot Ihe C o u rt
B y: Ap-ie* E . Sulek
A s D e p u ty C le r k
R O B E R T M . M O R R I S . E s q u ir e
O lllc e : 615 W est 25lh Street
P e st 0(1 Ice D ra w e r M
Sa nford , F lo r id a J2772
T elep h on e (305) 323 7550
A tto rn e y to r H u sb an d
P u b lis h : Se p te m b er 5, 12, 19, 24,
19*5
D E J tS

Orlando-Winter Park

8:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 -Noon

1 tim e ......................1.34 a lift*
3 Lines Minimum

D E A D L IN E
N oon Tuesday

D R IV E R S W A N T E D
p a r t tim e . S a la ry p lu s co m
m issio n . *6 -M p e r hr. M u s i
h a v e ow n c a r A In surn ace.
C a ll D o m in o ’ s P ll t a . 371 5000
EXEC U TIV E SEC R ETA R Y
W ith o r w ith o u t s h o rth a n d !
P r e le r r a b ly W A N G w o fd
p ro c e s s o rs . N e e d e d In the
L a k e M a r y A re a .
Ablest Tem porary Services
321-1940

Experienced Carpenter
W an ted w ith a b ilit y to m an ag e
s m a ll c re w It n e c e s s a ry C a ll
349 5010 le a v e m e ssa g e
EX P ER IEN C ED

AH Classified Advertising th e appears in the Evening Herald
en Wednesday preceding tfce Herald Advertiser. The rates
shewn above ere for bath days.

R E A L E S T A T E A G E N T lo
la rm Geneva area.
O V IE D O R E A L T Y ,I N C .
365-640)________
E X P E R I E N C E D O N L Y I Cab t
n e t M a k e r s . A s s e m b le r s .
L a m ln a lo r s . 129-5943

21— P e r s o n a ls

61— M o n e y to L e n d

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER

NEEDM ONEYT

E x p e r ln e c e d s h in g le la y e r s .
N e w w o rk. C a ll In e v e n in g s
6:30 - 9:00 P .M . 322 6 268;______

Experienced Window WasherA B O R T IO N C O U N S E L IN G
F r e e P r e g n a n c y Tests.
C o n f id e n t ia l- I n d iv id u a l
assistance.
Call
lor
a p p o in tm e nt- e v e n in g h o u rs
a v a ila b le ...........................321-7695

New construe!Ion. 327 7417_____

Everyone does at some lime. If
you own a hum* and h a t» a
job, It » easier than you think.
C R E D IT ?
N O PRO BLEM I

23— L o s t &amp; F o u n d

*34*900
F O U N D • E x o tic B ir d In the
v ic in it y o l 1st. S a n lo rd . F ou n d
Sunday. C a ll: 323 7599.

F R E E D L A N D E R , INC.
The Mortgage People
710 E. Atlamonte Drive
'Licensed Mortgage Broker

25— S p e c ia l N o tic e s
BECOME A NOTARY

63— M o rtg a g e s
B o u g h t A So ld

F o r D e ta il* ; I *00 432-4254
F lo r id a N o ta ry A s s o c ia tio n
• M A R Y K A Y C O S M E T IC S *
Skin care and color tlalr
C O N N I E .......................... 322 7734
Rummage Sale- B a rn e tt M e m o
r ia l C h u rc h , D o y le R d . E n
te rp rlse . Sept. 27 2*th, 9 A ,M .

71— H e lp W a n te d

Employment
323-5176
2523 French Ave.

HELP US HELP OTHERS!

AAATEM P
A divlson ot A A A Employment
Work when you want. Apply
today, NO F E E 1122-0057

27— N u r s e r y &amp;
C h ild C a r e

AAATEM P
Looking for good people far good
fobs' Apply today I No feat
322.......................... ................. 0057

Mother ol 2 year old would liko
to watch ono or two children In
my Lake M ary home. 222-3123,

33— R e a l E s t a t e
C o u rse s
★
★
★
★
• Thinking ol getting o •
• Real Estate Licenser •
We oiler Free Tuition
and continuous Training)
Call Dick or V icki for details;
671-1867...323-1209... Eve. 724-1*50
Keyes ol Florida., Inc.
19 Yoars Experience I

Legal Notice
N O TICE
U N D E R FIC TITIO U S

A cry lic Applicators noodod to
apply protective coating on
cars, boats and planes. *5 lo
(It per hour. We train. For
work In Sanlord area call
T a m p a *13 0*4 7151.

LABOtt / 4 &gt; V
•m i anas

FICTITIO US N A M E
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
lhat JC M IN SU R A N C E COR
PO RATIO N Is engaged In busi­
ness a t:
10 Sherry Avenue
Winter Springs, Florida 377M
Seminole County, Florida, under
Ihe FIctltlousNam eol:
A LT A M O N T E
T IT LE
COM PANY
and that It intends to register
said name with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, Seminole County.
Florida In accordance with the
provisions ol the Fictitious
Name Statute, lo wit:
Section (65 09 Florida Statutes
G A R Y E. M A S S E Y . Secretary
JC M IN SU R A N C E C O R ­
PO RATION
Publish: Septamber S, 17, 19, 24,
19*5
O E J 77_____________________
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F THE EIG H TEEN TH
JU D IC IA L CIR C U IT
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A
C IVIL ACTIO N NO.;
(S-21S4-CAI9G
C E N T R U S T SAVINGS B A N K .
etc.,
Plaintllt,

I

I NO
^
FEE I
Report ready tor work at 4 A M
407 W. 1st. $t.................Sanford

32M590
A P P O IN T M EN T S E T T E R S
Full time only. 17 or older
preferred *4 per hour plus
bonuses. Longwood local Ion.
Call: 699-5262______________

ASSISTANT MANAGER
WANTED
For well-established apartment
c o m p l e x
In L a k e
M ary/Sanlord area lo work 2
days • week. Inquiries: 22J4923.______________________

ATTENTION:
S T U D E N T S . H O U S EW IV ES
OR A N Y O N E LO O K IN G
FOR A PLE A SA N T
S EC O N D IN C O M E.
W o rk a l o u r c o n v a n lo n lly
located Altamonte Springs o f­
fice. Good hourly rate plus
commission. Hours I • 5 P .M .
or 5 ■ 9 P .M . We cover you lor
sick days and holidays; Also
paid vacation. We train you
whl It you tarn.
Call M r Peterson
F ar Appointment............ 134 4646
A V O N E A R N IN O S WOWIII
O P E N T E R R I T O R I E S NOWI It

n i U U er 3370659

R A S Y S IT T E R
3 Day* per
week to watch 3 Infants In my
home. References. Ask lor
Janoy 3331133._____________

LABO RERS
R e lia b le w o rk e rs needed
to r fir s t s h ift
Ablest Tem porary Services
311-1940
L A N D S C A P E L A B O R E R S Full
lim e positions. 14 00 per hour.
Call: 133 *133______________
L P N or RN needed. 3-11 shill.
Good atmosphere A benefits
Full lim e position. Apply al:
Debary M anor...60 N. Hwy. 17-93
Oebary.................................. E O E

NIGHT JANITORS NEEDED
9PM lo 7AM, lull A pari lime
Som e e x p e rie n c e helpfu l.
Janitors needed tor Ihe San
lo r d A A lt a m o n t e a re a
904 753 0731

NURSES AIDES

O F F I C E O P E N I N O In Local
F irm . Experienced In credit.
Inventory, C R T date entry,
and Accts. recelveable Send
Resum e’ to:
Box 1213
C/O Sanlord Herald
PO BOX 1657
Sanlord. FI. 31771 1457

Part time Babysitter Needed
For church groups 331-4171

PRODUCTION DIE
A SET-UP MAN
E x p e rie n ce d punch press,
d r i l l p r e s s a n d m ill in g
machine. Must be able to read
blueprints, have basic math
skills, and work with decim als
an d f r a c t io n . S te a d y
e m p lo y m e n t w ith f rin g e
benefits An Equal Opportun!
ty Em ployer.

PENN ALUMINUM, INTER’L
2540 Jewett Lane............. Sanlerd
311-1100

REAL ESTATE
SALESPEOPLE
High
Earnings
Potenllall
Modern office In excellent
location Complete training
program - New division of old
established firm . Call now
for
datalls
on
pleasant
working conditions and to
secure your future
Jim R atlerty................... 574 6656
Real Estate Associates Needed
100% commission concept
G R A N T P R O P E R T IE S .IN C
______ 774 5105

RECREATION AIDE

BABYSITTER
needed. M y hom e. Some
housekeeping Involved. 333
5713 alter* pm._____________
Babysitter- loving person to
care tor Infant In m y home.
F u lltim e . R e t.574 6453

F o r 64 bed re s id e n tia l fa c ilit y
A d u lt M R 331 7331
R elia b le hairdresser needed
with clientele preferably. Only
those interested In working
call: 333 0991_______________

SALESPERSON
BICYCLE MECHANIC
Wanted. *5 *13 p/hr. Must
have: Own Car, Phone, Basic
Tools. Experience a plus but
not necessary Must be re
sponsible A Bondeble Call
646 9496. Ask for- Bob
C A B IN ETM A K ER S
Experienced fop men. builders
Excellent wages and benefits
Call: 333 1440.

CARPENTERS Md HELPERS

v*.

H A R O L D L PH ILLIP S, II, etc .,
Defendants.
N O TICE O F AC TIO N
TO: H A R O L D L P H ILLIP S
R E S I D E N C E : UNKNOW N
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D lh a l an
action lo foreclose a mortgage
on the following property In
S E M IN O LE Counly. Florida.
U n it C J. S A N D L E W O O D
C O N D O M IN IU M , a C on­
dominium, according lo tho Do
deration of Condominium and
exhibits attached thereto re ­
corded In O tfk ia l Records Book
9*5, page 900, Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida,
ha* been Hied against you and
you are required to servo a copy
ol your written defenses. It any.
to It on C H A R L E S R. G E O R G E .
Ill, Swann and Haddock. P.A .,
P a ll n t lf f ’ s a tto rn e y , w hose
mailing address Is 135 West
Cenlral Boulevard, Suita 1100,
P O Box 640, Orlando. Florida
32*02 0640, on or before the 15th
day ol October 1M5 and file the
original with tha Clark ol thl*
Court althar belore service on
Plaintllt'* attorney or Immedi­
ately thereafter; otherwise a
default will be entered against
. you lor the relief demanded In
Ihe Complaint or Politico.
W ITN ES S m y hand and teal
of this Court on the tth day ol
Septamber IMS.
(S E A L !
D A V ID M . B ER R IE N
C LE R K O F TH E COURT
By: S u sa n E .T a b o r
Deputy Clerk
Publish; September 12, If. 26.
October J. IM5
D E J 15

r M C
ssatrst

Couple, mature adult. Chris
tlan Shelter lor abused A
troubled teens 149 5099

A ll shllts. Good atmosphere
and benellts. Apply at
DeBary Manor 60 N Hwy 17/93
DeBary E O E

A L L T Y P E S JO BS
S T A R T W ORK NOWI

NAM E LAW
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
that Ihe undersigned, desiring lo
engage In business under the
lictltious name of M D C C O R ­
PO R A TIO N at number 1033 E.
Semoran Blvd., lA . In the City ol
Casselberry, Florida, Intends to
register the said name with the
Clerk of the C ircull Court of
Seminole County. Florida.
Dated at Denver. Colorado,
this 16th day of August 19*5
M D C H O LD IN G S. INC.
By: Mlchaal A. Falner, Presl
dent and Co Chief Executive
Officer
Publish: September 5. 17. 19, 26.
19*5
D E J 20

FASHION M O D E L S
tor lash
Ion designer. T V . calalogs. all
ag e s 421 9*39,________________
H A IR STY LIST
E x p e rie n c e d . L a k e M a r y Salon
123-6521.
______________
H E L P W ANTED
D elivery
Person. Musi Know Ihe area.
Apply In person (II Sanlord
Ave.
__________________
HOUSEKEEPERS
F u ll and
part time Good atmosphere
and benllts. E O E. Apply at:
Debary Manor, 60 N. Hwy
17 91. Oebary.______________

H0USEPARENTS
We buy 1st end 2nd mortgages
Nation wide. C a ll: Ray Legg
Lie. Mtg Broker, 940 Douglas
Ave., Altamonte. 724 7757

★
★
★
★
S A N F O R D L IO N S C L U B
In v ite s you to t h e ir a n n u a l
S p a g h e tll D in n e r and B in g o
P a r ty . S a tu rd a y Se p te m b er
2*. 1985. 4 P .M to • P .M . a t
th e S a n lo r d C iv ic C e n te r.
C h ild r e n u n d e r 5 ( re e l
Benefit; Lion* Sight Program

E x p e rie n c e d g ra d e tra c to r op
e r a lo r an d s u p e rv is o r *7 p er
ho u r, p lu s b e n e fits Til *133.__

Wanted. Own tool and Iran*
porlotion
Longwood Area.
Vacation and benefits. Bob
305 331-7349
Avon Christmas Earnings
Two W aysl.Ba a Representative.
333-591*............................ 331-103*

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
We have an axcalltnl opportuni­
ty t o r s o m e o n e In o u r
cla tslfle d department. The
requirements are: A good
attitude, pleasant voice, neat
appearance and general otllca
(kills, which Include typing
and filing.
Wa offer full time employment,
h o s p lta llia tlo n p la n , p a id
vacation and an excallanl
working atmosphere.
For further Infermatlen. call
M el Adkins et 123-2*11, a it. it
a r a p p ly at Tha Sanlerd
E v e n in g H e r a ld ,
N.
French Ave., laniard. E O E

C00R
’

Home style food experience.
Apply 2 lo 4 pm. Holiday
House Restaurant, Hwy 12/93.
Near Lake M ary.

DENTAL
RECEPTIONISTS
F u ll and P art time. Experl
once helpful . 133 *1*5________

OCNTAl ASSISTANT
Experien ced with span of
dot las. Energetic, neel ap­
pearance. 223*115

F O T O M A T has Immedllale
opening for 3 7 P M shllt at
Sanlord Plata.
Benellts In
elude:
• Uniform s A Paid Training
• Paid Holidays A Vacation
• Insurance
• Em ployee Discounts
• Incenl Ive Program*
Apply at Sanlord Plata Store
or 114 L iv e O a k s B l v d .
Casselberry
___

SECURITY OFFICERS
*4 00 per hr. Winter Spr
A re s . Im m ediate posil
available I Apply: 111 E C
nlal D r . Suite 305. Orlando

SUPERMARKET
E X P E R I E N C E D M e a tc u t
ter/Cashler/ Produce Clerk
Apply In person:
P A R K A SH O P
IStti A Park Avenue
Polygraph required
See M r. er M rs. G e iil

TEACHERS-SUBSTITUTES
For Private Prep School in
SanlordA raa Call 331 3037
TRACTOR O PERATO R
Exp. with box blade A finish
grading. Salary com mens u
rale with ability 549 5290.
W AREHOUSE
A T T E N T I O N M E N I Shipping.
Receiving. Able lo till 50 lbs .
own transportation. *4 an hr.
Permanent positions. Never a
leel

TEMP PERM............774-1341
W AREHOUSE
LAR O RER
needed- Up to *5 per hour.
Please C a ll:.................333 83*0

W

Borns with this »4I

Needed Immediately
Nursing
Assistants and Live In Com
panlons. 1 year experience
required

MEOICAL PERSONNEL
POOL
305*91*911.

E O E ...... ............. M/F/H/V

�Experience hou*e cleaner. De
pendable. tru*tworlhy, refer
ence*. resonable rale*
Call J u d y .........................372 6*77

91— A p a r t m e n t s /
H o u se to S h a r e

TURN. ROOM........$55 a WEEK
*100 Security.................... 331 5990
Large room w/prlvata entrance
&amp; bath. Nice area. *55 week.
Relerence* required. 3? IS WO
S A N F O R D Furnished room* by
the week. Rea*onable rate*.
M aid service Call 333 4507.
S 7 P M . 4)5 Palmetto Ave
S H A R E clote In hou*e with
working person or 1-2 senior
citizens. Small pet? 371 SOSO

FREE MONTHS RENT
ON ANY 1 YEAR LEASE,
On these
All New Award Winning

ON SITE M A N A O E M E N T I
Children A Pets Welcome
Senior Cllliens Discount!

CANTERBURY VILLAS
321-3827
HOUSE A A P A R T M E N T Good
location . N ear schools A
store* Reasonable rent. Ret
erence. 373 1610,____________
* a * IN D E L T O N A • • •
* * H O M E S FO R R E N T • •
_______* * 574-1434 * •______
Longwood/Lake M a ry AreaNew 3 bd rm . spilt plan,
garage, blinds, appliances.
carpet. 4325 mo 679 6410

Oreat Location o il 434- Exacu
five suites Include finished
Interior, all utilities, cleaning,
conference room, lounge, an
swerlng service, secretarial A
coltee service. 630-9694.______

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Real Estate Broker

W E K I V A F A L L S - 2 b d rm .
Mobile with 1.9 auras. Owner
financing. 527,900
2640 Sanford Ave.

321-0759 E v e . -322-7643

S A N F O R D -3 Bdrm ., I bath,
appliance 5375 per month plus
5375 security. Call: 799 7900 or
6)3 179 3190 _______________

A I Clean I bdrm. Complete
privacy MO per week plus
5700 security. Call: 373 7769 or
327 9637._________________

SAN FO RD
R avenna P a rk .
Very nice 4 bdrm. 7 bath,
central alr/heat. lanced yard,
appliances. Newly decorated.
No pets. 6500 mo. plus securl
ty. 377 7649 or 321 3136_______

DeBary- L A R G E LOT- Spacious
2 bdrm. 2 balh. utility A
fa m ily room , a p p lia n c e s,
screened porch, air, double
garage. 546,900,669 3974

SEN IO R C ITIZ EN S DISCOUNT
R A N C H S T Y L E LIV IN O ttl

SANFORD COURT APTS.
323-3301
Furn. Apts, tor Senior Cltlien*
311 Palmetto Ave
J Cowan No Phone Call*

2 Bdrm., I bath, stove, retriger
ator. ac. carpeted, no pels.
5350 ♦ security. Attar 6 P.M .
643 2174.__________________
2 Bdrm .. Living room, dining
room, kitchen, a/c. paddle
Ians, good location. 5340 per
month discounted. Call: 3716443 or 373 7013_____________

L A K E M A R Y Small furnished
apt Nice tor working person
only. No Children or pet*.
C a ll: .................
377 3930

105— D u p le x T r ip le x / R ent

Lovely 7 bdrm. huge room*,
complete privacy 590 wk. plut
5750 security deposit Call:
373 7769 or 373 9637_________

Casselberry- 2 bdrm., central
heat/alr, carpeting. 5350 mo.
plus deposit. 349 9000________

Sanford I Bdrm, adults, no pets,
air. quiet redsldenllal 5775
mo/up ♦ deposit. 373 60)9
S M A L L
G A R A G E
E F F I C I E N C Y - 1 w orking
adult 575 a week plus deposit
Utilities lurnished 322-2617
W E K IV A R IV E R - Efficiency,
air. carpel Canoe use. adults,
no pets 5755 m o . utilities
Included 377-4470.__________
I bdrm , apt 595 per week,
utilities Included, plus securl
ty Call 373 4176

99— A p a r t m e n t s
U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t
BAM BO O C O V E A P T S .
&gt;00 E. Airport Blvd.
I Bdrm.. I Bath............. u a o m e.
7 Bdrm.. I Bath............. 1375 mo.
P H O N E ............................ &gt;33-6461

• COUNTRY SETTING •
Large I A 2 Bdrm. Apartments
Adult Lakevlew Fam lly Poolside

Available Now.Optn Weekends
S E C U R IT Y O E P O S IT ..........5100
W ITH THIS ADI

MASTERS COVE....... 323-7900
Efficiency newly decorated 564
wk. Ullllties Included I mo
security 371 5990___________
LAR G E EFFIC IEN C Y
Ideal
for I adult or couple Reliable
personls) wanted
Reason
able Call 377 5779__________
M A R I N E R 'S V L L A G E
I
bdrm 5310. 7 bdrm 5360 and
upl Adult*only 373 &gt;670

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE

L A K E M A R Y - 131 E . Lake M ary
Ave. Almost new 2 bdrm ., 3
bath duplex, all amenities.
Washer/dryer hook-up. Very
private. 5393 mo. 747 6910
L A K E M A R Y • 2 B d r m .,
washer/dryer connection, ap
p l l a n c e s , q u ie t a r e a ,
5330/discount. Investors Real
ty Services. 679 9034.________
S A N F O R D 2 bdrm ., carport,
la u n d r y r o o m , c e n t r a l
a lr/ h e a t, a ll a p p lia n c e * ,
carpets, drapes. 2424 S. Lake
Ave OttW . 75th St. 530 0565

2

Mini Warthoum
554 A Up...........................373-9479
S T O R A O E- Trailers. R V 's A
Boats. 24 hr. security guard A
fully fenced. Call Bill Quail or
B i l l S l ln q m a n . 173-2677

115— In d u s t r ia l
R e n t a ls
W A R E H O U S E SP A C E - Suitable
lor sub contractors. Zoned in
dustrlal. Fully fenced A 34 hr.
security guard. 1.250 sq. tt. or
more. Call B ill Quail or Bill
Sllnqman. 311-1677__________
3.000, 4,999, er 9,000 SR. ft. with
dock height. A vailable Imme
d lately. G reat location In
Long wood. 930-9496.

117— C o m m e r c ia l
R e n t a ls

MOVE IN SPECIAL!
$299.00

Retail A Office Space 300 up to
7.000 sq ft. also storage avail
able 377 4403______________

• F A M IL Y A A D U L T e

Sanford- 2 unim proved lots.
Zoned C-2. W. M ellciew ski,
...377 7993.
R E A L T O R ..

2 BEDROOM.
C a ll....................................&gt;33 7970
S p a c io u s A p a r t m e n t s Lakefronl, pool, tennis, adults,
no pels, laundry. Starting at
6303 a mo Call 7234743 to see.
1 and 2 bdrm. Also furnished
efficiency Irom 675 week. S2M
deposit. No pels Call 323 4507
5 7 P M . 415 Palm ello________
I Bdrm.. pool, references and
security required 6775 month.
Call: 371 5990

$100 OFF!
1st. Months Rent
1 Bdrm .. I bath......... 53l5Month
7 Bdrm . I's Bath
6350Month
Each apt. has patio or balcony
over ooklng court yard. All
appliances, laundry room, and
pool.

FRANKUN ARMS APTS.
3234850

2 bdrm

. I bath, children wel
come. yard. 560 week, plus
utilities Security deposit 6700
Call 711*431 or 1714*67.

103— H o u se s
U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t
EX EC U TIV E
COUNTRY
H O M E lor sale or rent. 4
Bdrm .. 2 bath, with pool, large
wooded lot. new carpet, near
school. Call: 1-773 3*72.

Extra Clean 4 bdrm. 2 bath
home Wynne wood. O K 'd lor
V A A F H A . 559.500. By Owner.
371 3363___________________
FOR SALE
BY OW NERMagnolia Estates 3 bdrm.,
fireplace, large lot w/small
apartm ent. Assum able, no
quailflying. Payments of 5219
per month. 566,500 171-3350

mm

121— C o n d o m in iu m
R e n t a ls
PIN E R ID O E C L U B

LUXUIY CONDOS
1,2.3 Bdrm ., 2 bath, washer,
dryer, vertlcles. retrlg , dish
washer. Starting at S375.
O O L O K E Y M O M T .. INC.
__________ 671-7777__________

SANFORD
7 bdrm . Townhouse, living
room, fam ily room, eat-ln
k it c h e n , w a llp a p e r ,
washer/dryer hook up, pool.
5363 mo 774 4054____________

S IN G L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G
L m s b Ttrms to Fit
Your Noodsl
Furnished or Unfurnishtd.
Carports.............. Private Patles
Lush Landscaping.Pets.Children
W ATER BEDS A CCEPTED )

Call......... 3211911
THE ARBORS-

2 bdrm. 2 bath, microwave,
washer/dryer, blinds, pool.
Was model I Private lanced
patio. 5493 mo. 774 4054

3 Bdrm. 1 Bath Huge lot.
500sq.lt. workshop.
Wallace Cress Realty
Realtor............................ 311-4577

ii\ n

n i:\ m

it i : \ i r o i t

; 0000 Pw Month

H A L F A C R E - L a rg e heme
w/peel, air, fenced. 549.509

.

Security
' ____

' *t .

I Ann

SPACIOU S1 BD R M . H O M E
On larga shady lot at end of
street. Qulel yet very conve
nlent. Perfect family home
you will agree, at 569.900

153— A c r e a g e L o t s / S a le

CALL BART

C A N A L LOT- for tel* by owner.
3.9 miles west of M o l l Hwy 46
on Lake Sylvan (305) 374 1547.

R E A L ESTATE
REALTO R
371-7499

Mf A|TOMS

L A K E J E S S U P Single family
lot on canal. Large oaks.
B e a u t if u l v ie w o f L a k e
Jessup! 520.000. C ell: 931 1534.

STe m p e r

Sanford Building Lot with large
oekt. 57,900. Call: after 4
P .M ,321 1399._____________

P R I M E LOCATION- Homa to
llva In P L U S 7 rantal units
with St,050 par month Incoma.
P rlca reduced to 1155,000.
Submit oilers.
EXTRA
LAR O E
HOM ECentral haat/alr, eat-ln kltch
a n , d o u b le - c a r g a r a g e ,
assumable mortgage! Owner
will hold 2nd with 115,000
down. 559,000.
O T H E R H O M ES , LOTS,
A C R E A O E , IN VESTM EN T
PROPERTY

C O U N TR Y W ID E R E A L T Y
Reg. R .E . Broker............ 321-9135
470 Hwy. 4)3, Osteen, FI*.
5

A c r e s C le a r e d L a n d In
Geneva. 535.900- Assumable
mortgage. 349-5977._________

5 acres near Mullet Lake Park.
Term s. 577,900.
O V IE D O R E A L T Y , INC.
365-6403

LIST W ITH USI

1 5 7 - M o b ile
H o m e s / S a le

All YOU HI f 0
10 SNOW

V

7

IN Rf 61 [SIAM

2194 HW Y. 17-91

C A R R IA G E C O V E
MO. H O M E P A R K
Now a n d r a t a l* . C o n n e c t
Gregory Mobil* Home*. 323
3700.______________________
N E W O B L . W ID E M O B I L E
H O M E on 5 acres. Complete
package- 556.900
Also. Two/
5 acre tracts ready for Mobil*
Homes. 373 5700

STENSTROM
t

K

INMnfl*Wlt&lt;r«Mli «\l&gt;imi&lt;tip

REALTY-REALTOR

KISH R E A L E S T A T E
7101 S. F R E N C H A V E .

Sanford’s Salts Laador

REA LTO R

321-0041

L A K E M A R Y A R E A 3 bdrm. 3
both on shedy cut de-sac.
Fam ily room. Good schools 1
567,500- assumable. 377-4496
LONOWOOD- Markham Woods
Rd. 4 bdrm. 2 bath homa with
2 bdrm. I bath, mother-in-law
or rental apt. I + acres with
pool. 5159.900

Wall S t Company— 322-5005
Lounge Under the Shade Trees
end En|oy the Privacy. Fen
tattle Assumable AAortgege.
Low Down I Upgraded carpel
and peddle fens. 2 bdrm. I
b a th , f a m ily ro o m , and
workshop. Priced In the eO'tl
STO P C A L L N O W I I !
H .O . R E A L T Y . 530*900_______
Osteen- 4 bdrm., 3 balh on 5
acres with horse barn and
pasture. 574,900.

3 bdrm..

I bath situated on 3
acres. CB, alr/heat, on Laka
Butler In Osteen. Possible
owner financing. 560.000 total
price.

CO U N TR Y W ID E R E A L T Y
Reg. R .E . Broker............ 373-9135
479 Hwy. 415, Osteen, F le.

OWNER FINANCING
S A N F O R D renovated 4 bdrm.
I bath, wood floors. Ilreplect.
d in in g ro om , F la . room ,
c e n t r a l a lr / h e a t , le n t ,
washer/dryer. Large corner
lot In nice area. 559.000 Owner
will hold mortgage with 56.000
down. 373 6607

K X CELLEN T
STARTER
H O M E for working couple.
Assumable F H A 9.5%, freshly
painted, on corner lot, nice
yard. Only 5)9,900. See to
a p precia te) C a ll Flo re n ce
T hom p son, R e elto r/A sso c.
331-1433, attar hours 323 9632
OW NER T R A N SFER R IN G - A
Dream Come True tor You I
O n l y 9 m o i . o ld , F H A
assumable, nicely landscaped,
spilt plan, 70 x 40 screened
porch, clote to schools. Im­
m a c u la t e . C e ll F lo r e n c e
Thom pson. R e a llo r/ A sso c.
331 1631. alter hours 372 9637

SANFORD REALTY
S A N F O R D / L A K E AAARV
Dream
Hemet
Available
New I All Price*. Seminole
aad Velutle Ceuntles. Oreat
Term s.
Call
tor
Fra*
Camputer Search Today11

323-1200

WE LIS TA N D SELL
M O R E HO M ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R TH
SEM IN O LE CO UN TY
P A Y S F O R IT S E L F I 1 Mobile*)
) bdrm. 1 belli er 2 bdrm. I
balh) monthly Income el S77S.
A s s u m e F ir s t M o r tg a g e .
559,000
S T Y L E , Q U A L IT Y , V A L U E I 2
bdrm . 1 bath heme on IVY lets,
rem odeled eat-ln K ltcban,
central alr/haal, dining room.

SA N FO R D - 7637 Laurel Ave.- 3
bdrm .,I large bath, living
room, dining room, Pla. room,
kitchen equipped. 312 TIM.

F re* Vacation •3 days, 3 nights
with purchase of Mobil* Home
M any Homes - F a m ily - Adult
Adult Park • Lake Aces* 24x413
Bdrm., a/c, many extras. Call
tote*.
Fam ily Park • Kids O .K. 3
Bdrm., 2 bath, 5349 par month.
Adult Park- New carpel, screen
room, oxcellent location, only
t il* per month.

73*6 French Ave. Suit* A
Santord, FI.

(days) 311-7931 e r (Evens)
711-7255,149 5904, 79* 9559

Y A R D S A L E - Saturday only! 9 7. Clothes, dishwasher, tools,
other miscellaneous 2511 S
Sanford Ave._______________
Y A R D S A L E H 3000 S. Park
Friday A Saturday. 6 to 4.
Doors, clothes, odds A ends I
7 Fam ily Sale! 7007 Grandview
Ave. N Sat./Sept. 76. 6 30 to ?
Small appliances A Little Bit

Ma|or A p p lia n c e ! Repaired,
bought, and sold. Fully guarantaad. C a ll:223-4294.________

^l_Every1hln2^_^^^^^_
219— W a n te d to B u y

Reconditioned Appliances
Irom 5*5- W A R R A N T Y .
B A R N E T T S .....C A S S E L B E R R Y
I30-HI1............................ 630 5433

53$:Aluminum Cans..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Metals...........Glass
K O K O M O ........................123 1100

* R E N T T O OW N*
Color TVs., stereos, washers,
dryers, refrigerator, freezers.
turnlture. video, recorders.
Special 1st week's rent 55.00
Alternative T V A Appl. Rentals
Zayres Shopping Center
__________ 233-5000__________

Baby: Bods, Strollors, Clothes,
P laypens, Etc. Paporbock
Books. 313-6377 - 322 *504

If you are looking tor a
successful career In Real
Etfafe, Slenstrem Realty It
looking for yeu. Call La*
Albright today a l 122-2410.
Evenings 111-3997.

W A N T E D : A L E A S E / O P T IO N
3 Bdrm. Home Lake Mery/
Long wood Area. Low 5300V
me. References. 331-3539

1 4 5 -R e so rt
P r o p e r t y / S a le
N E W S M Y R N A B E A C H - Owner
will pay 54.000 closing cost on
new mortgage. Beachsld* 4
bdrm ., 3 bath pool home with
detached garage. Steps lo
ocean and public handbell
courts. 564.900

New Smyrna Beach- Luxury 2
bdrm . Its bath Townhouse.
Across from ocean- 566.900 or
equity share with low down
p a ym e n t. G R A N T PR O P E R T I E S , INC. 774 5005
NEW
SM YRNA BEACH
O C E A N F R O N T C om p lex
Condo. Sloops 4. Attractively
furnished, fully equipped.
Weekend rates, 1150 Week,
5300 C ell: 3)9 7953

'70 Trans Am air. power. V/l.
am/lm casw tle Needs minor
body work. Have most parts
57995 Carol: 331 3050 days;
111 1109 evenings
'79 Ford Fairmont Future
. auto, p ' steering brakes,
air. am/lm, brand new tires,
sunroof. Good Condition! Must
sell
Asking 57395 or best
oiler. 172 6764 alter 5

0cyl

'60 T -B ird............... II E ic o n O L.
Loaded 1...... 5450 Down...... Smell
Monthly payment.
CHICO A T H E M A N ....... 499 0900
'M T O Y O T A C O R O LLA - Red.
black trim package Stereo
cassette. 1 door lilt back.
53,175 305 193 0791, ovts. A
weekend I.
'11 C A D I L L A C C IM A R R O N 74,000 ml. Must see to appre
data. Prlca negotiable. 321
1415.

223— M is c e lla n e o u s

Used Washers- Ports A Service
for Kenmores................. 313-00*7.
M O O N EY A P P LIA N C ES

233— A u to P a r t s
/ A c c e s s o r ie s

All tools, guitars, and stereos
50% O F FI Crown Pawn Shop.
1904 French Ava.

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE

Carpel For Sale recarpetlng
homa, old carpet lor sale. 40
sq. yards, green, good condl
Hon. bug tree! Price negiota
bla. 377 7407 after 4

311-315 E . 1st ST.............. 322 *432

183— T e le v is io n /
R a d io / S te re o

Rebuilt Automatic Trans- 5150
or can pull A rebuild yours
5775 Steve: 371 6076

2 3 5 -T ru ck s /
B u ses / V a n s

• CLEARANCE SALE!
(9) 5 ft. glass showcases. II) 1
ft. I In. X 5 It. 25 In. sal*, guns,
fewelry, guitars, tools, c a m ­
e ra s, ate. A ll Items d is ­
counted! Sal* ends Sept. 761

C O LO R T E L E V I S I O N
R C A 25 Inch wolnut color Television. Original prlca over
5900, balance due 5244 cash or
faka over payments ol S75 per
month. Sllll In warranty.
NO M O N E Y DOWN I Free home
trial, no obligation. Call 167
5194 Day ol night.___________

Crown Pawn Shop
1*04 French Ave.
Santord, FI

REBUILT KIRBY’S. 1995 t UP

25 in. Zenith Color TV With

Wa finance!.............Call 121-5440

Rtmota Control,, 5400 .377 q53

1*71 LIN C O LN
Dining tabla with 4 chairs
C a ll:................................. 171 7561

*
■
Coma to Orlando this weekend
lo r th e l a r g e s t : G U N ,
CUSTOM K N IFE , AND
M ILA R Y
SHOW , ever
assembled In Centrol Florida.
Sea " R a m b o the M issio n
knllo" and the Knltemaker,
who mada It, Jim m y Lila.
Expo Canter, downtown Orlanido, off 1-4. Saturday 9-6
P .M ., Sunday 9-4 P .M . Ad
mission refunded with special
purchase coupons at show. A L
Bullets and SIG H T In the
Block Ammo.

1 9 1 - B u ild in g
M a t e r ia ls

4 x 4
enclosed trailer- 5250.
W arm Morning Spaca Heater15.000BTU 550.373 7613

Dodge Tradesman M a il VanNew paint, 360 hp, axe. shape.
52000 331 0053 attar 5 P M.
1904 CHEVY-70 C U STO M V A N
Loaded, automatic
C a ll: ................................. 37I30V9

7 2 DodfeVan- $700 or
Best olfar........................ 771 7019
'71 Chavrelal Window Von- 90%
customized. S7.I00 or reason
able otter, Stovo, 321 0026.
10 Ford F 150 S U P E R C A B V/0.
auto, air, p/ste*r!ng brakes,
stereo. CB. dual tanks, new
tires, custom Interior. Runs A
Looks Great. 55000 349 5601

237— T r a c t o r s a n d
T r a ile r s

231— C a r *
Bad Credit?

No Credit?

W E F IN A N C E
1310 Down Payment.....Any C arl

• TeQual tiled Buyer I *

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
Santord Ave. A IHR Sf.... J7I-0075

★ DAYTONA AUTO*
★ AUCTION ★

'73 Chevy Titan ** Tractor COESlaeper. 310 Detroit, to speed
R A R . '71 Kentucky T ra iler. 64'
drop-tram* moving van. All
equipment for moving busi­
ness. 1010 Rubber. A ll good
shape. Getting out of business.
P a s s ib le tr a d e s . P r ic e
negotiable. t t i r t t e

Hwy 92................ Daytona Beach
* # # # • Molds* * * * * *

23?— M o to r c y c le s
a n d B ik e s

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
BUILDINOS- all steel. 50 x 61510.9*0: tOO x 225 549.960:
others Irom 52.25 sq. ft.
1-291 6761 (collect)

Every Thurs. N iteat 7:30 PM

* W h e re A n yb o d y *
w C a n B u y o r S e l l! to

'SO H ON DA XR-00 • Excellent
condition. 5500 or best otter.
C a ll:.................................MI-2765

199— P e t s A S u p p lie s

For more datalli
________ 1904-355-03)1________

243— J u n k C a r s

Golden Retriever Puppy
10 weeks old. S2S0.
C a ll: .................................165 4993

DoBory Auto B M arine Sales
Across the river, tope! hill
170 Hwy 17-91 DeBary 649-9500

T O P Dollar Paid for Junk A
Used cars.trucks A heavy
equipment. 322 5990.

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

A d d itio n s A
R e m o d e lin g
REMODELING SPECIALIST
W* Handle
The Whole Bell Of Wax

B. E. LINK CONST.
322-702?
Financing Available

A p p lia n c e R e p a ir

C le a n in g S e r v ic e

L a n d c le a r in g

P a in tin g

Heed Carpel Cleaning. Living.
Dining Ream A Hell 519.99.
Sola A Chair. 515. 327 1599

O E N E V A L A N D C L E A R IN O
Lot/Landcloaring.......... F ill dirt
Topsoil....Pond*... Drain ditches
Sit* Preparation ..C all..149 5920

C U N N IN O H A M A N D W IF E

Husbend/wite teem will clean
your home or olllc* dally,
weekly or monthly. Extremely
reasonable.Call: U1-7514.

C a r p e t / F lo o r
C o v e r in g s

C o n tro l* B M a in te n a n c e
Specialist In E le c tric a l A
Pneumatic Controls. U 1 93*9

H o m e Im p r o v e m e n t

T H O M A S B T H O M A S . Ham*
repair, cleaning, lawn car*.
Cell n i-isa* .

C A R P E T C LEA N IN G
112.95 room, 1 room minimum
C a ll:................................ 3716*15
Callage Care la c.............6*9-45)*
L k . Insured, landed
III gor hour, all da mastic fab*

P a p e r H a n g in g

U R N S MOWED ft TRIMMED

C a t e r in g

C le a n in g S e r v ic e

HAUUNG....FHI DirL...Top Soil

P lu m b in g

Comer's Building A Remodeling
N* Job Tee Smell
S ll Barton Lane, Santord
371-6417

S744U*fVoU^^^^^^

L a n d s c a p in g

Wall Plumbing B Heating
1007 South Santord Avenue
Santord. F lorkt* 17771

C A R P E T IN ST A LLA TIO N
B R EP A IR S
311-5557

W ill cater private B family
dinners, parties. A ate. a c­
cording to your budget. For
details, call 6306705 (Sam.) or

)21 •75 14

Expert Lawn Cara
"The Grounds Keeper"
377-64*5

G e n e r a l S e r v ic e s

RIchardGrwsJTTSWT^^^

up

E le c t r ic a l

C a rp e n try
A ll types of carpentry A re
modeling. 27 y rt. exp. Cell

A

to a d ............. Call MI-9169 after 1.

R E B U I L T T R A N SM IS SIO N S
S)50
with exchange. Call
Steve. 731 4*76

tnrr^xg^JJWMUj^TAbjll

9 )0

JU S T O E N IE S
Professional cleaning
C a ll................................... 371 466)

Anything E lectrica l-S In ce 19791
EsHxutes....34 Hr. Service C alif
Tom 's Electric Service...133-3771
n n F U r t r lr
Now A remodeling, additions,
lens, security light*, timers
plus all elec, service*. Quality
Service-Licensed A Bonded

10 hr. Service-.No Extra Charge!

A u to m o tiv e
lia s P A R K A V E ............. Sanford
9*1 Lk, M ery Blvd........ U . M ery

'40 F O R D O A L A X Y 5N- 7 door
hardtop, automatic, new tires,
brakes, etc. 5650 Call alter
3PM. 377 1145

To List Your Business...

Allans Appliance Sendee
C A L L A N Y T IM E

1992 Trans Am While. Loaded
Good Condition
77.000 ml
Price 51.500 or assume 21
payments ol 5170 00 mo Ph
105 7474. or 171 1709

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

L O C A T I O N IS T H E K E Y
W OROI
Excellent petentlal
tor office complex. Located
behind new hospital on about 1
acre. Proper toning. 5350,*00

• O E N E V A -O S C E O L A RD. #
Z O N E D F O R M O B ILESI
S Acre Country tracts.
Well tread an paved Rd.
29% Down. 19 Vr*. att2%l
From 119.5991

1900 PO N TIAC 5 U N BIR D
E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , 57.000
miles. See at corner ol 70th
and 1909 Holly Ave

CONSULT OUR

R E A T T H E H E A T I 3 bdrm. 2
bath home IS x 30 peel, extra
large petto split bdrm . plan,
spacious living room with
lierpU ce. 561,000

W I L L B U I L D T O S U IT I
YO U R LO T OR OURSI
E X C LU S IV E A O E N T FOR
W INSONO D E V . C O R P ., A
C E N T R A L FLO R ID A LEAD ER I M O R E H O M E FO R
LESS M O N EY I C A L L T »
DAY I

CARPORT SALE
Saturday
9:10
5 PM
Miscellaneous
Items, collectables, etc. 369
Short St.,(Near Lake M ary
Elementary.)

181— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n it u r e

Don't Rent I

R O N L E E IS YO UR ANSW ER

1900 P O N T I A C S U N B I R O
Automatic, ps. pb. a/c. new
lire* Call 371 S650after6

M O V IN G S A L E : 706 Baywood
Circle In Sunland Estates.
Mlsc. Items must sell! 7 am
5pm. Sapt. 27/36____________

Freezer Sears Upright. 15.S cu.
ft. Color- white. Excellent
condition. 5150 371 1371

1990 Mercury Marquis Wagon
S4S00 Loaded Great Shape I
CAII alter 4:00 121 5075

217— G a r a g e S a le s

Building Lois, A Voconl Land
Wantadl United Sales Assoc..
Inc . R E A L T O R S . 371 3031

P E A C E F U L COUNTRYI 1
bdrm . 1 bath ham* on I Acre.
Paddle Ians, central alr/heat,
eat-tn kitchen with almend
appliance*. *64,900

Bosch* Id* Realty, R E A L T O R S
996-637-1313.....■■■■...Open 7 Day* I
Sanford By owner I 1600 sq ft. 3
bdrm. 2 bath, living room, 22 ■
70 fam ily room, fireplace,
s c r e e n e d p o r c h , I n s id e
laundry room, fenced yard,
central heat/alr, paddla fans.
S S I . 900 e r a i t u m e 9%
mortgage. 777-9369__________

R0NLEE OF SANFORD

1977 C A D IL L A C E L D O R A D O
Extra nlca, loaded 51900 or
best oiler. Call: 321 4076

G A R A G E S A L E ! Van Buren A
Racoon St.. Lake Mary. 371
9165 Friday A Saturday 10 to
6. 3 bikes, cameras, boat
wanch. depth tinder, cot.
blankets, odds A ends_______

Assorted Household Furniture
In clu d in g g lo n t L shaped
couch. Call to see thru F r l„
Sept. 27th. 373 7077. Ask for
Laurie between 9 5.

# * W E W IL L B U Y * •
• • YOUR U SED C A R * •
• C A L L PHIL B E T T I S .

BRIDGES AND SON
WE BUY EVERYTHING!

187— S p o rtin g G o o d s

A F F O R D A B L E H O M E on big
lei. Lew down, lew monthly,
579.990.

323-5774

13 plut acres. 450 Ft. on Doylo
Rd. Near Osteen. (Oak Grove
and wooded.) Zoned R-4 Resi­
dential. Can be split In 2V*
acre tracts with no costs. 55500
per acre F IR M . V* down.
Balance 5 years al 10%.

C A L L A N Y TIM E
R E A L T O R .......................372 4991

O W N E R FIN AN CIN G - 1 bdrm.
w /fam lly ream , IV* bath.
543.990. Make offer.

Socuftty Deposit 0260

DUPLEXES 3/2

C O M M E R C I A L S P E C IA L IS T
S A L E S A N D A P P R A IS A L S
BOB M . B A L L , JR . P.A..C .S.M .
R E A L T O R .......................373-4111

1 ST O R Y TO W N H O USE- Com­
m u n it y p e e l, k it c h e n
equipped, air. 534400

R E A L T O R .......................773 5374

LEASING NOW- DELTONA
APARTMENTS 2/1

S A N F O R D - House tor sale by
owner. 3 Bdrm.. I balh, applla n c a s , f i r e p l a c e , 17x30
screened porch, pool. 549,000.
Call: 373 1097______________

H A N D Y M A N S P E C IA L

bdrm .. t bath, appliance*,
heek-ups, screened p e lla .
5360 540C. 371 3213^________

113— S to r a g e R e n t a ls

14Y— C o m m e r c ia l
P r o p e r t y / S a le

141— H o m e s F o r S a le

★ INSTANT CASH ★

C O U R T E S Y PONTIAC..111 1121

Hwy 46 ......................... 333 3601

Behind In Your poymenlt? Save
your Credit. We buy houses
A ll a rea s. G R A N T P R O
P E R T IE S .IN C . 774 5005

C O U N T R Y - 3 bdrm. 1 bath,
eat-ln Kitchen, formal dining
room, family room, fireplace,
central alr/heat, carpeted, 2
car garage, screened porch.
Zoned AIO. 677,900

2 3 1 -C a rs

213— A u c tio n s

Auction every Saturday at 7 PM

159— R e a l E s t a t e
W a n te d

\

C A S S E L B E R R Y - 3 bdrm. 2 bath
Mobile with lot. 536.900

97— A p a r t m e n t s
F u r n is h e d / R e n t

Winter Springs 3 Bdrm 2 Bath
Excellent Condition. 5450 per
mo
1st., last A security.
332 4494, or 321 3364_________

Llfttlm *
Adult Park................... Lot Rents
tlOO 5110
Includes Water.Garbage Pick up
Yard Maintenance
Immediate Occupancy
G re g o ry M o b ile H e m e t.&gt;13 1200.

141— H o m e s F o r S a le

T H E F L O R ID A H O T E L
500 Oak Avenue............... 321 6304
Reasonable Weekly Rate*

FLEXIBLE LEASES

_

127— O ffic e R e n t a ls

B Y O W NER- 3 Bdrm . 1V9 Bath
B r i c k R a n c h e r . 10X34
screened porch, utllitty room,
carpet. 546.000. 321-7599. after
3PM______________________

Furnished Studio Apartments
One Bedroom Apt*.
Two Bedroom Apt*

GEESE-S8.00
HENS-52.00
323-4762

2 Bdrm., 2 Bath Patio Homas
Nestled In quiet country setting,
Near shopping and schools.
Minutes Irom
Downtown Orlando via 1/4.
CHECK TH ESE FEA TU R ES!
• Frost Free Refrigerator
• Oarage
• Attic Storage
• Washer/Dryer Connections
• Some Units with Fam ily Room

T hursday, Sgpt. 29, 19IS—SB

203— L iv e s t o c k an d
P o u ltry

157— M o b ile
H o m e s / S a le

Brand New 3 bdrm., wet bar,
blinds, pool, clubhouse. 5395
mo. 774 4054_______________

R E V E N N A PARK
3 bdrm , 1
bath. 7 car garage, lanced
yard. 5350 per month. 1st A
last. 4100 deposit. Lease re
gulred. Call:3?27254altera

A V A IL A B L E NOW

E v tn ln fl H arold, Sanford, FI.

KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE &lt;5fcy Larry Wright

LAKE MARY-

Roommate Wanted to thare
home In nice area on St. John*
River. Prefer woman w/tmall
child 3W 437) alter 6 pm

93— R o o m s fo r R e n t

121— C o n d o m in iu m
__________ R e n t a ls __________

H o m o R e p a ir s
CARPEN TER
R ep a ir* and
remodeling. No |ob too email.
C all: 37196*5
Maintenance of oil type*
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
and electric. 32)40)9.
W ILLIS H O M E R E P A I R
Remodeling....... AddHIexi........A
A ll Type* Repalral........ Insured
No lob too sm a ll.............. 321 774*

A

L a w n S e r v ic e

Spring Yard Ctoan-upt...tt)-ttS)

Quality Lawn Care
At Affordable Price*. 1114*7)

M a s o n ry
IA H V T H IN O IN C O N C R E T K I
Free Estimate* Oiedly Oivonl
• E A U M O N D E Const. Co.
"W e A re The Best".........1315*97
Oceania* B Sens Masonry
Quality a l resonabl* price*
Specializing In Flrepl*ct*/Br(ck
C a ll)........................... 3*5-3714736

N A L Wallpapering S a lt
Fro* Eat......... Work Guaranteed
774 1799............................ 1)1-917)

S e c r e t a r ia l S e r v ic e
C U STO M TYPIN G - Big or email
assignments. Call) O .J. Entarprkgs. til* ) IM-79W.

T ile
C U STO M T I L E W O R K
Ceram ic III* baths. Q uarry Til*
Floors. Free Est. Licensed,
Insured. Call Frank after A
PJto (906)799 5794.__________

M u s ic L o s s o n s

T r e e S e r v ic e

Guitar Lessens
A ll eget/ell level*. Pro Back
ground. Coll Ju lia........ 17146*4

A L L E N S T R E K SER VIC E
You've Called the Rest
Now Call the B e lli
P A Y L E S S I .................... M I S)—

N u r s in g C a r o
JAN IS'S A L T E R N A T I V E
SEN IO R C A R E
24 Hour loving car* tor senior
cillian*. Fam ily environment
and horn* cooked meal*
l i i i . •■&gt;••••........................ M l a •w
O U R R A T E S A R B LO W ER
Lakevlew Nursing Cantor
919 E . Second St.. S ta k e d
1274797

1 Faarelt—

ft—
1 Mala Bad
A v a ila b le .........................3214(73

I Tree Serv.+....,
..Call i
* P.M..,
ECN O LS T R E K S E R V IC E
Free Ealias*toil Law Prfcaal
Lie...lx* .Slum* Ortxdtng.Teel
)23t77*d*y#rnrt*
" L e flh * Preto«sl*x«l* d e j f r _

W e ll D r illin g
Bush Shallow W e ll* " " ^ "
Licensed A Insured
Reasonable.................... J2)9*S7

%&gt;-.•»•V* V« V.*V I "/ IV *VfV •VPVPVPV/V/w •

E x p e rie n ce d T ru c k D riverStraight truck or van* desire*
work with Sanford A rea Firm .
Fam ilia r with Soulh Florida
Steady, reliable worker with
local reference*. Phone 574
7966 Speak to Gus Available
Immediately! Part/full time

103— H o u se s
U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t

VLVAVIV SVIVAVAV»V»M#V»V»V# VP

73— E m p lo y m e n t
W a n te d

�« B — E v tn ln p H » n ld , Sanford, PI.

T h u n tU y , bept. U, I f 15

A n d r e w s S is te r G o e s Solo

N o w It C an Be T o ld : P a tty C o u ld n 't Sing H a rm o n y
By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — Anybody with ut least
one winsome gray hair remembers the Andrews
Sisters, "Beer Barrel Polka." "Bel Mir Blst Du
Schon" and all those dandy sounds of the *30s
and '40s.
Most of us can shut our eyes and conjure up a
mental movie of those three girls — pretty
Maxcnc at our left, tall and cheerful Lavcrne at
• our rlght and vivacious Patty In the middle, the
lead singer.
We always figured Patty was the best singer,
otherwise why would she be In the middle, doing
; all the solos? Well, now comes the revelation,
after all these years.
Patty was the lead singer because singing
; harmony came naturally to me and Lavcrne."
•says Maxcnc today. "But Patty couldn't slrig
harmony. So It worked better for her to be the
. lead singer, and we would Just harmonize with

her."
The group has long since broken up. Lavcrne
died almost 20 years ago. And Patty and Maxcnc
are no longer friends.
"W e don't talk." says Maxcnc. "But I'm not
going to talk about that."
But now, at 69. Maxcnc Is embarking on a
career as a soloist. She has Just recorded an
album. "Maxene: An Andrews Sister" (on the
Balnbrldgc label), which is her first ever by
herself.
For some years, after Lavcrnc's death. Patty
and Maxcnc worked together. Then, when they
split acrimoniously In '79. Maxene thought of
retiring. But she says she is only happy when she
Is singing, so she slowly began working up an act
by herself.
"When I began going out on my own." she
says. "It was a shock to my system. I was so
insecure I had to go to a vocal coach, and he tried

to Instill some confidence In me. It was scary, let
me tell you. to do my first performance alone."
But she stuck to it. singing the obligatory
medley of the old Andrews Sisters' hits anil
adding some new songs occasionally. Her search
for new material brought her one day to an
arranger's studio. He said he had a song that
sounded as though it had been written expressly
for her by the composer, a school teacher.
The song was "I Suppose" and the composer
was Nancy Goland, who happened to be married
to the arranger. Arnold Goland. And the song was
perfect for Maxene Andrews. It forms the
keystone of her new album, which Arnold Goland
eventually arranged and produced.
"W e recorded It the way we used to record
songs." Maxene says. "The orchestra and I were
In the studio at the same time. I can't work the
way they record today — a track at a time. I have
to hear it all together at the same time."

While Maxcnc looks for new material con­
stantly. she won’t attempt to sing anything with a
rock sound.
"I Just haven't the vocal gymnastics to sing
rock." she says. "In my era. singers were pure
singers — Perry Como. Maggie Whiting, people
like that.
"Today, it Isn't singing at all that these rock
stars do. If you have the money to buy good
electronic equipment, you can be a singer today.
It's all electronics. I don't know how today's
singers would sound If they took their noise
away."
So’ she is still singing the way she always sang
— except now there arc no two sisters standing
next to her. At 69. she doesn't know If It’s too late
to become a star all over again, but she's game to
try.
"Maybe I will. Maybe not. 1 really don't care. As
long as the Lord lets me sing. I'll be happy."

Quickie Counseling
How To Shako The Blues And Not Your Budget
Hietand
Byr Michael Hlstand
• How often, during a bout of
the blues, have you wondered If
your worri es warrant
psychological counseling? And
how often have you dispelled the
thought of therapy because of Its
high price and prolonged com.mltment?
Freud may not have Intended
psychiatry to be convenient,
c o s t - e f f e c t i v e and selfmotivating. But short-term ther­
apists do.
.* "Short-term therapists are like
master mechanics." says Milton
Berger, the co-dlrcctor of the

Amerirnn
Thnronn
American Shorl.Tnrm
Short-Term Therapy
Center In New York City. "They
must have a long and complete
education so they can fix the
carburetor without tearing down
the engine."
A h y b r i d a p p r o a c h to
counseling, short-term therapy
Is a less expensive, less time­
consuming course of therapy
that be ne f i t s pe o pl e who
wouldn't normally sec a thera­
pist.
The key to successful short­
term therapy is focusing on one
or two specific problems. Then,
the patient and therapist work at

iHpnUfulmf the
♦H#» problem,
nrnKlAm ■
*n
identifying
un
derstandlng past and present
events that may have given rise
to it and resolving it in as short a
time as possible.
Berger says that the most
effective treatment comes from
borrowing techniques from a
variety of therapies: gestalt ther­
apy. transactional analysis,
psychoanalysis, assertiveness
training, encounter groups, fam­
ily counseling and behavior
modification.
" A shor t - t e r m t herapi st
doesn't allow prolonged side­
tracking Into other problems."
says Berger. " If a patient goes
too far away from the specific
problem, whether it's work or
family related, he won't go back
to face it. It’s our duty as
therapists to resist a patient's
inertia and desire for someone to
rescue him and to remind him
that he Is resp on sib le for
himself."
David Grant, a copywriter for
an advertising firm, turned to a
short-term therapist when he
found that he was boring friends
with his negative comments on
everything from restaurants to a
friend’s new car. He knew that
something was disturbing him.

It's '
CatsOnly'
At This Motel
By Linda Warren
ADA. Mich. (UP1) - Un­
abashed cat lover Joyce
S n y d e r f i r ml y b e l i e v e s
nothing is too good for a
feline, and guests in her
country vacation hideaway
have no complaints nhout the
appointments in their "resldentlal units."
At Joyce s Kilty Motel in
the pastoral woods of Ada
Township, cats aren't merely
boarded, they're treated like
royalty at a pet spa. Snyder
says many of her pampered
roomers aren't that excited
when It's time to go home.
Meals arc home cooked
dally to each cat owners'
specific order — one resident
dined only on a special blend
of spinach and bananas —
and each of the 30 units Is
fully carpeted and furnished
wi t h b rig h tly patterned
feather pillows.
Easy listening music Is
plped^ in or. especially when
there s a full house. Snyder
turns on the television. She
said her guests particularly
enjoy cartoons and wildlife
adventures, especially If they
f eature bri ghtl y colored
birds.
"I like to treat them like
little people because that's
what they are to me." said
Snyder, who has eight "very
spoiled" cats of her own at
home. Snyder lives right next
door to the cottage-style
boarding house, which Is the

only "cats only" boarding
facility in the state.
The dally routine for guests
Includes three "play periods”
daily, when cats arc let out
one at u time for a full run of
the two-floor cottage. A wide
urray of cat toys is provided
and Snyder gives each one
lots of individual attention to
assure even the most finicky
feline doesn't get bored.
She has converted four of
the Individual units Into
d o u b l e s by c u t t i n g an
archway In the dividing wall,
so pairs can stay together.
One "room " is set aside for
dining and litter facilities and
t he ot her for sleeping.
"It's definitely more upset­
ting to cats to be boarded
than for dogs." Snyder said.
"Cats want privacy but they
have a lot of personality and
need contact with people,
too."
Cats normally are boarded
In facilities that take dogs as
well and so spend all of their
time cooped up In open wire
cages wi th little o f the
personal attention they need,
she said.
A grooming routine. In­
cluding a full brushing to
guard against hair balls. Is on
the dally agenda for guests at
the Kitty Motel. The motel's
units also areclcancd and
disinfected each day and the
carpeted "playroom" gets a
t wi ce dal l y vacuumi ng.
Snyder said.

Yellow
Pacjes
Deadline
C a ll N o w 628-5000

...i when
i. he
*• thought
. ..
.. ^
'
but hesitated
tionally fit.
that otherwise cause havoc in
of seeing a counselor because he
But short-term therapists arc their lives."
was wary of a "long-term com­ quick to point to the limitations
Rosenbaum and Berger have
mitment that I knew I couldn't or their discipline, and dispel the
found that successful candidates
afford."
notion that there are psychiatric
After eight visits with his shortcuts. Theirs Is a specialized for short-term therapy are:
— Intelligent and open enough
short-term therapist. Grant real­ approach to specific emotions,
to acknowledge and accept the
ized that he had been sitting anxiety and stress.
connection between present dif­
q ui e t l y t hr oug h an of f i ce
"Short-term therapy won’ t ficulties and various past and
shake-up. afraid to ask his boss work for chronic deprcsslvcs.
present events.
what was going on.
those addicted to alcohol or
— Motivated enough to face
"I knew my work was good drugs, borderline personalities
these
events and work actively
but I needed some affirmation or anyone with a history of
from the boss. So at his (the suicide attempts or hospitaliza­ with the therapist.
— Have the capacity to react In
therapist's) urging 1 went in and tion for mental Illness." says
asked If he had any problems Max Rosenbaum, a psychologist the give and take or therapeutic
sessions, sharing thoughts and
with me.
and co director of the Short­ feelings with the therapist and
"He didn't act surprised or Term Therapy Center.
not sit passively waiting for a
concerned. He said things were
But If you feel that you're
fine, and thanked me for asking. under too much stress, or that cure.
A short-term therapist can be
I felt a little embarrassed, but I you’re drinking too much these
never had to sec the therapist days, or that the fun Is out or a psychiatrist, psychologist,
social worker or guidance coun­
again."
your home life and work,
Short-term therapy can In­ short-term help "might be the selor. It’s essential also to be
volve from six to 26 sessions remedy to the nagging anxiety comfortable with whomever you
with an average cost of S75 for a that If allowed to persist, may choose and to be assured that
private session. $40 for a group. mushroom Into a major disabl­ he's a competent professional. A
Even at Its most expensive, the ing situation." says Rosenbaum. check of his credentials with the
state licensing board or local
counsel i ng runs less than
D r. P e t e r S l f n e o s , a
$2,000. Compared to the price of psychiatrist at the Harvard Med­ professional association is a good
Idea.
$3,000 to $6,000 for a week of ical School, concurs.
For help in finding a short­
psychiatric hospitalization and
"Research Into patient treat­
$4,000 to 8.000 for a year “ of ment over the past 25 years term therapist in your area, call
private outpatient consultation, shows that short-term therapy your local medical society or
it's a bargain for keeping emo­ helps people to cope with crises c o mmu n i t y ment al heal th
board.

LAKE MARY HIGH SCHOOL BAND
PrRSRnlQ

FUND RAISING DRIVE ’85

r -•-*
&lt;5!

k*..

-M
ud
UB* '

SUPPORT LMHS BAND BY SUBSCRIBING
TO THE
Evening Herald
□ Buy a 3 m on th subscription at our normal rate of $14.25 and we will
donate $3.00 toward the L M H S Fund Raising Drive.
W® W
D ? Uy ! ® ™ n! h subscHptlon at our normal rate of $27.00 and we will
donate $4.00 toward the L M H S Fund Raising Drive

(PHONE 1%
BOOK —
l Jf Ntt?\l
i '• » m u l i t

\ i i n , 1 1&lt; i | \
S y S t*w

CL IP A N D S A V E

NAME
ADDRESS
PHONE
CLi ? . - NDMAIL D CHECK FOR $14.25 OR □ CHECK FOR *27 fwi
EVENING HERALD, P.O. BOX 1657, SANFORD. FLORIDA 32771°°
OFFER EXPIRES 10-145

'F T *“&gt;*■»■ ^ m
•

i

*

*

• • •-« • » • •

'

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218151">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, September 26, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218152">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218153">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on September 26, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218154">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218155">
                <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;, September 26, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218156">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218157">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218158">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218159">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21850" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21454">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/98ccb412efca1a7785125e35a8968843.pdf</src>
        <authentication>65ae0377d7205e9343e930a5aa532b45</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218180">
                    <text>Evening

7*th Year, No. *7, Friday, November I , IMS— Sanford, Florida

•»

v..

H erald

—

(U S P S

4I1-230)

—

P r,c# M

Cenfa

p i-

''SJ'n\

n

&gt; r

I
v*w ^ri-S

M

s —-• &gt; * —■

Site Seeing
On Sanford Agenda

Beta M a rin e operator Jo h n Sm ith and Sanford architect G e ra ld
G ross propose a $2-milllon "lo w silhouette, com m ercial m a ll"
depleted above, left. A series of wooden retail stores with glass on
both sides to p e rm it view s of the lake, would be constructed in
com bination w ith beach facilities.

H o lid a y Inn o w n er Bob W elch said he Is prepared to offer Sanford a
S l-m illlo n p ro ject, above right, w ith three buildings housing a retail
o u tle t, food s e rv ic e a n d a tw o -sto ry office b u ild in g . T h e
developm ent w ould be connected by a boardw alk and Include a
pub lic beach an d picnic area. Story on both proposals, page 2A.

Flapjacks
Floppier,
But Cake
Race Hot

Longwood Bondsmen Ask Charges Be

Bounty H u n te r Rights
Issue In K id n a p A rre s t
apply the law.” said John Hayes,
an associate of Freedom Ball
T h e ••original” right o f a Bonds where the men worked In
bounty hunter to go anywhere Longwood.
The bondsmen. Charles Davis.
and get his man collided with
34.
of Casselberry, and Jerry
refined Ohio statues Thursday
w h e n tw o L o n g w o o d b a ll Fontana. 26. of Maitland, were to
bondsmen were arrested In a appear In court today to argue
Cincinnati suburb and charged that a U.S. Suprem e Court
decision gives them the right to
with kidnapping and burglary.
T h e bondsm en reportedly collect a person and not be held
tried to spirit a Sanford fugitive liable for criminal action. Hayes
back to Seminole County after said.
The meet were released on
he Jumped bond on theft and
920.000 bond each.
fraud charges.
They were arrested about 9:15
” 1 don't know where In the
a.m.
Thursday by police In
hell Ohio gets their law from.
They apparently don't want to S p rtn gd aft. O hio, w h ile re ­

By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer

Atheists Leave
Without Their
Express Cards
A U S T IN . T exas (UPI) Atheists say they won't leave
home with their American
Express cards because the
I company ts denying mem­
bership to Madalyn Murray
I O H alr's Am erican Atheist
Center.
Brian Lynch, a spokesman
I for O 'H air, eald Thursday
j American Express rejected a
| r e q u e s t th a t the c e n t e r
" b e c o m e a m e m b e r
|establishment, allowing It to
i transact book and magaxlne
sales, and collect dues and
I donations on the credit card.
Lynch said’members of the
atheist group, also known as
the Society of Separatlonlsts
Inc., have tom up their Amer[ lean Express cards, returning
'them to the company with
Indignant letters.
In a letter to the society, the
|firm s a id " F o r b u s in e s s
reasons. American Express’
policy Is not to allow the
charge card to be accepted for
transactions that Involve re|llglon or politics.”
The atheists responded that
I it was "curious about the
scruples and morals of Ameri­
can Express (because) they
allow any massage parlor to
j accept ch arges from card
&lt;holders. Hopefully, card holdI era don't get massaged by'
American Express.”
The atheist center Is served
by Visa and Mastercard.

portedly trying to put Bandy
Conglcton. 29. of 117 10th St..
Sanford. Into a van. according to
Springdale Police Detective Dave
Koenig.
Koenig said the |X)lice had
received u report of a burglary In
progress at the home of Congtelon's friend. When police ar­
rived they saw the men struggl­
ing with Conglcton while trying
tostulThlm Into the van.
D a vis and Fontuna w ere
charged with kidnapping und
aggravated burglary. Koenig
said.
Koenig said Conglcton was

B y Bm u Lodea
Herald Staff W riter
The cakes were cold but the
competition hot In the tradition
breaking Golden Age Gamea
pancake race which apw eight­
time gold medalist and two-time
silver winner Minnie Kane of
Sanford step out of the game to
give newcomers a chance at the
gold In the women'a race.
And the cakes weren't their
usual solid, wind resistant selves
either, with McDonalds Restau­
rant replacing gam e official
Pautec Stevens os the official
pancake preparer.

RIGHTS, page 2A

'Nolhing Wrong With

Mrs. Btevens met aalds bar
special recipe, which always

’

O f f ic e r S u s p e n d e d
A f t e r P a tro l C a r
H its G a s P u m p s
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer
A Sanford police officer whose
patrol car was destroyed In an
accident two months ago has
received a 30-day suspension for
doin g the sam e to two gas
pumps early Sunday morning.
Officer Alvin McGill. 28. of
Sanford, was suspended without
pay for "failing to use evasive
action” during an Incident In
which his patrol car caused
93.000 worth o f damage to
pumps at the Park Avenue and
13th Street Flna gas station,
acting Chief Charles Fagan said
today.
According to Fagan, the dis­
ciplinary action also requires
McGill to attend defensive driv­
ing school and. upon returning
to duty, be assigned to the foot
patrol "Indefinitely.” The officer
has been with the Sanford police
departm ent for three years.
Fagan said.
McGill was uninjured and the
patrol car "o n ly scratched" In
the 5:27 a.m. Sunday accident,
said Fagan, who is heading the
department while Police Chief
Steve Harriett attends a law
e n f o r c e m e n t s e rn I n a r i n
Tallahassee.
Officer McGill reported he hit
the pumps at 15-20 mph after

the patrol car's brakes gave out.
H ow ever. Fagan said a d e­
partmental Investigation has
determined that although
no
drugs or alcohol were involved"
and McGill "is probably right"
regarding the car's speed, "there
was nothing wrong with the
brakes."
When tested on the scene by
police officers and at the de­
p a r tm e n t's g a ra ge by c ity
mechanics, "they were in perfect
working order." Fagan said.
In a report Issued to the
d ep a rtm en t Th u rsd ay, c ity
mechanics .Jim Linder and Carl
Higgs stated, "th e brakes could
not have failed.”
When McGill was told this, "lie
still maintained they did." the
acting chief said. The Ew n/iig
H vra U I was unable to reach
McGill regarding the Incident.
Fagan also said today's dis­
ciplinary action took the officer's
overall departmental driving re­
cord Into consideration.
A c c o r d in g to Fagan, one
example of this "not very good
record Is McGill s Sept. 25 col­
lision with a car driven by an off
duty Longwood police officer.
McGill had been transporting a
prisoner to Seminole County Jail
when the accident occurred at
See OFFICER, page 2 A

It y TMMNV V lM » *

A m elia D lrkschn eider, 70, plays to a packed house at the
Golden A ge G am es talent show Th u rs d a y night at the
Sanford C iv ic Center. A potpourri of song, com edy, recitation
and even a little soft shoe kept alm ost 500 spectators
enthralled d u rin g the three hour show.

Talent Show:
Audience Wins
The audience won ibis one.
G O L D E N
For nearly three hours they sat
bark al the Sanford Civic Center A G E G A M E S
and were privy to a contest that
pitted bassos against contraltos,
|4-*
pianists against accordionists
an d v a u d e v illla n s a g a in s t
stand-up comedians. It was the
M o r e G a m a s sto rk
Senior Games talent show and
ra s u lts . p ogo 3A
Its east o f nearly 100 was
enjoyed by an audience of 500.
Sally McDonnel. 61. of Or­ entertaining British troops dur­
mond Beach, tapped her way in g W W II. Her black and
across the stage to the strains of white-sequlned body suit re­
Tea For T w o provided by her flected the auditorium's lighting
accompanist Hal Bremer on the and t he sparkle of her eyes.
piano. A dancer since the age ol
Esther Durfee. 62. also of
live. Mrs. McDonnel brought the Orinond Beach, took a refined
same high step to Thursday's
Bee TALENT, page 3 A
performance as she did when

Helms Panel Issues Subpoena For Soviet Seaman
the Ukrainian sailor but decided the
RESERVE. La. (UPI) - Four people Senate Agriculture Chairman Jesse administration should not Intervene,
Helms.
R-N.C..
who
said
he
was
b e a rin g a subpoena fo r s a ilo r
said Peter Roussel, u White House
Miroslav Mcdvld boarded a Soviet trying "to save this young man's spokesman.
.
freighter late Thursday night, but life."
President Reagan did not attend
George Dunlop, u staffer on the
there was no word whether the man
Senute
Agriculture
Committee,
said
the
meeting.
who twice Jumped ship would be
U.S.
Customs
Commissioner
William
turned over to the Americans.
The American Civil Liberties Union
The two congressional aides who von Raab assured Helms the ship
filed suit late Thursday on behalf of
would be prevented from leaving the
Mcdvld. asking yet another federal
b r o u g h t th e s u b p o e n a fr o m
Washington were accompanied onto Mississippi River until the subpoena court to keep the ship In port until
the Marshal Konev by translator could be served and acted on.
Medvid is questioned again.
T h e s u b p o e n a w as tak en to
"W e have to do everything we can
Irene Padoch of New York, who says
Louisiana by two of Helms' aides, and hope that somehow someone in a
Mcdvld definitely wants political
asylum, and the Jeweler who first who arrived In New Orleans about
position of authority will grant the
encountered Mcdvld — dripping wet 6:30 p.m. EST and spent several
relief Mcdvld needs to save his own
hours with Customs officials before
— after he Jumped ship Oct. 24. The
life ,” said Martha Kegel. ACLU
subpoena — written In English. heading to Reserve, where the ship director in New Orleans.
Russian and Ukrainian — demands had been taking on grain.
At the While House. President
In Washington, members of the
that Mcdvld appear before Congress
Reagan
said he has usked Attorney
N a tio n a l S e c u rity C ou n cil m et
in Washington.
.
General Edwin Meesc to "look into"
Thursday
night
to
discuss
the
fate
ol
It was issued earlier In the day by

V

J

the case o f Medvid " t o
warrants further action.”

see If It

Hut presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes repeated. "W e consider the
case closed."
Asked whether he thought the
subpoena could hurt U.S.-Soviet re­
lations on the eve o f the ReaganGorbachev summit. Helms quoted
Rhctt Butters famous retort In "G one
With the W in d " - "Frankly my dear.
I don't give a damn."
" I want to hear from this young
man himself what happened and
whether he wants to return to the
Soviet Union." Helms said, uddlng.
" I f there is persuasive evidence that
he wants to go back to the Soviet
Union ... then we'll say bye. bye."

Included at touch of body build­
ing sand or sawdust to steady
the flapjacks against the wind.
Mrs. Stevens said McDonalds
volunteered to take the skillet
out of her hands and she's not
one to turn down a bit of help.
"I believe in putting people to
work." she said. But In an effort
to firm up the flapjacks, which
were made with the restaurant’s
usual mix. they were cooked a
bit longer and then dried.
"I hope it will work all right."
Mrs. Stevens laughed.
And by the end o f the races
between 15 women in two heats
who were followed by eight male
runners, the pancakes held their
own. even though they were
recycled through the races and
given a pre-race sand coating by

Bss PANCAKE, page 3A

Lake M a r y 's cham pion
ru n ne r K ay Th o m so n flips to
a s i l v e r m e d a l in th e
w om en's pancake race. " It 's
not like a re gu la r ra c e ," she
said.

TODAY
Action Reports......2A
Bridge...................10A
Classifieds.... 11A-14A
Comics..................10A
Crossword........... 10A
Dear Abby............. 7A
Deaths....................2A
Dr. Gott................ 10A
Editorial................ 4A

Horoscope............. 10A
Hospital.................. 2A
Nation..................... 2A
People..................... IB
Sports................5A-IA
Television. LEISURE
Weather..................2A
World...................... 2A

H olid a y C h a ln ga
State and federal office*, C a s s a lb trry
C ity Hall, banks and post offices w ill ba
closed M o n d a y for V e te ra n 's D a y .
Seminole County, schools, and the other
cities w ill rem ain open.

�I

1A— IvsnM* HwaM, t i i r t f i , Ft-

Friday, Nov. a, m s

D e v e lo p e r s O f f e r P la n s F o r H o lid a y Islci
1? Korea T all**
Harold Staff Writer

NATION
IN BRIEF
M any Toxic Waste Dumps Fell
O n Anti-Pollution Standards
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Nearly onc-third of the nation’s
1.600 toxic waste dumps may be forced to shut down
today because they cannot meet new federal standards for
anti-pollution controls and liability Insurance, the govern­
ment says.
" I f they don’t certify (that they have met the new
standards), they’ll have to close down." said Winston
Porter, the Environmental Protection Agency’s asssltant
administrator for hazardous waste programs.
Most of the facilities involved arc private dumps used by
factories to handle their own hazardous wastes, but a few
are commercial landfills whose shutdowns could lead to
isolated regional shortages of dumping space. Porter said.

Governor Used Chinese Aliases
N£W ORLEANS (UPI) - Gov. Edwin Edwards often hid
his Identity behind Chinese aliases while losing more than
$2 million at Nevada gambling casinos, uncontcstcd
testimony in his federal racketeering and fraud trial
reveals.
Edwards paid off some of the losses In the state capital of
Baton Rouge, where a former casino collection agent said
he received two separate payments of 8400.000 and
8350.000 In cash-packed suitcases.
FBI agent Jerome DiFranco. who cataloged the gover­
nor’s gambling forays over a three-year period. Thursday
produced evidence that Edwards used such aliases as T.
Wong. E. Lee and Ed Neff.
U.S. District Judge Marcel Livaudals Jr. prefaced the
gambling testimony with a caution to the jury that such
wagering was legal.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Colombian Troops Storm Rebels
A n d End 27-Hour Occupation ;
BOGOTA. Colombia (UPI) — President Belisario
Bctancur. refusing to negotiate with rebels, personally
ordered troops and police to storm the Supreme Court
building ending a 27-hour occupation.
At least 38 people died during the siege, which ended a
bloody protest against Bctancur's government. Many of the
dead were rebels who tied dynamite to their bodies to avoid
capture.
Police said Supreme Court president Alfonso Reyes and
rebel leader Andres Almaralcs died during the ordeal. Also
reportedly killed was Judge Marta Inez Ramos, who had
supported a law granting pardons to guerrillas.

Two Sanford developers have targeted the
same strip of "Holiday Isle” land In Sanford
for retail nnd retail-office developments, and
will vie for a lease to the property with
presentations before the city commission
Monday.
Holiday Inn owner Bob Welch and Beta
Marine operator John Smith in connection
with Sanford architect Gerald Gross, will
present plans for the property behind Beta
Marine and cast of the Holiday Inn's Dock 'N
Shop.
The men appeared before the city com­
mission last Monday to discuss developing

Sem inole County sh e riff's
deputies
and drug agents re­
pose In formal gown and sang T
Don't Know Why’ and ‘It Had To portedly watched, along with a
Be Y ou ’ while accom paning confidential informant, a reputed
herself on the piano. The voice illegal drug deal In the parking
she leads her church choir with lot of a service station on Lake
each week rang out melodiously Mary Boulevard. T h ey then
moved In and arrested two men
at the Civic Center.
and
confiscated 200 grams of
Sportscaster Lule Euler. 59. of
Altamonte Springs commented cocaine and 811.000 cash.
The arrests were made at
and contrasted the unusual reparte of his big league coun­ 10:28 p.m. Wednesday at the
terparts and kept the audience Tcnneco Station. The lawmen
had received a tip that the drug
smiling throughout.
deal had been set for that
Coca Beach resident Lee Fish­ location and they had been given
er. 77. unveiled a new slate a description of the suspect's
song. "F lorida," to the Sanford vehicles, a sheriffs report said.
audience which responded by
Leonard Hayward Hooks. 20,
loudly clapping their resounding of 20 Majorca Ave.. Altamonte
approval.
Springs, and Donald Frederick
Loretta and Sarge Falford of Hartner. 25. of 613 Witshlrc
Altamonte Springs look the au­ Drive. Casselberry, have been
dience to the Bahamas with their charged with trafficking in co­
sting and dance routine, while caine. They were being held In
Jack Smith of Inverness recalled lieu of 810.000 each.
bygone days with the singing of
POT A SELL ARREST
some old standards.
Sanford police reported wat­
ching a man they believed to be
The Judges for the evening selling marijuana. The man.
A’ere Sanfordltcs Viola Kastner.
another man and a woman
Owen Kelly and Bob McQuirc.
drove away and when a police­
The gracious and gregarious MC man signaled for the car to stop
was Martha Yancey. Sanford, the two men Jumped out and
who summed the evening up:
ran. One was caught.
The Suspect arrested at 10:40
"W h a t w e ’ ve seen tonight
p.m.
Wednesday at Sparkles Bar
shows we’ll never get old. they
can never make ns old. Enjoying in Sanford, reportedly had about
life in its fullest, that’s what It’s two grdms of marijuana in his
possession, a police report said.
all about."
David Jones. 28. of 120 Drew
—K aren T alley

...O fficer

CAIRO. Egypt (UPI) — The Palestine Liberation Organi­
zation said it hopedYasser Arafat's denouncement of
terrorism would persuade the United States to end efforts
to bar the PLO from Mideast peace talks.

STO C K S

M ore Violence In South Africa
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (UPI) — Police arrested
over 500 mixed-race students participating in antiapartheid school boycotts near Cape Town and detained a
Journalist protesting press restrictions.
The South African government, under pressure to meet
with black leaders and halt the racial violence that has left
836 blacks dead from 14 months of violence, said
Thursday it would be willing to negotiate with some
representatives.

Court ruled in a case that ilaright of a bounty hunter lo
collect ills debt is an "original"
right, one that supersedes statu­
C ontinued from page 1A
tory law.
"I'm tlead within my rigiils.
arrested last week on a fugitive
warrant from Seminole County hill it is the amount of cost. I
sent two people up there, and
and was ftghtlug extradition.
Congleton was free on S2.000 sent an attorney up there. I have
bond during the extradition pro­ been very worried about th em ."'
ceedings. Koenig said. There tie said.
During the scuffle. Congleton
also is an active fugitive warrant
fo r C o n g l e t o n is s u e d by suffered some cracked ribs and ■
Missouri, sheriff records show. one of tile bondsmen was bitten
Congleton was originally ar­ on tiie thumb. Koenig said. The
rested in Seminole County on men were treated at a local
June 17. 1984, according to hospital, he said.
records.
H a y e s ’ a t t o r n e y . A la n
Hayes said his men were not Robinson, of Orlando, was lo ask
aware that Congleton had been a Judge today to drop the
arrested in Ohio but added his charges based on the case of
men were within their rights as Taylor vs. Talnter in which the
bounty hunters to take Con­ "original" decision was made.
gleton where ever and whenever Hayes said.
they found him.
He said he may consider civil
Hayes said the U.S. Supreme action against Springdale.

...Rights

Control Florid* Rtgienjl Hospital
Thursday
ADMISSIONS
Sanford:
Nclda K. Bucknor
Morion* L Hoops
Pomtlo J. Smith
Olivo Tool*
Art I* fauna

Ooisy £ Clttodino. Orong* City
JoanM. Gregory. Ostoon
Troy G. Rlchordson. Oviodo

1

These qu ota tion provided by member* ol
the National Association o l Securities Dealers
are representative inter dealer p rice* at ol
mid morning today Inter dealer markets
■.ftdngf throughout the day P rice* do nol
include retail markup markdown

Bid Aik

Atlantic Bank

.......................... 4JU

42'j

Amorlean Pioneoc SAL..
......... * » ,
Barnetl Bank.................................... 38
Florida Power

9 ',
38',

DISCHARGES
Sonford
GoorgidO Chorponing
Rufus L Horvoy
Richard L. WllJloms
Lillion L Ritch, DoBory
Konnoth Gortin, Deltona
Jock K Phillips. Ooltono
MillardC Tyson. Osteen
Mary E. Foster and baby boy. Long«ood

BIRTHS
Michael P. and Pamela J Smith, a baby
girl, Sonford

The Incident reportedly oc­
curred at a convenience store at
1201 South Park Avenue.
McGill allegedly also verbally
threatened to kill Washington
during the confrontation. W it­
nesses said McGill aimed his
. 3 R 0 - c a l t b e r g u n at
Washington's head.
The officer was suspended
pending an investigation which
resulted in no disciplinary ac­
tion. McGill denied aiming the
gun at Washington but admitted
he threatened to kill him if
Washington bothered him in the
future.
Prior lo the incident. McGill
had arrested Washington and
said he had many run ins with
him. Washington said he did
nothing to provoke the July 27
alleged Incident.
Stemming from this alleged
con fron tation, the state a t­
torney's office on Aug. 6. 1984,
said there was Insufficient evi­
dence to prosecute a charges of
aggravated assault and reckless
displav of a weapon against
McGill.
Also on Aug. 6. then-Clty
Manager Warren Knowles also
declined to discipline McGill.
Knowles said there wasn't "su f­
ficient cause" to proceed re­
garding the July Incident.

A Light...................................... » t i
Fla P r o g r tll................................ 3 *'.
Freedom Saving*....... ...................10*4
HCA ........................................... 33'.
Hughe* Supply............................... 21*4
Morrlion’* ...................................... 11*4
NCR Corp.......................................34V*
P le u o y .......................................... 19'.*
Scotty'*..........................................13'*
Soulh*4*t Bank..............................3t’ »
SunTru*t............................. ...... .31U

25'.
29'•
II'-*
33*»
22'»
19
341*
20’ i
13*4
31'*
3S'i

W EA TH ER
N A T I O N A L

RE PO RT:

Residents in four stales and the
nation’s capital struggled to re­
cover from raging floods that
killed at least 40 people
AREA

R E A D IN G S

(9

a.m .):

temperature; 70: overnight low:
54: T h u r s d a y 's h ig h : 76:
barometric pressure: 30.17 and
rising: relative humidity: 73
percent: winds: West at 8 mph:
rain: 0.0 Inch; sunrise: 6:42
a.m.. sunsei 5:36 p.m.
..S A T U R D A Y T ID E S :
D a y to n a B each: highs. 3:43

H O SP ITA L NOTES

The Smith proposal is a "low silhouette,
see-through, commercial m all." Gross said.
" A aeries of wooden retail stores" with
glass on both sides to permit views of. the
lake, would be constructed In combination)
with beach facilities to create " a marina and
village." Smith said it would be a 82-mlHlon
development that "will be flrst-claas all the
w ay."

C o n tin u e d fro m p a g e 1A

PLO Wants In O n Peace Talks

BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — Police searched today for six
American hostages, whose fate remained in doubt after a
caller claimed the Islamic Jihad terror group would kill
them — and the deadline for their executions passed.
An anonymous caller claiming to represent Islamic
Jihad, or Holy War. told a Western news agency in Beirut
Thursday. "W e decided to execute the American hostages
by firing squad" because "indirect negotiation” reached "a
dead end."
President Reagan has publicly refused to bargain with
the captors and said Thursday. "Evidently, there’s no
substantiation" that the Americans were killed.

•rchlttct r m l Hampt o n - .w ?*1?. J *

strutted to enable open viewing of the r
from multiple vantage points. Humj
also said the project would have extei
walkways and p l*n ,lnge « n(l ’’greatly
enhance downtown Sanford.

Surveillance Nets Arrest

...Ta le n t

C ontinued from page 1A
the corner of S. French Avenue
and 25ih Street. Fagan said.
Although neither officer was
Injured, the prisoner claimed a
neck injury and the Sanford
patrol car was "totaled." ac­
cording lo Fagan, who said the
Incident " I s still b ein g Invesllgatcd."
The gas pumps destroyed in
Sunday's accident will be re­
placed through the police de­
partment's Insurance company.
According to Sanford Police
Department records, this Is the
third tim e McGill has been
suspended. In June of 1984. he
was Involved in an accident In
which S3.500 worth of damage
was done to his patrol car.
According to police records. It
was an Incident the officer could
have avoided.
McGill received a one day
suspension without pay for the
accident, which occurred oc­
curred at 1:45 a.m. at 16th
Street and Oleander Avenue.
On July 27 of the same year.
McGill was suspended with pay
for reportedly aiming a handgun
at Barrv Washington. 24. of
1200 West 8th Street. Sanford.

N o Trace O f American Hostages

the property Into commercial and aesthetic
tropical mini-villages.
Smith is the son of Sanford Mayor Bettye
Smith, who said today she will not vote
when the commission determines which
developer will receive the lease. This
decision could come at the Monday night
meeting, beginning at 7 p.m. at city hall.
Welch said he Is prepared to offer Sanford
a 81-million project consisting of three
separate buildings that would house a retail
outlet, food service and a two-story office
building. The development would be con­
nected by boardwalk and Include a public
beach and picnic area.
The wooden buildings, as explained by

a.m.. 4:12 p.m.: lows. 9:43 a.m..
10:13 p.m.: P o rt C anaveral:
highs. 3:35 a.rn.. 4:04 p.m.;
lows. 9:34 a.m., 10:04 p.m.;
B a y p o r t : highs. 9:30 a.m ..
10:15 p.m.: lows. 3:40 a.m.. 4:07
p.m.
EXTENDED

FORECAST:

Partly cloudy and mild through
tile period. Highs mid and upper
70s north to mid 80s south.
Lows In the 60s north and

central to mid 70s south.
AREA FORECAST: T o­
day...mostly sunny. High mid to
upper 70s. Wind becoming north
10 to 15 mph. Tonight...fair and
cool with low In mid 50s. Wind
northeast 10 to 15 mph. Satur­
day...sunny and breezy. High In
low 80s. Wind cast around 15
mph.
B O A T IN G FO R EC AST: St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles, Jupiter Inlet to Key Largo
out lo the Bahama Bank — Wind
becoming north and increasing
to around 15 knots today then
northeast 15 to 20 knots by
tonight and around 20 knots by
Saturday. Sea building to 3 to 5
feel today and 4 to 6 feet tonight
but higher In the Gulf Stream.
Sea Increasing Saturday. Bay
and Inland waters becoming a
m o d e ra te c h o p tod a y an d
choppy tonight. A few showers
north part today oth erw ise
m ostly fair becoming partly
cloudy tonight and Saturday.

I

Action Reports
* F/r**

* Courts
* Pollco
Ave.. Sanford, has been charged
with possession of a controlled
substance, possession with in­
tent ot sell and resisting arrest.
He was being held In lieu of
88.000 bond.

HEAVY BREATHER
Sanford police heard a bang­
ing noise at the Poplar Grocery.
315 Poplar Ave.. and chased a
man from outside the store Into
nearby woods, a police report
said.
The Incident occurred at about
11:19 p.m. Wednesday and a
policeman reported losing sight
of the suspect. He heard heavy
breathing and shined a flashlight
toward the sound, where he
reported finding a man lying on
the ground.
•That man reportedly said he
had tripped and fallen after
running from the grocery store
which he and somcTrlcnds were
reportedly trying to enter by
breaking a hole In a wall with a
hammer to get a firearm they
had spotted earlier, the police
report said.
Willie Anthony McCloud. 22.

Also, last spring, McGill was
acquitted of charges Involving
an alleged sting operation.
McGill was suspended without
pay on Feb. 27 fallowing an
Incident in which officers said
they planted a wallet containing
•20 and McOlll turned it In lo
the station without the money.
The officers said they left the
wallet In a phone boot)] and then
had a s h e r iff’ s departm en t
employee report she had found
It. McGill was dispatched to
pick-up the wallet and officers
said when he returned to the
station to turn the wallet In. the
money was gone.
Further, the officers said.
McGill did not mention any

or 40 Seminole Gardens. San.
ford, has been charged
with
burglary an possession of burgiary tools. He was being held In'
lieu o f88.000bond.

DUIARKBSYS
The following persons hav*
been arrested In Sem lnol*
County on a charge of driving
under the Influence:
—Dean Arthur Catalano. 21, ot
400 Sandspur Road. Maitland,
w as arrested at 2:10 a.m,
Thursday after hta car was seen
sp ee d in g on U .S . Highway
17-92.
7
-R a n d a l Kenneth Suggs. 20. o f !
711 Laurel Way. Casselberry, at
1:30 a.m. Thursday by Seminole
County sheriff a deputies in.
vestlgatlng a reported suspicious
vehicle parked on Sandpiper at
Red Wing roads. Casselberry,
The engine of the vehicle wi
running, a sheriffs report said.

BURGLARIES ft THEFTS
Ernest Brown. 37. of 2510 g. i
State Road 46, Sanford, reported
two televisions worth 8380 —rH
were stolen from his home)
Wednesday.
Jew elry, tapes, coins an
clothing with a combined vaiu
of about 8400 were stolen froi
th e h o m e o f C h r ls t in
Giambrone, 37. of 7312 Blu
Jacket Place W.. Winter Pari
between July and Wednesday,
sheriffs report said.

money In his report of the'
Incident.
McGill's lawyer argued the j
Sanford police officers did not
search the person who had I
planted the wallet to make sure'
she hadn't taken the money. ThcJ
attorney also said McGill wi
confronted with the accusation
until several hours after the
Incident.
The police had set up the lest.l
according to court records.]
because some citizens hat
complained McGill had taken|
money from them.
During the trial McGill testified 1
there was no money In the |
wallet.

A R E A D EA TH S
REGINALD L. SCHMIDT

Spencer W . K im b a ll
S p e n c e r W. K i m b a l l ,
president of The Church o f Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, died
Tuesday night at his home at the
Hotel Utah In Salt Lake City
after a lenghthy Illness. In at­
tendance with him was his wife.
Camilla.
Born March 28. 1895. In Sait
Lake City. Utah, he became the
12th world president and "p ro­
phet. seer and rclavaior" of the
church on Dec. 30. 1973 pre­
siding over 5,700.000 members.
Under his leadership construc­
tion o f 31 new temples was
announced around the world.
His best known revelation was
the decision to allow black males
to become priests, a responsibili­
ty previously denied.
In addition to his wife, Spencer
Is survived by one daughter and
three sons.

OAKLAWN

•f u r u u mm •c t m a r •florist
IS YMR HST CORKS
0m local Sow* Taboo Coro Of tnrySMg
48A At Mooted M .
Sorrfof 4B Central FhrMt 122-4281

^ low c^ C en ^ fittiT L ov^

(C o llin s

mmm

2k 323-1204

Mr. R e g in a ld L . ’ ’ B u d ’
Schmidt, 61, i l l Tarrytown
Trail. Longwood, died Thursday
at home. Bom Oct. 11. 1924 In
P it t s b u r g h , he m o v ed o
L o n gw oo d from C ap e Cod.
Mass., In 1973. He was a general
contractor and a member of St.
Mary Magdalen Catholic Church.
Survivors Include his wife,
Dorothy: three sons. Gary, of
Altamonte Springs and Jeffry
and Bruce, both of Manchester.
C onn .: d a u g h te r. C h ristin e
Marblin, West Haven. Conn.: two
stepsons. Robert Karber. Or­
lando and Russel Karber of Cape
Cod: two brothers. Karl and Bob.
both o f P itts b u rg h : sister.
V e r o n ic a W h lt la m . N o rth
V e r s a ille s . P a .: 11 g r a n d ­
children.
B ald w in -F alrc h lld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, la in
charge of arrangements.

Funsrol Nolle#_______
McCRARY. ROBCRT
Funorat torvlet* for Rabort McCrary, 2*.
of ts&gt; Motionvin* Av*.. Sonford. who dlod
Sunday, hov# boon changed to 11 o.m.
Saturday *1 Cloorwotor Mluianory Soptllt
Church. 2204 Southwotl Rood. Sonford. with
tho Rov. R. Colo. Porrlih. FI*., officiating.
Burlol to follow In Rotllown Comofpry.
Colling hour* for frltnd* will bo hold from J4
p.m. todoy ot tho chopol. WllionElchoibirgor Mortuary Incharge

Evening Herald
IUSPS 4112*0)

Friday, November B, IMS
Voi. 71, No. 47
Publlthod Doily oid Sunday, oicopt
Soturdoy By TRo Sonford Horold,
Inc. JO* N. Fronth Av*., Unford,
Flo. H ill.
Socond Clou Footage fold ol Unford.
F lorIdo m il
Homo Doilvoryi Wook.
Month.
U.1ti J Month*. tM.JSi * Month*.
UT.M j Voor, Ut.M. By Moil: Wooh
It.M i Month, m .M j J Month*.
■II.Mi • Month*. *32.Mj Voor.
SM.M.
Phono (JOS) JU-1AI1.

�*&lt;*—
"**•

(nlaid Bowl
|.Jakes Two
fifeame Wins

ELEVENTH ANNUAL GOLDEN AGE GAMES
SCHEDULE OP EVENTS
•own
IWSKMIM
nsoav. wovMwtNt. nas~

i '.h

B jr J iM C u M lb m j

B m M Iu n W r it e r

400AM -4 00PM

W |H *l

Ptrty Rubber
ttobt, Pn&lt;Koff»hj
n c i u r tiH iu rs
•Shuftletued . Doublet 0*‘»
*•* l x , ■4 Mil,

100PM
1 00 PM -4 00PM

•orntn i CJut ol StntoO
W»H*II

IOOPM
100PM
100PM

FI Meton Pet
Stmmoit H
i(*i School
Seminal, Community Colitft

(■teivon Homtmjltft ol
Sen &gt;noit County
Somtn i Cut Ol SinhjnJ
Eitenwn Homemners ol
Sen moit Count,
Shufflrtotrd Dub
butt'd Amtncin fHerms
l.ont Club

lUtfBft RMrHN HiMMK4NPI

400AM

Sm.noi, Hifh School

Rrain.t Club ol Stntocd

400AM
4 JO AM
IOOPM

FI Melon Ptrt
Fl Melon Pjrt
FI Melon Pin

Shoftirtojrd Dub
Ityctei
McConildf fleltiunnl

Ota*
1

5

Mwtttfcurd Cont'MM
'MonttJlOtl

|

RtTUmav. NOVWMHt, 1 M

Tract ,ntf r*tt

i

^ . J 1 « « * ^ugrne MUln. 00. o f Si.
..
Petersburg Beach 10 months to design
,i’i:t.and complete the exquisitely inlaid
/:■" w ooden b o w l en circled by lively
/.■••singers, dancers and musicians o f the
,!*;■ various cultures of the Soviet Union.
.».•* his native country.
.m : But it w as worth It Wednesday when
he learned he had been awarded a gold
medal In woodworking division in the
Golden Age Games Hobby Show at
Sanford City Hall. His proud wife was
so excited when she found out she
likened It to "h av in gs baby."
The entry also won a first place
.‘ / ribbon in woodworking miscellaneous
category. T his was the first time Mllln.
* &gt; h o also received a third place ribbon
' ‘ for Russian samovars carved from
wood, had entered a show. He said he
began working with wood three or four
..y e a rs ago. Mrs. Mllln said she Is his
apprentice.
* "W e had more woodworking than we
;
ever had and It was spectacular this
‘.n year,
sa id Louise N olan o f the
v..£em lnole County Extension Home
. :•: makers, the hobby show sponsor. SIk
Aald that overall the number of entries
v &lt;. J*»
show w as down from last year.
but the quality was high,
i,
Other honors In woodworking went
l.° J E Hansen of Sanford for his large
■'.I.fpodel of a ship, silver medal and a blue
V. ribbon In the made-from-a-kit category,
r.-i.and Robert Dawson of Holiday for his
flocks, a bronze medal.
- r ,n *hc art category. Theo Konefke of
.. Zell wood. whose still and subject mat­
ter
may earn him the title of the
"Grandpa Moses" of the Golden Age
, Games, won the gold medal for oil
, Painting. "Early Settlers."
!j ' : C.M. Wolfe. 68, of John Knox Village.
Orange City, won a silver medal In the
•-••arts division and first and third place

WWW

liotwi

dotty Show o ris ro th i ru stic

I
!

v

Friday, Mm, t, h m - m

n

7.00 A.M *00 AM

POST C C ftf «LS

C IV IC CIN TCN

* D E A D LIN E: 9 :0 0 P.M . T H E D A Y BEFO R E T H E E V E N T

T w o D o u b le W ins
In Photo Contest
Eugane M llln displays his p rize w inning Inlaid
G am es Hobby Show.
ribbons In the graphics category for his
pen and Ink drawings or country
scenes.
Margaret Henderson received the
bronze medal for her pastel painting.
In the needlework division, winners
were: gold medal. John Blbcau of
Sanford for a manger picture: silver
medal, Desslc Bragg of Wood berry,
Tenn.. for her basket quilt: and bronze.
Virginia Simmons. Melrose, Tor a
crocheted wall hanging of The Lord's
Prayer.
Awards for the home decorations
division went to the following: gold. J.
Musgrovc. Sanford, quilted wall hang­

bowl at Golden Age

ing: silver. E. Cherry. Sanford, toaster
cover: and bronze. Abble Owens. San­
ford. natural materials flower picture.
Ceramics division winners Include:
gold, Marry Ballard for her china
painting; silver. Jessie Rinehart. DeLand; and bronze, Olga Homery. Lake
Mary.
Horticulture division honors went to:
gold and silver, Emily Edwards of
Sanford, and bronze. Abbey Owen,
Sanford.
Craft division awards Included: gold,
Kate lldeston. macramc table: silver.
Lucille Brennan. Orange City: and
bronze, Annie MacWorthy. Sanford, for
her Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls.

Lifelong Interests In photography
.contributed to the first place showings
.of two men who won In different
catagorles in the Golden Age Games*
photography competition.
Taking first and second place in the
color competition was Charles Merryrnan. 78. of Orange City. Kenneth
Peterson. 65. of Deltona, picked up first
and second place in the black and
white competition.
Merryman. a retired biology teacher,
said he’s been Interest In photography
since a boy t- before there w as color
photography — and used to tint his
black and whites with color dye. He
said his teaching career took him away
from the hobby until the early 70s
when he began to take serious pictures
•again.
His gold medal entry was a close up
color picture o f a opened milkweed pod
In Michigan.

Peterson, who won first and third
place last year In the Games, also has
been snapping picture for a lifetime. A
former data consultant for New York
Telephone Company, he won the black
and white division with the photo of the
masts of a sunk sailboat sticking out of
harbor water In Portland. Maine.
Third place In the black and white
category went to Robert F. Miller. 66. of
Jacksonville. Miller also tied for third
place In the color division with Betty
Heath, of Ormond Beach.
The winning photos, as well as the
other photos entered In the contest, can
be viewed on the first floor of Sanford
City Hall, west entrance. Also on
display are other arts and craft entries
from painting, to knitting to wood
inlay.
The photo contest was sponsored by
the Evening Herald.

'. t

B o tto m L in e F o r C P A
ts W in n in g A t T e n n is
If taking candy from a baby Is
a crime, winning the men's
«&gt;ralnglcs and doubles competition
at, the Golden Age Olym pic
Games In tennis should be grand
larceny for Roger Pharr or Or*
••• tando.
.V . Pbarr Is a just-retired certified
public accountant who has k
■ .c o u n t e n a n c e s im i la r to a
• _ bcspcctaled David Letterman of
, NBC Latenlght fame. He Is tall,
angular and suntanned from
hours on the playing courts
dating back to his childhood In
• Orlando. Pharr. 55. said he is a
- former captain of the fighting
'• G ator tennis team an d has
■' played tennis all of his life.
He has breezed through the
■ /competition here at the tennis
‘ tournament at Bayhead Racquet
Club In Lake Mary, drawing a
. . pyc In the first round and easily
disposing of his opponent Bill
Wetterer. 6-0.6-2. in the second
round. He vies for the champ!onshlp today against an unseeded opponent. Mr. Gootch. He
•. is also In the finals of the doubles
; .competition with his partner
. Henry Brandon. They destroyed
their opponents 6* 1.6*1 and
made It look almost too easy In
the process.
'-•/ While his appearance on the
•'•court might suggest Jocularity,
•’ Mr. Pharr Is anything but fun to
•‘fils victims across the net. Pharr
’* said he has Just returned from a
' ‘n a t i o n a l c h a m p i o n s h i p
‘/tournament in Nashville. Tenn.
'''w h ere he finished first In his age
"■ ’'group. He also said he Is ranked
’’ at the top of three divisions; ages
‘ •‘40-45. 45-55 and 55-60.
»* i*

. Pharr has the appearance of a
mean stork, no pun Intended for
/.bird lovers, on the court and the
“ Hard-Tru” clay courts of the
•, ,Bay head Racquet Club In Lake
|( Mary seem particularly to his
liking. Wearing a floppy white
tennis hat pulled low over hls
face to compliment hls white
^ -p a t t e r n e d ten n is sh irt and
blushing burgundy shorts. Pharr
---used a gilding, cat quick grace to
roam over the court In a doubles
‘ victory.
i*,

k

■// Wednesday Pharr teamed with
/ hls doubles partner to complete
■a "grand slam " of the events
* with a doubles championship in
", J(hc morning and In the after*
. noon he beat Hank Gootch.
! 6 -1 .6 -1 . to w in the sin gles
"Bivlslon.
Hls serve is at once powerful
and smooth. Grace Is a word that
will continually pop Into the
mind of a first-time observer of
Mr. Pharr.

It;

v "1 play 20-25 tournaments a
’year and at least three of them
a r e n a t io n a l t o u r n a m e n t s
.throughout the country. 1 love
this game and I probably will
always play tennis." Pharr said.
"/I think there are lots of benefits
,'(o this game, hi fact it probably
changed my life. 1 met m y first
boss through a gome o f tennis
a ft e r p l a y i n g on a f u ll -

G am es Results
PHOTOGRAPHY
COLOR

scholarship at the University of
Florida. I stayed with that com­
pany for 26 years Just as 1 have
stayed with tennis, I love It."

JFW

F ir s t a n d s e c o n d p la c e .
Charles Merryman. 75. Orange
City; tie for third. Betty Heath.
66. Ormond Beach, and Robert
Miller, 66. Jacksonville.

He also said he has found
numerous advantages to staying
active and credits hls three to
four hours,a.day of,practice for,,
keeping hls .gam s fop .flight.
Pharr said the game helped him
overcome a back Injury that kept
him sidelined for three months
and the stretching and weight
lift in g e x c c r c ls c s he d o e s
everyday help keep him young.
In addition Pharr said he does
floor exercises and jogs daily to
make It possible for him to
hopefully play till he is 80.

ALLEY CAT

One look at the man with the
white hat on the center court
and you could easily And It hard
to believe Roger Pharr will ever
age.
MENS BILLIARDS: 8 BALL:
Twenty-eight men competed
in the 8-ball billiards competi­
tion with the oldest pool shooter
being Nels Nelson who stroked
the ball clean at age 85. John
Leach, 71. of Fern Park, re­
peated last years performance by
winning this event again. He was
closely followed by Ross Woods.
73. of Winter Park, who received
a scctyid place medal and James
Whelan. 66. of Orlando, was
third following a second place
finish last year.
TABLE TENNIS:
Joan Kwak Burgess, of Dunncllon, repealed her mastery of
th e tabic b y w in n in g the
women's tabic tennis champion­
ships. In the women’s 55-59 age
group, for the second year In a
row. Mrs. Burgess, a former
South Korean champion, said
she was worried she wouldn't
repeat this year but got her
game together In the second set
and pulled away from runnerup
Mary Tumin. who Is from San­
ford. Mrs. Tumin was also sec­
ond to Mrs. Burgess last year.
Mrs. Burgess said this is the
fourth such gam es she has
entered and It Is her fourth
consecutive championship. She
claimed she and her husband
don't own a table at home but
that she likes to play at the
Rainbow Lakes United Mchlodlst
Church In Dunnellon. As she
w alk e d a w a y Mrs. B u rg ess
looked back and called out. "See
you next year!"
Mr. Tumin was also a big
winner as he won the men's
60-64 gold m edal for table
tennis. He said he was second
Iasi year but got hls serve
working for him this time and
hls opponent was done for the
day. Mr. Tumtn said he is a
former University of Maryland
baseball player and assistant
Maryland baseball coach and he
w o n the c o v e t e d " B e r g e r
Trophy" In 1949. The award is
given to the year’s moat out­
standin g M arylan d baseball
player.

62. O rla n d o ; second place,
Elaine Bohn, 59, Jacksonville
B each a n d C a rl G ra y . 64.
Jacksonville; third place. Bob
Miller. 66. and Edith Miller. 62.
Jacksonville.

Medal Moment
Louise Nolan of the Seminole County Extension H o m e m a k ­
ers presents silv e r m edal in the a rts category at the G olden
A ge G a m e s Hobby Show to C .M . W olfe of Jo h n Knox V illa g e ,
O ra ng e C ity, as he stands In front of. hls pen and ink
d raw in gs entered in the g raphics category.

Experience
Pays O ff
For Hess
Fifty-three years of golfing
experience paid off Wednesday
when a Sanford man won a gold
medal in the long-drive com­
petition at Sanford Airport.
Chuck Hess. 63. belted the golf
ball 247‘/i yds. Judges for the
contest w ere two Sem inole
County deputy sheriffs. The
sheriffs department sponsored
the event which made Its debut
In th is y e a r 's G o ld e n A g e
Games.
Hess said that while the win­
ning shot may not have been hls
best swing or the three chances
he had. It was the one that rolled
the farthest after landing. The
flight and rolling distance of a
golf ball are counted In driving
contests. Hess said.
Forty-five golfers entered the
event.
The winning drive was Hess'
first shot though he said his last
‘swing w as a better connection.
That ball however landed in
sand and did not travel far after
landing. His other two shots
were 142 and 147 yds. he said.
Hess, who works for Starline
Corp.. a Sanford manufacturer of
ambulances, was a golf pro from
1955 to 1965.
"H aven’t played competitive
golf since," he said though he
does play about twice a week. He
said he started playing golf at an
early age because hls older
brother was a golf pro. Hess at
one time also owned hls own
driving range.
Don Hess, another brother of

First place. Marie Milton. 64.
First and second place. Ken­ Sanford; second place, Loretta.
neth Peterson. OB, Detton: third. •66. and Barge. 72. Pafont. Alta­
Robert Miller, 66. Jacksonville.
monte Springs: third place, carl.
63, and Jerl. 61, Hasscnplug.
Altamonte Springs.
First place. Dan Riendeau. 66.
Sanford; second place. Dewey
TANGO
Dumont. 60. Sanford; third place
First place. Esther. 75. and
Francis Tweedie. 62. Sanford.
Jim Long. 74. Orlando: second
place Lll Vetter. 74. and Herb
DAMCOVO
Vetter.
.76. DeLeon Springs:
W A LT S
First Place. Lll Vetter. 74. and third place. Bob Miller. 66. and
Edith Miller. 62. Jacksonville.
H erb V etter. 16, D eL eo n
Springs; second place. Bob Mill­
BASKETBALL — ONE ON ONE
er, 66. and Edith Miller. 62.
Men
Jacksonville; third place, Elaine
Age 59-59
Bohn. 59. and Carl Gray. 64.
First. Herbert Crank. Polk
both of Jacksonville Beach.
City: 2nd. Carl Mays. Bellevlew.
Ohio; 3rd. Thomas Dunkle. Or­
FOXTROT
lando.
First Place. Bob Miller. 66. and
Edith Miller. 62. Jacksonville:
second place Lll Vetter, 74. and
First. John Davison. St. Cloud;
H erb V etter. 76. D eL eo n
2nd. Andy McGuffln, Eustis: 3rd,
Springs: third place. Esther .75.
M elvin G a n g lo ff. P om p an o
and Jim Long, 74. Orlando.
Beach.

POLKA

AgG 65-69

First place. Carl. 63. and Jeri
.61. H aasen plu g. Altam onte
Springs; second place. Rosemary
Scmkanich. 55. Sanford; third
place. George Scmkanich. 58,
Sanford.

First. James Whelan. Orlando;
2nd. Aubrey Phillips. Cincinnati.
Ohio: 3rd. Art Smock. Maitland.

JITT1RBURG

C H A -C H A
First place. Eve Tomelson. 60.
Winter Park and Clay Pickett.

...Pancake
1A
some runners and were flipped
to the ground by others in the
heat of the races.
Mrs. Kane, 71. gave novices a
demonstration of her winning
technique before the race w as
on. First-time pancake racer
Anne Witt. 55. or Sanford, must
have picked up a few pointers,
because she grabbed the gold In
the women's run.

Hess's and an overseer of the
event for the Golden Age Games
executive committee, said he
was pleased with the number of
entrtes. particulary since it was
the first time In the games' 11
years It has been offered.

AgG 75-79
No entries

First place. Eve Tomelson. 60.
Winter Park and Clay Pickett,
62. O rlan do ; seco n d place.
Elaine Bohn. 59. Jacksonville
B each, and C a rl G ray. 64.
Jacksonville; third place. Bob
Miller. 66. and Edith Miller. 62.
Jacksonville.

C h u ck Hess won tha G o ld
M ed al In the golf long-drive
com petition w ith a 247V» y a rd
boom er.

AgG 70-74
Wilbur Ott. Lakeland.

In the men's division WUbur
Ott. 71. of Lakeland, came out
on top for the fifth straight year.
Ott has mastered the game,
which calls for the runners to
race on a marked field and flip
their single flapjacks Into the air
from a skillet at five points on
the track as they bolt for the
gold.
Ott said he practices, but
that's not the real secret of hls
winning ways. " I f 1 tell you.

Women
AgG 55-59
No entries

AgG 60-64
Age 65-69

Ruth Manger
No entries

Age 70-74
Helen
Ohio.

B row n.

W ilm ington,

Age 76-79
No entries

you'll tell somebody else." he
said. " U ’s my own secret."
Lake Mary's champion runner
Kay Thomson, 62. found time
for the first time since 1978.
following the Thursday morning
decathlon, for the pancake race.
Before running away with the
women's silver at the Ft. Mellon
P a r k p a n c a k e r a c e . M rs .
Thoihson said, "U 's all fun. This
ts tough, becau se you can
always drop your cake. It's not
like a regular race."
Arlene Bremer. 65. of Ormond
Beach, who had never see a
pancake race before was de­
lighted to win the wom en's
bronze. Carl Mays. 59. of Ohio
took the bronze In the men’s
division and Aubrey Phillips. 66.
of Ohio flipped Into second
place.
"I never even knew what It
was about." Phillips said, after
hls win.
But win or lose in the pancake
race It sometimes seems that
perhaps It's better not to know
what it's all about.

�ni

Evening H erald

Children's Legacy: Mega-Trill ions In Debt

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 303-322-2611 o r 831-9993

Friday,' November 8, 1785— 4A

Wayne 0. Onto, FvMieker
Ttoemas Oterdane,
Kilter
dftllin
Ws MaevTlfarl^
aAyuililBA ftniVCrat
Neaete#
VIH A
pWRI
iIS

Home Delivery: Week. 81.10; Month. 84.75: 3 Months.
814.25: 6 Months. 827.00: Year. 851.00. By Mall: Week.
81.50: Month. 86.00:3 Months. 818.00:6 Months. 832.50;
Year. 860.00._______________________________________

Aid Needed
By Democracies

0 .5 .

U.S. officials arc w arning that leftist
guerrillas are preparing to escalate their
terrorist activities to destabilize Central
American governments. Lt. Gen. Phillip Gast
recently told members of the House Foreign
AfTairs Committee that Intelligence informa­
tion suggests urban-style terrorism may
th r e a te n C o s ta R ic a . H o n d u ra s a n d
Guatemala.
Gen. Gast's warning must not be ignored
by Congress. Desperate Insurgents in El
Salvador are Increasingly turning to terrorism
to offset both battlefield losses and declining
public support.
The kidnapping of Salvadoran President
Jose Napolcan Duarte's daughter is the most
recent proof that the Marxists at our doorstep
are no more principled or humane than their
friends in such Mideast terrorist organizations
as the Palestine Liberation Organization.
(It should be noted that the Marxist
Sandinista regime in Nicaragua counts the
PLO among its friends and advisers and a
number of Yassir Arafat’s saboteurs have
made Managua a regular port o f call since the
Sandinistas seized power.)
In addition to kidnapping Mr. Duarte's
daughter, communist insurgents in June
gunned down four U.S. Marines, two Am eri­
can businessmen and two others in a
restaurant in San Salvador.
President Duarte’s daughter was released
recently in a complicated exchange which
included the release of a number o f guerillas
held by the government.
Salvadoran guerillas have been playing the
kidnapping game for years (they released
some mayors and other municipal officials as
part of the recent exchange), but the
abduction of Ines Guadalupe Duarte Duran
clearly represented an escalation.
In addition to obtaining freedom for a
number of their comrades, the Salvadoran
guerillas created political problems for Mr.
Duarte. Many Salvadorans do not think the
president should have negotiated with the
rebels. The families of other Salvadorans w h o
h a v e b ee n kidnapped and/or k ille d b y

the

communists over the years resent the lengths
to which the government went to free Mr.
Duarte's daughter.
Those who don’t think Mr. Duarte should
have made a deal with the kidnappers have a
point, since dealing with terrorists e n ­
courages them to repeat their actions.
On the other hand, it is difficult to tell
parents they should not do everything
possible to save their children, and there have
been previous exchanges of prisoners be­
tween the Duarte government and the rebels.
The popular Duarte government, which has
made great strides in strengthening demo­
cratic Institutions in El Salvador, will survive
the tensions caused by the kidnapping.
As El Salvador’s army continues to defeat
the communists in major battles, however,
the country’s security forces will be increas­
ingly tested by cowardly kidnappers and
assassins.
And such PLO-type "warfare" may. Indeed,
increase in neighboring countries as the
Marxists seek to expand their territory
outward from Nicaragua.
The Sandinistas have boasted that their
"revolution with out frontiers" one day will
spread even to Costa Rica. Latin America’s
most democratic nation.
The Reagan administration has proposed a
S54 million program to help Central Am eri­
can governments improve their anti-terrorist
capabilities.
The goal is to Improve the capabilities of
pro-democratic governments in such areas as
secure in tellig en ce, arm s in terd ictio n ,
hostage rescue and small unit operations.
Congress should promptly approve the
White House proposal.
With the exception of Nicaragua, democra­
cy is advancing in Central America and the
United States has no humane alternative but
to help assure that freedom triumphs over
tyranny.

BERRYS WORLD

'V *
li t • &gt;
■-'f*.
i

DONALD LAMBRO

lu s n m s n )

.. HY

WASHINGTON - Whatever Congress does
with the budget this month, for the first time in
U.S. history, both the government’s national
debt and its budget will be counted In trillions or
dollars next year.
A year from now. the gross national debt
probably will exceed 82 trillion and. for the first
time, the budget will exceed 81 trillion. Even
Uncle Sam's tax haul Is projected to go over the
81 trillion mark in Just three years.
The quantum leap from billions to trillions In
recent years means that the federal budget
numbers will be virtually Incomprehensible to
most U.S. taxpayers. After all. who can even
conceptualize what a trillion dollurs is?
There, are of course, statistics that help put
such mega-sums into perspective. For example.
If you were to put two trillion 81 bills end to end.
they would form a ribbon of money 1B6 million
miles long — reaching to the sun and back. If
you were to stack 82 trillion worth of 81.000
bills in a single pile, it would be more than 130
miles high.
But whut does this debt really mean to you
and me. and to our children and grandchildren?

A little division shows that the government’s
82-trillion national debt represents a liability of
nearly 89.000 for every U.3. citizen. W e aren’t
going to pay that sum anytime soon, even If we
eliminate the deficit in the next several years
and begin to pay o(T the debt In the immediate
years to come. Clearly, lt is going to be a huge
burden inherited by our children, and by their
children, well Into the foreseeable future.
Such overpowering debt didn’t come upon us
all at once, and the finger of blame can’t be
pointed at any one person or Institution. The
national debt had already hit the 81 trillion
mark by the time Ronatd Reagan came to
Washington, and the deficit had previously run
us high as 873 billion a year.
The recession of 1980-82 cut federal tax
revenues nfT nt the knees, and the economy and
the U.S. Treasury are still recovering from that.
At the same time, government spending has
been accelerating at a furious pace. In the last
fiscal year alone, spending had Increased by an
awesome 8100 billion. Think of It — In the space
of one year!
Many factors arc feeding such growth. Former

Rep. Barber Conabte. R-N.Y.. points out In a
recent editorial In U.S. News and World Report
that 325.000 federal pensioners are getting
pensions that are larger than the salaries they
were earning when they worked for the
government. The taxpayer liability for military
and civilian pensions alone totals 81 .7 1rltllon.
We are now five weeks Into the new fiscal
year, a period in which a debt-ridden Treasury
will give 84.5 billion in revenue-sharing to every
city and town, regardless of need: 83.5 billion In
Community Development Block Grants, with
m uch o f that sum going to upper- and
middle-income communities: and 8400 million
in Urban Development Aetlon Grants that will
provide funds to help build ritzy hotels and
other structures for big corporations.
Some courageous lawmakers are trying to
slop Congress’s spending binge, but it isn’t
easy. On Oct. 24. a spending-bill amendment
offered by Rep. Delbert Latta. R-Ohio — which
would have trimmed 83.5 billion from the deficit
— Tailed by a mere 10 votes (219-209). House
Democratic Leader Jim Wright of Texas fran­
tically worked the floor In opposition to the
amendment.

SCIENCE WORLD

WASHINGTON WORLD

Smoking
Hazards
Ignored

Angered
By Leaks,
Sometime

By

By Norman D. Sandier

G ln o Del G u e r c lo
UPI Science Writer

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pollticans
have been harshly crltlzcd for their
unwillingness to oppose the tobacco
lob b y by p assin g tough a n ti­
smoking legislation, but smoking
critics say in many cases the news
media appear to be as much at fault.
Various reports Indicate that
many magazines are reluctant to
publish Information on the harmful
effects of cigarette smoking because
they fear tobacco companies will no
longer advertise in their magazine.
Such a threat is a powerful force
since the tobacco Industry spends
S2 billion a year on advertising and
many magazines receive as much
as 50 percent of their profits from
cigarette ads.
A special report in a recent issue
of tlie New England Journal of
Medicine cited Instances In which
Newsweek and Tim e magazines
downplayed the role cigarette smok­
ing has on poor health In health
supplements they published.
In the Nov. 7. 1983. Newsweek
p u b lis h e d a s u p p le m e n t on
"Personal Health Care" prepared by
the American Medical Association.
The 16-page supplement included
only four sentences about smoking,
none of which explicitly identified
smoking as a health hazard.
” ( T h c A M A ’ s) i n t e n t i o n ,
expressed and argued, was to have
a much stronger statement about
s m o k in g .’ ’ Jam es Stacey, the
AM A’s science news editor, said In a
letter. "N ew sw eek resisted any
mention of cigarettes."
A spokesperson for Newsweek
said. "W e naturally share concerns
regarding smoking, but hope that
vou understand that there is Just
not enough space sometimes to do
Justice to all the subjects Involved."
A spokesman for the publisher at
T im e said th ere has b een a
longstanding tradition of allowing
no advertising department interfer­
ence In the editorial department. He
said in a case such as the supple­
ment. the line may not he as clearly
drawn because the supplements are
often not produced by the editorial
department.
The Columbia Journalism Review
characterizes the record of the
national magazines that accept cig­
arette advertising as dismal.

W ASH ING TO N (U P I) News
leaks, some of which make Presi­
dent Reagan mad enough to cuss In
public. Dared anew at the White
House this week.
Reagan awoke at Camp David last
weekend to find details o f In­
telligence documents related to a
secret CIA plan to undermine the
g o v e r n m e n t o f L i b y a ’ s C o t.
Moammar Khadafy on the front
page of T h e W ashington Post.
Breaking with a past practice of
not commenting on such mailers,
the White House announced an
angered Reagan had ordered an
Immediate Investigation into the
leaks and demanded "appropriate
action" against anyone responslbk*.

B e a rd s N e e d C o m b in g
RIYADH. Saudi Arabia (NEAI — I
arrived in this fascinating desert
kingdom not long after President
Reagan’s impulsive endorsement ol
Israel's air attack tin the PLO
headquarters in Tunis, and even
sooner after U.S. fighters forced
down the Egyptian airliner carrying
the Achille Lauro hijackers to sanc­
tuary. Both of these actions were
highly unpopular with the Saudis,
who naturally lend to favor i lit- Arab
side in Middle Eastern disputes, and
mv conversations with a good many
of them were therefore what ii
diplomat might tactfully describe as
"frank and lull."
A typical talk would begin with
my Saudi friend charging that U.S.
policy in tlic Middle East is far from
"cvetihanded." although that is
how we often advertise it. I would
concede in reply that it Isn't truly
balanced — tor example. Israel Is
given U.S. military aid free til
charge, while Saudi Arabia pays
(and can well allord to): hut I would
insist that our policy is not nearly so
unbalanced as my friend was sug­
g e s tin g — w itn e s s P re s id e n t
Reagan's citrieut bailie with Con­
gress on behalf of arms aid to
Jordan.
That word "Congress." however,
opened it whole new avenue for
discussion I would remind mv

friend (who knows this, but u
reminder never hurls) that the
policies o f any democratic society
are the net product of the tola]
number o f pressures exerted upon
it. The existence of America's artic­
ulate Jewish m inority, and Its
passionate dedication to the cause
of Israel, are simply facts of our
political Itlr. Where elections are
commonly won or lost by margins
of 1 or 2 percent, the existence of a
bloc of 3 or 5 percent for whom a
particular Issue is all-important Is
quite enough to carry the day for
that Issue — especially If the
remainder of the electorate is not
deeply concerned.
Finally. I stressed again and
again, the Arab cause can scarcely
expect to make headway In the
United States as long as it is
symbolized. In American eyes, by
fanatics who will kidnap and klil
totally innocent U.S. citizens.
A n &lt;1 w h a t A r a b l c a d e r o r
spokesman would be Instantly rec­
ognizable by the average American
if he walked In the door? Only
Yasser Arafat — scarcely an ap­
pealing figure, to American eyes.
The Arab cause Is far from being
wholly unreasonable: hut it must
lirmly comb the terrorists out of its
heard, and find better spokesmen to
pul Us ease to the West.

The While House reaction was
much more muted earlier when The
Post bared rough details of tlie new
arms control proposal the United
S tates w as p r e s e n tin g as a n
alternative to Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev's proposal
for- a 50
p ercen t re d u c tio n In n u c le a r
weapons.
That information, like Ihc materi­
al related to Khadafy. was classified.
But the sources, their motivations
and impacts In each case were
different.
While the administration prefers
to not discuss its arms proposals in
public, selective leaks are a com ­
mon technique to make the ease
that Reagan, under pressure from
Congress and Western allies, is
serious about the negotiations In
Geneva.
T o that end. an unidentified
administration official, divulged
that Reagan would outbid the Sovi­
ets in proposing reductions in
nuclear warheads and rockets.
W hen that in fo rm a tio n w as
published, there was no stamping of
feet or slamming of fists at the
White House, where Reagan had
declared 22 months earlier that lahad "had it up to my kelster" witli
leaked reports o f turf battles among
his senior advisers.
In the ease of the Libyan story,
the While House reaction was pro­
voked by fear of embarrassment
and Jeopardizing of a covert opera­
tion.

JACK ANDERSON

CIA Backs Wrong Man In Libya
By Jack A n derson A nd Dale
V an A tta

WASHINGTON - The CIA is
backing the wrong man in what
appears to be an illegal effort to
overthrow Libyan dictator Muummar Khadafy. But they really don't
have much choice: the right man
turned them down.
Despite an executive order that
seems to forbid it. the CIA trained
.md supported (he National Front
lor the Salvation of Libya before,
during and after its vain attempt to
assassinate Khadafy on Muv H.
1984.
The antl-Khadafy group sent too
few men to do the Job. They were
slaughtered in u daylong battle less
than a mile from the barracks where
the dictator was holed up behind
Soviet-made tanks and anti-aircraft
guns.
The coup attempt was doomed
before it started. Tw o days before
the Tripoli battle the Salvation
Front's top military man bad been
captured near the border as he tried
to sneak In from Tunisia. Hut tin­
group's leader. Mohammed \ousscf

Magarielf. evidently felt he had to go
ahead with the operation to show
his CIA and Saudi Arabian backers
what they had bought with their $7
million in funding. The CIA is only
tcx&gt; painfully aware that what they
bought was Just another costly
fiasco.
The anli-Khadaly exile the CIA
should he backing — and in fact
wants to — is Abdel Moneim
al-llunl. form er Libyan foreign
minister and one of the original 12
army officers who helped Khadafy
seize power in 1969. A s vice
president, interior minister and
counterintelligence chief in the
early years, al-llunl was Khadafy‘s
No. 3 man.
But by 1975. he had become
disgusted with the corruption of the
revolutionary regim e and with
Khadafy's treatment of dissidents
and minorities. (Al-llunl once had
the nerve to pass a law compensat­
ing Jew’s for their property that
Khadafy had confiscated.)
Barring a Soviet-backed coup —
always a disturbing possibility —
ul-Hunl is the man.most likely to
succeed Khadafy. whose overthrow

seems more likely almost by the
hour. Probably for that reason.
al-Hunl shuns any connection, or
even perceived connection, with the
CIA. The merest hint of CIA support
could destroy him politically. Ikeven refused the CIA's request to
lend his support to the uninspiring
Magarielf.
By our own count, there are at
least two dozen groups and promi­
nent individuals who would like to
see Khadafy ousted. They include
leftists, rightists, monarchists and
Islamic fanatics, yet al-Hunl appears
to be acceptable to all of them as the
"M r. C lean" of Libyan politics.
Many opposition leaders have tried
to enlist al-Huni's allegiance, but he
has firmly resisted their overtures.
He Is now the leader o f a coalition
currently being formed.
A soft-spoken, affable and un­
pretentious man. al-Hunl has lived
quietly in Cairo since 1975. An
unsuccessful coup that year In
Tripoli made him fear he was under
suspicion by Khadafy. according to
a secret CIA report. So he decided to
stay In Egypt.

In addition to his high standing
with exile groups. al-Hunl also
worries Khadafy because of his
close ties to a key faction of the
60-member Free Officers organiza­
tion set up by Khadafy to run the
Libyan government.
Inevitably, the dictator tried to
have his dangerous rival eliminated.
According to a CIA report, on March
6. 1976. three hit men armed with
guns and grenades boarded u plane
In Cairo on which al-Huni had
booked passage to Rome. They
Intended to hijack it and take
al-Huni to Libya. Fortunately for
ui-Huiit (and the plane's passen­
gers). lie switched planes "after
being advised to do so by Egyptian
authorities as a precautionary
measure,” according to tlie CIA
report, which added; "W hen the
three Libyans arrived In Rome they
were arrested."
There have been no attempts on
al-Hunl since then, but us he begins
to speak out against Khadafy — and
us the dictator's hold on Libya
grows ever shakier — al-Hunl will
doubtless become u target again.

�SPORTS
I

^

Oviedo Lassos Cowgirls
For 3A-9 Championship

Intensity Returns
A s Lyman Moves
Into District Final

B y G k r iiP U U r

Herald Sport* Writer
After breezing through the
first round. Oviedo's Lady Lions
struggled at times Thursday
night against Osceola Kissim­
m ee's Kowglrls In the 3A-6
District Tournament finals at
Kissimmee.
The Lady Lions pulled out a
15-10 lead In the first game,
thwi built a 9-3 lead in the
second. The Kowglrls then came
baak with 12 straight points to
win the second game 15-9.
w as worried after that
scrond gam e." Oviedo coach
Anita Carlson said. "The girls
Justquit playing."
Oviedo came buck strong In
game three though as the net
play of Stephanie Nelson and the
defense of Lisa Knapp paved the
way for a 15-8 victory and the
district title.
The Lady Lions go up against
the 3A-5 District champion on
Tuesday In the 3A-3 Region,
match. Since Oviedo hosled the
region last year. It will be away
this year. District 5 Is the
G a lh c s v lllc -O c a la V an g u ard
area.
Carlson said the opening game
Thursday was a back and forth

Volleyball
struggle with both teams playing
well on offense. In the second
game. Nelson led the way as
Oviedo built a 9-3 lead. However,
when Nelson w as ofT the front
row. Osceola came on strong.
The Kowglrls pulled within
9-7, then got the serve back and
reeled off eight points to win the
second game. 15-9.
Osceola won the coin toss and
served to open the third game.
On the first serve. Oviedo got the
pass to setter Kim Verne and
Verne lofted her set right in
Nelson's wheelhouse. Nelson’s
spike gave Oviedo the serve and
the Lady Lions Immediately took
control as they scored four
straight points.
Oviedo would go on to take a
14-6 lead but Osceola fended off
three match points then pulled
within 14-8. Oviedo got the serve
back though and closed out the
match.
"Stephanie (Nelson) controlled
the net when she was up front."
Carlson said. "A n d she w s get­
ting good sets from Kim (Verne).
Lisa (Knapp) played excellent."

By Chris Plstsr
Herald Sports Writer

Volleyball

LONGWOOD — Lyman High’s
devastating offense and hard
serves reduced Spruce Creek to Tuesday against Orlando Evans.
playing bump ball in the first Evans won the 4 A -I0 title last
gam e of their 4 A -9 District week.
Tournam ent semifinal match
The last time Lyman and
Thursday night at Lyman High.
Spruce Creek met. the Lady
The result was a 15-4 win for Greyhounds breezed through
the Lady Greyhounds. However. the first game (15-1) only to lose
Spruce Creek gol Its ofTcnse on two close ones and the match.
track In game two and rallied for The Lady Hawks snapped a
a 13-10 lead. Unlike the last time 12-match Lyman win streak.
the two teams met. though.
"Our Intensity was a lot better
Lym an pulled together and this time," Lyman senior Shelia
bounced back to claim a 15-10 Mandy said. "W e knew basically
victory to earn a berth in that Spruce Creek was strong on
tonight’s district finals.
defense and we tried to see the
T h e s e c o n d -s e e d e d L a d y
holes that they weren’t cover­
Greyhounds take on top-seeded ing."
DeLand tonight at 7 in a re­
In the opening game, senior
match of last year's district title setter Dawn Boycsen got Lyman
game. DeLand. which won the off to a good start as she opened
district the past two years, the match with an ace. Boycsen
HaraW State fo Tammy Vises* advanced with a 15*3. 10-15. served one more point and
Lyman got the serve right back
L ak e H ow ell's C hristy Tlb b ltts concentrates on the ball w h ile T h m ^ y ’sftrst match.H° WeH *n from the Creek on a spike by
w a rm in g up before Th u rs d a y 's sem ifinal g am e against
The winner of the district win Mandy. Kristie Kaiser's two
D eLan d. T h e L a d y H aw ks w ere elim inated In three sets.
host the 4A-5 Region match
Baa LYMAN. Pag* BA

Pride On Line For Rams, Patriots
By Bam Cook
Herald Sports Editor

HtraM Ptwto by Tammy Vlncant

Lake M a ry tackle M a rty Hopkins, lower
, gets a linem an's view of Brett M olle

ch a rg in g for a first down. Shane Letterio
makes the handoff for the Ram s.

Seminole and Lake Mary. Lake Brantley and
Lyman. Oviedo and Lake Mary. Lyman and Lake
Howell.
All four of these Seminole County matchups
have the rivalry and Intensity firmly Instilled. The
games arc always spirited with the outcome
usually in doubt until the waning minutes.
But when It comes to a rivalry — a real
honest-to-goodness rivalry with thousands and
thousands of fans — It’s tough to top the Lake
Mary-Lake Brantley showdown tonight at B at
Lake Brantley High School in Altamonte Springs.
The proof is in the past. Last year, when all of
Lake Brantley’s caravan o f cars had been packed
into the deep recesses of Lake Mary High School's
parking lot. the place w as ready to burst.
Lake Mary High School officials estimated the
crowd at close to 7.500. There were 5.053 tickets
sold. Freebies, season-ticket holders and the
bands swelled it even more.
It will not be much different tonight. The build
up started Wednesday night when the two
faculties met for a fund-raising athletic competi­
tion. Lake Mary has its own car caravan planned
for tonight.
Sure. Brantley has lost all seven gam es it has
Sure. Lake Mary has won five of seven,
unkel Index line has Lake Mary as a
10-point favorite.
Lake Brantley coach Fred Almon said the line,
however, is out or line. "It's going to be a close,
high-scoring gam e." Almon said. "Lake Mary has
a great offense and I don’t know if our young
defense can stop them. But 1 don't think they can
stop our offense either.
"T h e community (school district) has been split
and our kids are excited about playing them.
Whoever gets the ball last may win it. It might
even come down to a two-point converson.”
Nelson said he hopes it’s not that close. "W e've
had enough close games this year." the third-year
Lake Mary coach said. "It doesn't matter that
Lake Brantley hasn't won a game. I know he
(A lm o n ) w ill h a ve them w e ll p r e p a r e d .
Statistically, they're a good baMclub. They’ve got
good passers and throwers."
The thrower Is Patriot quarterback David
Dclfiacco. The receiver is wideout Sammy Sears.

LiiMarr Richardson said he looked In the
mirror this morning and couldn't believe his
eyes. He said he was the same size, had the
same muscles and same good Itioks.
But he was 10 years younger.
" M y prayers had been a n s w e re d ."
Seminole High's popular assistant principal
said. "I know I’ll have to get physical
tonight and I Just need those extra 10 years
taken off to do some real damage.”
Tonight. Richardson and his Seminole
High faculty teammates plan to get revenge
for a loss last year In the Faculty-Alumni
Flag Football game.
- After Richardson made his deal with
someone down under, he was told he had 24
hours before he turns back Into a 41-yearold assistant principal.
"Coach (Emory) Blake and I know we
don't have much time left to take care of
these younger alumni guys," Richardson
said. “Maybe one year, maybe two. W e have
to get our revenge on the alumni tonight."
Richardson, a former NFL player who was
u major contributor when the faculty won
the Initial encounter two years ago. said
Blake. Bobby Lundqulst. Alex Holcomb.
Nate Perkins. Glenn Malolini. Donald Mer­
rick and Jerry Posey have a mission tonight.
"W e're ready;" he said. "I totd Tim Raines
and Mike Good and Clifford Martin, they
better watch out. If you get In front of me
tonight. I'm going to get down.
"Brent Carll is lucky he's not playing.

NEW YORK (UP!) - Six cities
seeking to get a major league
baseball team made pitches
Thursday to the Major League's
Long Range Planning Commit­ Tampa-St. Petersburg. Fla.: the
sta te of N ew J e rs e y and
tee.
Seven more cities will make Nashville. Tenn.. are scheduled
to make their proposals.
Ihclr presentations Friday.
Representatives from V an ­ U P I S E L E C T S C O X
NEW YORK (UPI) Bobby
couver. British Columbia: Den­
ver: Columbus. Ohio; Miami: Cox. who was voted American
Washington. D.C.. and Indian­ League Manager of the Year by
apolis made hour-long proposals the Baseball Writers' Associa­
before baseball commissioner tion. added another plaque to his
P e te r U e b e r r o t h . N a t io n a l trophy case Thursday when
L e a g u e P r e s id e n t C h a r le s U n ite d P ress In te rn a tio n a l
"C h u b " Feeney and eight club named him Its AL Manager of
the Year.
owners.
Cox. who guided the Toronto
Each representative argued
the merits of their particular Blue Jays to their (Irst ever
region In acquiring a major- division title, collected 16 votes
in a poll of 26 UPI baseball
league franchise.
" N o c o m m it m e n t s w e r e correspondents. Dick Howser.
m a d e " to e x p a n d the tw o manager of the World Series
champion Kansas City Royals,
l e a g u e 's c u r r e n t 2 6 -te a m
structure, said Ed Durso. secre­ 'received six votes. Form er
tary-treasurer of the Long Range Yankee manager Billy Martin
and California's Gene Mauch
Planning Committee.
"T h is is simply a staging were the only others to get any
process to assess cities and voles.
In other N ational Leagu e
areas. Everything went very
news,
the St. Louis Cardinals
smoothly and we're very Im­
pressed with the people in­ said they would not offer a
contract to catcher D arrell
volved."
On Friday, prospective fran­ Porter. Porter Is free to negotiate
chise holders from Buffalo. N.Y.. his services wtth the rest of the
N e w O r l e a n s . P h o e n i x . league.

Baseball

Football
He's been vocal all week but I'm going to
leave my name on the quarterback's chest
tonight. Anybody coming my wajt better be
prepared."
Carli. who is laid up with un injury, had
said the faculty’s win two years ago was a
fluke and that the alumni was going lo
re-establish Itsdomlnanee tonight.
The third annual game Is a fund-raiser
with the money going lo the Seminole High
athletic department. Tickets are 82.

000
On the prep side of the field, coach Jerry
Gergley’s Winter Park Wildcats have been
selected as one of the teams to play in the
Rotary Bowl football game Wednesday, Nov.
27 at Lyman High School. Gerglcy and the
Wildcats, who are out of the District 5A-5
picture, accepted the Invitation.
Larry Cowart. South Seminole's Rotary
Club's head of the selection committee, said
Winter Park’s opponent will be chosen after
Nov. 22.
"Right now we're looking at the loser of
the Lyman-Lake Mary game along with
Titusville Astronaut and Kissimmee Os­
ceola." Cowart said. "W e would really love
to have Lyman or Lake Mary. If they qualify.
Those two and Astronaut arc the top three."
Lyman High Principal Carlton Henley said
the Florida High School Activities Associa­
tion guidelines state that a team must win

Dclfiacco'has been erractic this year but at times
he has flashed the form that made him the
county's top QB last year. Sears has been steady.
His 25 catches lead the county.
Adding to the attack will be the return of
tailback Andy Dunn, who w as sidelined with an
injury. He joins Johnny Griffin to give the Pats
two capable tailbacks. Cornelius Friendly and
Derrick Gulnyard share the fullback slot.
Lake M ary's strength comes from Its skill
performers and Its underrated defense. Wideout
Ray Hartafteld and quarterback Shane Letterio
clicked eight times last week for 105 yards. John
"T h e Battering Ram " Curvy rumbled for VM
yards and three TDs.
Defenders Ryan Lisle, Marty Hopkins. Brett
Molle. Shannon Porter, Scott Frost and Paul
Owen are each coming off solid games in the
33-21 win over Mainland.
It was easily Lake Mary's best performance o f
the year. yet. Nelson Isn't ready to say the Rams
have turned the comer. " W e scored when we had
the opportunity, which is something we didn’t do
earlier." Nelson said.
Lake Mary la playing a three-game season and
searching for four. It needs a win tonight to clinch
a share of the SAC championship. A win tonight •
and in two weeks against Lyman will sew up the
District 5A-4 title and the SAC championship. .
Next week, the Rams play Boone for homecom­
ing, which la another game they want to win.
Lake Brantley, meanwhile. Is desperate for a
win. It has three opportunities to avoid an 0-10
season. It plays Lake Mary, Lake Howell and /
Boone. It will be the underdog In all three but
Nelson said the Patriots are backed Into the
comer and ready to strike.
"A t this stage of the season, he (Almon) would
like to beat anybody and I don't blame him."
Nelson said. "That's a tough load (seven-game
losing streak) to carry. I know he would give his
eye teeth to beat Lake Mary."
There’s a reason for that. too. Almon and
Nelson coached together at Lake Mary two years
ago. They didn't get along. " I guess it was lust a
personality conflict." Almon said.

7 More Cities To Make
Pitch For Major League

ardson Vows Revenge;
tary Eyes Lyman, Rams
By Sam Cook
Herald Bporta Editor

Football

HaraM P^atafcy Wily MtwfSy

L a M a r r Richardson reaches for a pass
In last year's Seminole F a c u lty -A lu m n i
football g a m e . T h e two team s meet
again tonight at 7:30at Seminole H ig h.
at least half of games and not be Involved in
the district playoffs to participate in an 11th
game.
Lyman. 4-3. and Lake Mary. 5-2, meet
Friday. Nov. 22 to decide the district title. If
the loser meets the above qualifications, it
could be Winter Park’s opponent.
A Lyman victory tonight over Lake Howell
would ensure the Greyhounds of a .500
record. "Tonight is a very key game for
Lyman.” Cowart said.

�t - . « •■

FI.

i •'**•*■

* .. * • •

1t « *

* -W* *■ # % *J*- K »t | . *g v•| •

FrMay, Nov. 1 , 105

'Refrigerator' Inspires Appliance Nicknames!
William "T h e Refrigerator" Perry Is creating
quite u stir In the National Football League. The
rookie defensive Ilneman-ofFcnsivc back for the
Chicago Bears is probably the first 300-pound
man to score a touchdown.
His nickname has inspired Chicago fans to
construct and w ear cardboard refrigerators to
games. He has given new meaning lu the term
"backfield In motion.”
However. Perry Is far from the largest human
currently roaming the gridiron In the U.S.A.
Raymond “ Meat Locker” Smith, an offensive
tackle out of H.D. Woodson High in Washington.
D.C. weighs in at 465 pounds and stands 6-6.
Needless to say. he opens huge holes for
running backs. He also plays on the defensive line
on short-yardage plays. Smith could break
Perry's record for the heaviest man to score a
touchdown offensively if he ever got the call on
the old tackle eligible play.
Since "T h e Refrigerator” has become a na­
tional phenom. a number of players have been
named after appliances. Here are a few for some
Seminole County prep players:
Seminole’s Brian "Broiler" Brinson. When he
lines upopposltc you. you know the heal is on.
Oviedo's Andrew "LaM ach lnc" Smith. He
dances through opposing defenses faster than a
food processor slices tomatoes.

LARE MART AT LAKE BRARTLEY
t

The Rams found their ofTense In a 33-21 victory
over Mainland, last Thursday while Lake Brantley
is still searching for Its first win. Lake Mary can
move closer to the Seminole Athletic Conference
title while the Patriots move closer to a winless
season. — R aao bp 10

Chris
Fister

LYMAN AT LAKE ROWELL

•PORTS
WRITER

V

Lake Howell coach Mike Blaceglta would like to
reintroduce his ofTense to the end zone. The
Silver Hawks have not scored in 10 quarters.
Lyman's ball-control ofTense and tough defense
will extend Howell's streak. — L jraaa by •

Lyman's Robert "Toaster" Thomas. Has burnt
so many defenders this season that they become
known as "T oast" to teammates.
Lake Mary’ s Marty "T h e Washing Machine"
Hopkins. He washes away the tacklers before
picking out the ballcarrier for the tackle.
Mark "T h e O ven" Schnltker. After 25 rushes
by the Sliver Hawk fullback, most defenses are
well done.
Lake Brantley's Sammy "Glnsu Knife" Sears.
Sears' deft cuts have shredded the way for a
county-leading 25 catches.
m mm
Last week, the Fearless Fister Forecast was a
pretty frigid 6-4. For the season. 48-31-1. What
kind of percentage Is that? Cool out. okay.

OVIEDO AT COCOA BEACH
Coeoa Beach probably has not seen the likes of
a running back like Andrew Smith. The Oviedo
senior speedster will lead the way as the Lions get
back in the win column after three straight losses.

while South Carolina watches the post-scascki
festivities on TV. — FSU by 13

UCF AT GEORGIA SOUTHERN
UCF*s Knights tangle with another powerful
team In Georgia Southern, which is one of the trip
small college Independents in the nation. THe
Knights are having problems with turnovers arid
defense and would be doing good Just to win otic
more game this season. — Boatfeara by 14

MIAMI AT MARYLAND
The Hurricanes want revenge after blowing «
31-point lead to Maryland last year. Vlnnje
Testerverde will crank up the Miami offense again
as the 'Canes cruise. — Miami by 13

CARDINALS AT BUCS

— Oviade by 7
FLORIDA V *. GEORGIA

If St. Louis wasn't riding high after upscttlitg
Dallas on Monday night, the Burs might stand !a
chance In this one. Tampa Bay. as usual, will
probably lead early and challenge late bcfofc
bowing out In the end. — Cards by S

This traditional game, played In the Gator
Bowl, is usually close but Georgia is not as strong
as usual while Florida Is more powerful than ever
before. — Gators by 20

Miami's playoff hopes hinge on this game and
Don Shula will come up with a game plan to kec
the Dolphins hopes alive. — Dolphins by 9

JETS AT DOLPHINS

I , CAROLINA AT FLORIDA BTATE

LIONS AT BEARS

After a disappointing loss to Miami. Florida
Slate Is out of the running for a major bowl berth.
But the Seminoles will go bowling somewhere

"T h e Refrigerator" will be short circuited th|
week as the big-play Lions' defense pulls off tl
upset of the week. — Lions by 3
*

a

Blanton:
We N eed
A Victory

Hawks Attempt
To Brake Skid I
Against Lyman

I ~

*
I

|

*

By Chris Flstsr
Herald Sports Writer
Oviedo's Lions have played
good enough to win six oui of
seven limes this season but they
have come out on the short end
of the stick five times while
winning only two.
Tonight. Oviedo will begin to
try to salvage what is left of the
1985 season when It travels to
Cocoa Beach. Oviedo. 2-5. will
also try to snap a three-game
losing streak.
"W e're playing good football,
now we Just want to w in ."
Oviedo coach Jack Blanton said.
"W e 'v e been In nearly every
game only to lose 5 of 7 times.
That's not much fun."
Blanton said Cocoa Beach,
which stands at 4-3. is not as
tough as Seminole or Lake Mary
but is still a very good football
team.
"T h e run the veer-option very
w e ll. " B lanton said of the
Minutcmcn. “ They mostly run It
but are capable oT passing. They
gave Jones a real tough time two
weeks ago. Jones won the game
when they picked up a fumble
and ran fora touchdown."
Oviedo, which has one of tIntop running attacks In Central
Florida, hopes Andrew Smith
can break off a few long ones and
put the Lions on the scoreboard.
Smith goes in with 1.172 yards
rushing and 11 touchdowns.
Smith, a senior, was roughed up
a bit In last week's loss to
Seminole, but Blanton said he is
ready lo go.
"H e was banged up a little
against Sanford." Blanton said
of Smith. "H e had a bruise on
Itis lower back but he's alt right
now ."
O v ie d o q u a rte rb a c k John
Morrow was not In lop form I he
|)ast few weeks after a back
injury suffered against New
Smyrna Beach. But Blanton said
Morrow, who has completed 32
of 84 passes for 479 yards,
looked better last week and
should be at 100 percent to­
night.
Defensively for Oviedo. Bcrnell
Simmons leads the way with 92
tackles (fifth In the county),
three sacks and two fumble
recoveries. Tony Coffie Is next
with 61 tackles and Jeff Joyce
has 54, Willie Gainey is tied for
the county lead in interceptions
with four.
While Cocoa Beach Is a tough
team , particularly at home.
Oviedo did pull out a 14-13
victory over lhe Minutemen two
years ago at Cocoa Beach.
"T h e guys are ready to go."
Blanton said. "W e Just can't
make mistakes."

...Lyman
Continued from 5A
points gave Lyman a 4-0 lead.
Spruce Creek came back with
a nice rally on the serve of
Debbie Bunch to lie It at 4-4.
Lyman made it 6-4 on Tami
Foss' serve and got it back on a
spike by Kim Forsyth. Donna
Ball then came on with the best
service string o f the game. The
Creek couldn't control Bail's line
drive serve as Lyman reeled off
seven straight for a 13-4 lead. A
pair o f nicely placed dinks by
Forsylh frustrated the Lady
Hawks on the rally.
Spruce Creek regained the
serve but couldn't hold onto It as
Kaiser nailed a spike lo return it
to Lyman. Forsyth then served
the last two points with Mandy's
spike accounting for the 15th.
" W e expected more from them

w
w \
Vtkkl M cM urrcr

Kim Lem on

B y T b a H o ra
Spatial to t b « Harold

r

Tw o teams that have been
heading in opposite directions
will face off tonight when the
Lake Howell Silver Hawks host
the Lyman Greyhounds at 8 p.m
tit Lake Howell Stadium in a key
Sem inole Athletic Conference
showdown.
Lyman. 4-3. dropped its first
two games of the season but has
since won four out of five to put
itself into fine position in the
Seminole Athletic Conference
and District 5A-4 races. The
Greyhounds, who are 2 -1 in both
I he SAC and District 5A-4 stan­
dings. can claim the Inaugural
SAC championship with wins
over Lake Howell tonight and
over the Lake Mary Rams in two
weeks. A win over the Rams
would also give the Greyhounds
the District 5A-4 title.
On the oth er hand. Lake
Howell. 3-4. has lost four con­
secutive games following a 3-0
start. The Sljver Hawks, who
have fallen out of contention in
the District 5A-5 race, are 1-1 in
the SAC and need wins in their
final three conference games
against Lyman, Lake Brantley
and Oviedo and for Lake Mary
(3-0 in the SAC) lo lose its final
two conference gumes against
Lake Brantley und Lyman In
order to claim the SAC champi­
onship.
Despite Lake Howell's recent
downslidc. Lyman coach Bill
Scott expects quite a challenge
from the Silver Hawks.
"Lake Hofrcll has got a good
football •team. They have Just
had a tough schedule." he said.
"I'm expecting a very lough
ballgame because Lake Howell
always plays us tough."
Scott said he has had no
p ro b le m w ith k e e p in g his
players from looking ahead lo
the district championship game
ugainsl Lake Mary.
"There hasn't been any pro­
blem with that." he said. "T h e
kids keep things in perspective.
They know we have to play hard
every week to win and we’re
only concentrating on Lake
Howell right now.
"T h e Lake Mary game will
lake care o f its e lf when it
comes."
Greyhound linebacker Byron
Overstreet, a defensive leader for
Lyman who Is tops on the team
in tackles with 79 and seventh in
‘the county, agreed with Scott.
"No. we’re not looking ahead
to Lake Mary because we want
to win the conference, loo. (along

Fotlm o Lafond

Look M cClure

Tip Off For la d y Raiders
Johnson, Good Recruits Have Gallagher Upbeat
By Chris Pieter
Herald Sports Writer
With iwo starters returning from a team that
was one win away from the state finals and a
fine crop of freshman recruits, coach lleana
Gallagher is optimistic about the 1985-86
season for the Seminole Community College
Lady Raiders.
The Lady Raiders open the season this week
with a pair o f home games. SCC hosts
Brunswick (Ga.) College tonight at 7 and
Pensacola Junior College Saturday afternoon at
2.
"W r'rc extremely excited about this season."
Gallagher said. "A ltera fine recruiting year, and
key returning strength, the upcoming season
should be a highly successful one.”
Leading the list of returning players is
sophomore potm guard Tammy Johnson. As a
freshman at SCC. the Lake Howell High
graduate led the team in scoring (18 points per
game) and steals. Johnson, a 5-8 sharpshooter,
was named All-Mid-Florida Conference. All-State
‘ and Honorable Mention All-America for her
outstanding 1984-85 season.
"Her quickness and shooting strength from
the point position will make her a definite threat
again this year." Gallagher said of Johnson.
Another returning starter Is sophomore
forward-center Kim Lemon. Lemon, a Lyman
High graduate, filled in at the center position
and performed admirably against much bigger
opponents. At 5-9. Lemon held her own under
the boards against a number of six-footers.
"She will contribute a lot to tin- leant with her
leaping ability and Inside play." Gallagher said
of Lemon. " I 'm looking to Kim for her
leadership on and off the court, too."
Also returning from last year's squad are
sophomores Elizabeth Dietrich and Leah Mc­
Clure.
Dietrich, a 5-9 forward, couiributcd good

Basketball
outside shooting off ihc bench a year ago.
Dietrich, a Lake Howell High graduate, was
especially effective in the stale tournament
where she led a tremendous SCC comeback ill
the semifinals that fell |usl short.
McClure, a 5-8 lorward. did not see a wholcjot
of action last season but will be counted on for
additional defensive strength this season.
Another piayer who was with the leum half of
last season who is returning for the ‘85-86
campaign is 5-11 sophomore center Vlkkl
McMurrcr.
The freshman talent Gallagher recruited
includes three players out of Miami American
High. They include Lisa Starks. Carol King and
Fatima Lalotid.
Starks, a 5-11 forward, averaged 12 points
and 12 rebounds per game at American High
last season. "H er strong inside play will keep
our offense on the boards." Gallagher said of
Starks.
King, a 5-7 point guard, will lx- counted on to
relieve Johnson at the point and to provide
lough defense. "Her defense will make us
capable of using our fast break offense more this
season." Gallagher said of King.
Lafond. a 5-11 center, will give the Lady
Raiders added strength on I lie boards. "Lafond
along with McMurrcr will give us a strong center
position." Gallagher said.
Two other freshman who will be counted on
this season are Allcen Patterson and Anita
Brown.
Patterson, a 5-H small forward, averaged 10
points and I 1 relxxtnds per game a year ago and
helped Lake Mary High lo a district title. Like
Lemon. Patterson lias excellent leaping ability
and can mix it up with much bigger opponents.

k
*4$ K flMSr

-SO

E lisabeth Dietrich

C arol K ing

L is a Sparka

(Spruce Creek).” Boycsen said. received excellent back row play
"But we came out and played Thursday from Ball. Mandy.
really well."
Kaiser. Forsyth and Boyesen
The two teams traded points (when she wasn't setting).
in the early going of the second
"W e were a lot more de­
game until, with Lyman holding termined this time than last."
a 5-4 lead. Tyrina Mack served Boyesen said. "W e weren't going
three points for the Creek to give to fall apart. The attitude was
it Its first lead of the match. 7-5.
better and we played as a team.”
Lyman came back to take a
9-8 lead with Kaiser and Mandy DELAND UPENDS HOWELL
Luke H ow ell’s Lady Silver
serving one point each and Jodie
Hawks were both hot and cold
Vega two.
The Lady Hawks then ran off Thursday night In their threethe next live points for a 13-9 game match against DcLand's
lead. Mack's play at the net and Lady Bulldogs. Unfortunately.
Samantha Osterman's serving Lake Howell was hot in only one
of the three games and dropped
and defense led the way.
After a Spruce Creek missed a 15-3. 10-15. 15-4 decision.
serve, Lyman got the serve back
In the opening game. Cake
and closed the door on the Howell had trouble with its
Hawks. Even two time outs by serves while serving led the way
Spruce Creek couldn't kill the for DcLand. Along with Patty
Lady Greyhounds’ rally.
Corr's serving. Cathy W yche’s
Boyesen served six straight, play at the net keyed the Lady
three of which weren't returned, Bulldogs in the opening game.
lo give Lyman the win. Ball's
Lake Howell shook off the
outstanding play in the back row Icicles in game two and roared to
highlighted the rally. Lyman a quick 11-0 lead. Mary Kay

Tam m y Johnson
Herald Photo* by Tommy Vincent

Scott served four of the points.
Anita Chechowskt served three
and Michelle Arana and Jolee
Johnson two each

when Scot! served the last two
points.
The Lady Hawks played well
In the early going of game three
as they took a 4-3 lead.
Then, the Hawks cooled off as
DcLand came back with five
straight paints on Tamy Martin's
serve for an 8-4 lead. After
D cLand m ade it 9-4, Lake
Howell had the serve three more
times but couldn't pull any
closer.
Wyche then served two points
for a 11-4 lead with Am an’s hit
providing the 11th point.
The Lady Bulldogs got the
serve right back and closed out
the match on Martin's serve.
Aman's spike gol the rally going.
Lyman will look to avenge last
year's district final loss to DeLand tonight.
"DeLand's probably as good as
Spruce Creek and they're more
s c ra p p y ." L y m a n 's Boyesen
said. " A n d the h ave som e
height. If we play together, we'll
be all right."

Johnson's play at the net
ignited the Lake Howell rally us
the senior standout converted on
4 of 4 kill opportunities.
DcLand came back strong
though as it scored eight straight
on the serve of Wyche with Mary
Amun's net play leading the
way. Aman. only 5-6. would go
on to make some crucial kills In
game three.
After DeLarul pulled within
11-9. Tammy Lewis served a
pair of points to put the Lady
ilawks up. 13-9. Scott's block
and Cechowskl's hit accounted
for the points.
DcLand came back with a
point to make it 13-10 but
couldn't pull any closer as De­
nise Efstathion dug out two
vicious spikes lo turn the Lady
Bulldogs away. Luke Howell
then claimed the second game

1

Football
with the district) and we know
we have to defeat Lake Howell
first." he said. "Then. If wc heji
Lake Mary we win the confer­
ence and the district."
O v e r s t r e e t e x p e c ts Lake
Howell to be up for lhe game.
I
"T h e y 'll be up for It because
It's their homecoming." lie said.
"It will be a tough game hrraiisr
■Lake Howell plays Lyman lough
every year."
Lake Howell head coach Mll(c
Blsceglia said this game Is very
important lo the Silver Hawks.
"W e need this one bad." he said.
" I f we arc going in do anything
in the county we have to go oilt
and win It — no doubt alxmt It."',
The game will feature two t)f
the county's best running buck*,
ta ilb a ck Robert Thom(i,v n fj
L y m a n and fu llb a c k M ark]
S c h n ltk e r o f Lake H ow ell. 1
Thomas is second In the county
in rushing wiih 783 yards anil
has scored eight touchdowns. |
Lym an also received stroni
rushing games from halfbacj
Eddie Brown and fullback Hcnnjr^
Glenn last week. Schnltker la.
fourth in the county with H I7
yards rushing and has uvcragctl
5.4 yards a carry.
Schollker said this game wijl
make or break Lake Howells
season. " If we heal Lyman aujl
then win our final two games in
finish 6-4. we will feel like we
have accomplished a lot." he
said. "Bui If we lose this one. (t
will be really disappointing.”
;
And. he said he expects a very
physical game. "I'm expecting p
really hard hit ling game." hp
said. "It might nol be hlgji
scoring, hui it should he exeijbig."
Quurtcrhaek-wisc. the trains
are simillar. Lake Howell's Mark
Waiuwrighl and Lyman's .Johp
Burton each are effective with
the short pass. Senior wideotfl
Ralph l'hil|M&gt;it is Burton's prime
ta rg e t w h ile vern al lie Bill
Wasson Is Howell's big threat.
Wasson has caught four TD pans
this year, all from Wninwright.
Lake Howell will benefit from
the return of halfback Terry
Gammons lo the offense und
Dave Williams. Francisco Arias
and Shawm- McNeil lo the de­
fense.
Williams. Arias and McNeil,
three senior defensive linemen
that Hisrcglla said have been
sorely missed, were unable to
play due to academic reasons.

'1
HtraW M

i ky Tammy Vtacwt

L a d y H a w k coach Jo Luciano
doesn't like w hat she sees.
How ell dropped a three-set
m atch to D e La n d in T h u r s ­
da y's district sem ifinal.

�**'%■*%• *

i ■'i1""f

•» #•■*7 1;rT %»’ * T %j. f,,y,-&lt;ir»rl&lt;# %«: jp %,▼v

♦wO

FI.

Friday,Hoe, g, H g-T A

S C O R E B O A R D

TV/RADIO

MBREF

MMiraui
» * » * - WTtl SI*. Dow feffts

WinterFork, Howell To Duel
In Dlttrlet 4A-5 Crete Country

MUM
&gt;» m - H IS. Stun Cuf me t Own*
•!«*».
III

Winter Park and Lake Howell, the top two teams in the
state (4A) girls rankings, will battle It out for the top spot
Saturday In the 4A-5 District Cross Country Champion*
ships at Trinity Preparatory School.
The girls meet begins at 10 a.m. followed by the boys atf
10:30. The top six teams and top five Individuals In each
meet advance to next weekends 4A-3 Region Meet at Lake
Mary High.
W inter P a rk 's Lady W ildcats have the top two
individuals in the state in Kim Bovis and Am y Gamber and
will look for Beth Gam ber and Janice Wilder for additional
strength. Lake Howell hopes to use its pack to offset Winter
Park's one-two punch. The Lady Hawks' top runner is
Junior Lisa Samocki followed by Martha Fonseca who is
probably the most Improved runner in the county.
Behind Winter Park and Lake Howell, Lyman has a solid
shot at reglonals while Lake Brantley. Lake Mary. Seminole
and Boone arc also fighting for a berth.
Individually, Seminole's Shownda Martin is looking to
advance irthc team doesn't.
In the boys meet. Colonial High is the favorite followed
closely by Winter Park. U k e Howell. Lyman and Lake
Mary. Seminole High. Lake Brantley and Boone are also
looking for regional berths.
C olonial's A lan Salyers. Lake M ary's Ken Rohr.
Seminole's Billy Pcnlck and Winter Park's Ken Gamber are
among the individual favorites.

MttlMCIM
U N pm -

Own*«W»kril.lU
l Npm - « W i P U . U m o C p *
fo c tuu

I N pm - 1JIN. CtOfft. bn Jm li#t* tt
***» SMtt
Nun - U U CUKpt. M
«t H e ,
D m . Ill
U N pm - N T H NCM * Cemp.
tanfcctf MVaiPvSit. (u
I p M - Sf TV t. CMMpi. AiJkwnt it LIU.

IU

I N pm - NCI* 1 CMitpt. M*ni »•
M m n u tiu
? N pm - I V * CpiMfi. ! * m C n fn i
PfiMrMiltM. (1), MMitmidb-pM
I pm - N T H CMWft. Ora***
rt
S r 5 | V » - N tM * HfTOG u CoiMft.
Gpprpdn rwm
M il
I N pm - ItM i ft,un Cup met
OmnpMmPp MGut. T lr t rump
Ipm - l i n t ft,u*CtpW etCMmpi

ftp net

M tM l
Ipm - (|M l Mm*
CrmdPrla
M Nlafat
I0CCII
I N pm - I IPX Input, It Lfci'i
IWmeftsi FithlwiP Ipifit. ILI
M U IM IM
ipm - UPS.IHIAitr*
FOOTMU
II N «m - M ilt i. Cetp. lot*,

Buonlcontl Has Vortabrao Fusod

•MMtNt

Nu r - NCI 1 i CmMpl. StMDM l }!*■
I pm - (INN. Cetp. Wvm Ctrthrt M
rwipistM
I pm - *CM p ML. Ottrpi Lmnt n
CMCppilurtILI
4 pm - NISH !. M L. N»» Tart MS tt
M.tmi Dwpniftt 1L)
tpm - w e n t M L OtHMCPrtmtt
Wmfinpei M l t t i (L)
I t " - (INN. CtHtfr Stn Jm SUN pi
l« N *ucti lUH
•Oil
I pm - ()NN. LNM MtlPt JtptN
ClHipPmimtid
•VNMSTIC1
1 p m - (JNN. met CKimpitniftip.
Nomtfli Turn Tritd
. NOCHIT
I pm - (JNX NHL. Mmntwtt He*
S'tntllotianltvint
NONIRMPTIPCINO
•Opm - (SNN Nop»r« l O ttw t fret

MIAMI IUPI) — Marc BuonicoYitl. paralyzed after making
a tackle in a college football game, remains a quadriplegic
following a successful operation to fuse the injured
vertebrae In his neck, doctors report.
Buonlcontl. 19. a linebacker for The Citadel and son of
former Miami Dolphins star Nick Buonlcontl. suffered a
broken neck during a game with East Tennessee State Oct.
26. The injury has left him paralyzed from the neck down.
Buonlcontl underwent an hour-long operation at Jackson
Memorial Hospital Thursday to stabilize the Injured
vertebrae and prepare him for rehabilitation.
"Doelors say the patient is fine after the one-hour
operation. Marc is awake and he Is aware that all has gone
well,” said Jackson spokeswoman Betty Badcrman.
However. Buonlcontl is still listed In critical condition and
continues on a respirator in the hospital's neurosurgical
intensive care unit, she said.

M cEnroo Back*

I t M . lra*M,|' Crt*n

Mi

MMO
1 p m - (INN. N.nttU To*r Tttm
Campttitian
T IM M
•IXpm -N FTV I, FW kM ft*,*i Owv
ill

Position

h u s h in g

w N •m - WESH ). UmM VtSt Cltn
VNttHmp

LONDON (UPI| — The governing body of m en's
professional tennis received support from John McEnroe,
the world's No. 2-rankcd player. In its crusade against the
agents who control 40 percent of the world's top players.
The Men's International Professional Tennis Council
announced It had filed suit Wednesday In U.S. District
Court in Manhattan accusing Donald Dell and Raymond
Benton and their Washington-based management firm.
ProServ, with violating the federal Racketeer Influenced
and Corrupt Organization Act by engaging in "numerous
acts of mall fraud ... and wire and television fraud.”
"T h e lawsuit will hurt the sport, but it’s something that
has to be done." said McEnroe, wh, Is represented by his
father, a lawyer, rather than an agent or management
company. "I think the players should organize the
tournaments."

tick
tot pm - NKItPM ITS), tptm Tplk
ailPCRnttutarPuiu

NOOTUU

I pm - NHOOM IM Gts&gt;* vt
Fsripi It ittHUnitlp
1 Npm -N H IlA M lW .C u tritO W P i

S/TONIGHT

eC* Stvmim

ISprn - NtX0*M(Ml.S«vMCtr^.nl

VolUyball: Varsity - DUtrict
4A-B T o w a u M B t at Lymaa High

FQQTMLl
1pm - NO10AN IM). It Lour, tt

7 p.m. — Lyman vs. DcLand (champion­
ship)

ttPwppttftt

Sji.m. — Lake Mary at Lake Brantley
8 p.m. — Lyman at Lake Howell
8 p.m. — Oviedo at Cocoa Beach

JA1 ALAI

K A PA LU A . Hawaii (UPI) —
Unless disaster strikes. Bernhard
Langcr is confident his Europeun
squad will be one of the teams In
the finals of the 8750.000 World
Championship of Golf.
With one more round-robin
match to play today, no one
doubts the West German. The
schedule has winless Japan
against the U.S. and Europe
against Australia/Ncw Zealand.

Baskatball: Junior Collage

TNwPn 'IUUNl
M (mat
■P ’4 4'trt
IIe IK 190
o u p tlim p t
i n no
1(»*0po Cmitcottp
IH
Qll 1INN. N IlllK N j T ilt DltPN
M pm t
Itorm
U» in
•W *
I P tn
]|«w C ,IK 9 r&lt; «
]«
o i*»i nm. n ti 4, p « ; r it » i) nt M:
30 on N S
Mppmt
tOApptpo , mi
itn too i n
!•&gt;**turn*,*
IN IN
)Zupu*(iari*
no
0 O il NNi NIPJIN N . T (PI II m N
PNptmt
INk XO
,N IK IN
PJ«W«
IN IH
iGtf»r
ip
0(1 Pitt N; NIMlWM. T llP Ilin N
M|mm
tjp iJlle ’ttfi
19h ) p t n
»N,i*Cpiipco^ p
i n 4H
ICtrirlumPT*
l«
0 IIII NNi N II1) n.llj T II &gt;11 ItlMi
0004)11 il ION
ilupttpAtu
0M IN itC
UrtuiOyri
IH in
llp d r w
Jp
0II4IS.M. NIPUPLtl.TlPIIMNM
INppmp
tA,,,IIAnp*
-OH IM IN
) Durpnpi KM f e e
}«
tM
IGplipIrputpl
ip
• IH ) N Ni NlPlltlN; TlPM ITNN
Mppmt
tGtrMWPArcp
ItH IH IN
INpvVtAngtf
tR iOO
tC W M Aflpip
tn
QOOM Ni NtfDNN, T1M IIN1 N
fill ||ii|
)Arrpll6&lt;*
l|M I H )M
■CutrpitLPtP
1 00 4 70

lCeil IfPMbpl

|H

QOIIP1M; N O U N It. T o i l ) | N »
IMppM

•GornttipAnpti

U.S.A.

Paatball: Varsity

ipm -NIIIAJNirNl.NTJfHttpLtff.i

1)00 PHIM

KtuprpgtuPill
PR 190
•Gtllp f e e
]M
0 IIII MS. N(PI) IU4I. T It IM lit M
IHtptmt
( C*pt*o I'llpPpr
I P IH JH
‘ C*(i*Qi f e e
IX IK
0 (Pt) IIP ; N (PP) IMP; T (PPII Ml M.
NX I (PPilPt) IM t PPM UP IP. Mftrntr
NI.ItJN
impprnt
lOtpuMt
1IM 100 IH
)itp&gt;ptpi
i u no
iGOTMtO'P
m
0 O il MM; N O II U S . T I I 141 tu M.
do o n m s
mppmp
pArrpll Tkc-Pil
14M PM IM
ICtwtfpAnpti
I B 4H
| Bmpu*^UpbM.
&lt;pm.
0114141 Mi N (PI) IB TI; T IPMl W1H.
0001)04) IBM
A-l.Mli IP—HM.fi*

7 p.m. — Brunswick at SCC women

9/SATURDAY
Croat Country: Varsity — District
4A*B Championships at Trinity Prep
10 a.m. — girls varsity 2 mile
10:30 p.m. — boys varsity 3 mile

Football: Collage .

"W e 'v e won both of our first
two m atches quite e a s ily ."
Lunger said T h u rsd ay a flr r
Europe routed the United’ States,
live matches to one.

1:30 p.m. — UCF at Georgia Southern

Basketball: Junior College
7:30 p.m. — SCC men at North Florida

NFL

* P -'* l'S l« 0 ,« P " t 'pm
. i Pp 1r,4'l^O ppo 4pm
TV Jt* p*Vpmi 4pm
&gt; 4 1 p' Anr&lt;n*pn 4 pm

NATIONAL NMTIALL HAGUE
l r UpiIpP Nrm Ipfpr
Ampfitpn CpMpfpfict

(M

v J*n
H*» E*9I*4
W*m.
liHwpoii,
Bjlf* 9
C
ea
C «( 11*4!
P,"l&amp;,,9*
H06,'S*
l * l4 M „
3n.*»

"W e should really be in the
finals unless disaster strikes.
The only way they can knock us
out Is if the Australians beat us
In all the matches and the
Americans sweep the Japanese.
"But I think we're playing 1041
well to lose all the matches."

N"»w'JPp'«PnP»Ct» Ipm
V L»,»P’ Tpmp,B,( ipm

w
7
ft
1
)
t
CddtrM
4
4
4
4
Nnt
ft
ft
5

I T N ) Ft
J t 771 004
) 0 44&gt; 771
4 4 U4 no
* 0 U) *71
1 9 III u'

ft

NBA
TMmAt,', H*i»m

444 «
•47
M7
IM
444
111

V I4 M N G Hta *0-1M
"PupW
L*C pcm-i )
&gt; * .«,))' 34 fit*
LAL**mi:i u-P* '0*

u

.‘ ( ■ I I S M tpc-pm^-p *4

tr* f,, Gamp,
ii-Ssi-o* •Xpm
Sa-iinw-ot-N- pap- 1iKpDt-f»(pl A«* -g-x 7 Mpm
0*-i.t*piL A Lp«i*,, it Npm

IN *17
11* »
n* TO
no W
171 794

A- pn-p p&lt; Go « " Vl-* I’ p m
Prt
M7
*47
IM
444
444

NHL

PF n
»7 '4
r.i H*
h i ’ll
in ’41
in Jt

TPurUf, *HtWltl
i n 'e : Hpriva i

p- «4,p*l 4 C- t*90 2
FrMii iGpm,,

S' LX'I Pi 8.7*44 7 Upfl

Despite Its lowly standings.
J a p a n h a s p r o v i d e d th e
tournament with the top indi­
vidual player in Taleo Ozakl.
who has a 36-holc total of
11-under-par 133. Langcr trails
by a stroke and Sandy Lyle,
a n o t h e r E u r o p e a n team
member, is at 135.

N* Sujf-ll1An*p,, , tipm

1000
t*
IM
ID
900

ID 1)4
ITU ID
III »;
144 71
*14 )7J

III
IM
III
III

111 117
ni
171 111
171 214

8 -ne.-y e H t 7 npm
70f6*1Jf.3,1,pH 7 lip m
)4*:o..,- f1 : Jmo,-or *11 pm

lafuHtr» Oppw,
30,10*4' P» toro*. i

g*i

Hp,’*o'9p'0u«»£ mjrf
Mo*i*,p e Ln 4np n.n ) - '

**••)*,*» |&lt;N, iip*«ri " C
SV Bp»9H,ptV **t«-f 49*1
C* C*J0I*P *tty,9* *.9*1
Cp

ip ,,

1' N j v *9'o* " 9**

i* Lui il' Vo *&gt;0 "'9*1

Each member of the winning
team will collect 850.000 with
the Individual winner also get­
ting a check for the sam e
amount.

Vaitc.rt, p- N.im.ppf * 9-11

M18L
PtlHtWt

E s * 4 Ipm

NiCKrtP 7

LA Ham, e HtOani, i p m

S a m p s o n , O l a j u w o n H a lt
C lip p e r s ' W i n n i n g S t r e a k

Australia/Ncw Zealand, whieh
defeated Japan. 17-5. In the
second round, moved Into sec­
ond place w ith 21 points,
followed by the U.S. with 20 and
Japan 8.

Stpi'4i' 9e*et ') )0pm

lAHhmti (tT)
At.pflfp pi Nk11fd*1pP4 1pm
C4f*lpndpiCK&lt;nnpii ipm
Ot'-a-iI*Crtfpo ipm
G'Ptn&gt;p,p«Mn&gt;*ipip ipm
mtul'anpili.ttpra 1pm
I-it mvppa t pi

The near-sweep of the U.S.
over the 7.879*yard Kapalua Bay
Course on the island of Maul
gave Europe 39 points, based on
two points for each Individual
victory and 10 bonus points for a
team win.

H f» .4-14f 34 C» (490*'

444 *10 *u
444 no n
444 'll 11

&gt;9
19
) 9
I 9

) 9
] 9
49
&gt;4* 0 *91
4 I 9
0114, Cl*,
19
N*7*m I CMNrrKi
tni
ml T
D ili
) »
Hi C e*\
• ) 9
* 4, 11*910*
3 49
P*ii*4t',n&gt;4
4 ) 0
S' L0&gt;'1
4 19
OMfM
• 99
C-C490
Derail
j 4 9
Mim4M&gt;4
1 4t
G&gt;iei h i
i 49
Tl*M Ilf
0 •9
Not
. » He*,
1 19
*4* F&gt;4*C'kO
1 40
•tt. 0 * 4 ",
) 49
*114*14
7 19

Mm Ppi'i Damn
ie&lt; f 'e t up e 0e&gt;e * p *

FI
HI
*M
*;
X*
)•

0*&lt;&gt;P, 4

B u y tire s t h e e a s y w a y ...w l t h

United Press Internstlonel
This lime, the Rockets were
ready.
T h e Los A n geles C lippers
surprised everybody by winning
their first live games. Including a
double-overtim e victory over
Houston on the second day of
the season. Last night, the
Rockcty weren't fooled, and
made LA's first loss a resound­
ing one. 137-115.

100 Friends A t D 'A m ato Funeral
CATSKILL. N.Y. ((JIM) — About 100 relatives, friends and
boxing associates. Including former heavyweight champi­
on Floyd Patterson, attended the funeral of trainermanager Constantine "C u s " D'Amato Thursday at St.
D'Amato. who was 77. died Monday of Interstitial
pulmonary flrbrosls. a form of pneumonia, at Mount Sinai
Hospital In Manhattan.
Pallbearers included former boxing champions Patterson
and Jose Torres, now chairman of the New York State
Athletic Commission, as well as heavyweight Mike Tyson.
I)'Am ato's most recent protege and udnptd son.

"Things arc going our way
n o w ." Houston guard Lewis
Lloyd said. " W e have a better
team than they do and wc
wanted to prove II."
The Rockets' inside game was
overpowering. Ralph Sampson
and Akcem Olajuwon each had
12 rebounds each and combined
for 41 points. Houston cruised to
a 20-point Jead al halfllme und
never relented, controlling Ihe
boards for 26 points from within
the lane in the third quarter
alone.
"W e played a little Rocket ball
iu the third q u a rte r." said

IWildcats Shut O u t Cow boys , 7-0
Tony Hollle tossed a 55-yard scoring pass to Richard
Anderson and the Wildcats turned In a strong defensive
performance to blank the Cowboys. 7-0. Thursday In
Sanford Recreation Department Junior League Flag
Football.
Hollie's scoring strike was followed a run for the
conversion from Charlie Jones. The Wildcats' defense did
i he rest to preserve the victory.

NBA Roundup
Houston coach Bill Filch, whose
team opened a 91-63 advantage
in the period. " W e 'v e been
letting some people back in
lately after we build big leads."
The Clippers never recovered,
despite Derek Smith’s gamehigh 35 points.

Sto«l Btlitd Radiol
LUmowt XLM*
ASLOWAS
ll)
I

" W e got caught too many
tim es w ith o u r gu a rd s u n ­
derneath und we didn't have
people back on defense." Cllppers coach Don Chaney said.
"Y o u should never have off
nights when you don't play
defense, but wc had one to­
night."

*

AAOWfNLvj
f a y m in t 1
s ir o f t i|

ou*
MICC

1 ****
f u m m ii

| a i«/ H R u

**.*»

u n

[

41 .n

il m

||

iii

UN

11 .h i |j

|f W / 7 I I I I

N .N

1ta t ||

| a m / » R i«

U .M

U M |j

|F W / l l t l l

M.M

|f

iw

»

c

. .
LUMHtaar

In other games. New Jersey
s t o p p e d C h i c a g o 1 0 6 -9 7 .
M ilwaukee edged New York
92-88. Denver decimated [Julias
131-99. Cleveland nipped Sac­
ramento 95-94. and the LA
Lakers whipped Utah 116-106.

A O K TIRE M A R T

NEW ARK . ,VJ. IUFII A
federal Judge Thursday ordered
N l w Jersey to free Rubin "H u r­
ricane" Carter, lilt- former mid­
dleweight boxer whose 19-year
battle to clear himself of murder
charges was made famous in a
ballad by ikib Dylan.
The Judge ruled Rial Carter.
48. who is black and has been
im p riso n e d for all but six
months since his 1966 arresi.
was the victim of racial prejudice
Iu his original 1967 trial and
1976 retrial for a triple-murder
in a Paterson. N.J.. tavern.
f f U.S. District Judge H. Lee
* Sarokln set aside Carter's eonEviction and life sentence and
,’ *uld Carter might have been
'fo u n d Innocent If prosecutors
;^|iud not used prejudicial evi­
dence ugalnst him.
' The Judge said he hoped "that
ronslitultonal considerations, as
Hell as Justice und compassion.
Will p r e v a il" and that pro#*eculors will not bring Carter to
&gt;lylal again.
% O n e o f C a r t e r 's la w y e r s .
;gdward Graves, talked to the
- former middleweight title eon• tender at Rahway Slate Prison
&gt; after Ihe ruling.
' "H e Is elated, of course."
Graves said of Carter, who could
be freed after a bond hearing In
federal court Friday. "H e wants
out of there now. He has never
given up."
First Assistant Passaic County
prosecutor John Goceljak said

B o xin g
ids office will not say unlil the
hearing Friday whether it will
drop the case, retry Carter or
appeal Sarokin’s ruling.
"W e Just received Ihe Judge's
opinion and we're reviewing It."
lie said.
Carter will not be In court
Friday, but could be released

from Rahway wllhtn hours after
bond is set.
Carter's case drew national
attention In 1975 when Bob
Dylan wrote and recorded an
elght-mlnute song called "H urri­
cane" claiming the former boxer
had been framed and "falsely
tried." The song helped build
momentum for Curler's request
for a second trial, grunted by the
New Jersey Supreme Court In
1976.

j

3 2 2 - 7 4 8 0

i l l s misi « 1, 1

f r v v j

.ah*dhii
u

J u d g e O r d e rs 'H u r r ic a ne* F r e e d

-

MO*4fU'8\)OSAf8l)MOO*&lt;

m

m

1

m

Dn 'I 8ft Caught
Cold

m

i

i

i

MT.S4JB
tW U M

VMS Tm t r*MM Bn

___

WMttWflron

lU n d &amp; Water Sports C trl
3110 Mile North of Dog Track Rd.
Loafw ood

W ALL
1007 S Sanford A»a.
San lord

987 W. M 488

1 6 8 7 8 .1 1 8 1 7 *9 2

Hsat Pump/Alr Conditions
D« IfiM* CmH* Mam7m IBlit, H.U

IK-Mart S h o p p in g C t r l
2 M iles W est o f 1-4

Altssaonta B prlags

962*5499

698*0991

SCUM INVENTORY

REDUCTION S A L E

JACKET BC|
ADVANCE DESIGN VEST
ALL DIVE KNIVES
WETSUIT MMDM

..................I11DM
20-50% OFF
...........•130"

.......... U1Q"
. . . . 20% OFF

DIVING EQUIP.
_____ ________ SPANS. LOADS) WITH
automatic, am. powcr steering and

OLDSM OBILE
CAD
ILLAC
37009. HWV.t 7*48
•AMFOflO

322-3391

mm

COMBO WITH COMPASS.................J l

J**JXC
0
l,P
lC
T
£
Jm
S
f
I
&lt;
feA
^"aSaSraun'^
UfETINE MRI

LAYAWAY T IL CHRISTMAS
NO INTEREST - NO SERVICE CHAROE - CALL FOR DETAILS

FALL SPECIAL SCUBA CLASS
m CLAIMS R8V. 4 A 88V. 18
,* t t m

n

m

n

h

1 u

t r

• t 9 »
m

t n

’ ' ’ *' t

m

"

t t 1

�•

•

#**•

•A-Evtfiiti« HtraM, Sanford, FI.

•- t

I' w

^

Friday, Nov. •, lass

Can Georgia Regain Dominance Over Gators?
______ _____

Gators' unbeaten skein to 18 games.
Except for a bizarre 28-28 tic against
Rutgers Sept. 14. the Gators have been
perfect and Coach Galen Hall has a
15-0-1 record at the Florida helm since
taking over for Charley Pell.
"This will be a showdown Just like
the Auburn game.” says Florida's
hlg-play receiver. Ricky Nattlel. whose
90-yard touchdown catch from Kcrwin
Bell sparked the Gators past Georgia
27-0 last season. "Georgia will be
really fired up and will play perhaps
their finest game of the season.”
The Bulldogs. 6-1-1. have n 39-21-2
advantage In the series and Florida has
not w on con secu tive gam es vs.
Georgia since 1962-63. With games
against Auburn and Georgia Tech

JACK SO NVILLE (UP1I Florida
puls the nation's longest unbeaten
streak on the line Saturday at the
Gator Bowl, with 81.000 college foot­
ball fanatics xvondrrlng whether No.
15 Georgia can regain its dominance In
one of the sport's greatest rivalries.
Because of past NC’AA violations, the
Gators. 7-0-1. are ineligible for the
Southeastern Conference title or
post-season play while the Bulldogs
are trying to earn the conference
crown and a berth In the Sugar Bowl.
This game has been played yearly in
Jacksonville since 1933 with the
exception of 1943. when Florida did
not field a leant.
Florida comes off an emotional 14-10
triumph at Auburn that stretched the

__________________________

Football
remaining, the Bulldogs need an upset
Saturday to solidify their SEC position.
Coach Vince Dooley's main problem Is
a depleted secondary that must cope
with Bell's accurate right arm.
S afely Miles Sm ith suffered a
shoulder injury In practice Tuesday
while comerback Gary Moss Injured
Ills hamstring in the same session.
Georgia was forced to work roverback
John Little at sufety in practice and
Bell, who has hit on 59 percent of Ills
passes with 17 TDs. expects to pad
those statistics.
"The starters In the backfield could

Back-To-Back Florida Wins
Would Be First In 22 Years
With Hie lop ranking in the country now in the
Associated Press pull, the Florida Gators will try
to accomplish something ibis week that they
haven't dune in 22 years - defeat the long-time
rival Georgia Bulldogs in back-to-back seasons.
The Gators, who crushed the Bulldogs last
year. 27-0. have not beaten the Bulldogs twice in
a row since earning consecutive victories back In
the 1962 (23-151 and 1963 seasons (21-141. The
Bulldogs lead the series ail-lime with a 39-21-2
mark. KlekolT Is set for I p ut. Saturday at the
Gator Bowl in Jacksonville.
After last week s big win over Auburn. 14-10.
the Gators record stood at 7-0-1 on the year and
( 0 in the SEC. They also currently hold the
nation's longest unbeaten streak of 18 games
oxer two seasons.
Georgia comes into the game with a 6-1-1 mark
and has won two straight, including a 58-3 win
uver Tulane last week. The Bulldogs are ranked
16th in the AP poll and 15th in the DPI ratings.
Florida quarterback Kcrwin Bell, who directed
the Gators to a victory as a freshman last season
and is currently second in the country in passing
cHtcimi x as ,i sophomore this year, is anxiously
await ing his second start against Georgia.
“ There is nothing like the Georgia game." he
said
I played m all the big games Iasi year and
cvervotte told me that the Flnrida-Gcorgta game
xxas different and I didn’t believe them I was
wrong. That game means a whole lot and Georgia
is going to be sky high
"Tliex s c e n t to be playing their best lout ball
tight now and I'm sure they will play their best
name ol the season on Saturday We will have to
do the same.
l.tuebacker Alon/n Johnson, an All-American
Iasi year and one of the 12 final nominees for the
Lombardi Lineman of the Year award Bits season.
* agrees with Bell.
*
"W e know that Georgia is a great team and the

rivalry between the two teams Is one ol tin
biggest in the nation.'' In said. Tin si.-e Georgia
Is going to come out and be lired up, but we will
also and I think it will be a close ballgame.
The Gators art iixing to become Just the third
a am m history to win ih&lt; national championship
while on probation. The other two were
Oklahoma m 1974 and Auburn In 1957.
it ft ti

In oilier games involving Florida teams Saturday the I ’niversiiy ol Central Florida Knights are
on the road against [)ivlsiou-ll power Georgia

Tim
Horn
8PO R TS
W R IT E R
Southern. Florida Slate hosts South Carolina and
•the University of Miami travels to Maryland.
The 2-6 Knights are still searching for their
third victory of the season and have lost six
straight straight. They are Idle next week and will
play host to Savannah St. on Nov. 23.
The Seminoles, 6-2. and the Hurricanes. 7-1.
who were locked up hi an exciting battle last
w eek b efo re the H urrican es rode Vlntile
Tcstaverde's right arm to a 35-27 victory, are
both trying to avenge defeats against their
opponents this week that were pinned on them
last year.
FSU. 6-2. lost to South Carolina 38-26 and
Maryland overcame a 3 1-point h.ill-lime deficit to
clip Miami 42-40(whocan forget that one'.'l.
S a n fo r d 's Isaac W illia m s , w h o sacked
leslaverde three limes last week and helped the
Seminoles limit the I lurrieaties n&gt; minus 1H yards
rushing, will start at defensive laekle lor FSl’ .
tt U U

P IC K S — Another mediocre record last week at
7-4. hut 1 did pick the Ohio Stale Buckeyes upset
of previously top-ranked Iowa, so give me a break.
For the season: 44-27 (14-12 in preps. 20-10 in
xoUege and 10-5 to the pros).
H i g h School: In a mild upset. Lake Howell bv -1
over Lyman. Lake Mary over Lake Brantley by 9
.old Oviedo over Cocoa Beach by 13
C ollege: Florida by 17 over Georgia. FSU by I I
over South Carolina. Miami (don't count them out
lor a possible second national championship in
three years) by 21 over Maryland and UCF's
agony will continue with a 12-point loss to
Georgia Southern.
Pro: Dolphins (will the real Dan Marino please
show up .it the Orange Bowl) by 8 over the -lets.
Cardinals over the Dues by 3 and the Bears by 5
over the Lions.

Ufef W49

Vi”
r
0#&gt;2*a*’•;*!* £

1*1f

A 1-5 !
.,** " I " 5 K

&lt;1*1, *. .3- I

V * A i- i U

§•*a* Aji” '

*F&lt;f

■*'*

*

j

ce^i j #'" 13

i*

Ih ip V r J

W*«
T*n

JO^wC

o;
*

V i *

,

Dt« «C » ;

5i

**
C't** 'te * X

“ * ‘t « *
• " .* «»
'. 'I ',
a." 'e

Tor. Cx*. ; u

9,-s" X
. a »"( .))

v

n

'(*c.

IX. 3 H.—
W .» . ,3, I

Set*. &gt; (* t* K
C *»,x 5 :*«« u
St:” l « . "
)
1

«tA .35,3-

W'daft 8 3v IJ
9»'Cr Aty*
lit " I 'V e 3

if&lt;r l i t 32
LfWjn QHfftvt I
A 3*

’ *:• *
v,x-3
V y

',.,-3
"r•*
3 - *-3

G-rjw

• »* hSfw'
*

, 0J

C-i 3&gt;**5-3*’
Vy&gt; A , n.f
Vx-i St*V *&lt; C x - - i - i

xm i2

V ( C3"« A
&amp;0-X" x-ig 5]
s-va. Px-v» so1

... foe* A 51
Any |]

v .♦ v:C .'s. ::
Vj- » 5 ' * - 1

j,“ P- 55
Llil Hcmm DHtxit M

I

Di.*B* *x ;J 'll
M»l1i|lt
C443 G*351( sit 13'
Vl-« its* ,i .
8:tt. iy x n .51.

AA4 H3i x ii
Ol. 3 A 1415 M
Vl-&lt; 8l.5J.4- '5

c, , |7

Em , &amp;d - 534 «

ts

ViS,

A T*■«i
, - x.-v

Vlt

hose 5.,-3
"k i •

h
* &gt;-3. 0-w- »)

Cl-I* .5 fr 1-a , Jt
jQfflr, G, tffl X

S't.t T , f
Vxri, sx-y. (

0.»3c
it 'r*9

-

S;;"Si-*- ■;
. mi -“.Jd.«-&lt;«
;i.f Zt *ic:;

tji. He.,II0&lt;l,"U ,t,r OxtUX

11
Sea* Ben JC

j;

S i- 5,1--. Ji

i

. -st*;,,-

A

Vi-’ Cit*;.: I
C--5V. sC

t

3**0**" ’S
*1 S4

8
*

i [&gt;i l*M S

V

Ukt Ml'i DfifflM \1

A use* V.

I 01)411 P-5 I

l l" 4 » Dx**"W

E*S

3

.h C-;**! Jl

«&lt;* » Vft'* i

.PS V-k'* r •;

T:*
'I
Ci.aV-: :

X1! - A tV- II

P-A-C « t A* ,5

J15C4 . V I - J
C445 Al 51 11

W.ft'141 i

0l.&lt; 0, ! »;;s ’

Lake M a ry Puts Finishing
Touch O n Perfect Season
By Tim Horn
S pecial to the Herald
You can make dial lt&gt; straight
wins for the Lake Mary Rams'
Junior varsity football squad

J.V. Football

Rams in the lead early in the
lirst quarter. 6-0. with an 1 I. With a 20-12 win over pre­
yartl touchdown run. The kirk
viously undefeated New Smyrna
lor the extra point attempt was
Beach Thursday the Rains' wide.
Juniiir varsity closed out ils
Alter New Smyrna had tied the
season with a second straight game at 6-6. Ram quarterback
8-0 record under roaches Bill
Kelly McKinnon bn Jim Cor­
McDaniel and Charlie Reynolds
nelius with a 39-yard touchdown
"h was just a super ballgame. pass to put the Rains hack in lit*'
one of the lietler ones all year." lead for good at 12-6. McKinnon
McDaniel said. "It has been a lot then passed to Burketle for the
o f pressure playing with an 2-point conversion and the Rams
tiudefeuied record each week. lead 14-Out halftime.
eJ n u the players came through
In the third quarter. New
^ "real well
Smyrna closed to within 14-12.
•;&lt; ” !l has been a really giioil but Terry "The C at" Miller, who
•'\sA-asun and I appreciate all the gained 78 yards on 10 carries,
•.'-.support that our Ians have given added a three-yard run lor the
•:«:us.”
Rams early In the fuurth quarter
7*. Richard Burketle. who gained to make the score. 20-12. The
"'HI yards on II carries, put the Ram defense then stiffened and

Lake Mary was on its wax t o
another vic tory.
I he (lelcnse played real well
•'gain tonight." McDaniel said.
Linebacker Lance Stuart had
nine tackles and three assists
and rinse man Bill Kroll and the
rest ol the- defense just did a bell
ol a job."
McDaniel said ibis particular
group o| players lias won 16
straight games, eight consecu­
tive wins kisi year as trestunan
and eight more this lull.
In o t h e r J V p l a y . T h e
Seminole junior varsity was also
sc heduled to close out ils season
T h u rsd ay at T itu s v ille bin
Seminole JV couch John Brady
said the game was called oil due
to Titusville's inability to get
enough players for the game.
Most of Titusville's junior varsity
squad had already been culled
up lo pluv for the* varsity.

■M M W M M L-

V-

N attlel
a quality of Its own. The defense fa
looking forward to another grea
challenge. If we go out and play like wt
have over the past few games, we fee
we can get the Job done."

Ltgol Noticas
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC NEARINO
THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
will hold s public htcirlng In
Room • W 120 of th# Sominolo
County Sorvlcti Building. Sonford. Florida on DECEMBER &gt;.
! W A T 7iM P.M., or l i loon
Ihortoitor 1 1 poiiibl* to contld
•r th* following:

PUBLIC NEARINO
POR CNANOE OP
20NIN0 REGULATIONS
t. NAOEN HOMES. INC. S P E C IF IC A M E N D M E N T
FROM PRESERVATION/LOW
INTENSITY URBAN TO ME­
DIUM DENSITY RESIDEN­
TIAL AND RE20NE PROM A t
AORICULTURS TO R1 ONE
AND TWO FAMILY DWELL­
ING DISTRICT PZ(I1-* -«)-IIS

PREP FOOTBALL ROUNDUP:
S TA R TE R S

___ ,
be Tony Flack at safety and Tony
Mangrum and Garry Moss at IM
corners, providing Moss Is physically
capable." says Dooley.
Georgia crushed Tulane 58-3 last
Saturday, but the Bulldogs know they
won't be cresting over uny Green Wave
at the Gator Bowl. Besides Bell's ample
talents, the Gators sport n superb
backfield combination In Neal An­
derson and John L. Williams. The
defense, led by outside linebacker
Alonzo Johnson, shut down Auburn s
ground game and confidence has
peaked.
"People are always reminding us
how Georgia seems to have a Jinx on
Florida.” says Gator linebacker Scott
Armstrong, "but this Florida team has

from time to tlm* a t found
n e c e s sa ry . Furthar d e ta ils
available by calling 331 1130.
Eel. 441.
Persons are advised that it
they decide to appeal any d t
clsion made at these meetings,
they will need a record of th*
p ro c e e d in g s , en d fo r such
purpose, they may need to
ensure that a verbatim record ot
th* proceedings Is made, which
record Includes the testimony
and evidence upon which th*
appeal it to be mad*.
Board ot
County Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
B Y : Herb Hardin. Director
Land Man e g * men I
1 Publish N ovem ber!, lets
DEL 4J

CITY OP SANFORD, FLORIDA
- Th* W I»1 0* ft. of th* NW '«
NOTICE OF ENOINECRINO
of SW &lt;* of S«&lt;tlon 77 M X .
SERVICES DESIRED
north of SR W . plus l**s th* W
Pursuant lo 40 CFR Part JX
■5 It of th* Sly ISO It. plus l * l i
notice Is hereby given that
th* E IS ft of Sly ISO ft. alio
p roposals are Invited Irom
known Ai P a r o l llr and th* E
engineering lirm i or Individuals
95 54 ft of the W : m 67 ft of th*
to render complete construction
NW '1 of th* SW 'i . North ol SR
related professional services In
*77. In Section 77. Townihip 70S.
the lollov-ingerea:
Range SO E. alio known a i
M alaria's end Quality Control
Parcel *tj. (Further described
Testing — Soils, foundation end
as 7 a acres located on the north
soils laboratory quality control
side ol C 477. one hall mile west
testing, earthwork end road
of Hwy 17 97 MOIST i j )
base compaction quality control
7 HAGEN HOMES. INC. testing, earthwork materials,
R E 2 0 N E
F R O M A t
piping and structural e ic a v a
A G R IC U L T U R E D IS T R IC T
lion, bedding and backfill mate
ANO R-2 ONE AND TWO FAM
rials quality control testing,
IL Y DWELLING DISTRICT TO
asphaltic concrete design m l«.
R 1A S I N G L E F A M I L Y
compaction density, thickness
D W E L L I N G D IS T R IC T and in place composition quality
PZU1 4 I S l't ll - That part ol
control testing, and complete
the SE '1 ot Sec 19 21 29.
concrete quality control testing
Seminole County, and that part
The above services will be
ol the SW ’ i ot Sec 20 21S 29E.
provided lor the following con
being more particularly de
slructton contract, through a
scribed as lolloes Commence
contract with City of Sanlord,
at the SE corner ot the SE ' i of
Post Office Boa 1778. Sanlord.
said section 19; thence N
Florida.37777 1771
8 9 *ir2 l" W 81$ 94 tl along the S
Cltyol Sanlord. Florida
line ol the SE ’ i ot said Section
Wastewater Treatment Plant
19 tor a POB, thence continu* N
Sludge Handling Facility
89*41 71'1 W 478 25 It along the S
FOER Project No 584100
tin* ol SE ' i ol said Section 19 to
Interested firms or individuals
the SW corner ot th* SE '4 ol the
SE ’ 4 ot said Sec 19; thence N
are requested lo indicate their
00*24 05 "W. 1145 29 It along th*
interest In this proiect by sub
W lln* ol th* SE &lt;* ot th* SE &lt;h
m atin g liv e coplee ot their
ol said Sec 19; th*nc* Weeing
proposal I * the office ot the City
said W line run S 89*32 29E E
Engineer. City ol Sanlord. P 0
Boa 1771. Sanford. F lorid a
271 49 It. thence S 00*40 14" E.
22772 1778. on or before 7 00
100 02 ft thence S 89*13'29" E.
P M Local Time, the 14th Day
421 70 ft thence S 00*44'28" E.
of December 1985
173 35 It. thence S 89*37'24" E.
547 89 ft thence N 44*20 2$ E
The proposal must be ac
144 97 tt thence S 78*$S OO" E.
companied by U S G S A Forms
142 1$ It to the Wly ROW ot Bear
254 and 255. data regarding
Lake Hoad said ROW being
experience on similar projects
recorded in PB 14. Pgs 31 33,
and other pertinent information
which the submitter believes
thence S 11*05 00 W 100 tt
along said Wly ROW lo the Nty
will be helpful in describing or
line ot tract described as Parcel
demonstrating their qualified
8B in said Section 20 ol Seminole ' tions S ig n ific a n t selection
County Ta« Records, thence N
criteria In relative order ol
78*55 00 W ISO It along sa&gt;d
importance will include
a)
Nly line to the most Nly corner
Specllited experience ot the
ol said trad
thence leaving
lirm in the type ot work re
said tract run S 44*20 25" W
quired. bl Past experience, it
137 47 tt. thence S 00*58 51 ' E
any with respect lo the firm's
120 03 It thence N 89*37 24" W.
performance on contracts with
811 44 tt. thence S 00*14 14 ’ E
City ot Sanlord, ct Current
485 47 tl to the POB Consisting
workloads and daily ability to
ol approximately 14 97 acres
respond to the work and pro
(Further descr.bed as located
le tte d requirem ents ot this
on the west side ot Bear Lake
proiect. d) Specific stall and
Road and to the south ot Little
resources proposed lor this
Bear Lake I IDIST #31
proiect. and e) Location of the
3 RICHARD C. LAWRENCE.
lirm m general geographical
JR. - SP E C IF IC AM END
area ol the protect
M ENT FROM MEDIUM DE
Consistent with Ihe require
N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L TO
ments ol 40 CFR Part Jl. small,
COMMERCIAL AND REZONE
minority and women's business
FROM RM 1 SINGLE FAM ILY
will recieve consideration dur
M O B ILE HOME RESID EN
mg selection and. all other
T IA L DISTRICT TO C2 RE
selection criteria evaluations
T A I L C O M M E R C IA L betnq equal, small, minority or
PZM1 4 85) 134 - Lots 48 and 49
women a business status may
Block A. and Lots 2 and 3. Block
become a determining (actor tor
B. Mobile Manor, Second Sec
selection
lion, PB It. Pg 44 48 in Section
Notice is also given that the
3 7 1 79 S e m in o le C ounty.
c o n tr a c t(a ) which may be
(Further described as lour lots
awarded under this procure
located south at SR 434. between
men! will contain applicable
Mobile Avenue and Vagabond
provision ot Subparts F and G of
W ay.I (DIST i3&gt;
40 CFR Part 13. as published in
4 JO H N E M E R S O N the Monday. March 28. 1983
S P E C IF IC A M E N D M E N T
Federal Reqister The above
FROM G ENERAL RURAL TO
regulJ.ions as well as the Con
INDUSTRIAL AND REZONE
struction Contract Documents
FROM A-l AGRICULTURE TO
lor the protect are available tor
C 3 GENERAL COMMERCIAL
examination at the olflce ot City
AND WHOLESALE DISTRICT
Engineer, City ot Sanlord Any
- P Z ttl 4 851 127 - Th* E 720
selected firm (s) will also be
It of the E ' i o I Lot 99 (less the
required lo carry and maintain
N 132 tt) of Florida Land and
Professional Liability (Errors
C olom tatlon Company, Ltd.
and Omissions) Insurance In
William Beardall's Map ol St
(crested parties may call the
Josephs. PB I. Pg
114. in
City Engineer at IMS) 322 1141
S ectio n 71 19 30. S em in ole
for further informal ion
County (Further described as
Publish November 1 , 1995
7 79 acres located at the NW
corner ol SR 44 and Elder
NOTICE FOR HEARING
Road I (DIST tSI
ON DECLARED
5 GERALD S. RUTBERG PUBLIC NUISANCE
S P E C IF IC A M E N D M E N T
IN RE Lot 38, JAMESTOWN,
FROM LOW DENSITY RESI­
according lo th* plat thereof as
DE N T I A L TO LO W I N ­
recorded In Plat Book 9, Page
71. of Ihe Public Records ot
TENSITY COMMERCIAL ANO
Seminole County, Florida pres
R E Z O N E FR O M R -IA A
enlly shown as being owned by
SINGLE F A M ILY DWELLING
FLORENCE A LLE N
and all
D IS T R IC T TO O P O F FIC E
parties having or claiming to
DISTRICT - PZ( 11-20 81) 135 have any right, till* or interest
Ta* Parcel 29. on Assessor's
in Ihe property described above
M ap 754. Section 74 21 79,
Seminole County (Further de
W H E R E A S , the Board ol
C ou n ty C o m m is s io n e r s o l
scribed as ’ 1 acre located on the
Seminole County, Florid*, did
W side ol Maitland Ay# . S ol
on the 10th day ol September,
RoyBlvd ) (DIST »4)
1985. tin d e n d d e c la r e e
4 SUDA, INC. - SPECIFIC
structure located In Seminole
A M E N D M E N T FR O M LOW
County. Florida, to be unsafe,
DENSITY RESID ENTIAL TO
u n s a n it a r y e n d a p u b lic
PUD AND REZONE FROM A t
nuisance: lhal the owner ol the
A G R IC U L T U R E A N D R -tA
property according to th* pro
SINGLE F A M IL Y DWELLING
party records In th* Seminole
D I S T R I C T TO P U D
county Property Appraiser’ s
(P L A N N E D UNIT DEVELOP
Office on which the structure is
M E N T - P Z ttl 4 15) 179 - All
located Is FLORENCE ALLEN ,
ot the Plat ot The Forest Green.
c/o W ILLIE JAMES COLE. 1811
PB It. Pg 77 71 less Blocks J. K
Guinyard Way. Orlando, Florida
and L thereof, AND. All ol th#
32801) that th* public nuisance Is
P la t o l T h * F orast G reen
e residential structure located
Amended Plat, PB 14. Pg S3
on South Street. Oviedo. Florida,
ANO. Lot Sol Spring Hammock,
and further described as set
PB 2. Pg 2 5. all in Section 7t
forth above, and that corrective
and 78. Township 20, Rang* 10.
action is required to abet* the
Seminol* County. (Further de
public nuisance; and
scrib ed as S3 a cres M O L .
W H E R E A S , th* Board o l
located on the S side ol C 427. W
County Commissioners found
ol Hwy 17 92 ) tOIST i2)
that th* following conditions
Those in attendance will b*
constituted a public nuisance.
heard and written comments
( I ) the b u ild in g has been
may b* tiled with th* Land
severely damaged by tire end
M an agem en t M an a ger.
th* elements ot nature due to
Hearings may b* continued

abandonment; 17) foundation
piers, exterior walls, exterior
steps. Iloor framing and floor
Ing. partitions, root ratters and
sheathing, celling joist, exterior
and Interior doors, rooting me
ter la Is. root Hashing, window
glass, window screens and
window frames ere damaged
beyond reasonable repair; (Jl
electrical service, electrical
panels, electrical receptacles,
electrical lights and switches
are damaged to th* extent that
they are a haiard; 14) plumbing
f i x t u r e s , p lu m b in g d r a in
system, hot and cold water
distribution system and hot
w a ter heater are dam aged
beyond reasonable repair or
nonoxistanl; (5) (hero Is no
evidenco ol a septic tank or
draInfield; (*&gt; there is trash and
debris inside end outside ol the
building; and (7) this condition
constitutes a potential lire he*
ard, and
WHEREAS, the following cor
re c liv o action necessary to
abate the public nuisance Is to
demolish end remove Ihe build
ing. trash and debris Irom the
property
NOW THEREFORE, notice Is
h e r e b y g iv e n to tho said
FLORENCE A L L E N and all
parlies having or claiming lo
have any right, title, or interest
In the property described above,
lo appear before the Board ol
C ou n ty C o m m is s io n e r s of
Seminole County, Florida, at
10 OO a m . at its regular meet
ing on tho 10th day ol December.
1985. at the 5*mlnole County
Services Building. Room W 120.
1101 East First Street. Sanlord.
Florida, to show cause, it any.
why such structure should not
be declared a public nuisance
and the corrective action ol
abatem ent sp ecified in the
N o tic e o l P u b lic Nuisance
should not be taken, or cause. It
any why the cost ol the correc
l i v e a c tio n ot a b a te m e n t
5pecilied In th* Notice ot Public
Nuisance should not be paid lor
by FLORENCE ALLEN , her
heirs or assigns, or cause. It
any, why said cost should not be
assessed against the property
WITNESS my hand and seal
this 15th day of Oct . 1985
D AV ID N BERRIEN
Clerk to the Board
Ol County Commissioners
By Sandy Wall
Deputy Clerk
Publish October tl, 25. Nov
ember 1.1, 1985
OEK 107
NOTICE FOR HEARING
ON DECLARED
PUBLIC NUISANCE
IN RE Lot 9. Block 7. ALLENS
1ST A O D I T I O N
TO
WASHINGTON HEIGHTS, ac
cording to the plat thereof as
recorded in Plat Book 2. Page
23. ol Ihe Public Records ot
Seminole County. Florida pres
ently shown as being oened by
SA M U EL P O R TE R and all
parties having or ctaimmq to
have any right, title or interest
in the property described above
W H E R E A S , the Board ol
C ounty C o m m is s io n e r s ot
Seminole County. Florida, did
on the 10th day of September,
1915. fin d and d e c la r e a
structure located in Seminole
County. Florida, to be unsate,
u n s a n ita r y an d a p u b lic
nuisance, that Ihe owner ot the
property accordmq to Ihe pro
perly records In the Seminole
county Property Appraiser's
Otlice on which the structure is
located Is SAMUEL PORTER ot
Route I, Box 108. Sneads.
Florida 32440 lhal Ihe public
n u isa n ce is a r e s id e n tia l
structure located on Wilson
Street. Oviedo. Florida, and
further described as set forth
above, and that corrective ac
lion is required to abate the
public nuisance, and
W H E R E AS , the Board ot
County Commissioners found
lhal the following conditions
constituted a public nuisance
(1 ) the building has been
severely damaged by lire and
the elements ol nature due to
abandonment. (71 foundation
piers, exterior walls, exterior
steps, floor framing and Iloor
ing, partitions, root ratters and
sheathing, celling joist, exterior
and Interior doors, rooting ma
ferlals, roof Mashing, window
glass, window screens and
window frames are damaged
beyond reasonable repair, ( i )
electrical service, electrical
panels, electrical receptacles,
electrical lights and switches
are damaged to the extent that
they are a haiard. ( 4) plumbing
f ix t u r e s , p lu m b in g d ra in
system, hot and cold water
distribution system and hot
w ater heater are dam aged
beyond reasonable repair or
nonexlstanl; (S) there Is no
evidence ot a seplic tank or
dralnfleld. (4) there is trash and
debris Inside end outside of th*
building, and (7) this condition
constitutes e potential fir* he,
ard; and
WHEREAS, the following cor
re c tiv * action necessary io
abate the public nuisance is to
demolish end remove the build
Ing. trash end debris from the
property.

NOW THEREFORE, notice is

h e re b y g iv e n to the said
SA M U EL PO R TE R end .M
parties having or claiming to
have any right, title, or in v e s t
in th* property described above
to appear before the Board ot
C ounty C o m m is s io n e rs o l
Semtnol* County, Florida, *t
10:00 o jn ., at Its regular meet
Ing on *^e loth day ot Oecember,
1985. at tho Seminole County
Services Building, Room w 120

Sanford!

Florida, ta show causa, It any.

why such structure should m
be declared a public nuiiarn
and th* corrective action a
abatem ent s p ec ifie d In h i
N o tic e o t P u b lic Nutsenc*
should not be taken; or cause |J
any why th# cost ol tho corrat.
l i v e a c t io n o f abatem eni
spec IHad in tho Notice ot PubiJ
Nuisance should not bo bom i 2

by SAMUEL PORTER. htsheJs

or assigns, or cause. It any,
said cost should not be x . J j Z
egalnsllhe property.
WITNESS my hand and m
this 15th day ot Oct . 1985
D AVIO N. BERRIEN
Clerk to th* Board
ot County Commissioners
By Sandy Wall
Deputy Clerk
Publish: October 11. jj,
ember t, 8 .198J
DEK 104

ORDINANCE NO. 734---- AN OROINANCE OF THE
C IT Y O F LO NG W O O D
F L O R I D A . A M E N O IR E
CHAPTER TWO OF THE CITY
CODE BY THE ADOPTION A t
SE C TIO N 7 144 "APPLICA.
T IO N F E E S C H E D U L E ",
P R O V I D I N G
FOE
S E V E R A B ILIT Y. CONFLICT!
AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE
W HEREAS, th* City C m
mission ol th* City of LongswE
Florida, has conducted stvdto
ot th* actual costs of process!*
the various applications ab
ministered by the City; end
WHEREAS, present eppHcp
lio n le e schedules requirt
amendment to Insure that cWB
involved in processing appllib
lions are paid by the applfcmfc
NOW. THEREFORE. » | IT
O R D A IN E D BY THE CITY
COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF LONGWOOD. FLO R I04M
FOLLOWS
SECTION ONE: The Cad8B
O rdin an ces o l the C ity;*
Long wood Florida, shell lie M
is hereby amended by the * «
lion of Section 2 144, "App..*
lion Fee Schedule” B reed «
follows
Section 1144 AppMceRae h e
Schedule
s'
Properly Reionlng, M U I
plus advertising costs
Chang# to Comprehensive Or­
dinance Comprehensive PlIR,
1400 00 plus advertising costs
Non Conforming Use Rsqiaat.
1700 00
Variance Request. 1200tt ;
Special Exception Request.

120000

Planned Unit Development
A Receding 1500 OO plus |th
per dwelling unit and HO 00 pa
acre lor non residential
B Final Master Plan. 1500 IB
C Maior M ailer Plan Re­
vision, 1500 00
O Minor Master Plan Re
vision, 1350 00
E P relim inary Site Pile.
1100 00 plus 1100 per dwell inf
unit — non residential 1108■
plus HO 00 per acre
F Final Site Plan, 1100 00 p*W
17 00 per dwelling unit — now
residential 1100 00 plus HIM
per acre
Historic District Application
175 00 (under 10.000 square
feet). H00 00 (over 10.000 square
teetl
Site Plan Review. 1500 00*
Site Plan Revision. 1100 00
Preliminary Subdivision Plat
Development Plan. 1300 00 (less
than 10 acres)*. MOO 00 (mere
than 10 acres)*
Final Subdivision Plat Devel­
opment Plan. 1300 00 (less than
10 acres)*. 1400 00 (m ore than If
acresl*
Conditional Usa Application,
1200 00 plus advertising cotti
Annexation Request. 1280 M
plus advertising c o s t i"
Arbor Ordinance Permit Re
quest, 1)00 00 tor commtr
cial/industriel No fee for rail
dential
Vacate and Abandonments
A
R o a d s an d D rain age
Easements. HOO 00
B Plats. 1173 OO
C Utility Easements. 158 00
Right of Wey/Curb Cut Re­
quest, 120 00
Sewer and Water Connection
Permit. HOO 00
Water Lln* E xtenslon. 1100 Bl
’ Plus an advance engineering
Ice ol 1500 00
** City Commission may waive
annexation lees e l their discre
tion
SECTION TWO: If any vec
Hon. su b section, sentence,
clause, phrase, or portion ot M i
ordinance Is lor any reason hqld
to be invalid or unconstitutional
by any court o l compalent
jurisdiction, such portion shill
be deemed separata, distinct
and independent provisions end
such holding shall not oftoct tfw
validity ol th* remaining portion
hereof
SECTION T H R E E : All o^&gt;
nances or ports of ordinances In
conflict herewith are hareby
amended or repealed SO atxto
conform to th* provisions of l ^ »
ordinance.
SECTION FOUR: This o r «
nance shell be published atd
posted as provided by law W«d
shall lake effect immediately
upon adoption.
FIRST READING:
SECOND READ ING :
---- — -------------PASSE O A N D A D O P T E D
T H (S ------- DAY O F ---------- —
A D Ifu
----------------------- ;*
M ayor.CItyot
Long wood. Florida
Attest;
I V — ------------- City Clerk
Publish: November*. 1985
DEL 58

�PEOPLE

Kvenhig H tr s M , S a n fa ri, F I.

F rid a y , N a v .« , 1 N J - 9 A

*•

Gardening
It's Tim e To M oke Preparations To Protect Plants From Cold
The cool weather we've expe­
rienced the past few days In­
dicates that autumn is here.
And. It won't be long before
winter arrives. Certainly you
haven’t forgotten the past two
winters? We may have a repeal
performance again this winter.
Cold dam age to our lender
ornamentals appears to be an
Increasing hazard, but not nec­
essarily a disastrous one. If you
want lo protect your plants, now
Is the time to make preparations.
Then, whenever frost or freeze
warnings arc Issued, you’ll be
ready.
E ach y e a r. I h e r e 's som e
danger o f cold damage to land­
scape plants all over the state.
There are many ways to protect
ornam entals from Ihc cold.
Commercial growers of nursery
plants use heating more than
any other method of protection.
Bui. for lhe average homeowner,
this method can present some
problems, especially If you're
trying to protect large plants
growing in the open. It can be

done, though. You can use an
ordinary light bulb under a
sheet, blanket, or similar cover
over the plants.
Even if you don't use a light
bulb or other heat source, you
certainly can reduce the amount
of cold Injury to your plants with
a cover. Any cover will help keep
your plants from cooling off as
fast as they would if left In the
open. And. If the coverings reach
the ground, they can help con­
serve ground heat. Surprising,
too. covering a plant helps pre­
vent cold damage by providing
shade during the day. If a plant
has frozen. It will thaw out more
slowly if U’s under a shade
cover. This results in less serious
cold injury.
In spite o f these benefits,
covering a 'plant without addi­
tional heat is primarily a method
of protection against frost, rather
than hard freezes. Be sure you
remove Ihc coverings when the
weather warms up — even If It’ s
only for a day or two. Otherwise,
your plants may suffer from leaf

Alfred
Be$§e»en
U rb a n

Hortlcaltrlsl
323-2BOO
Eat. 1B1

It may hold enough ground-heat
to keep the plants’ roots from
being frozen. A plant may come
back from the roots after consid­
erable cold damage to the foliage
and branches. But, If the roots ar
frozen, you'll probably lose the
whole plant.

Sometimes water can be very
useful
In protecting your plants
burn.
from
cold
damage. Remember
The use of a mulch Is one cold
p r o te c tio n m e a s u re w h ic h the pictures from past years
causes some confusion. If the showing living plants encased In
temperature drops below freez­ Ice? Maybe you think this Is a
ing for just a few hours, a good strange way lo protect your
layer of mulch orten will lead lo plants from cold damage. But, it
Increased cold damage to the d o e s w o r k u n d e r c e r t a in
lops or the plants. This top circumstances. In fact, a cons­
Injury results from the mulch tant spray can protect some
holding the latent heat in the shrubs and other plants against
ground away from the leaves of temperatures as low as 20°F.
your plants. If a brief, overnight
How docs It work? A small
freeze is forecast, you may want amount of heat is released as
to pull the mulch away from the water freezes. So. even though
base of your plants to release plants seem to be frozen in solid
this latent heat. Longer periods Ice, their leaf temperatures can
o f very cold weather arc a actually be kept between 31 and
different matter. If you expect 32°F. The Icy covering protects
enough cold to kill the lops of plants against the chilling cfTcct
the plants, regardless of what o f winter winds, too. If you want
you do. leave the mulch th place. lo try this method on some of

you r s p ec ia l lan d scap e o r ­ up to replace what’s being lost
namentals. you must remember through the leaves. If everything
two things. First, apply enough works right, this method may
water to cover the plants evenly help reduce leaf scorch.
— at least one-third of an Inch
per hour. Second, you must keep
However, you must remember
w a te rin g u n ll ih e w e a th e r that wet soil Is a better con­
warms up and all the ice is ductor of heat than dry soil. If
m elted. IT you d o n 't apply you water heavily Just before a
enough water, or If you cut the freeze, the soli around your
water off while the temperature plants will probably cool off
is still below freezing and there faster than It would otherwise.
Is ice on the plants, cold damage T h is could have a negative
to the plants may Increase. This effect.
procedure requires a sprinkler
Whether you plan to sprinkle
system that can be accurately
calibrated to supply the proper or irrigate, or use heat under
amount or water for as long as It your coverings, exercise caution
Is needed. If you don't have a and use common sense, and use
sprinkler system — forget It. The Ihe right equipment. Otherwise,
you can do more harm than
results will be disastrous!
Another way to use water for good to protect your plants from
cold protection Is lo Irrigate low temperatures. This Is the
heavily a day or so before a time to get organized — don't
freeze hits. The Idea is lo prevent wait until the weatherman gives
excessive moisture loss from the you Just a few hours. With
leaves. If high winds accompany reason ab le p rep aration and
a cold snap, the plant leaves lose prompt action, you can usually
moisture rapidly, resulting In protect your most valuable land­
scorching and burning. If there's scape plants from the winter
plenty of moisture In the soil, the cold.
Happy gardening!
plant's roots can quickly take it

Irate Shopper W ants Just
A Pretty, Classic Dress
DEAR ABBY: I have Just
returned from another shopping
trip fru stra ted and em p tyhanded. A ll I want ts one
good-looking dress that I can
wear for an evening out. I would
like to ask the American fashion
designers: For whom are you
designing? Each other? Cer­
tainly not for American women.
i am a 41-year-old professional
woman who has worked hard to
maintain a trim figure, and I’d
like to sho.v It ofT a little. Today's
designers make that hard; their
fabrics are lovely but their styles
range from frumpy to ridiculous.
1 can find nothing without a
blousy waist (Intended to hide at
least 20 pounds around the
m id d le ), and d re s s e s w ith
shoulder pads that make me
look like a football tackle.

N e w Yorker Teaches Sanford Dancers
Guest teacher D am ien Stevens puts dancers through their paces w hile conducting
classes at School of Dance A rts , Sanford.
Stevens m ade Sanford his last stop on a tour

of Flo rid a before re turning to N e w Y o rk
C ity w h e re he d ire c ts his o w n dance
com pany " E lf e e t."

W hatever happened to the
classic little cocktail dress whose
*hape approximates a woman's
figure? I’m boycotting the dress
market until the designers come
up with something worth buy­
ing. and I'll bet I have plenty of
company.

Dear
A bby

F U R N I T U R E (o n cfoc&lt;
3 0 3

F R E N C H

A V E .

THREADBARE

SEEDCO Sets Friendship Fete
The Sem inole Employment
And E conom ic D evelopm ent
Corporation will host its 14th
A n n u a l F r ie n d s h ip D in n er
llanquct on Nov. 29. at 7:30 p.m.
Tills event will Ik* held at The
Park Suite Hotel. 225 East Alta­
m o n te D r iv e .
A lt a m o n t e
Springs.
The keynote speaker will be
the H onorable Louis Stokes
member of the United Slates
H ou se o f R e p r e s e n ta tiv e s .
Washington. D.C. Please make
your reservations for tickets In
advance by calling 5211-4360 or
the SEEDCO Office. 1011 South
Sanford Ave.. or from members

DEAR THREADBARE! Don't
give up. Figure-flattering dresses
can be found If you know where
to look.
If you can't find something
that pleases you. buy fabric and
a pattern and make your own.
You can't sew? So what? Find a
dressmaker who can.

Marva
Hawkins

Evctl Simmons. P.A. Orlando.
Music will be presented by the
Christians of Sanford.
The community is invited. The
Rev. J.L. Brooks is pastor.

T B -M M

o f the board.
A special praise and Thanks­
giving service will Ik * held Nov.
10 at I I n.m. at Zloti Hope
M issionary Baptist Church.
Corner of 8th Street and Orange
Avenue.
Guest speaker will be Attorney

The choirs and members of St.
John Missionary Baptist Church
gave a surprise bridal shower for
three members of the choir, Kay
(Jauthun. Boston. Gloria Morris
Jones and Juandolyn Adams.
Each honoree had a bridal
table with white table cloth and
a candle of love in the center.
Gifts lor each honoree were put
on their table.
Pink, blue and while accenled
the lower dining room of the
church where cake, punch and

open luce suuuwichs were served
to the guests after the morning
worship.

P H .
j S £
OPEN MON

3 2 3

2 7 9 9

S A N F O R D
THRU

SAT

Juandolyn Elaine Adams was
honored by her friends at a
surprise bridal shower last Sat­
urday evening. Friends and fam­
ily shared in the surprise given
by her maid of honor Genlce
Campbell and Sojan Cauthun.
Ju an d olyn received m any
useful gifts and the guests
played games and shared in the
fun.
Ms. Adams will become the
bride of Larry Stewart, of Texas.
Nov. 9. At St. John M.B. Church.

9 A M

- ____
S P M

6-PAK
SALE

Happy Birthday to Mrs. Victo­
ria Nathan Klllins.

All Annuals And veggies
Best Selection For
Central Florida Gardens.

W T i

Reg. 99*
Per 6-Pak

Temperatures May Be
Dropping , But You’ll
Warm Up To

PHASE II Prices
We have Fall and Winter Fashions.
Coats &amp; Jackets
Arriving daily for women

SHOP AT THE PHASE II SHOP
SHOPPING IS FUN
WHEN YOU SAVE MONEY

THE PHASE H SHOP
12 0 E . L A W M A R Y K V t .

TMSMorru or u u
MON FBI 12-6 SAT. tO-S

hai

3214044

___ ____
VISA. MC, AM EX

MINIATURE
ROSES
Piofuie Blooms All Year Long
Will WII hstand lower
■lures Than
e Roses. Use
MT I
Pots or Plant ^
dscape Color.
,t Req. 2.99
I
2 7 1 W . U L H N f f H .V B .

2B29 MTV. 17*tt

LAKE MANY

MAITLAND

3 2 3 -6 1 3 3

8 3 4 -2 0 8 0

�»^ill' * i »* »&lt;■

■4 * • *4* • ft * ♦ - S

FrMar, Nev. 1,1HS

14A—Ivtnint H*riM, Banters, Ft.

BLONCXE

THS *O L* N U . m 90
HAPPYTO 8 U YOU POM

by CMe Yowif
___ THAN
VOU TWIN*

ISO LO N 0

Ht(l

1VBSOMJD

n

11-8

by Mort Walk*

BEETLE BAILEY
I SHOULD

I H AV E T S W ALK
A LL T H E WAV O V M

SET A
B ELL

Hen

AMP X NCVM BEAT THEM
BACK TO THE MESS TENT

to c a l l

toluhck

i-L
THE BORN LOSER

by Art Santom
INKEERN&amp;
WTHTHAT
fttlCY.WE
HAVEJUST

THERKSST

eoenmr
£MDELIME$
R3RHEWW

BUSINESS

BOUfeHT

w in c e s

OUT
ANOTHER.
OF OUR

STATE THAT

(Nousmy
thnvescm

LCMfETTORS.

LQWYTinOW.

f i . &gt;. • «. «.

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE
B ETTV S
WASHING MACKINS
BMOKf DOWN, MOM.,. 9 0 X
TO l P H ia 9H6
USB

f i 0 //ve a a # e
'• H B S A lP S M B Ju S T
LtVANTS -no WASH A FBW
THINGS TO
WBAB O V « «
th s

WBSKINO/

by Howls Schnsldtr

EEK A MEEK
WEUDME TO THE FIRST
AkXXJAL TELETHOfJ RQR
THE ELDERLV..

“ t»1 •t* ..

• , * ♦ **

COOT5EWD
MOXY...

SL

-jr'-I"

Menopause Causes
Fluid Retention
D E A R DR. O O T T I ‘ve
gained 8 pounds In the last year.
I also stopped having periods a
year ago (I’m 53). I take bolobld
and Limbetrol twice a day Tor
arthritis and Ativan to help me
sleep. I Teel bloated all the time.
Which o f these drugs is causing
the weight gain, and could a
diuretic help the bloating? I’m a
very active person.
DEAR READER — Rather than
blaming the medicine for what
appears to he fluid retention. I
w ould advise you to see a
gynecologist, t think you proba­
bly are experiencing menopause
and are holding excess fluid
b e c a u s e o f h o r m o n a l Im ­
balances. With time, the condi­
tion should correct Itself, but
you may feel more comfortable
with some professional help.
Meanwhile, cut way down on
salt consumption: excessive salt
In your diet may encourage fluid
retention.
To an sw er your questions
about menopause. I am sending
you a free copy of my Health
Report on the subject. Other
readers who would like a copy of
the reports should send 75 cents
p lu s a lo n g self-ad d ressed ,
stamped envelope to P.O. Box
2597. Cincinnati. OH 45201. Be
sure to ask for the Health Report
on Menopause.
DEAR DR. G O TT - I’m trying
to cope with this thing called
arthritis. How much asprln is too
much? Can a large person take
more than a small person? It
seems that I get the best relief if I
take one tablet per hour for three
consecutive hours.
DEAR READER - Arthritis is
the inflammation or wearingdown of the Joints. Usually, eight
aspirin a day is about the limit
for an average person.
Large
people may need more than
small people. Ringing In the ears
(tinnitus) is usually the earliest
sign of aspirin toxicity. If your
method of treatment works for
you. use it; three aspirin a day is
not a high dose. You may also be
h e lp e d b y p h y s io t h e r a p y ,
application o f heat and the use of
nun-aspirin medication.
DEAR DR. G O TT - I belong to
a private health club and love to
use the steamroom after playing
racquctball. Everyone uses it
naked, and lately I’ve been

wondering If a person could
contract a venerea) disease or
A ID S Just by sitting where
someone with these things has
sat. Would bringing my own
handtowel to sit on offer suffi­
cient protection?

pants are engaging in more
intimate behavior than sitting
around getting the kinks out.
Using your own handtowel is
p r o b a b l y an u n n e c e s s a r y
gesture. Even so. I would advise
you to wipe off the bench where
you sit so that you don’t plunk
down In someone else’s puddle.
Send your questions to Dr.

DEAR READER — I am not
aware that AIDS or venereal
diseases can he transmitted by
the type of casual contact you
describe. Such diseases are In­
deed spread in public baths and Gott at P.O. Box 91428. Cleve­
steamrooms. hut the partici­ land. Ohio 44101.________________

ACROSS
1 (tuMisn villsfs
4 ioeorrset (prsf.)
7 1004. Usman
10 A m u Form*
11 Comfsss point
12lom#thlnf
untqu*
14 Itiw t elotho#
tflpoak
14 Play by---------

I I Msotursof

tend
21 102. Roman
22 Ail (prsf.J
24 Madams (abbr.)
21 CMlomation of
honor (2 wds.)
21 Sound of • cow
27 OiootM
carrying fly
21 Wcys
21 Contemporary
painter
21 Map within s
map
20 Colander
27 Musical
symbols
40 Unrsflnsd matal
41 Surdsn
44 My (Lst)
41 Chureh pulpit
44 Wire msaauro
47 Wator (Fr.|
44 Flightlaaa bird
44 Actress

Niwrvnvvo
41 Stodgy
45 Moms and

Honshu bay
Open-------Grimace
Bank payment
(abbr.)
Twining plant
Itridlepart
i Liberian natives
' Spanish river
I Soak Rea
! Biblical king
I larths satellite
l First copies
(abbr.)
Egg (Fr.)
2 4i 1
27 I
l Siidos on anew
211
M ilHardy’s heroine
121
33 (dgs of a (treat
(•fit)
34 Of tho planet
Mars (comb,
form)
24 Hot spring
24 Fhysielens’ as1

a

10
14

n

Answer to Previous Punte

□no

b e c o d

n o g

■son

m n n o n

□ □ □

□ EC

□ BDDQ

c u e

d e c e it

Ennnn

□ B o n n

o n o n n

n o n n o n
racnnnn e c d d e c
□no
b e d
n o n
□c d
o n e
n o n
□e d e e o
o n Ec in n
E E C
ED O
□on
□□ E
□ ED

O E c n c
c c o d c

D EC EIT

24 tibiioat brother
41 Medical suffix
42 Near
42 Of arm bona
44 Astronauts' "all
right” (comp,
wd.)
47 To bo (let)

n o n
n n n
CCD

44 Intact
40 FtmaHshoap
42 Grain
42 Bud's sibling
44 British Navy
abbreviation

H
1

aa

at
at
at

B i Consume
47 Steel
44 Female
sandpiper
4 4 ____ degree
40 Highway curve

DOWN
1
2
3
4

2100. Reman
3, Roman
Starving
ItraoTt Golds
oon

(C)1S8S by N IA . Inc

W IN A T BRIDGE
//•? €

By James Jacoby

by Hargrtavts A Sailors

MR. M EN A N D L IT T L E M ISS

,*
• «

sT '*46 *•# #,»*#*

On. tv'»J f rM»

fMR S*\ALL CA.V\£ o u r 7 &amp;
IN H IS OCW PREHENSlCN / E R . - W H A T /S
T E S T A T SCHOOL /
( C O W ’R EH EN lSlO N l TV

H EY!
Guess WHAT!
WK.SKALL CAME
iM H »S &lt;39V\PREHENSK&gt;N
TE S T A T SCHOOL

i n

j c

-

j

In-*

“ri fVWSFs

BUGS BUNNY

by W am a r Brothara

MY TPAMPDliNE
wakes A SffEAT
P 005M A T.

Som ehow or other. NorthSouth stopped at three hearts,
m o s tly becau se N orth d is ­
counted his king of spades as
being of little value. That was a
good decision. In fact, with the
d e fe n s e fu n c tio n in g at the
highest level, even three hearts
was too high.
When the opening lead of the
queen of spades was not covered
by dummy's king. East played
the deuce. That was a most
discouraging card. Normally It
would seem OK to play on
another spade, but West was in a
"keep your partrier happy" kind
of mood. If East did not want
spades continued. West would
o b lig e him. A cco rd in g ly he
switched to the club Jack, cov­
ered by the king and ace. East
cashed the club queen and

wondered whether he should
take the spade ace. He decided
not to. believing that West had
started with more than two
spades. (With only two spades.
West might have continued the
suit.I East therefore played a
third round of clubs, which was
ruffed In dummy. Note now’ ihe
unfortunate character of de­
clarer's distribution. That lone
ace of diamonds had become a
liability.
Declarer came to his hand
with the diamond ace. cashed
the ace of hearts and led a club.
He hoped that he could succcssiuliy ruff his lust club with
the heart jack and get rid of his
spade on a good diamond. No
such luck. East overruffed and
cashed the spade ace. and de­
clarer was down one.

II M »
NORTH
♦ K 73
VJ74
4 K Q J 10 7
4KI
WEST
♦ Q J6
M 10 3
44643
♦ J 10 7 5

EAST
♦ A 10163
*Q 5
4982

♦

a

q6

SOUTH
♦ 94
♦ A K 98 62
4 A
♦ 9 4 32

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
West
Pats
Past

Norik
i4
2 NT
Pats

East
1♦
Past
Pats

Sooth
2V
3V

Opening lead: ♦ Q

HOROSCOPE
'3

*■*-y■*»**-m*
FR A N K A N D E R N E S T

by Bob Thavas
£\ (LOTOS

L E T y ,

PRO gfiBIX A L I T T L E

BO06IEL

g l it c h

IN T H B RpofiBA M —
ANYH O W ,

lb

IT

W ANT? YOU

F A S T E N Y »u /?
S B A T te L T .

i
l
ill,

T&gt;-*Avt,^p

||.£

n

G A R F IE L D

by Jim Davis

GARFlELP,
VOU M A K E A
LOVELV FIRE

W ELL. I G O T T A GO G E T R E A P V
FOR M V P A TE. V O U E N d O V
V O U R L O V E L V F lR f

ttnapsaetn

■

j &amp;&gt;**#

*
,, r * THEV M AKE A
allfewl LOVELV FIRE

- #
* * —w

80S- U
K*
I

'V

W hat The Day
W ill B r in g ...
YO U R B IR T H D A Y
NO VEM BER 9 .1 9 8 5
Your financial picture looks
encouraging for the year ahead.
You might even realize gains
from severa l ven tu res that
looked like they had run out of
steam.
S C O R P IO (Oct. 24-Nov.22)
The many good deeds you have
done for others have not been
forgotten. As of today, you’re
going to be on the receiving end
for a change. Looking for unusu­
al Christmas stocking-stuffers?
Astro-Graph predictions for the
year ahead make the perfect gift
for the entire family. Mall 81 for
each to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper. Box 1846. Cincin­
nati. OH 45201. Be sure to state
all zodiac signs.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Solid Investment proposals
or. at the very least, profitable
Ideas, could be revealed to you

today through conversations
wllh successful friends.
CAPRICO RN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Devote your mental energies
today to devising ways to enrich
your life materially. You’re In a
lucky trend, and what you
conceive could work out suc­
cessfully.
AQ U ARIU S (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Friends will find you a delightful
companion today because you’ll
Instinctively know how to lift
their spirits and arouse their
enthusiasm for lire.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) In
your commercial dealings today,
do not Ignore your intuition and
hunches. These valuable assets
m ig h t en ab le y o u to sp ot
benefits overlooked by others.
A R IE S (March 21-Aprll 19)
Today you will discover that a
disturbing roadblock can be
circumvented. In fact, you'll find
several ways to do so.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Conditions arc a trifle unusual
today: little things could lead to
big opportunities, especially

A N N IE

TU M B L E W E E D S

by T. K. Ryan

SB ON THE LOOKOUTFOR PIRTV .

V

PUKE PUNKMBIFTEK1HE CARRIES
W ^ r iY U M B B U K S lH lS
25H0TBUAJS A NP2 $IX”*HC»1ERSI l I WISH I COOLOCOONT.
rw

by Lsonard Starr

LeAPIN' U Z A * P * / r n ,r a ------WHAT IS THAT,
W M TY7S0W ?

° ^ p L I SSSf

where your career and earnings
are concerned.
G E M IN I (M ay 21-June 20)
Your attitude and behavior will
attract attention today wherever
you go. People who never ac­
knowledged you previously will
sit up and take notice.
C ANC ER (June 21-July 22)
You're the catalyst today that
makes good things happen for
yourself as well as for others
with whom you'll be Involved.
Keep rubbing the rabbit's foot.
LE O (July 23-Aug. 22) Todays
the busier you arc. the morq
effectively you’ ll perform. Don’t
be a fra id to Juggle several
assignments simultaneously.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your Important material tiends
are positive, so strive to improve
upon present happenings. Focus
on things that can make you
more money.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Don’ t
be too surprised If you hear from
someone you like, but who’s
been out of touch lately. Leave
word where you ran be reached.

V , - ,

owT w .

WOW/ THAHH6 FOR HtSAfV/M
tft, A M IT Y / . BUT WHAT r ~ &gt;
ARB YOU t » t N 'H E B E ? -

. 1 THOUGHT YOU W CTTNT '
ALLOWBO T '6 0 PA S T YOUR

,1
. H

BOUHQAAieSf*. &lt;-----

--------f t *

2*

..•r

J

V.

�IffB O h H H bcb M , iB B tarP, F I,

jWPJ W j i - l11'jbC®
NOTICE
Tha SI. John* Rlvar Water
District ha* ra­
th application ter Can: Water Use tram
L I I RAN C H . IN C ., S it
N IV A DR.. OVIIDO, FL
M S , a a a lle illin
117 4443AUR. an Bf/tI/49.
appffcetten te tar Iha re­
st al Iha existing permit
IMM9- Th# applicant ara­
te withdraw I.J MOD al
JNDWATCR FROM THE
ORIDAN AQUIFER VIA 1
X IS T IN G W E L L FOR
STURE IR R IG ATIO N la
acrala) In Sam Inala
•cated In Section 30.
hip 11 Sawth. Rang* u
E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
N V I R O N M E N T A L
RVICES. P.O. BOX 1444,
FORD. FL 12771, AppllcefS-117-SniANF, on 10/07/19.
a application It tar toa real ol la expired parmlt
I70021N Th# applicant pra­
te withdraw MS2 MGO ol
NDWATER FROM THE
IOAN AQUIFER VIA I
IS T IN O W E L L S FOR
•L IC SUPPLY to aarva 4.100
la ) In Samlnala County
In Sactlan II, Townahlp
South, Ranoa 20 Eaal. &gt;
‘.U L L E T LA K E W ATER
S O C IA T IO N , BOX 400,
NEVA, FL 32732, application
117-004SANM, on 00/10/09.
la application la lor Iha
illcatIan of tho existing
It 2 117004M. Tha appllpropaaaa to withdraw .091
0 Of G RO U N D W ATER
OM THE F L O R ID A N
IFER VIA 2 EXISTING
LLS FOR PUBLIC SUPPLY
aarva 2,910 a c r a la ) In
Inala County located In
tton(s) 14 and 21. Townahlp
South, Ranoa 33 Eoat.
OLAN FORE. 790 LAKE
LLS ROAD, CHULUOTA. FL
744. a p p l i c a t i o n
I17-0IMANV, on 04/12/09. Tha
leant propcaat to withdraw
MGO of GROUNDWATER
O M TH E F L O R ID A N
IFER VIA 1 EXISTING
LLS FOR CITRUS to aarva
acrala) In Samlnala County
“ tad in Sactlan 27, Townahlp
South. Rang* 33 Eaat.
INLAND MATERIALS INC..
BOX ISO. CASSELBERRY,
L 12707, a p p l i c a t i o n
117-0IIQAN, an 04/10/09. Tho
(leant propn ai to withdraw
MGO of GROUNOWARER
O M TH E F L O R ID A N
IFER VIA 1 PROPOSED
LL FOR THE PRODUCOF READY MIX CON
ETE to aarva 9.4 acrala) In
1 nola County located in Sac11, Townahlp 31 South.
II Eaat.
Tha Govarnino Board of tha
trlct will taka action to grant
deny th* application!*) no
than 70 day* from th*
of thla nolle* Should yau b*
atod In any of th* lilted
llcatlon*, you should contact
SI. John* R im Water Man
m*nt District at P.O. Boa
Palatka. Florida 17071
, or In parson at It* oftic* on
a l* H igh w ay 100 W **t,
latka. Florida. 404/13M121.
r ltta n o b la c tlo n to th*
llcatlon may b* mad*, but
Id b# r*c*lv«d no later than
day* from th# date ot
llcatlon. Written ob|*ctlon*
to fdantihr th* *ateeter by
at*, and fully
d**crlba th* objection to th*
appllcallon. Filing a written
ob|*ction do** not ontltlo you to
a Chapter 130. Florida Statute*.
Administrative Hearing. Only
that* parton* who** tubttanllal
inter**tt ar* attected by th*
appllcallon and who III* a peti­
tion moating th* requirement*
ol Section 3B 9.701. F AX ., may
obtain an Administrative Hear
ing. All timely tiled written
ob|*ctlon* will b* pratanted to
th* Board tor It* consideration
In It* deliberation an th*
appllcallon prior to th* Board
taking action on th* application.
Dannlte T. K*mp. Director
Division ol Record*
St. John* R im Water
Management District
Publish' November 1 .1445
DEL 94

NOTICE UNDER
PICTITMUB NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM ITMAVCONCERN:
Notice I* hereby given that ttw
undersigned pursuant to tha
"Flctltlaua Nam * Statuto",
Chapter 149 *4. Fterlda Stotutoa
will register with tha Clerk of
th* Circuit Court. In and tor
Saminote County, Florida upon
receipt of proof of tha public*
tten of thla notice, the flctltlaua
name, to wit;
OR THO-COMFORT
undar which I expect to tngag*
In business at l$1 East Stott
Dead 434, Winter Spring*. FL
37701
That the corporation interest
ad In said business enterprise Is
a* follows;
INVESTEX LTD., INC..
OF GEORGIA
Dated at Winter Springs,
Samlnala County, F lo rid *.
October 7,1449.
Pubfish November t. a, 19. 23.
1449.
D ELI
CITY OP
LOMEWO O a FLORID*
NOTICE OR
PUBLIC HBARINB
TO CONSIDER
ADORTtONOF
PROPOSED ORDINANCE
TO WHOM ITM AV CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
by tha City o f Lang wood,
Florida, that the City Cammlseten will hold a public hear­
ing fa consider enactment of
Ordinance No. 734, antlttod:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF LO N O W O O D .
F L O R ID A , A M E N D IN G
CHAPTER TWO OF THE CITY
JCOOE BY THE AOORTION
OR S E C T I O N 3-144
"APPLICATION REE SCHED­
U L E " P R O V ID IN G ROR
SEVERABILITY, CONFLICTS
ANO AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
Said Ordlnanc* we* piacad on
first reading on October 2*. 1444,
and tha City Commission will
consider samt tor final passage
and adaption after th* public
hearing, which will b* hold In
th* City Hall. 175 Wtotl Warren
Av#.. Longwood. Florida, on
Monday, th* 14th day of Nov­
ember, A D , parlies may ap­
pear and ba hoard with reaped
to th* proposed Ordinance. Thla
hearing may ba continued from
time to time until (Inal action la
token by th* City Commission.
A copy of th* prgpond Ordl­
nanc* Is pasted at Ih* City Hall,
Longwood. Florida, and coplaa
or# on til* with tha Cterk of tho
City and same may ba impacted
by th*public.
A taped record of Ihla moating
la mad* by tho City tor Its
convenience This record may
net constitute an adequate re­
cord far purposes of appeal from
a decision mad* by tha Com­
mission with respect to th*
foregoing matter. Any parson
wishing to ensure that an ade­
quate record ot the proceedings
is maintained tor appellate
purposes is advised to make th*
necessary arrangements at his
or her own#spans#.
Dated this. 4th day of Nov­
ember, A O 1449.
CITY OF LONGWOOD
Donald L. Tarry
City Cterk
Publish: November*. If* }
DEL 94
IN THE CIRCUIT COUNT
FOR 4BMISKH.R COUNTY.
FLORIDA
FROBATE DIVISION
File Number M-44I-CR
Ofv ltten Probate
IN RE: ESTATE OF
EDWIN J. DOLAN.
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* administration at tho
allot* ol Edwin J. Dolan, daceased. Fite Number I944I-CP.
Is ponding in Ih* Circuit Court
for Saminote County, Florida.
Probal* Division, th* address of
which Is Saminote County
Courteous*. Sanlord. Florida
17771. Th* nama* and addresses
ot Ih* personal representative
and th * p e r s o n a l ra p reseetlallva's attorney are set
forth below.
All Interested persons ar*
required to file with this court.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims
against th* estate and (7) any
oblactlon by an Interested
parson to whom nolle* was
mailed that challenges the valid­
ity ot th* will, th* qualification*
ot tho personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ol th*
court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILEO WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of this Nolle* has
begun on November t, 1449.
Personal Representatives:
Lawrence E. Dolan
lateBuckwood Orlv*
Orlando, Florida3340*
Joseph F. Dolan
14007 Jerold Road
Laural, Maryland 70707
Attorney (or
Personal Representative:
Lawrence E. Dolan, Esquire
500 East Jackson Street
Orlando, Florida37401
Telephone (309) 441 7300
Publish: November 1.4.1449
DEL-9

NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Notice I* hereby given that th*
undersigned pursuant to Ih*
"Fictitiou s Nam* Statute",
Chapter 449 04, Florida Statutes
will register with the Clerk ol
Ih* Circuit Court, In end for
Seminote County. Florida upon
receipt ot proof ol th* public*
tlon ot this notice, th* fictitious
name, to wit:
Top Cat
undar which I taped to engage
In business at 19) East State
Road 434. Winter Springs. FL
17701
That th* corporation Interest
*d In said business enterprise is
as follows:
INVESTEX LTD.. INC .
OF GEORGIA
Dated at Winter Springs,
Sem inole County, Florida.
October;. 1449
Publish November 1. 4. 19. 77.
1449.
DEL 7

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R
Cues my Cipher angtogtosw ere

**** * * * "m am irredsyvekw(4aqua*P.
by CONNIE WIENER
"B V D D V J I
OW NOX
DVTV

QNOTDVM

SW AT

VK

J

...
BW AX

"IW D V B K V IL V O "

BRVDY
—

C.

O JDDVKH

IJ A T

P V I

X W H .”

A N B IV D D .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “Tfwrb &gt;4 nothing moc#
satisfying than to Ito In bad ... wtth a whittling wind
outside." — Clara Lalghton.

DM DECLARED
MuMEA. I# I M I l l l i f
•N RE: Sactten 1, Township it
South. Range JB East. South »
Mat of Cast H af Northeast to af
i autheqsf to af brtcb raid (teas
t o d t t teat m m mad), laminate
County, PtarMi presently shown
as baton owned by LIFE AR S
and GENEVA JACKSON and all
aartlet having er claiming to
Jtoiq arty right, title ar toterasf

Wh T rV a I, th# Board of
County Commissioners af
Samlnste County. Florida. dW
an Ih* tgth day af September.
I4S9, find and dtclara a
structure located to laminate
County, Florida, te ba unaate.
unsanitary and a public
nuisance: that ttw owner of ttw
property according te ton pro­
party records to too SemUwta
county Property Appraiser'*
Office an whkh toe structure t*
located Is LEREARS and
GENEVA JACKSON, Baa 7BL
Allamant* Springs, Florida
12741: toot too public nuisance ts
a realtor tie! structure laratid
« i Slate Road 417, Adamant*
Springs. Rlarlda. and furtoar
required to
nuisance; and
WHEREAS, tha Board af
County Commissioner* found
that th* fattewing conditions
constituted a public nuttanc*:
M ) tha building has b ttn
severely damages by fir* and
tha elements af natum duo te
abandonment; (2) foundation
ptors. exterior walls, anterior
Ing, partitions, mat rafters and
sheathing, catling joist. extorter
and Interter amra, reefing ma­
terials. root hashing, wtndaw
glass, window screens and
window frames art damage!
beyond reasonable repair; (3)
electrical servlet, aloe trie si
panels, electrical receptacle*,
electrical lights and switches
are damaged te tho extent that
they am a hazard; (a) plumbing
fle tu r e a , p lu m bin g drain
system, hat and cold water
distribution system and hot
water hooter are damaged
bayand reasonable repair or
nonexistent; 19) there it no
evidence af a septic tank or
dralnfteW; (*) there Is trash and
dbbrls Inside and outside of th*
building: and (7) this condition
constitute* a potential fir* haz­
ard; and
WHEREAS, tho fallowing cor
ractlv* action necessary to
abate too public nuisance Is to
demolish and ramav* to* build­
ing, trash and debris from Ih*
PrNOWTHEREFOBE, nolle* I*
h ereb y g iv e n to tho said
L E F E A R S and G E N E V A
JACKSON and all parties hav­
ing or claiming to have any
right, IHIa. or Intern! In tha
property described above, to
appear batora tha Beard of
County C om m ission ers ot
Samlnala County, Florida, at
10:04 a.m.. at Its regular mast­
ing on to* loth day of December,
1441 at to* Saminote County
Service* Building. Room W-120.
not Bast First Street. Sanford,
Florida, te show causa. If any,
why such structure sheutd net
bo declared a public nuteanc*
and th* corrective action af
abatement specified in tha
Natlca af Public Nuisance
should not ba taken; or causa. If
any why to* cost af too correc­
tiv e a c tio n o f ab atem en t
specified In to* Natlca af Fubllc
Nuteanc* should net be paid ter
by LCFBARS and GENEVA
JAC K SO N , th alr h airs or
assign*,- or causa, If any, why
said cost should not be assessed
against to* propertyWITNESS my hand and seal
tote 19th day at Oct . 1409
DAVIDN. BERRIEN
Cterk to too Board
of County Commissioner*
By: Sandy Walt
Deputy Clark
Publish: October II. 21 Nov
amber 1,11409
DEK 10*

IN THBCIBCUIT COURT
FOR IBMINOLB COUNTY.
FLORIDA
FROBATB DIVISION
File Number 00-741-CP
Division FROBATB
IN BE: ESTATE OF
CHRISTINE MARIE KOLB.
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* administration ot th*
estate of CHRISTINE MARIE
KOLB, deceased. Fll# Number
11741 CP. Is ponding In to*
Circuit Court for Saminote
County. F lo rid a . P r o b a l*
Division, to* address of which Is
Pest Oftic* Drawer C, Sanford,
Florida 22772 0414. Th* names
and address** ot th* personal
raprasantally* and to* persons:
representative's attorney are
set forth below.
All Interested parsons are
required to Ilia with this court.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (I ) all claims
against th* estate and (3i any
oblactlon by an Interested
parson on whom tots natlca was
served that challenges too valid­
ity af too will, to* qualifications
of too personal raprasantatlv*.
vonua. ar jurisdiction af to*
court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication af tote Natlca has
begun on November 11449.
Personal Representative;
JOHN KOLB
449 LaSalle Drive
Altamonte Springs. FL 11701
Attorney tor
Personal Representative:
ROBERT L. TAYLOR. Esq
Curry, Taylor and Carls
Hartford Building. Suite 1130
200 Baal Robinson Streat
Orlando, Florid* 13401
Telephone (MS) 421-1171
Publish: Novambor 1111449
OEL-57

NOTtCB ROD NBARIRD
ON OBCLABID
PUBLIC NUtlANCK
IN H I: Late 3 and 4. RKRLAT
OR WINWOOO PARK, accord
Inf te tha plat thereof a* re
carded In Fiat Beak 3. Rage 34.
af the Pu b lic Racards af
laminate County. Rlarlda pros
•fitly shown a* being owned by
OOBSSA M. IRVING and all
partita having or claiming to
have any right, title or Interest
In to# property described above
WHEREAS, tha Board of
County C om m issioner* of
Saminote County. Florida, did
on Iha 10th day of September,
1419, fin d and d e c la re a
structure located In Saminote
County* Fterlda. to ba unsafe,
u n s a n ita ry and a pu b lic
nuisance; toot to* owner at to*
property according to toe pro
party racards In too Saminote
county Preparty Appraiser's
Office an which tha structure Is
located It OOBSSA M. IRVING
of 2344 N.W. 44th Streat, Miami
Florida 31141: tool to* public
nultanca It a resid en tial
structure severely damaged by
fire located on Station Sheaf,
Alternant# Springs, Florida, and
furtoar dsicribad at sat forth
above, and that corrective ac­
tion it required te abate to*
public nultanca; and
WHEREAS, tho Beard of
County Commissioner* found
that to* tallowing conditions
constituted a public nultanca:
(1 ) fh* building hat been
severely damaged by lire and
th* etements of nature duo to
abandonment; (2) foundation
piers, exterior walls, exterior
step*, floor framing and floor­
ing, partitions, root ratters and
sheathing, calling |ofs4, exterior
and Interior doors, rooting ma­
terials. roof flashing, window
glass, window screens and
window frames are damaged
beyond reasonable repair; 13)
elactrlcal service, electrical
panels, electrical receptacles,
electrical lights and twitches
are damaged fa tha extent toot
they are a hazard; (4) plumbing
flx tu r a t. plum bing drain
system, hot and cold water
distribution system and hot
water heater are damaged
beyond reasonable repair or
nonexistent; (9) there is no
evidence at a septic tank or
dralnflald; (4) Mtre It trash and
debris inside and outside of to*
building; and (7) this condition
constitutes a potential lire hazWHEREAS, too following cor­
rective action nacassary to
abate tha public nuisance is to
demolish and remove the build­
ing, trash and debris from th#
^ ' n OWTHEREFORE. notice It
h ereby g iven to tha said
ODESSA M. IRVING and all
partial having or claiming to
nova any right, title, or Interest
in tha property described above,
to appear before tha Board of
County C om m ltslon ort ot
Saminote County, Florida, al
14:00 a m., at Its regular meet
Ing on to* 10th day ol Decamber,
1449. 4t tot Seminole County
Services Building. Room W 120.
1101 East First Street, Sanlord,
Florida, te show cause. If eny.
why such i truefur* thould not
ba declared a public nuisance
and to* correctly* action al
abatement specified In tha
Static* al Public Nuisance
should no* ba taken; or caw**, it
any why toe cost at to# correc
Mva action o f abatem ent
specified In fh# Nolle* ol Public
Nulsanca should not ba paid tor
by ODESSA M. IRVING, har
hairs or assigns, or causa, it
any. why said cast thould not ba
assessed against tha proparty.
WITNESS my hand and tael
this llto day ot Oct ., 1449
DAVIDN. BERRIEN
Clark to tha Board
ot County Commissioners
By: Sandy Wall
Deputy Clerk
Publish: October II. 29, Nov­
ember 1,4. IN9
DEK 105
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THB RIOHTRBNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOB
IBMINOLBCOUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. M-I914-CA-04
COMMERCIAL CREDIT
MORTGAGE COMPANY,
Plaintiff.
Is r a e l h e n r y l e e v a n
BRACKLE and HARRIET VAN
BRACKLE.hltwIto,
Defendants.
NOTICE OP
FORECLOSUREIALB
BYCLERK OF
CIRCUIT COURT
Not lea It hereby given that the
undersigned David Berrien
Clerk at tha Circuit Court ol
Saminote County, Florida, will,
on tha 37to day o4 November.
1449 at 11:00 A M., at Iha West
Front door of tha Saminote
County Courthouse. In too City
of Sanford, Florida, otter lor
sal* and tall at public outcry to
tha highest and bast bidder tor
cash, th* fallowing described
proparty situated In Seminole
County. Florida, to wit.
THE WEST 42 FEET OF LOT
27 ANO CAST 12 FEET OF LOT
24, BLOCK " C " . ENGLISH
E STA TE S. U N IT TH REE.
ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECOROEO IN
PLAT BOOK 14. PAGES *4 and
4). PUBLIC RECOROS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
pursuant to ton final decree ol
foreclosure entered In a case
ponding In said Court, to* style
el which Is COMMERCIAL
CREDIT MORTGAGE COM
PANY. vs. ISRAEL HENRY
LEE VAN BRACKLE.at ux.
WITNESS my hand and ol
tlciel seal ol said Court this 30th
day of October. 1449.
(SEAL)
DAVIDN. BERRIEN
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Diana K. Brummett
Deputo Clark
Publish: November t, 1,1149
DEL 21

■LOOM COUNTY
m am oN fuM tt
ncM um **
m ta m n e s * 4*Y~P0YW m *
./ H Y W rX M M

\ iw H 3 ta m r

a

w m o trm
rm ct i r r * /torn.
I
AMOK
/
JO ».
MMAfVm
TMHK f
\

*»-a

. L trm
J O T M t im
M W TTM T-

m u

am m
m m Mr
MMMYr

la f l Natlca

NOTICC

Tha laminate County Dirt
Authority, laniard, laminate
County, Fterlda, fumMws to*
*4P*WWT!pp IflvapyrflMsIWv W

'IW4
*

desiring te submit prepaaaf* tar
Iha work herein described:
Bid ISCOPA » 1 , Pavement

I mpr ove m a nt t -O r an R *
GENERAL DCICRIPTHM OR
■M Ri
Tho principal work consists of
to# construction of dtcalar*tion/turn lane* and too oast and
west entrance reads. Part af
lan iard , lam inate County,
Fterlda. ConstrueAon shall ba In
campllanca with plans and
specific*!ion* sat forth by toe
Semlnot# County Part Authority
as wall as tot existing codas of
tha County af laminate and
State of Florid*.

INSTRUCTIONS ON OBTAIN­
ING DOCUMBNT1:
Specification* and a complete
description of tha propaaad work
too office of too Administrator.
Seminote County Pert Autoorlty.
Dennis K. D o lg n tr, A d ­
ministrator
S a m ln a la C o u n ty F a r t
Autoorlty
Rartoflanterd
Orange Boulavard
Lake Manraa, Florida
(309) n2-47ia
Contract and Bid Specifica­
tion* may be obtained far a
non refundable fee of 134.04.
ch ocks m ade p a y a b le fa
Seminote County Port Authority.
All drawings, specifications and
contract documents may ba
examined in parson at too office
at tha Administrator.
RRJRCTtONOR BIOS;
Tha Samlnala County Port
Autoorlty reserve* toa right to
re|act any ar all bids or any part
thereof, to waive any Informali­
ty or technicality In toa bidding,
to accept toa bids or any part
thereof deemed mast favorable
to toe Interest of toa Autoorlty
after all bids havt bean exam
Inad and evaluated, or to re|act
all bids and reodvartis* or
cancel toa propaaad work.

TIME AND PLACE OR BID
ORBNINDi
Saalad bids will ba received at
Iha office of tha Fort Ad­
ministrator until 1S00 hours
&lt;1:00 p.m., e.d.t.) November 24.
114*. al which time they will bo
publicly opened and read aloud.
Any bid received after toa
above specified bid closing time
will not ba considered. No bids
shall ba withdrawn for a period
of thirty (X ) days Subsequent to
toe bid spending without toa
consent of th* Administrator,
Saminote County Pert Autoorlty.
Dated this «th day of Nov
• mbar, 1449. at S an ford ,
Saminote County, Florida.
By enter ot: Saminote County
Port Authority
Joe F. Justice. Chairman
Attest: Jama* V. Row*
Secretary
Publish: November 1 ,19,1449
A IL :
IN THB CIRCUIT COUNT
OF THB RIOHTBBNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN AND PON
IBMINOLB COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. 44-2444-CA-at-B
B.P. INCORPORATED OP
FLORIDA, a Florida
corporation.
Plaintiff,
vs.
FEROINANDOKONKWOand
TRISHA OXONX WO. his wife.
Defendants.
NOTICE OR ACTION
TO: FERDINANDOKONKWO
and TRISHA OKONKWO.
his wife
Address Unknown
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a
Chattel Mortgage Foreclosure
hat bean Iliad against you In to*
above named Court, and you are
required to serve a copy af your
answer or pleading to toa Com
plaint on toa Plaintiff's at­
torney. Stephan M. Stona. Es­
quire. 123 East Pina Streat,
Orlande. Florida 32401. and III#
tha original answer or pleading
In to* office of too Clark of too
C ircu it Court In and fo r
Samlnala County, Florida, on or
batora November if. 1*49.
II you tell to do to. judgment
by default will ba taken against
you for toa relttl demanded In
toa Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and seal
this ISth day of October, 1449.
(SEAL)
DAVIDN. BERRIEN
Clerk af toa Circuit Court
By: Susan E. Tabor
Oaputy Clark
Publish: October II. 29. Nov
ember l.l, H4J
DEX 119______________________
CITY OF
LONGWOOD, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OP
PROPOSED OROINANCB
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by th* City ol Longwood.
Florida, that to# City Com­
mission will hold a public hear­
ing to consider enactment ot
Ordinance No. 734. emitted:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF L O N G W O O D ,
F LO R ID A . P R E S C R IB IN G
THE TIMES ANO PLACES
FOR THE CITY COMMISSION
TO MEET AS REQUIRED BY
SECTION 3.04 OF THE CITY
CHARTER: PROVIDING FOR
S E P A R A B IL IT Y AND EF
FECTIVE DATE.
Said Ordinance was placed on
first reading on October 74.1449.
end th* City Commission will
consider same tor final passage
and adoption after to* public
hearing, which will ba held in
th* City Hall. 175 West Warren
Av*., Longwood, Florida, on
Monday, th* llto day of Nov
ember. A.D., parties may ap
pear and be heard with respect
to th* proposed Ordinance This
hearing may be continued from
lima to lima until (Inal action is
takan by tha City Commission.
A copy ol tha proposed Ordl
nanca Is posted at toa City Hall.
Longwood. Florida, and copies
are on III* with to* Clark of Iha
City and same may ba Impacted
by tha public.
A taped record of this maaling
Is mod* by toa City tor Its
convenience. This record may
not constitute an adequate re­
cord tor purposes of appeal from
a decision made by toe Com­
mission with respect to tha
foregoing matter. Any parson
wishing to ensure that an ade­
quate record of toa proceedings
It maintained tor appellate
purposes ts advised to make toa
nacassary arrangements at hit
or her own expanse.
Dated this. 4th day ol Nov­
ember. A .0 .1449.
CITY OF LONGWOOO
Donald L. Tarry
City Clark
Publish: November!, 1445
DEL 55

CITY OR U N I
MABY, FLORIDA
NOTICE OP
RUOLKNIADIND
TO WHOM IT MAY C044CIRN:
NOTICK IS H IR E BY GIVEN
that tha Laha Mary Flaming
and Zoning Board will conduct a
Public Hearing on too Rrlmara
Development of Regional Im­
pact (D R l) on Tuesday, Nov­
ember 74. 1149. at 7:44 P.M., ar
as tarn thereafter as possible, at
Lake Mary City Hall, I I I North
Country Club Read. Laha Mary,
Florid*. Th* purpose af to*
hearing It to receive comments
and make recommendations to
toa Lake Mary City Cam
mission.
Tha Lake Mary City Com­
mission will conduct a Public
Hearing an Thursday, De­
cember 9. 1149. at 7:14 P.M., or
at seen thereafter as passlbla. at
Lake Mary City Hall. I14 North
Country Club Read. Lake Mary,
Florid*.
Tha Public it Invited to attend
and ba heard.
L IQ A L DESCRIPTION;
All that part af to* SW te af
Sactlan 7. Township 14 South,
Range 30 East.
Saminote
County. Fterlda. lying Easterly
of State Read 444 (1-4) and
North af Lake Mary boulevard,
LESS to* East 70 teet of th*
North 7.5 chains (41* teat)
thereof; AND ALSO LESS
BEGINNING S14, 70 teat North
of too S te Section corner of told
Sactlan 7. run N*4'04'04"W.
577.49
faat.toanca
run
N.01'lt'04"W. 753.75 teat, toanca
run east 91* 44 teat, toanca run
South M4.44 teat to tha POINT
OP BEGINNING: ANO ALSO
LESS toa East Its teat of toa
West 1794.45 teat of the South 190
toot af said SWte. ANO ALSO
LESS BEGINNING at toa
Northeast corner ol toa Watt
1794.49 teat ot toa sold SW te af
said Sactlan 7, run S.4'I*'I4"E.
410 teat to toa North Right ofWay Lina af Lake Mary
Boulavard.
toanca
run
N.44’’ 43'14"E.. along told North
Right of WAy Lino. 744.227 toot,
toanca run N.O'IO'sT'W. 774.111
feet, thence run N.44'00'40"W.
914.134
feet,
thence
run
Southwesterly 337.012 feet to toe
POINT OF BEGINNING: AND
ALSO LESS From toa Southwait
corner of told Section 7, run
N.S4'43‘ !4"E . along toa South
Lina of said SW te, a distance af
M7.4S feet to tha and of toa
limited access R/W line of 1-4.
North of Lake Mary Boulavard,
extended South, toanca run
N.D'OT'OVW. a distance of 14.11
teat, toanca run N .m r e r w .
1*3.14
teat,
toanca
run
N.IOtel'ia-'E. 700.40 teal, thence
run S&lt;n i'4l"E . TOO feet to to#
North R/W lino of Lake Mary
Boulevard.
thane*
run
S.lT4i‘ ir-w . 700.14 teet to the
POINT OF BEGINNING: Said
SW te being subject to th*
following described aasamants:
An Easement to local* and
maintain an advertising sign on
'toa following described parcel:
BEGINNING at toa Intersection
of toa North lino at toa South 490
teat ol said SW te and toa
Eaaterly limited accost R/W
Una al l-a. run NJ4’4 1 'lt"l.,
along told North line, 79*4 toot,
toanca
run
S .tr tn t"W ..
parallel wtto said R/W Una,
4*44 toot, toanca l . t e 'a 'i r vu.
7*04 teat to said R/W line,
toanca run N.t7*n't*"C. 40 00
teat to toa POINT OF BEGIN­
NING: ALSO an easement for
•ccass and utility lines to
aforesaid aeaamant ovar a 10
fool parcel tying Easterly and
Northerly of toa limited Access
R/W llna; From too Southwest
comer of spld Sactlan 7. run
N.04’41'I4"E., along toa South
llna of toa SW te of said Sactlan
7, a distance af 407.49 teat to the
and of toa limited accast R/W
| llna of 1-4 North of Lake Mary
Boulavard attended
South:
toanca run N.4’07'4I"W. along
said R/W llna 74.41 feel tor a
Paint of beginning; toanca run
Northwesterly along a curve
concave Northeasterly, having a
radius of 440 feet, o tangent
bearing of 4.44'S2'54"W„ a
central angle of ft'OQ'OT" and an
arc dlstanco of 434.94 feet;
thence run N.44'09'34" W. a
distance of 17.44 teet to a curve
concave Northeasterly having a
radius of 940 toot, a central
angle of 43'Orif"; thence run
Northwesterly along said curve
an arc distance of 41117
leet.toenct run N . i n r i r 'E . a
distance of 137.34 teat to toa
point 40 teat Southerly along toa
Easterly R/W llna of 1-4 from
toa North lino of too South ISO
tool of said Section 7 and th# tod
of Wasterly line of casement.
Together with toe NW te of SE
te (LESS North. 7 te chains and
lass East te of too West te South
ol canal), Sactlan 7, Township 30
South, Rang* 30 East. East te ol
too West te South of canal Is
described as: Begin 117.4* feet
East of SW corner ol NW te of
SE te. Section 7, Township 10
South. Rang* 30 East, run North
00'04'07" West 710 feet to too
centerline ol canal, toanca run
N 41'0ri9"E. along said C/L ol
canal *40.710 lael;
toanca
S.00'04'Ot"E. 309.00 toot to a
point on too South lino of said 40.
ihonco Watt 039 470 feet to the
P.O.B.;
SAID
PROPERTY
BEING
FURTHER
DE
SCRIBED
AS:
From
to*
Southwell comer of said Section
7. run N. If47'33'E. along toa
South llna ol sold SW te. a
distance of M7.4S teat to tha
limited access R/W llna of
Interstate 4. North ot Laha Mary
Boulavard.
extended South,
thonco run NOO'Ol'ir’W along
said R/W llna. 40 teal to Iha
North R/W llna ot Lake Mary
Boulavard.
toanca continue
N 00'03'ir‘W. a distance of 3* 74
feat for a Point ot Baginning,
toanca run N.40'17'I7"W. 1*377
toot, toanca run Nt4'42'J3'E.
70000
teat.
thence
run
S 00’ 17'37'E. 100 00 feel to the
Northerly R/W llna af said Lake
Mary Boulavard. toanca run
N.lf'43'33'E.
along
said
Northerly R/W line. 907.732 teet
to th* West line of to* East 1*5
feat ot the West 1790 *9 teet ol
the South 490 feel of said SW te.
toanca run N OO'1Y14"W. along
said
SW te. lhanca run
N.OO’ iri4 "W . along said Wstl
llna 410.00 teat to toa NW comar
of said East 1*5 feat ot tha West
1794 ts tool of Iha South 190 tee!
of said SW te. toance run
N.4r42'H"E. 149.00 het.thence
run N IT2S'90"E. M7.0J3 teat,
lhanca run S W ir s i'B 917 97*
teat to Iha point on tha East llna
at tha SW te ot said Sactlan 7,
said point being 414.12 teat
North of tha South te corner at
said. Sactlan 7. toanca run
N.OO'lO'sr'W. along said East
llna. 11044 teat, toence run
N.44‘ W'4rW. 922.49 teat, toanca
run N.0T4T4I"W. 792.79 teat,
toanca run N OO'CT'H' E 534.407
te»t to a point an toa East llna af
said
SW te, toanca run

S.04* I f 41"E. 131.240 teat to tot
SW comer af to* NW te of too
SC te of laid Sactlan 7. thence
run N. 44'44'94" E along to*
South llna ofto* NW te of to* SE
te af said Sactlan 7.317.45 teat to
toa SW comer of Iha East te of
toa West te af tha NW te af toa
SE te of said Section 7, thence
run NM'Oror'W. along toa
Watt llna af toa East te of too
watt te of toa NW te of tha SE te
of toa SE te af told Section 7,
234 04
teat,
toanca
run
N4T0I'1S"E. 440.73 totf to t
point on too East line of toa East
te of toa Watt te of toa NW te af
toa SE te ot said Section r,
thence run SOO'Of’OI"E elong
said East line. 109.00 feat to a
point on toa South lino of toa NW
te af toa SE te af said Section 7.
toanca run N H'«4'S4"E along
said South llna 31/140 toaf to toa
SE corner of toa NWte of toa SE
te af said Section 7, toance run
N a r o r ir - w along too East llna
af toa NW te af toa SE te of said
Section j, 117.044 feet, thence
run S.4r4rt7"W. along toe
South llna of toa North 7&gt;»
chains (449.00 teat) af the NW te
of toa SE te at said Section 7.
1171.147 teat to toa point on to*
East line af toa SW te of said
Section 7. said point being ;&lt;i
chains (445 00 fret) South af toa
NE corner o( toe SW te of said
Sactlan
7,
lhanca
run
S44'40'94"W. parallel with (he
North llna ol fh* SW te ol said
Section 7, 70 00 feet, thence run
N.00*I0'41"W. parallel with the
East llna of la SW te of said
Section 7. J't chains (449.00
teal) to a point on tha North llna
of toa SW te of Mid Section 7,
said point being 70 00 leaf West
of toe Center of Mid Section 7.
thence
run
S.44'40'S4"W.
1741.140 feet to a point on th*
Easterly R/W line ol Interstate
4 (State Read 400), lhanca run
S.IT'TO'TT'W.
along
Mid
Easterly R/W llna 7095.174 feet
to tha point on tha limited access
R/W lln* of Mid Interstate 4.
Mid paint being Ih* P.C. of a
curve concev* Northeasterly
having a radius of 940 00 feet
and a tangent bearing of *
S.00'5ri5‘‘W..
thence
run
Southerly along Mid curve
&gt;11.471 feel through a central
angle of M'OS'Tf" to th# P.T.,
thence run S.S4'04'S4"E. along
Mid limited access R/W line,
77 179 leal to Iha P C. ol a curve
concave
Northeasterly
end
having a radius of 440 00 feel,
thence run Southeasterly along
Mid curve 471.540 feet to the end
ol toa Mid limited access R/W
line and tha Point ol Baginning.
Containing 1)7.7115 acres; Said
SW te being subject to th*
following described easements:
An Easement to locate and
maintain an advertising sign on
th* following described parcel:
Beginning at th* InterMctlon ot
th* North line ol the South MO
teet ol Mid SW te and th*
Easterly limited access R/W
line ot
Interstate 4 run
N fr47’ll"E . along Mid North
llna. 75.00 teat, toanca run
S.iriO 'ir'W . parallel with Mid
R/W line 4000 teat, thence run
S.lf'43'll’’W. 75.00 teet to said
R/W
tine,
toanca
run
N .tri4'a*"E. along Mid R/W
llna 44.40 tort to toa Paint al
Beginning: ALIO an easement
tor eccee* and Utility linos to
W T w M porCDi Ifin f C W m ly
and Northerly of th* limited
access R/W line, said limited
: access R/W line being more
particularly
described
at
follows: From tot Southwest
comer of Mid Section 7 run
N 44'*7'33"E. along toa South
lln* ot toe SW te of said Section
7. a distance ol H7.49 tool to toa
and of toa limited access R/W
line of Interstate 4 North af Lake
Mary
Boulavard
extended
South, toanca run N OO'03'ir'W.
•long Mid R/W llna 7P.2PO teat
tor a Point af Beginning, toanca
run Northwesterly along a curve
concave Northeasterly, having a
radius of 440.04 teal, a tangent
bearing of S.&lt;rsi'9f"W. a
central angle af Jt'00'07" and an
arc distance of 419.940 teat,
toanca run N.«4'0r94"W. 27.325
f to toa P C. of a curve
tcava
Northeasterly
and
having a radius of 540.00 teat,
thence run Northwesterly along
Mid curve through a central
angle of U O Vl* ". I l i an teat,
thence run N.I7'T0‘71"E. 117.017
feel to a point 40 feet Southerly
•long tha Easterly R/W lino ol
Interstate 4 Irom th* North line
ol th* South ISO teet ot Mid
Section 7 and the end ol
Westerly llneot Easement. AND
ALSO:
Lott 1 through 30. Interstate
Industrial Park, according to
the plat thareol as recorded in
Plat Book 14, pages ri b 74 ol
th* Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida, TOGETHER
WITH
Commerce
al
the
Southeast corner ol th* North 7
•i chain* ot tha Northwest te ol
th* Southeast te of Section 7,
Township 70 South. Rang# 30
East and run S I t 'l l ' I2''W.
•long the South line ot Mid
North 7 te chains, 417.14 teet to
tha Point ol Beginning, thence
continue S lt t e n r w . along
M id South line tot.152 feet to th*
Southwest corner of Mid North
7te
chains.
thenca
run
5 tfteO'ir'W 70 00 teet. thence
run N.00'10'41"W. 7 te chains
(445.00 feet) to a point on the
North line ol th* Southwest te ot
Mid Section 7. thence run
N.OtteO'ST'E along Mid North
lino. 20 00 teet to tha center ot
Mid Section 7, thence run
NOO'IO'irW. elong the West
lino ol th# Southwest te ot th#
Northeast te, 7 te chains (445
teet). to th* Northwest corner of
tha South 7 te chains ol tha
Southwest te ol tha Northaait te
Of Mid Sactuon 7. thence run
N . i r i r i r ’E along the North
lln* of Ih* Mid South 7 te chains.
144.22
teet.
thence
run
S-00'ir04"E. teet, thence run
S o r il'ir 'W . 240 50 leal, thence
run S 00'7I'44"E. 749 00. feet to
th* Point ol Beginning: Con
talning 41.5103 Acres.
A Public hearing concerning
this prelect will be held by th#
City ot Lake Mary Planning and
Zoning Board on November 14.
1409. at 7:00 P.M.. or as soon
lharealter as posslbla. al Laka
Mary City Hall. 114 North
Country Club Road. Laka Mary,
Florida, in order to review, hear
comments and make recom
mend* i ion* to tho Laka Mary
City Commission on tha above
application. Further, a public
haarlng will bt held by toa City
Commission of tha City el Lake
Mary on Oacambar 5. 1449. at
7:10 P M., or a* soon thereafter
at possible, at Laka Mary City
Hall. 194 North Country Club
Read. Laka Mary. Fterlda. an
tha abava application. Theta In
attendance will ba hoard and
written commantt may ba Iliad
with toa Planning and Zoning
Board. Haarlng* may ba con
| tinuad fram lima to lima as

F rtd g y , N t v . B, I B M - t l A
I A jn g l

I l f

M A A la w '

w tn w

found nacassary. Furtoar details
available by calling 305-1237410.
Furtoar tnformation pertaining
to this application may ba abtainad from toa City Manager's
office. 194 North Country Club
Road. Laka Mary, Fterlda.
Parian* are advisad Mat If
they decide to appool any de­
cision mad* af fhew meetings,
they will need a record of toa
proceedings, and ter such
purpose, toay may naad 1a
•mure that a verbatim recard af
toa proceedings is mode, which
record Includes too testimony
and evidence upon which to*
ppaal It lobe made.
CITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
BY: CAROL A. EDWARDS
CITY CLERK
Publish: November 1,70.1149
DEL 47
FICTITIOUS NAMR
Nolle* It hereby given that I
am engaged in bu tln m at 949
Lima Wtkiva Rd . Altamonte
Springs, Samlnala County.
Florida 31714 phono 7497749490
under tot fictitious name of ACT
NOW REALTY, and that I
intend to register said nama
with toe Cterk of toa Circuit
Court, Saminote County, Florida
In accordance with tha pre­
visions of toa Fictitious Nama
Statutes. To-wlt; Section (49.44
Florida Statutes 14S7.
/*/ Robert F. Pichany
Publish October 2S A November
1,4,15.1149.
OEK 157

NOTtCB OP A
PUBLIC HBARINO
TO CONSIDER
THE ADOPTION OP
AN OROINANCB
•V THB CITY
OP SANFORD. FLORIDA.
Notice It hereby given that a
Public Hearing will ba held at
tha Commission Room In toa
City Hall In tha Clfy of Sanford.
Florida, at 7:00 o'clock P.M. on
November is, 1143. to consider
the adoption of an ordinance by
tha City ol Sanford. Florida, at

iQHewt:

OROINANCB NO. 1747
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D ,
F L OR I DA . TO A N N E X
W ITHIN THE CORPORATE
A R E A OF THE C IT Y OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA. UPON
ADOPTION OF SAIO ORDI­
NANCE. A PORTION OP THE
PROPERTY LYING AT THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OP
THE IN T E R S E C T IO N OF
KENNEL ROAD AND JEWETT
L A N E ; SAID P R O P E R T Y
BEI NG S I T U A T E O IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA, IN ACCORDANCE
W ITH THE V O L U N T A R Y
ANNEXATION PROVISIONS
OF SECTION 171.044. FLORIDA
STATUTES; PROVIDING FOR
SEVERABILITY. CONFLICTS.
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS, there has boon
(Had with tha City Cterk af toe
City of Sanlord, Florida, a
petition containing toa names al
toa property owner* In toa area
described herein attar rsqwef
Ing annexation la toe corporate
area at toa City al Santera.
Florida, and reqMOaflng te ba
W M B R R M .'tte ? p ra p a rti
Appraiser ol Saminote County,
Florida, having cardflad that
there it ana ownar in toe area t*
ba annexed, and that said proparty owners hava Signed toa
Petition tor Annexation; and
WHEREAS. It hat bean de­
termined toaf ttw property de­
s c r ib e d h o r a ln a ffa r It
reasonably compact and configuout fa toa corporate area* al
toa City of Sanford, Florida, and
It hat furtoar boon determined
that toa annexation al said
property will net result In toa
creation of an anclava; and
WHBRRJtS. to# Clfy * f San­
ford, Fterlda, Is In a pMJtlwi te
provide municipal earvkae te
nw profasny e v K r n v i
and toa Clfy Cemmlastan at tha
City of. Sanford. Florida, daam*
It In toa bast Interest of tha City
fo accept m M petition and to

annex Midproperty.

NOW. THEREFORE, BE IT
ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE
OF THE CITY OF SANFORD.
FLORIDA:
SHCTION 1; That toa pro
party described below situated
In Saminote County. Florida, bo
and th* same It hereby annexed
to and made a part of the City of
Sanlord. Florida, pursuant to
tha voluntary annexation pro­
visions ol Sactlon 171.444,
Florida Statutes:
Block 70, M. M. SMITH'S
SUBDIVISION, according to toa
plat tharaof at recorded In Plat
Book 1, Pag* 99. Public Racards
ol Seminola County. Florida.
SECTION 1: That upon this
Ordinance becoming effective,
th* property owner l and any
resident on toe property de­
scribed herein shall ba entitled
to all the rights and prlvflegaa
and Immunities as are from
time to time granted to resi­
dents and property owners of
th* City of Sanford. Fterlda. and
as further provided In Chapter
171, Florida Statutes, and shall
further be subject to toa re­
sponsibilities ef residence ar
ownership at may Irom lima to
lime be determined by tha
governing authority of tha City
of Sanford. Fterlda. and toa
provisions ot Mid Chapter 171,
Florida Statutes.
SECTION 3; It any section or
portion ol a sactlon of ‘ this
ordinance proves to ba invalid,
unlawful, or unconstitutional. It
shall not ba held to Invalidate or
Impair to* validity, fare* or
litect of any other sactlan or
part ol toll ordinance.
SECTION 4: That all ordi­
nances or parts of ordinances In
conflict herewith, ba and toa
same are hereby revoked.
SECTION 9; That this ordi­
nance shall become effective
immediately upon its psn sga
aurtdAdDotiflfi.
A copy shall ba available af
Iha Office el tha City Clark tor
all parson* desiring to examine
the same.
All parlies In Interest and
citizens shall hava an opportuni­
ty to ba heard at Mid haarlng.
By order at toa City Com­
mission ef toa City of Sanford.
Florida

ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: l»

• person decides to appeal a
decision mads with respect te
any matter coittidtred al toa
abava moating or haarlng, ha
may naad a verbatim record af
tha proceedings. Including tha
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by toa
City af Sanford. IF52E4-0IAS).
, H.N.Tamm.Jr.
City Cterk

Publish: November t. 4. 11 It
1113

OEL-I*

�• #•#%

* "&gt;■■»• *

* • • -* • # '

. \

Friday. Nov. I, m s

l J A — K va n lttf M *raM , Sanford, FI.

71— Http Wanted
71— Hvlp Wanted

CLASSIFIED A D S
Seminole
322-261)

Orlando •Winter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
&amp;

a

m

u
r s i IRC
n w u iw
a

k

V iJ v

*

$ Hm ................ W*
a Im
• ----------- ai. . ■■—
a t e ■ M—

eP GWWwwCllfll*w

r*M&gt;

* * * " " .■ ? *****
SATWOAY 9 •Naaa

RATES

T

vi

■ w **W
W

A )a|| 8SC m Um

10 caaiKPtha than 4tc a Dm
Caatrart Rataa
)U m

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

LICENSED COSMETOLOGIST
AVON EARNINGS WORM 11
O PEN T E R R ITO R IE S NOW Ml

______ 331-3355 er 323-6659
BACKNOE OPERATORS
Minimum S yr«. experience with
pipelaying, line A grade t ip
C a ll H a r p e r M e c h a n ic a l
Corp . 121 8100 Ask for Pat
Chambers.
C ASH IE R /C LE R K
Apply In
person at: U l‘ Food Town. 7)0
Lake Mary Blvd. E O E

CUSSIFIC0 ADVERTISING
REPRESENTATIVE
Must be fast, accurate typist
and have the ability to work
with the public. General office
experience a plus. Pleasant
personality and willingness lo
work as a team essential.
Apply In personTHE SANFO R D EVE N IN G
HERALD

21— Personals

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
ADOPTION COUNSELING
F r e e P re g n a n c y T ests
C o n fid e n t ia l
In d iv id u a l
a s s is ta n c e
C a ll fo r
appolntfnent- evening hours
a v a lia b ie _ ^ ii^ _ ^ i _i i n i i MfJ

25— Special Notices
I f COME I NOTARY
For Detain: MOB431 4254
Florida Notary Association
JANIS'S ALTE R N A TIVE
SENIOR CARE
24 Hour loving care for senior
cltiiens. Family environment
and home cooked meals.
C a ll:............................. 1457148
e M A R Y KAY COSMETICS e
Skin care and color flair
C O N N IE ....................... 322 7734
NEEOED
H aircu ttin g m odels.
M e i# / F e m a ie f o r a de
monstratlon Call for more
Information 311 5851_________
Playhouses Custom built A de
llvered by Christmas Model
OnDisplay Call 321 0235

SHMLEE PR00UCTS
Sand!............................. 32? 4542

27— Nursery A
Child Care
I will do babysitting in my home
day or night 333 7941. alter
1AM Ask Ipr Mary____________
Will baby sit In my home
M o n d a y th ru F r i d a y
Seminole High School area
_ C a N _ ? 2 M S i7 _ _ ^ _ _

33— Real Estate
Courses
♦ * * *
• Thinking ol getting a •
• Real Estate Licenset •
W e otter Free Tuition
and continuous Training!
Call D icker Vicki lor details:
47I-H47...Ill 1200...Eve. 774-1050
K e y a te l Florida.. Inc.

Sf Years Exgaeiawcal

Employment
323-5176
1513 French Ava.
Acrylic Applicators needed to
epply protective coating on
cars, boats and planes. SS to
I I I per hour. We train. For
work In Sanford area call
Tampa 111 886715).
Administrative Assistant/Sales
Ceerdineter tor commercial
sales office. Must be expertenced A flexible Call Jack or
Ann. 841 Map________________
A S S IS T A N T M A N A O E R
P O S IT IO N Benefits, end
bonus. Hair dresser experl
ence necessary. Apply In
person at A c t Beauty Supply.
Z ayrt P lata. Sanford. Be
tween 9 A.m.-4 P.M.__________
ATTENDANTS
Coin laundry attendants wanted
for new laundromat In San­
ford Apply In person Tues ,
Nov II. 1915 12 Noon to 5
P M . at: Seminole Centre
3619 Orlando Dr.______________
BIO-MEDICAL
ELECTRONICSTECH
Install, maintain A repair medi
cal electronics equipment
A P P L Y : W. Volusia Memorial
Hospital. 701 W. Plymouth
Ave.. Do Land, Fla. EOE
Auto equippm ent dealer in
Winter springs looking for
mature, intelligent, non smok
ing secretary lor full or part
tim e work Telephone and
typing duties required 2 girl
Office Call Mr Turk or Mr
Owen 327 2830 M F 8 5
Bill Lowe's Exterminators ot
New Smyrna Baach Is now
opening office In Sanford
Need professional salesperson
A phone solicitors Immediate
ty. Call Mr Lowe at 371 6169

Everyone does at some time It
you own a home and have a
job it s easier than you think

CREDIT?
NO PROBLEM!
834-8900
FRE E D LAN D E R . INC.
The Mortgage People
710 E. Altamonte Drive

^^JLicense^tertjy^roke^

*3— Mortgages
Bought A Sold
We buy 1st and 2nd mortgages
Nation wide Call- Ray Legg
Lie Mtg Broker. 940 Douglas
Ave . Altampntt 774 7752
We buy 1st A 2nd mortgages
Fait closing A fair price
Barton Pilcher. Lie
Mtg
Brkr Call anytime. 322 7491

Melal building workers, car
penters. concrete laborers
Santord Airport, Bldg. 146
D AILY W OBK/DAILY P A Y
START WORK NOW I

LAMM

TORCI

H ta a

x x i tet

I NO V FEE f
Report ready for work at 6 AM
407 W l i t St...............Sanford

32MS90
Drivers Wanted- Part time. 7
days (o p tio n a l). M orn in g
hours. Call Jenny. 333 0610.
Expanding In Ihe area. Will
have Ihe work and will have
you working sfal. Pediatric
critical care RN’s needed for
established case In Deltona
Alio staff relief and private
duty In the area Work as little
or as often as suits your
schedule. Excellent benefits,
top pay.
Nurse World. 1950 Lea Rd.
Suite 4210. (303)639-116).

FASHION MOOELS

for fash
Ion designer. TV. catalogs, all
ages. 433 9039.________________

Full lima maintence position
available Hours irom early
morning to early alter noon
Monday thru Friday. Apply
Inoerson at: Rax’s. 1000 W
Hwy434 Longwood____________

GRAPHIC ARTIST/PASTE-UP
DeLand Penny Saver has lull
time position open In our
production dept We're looking
lor someone with considerable
ad paste up experience who Is
last, creative A prolficient at
using Clip Art Service In ad
layouts Apply
DELAND P E N N Y SAVER
243A S. WOODLAND BLVD.

HONEST
DEPENDABLE PEOPLE
to work in convenience store
Paid vacation, group insur
ance a v a ila b le P olygraph
required Apply In person
Lll’ Champ Food Store
1930 French Ave.. Sanford

H0USEPARENTS

U g a l Notice

Couple, mature edult. Chris
lien Shelter tor abused 4
troubled teens. H t SS99

JOBS JOBS JOBS

*1— Money to Lend

NEED MONEY?

300 N. French Avenue
Sanford. F L 31771
Censtructian Help Wanted

NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
Notice is hereby given Inal the
undersigned pursuant to Ihe
Fictitious Name Statute” .
Chapter 865 09 Florida Statutes
will register with the Clerk ot
the Circuit Court, in and for
Semmol* County. Florida upon
receipt ot proof ot the publica
t.on ot this notice the fictitious
name to wit
Purrfect Products
under which I eipect to engage
m business at 351 East State
Road 434. Winter Springs FL
32708
That the corporation Interest
ed m said business enterprise is
as follows
INVESTEX LTD . INC
OF GEORGIA
Dated at Winter Springs.
S em in ole County. F lorida
October 7, 1985
Publish November 1 8 15. 22
1985
DEL 1

Immediate full time, part time,
and evenings available. P e r­
manent positions
Never a Feel

TEMP PERM........ 774-1348
LANDSCAPE LABORERS- Full
time position 54 00 hr 322
8133________________ |__________

NURSES AIDES
All shills Good atmosphere,
andbenellts Appiyat
DeBary Manor...60 N. Hwy 17/93
OeBary........................... E.O.E.
NURSES AIDES W A N T E D All
3 shills Musi be certified or
experienced Apply in person
Lakeview Nursing Center, 919
E 2nd St.. Sanlord, Fla_______

OFFICE CLEAR
Banc skills required Excellent
benefits with competitive pay
Apply in person at Low e’s
Truss Plant. 2901 Aileron Cir
cle. (Airport. Sanlord Indus
trial Park I___________________
Part lime, women or men work
from Irom home on new tele
phone program Earn up to 55
lo 110 per hour Call 323 4241

NOW HIRING!
M A LE/FEM A LE

PART TIM E EMPLOYEES
Flexible Hours On 24 Hour Basis
4 to 8 Hours Per Day.
Up To 30 Hours Per Week
•CASHIERS • FOOD PREPARATION
•STORE MAINTENANCE
TOP SALARY IN THIS AREA

ONE STOP CENTERS
A PPLICATIO N S A T
302 N. Laurel Ave., Sanferd

Mon.-Fri. 0:304:30

The amount of closet space
left in your home DECREASES
each year you live in itl
When you want space to spare —
you need classified!

P a rt tim e a tfa n d a n f/ ia le s
person
A lert, intelligent.
Individual needed to look after
amusement center in Sanford
Plata Nights and weekends 15
to 20 hours per week Musi be
mature, neat in appearance
and bonabie Phone tor ap
pomlmenl 321 4903_________
PLUMBING A P IP E F IT T E R FOREM AN
Immediate openings Licensed
In Stale ol Fla Minimum 5
yrs supervisory experience
large proieds Call Harper
Mechanical Corp., 371 atoo.
Ask lor Pal Chambers.
P R O G R A M A S S IS T A N T Vo
work with adult disabled
Prev exp in child care nurse
aid or w. disabled preferred
Good bencMs 331 7231________

REGISTERED NURSE
Full time 3 11 shift Charge
poul.on Apply at
DeBary Manor... 40 N. Hwy 17 92
DeBory..............................EOE
R e s id e n t ia l J o u rn e y m a n
L ic e n s e d
S a la r y co m
menserale with ability and
experience Call 699 4463
RN Needed Part Time on day
Shilt Good atmosphere A
benefits Apply at
Debary Mjnor.,. 40 N Hwy 17 92
DeBary.............................. EOE
SALESLADY Full time expe
rience In ladies' ready to
w ea r S a la r y plus com
mission Apply in person only
No phone calls, please Ro
lay’s. 218 E 1st Street________
S ecreta ry / R ecep tlo n lst lor
busy m anufacturing com
pan; Pleaant telephone voice
and good lyomg a must Send
Resume'lo P Q BOX 1952

C lassified's real estate section can put
you In a new home with room enough to
grow with your family and possessions
over the coming years.

S E C R E T A R Y / T Y P I S T lor
purchasing, receiving, filing A
Inventory ot electronic com
ponenlt Previous experience
desirable Call 373 7750
SECURITY GUARD
Mature,
intelligent, and able lo pass
polygraph Cobla Boat Com
pany Call 322 3340___________

Eve ning Herald

SU BSTITUTE B A B Y S IT T E R
N EE D E D Occasional meet
ings al church Morning A
evening hours 322 4371______

322-2611

Wanted: Grandmother lype to
care lor 3 children In my
home Must be flexible, refer
ences Please call 321 4*73

w / cllen tete needed. Good
benefits. Call 3221991.________
L P N er RN needed, 3-11 shift.
Good atmosphere A benefits.
Full time position. Apply at:
Debary Matter. . M N. Hwy. 17-92
Debary............................... EOE

NURSES

DELTONA- 2 bdrm., living

MEDICAL PERSONNEL
POOL

73— Em ploym ant
Wanfad
Cleaning- Commercial A Resl
dental. Reasonabla rates. Cell
alte rs 323 1107or 121 8017,

93— Rooms for Rant
ROOM FOR RENT
Weekly. Full house privileges.
C a ll:.............................322 9393
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rales.
Maid service Call 321 MM or
3214507 5 7 PM. 413 Palmatto
Ave.

THE FLORIDA HOTEL
500 Oak Avenue.............121 6304

^ReasonableWeeklj^ates^

97— Apartmants
Furnishad / Rant
A V A IL A B L E NOW
Furnished Studio Apartments
One Bedroom Apts.
Two Bedroom Apts.

FLEXIBLE LEASES
SENIOR CITIZENS DISCOUNT
RANCH STYLE LIVINOIM

SANFORD COURT APTS.
323-3301
Furn. Apts, tor Senier Cltiiens
111 Palmetto Ave
J Cowan. No Phone Calls
Lovely 2 Bdrm w'sereen porch
N e w ly p ain ted C om plete
p rivacy. 590 week *■ 5250
security deposit 121 7769 or
373 9632
OSTEEN AREA- 3 bdrm . room
far gard en and chickens
P a rtly furnished 5775 5300
month Call 322 8271_________
SANFORD
1 Bdrm . apt 5765
month. 5300 deposit. Refer
ences required Call 668 4801

STUDIOS
Just bring your linens and
dishes Single story living,
soun d c o n t r o lle d w a lls
Abundant storage

SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT
FLEXIBLE LEASES
SANFORD COURT ARTS
____________ 323-3381____________
1 Bdrm.. Adults, no pets. 570 per
week or 5250 per month, a ll
Palm etto Ave.________________
1 Bdrm.. kitchen with appli­
ances. Ilvlngroom. alr'heat,
5270 per month plus deposit.
Nice area
3 2 1 -3 1 9 0
2 Bdrm., l bath Nice wall to
wall carpet, ac. kitchen A I
Bdrm furnished 7 large walk
in closets, tile shower A tub.
Owner pays water, garbage
and sewer 1280 per month.
5280 deposit Lease required.
NO pets Call 373 9040________
2 Bdrm ., newly rem odeled.
Owner pays water, sewer,
electric 5110 per week. Call:
327 5696_______________________
2 b d rm ., p r iv a t e p o rch ,
lireplace. child OK. 5310 mo ,
5150 deposit 321 087)

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAMBOO COVE APTS.

room, dining room, wall/wall
carpet. Hove, refrigerator,
well alr/heet. Nice yard 8350
mo. Yearly lease. Alio 2nd
house without separate dining
room . S100 mo. No pots.
Available now. 8300 security.
574 1040
___________
IDVLWILDE DRIVE 3 Bdrm 1
both. 2 car garage, storage,
large polio end yard, new
palnl. carpet, good schools.
N IC E I W i l l c o n s i d e r
lease/optlon. MIS. Cell: 323
5443 evenings end weekends

dryer, vertlclet. refrlg., dish­
washer. Starting at 8375.

OOLD KEY MOMT.. INC

123— Wanted to Rent
Mother and edult ion with to
rent live-room house w/fenced
yard. Tw o smell dogs; one
intide A one outside. Will pay
54001500 monthly on short
term leeie. Ceil 1-113-124-1001
o r u tw m s n ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

e * 174-1434 e • ______
LAKE MART- 2 bdrm . near
school. Reference. 8300 mo.,
322 ll l f l___________________ __
SANFORD 5R 46A. at Country
Club, extra clean, large 3
bdrm.. 2 balh. fenced. 8450
mo. 322-2140__________________
Smell Lake Cottage tor 1 or
couple only. Lease required.
Nopats-Call: 322 41061 bdrm., 2 bath house. Brand
new. 8450 mo. 842 2629 or
423 1556.______________________
1 Bdrm., 1 bath, garage home on
qulot street In Debary. NO
pets. 8450 per month with
lease. Cell: 574 2332.__________
3 Bdrm ., 1 bath, elr/heet.
carpet, very large, big yard.
C e ll:...........................122 1469

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
SANFO RD Close In. 2 bdrm.
duplex. Carport, eppl Just
painted. C 'H / A , carpels.
hookups. 8360.830 0585
1 bdrm., 1 bath, appliances,
hook-ups. screened petie.
8380-8488.331-3353____________
2 Bdrm., air. carport, water and
trash pick up Included 8180
per month Call: 323 9155
2 Bdrm., 2 balh, ac. carpal, all
modern conveniences.
C e ll:..............................322 1449

107-M obile
Homes / Rent
2 Bdrm fully furnished mobile
home In Pinecresl Mobile
Home Park. 2110 Magnolia
AVe. Lot *19 499 5257 or J22
5939. 8300 per month.__________

113— Storage Rentals

Offices for rent. On 17 92 From
IOO to 900 aq. ft. Cell. 322 1790
. or 12301.00____________________

141— Hamas Far Sale

For Lease: lOOXTOO on 1792
Includes t.eoo sq ft bldg (1
bays A office) Zoned lor auto,
boat, trailer sales A repair.
lother uses.) 661 8121_________
Retail A Office Space 300 up to
2.000 sq ft. alto storage avail
able 322 4403

» *# ' -* U

- * * f '* • '

E X TR A N IC t A P FOR G A E L !
NORIK - Mr sale by owner. 3
bdrm.. 1 bath, air/heat carpet,
fans. B more. Call. 123 7919
evenings A weekends Days,
Den H2 0618,_________________

5TEM PER

SPACIOUS extra clean 4 Bdrm..
2 bath, family room, tlrplace.
separate dining, big porch,
smell prlco. Only M7.750

a i l mm

OTHER HOMES. LOTS..
ACREAOE. INVESTM ENT
PR O PE R TY

2646 Santord Ave.

321-073a E v a .-322-7443
DELTONA M.500 end assume
no qualifying lean. 8510 total
monthly payment. Ideal tor
Investor, retiree or small fam­
ily
Vise III, Inc. Realtor
&lt;9041 786-2683 or (305&gt; 419-1102.
DELTONA By Owner New 1
Month old 3 Bdrm.. 2 both,
family room, firplaco. garage,
corner lot. I ’-iSk assumed's
loan. P I 8601 per month.
P r lc o d e l 874,500. C e ll:
1105) 322 7242.________________
BXPBK8S YOURSELF, OWN A
CLASSIC! Teve hod by tradi­
tion, this beautifully weeded
•rounds provides shady camtort tsr this elder Sentord
heme. 4 bdrm., tty baths,
Renevatton almost complete.
Don't delay Inspecting this
heme. Far personal shewing.
Cell: Qene Theme sen, Realter/Aiseclete. 313 5741. The
Well 81. Company. I l l 1085

HAPPY THANKSOIVINO
You can be happy forever In this
affordably priced 1 Bdrm.. 2
bath recently carpeted home.
Pleasant patio views, lovely
fenced backyard If you are a
happy buyer, come see this
happy home today and move
in by Christmas Only 541.900.

CALL A N YTIM E
R E ALTO R .....................122 4991

II \l I Itl \l \\
Itl M I (Ht

L

Turns to Fit
Your Nnds!
Furnished or Unfurnished.

Call8811811*1911132M911

Daysanly: 321 3190__________
400 PLUMOSA DRIVE
•Ib d rm .. 2 ' jbath
• Formal living A dining room
• Enclosed polio A game room
• Extra large home
• Large corner lot. 173X135
•Owner or FHA financing
• No loan or closing costs
'•
• Exchange or trade

CALL BART
143— Out of State
Property / Sale
—
_________ »
BY OWNER- 4 bdrm., 2' j bath;!
h o m e on 1.5 a c r e s . In
Crotsnore, N C. Near beach A
Sugar Mountain ski resort.
3.115 sq tt. living area, full
basement, fireplace. 8117,500.704 733 4915
_______ *

14 9 — Commercial
Property / Sale
CASSELBERRY- I acre, zoned PR I 115.000 W.Malictewtkl.
R E ALTO R .................... 321 7983
COMMERCIAL SPECIALIST
SALES AND APPR AISALS
BOBM. BALL, JR. P.A..C.S.M. *,
R E A LT O R .................... 113 4118 ‘

153-AcreageLots/Sale
I

*

'HI; ki l l )
'
•VOW

s «il

i

i|l|

L OT FOR SALE- ChuluetaSmail lot on small lake. Paved ,.
street City water 16,900
OVIEDO RE ALTY,INC .
____________ 365 6602____________ -

STENSTROM
REALTY-REALTOR
Sanford's Solos Loafer
WE LIST AND SELL
MORE H O M E !T H A N
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY
F R O N T PO RCH C H AR M 2
bdrm., I bath, large living
roam, w/ftreplace, 2 peddle
tens, targe treat perch. 831,100
COZY- 3 bdrm., i balh, dining
room, eat-ln kitchen, brick
fireplace, pinewood walls A
wood Doom 542,500

RAMBLEWOOO 2 STORY with
sparkling peel I Hugh stone
lireplace! Cathedral ceilings I
All the entreat Almost newt
103.166.

SANFORD AVE. I4&lt;i acres
Im proved pasture. 844,500
Owner financing.
Wallace Cress Realty Inc.
Realtor..........................321 6577 SA N FO R D 5 Building lets,
810.000 each All lor 845.000
Call 831 2315_________________

D UPLEX- E-Z purchase tor
live-in buyers. Large bdrm.
wi t h k it c h e n e q u ip p e d l
Central air A carpel I Priced
below merhott S74.880
WE NEEO LISTINGS!

323-5774

W I L L G U I L D TO SUI T!
Y O U R LOT OR OURSI
E XCLUSIVE A O E N T FOR
WINSONG DEV. CORP., A
CENTRAL FLORIDA LE AD
E R I M O R E H O M E FO R
LESS M O NEYI CALL T D
DAY I
• GENEVA OSCEOLA RD. •
ZONED FOR MOBILES!
S Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
30% Oown. 10 Yrs. at 12% I
From 111.S40I

Nice country home on 2 acres oI
lend. 1 Bdrm. 2 bath, on paved
road. Priced below appraisal.
566.500 Call: 331 4063_________
R e p o s s e s s e d P r o p e r t y In
Deltona- 1 bdrm.. f/p, cathe
drat callings, pool 555.000.
Fleet Finance Center 322 1965
SANFORD 3 Bdrm . I •* bath.
CB. Garage, central heat and
air. owner assisted financing.
85.000 down. 8420 per month.
363 3710.
R A M B L E W O O O Handyman
Special. 4 bdrm ., 2 bath,
double garage, fenced yard.
561,100 363 3760______________

(1) S ACRE TRACTS- Partially
improved 137.000 each Owner

^lnancln2J23H0^___^_

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale
lx
LAKE M ARY No Ouattlylog
N ew 1 b d r m . , 2 bath,
lir e p la c e . all appliances. „
vaulted ceilings. 5/500 down A
a s s u m e 554.500 F H A

157-M obile
Homes/ Sale
CARRIAGE COVE
MOBILE HOME PARK
New A resale. Contact
Gregory Mobile Homos
1315200

14 Years In Santord
S E L L I N G OR B U Y I N G A
MOBILE HOME?
L E T US H E L P !
New Or Used
Gregory Mobile Homes.113 5300.

Let Us Build
Your Dream Home

It you are looking for a
su ccettlu l ca reer in Real
Estate, Stenifrom Realty It
leaking ter you. Cell Lee
Albright today at 222-2426.
Evenings 111-3881.

O n Our 1 A c r e P lu s
L o t In E xclusive W a y s id e
W o o d s . (Va Mi. W . O f 14
In S a n lo rd )

3 2 2 -2 2 8 7
BIG OAK

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420

CONSTRUCTION INC.
C u s t o m H w ld iiu ; In
C r n i r . i l F lo r id .i

2565 PAR K A V E ............ Sentord
901 Lk. Mery Blvd........Lk.Mary
Sun land 1 bdrm , den. Ig patio,
fenced, all carpeted Very
c le a n O w ner m o tiv a te d
852.000 131 1503

Since IIIHtt
Stave Sensakovlc
President

NOVEMBER SPECIAL!
on energy efticent 1bdrm apt
a 1100 otf tst Month’s Rent
0 HOO Security Deposit
6 Senior Citizen's Dieounl

CONSULT OUR

FRANKLIN ARMS
M70 Florida Ave............333 6656
RI DGE WOOD ARMS APT.
2514 RidgeGood Ave.
SPACIOUS! BEDROOM
599 FOR 1ST MONTH'S RENT
NOVEMBER O N LY!
PHONE 323 6470.FOR DETAILS
SANFORD- 3 bdrm . 7 balh,
w a s h e r d r y e r , b lin d s ,
screened porch patio 5450 de
posit Hall oil firsl mo rent
B ritish Am erican R ealty.
439 1)75.______________________

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

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
MOVE IN SPECIAL!
$299.00
• F A M IL Y A AD ULT e

2 BEDROOM.
Call................................ 333 2920

WEEKEND SPECIAL!
I month's rent tree!
Geneva Gardens Apts
1505 W 25lh SI
____________327 2090____________
1 and 3 bdrm Also lurnished
efficiency Irom 575 week 5250
deposit. No pets Call 323 800a
or 323 4507 5 7 P M
415
Palmetto_____________________
I BDRM. OUPLEX
5300 per
month 5300 deposit Call:
321 3499 evenings_____________
1 Bdrm . I bain
air condition, carpet. Nice
Call .............................. 322 1469

$100 OFF
111. Month's Rent
1bdrm , 1 bath ......... 9335 Mo
2 bdrm . I 1j bath
5360Mo
Each apartment has palio or
balcomy overlooking court
yard All appliances, laundry
room, and pool

FRANKLIN ARMS
1120 Florida A v e ............373 6650
2 bdrm , 3 bath, over 1.000 s q .
f l . washer/dryer. dishwasher,
Ians, pool and clubhouse use.
5325 per month Pay only
electric Call 645 1824

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

REMODELING SPECIALIST
We Handle
The Whole B allot Wax

B. E. LINK CONST.
322-7029
Financing Available

Appliance Repair

Aligns Appliinct Service
34 hr. Service-.No Extra Charge)
17 Vr Exp.... 661 1441.....174 8423

Building Contractors
Co mme r c i a l 0 Resi dent i al
Seminole Forms A Concrete
Remodeling. Repairing
Licensed Florida Builders

Catering

Home Repairs

JUNES’ CATERING
ALLOCCASIONSI
We SatisfyII...................321-7854

CARPENTER
Repai r s and
remodeling. No job loo small
Call: 321 9645

Cleaning Service

W ILLIS HOME REPAI R
Ramodeling...... Additions.......A
All Types Repairs!
Insured
No |ob loo small
321/746

Cottage Care Inc............ 699 4530
Lie. Insured. Bonded.
Sio per heur. all domestic lobs
Hood Carpet Cleaning. Living,
Dining Room A Hall 139.84.
Sola A Chair, 831.122-1588
JUST GENI ES
Professional cleaning
C a ll.........................
jJl 4663
S P IC N ' SPAN CLEANING
Homes, offices, etc. Cleaning
supplies furnished.

CARPET SALES
A INSTALLATIONS
Cai 1321 SJl? atl«r 6fLM.

- r v j CALL NOW
fit

P

to ruu

roui urn

322-2411
fm fin ftnmtl Urwu

G E N E V ALA N O C LE AR IN G
Lot/Landclearlng
Fill dirt
Topsoil... Ponds Drain ditches
Site Preparation Call 349 5930

Lawn Service
CLASSIC LAWN SERVICE
W e do e v e r y t h i n g
Free
estimates Call 339 3536

Masonry

F r e ^ s ^ ^ ^ im jIT ^ x M l

Carpet/Floor
Coverings

Landclearing

Electrical
Anything Electrical...Since 19761
Estlmetot....24 Hr. Service Calls
Tam 't Electric Service...321-1739

Greenlee A Sons Masonry
Quality al resonable prices
Specializing In Flreplaces/Brlck
C all:.........................MS-111 8716

M oving ft Hauling
Home Improvement
Collier's Building A Remodeling
No Job Too Small
111 Burton Lana, Santord
131 6431

LIOHT HAULING
AND D E LIVE R Y
121 6606
LOU'S HAULING Appliances,
lunk, firewood, gargage. etc
Call 333 4537 la m to 1pm

.

1*4 ACRES
wooded, on paved road 811.500
C a ll:.......................... 311 4065

CASUAL ELEGANCE 4 bdrm..
l i t both, g r e e t ream,
f i r e p l a c e , p a d d le ta n a ,
screened poet aree. cantral
heat/air. 1.508 sq. ft. at living.
S19g.S60

3604 HW Y. 17 93

SANFO RD Brand new. 2 bdrm .
2 'i balh 1365 mo 862 2629 or
423 3556______________________

w/13.000 do*n Stilt* wlH II*
nance Charming (like new). 2
bdrm., wall/wall carpel,
central heal/elr, appliances.

B EAT THE R E NT RACE- 1
b d r m .. 1* * b a th , d in in g
area.large screened fam ily
area, gas utilities, wall unit.
546.900

WE HAVE RENTALSI

‘

LIST W ITH USI

OLD A NEW 1 bdrm.. I balh.
central heat/air, dining area,
lanced yard, porch, remodeled
inside A out. 540,800

H.D. REALTY. INC.

07t Hwy-Oll.O***"'Yto.
YOU CAN OWN tor 8395 month

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR
322 7498 .

RELOCATING- Beevtltvl acre
center tot. Like new. 1 bdrm.,
l bain, eat-tn kitchen, pies
treat A privacy. Priced right.
It ACRES- 539.566

COUNTRY WIOE RE ALTY
Reg. R-E. Broker.

323-3200_ _ _ _ _ _

Lk. Reel Estate Broker

BATEMAN REALTY

121— Condominium
Rentals
New 2 Bdrm , 2 balh luxury
Condos
P o o l , tenni s,
washer/dryer. security 5465
per month Landarama Fla .
Inc 251 8314__________________

141-H o m e s For Sate -

SANFD0O REALTY
R E ALTO R .....................323-1116
SANFORD Home w/ ottlce.
prof, resto red “ C ra c k e r"
home. 1 b d r m 2 bath. 2500 sq.
tt. I acre Lew 890's 322 2340
SANFORD/ LAKE M AR Y
Dream
Homes
Available
Now I All Prices. Seminole
and Volusia Counties. Greet
Terms.
Cell
lor
Free
Computer Search Today I !

M IN I FARM
3 bdrm. home
plus guest cottege.bern, end
other out buildings ON to
SECLUDED ARCES Won’t
last long at I t 19.000

-

117— Commercial
Rentals

t

127— Office Rentals

Mini Wsrgtanas
850 &gt; Ue........................ 1116428

* 6 •*, * »*

K e ye s

• • • IN DELTONA * * *
* a HOMES FOR R E N T* e

300 E. Airport Blvd.
SINGLE STORY
I Bdrm., 1 Bath.................... 5300mo.
LIVING
7 Bdrm.. I Bath....................5321mo.
Efliciency............................ 5215
b jm
PH O NE .................................3736481
LAKE FRONT 1 and 2 Bdrm
apis Pool, tennnis. Adults, no
Carports.............Private Patios
pels Flexible deposit
C all__________________
3230742 Lush Landscaping.Pets.Chlldren
W ATER BID S ACCEPTED!
Near Downtown- Upstairs, 2
bdrm , 1 bath 5325 m o, di5
count rent 5300 sec No pels
32) 6900 or 323 5)17____________

1.1.1 Bdrm.. 2 both, wether,

831-7221

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

I

141— Hwne« For Sale

FINK R IM E CLUB

Responsible Couple- no pots , no
children. 5225 per mo.. 8100
damage. 322 3817.

leade d Immediately- 5 new
distributors for Herbal diet as
seen on TV. I (00 992 9991.
N E E D E D Partner m drywell
finishing business. Transpor­
tation needed. Cell: 321 7419.
Need Christmas Money? Start
earning extra money for the
holidays now. RN's. L P N ’s.
C N A’ s. end Live-in's needed
now. Cell: Sanford. 121 7096 or
Orlando, 190 6911.

131— Coodemlnlum
Rentals

101— H o u m
Furnished / Rtfit
Lovely i Bdrm. cottage, com
plate privacy with front porch.
998 per week. 1250 security
deposit. Call:
323 2269 or
323 9632.____________________

•

Nursing Care
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakeview Nursing Center
919 E. Second St., Sanlord
____________3234797________

Pressure Cleaning
~

CUNNI NGHAMAWI FE
Averaqe 3 Bdrm Home. 535
Average Mobile Home. 5)0

Secretarial Service
CUSTOM TYPI NG Big or sma
assignments. Call: D .j. Er
lerprltet (301) 322 7693,

Tree Service
AL L EN STREE SERVICE
You've Called the Rest
Now Call Ihe Best!
PAY LCS8I
331 514
ECHOLSTREESERVI CE
Free Estimates! Low Prices I
Lie...ins...Slump Grinding,Too
323 2339 day or nile
_|!LenheProtessionals do II",

Well Drilling
SAVE MONEY! I Shallow Well
lor lawn, pool, garden, etc.I

BUSH SHALLOW WELLS
Lk

Reasonable

jj]

wj

�•‘ •- * wd* *

we *1^*

KIT t f CARLYU ^by LarryWrljlH
•Waaring A m aral

M v f"B f—

—

111— Auctions
Auction teat Sunday
of the month t PM.

M N Y E V C R T T N IM !
We Hove Hemes In:
CARRIAOI COVI
HACIINOA VILLA O I
L A K IK A T H IR N U T A H
K 0 V IIIT A T 1 I
OAK SPRINOS
SPiC IAL
R%1l w m i r l t t ] month's
ren tIf yea pnrrhsoo a
B IK D

14’

Sprite Camping Trader.
Asking MM. WX4S meblto
heme. t Mrm.. Asking SUM.
aaM W m aa1-7771. a m ter
Gary.

F re n M U W w i.^ e k ! screen
parch.^toll r
Ia t 13 Oaks Rt.
4A. Cm
mediately. Contact u t M,

ai-WDrPatoto.

la i-A p p H a n ca t
/ Fvm itera
P R I I 8 I R - IS cw ft. upright,
treat tree. s m . _
L O T I OF P U R N IT U R I. In
eluding refrlgerater. I m «
brand naw. all In eaollent
c m « h m . aaa-raaa, M r « a

M mar*. Call: m
Kara 7 P.M.-1» P.M. Anytime

jn e g e b a n * liy tl^ _ ^ ^

lM -T B ie v ltia n /
Radio / Sterte
COLOR T IL IV I1 K M
■rani naw M " eater television
•fill In boa. Laff In layaway.
Two yoar guaranfan. lalanca
MM or « U month.
M ICRO W AVIO VIN
TAFFAN
Now IMS miMI. Family site,
loft In layaway, itlll In box.
10 yoar factory guarantee,
balanco MM or I l f month. To
sea, collbSlDM day or night.
OOOO USIO T.V'S US ani UF
Minor's
MU Orlando Dr. Call. 1110153

lf l-B u lld in g
Materials
BUILDINGS- all (tool. » a itSIO.fM; 1 « x »S - Mf.fM.
othort tram l l . i s iq ft.
i i f i n a i (cm loci)

i f f —Pats t SvppHos
F R IIM ITTR M
fooioodhomo.
7XKU7
Good door hunting dog. Malo.
Boaglo and walker. Ito yoart
old. Cell :4fS-3*51.

Lagal N o tk o
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT OF
T N I IIO H T IIN T M JUDICIAL
C I R C U IT , IN A N O FO R
I I M I N O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CIVIL ACTION NO.
M-M22-CA-W-P
F E D E R A L HOM E L O A N
MORTGAGE CORPORATION.
Plaintiff,
vs.
ROBERT E.LAURIA.

yy

m

rie

........................ m w

ESTATE AUCTION
Friday, Nm.NbOiMP.M.
B R IM E l A SON
HWY 4L Joot last of M

217— Oarag* Sates
BACKYARD SALE- fit Santa
BL. behind Bahama Joe's. Frl
A S a l. E V E R Y T H I N G
PRfCEDTO BELLI__________
BID O AR AAI BALI- Sot., Nov.
f. EM Vlhten Road. In rear of
house. Refrigerator, daybod,
stereo, nice clothes. A many
other Items.
CARPORT SALE- Baby Items,
some torn. A mlsc. Sat., f-7.
M tf Lake Avenue.___________
CARPORT SALE- Sot.. Nov.
•Ml. 1411 Summerlin Ave. An
tlquos A cotlectlbte glassware,
CARPORT SALE- Saturday.
Nov. fth. torn. to 7 KM N.
Sunland Dr. Sanford._________
CARPORT SALE- Safurday,
Nov.fth. • A.M. to 1 P.M. 2430
Maple A m . T.V., coats, shoos,
miscellaneous.

to

FIVE FAMILY • 111 Plnocrost
Or. Frl.- Sal,, f A.M. to 4 P.M.
E th a n A l l a n C a b in e t ,
furniture, mlsc. House hold,
Jenny U n d h igh ch a ir.
11nones, clothing, tools and
much more._________________
Frt-Sat, Otk a ffh, 10-4. iu W.
lis t St., between Park A Oak.
Gao hooter, couch, console
stereo, frooior, trash com­
pactor, children's clothes.
wood paneling, htehchalr.crlb.
terego late- 710 Park AVo., Frl
A Sat.. Nov. I A f. 41. Furn.
extension ladder, mlsc

221— C a rt

i

222— Ante Parte
MA x

H L t M r ,a m x t\ m *rrri

,

ANSWERING MACHINE UMIden), new w/phana, rag.
t t 4 f.fl- ONLY I l f .fit
COBBLE IS PNONB IUnMm), I M ft. range, naw rag
I t 4 f . f l - O N LY tS f.fS ;
K E R O S E N E N IA T E B
(Sanya), 14.401 BTU. now rog.
•ITf.fS ONLVMf.fS.
FLEA WORLD,.... ...lot. A Sea.,
Haw a ...............-GoaBto G i L
Braum flw r rack step etonee
Ofst. boa rack dry walls
benches, stsps, Ressf pets.
Mircte Concrete Company
3PS Elm Ave................22SPH
K B B O SIN I SPACE NEATER
LIKE NEW. 175.

*tb9mm orrwithout

¥ m m » IT. N T I PRaftttClF
* u u tCT A d o f m i D ttV ^ lU -

CotMWX me*

Home w it h * u -

122wn

211-Can

nt

Cedi Wet 77 todoa- Extra clean.
Saa at: B27 Roselle Or. 0.000
Fkm l Call: 221IK2._________
CMetten gt. Hall dented, no
rust, runs good, tltto or trade
ter station wsgen. 333-41M.

ACT II CONSIGNMENT, open
Ing at: 317 E. 1st. Stroot. la
looking for stylish fashions tor
men, women and teens. Coll:
322 IMS._____________________
W i Aluminum Cons,.Newspaper
iw irrE T fB W fW f iiS i.n m ii.v w H

KOKOMO.................... 333-Hto
Baby bods, clotbos, toys,
playpons, (boots, tow ols,
pertemes. 123-S177-122-0504
Electric A gas ranges, reflgerotors. washers, dryers,
furniture A bedding. 332-3740,
Celery City Furniture.

smaii v&lt;y..".r.".!y.y"'.‘.".".s4iboew
CHICO G T N i M AN......J*M N*
* « MBRCUBY CAPRI- e to-.
new Href, gaed candtton, darb
blue. ttAW.«)4W71

* DAYTONA AUTO★
W AUCTION W

219— Wanted to Buy
PIANOB.-OBGANI... GUITARS
Christmas clearance. Apollo
Music Center, 2220 5 French,
AvO.. 322-4409
n
0. Coll: otter • X
P.M.

PIANO RM M U
Wonted: Responsible party to
assume small monthly paymonte on plana. Saa totally
C a l l : C r a d lt M a n a g e r
1 N0-447 4M0

aFU ISAU TO SALRS#
Ytebwy, sallar trade)
Financing Avallabte
MBWadblt........Wlntor Springs
• 227-2(01 •
PL Y M O U T H Y O L A N I ’ 77
wpgan. I I I v-g, air. very
clean, in to. 32T-70M.
IfTS MBRCUBY COUGAR- 311
V I air, goad cewGtton. Aeb
Ing StSM. Call: t o t- m tf days.
321-3331evenmao.
U to dbwn G eequme law me.
peyments on a ifto Chrysler
LaGaron GTS. Call: 311-Nto.
'77 Cadillac Coop# OaVtllaBeautiful body, rune great.
Naw tires, brakes, shacks
t t .t t o .m ifw .
*7BOLDS CUTLASS SUPRBM I
A/C. with ps/pb. am-fm
starea. Gaad all areund candlIten. S2.3M 32S47ff
TfOjkOB CUTLASS S U P R IM f

222— Ante P a m
/Accatsortea

Hwyft. m
fiiyli8 § l i i d i
a a a a a H o id s a a a a a e

PUBLIC WTO AUCTKM

Rsbullf Automatic Trane- S ill
er can pull B rebuild yeurv
tt2J. Stove: 321-MM.

Every Tburs. HNo at I t l f PM

* Wtwra Anybody *
* Can Buy ar S till*

114Hwy 17-fl Osiory S40MSI

M A TH EW S M O TO RS
H W Y . 1 7 *9 2 S A N F O R D (Across From Flea World)

3654348
&lt;4 BERLINETTA CAMARRO

*8988
H0. black Mop loaded
*10,800
82 Z*28, loaded
•
*7488
79 TRANSAM,
black edition, must seel
*3988
79 BRONCO 4X4
*2995
80 FORD RANGER 150
Two tone, loaded
*4988
83 CHEVY SILVERADO za.ooo
*8488
V8. loaded, digital dash, cloth

84 2*28

miles, completely loaded, cloth inteiior

84 CHEVY SILVERADO h

m a

q a a

S E E O UR FIN E
S E L E C T IO N O F USED

LINCOLNS, GRAND
MARQUIS, COUGARS,
CAPRIS AND OTHER
FINE FORD MODEL
CARS.
A L L C A R S S O LD A T
W H O L IS A L I!

All Prices Clearly Marked

ON PREMI8ES

Bank Financing Available

Jim Lash9s
Blue Book Cars

229— Matercycle*
and M a t
^kK ^’ T S a g s ^ T lw ir
wprb. Asking |1Mf. Call:
3tt-3ttSdavsenl|.

241— Racraattenal
V tM cte t/C ainpan
WAIT'S RV C IN T IR
Specialist In sates and service.
Clasa A's, Mini's 13 Ft. Park
Medals. Trawl Traders and
fth wheals. Open 2 days per
weak. Ml N. Hwy 441Apeeks.
3M-NMBIJ.

1

B A R Q M N CK N TKR

L O N G W O O D
L IN C O L N

ortsT

M.bto ar I M s f b r . Cali:
321-lOf.
*77 DOOBICUSTOMI1IO VAN
Cemptoto......................... t t m
CHICO* T N I MAN____ e fM fto

( SPECIAL FINANCING I

See Brad Mathews o r H erm an G old

M VV T

250 CARS TO
CHOOSE FROM

IfIB C H IV Y C-M 3+3. dual
wheal pkk up. A/C. P/S. 4

lt7 t FwO TtoxterkW . . . . . .* 988
n e t Ctevy sues............... *1988
ltoo Cmmts T-T«p.............. &gt;2988
IBIS FsrO LTD...................*1188
ltbO Nwcary Capri............ *2788
lt7&gt; CxUrn C ib it............ *1988
M71 VW to g .....................»1788
1*10 Fsri Faktow.............. * 588
l*7b Paaflac toxMrO...........*1488
te n Ctevy KUHte.............. • 588
1S00 FMUac SmMto...........*1988
IS77 Fury Wagm................* 788
M77 Ctevy Capric*............ *1388
IfT f Mu4a QLC................. *1488

8A A 9A I O

A V yvU U

black, shoit wheel base, cloth inteiior

229— T r v d i l /
• w a a /V a m

AT OUR BARGAIN CENTER

at the

■

4 Used P3M/7S BIS Oaadyear
Wrangler radteto. C a ll:'304Mlaner4P.M.

BieffWs

l-to4-2tSH11
OeBery Auto A Atortoe Sotos
Across Wh river, top el bW

COME JOIN US

G ARAG E SALE- Saturday.
Nov. fth, I A M. to 4 P.M.
C h i l d r e n 's c l o t h i n g ,
bodsprsods, curtains and mis­
cellaneous. 100 Cobblestone
Way. IMoyfalr Meadows, oft
4SA Sanford).________________
GARAGE SALE- Soturdoy only.
• A.M.-7 Miscellaneous items,
tea E stoiia Rd. Lake Mary.
(1st house off Country Club
Rd.) Coll: m 1011.___________
OARAGE SALE Household
Item s, toys, and fam ily
clothing. »47 Georgia Ave
Soturdoy. Nov. fth. s AM. to 4
P M .________________________
Moving tile I Sal.. • ? Every
thing priced to soil! Don't
miss Itl Corner of 17 f l A tm
J t .__________________________
MOVING SALE- Nov. fth. f
A.M. to 1 P.M.. 414 W 20th
Stroot. Baseball cards, small
appllancos. soma furniture.
MoHt Family Yard Sale- Sat .
fth, a:»4:J0. 1101 Cedar (W
10th. oft French) • ft glass
sliding door. Ig. selection of
hauoohold a pits i n n s _______
n e i4 n b o r n o o d y a r d
SALE Saturday, Nov. fth. •
A M.- 7. Sonora Blvd In
Sonora Oovolopmont. (O il
Sanford Ave).

r i a w i # m i * ua viva

*

IALI • Lutheran
Church- Redeemer. ISIS Oak
Ave. Nov, f. ttoSfA.M.- 1P.M.
RUMMAGE SALE and BAKE
SALE. Friday A Saturday,
Nov. Mh A fth. f A M. to 4
P.M. Nativity Church on 427
(off of 17 f l ) . ________________
YARD SALE
Tobies, what
nets, lamps. Micollenoous. bar
stools, much mors. 2010
HIbustus Court. Sat. A Sun. f
AM . to 5 P.M._______________
YARD SALE - 2117 Hartwell
Ave. Saturday. Nov. fth. f
A.M. to 7____________________
YARD M L R Saturday Nov.
fth, 4 7. 3 families. Mlscellansous household goods, name
brand children's clothes,
adults clothing. All Soul's un
Iforms. No sate before f A.M.
127 E . Woodland Dr.__________
YARD SALE- Sal., f l . 2 girls'
blkas, 1 boy's lOsp. 1” AC/DC
TV, (4) 70X11 tires. IS" colling
fans, SOX radar detector A
mlsc. I l f Woodmer# Blvd., off
Sanford Ave. 331 ISM________
YARD M L B Friday A Saturday f A.M. to 4 P.M. teblo A 4
chairs. 1 wheel adult bike,
odds A ends. 401 Juanlla
Court, Sunland Estates.______
YARD M LR - 115 McKay Blvd .
Frl B Sot, B7. 3 microwave
ovens, lots clothes. Also, look
Ing for olectrk stove A hot
water heater._______________
YARD M L R - Soturdoy only I f
1. Everything must go. 2510
MeUenvlde Avo._____________
1-Family Oarage tote- Sat., f 5.
I day only) Many barge InsI
14US. Elm Avenue__________
1 FAMILY YARD SALE- Satur
day Nov. fth., fA.M. to 3 P.M.
Lots of old framos, books,
clotbos, old liras, and rims.
241) S. Orange Ave (off 3Sth
st.i.

prlcaa, piwe attareftens on
mano/laioo clothes, laminate
Plata naif fa lea cream store'.

f a l l . tM J B A i

rwwwwwm* .............

H 7 -0 a r a « e Sate*

'

1 I ) N (. W &lt; ) ( I( )

H 3 1 HO9 0

'• /j-.SEMINOLE FORD

M E R C U R Y

‘ I.

I l rt

3 2 2-4BU4

SANFORO.Fl.

" M m U m lM b

Serving Central Flnridu O ver 30 Yearn

r

r

Dofondant.

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: ROBERT E.LAURIA
RESIDENCE: UNKNOWN
Lad known oddrui: 717 Tool
Lano A lta m a n to S p rin gs.
F lor Ida 177SS
AND TO: All parsons claiming
any Intorod by, through, undor
or against tha aforosald parsons.
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED THAT an action to
forocloao a martgago on tho
following doscrlbod proporty
located In Samlnote County,
Florida'
LOT 123. CRANE'S ROOST
VILLAS, rocordod in Flat Book
a . Pagos 74 to 77, of tho Public
Records ot SamIn©la County,
Florida.
TOGETHER with all tha Improvomonts now or horoattor
orocted on tha proporty, and all
• a s a m a n ts . r ig h t s , a p ­
purtenances. rants, royalties,
mineral, oil and gas rights and
profits, water, water rights, and
water stock, and all fixtures new
or horoattor attached to the
proporty. Including replace­
ments and additions thereto,
has boon filed against you. and
you ore required to servo a copy
of your written dotonsos If any,
to this action on Roger D. Boar
of ANDERSON 4 RUSH. At­
torneys for Plaintiff, whoso
address Is 323 East Central
Boutovard, Orlando. Florida
2M0I, and file the original with
tho Clerk of tha above styled
Court on or before tha SMh day
of November, ISM: otherwise a
ludgm ent may bo entered
against you tor tho redetteemendad In the Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and tho
soot of said Court on this 22nd
day of October. INS.
DAVID N. BERRIEN
Clark of tho Circuit Court
By: OlonoK.Brummott
Deputh Clerk
Publish: October IS. November
1,1.11. INS
DIK-140

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 114
P in ea p p le C t „ LongwoodSemlnote County, Florida B7M
undor tha fictitious name of
J A M A U T O M O T IV E D E ­
TAILING. and that I Inland to
register said nemo with tha
Clark ot tha Circuit Court,
Samlnalo County, Florida In

at the Fktifteua Name Stetytoe,.
To-wit; ladton M M f F tertea
Statutoa lf*7.
/(/ JaaaphC.Oaitenlll
Publlih Navambar I, •. it, 22.
IttS.
ORL-4

1984

1977

CHEVETTE

RENAULT
ALUANCE

2 DOOR, RACK, AM/FM,
LOOKS NEW!

01, ALMOST NEW,

CU STO M

VANS
l

830-6688

HWY. 17*92
SANFORD

CRANO OPINING SKCIAL

321-0741

* 1 7 , 9 5 0 rag. $19,798

J

Budget

/ IF

.

RENT A CAR OF SEMINOLE CO.

FLE E T REDUCTION S U P E R SALE
1985

1984

PULL LUXURY HIGH TOF VAN
Complata with color TV, raor oir cond., AM/FM c o iia ffa
(teruo. 40 ch. CR, 4 copfoini ch ain (iwlvellng 8 reclin­
ing. tola bad, plui many more luxury llama.

VW RABBIT

ESCORT
*saa«
MARQUIS

•8100

•8UB

LTD

LTD BROUGHAM

*ssaa

«83S0

ESCORT
&lt;4800

CALL OR VISIT US TODAY AT

TOUT EBMPTCB.
LOW
704 Sovofl* Ct.
Longwood, FL
32750

O W

For Moro Information On
That* Wholasalo Valuaa
Call: Days
Nights
331-5111, 530*1102

WE WILL N O T BE U N D ER SO LD
BY ANYONBI

323*3349

Cart Can Alia la Saan At Sanford Airport Tannlnal

B M W

L O C A T IO N !

HWY. 17-92 at Ik. Mary (Ivd.

Sanford

�T * fT f

* *r • • • • • r—r--

- T

H A-tvm tm N w M , laniard. PI.

« •

•

.

• •

t

. •

.

, •

• •

• • . • •« - r *-#•••

• • •* • 9

i—

Friday, Wa». t, m i

•

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y W B

•'S..

i

3 DAYSONLY!

■ h a

r - gC % tV

5

i n

0

J2 ? « «

ENMNCNM
Factory
A u th o re d

Tent
Sale'

0 X7 0

NEW! USED! CAR! TRUCKS!
OVER 3,000 VEHICLES MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEKEND
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON EVERY CAR!

save

FINANCING
AVAILABLE

\.

ON THE SPOT
FINANCING AVAILABLE

B a rn e tt

0

BanK

BARNEn BANK
LOAN OFFICERS
ON PREMISES
TRADES WELCOME
'98^'

T O D A YTO N A
HW V. 434

t

DOG
TR A C K
RO AD

mN

FO LLO W
OUR
S E A R C H L IG H T !

ALL NEW 1986 CARS and TRUCKS
ON DISPLAY UNDER THE BIG TOP
AMC-BMW-CHEVY-CHRYSLER-DODGE-FORD
HON DA-ISUZU-J EEP-MITSUBISH l-SU BA RU
OLDS-PEUGEOT-PLYMOUTH-PONTIAC ‘
REN AULTTOYOTA-VW-LINCOLN-M ERCURY/

S E M IN O L A B L V D .

SALE
LO CATIO N

CM

2000 Saminola Blvd.
Cassalbarry

1500

SELECT QUALITY USED
CARS AT AUCTION PRICES!
APR
FINANCING

H W Y. 436

12.9%*

•: Vt
J

TO OR LANDO
to
f

V

7 2 MONTH FINANCING*

NB^ w m * ■

approvia crtcii

S A LE LOCATION - SEM INOLE G REYH O UND PAR K
2000 S E M I N O L A B L V D . , C A S S E L B E R R Y

1 1
&lt; *

i,

»

...

f

•*

* •

* • •

• •

•

'

&gt; •

.

.

•
-

-

- • *■
- _-

-- ---------- ------- ----- — *- M-J f—n
-. _ ^ _ „ _ _
_ _ ,
..
-

♦ •» i

�■

ih t r ln iy o u r handw riting.
rttlng. she u ld . «nlnurs w t a t s j n y ^

u^Uw.
-«»««.«
ytars and can t resist analysingjnoat

That revelation from hand

teeth, s h u t- ■

Chauaee encouraged me to

^
ees. said many people fear
my eyes and hand over my .
. Mich scrutiny.
notes to her. A review
m
doesn’t lie. nut my c u n w ij
* 7 /TTV^i
and Mb. ChaUaee impromptu Qnoings might lead
( M|(ed ^ chauaee to point out a few bad
y o u to take a doaer look at your script.
_ ^ | H good points revealed by my scrawl.
H ?
re p S e n t .m l., in y
want to change

^ T ^ S

L S

~
T
»***&gt; J 0*1

w

T ^
h

. b k b to note* tocotportle. m y own « y l c
i

c
7

h

&lt;*

m y molher couhlnl love or

V

______ ... , , ' . n

H i* , V . ^ »

read since I was In the
people, including myself If l b * * *
read notatlona
• couple d wwks bmju
shaking their heads In doubt. It
not all that bad under a quick study by mb.

Com

•Right off the bat.” she add. l ~ t y w ’ |
optimistic and tend to see the bright sloe «
things. Your writing Is slanting very muen »pm «
on every single sheet. Often P00?*®
demonstrate an optimistic tendency can hardly
keep their handwriting 1
1 denied being "Poll)
saying overly
ve
outlook am
have a
.

.

II

�1

HsraM, tafttord, FI.

Frktay, Nav. ft. IMS

Halley's Comet Inspires Legends And Science
B y A M lU u r d

Most o f us will only arc
Halley's com rl once In our
lifetime, but for Sum Slorch.
part of the experience will last
forever.
"The comet is n link between
generations. My 5-year-old son
may sec Halley's comet when it
returns in 76 years, and I want
him to remember that his dad
made him get a look at it."
Sloreh is activities director of
Ihe New York-based Amateur
Observers Society — one of
ma ny g r o u p s w a t c h i n g
Halley's. In addition to amateur
stargazers, scientists
'w orldwide will try to squeeze
out every possible bit o f In­
formal ion while Ihe comet Is
near. In hopes of learning not
only about its m ysterious
Ix'havlnr. hut also about the
origin of our solar system.
This is the 30th recorded
appearance o f the comet, which
pusses closest to Earth on April
I I . Depleted as a glowing
lireball. ils visits have been
woven into myths and legends
passed down through the
years.
Past civilization s imbued

...S c ra w l
Continued from page 1
work out. You expect the best,
you look forward to life."
I agreed. I could li\ ? with
that, especially after she offered
me an excuse for my careless
scrawl.
‘ ‘ You h a ve to la k e fast
notes." she lontinued. " I t ’s a
p ro fession a l lia b ility with
doctors, attorneys, anyone who
has studied. You develop your
own shorthand. It reflects a
change in you. You are forced
to think faster, to behave faster,
your livelihood depends on it.
so you have developed a much
looser, faster more practical
script than what you were
taught in school — to carefully
loop things.
"T h e more a person's hand­
writing varies from what you
were taught in sehool the more
you have developed as an
Individual and have become
your own person.
"Y o u are also a doublechecker. I see dashes used
often instead of commas or
periods. T h a t in d ic a te s a
person with a reviewing type of
mind. You will go back to make
sure everything is right.
"You also have become quite
tactful. You have the ability to
be tactful, or shrewd or even
diplomatic, which is a real plus
when you have to deal with
people.
"You have really developed
people skills — social skills and
1 see lhat in the way a lot of
your words trail off. You don't
lake time to form the whole
word. It's a mess! That's a
joke." Ms. Chauscc said.
On the- negative side, she

skies.
However, as Edmund Halley
explained, many comets do
follow regular paths that cross
Earth's orbit periodically. Their
orbits are more elongated than
those of the planets, which
travel in nearly circular pat­
terns. Depending on how large
and bright comets arc. and how
close they come, we may be
able to sec them from Earth.
Because H a lley 's returns
every 75 years or so. it is
classified as u short-period
comet. Other comets may take
millions o f years to make one
orbit. Still others never gel
close to the sun.
Although no one cun be sure
exactly how comets formed,
most theories connect their
origin In one way nr another
with the birth of our solar
system . S cien tists b elieve
comets contain the same malerial, that was present in the
solar nebula, the region of gas
and dust In w h ich Earth
formed.
One theory is that comets
were the building blocks for the
ou ter planets, said Roger
Knackc, astronomy professoral

the State University of New
York al Stony Brook.
"There were lots of small Icy
objects in Ihe outer solar
svstem. Some became planets
and those that didn't became
c omets." said Knackc.
According to current theory,
a cloud of perhaps a billion
comets slowly orbits the sun.
about 100.000 times farther
front the sun than Earth. They
would never be noticed if they
remained in their communal
habitat, called Oort's Cloud
after the Dutch astronomer
who theorized about it. Gravity
front a nearby star sometimes
pushes one out of hibernation,
sending it hurling toward
Earth.
Because cornels spend most
of their lime lit the deep freeze
of outer space, pari of ihe birth
cloud has been preserved In
their core. Scientist liken this
ball of frozen gasses imbedded
with bits of primordial rock to a
dirty snowball.
Ironically, each time a comet
strea k s th ou gh our solar
system, putting on a celestial
show, it comes closer to ils
death. Heat from the sun

evaporates the snowball, pro­
ducing a stream of dust and
gas. The vapor collects in a
coma — a halo around the
Iceberg. From Earth the glow­
ing gasses look like a hazy
patch.
Two types of tails extend
from Ihe head. Radiation from
the sun pushes dust out of (he
coma to form a tail that curves
with the com et's orbit. The sun
also produces a stream of
high-speed particles that con­
tain magnetic Helds, or solar
wind, that blows electrified
gasses from the coma and traps
them into a straight tall. De­
pending on Halley's position as
it travels through Earth's orbit,
we may sec one or two tails.
One reason Halley's comet is
so big and bright Is that it has a
relatively large orbit compared
with others that get close to
Earth. Comets with very short
p e r i o d s h a v e h a d m o re
exposure to the sun. losing
some of their glitter with each
orbit. For example. Encke's
Comet, which visits every 3 '/t
years, the shortest known
period, travels closer to the
Earth than llallev's.

said, my T's are very telling. I doesn't weigh things extrctnly
slap al crossing them and when carefully, but who also doesn't
they are crossed it is with a think so quick that they tend to
backward stroke. That means. Jump to conclusions.
"Although legibility has a lot
Ms. Chauscc said. "Y ou have a
tendency to look to the past. to do with your ability to
T h a t's a negative. Usually communicate, based on this,
that's unresolved conflict in the you would say. well??? But
actually you are a big compast.
"Y ou don't always do it. but municatlor. with your open O's
you do ft often. It's retrograde and A's. A person with open
motion, which is opposite what O's and A 's is a person who Is
w e ’ ve been tau gh t. W e're people oriented and who likes
taught In write from left to to talk and who is good with
right. Everythin* you go opposite of that you arc going
back psychologically, often In
unresolved conflict.
"T h ere is a way to let the
past go and It's to stop doing
this." she s^iid.
"T h e way you cross the T is
very indlcllaiive of tin* person.
Your T. the way you cross It.
when you cross It. which you
don't often do. is high. It’s well
placed and indicates a good
sense of timing. You can be on
time, you can meet deadlines.
FRANK COETTGE
IFs a good trait to have. This
1 8 9 5 -1 9 4 2
where it (the crass) does'l even
get to the T means you are
ahead of time. You are ahead of
time In projects. You are orga­
nized to the point where you
don't have problems budgeting
your time.
"T h e length of the T bar is
maybe a betler Illustration ol
tin* kind of thinker you are. A
person who habitually, like

words.
"In fact your whole hat id writ­
ing in the entire picture, it
flows. Just as your thoughts
llow. It's very fluid. You had to
develop that I'm sure to be in
your field, but even If I didn't
know* witai you did I would say
this Is a person that has
developed far front schooling as
an individual whose* mind is
always flowing. You're always
going on to the next thing,
except when you're looking to’

the past." Ms. Chauseesald.I didn't decide to change my
T ’s and dump the past, but if
you've been inspired to try to
break a bad habit by changing
your handwriting, experts who
can help arc listed in the yellow
pages. Fees vary depending on
the amount of work involved,
hut would probably fall in the
$100 range. You can also pick
up pointers from the pros on
how to scientiflcally analyze
script yourself.

H a lle y 's with supernatural
power, regarding Ils appear­
ances as frightening forecasts
of death and disaster. Some of
these themes have sparked the
imaginations or today's market­
ing wizards, who hope to lminortallzc the legends — and
fatten their bank accounts —
with literally Ions of comet
paraphernalia.
Some of the myths about the
comet were ■dispelled in the
18th century when Edmund
Halley computed its orbit using
Isaac Newton's law or gravity.
When Halley noted that comets
In 1531. 1607 and 1682 had
moved across the same part o f
the sky. he surmised that the
three were Ihe same comet und
lhat it would make another
appearance In 1758. The comet
did Indeed grace our skies
again as Halley predicted, and
It was named in his honor.
One reason Hnllcy's has In­
trigued so many people Is Its
seem ingly strange behavior.
Unlike the stars and planets
iliai we can count on seeing In
a certain place al a certain
llini*. comets seem to float
capriciously In and out of our

you.

s la s h e s ,

you

\

i

%

BILLY rilAZIER
1924-1944
JO H N

W,

B URD EN

l R 9 9 -1 9 4 J

s la s h

backwards, but H's still a slash,
so you're a fast thinker — the
long bar."
" A short T bar takes lime.
When you cross with a long bar
you logically do It fast. The
person that habitually makes a
small T bar is a slower thinker.
If It’s a medium length It's a
medium speed thinker who

TARO

TONAI

1 9 2 2 -1 9 4 1

Veteran Day Special: The
Unknow n Soldier, hosted
by Jason Robards, actor

A I .P H 0 N Z A

D A V IS

1 9 1 9-1944

and Veteran, is a one-hour
docum en tary presenting
the life stories of six

WALLACE KINDER
1914-194)

American sarvicama
a

w ho a ra still listad
m is s ln g fro m V y W .il.

TT^"

�television

Ft.

C h ild S ta r Sought,
A u d itio n s in O rla n d o

November 8 Thru November 14

U M e CN.

(D O (* B C ) Of latoo
CDO &lt;«*&gt; Orlando
(J) Q INBCI Oayfona Beech

(

Orlando

1*

C .M . CP,

(EDOS)
m a
do) a

independent
Orlande

;

IWfcfipRMlRftt

Orlande PeBtic
Breedcaiting System

chenneHlistod, taBtov isien i vb u rrb ert may t o e in to .ndrpetoent cheneet 44.

Specials

HOLLYWOOD (U P !) - If you precisely the right kid.
have a knock-kneed, freckleThey w ill spend the next six
raced tomboy aged 9-12 clim ­
weeks
visiting Orlando. New
bing backyard trees, she Just
York, London. Denver, Loo
m ight become a m ovie star.
It would help If she has red Angeles, and Toronto, holding
hair, a feisty attitude and a auditions. The m oviem akers
predisposition for telling tall also welcom e photographs or
tales. I f she can act. so much video tapes o f (heir quarry
mailed to: Longstocklng Pro­
the better.
ductions.
9255 Sunset Btvd..
If so. this particular little girl
is being sought to star in the suite 720, Los Angeles. CA.
m ovie “ Plpfrt Longstocklng." 90069.
“ W e're looking for a fem inine
She is wanted by producer'
P
eter
Pan o r H u ck leb erry
G ary Mchlman and director
Ken Annakin, the sooner the F i n n . ” s a i d A n n a k i n . a
s ilv e r -h a ir e d E n g lis h m a n .
better.
M eh tm an b o u g h t m o v ie “ Plppl is supposed to be the
righ ts to A strld Lin d gren 's strongest girl in the world.
popular Longstocklng books Gymnastic ability is welcom e.
and promptly signed director
They hope to audition 5.000
Annakin. They are gam bling girls In their quest, choosing
•1 0 m illion on a yet-to-be- population centers that w ill
found little girl who w ill either ‘ draw prospects from large rural
make or break their picture.
areas In various parts o f the
It is vita l, then, to find country.

O f The Week

SATURDAY
•

FrtWy, WMF, fc

7*0

(M| NATIONAL

A look m croMuna found Orty in
« d t o a r M M i an4

tom. q
|*0
® ■ NORTH AND BOOTH Hunloon M M t o h i t o OrDwOPJ, w p O B nUfiOMW

Oratfy loto John Broem'a raMart at

e&gt; 1M0. Sian EUxabem Taylor «td
Johnny Cadi (Part 9 of •) Q

SUNDAY

bum■Andftt
Dorte
oft
^wmeow^e m
a n wi
t o coaci of Hantucfcot. Q

olt iiw
the o c im
se

3:30
I (M ) ABOUT TAP Dancer / actor
Slava Condo*. Chuck Oraan and
Jimmy Slyda dwnonatrato and dtacuaa t o * individual alyto o* lap

0 *0
NOWTH A M SOUTH
i town to their I
are marriod al Mont
attach on Fort Sumtar
Fawchdd. Hal Hotorooh star, ( t o t S
o fi)Q

MONDAY
1 1 *0
■ (S) BtOAV BFBCMJ
JUST CdFW WT Whan a i
retarded IS-yaar-oM (Perry Lang)

0 *0
0 (10) M BCANCH OP AMMNT
HYITIHWI
documentary
ol■ i i i u w * Thta
IW w
w iw iiv j V
tart speculation on t o idea that
Earth was actwaByeotonttad by beInga from another planol.
■ (B) THOM BMC

ttari curtataghor tom and Tala
Donovan.(tot I o il)
• Ml THOM BROS Attar Mwy
Carton's IBarbara SI anwye*)
dtalh. Father Ralph (Alehard
Chamberlain) taavoa lor Sydney af­
ter betraying Maggie (Recto Ward)
and t o larndy tor t o take ol N*
career; ho reluma when a lira ol
Drogheda roauRt In tragi
tor t o Ctoary tarndy. (t o t S ot 5)
IM B M Ifd n a V
tV B U N B B U A Y

gta'a batovod ton by Ralph, an­
nounces that ho t
prtaolhood. (t o t 4 ol S)

10*0
■
(M l BHKLOBM
CAN STAN WANS MAKS «
B A flt A critique ol t o fropooad
Strategic Ootonoe mulatto ("Star
Wart") including atcarpta bom a
World Aflaws Council ol

and the Cor- Vom Timet
ne*y boy* band topito r to prevent SmMhhoata.
(Richard Chamboton) by threaten Cotaltfy bom revoking t o ranch tmg to leave t o huge aetata to t o cenaa. James Otoon, tori LougNin.
brother Paddy Ctaary (Richard Kl- (Part 2 o(3)
ley| rather than to t o Roman Cath- ■ (B) THOM a s m
okc Church. (Part 1at S)
(Richard Chamberiam)
In Romo. Maggie (I
0*0
■ (10) OOU) LUST Orton WtBet agrees to marr
•*0
narrates true account ol a modem tube OtoO (Bryan Brown* a na- ■ (B) THOM BMM
gold ruth in Sratf. whore thoudy ttnkot t o Ctaary tamay attar
lands ot workers battto to r
Dane's ordtoabon in Romo, t o now
that a tamdy wW tattle I
Cardbia! do Brtcaooart (Richard
down. (Part 3 of S|
Chamberlain) return* to Drogheda
10*0
whore. In a tt ol anger and grtol.
■ (10) UNKNOWN BOUMR The
Eight MQQIt fn lP Ip vVflrQf MW nMI WHO
40th arvworwry ol t o end ol
(IB) SUNT
Oane‘*toMrto.(Part»of5&gt;
World Ww It la commemorated m

FRIDAY

By D A N IEL M. MARVIN

ACROSS

Sports O n The A ir
SATURDAY

5*0
O

1:30
U (34) WWESTUHO

10 *0
• rnWROtUNO

5:35
Q MOTORWtEK ILLUBTRATtD

0 *6

1*0

o COUEOi FOOTBALL. Oregon
Stale at Stantord (Uve)
12.30
(D ■ (Q COUCQC FOOTBALL
1 1 *0
Kentucky al Vanderbilt (Uve)
®
•
COUEOI FOOTBALL

1*0
•

(S W R U T U M

12*0
3 ) ■ FUNBOA FOOTBALL WITH
GALEN HALL

0*6

gWRUTUHO

M ONDAY

ami at Maryland ILto)

Georgia at Ftonda (Taped)

1*0

•
GD STIVE LAHOCSBIRO
■ ® PBA BOWUNQ 1135.000 SPORTS FAH
Outfeaiiir Open Hue horn Taylor
Lanas in Taylor. Mich

2*0

SUNDAY

3 *0
10*30
(7) O COLiiQK FOOTBALL Ala­
■ ® WRCSTUNB
bama M LouMiana State (Uve)
3-30
11:30
3 ) ■ COLLKM FOOTBALL Mt- ■CD

1 2 *0
(BMMFLTOOAV
® ■
TOMB Florida Fadorol
Open

M0
® • NFL FOOTBAU San Fr
citco 49ars m
(liveiq

1*0

TUESDAY

CD • NFL FOOTBALL Loo Angeta* Rams *1 New York Giants (Lto|

3*0

(VfNMQ

(D 0 W R MTUNB

1*6

3*0

Suns st Now York Knacks

■ 3 ) NFL IB

4*0
■ ® NFL FOOTBALL Now York
Jets at Mum Dolphin* |Uvo)
® ■ NFL FOOTBALL OaBaa Cow­
boys at waahmgtan RadMUna |LM)

7*0

B

1 0 *6

FRIDAY
|*6
O

NBA BABKHBAU CNcego

10*0

45 Nigerian
native
46 Slippery fish
47 Word with
can or tray
48 Connors and
Douglas
50 Rod —
54 Actor
Connery
55 Hockey great
56 Actor Glass
57 Map abbr.
58 New: prefix
59 Small bird

1 Bosley or
Laughlln
4 Jlllian or
Miller
7 Miss Chansse
10 She's Ruth
Galveston
11 Actor Gossett
12 Angel's
instrument
14 Songstress
Mandrell
16 Soap plant
18 Fame co-star
19 Auction bid
DOWN
21 Paddle
22 Sunken fence
1 Actor Hunter
24 Perform
2 Eggs
25 Chooses
3 Monte —
26
-------------- mode
4 Alda or Arkin
27 New Orleans
5 Negative
French
conjunction
29 Kind of beens
6 Shede of
31 Singer Ford
meaning
35 Gilda —
7 Mr. Everett
39 Edgar Cayce
8 Sweet potato
Found.
9 Sag
40 Actor
13 Map
Raynoids
15 Golden Girls
43 Always:
star
poetic
17 Bitter vetch
44 Loretta —
20 Sioux Indian

22 Holbrook or
Linden
23 Miss
MacGraw
24 ID for
Rutherford
25 Above:
poetic
27 1664
southern
coalition
28 Neptune
30 Actor Carney
32 He's Dick
Loudon
33 Here: Fr.
34 Small lizard
36 Scottish river
37 Willie -

36 Monogram
lor Rabbitt
40 Sound ol a
hard knock
41 Exodus
author
42 Jottersons
co-star
44 Dir. El Paso
from
Alamogordo
46 Seri
47 Air: comb.
49 Consume
51 Throe: ItaJ.
52 King: Fr.
53 An explosive

□
a t]
an a
□□□
D a s HDD
□ oca
q bb
onm n
H 0 B □BC10DD
a ooa a
eddhuu

□BGB13R n aa

□□□0
O0O □ □ □ □
□□0
CJ0D □ □ □
BE0ED □ □ □ □ □ □ □
□□□a
EEC DCD
E D 0 COD E G O

�4 -lv t w lm

to rtford, F I.

F rid a y , N ov. 1 ,1 H »

November 8

FRIDAY

7* 0

November 9

S A TU R D A Y

K D W M w T m io s to l

M BaN *

S i „ ,,°|||Cr y

, ; i^

«M

an AMcan tan ortaf group theft at­
tacking a r

7:30
0

FLORBA’S WATCMBM
a took al problems in
am m nq in n yoyngi cnnirvn.

Charming takes a
Stavroa Nachmans Angela, g

ffl 0
O

CAR O L

St

B U R N E TT

AN D

7:00
P.M. M AQAZM i Sax in ada;

Loretta Lynn.

S

«

(JEOPARDY
|BARNEY MNXER
S h

(M l PNORLBS O f NATURE
CARSONS COMEDY CLAD-

7*05

OUR FAABLY HONOR Uf

McKay la taken hostage by a wom­
an (Patty Owen) dsmwidtng the re­
lease ot her Imprisoned boyfriend.

(10) FAWLTY TOWERS Basil

creates chaos by trying to Impose
his views on sexual promiscuity on
his customers and staff.

10:30

(U) (38) BOB NEWHART
0 (1 0 ) TWO RONNIES
52 NBA BASKETBALL Denver
Nuggets at Los Artgaies Lakers

11:00

52 MARY TYLER MOORE

7:30
• (3 ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with Dotty Pari on

C l) Q W K E B R IG H T
_ 0 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
_ (35) BENSON
A (M ) THIS WEEK WITH CHRIS
MORGAN
a (5)ALL IN THE FAMILY

7:35
H I SANFORD AND SON

8.-00

• (3) KNIGHT MOER The FLAG
teem uaea a number of bizarre dis­
guises In their quest to prevent the
smuggling of a lethal bacteria
strain.
CD O TWILIGHT ZONE Two epi­
sodes: an English teacher (Adrienne
Bar beau) falls under the spell ol a
gargoyle: an old man (Danny Kaye)
holds the last hour of the world In
his timepiece.
(Z ) O WEBSTER Webster. Kathe­
rine and George take off on an ad­
venture-tilled trip to California.
(Part 1 o t ? )q

55 (39) HART TO HART
ffi (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW Topics: Yurchenko, KGB
defector, goes home, mishandling
ol detectors by CIA; results ot Vir­
ginia and New Jersey elections; the
royals are coming to Washington.
DC .q
®
(5) MOVIE "Black Sunday"
(1977) Robert Shaw. Marthe Keller.
A deranged Vietnam vetsran joins
an Arab terrorist in a plot to murder
80.000 unsuspecting Super Bowl
Ians

0:05
52 MOVIE "Somebody Up There
Likes Me (1956) Paul Newman.
Pier Angek Rocky Grasiano, a New
York skim boy, rises to lame as a
championship boier.

8'30
2 ) O MR BELVEDERE While pre­
paring for his parents' anniversary
party. Kevin finds an error in their
marriage license. Q

0

(10) WALL STREET WEEK

Guest managing director William
H Gross. Pacific Investment Man­
agement Co

9:00
0 (3 ) MISFITS OF SCIENCE John­
ny B * pursuit ol a young woman
(Rhonda Aldrich) leads Ihe Misfits
ipto a potentially eiplosive situa­
tion
(X) O DALLAS Pam and J R. have
their first confrontation when she
decides that as a partner in Ewing
Oil she should occupy Bobby's for­
mer office; Ray and Donna expect
their child to be born with Down’s
Syndrome. q

f fl O

OtFF RENT STROKES As

0 (D CD O CDO NEWS

(ID (35) ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE

0 (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
0 ( 6 ) NIGHT GALLERY

11:30

0 (3) TONIGHT Host: Johnny Car­
ton. Scheduled: comedian Larry
Miller, country singer Lee Green­
wood.
f f l O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
(D O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
(35) HAWAII FIVE-0
(I) TWILIGHT ZONE

8

12K)0
3) O
MOVIE "The McKerule
Break" (1970) Brian Kaith. Ian Hanf f l 0 SOUO GOLD Songs from
movies Including "Neutron Dance"
(Pointer Sisters), "Don’t Walk
Away" (Rick Springfield). "Let’a
Hear It for the Boy" (Doniece Wil­
liams) and "Eye ot the Tiger" (Sur­
vivor) (Part 1of 2)
S (6) MOVIE "Tokyo Joe" (1949)
Humphrey Bogart. Florence Marty.

0

12:30
(3) FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEOS

Hosts George Wendt and John
Rattanberger of "Cheers " Videos
by Sting ("Love Is Ihe Seventh
Wave”), Pointer Sisters ("Free­
dom"). Pete Townshend ("Face the
Face"), Yes ("Hold On")
51) (U ) CHICO ANO THE MAN

12:50
52 NIGHT TRACKS; POWER PLAY

1:00
(I ) O MOVIE "Constantine And
The Cross" (I960) Cornel Wilde.
Christine Kaufman.
53) (35) BIZARRE "Best of Bizarre Sketches: tnflate-a-mate; Super
Dave Jumps from world's tallest
building, strip-o-gram; the Rev. T.V.

1:30
53)

(39) 8CTV

Sketches: Earl
Camembert hosts the news show
"60 / 20"; the Lone Ranger
(Moranis) and Tonto (Flaherty) host
a Carson-like show.

1:40
0 ( ! ) MOVIE "Cast A Giant Shad­
ow" (1968) Kirk Douglas. John
Wayne

1:50
52 NIGHT TRACKS

2:00

( S O NEWS
53) (39) QUNSMOKE

2:50
52 NIGHT TRACKS

3:00
(D O MOVIE The Garden Of Al­
lah" (1936) Marlene Dietrich,
Charles Boyer
53) (39) I LOVE LUCY

punishment for Iailing lo do his
homework. Arnold's English teach­
er (Kareem Abdui-Jabbar) makes
him teach his classmates about
Dickens' "A Tale of Two Cities." q

51) (39) AFTER BENNY HILL

53) (36) QUINCY
® ( 10) GOOO NEIGHBORS

52 NIGHT TRACKS

____
(D O

8:30

m o

&amp;&gt; (35) BtOEPENOENT NEWS

0

3:30
3:50
4:00

BEN80N While on a bust- 55(33)RHOOA

®

7:30

0 (3) QtLUQAN-B MLAND
ffl 0 ALEXANDER QOOOBUOOV8 GOOO NEWS MAOAZBM
0(B)TNUNOERMROBi

S 3 MOWS "The Marti Of Zorns”
(1540) Tyrone Power. Unde Darrel,
in the 1520a.
•on of at
|EARTH. SEA AND SKY

1:30

0 (1 0 )EARTH,SEA AND SKY

7:35

52 GET SMART

8:00

1$

SNORKS

ffl 0 SCOOSY 8 MYSTERY PUNHOUSE
(U) (38) IMPACT
0 (1 0 ) LAP QUILTING
52 HIGH CHAPARRAL
0 (5 ) THAT TEEN SHOW

8:30

0
(3) ADVENTURES OF THE
OUMMI BEARS
(S 0 W U ZZLE8
CD O BUGS BUNNY LOONEY
TUNES COMEDY HOUR
(36) WRESTLING
(10) SQUARE FOOT GAR0ENBIG
0 ( 1 ) HIT CITY

S

9:00

0 ( 3 ) SMURFS
CS 0 JIM HENSONS MUPPETS.
■AMES S MONSTERS
( 10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(I) SOUL TRAM

S

9:05
52 WRESTLING

9:30
ffl O EWOK8 ANO DROIDS AD­
VENTURE HOUR
(38) WILD. WILD WEST
(10) FRUGAL GOURMET

S

10:00

(S O HULK HOGANS ROCK ’N
WRESTLING
(N » MAGIC OF OIL PAJNDNO
(I) WRESTLING

S

10*5
52 MOVIE "Saminota" (1953) Rock
Hudson. Barbara Hale. A Seminote
chiel outwits the Army by refusing
to sign a U S. peace treaty.

10:30
) ® PUNKY BREWSTER
) G KIDS INCORPORATED
) (35) MOVIE "Terzan's New York
Adventure"
(1942) Johnny
Wetssmuller, Maureen O'Sullivan.
Boy Is snatched from his lungie
home and brought to New York as a
circus sideshow attraction.

0 (1 0 ) THIS OLD HOUSE

11:00
0 (3) ALVIN ANO THE CHIPMUMKS
f f l O CSS STORYBREAK "The
Roquefort Gang" Animated. Twin
mice lace danger in ihe lorm ol a
poetry-reading cat when they be­
come lost in the woods.

CD Q 13 GHOSTS OF 8COOSYDOO
( tO) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
(6) STAR GAMES

S

230
0 QD PBA BOWUNQ 1135.000
Budwelser Open live from Taylor
Lanes In Taytor, Mich.
51 (36) MOVIE "Stand By Your
Man" (1951) Annette OToote. Tim
Mctntire. Dramatization ol the ca­
reer ot Tammy Wynetle. from her
impoverished childhood to her star­
dom in the country music field.

0 (10) IT S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS

0 (10) IT S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS
0 (5) M O W "The House That
Wouldn't Die" (1970) Barbara
Stanwyck. Richard Egan Three
people attempt to rid an old house
ot its evil spirits

3:00

f f l 0 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Ala­
bama at Louisiana Stata (Live)

0110)1

3-30
0
f f l M O W "Murder On The
Orient Express" (1974) Alban Fin­
ney. Lauren Bacall Belgian sleuth
Hercule Poirot Investigates the
murder ot an American Industrialist
aboard a luxurious and famous
train.
CD O COLLEGE FOOTBALL Mi­
ami at Maryland (Live)

0 (10) TONY BROWNS JOURNAL
Actresa Sheryl Lee Ralph ("Dreamgirls") discussea the strong sense
01 achievement among Weal Indian
blacks.

4. -00
5D (30) CHIPS
0 (10) WE'RE COOKJNQ NOW
52 HIGH CHAPARRAL
0
(6) GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO

4:30
0 (10) MODERN MATURITY

5. -00
51 (35) DUKES OF HA&amp;ARO
0 (10) WASHINGTON WEEK M
REVIEW Topica Yurchenko. KOB
defector, goes home; mishandling
01 detectors by CIA; reeults of Vir­
ginia and New Jersey elections; the
royals are coming to Waahington.
D.C.q

52 FISHIN' WITH ORLANOO WIL­
SON
0 ( 5 ) STREET HAWK

5:30

S

AFTERNOON

12:00

0 3 ) KiOSWORLD
( D O LAND OF THE LOST
O GUNS OF WILL SONNETT
(35) MOVIE "Herd Country"
(1951) Jan-Michael Vincent. Kim
Brslnger. A Texas factory worker Is

(10) WALL STREET WEEK

Guest: msraging director William
H. Gross, Pacific Investment Man­
agement Co.

5:35
52 MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED

11:30
0 ( 3 ) KtDDVIOSO
(J) O DUNGEONS 6 DRAGONS
O
LITTLES
(10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT

EVEMNQ

6:00
O f f l NEWS

55 (35) BLACK SHEEP SQUADRON
0 (10) OREAT CHEFS OF CHICA­
GO
0 ( 5 ) VEGAS

6:05

52 WRESTLING

6:30

S

ffl 0 AJRWOLF Hawk# protects
the kfe of a tael pitot (Nancy Everhard) who has vowed to reveal a se­
rious detect in a new aircraft,
® O HOLLYWOOO BEAT McCarrsn and Rado help an AWOL Ma­
rina locate his pregnant gtrttrtand.
(35) M O W "Dog Day After­
noon" ( t9*3) Al Pacino. John Cezaie A New York City bank robbery
escalates into a near-circus when
community activists |oin In to stage
an anti-police protest during the

0 (10) PROFILES OF NATURE

2:30

0

0 ® Q BM EAI
care of sevwvyeer-oid
(Ebonto Smith) when Samantha
shirks her responsibility as a Big
Sister to date a handsome now

ffl NBC NEWS
(tO)YAN CAN COOK

52 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Oregon
State at Stanford (Live)
0 (6) M O W "The Game Of Sur­
vival" (1974) Rock Hudson. Susan
Saint James. Commissioner McMil­
lan Investigates the murder of a
wealthy, w e*-known jet setter.

110
SATURDAY MONT LIVE
arv iOwppo o f n p » rapmory irvflfiv
bars tnckidtog Randy QuaM, Antho­
ny Michael HaB, Mora Ourm and
Oanltra Vanes.

®

0

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Georgia at Florida (Taped)

® 0 UFEtTYLES OF THE RKM
ANO FAMOUS Interview with
Wayne Newton, a tour of Part* (Part
t ot 2 ) white water rafting with Lau­
ren Tewes; Bruce Jenner at his
Lake Tahoe retreat.
55 (36) MOW "The Sword And
The Sorcerer" (1562) Lee Horsley.
0
m M O W "WHtord" (lB7t)
Bruce Davison. Ernest Borgnine.

12:15
52

MOOT TRACKS

12:30
ffl 0
COMEDY BREAK WITH
M ACKANOJAM 8

1*0

8:30

0 ® FACTS OF LIFE In hopes ol
writing ths great American novel,
Natalie journeys to a hole-in-thewall truck stop where she en­
counters entertainer Charo and In­
volves her friends In an unusual
musical-lanlasy. q

0 (10) ARTHUR C. CLARKE’S

MYSTERIOUS WORLD
9 *0

0 ® GOLDEN OIRLS Rosa (Betty
White| freaks out when the house It
burglarized
® O MOW "Risky Business"
(1983) Tom Cruise. Rebecca DeMornay A high school senior,
sheltered in an affluent Chicago
suburb, decides to experiment with
the wilder side of Me.
® O NORTH ANO SOUTH Huntoon and Bent stop k) a New Or­
leans bordaHo; Vlrgate's husband
Grady loins John Brown's raiders at
Harper's Ferry; political factions
prepare lor Ihe Presidential election
of 1880 Stars Elizabeth Taytor and
Johnny Cash. (Part 5 ol 6|q
0 (10) THE BRAIN Case histories
01 a man who underwent a frontal
lobotomy and a stress-ridden pro­
fessional Austral# this examination
ol personality and amotions. (R )q

0 ®
ETEVE LANOESSERQ
SPORTS FAN
ffl 0
M O W "The Paradtne
Case" (1945) Gregory Peek. Ann
Todd.

1:16
52 MOOT TRACKS

1:30
05 (38) M O W "The Bachelor Par­
ty” (1957) Don Murray. E.G. Mar­
shall.
O (5) M O W "Night Slavas" (1970)
James Franc!ecus, Lao Grant.

2*0

®r

2:15
52 MOOT TRACKS

3*0

55 (35) MOW "The Tiger And The
Pussycat" (1957) Vittorio Gasaman,
Eleanor Parfcar.
0 (5) M O W "Moonchlid" (1974)
Victor Buono, John Carradlne

3:10
ffl O M O W "Topaza” (1933)
John Barrymore, Myrna Loy.

3:15
52 MOOT TRACKS

A Toast To Halley's Comet
Hoim* bartenders
who want to Impress
their friends ean try
serving up a Halley's
C ornet. Li ke t he
eom el itself, tills
eoektall has a Haul­
ing tail.
All you need In
make this eoektall is
a steady hand and
some showmanship.
In a martini glass.
I layer equal parts of
I It e C u r a c a o .
Bailey's Irish Cream
and room tempera­
ture vodka iu that
order. Dribble the
Bailey's and later
the vodka over the
haek of a s |mm &gt;i i s o

the layers don't mix.
Then, using a long
rn a t c h and d i rn
lighting. Ignite the
vodka. Pour this
quickly Into an Old
Fash ioned glass
containing ice and I
ounce of half-andhalf. It comes out a
milky blue with an
orange-like flavor.
Exercise caution
when working with
f l a m i n g

f o o d s .

Practice pouring
from the martini
glass* using an unflaming mixture so
y o u

c a n

d o

II

without spilling-

�November 10 { { { '

K v tR lR t H srG M . iB R jS r j. $1.

PfO

f . N &gt;Y. t , 1 0 5 — 9

“C o sb y S h o w ” S ta r
Reason F o r Success
If B M ltG U

W erner added. "O u r scripts
offer stories that all fam ilies
Who can relate to.

P P l H ally w— $ l f Gr t E f

HOLLYWOOD (UPI) la responsible for making “ The
"W ithout m aking a point o f
Cosby S h ow " the top-ranked
it. the Issue ts that there are
TV series on the air?
m ore sim ilarities am ong the
Bill Cosby.

races and sexes than there are

I S - ..

ID th*

a
(D ( 0 FAME Ctrl* (BSSy Huteey)
fa*a In loa* srMi a Mow
who hana out to b*a haawy

And The
0* F*a»" (IMS)
Bead RaMiRone, NlgN Bruce, I m l
1240
on "Th* Five Flp*" by Arthur ■ ® LU N I BOAT
Conan Do|b Th* Brrtlah super
NFL TODAY
sNuth investigates th* mgrdart of
member* ot a gentleman's dub
Open
(39) W.V. GRANT

It

0

truciton tachmquaa rs
what "Dead Eamaat" looked Ska;
11:35
why rainbow* ar* curved; how pop­ OJOMNANKERHRQ
corn pope; bathing a baby hippo, g

0(000001

0 MY FAVORfflMARTIAN
700

88

rB COMPANY
ROBERT SCHULLER

rrewenw
■n

7:30
® (J ) HARMONY AM) QRACt
(It (M| PORKY FIO
® ALVMBHOW
0 0 W .V . GRANT

1:00
09)VO«C«OFV*TORV
(1) O WOULD TOMORROW
’ O l

at w

«

o

(K&gt;) SESAME STREET (R )g
ID LARRY JONES

1:30
0 9 ) SUNDAY MASS
S O DAY OF DNCOVERY
(DO ORAL ROBERTS
(19) TOM ANO JERRY
(D HE-MAN AND MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE

8

M O

• ® WORLD TOMORROW
CD 0 SUNDAY MORNMQ Sched­
uled World War I veterans racouni
than battlehaM aipanancaa. proMa
ot Lila magafln* photographer Carl

tit

FIRST PRESRYTERMN
S
CHURCH OF ORLANOO
(38) SURER SUNDAY
■ &lt;H» PEOPLE. PETS AMO DR.
(D FUNTASDC WORLD OF

9:30
0 9 ) WRATMNS
® 0 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OB (38) PMK PANTHER
0 (W) PAMTMQ WITH ILONA

1240

1240
•Th* Bad And Tha 0 m rrS A U V M G
(Q) (0 C N A R U TS ANGEL*
(1942) KM
745
Lana Turner. A tdd hear
1245
!B WRESTUNO
wood producer aAacta th* bvaa ot
Q JRWY SWAOQART
aavard paopN pursuing stardom.
740
12:30
9 ) SILVER SPOONS Rick pro­
140
0
9 ) AMERICA Scheduled:
9 ) 0 NFL FOOTBALL Loa Anga- tome of M* (hands from a last-food smokers and thee health, the per­
las Rams at New York Giants IUva) restaurant
fect pm*
0 ( 0 MABTH 0 ECE THEATRE 0 0 TALCS FROM TNI DARK- 9 ) 0URTOUCHABLE8
"The Last Piece on Earth" A lead­ SSC A boarra inventor (Phi Roth) ® 0 COMEDY BREAK WITH
ership crtsN aa*R« Armw du n dter Iwtpa out a pop compoaar (MKhaat MACK ANO JAMM
ha forces Ms man onto tha lea Bar- Warren) who's suffering bom a
140
rtar too toon; Scott has transporta­ mantel block
® 0
M OW "The Farmer s
tion probtama (Pari 3 ot 6 )g
Daughter" |1947&gt; Loretta Young.
940
Joseph Conan
140
0 9 ) AMAZMO STORMS MUton 0 0 SOUL TRAM
0
9 ) M O W "The Sterile Berta and Matihaw Labortaaua star
Cuckoo" (19991 Lira MlnnaM. Wan­ In "Fina Tuning." g
145
da* Burton. A tonaSy. miaad-up cot- ffi 0 MUROIRL SHE WROTE Jaa- O WORLD TOMORROW
lags co-ad Irtaa to manipulat* a tree investigates the mysterious eu1:30
nan*, aanatttva baahman Into a ro­ cumstancas surrounding the
mantic affair.
drowrung death at a wortd-daaa ® 0 MUSIC CITY U.BA
swimmer Laurence Lucklnbltl.
24Q
1:35
(D) &lt; 0 M O W " Charads" (1994) Johnny Crawford and John Asttn (9 LUCY SHOW
Cary Grant. Audrey Hepburn. A
240
woman becomes th* tergal of her _____ MACQYVER MacOyvar jour(3 )0 N E W S
murdered husband's crontaa who nay* to the Jungles ot South Ameri­
245
bakava th* knows whara a vast tor- ca whara h* takas on a horde ot
army ant*, g
® LARRY JONES
tun* it hidden
0 ( 0 GREAT PERFORMANCES &lt;D) 06) MOW "Psycho" (1990)
240
"Gospel at Cotonus" Clarence Anthony Parkins. Janet Leigh. A ® 0 C M M W S MQNTWATCH
Fountain *rut the Five Bind Boys ot young woman encounters a psy­
2:35
Alabama ar* taaturad in thw tradi­ chotic k«*r at a secluded motet at­
tional Mart gospel mtarpratatton ot tar staWIng a large sum ot money O C H U R D TS FU N O
from her employer
th* "OeRpus at Cotonus" story, g
340
0 (S) MOW "Somebody KiBed 0 ( 0 NATURE Th* year-long so­ ® 0 M OW "The Long Wart"
journ
ot
artist
and
naturalist
Kami
Her Husband" (1979) Farr ah
(1944) Anthony Quinn, Chart**
Fawcett. Jatt Bridge*. Shortly attar Brock* on Scotland's Isle ot May ts Coburn
a beautiful young woman fata m captured on Nm g
345
lova with a sslaaman-wntar. her 0 0 MCCLOUD
O HOGANS HEROES
stuffy husband is murdared

0

SS

2 :8 0

M O W "A l That Heaven Al­
m 0 WALL STREET JOURNAL lows" (1959) Jan* Wyman. Rock
REPORT Scheduled Swiss bar* Hudson. Criticism from other, al­
accounts; a proNa ot Houston- most tore** a woman to giv* up tha
bated Compaq Computer*.
gardener th* truly lova*

340

1040

0 M OW "Tha Story Ot Three

0 0 0 0 0 NEWS

10:30
® 9 ) WRESTUNO
(X) 0 HEALTH MATTERS
0 O IT M W W T T O I
0 ( M) WOOOWRMHTS SHOP
0 |«| M O W The Rduclanl Ha­
ro**" 11971| Kan Barry. Camaron
Mitchell A doomed regiment i*
tavad from annihilation al tha
hands ot Iha enemy by tha commandat» knowledge ot history

10:35

OX MOW "Th* Fighting SuRvanP'
(19441 Ann* Bailor, Thoma* Mitch­
ell Five brothers' devotion to on*
another is portrayed from Ihair
ctmdhood to World War II Based
on a true story
11.40
(3 )0 THIRTY MMUTES
(X O P R O /C O N
0 (ID) A HOUSE FOR ALL SEA­
SONS

11:30
0 9 ) BOSSY BOWOEN
( £ ■ FACE THE NATION
m s

440
OX SUNDAY MASS
4:30
(O irs v o u R i

0 9 ) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­

SENTS Burt Reynolds directs this
story ot an aging, alcohohe movie
Loves" 11943) Per Anga*. KM star who's teetering on tha edge ot
Douglas A bsiertra. a govamaas sanity. Martin Sheen. Manki Itenner
and a circus parlormar find ro­ and Hobby Benson star

mance

940

3:30

0

® M l '* §

9) MOW "Streets Ot Jutttca"

( 0 ABOUT TAP Dweer / actor
«Gregory
Hinas and veteran hooters

(Premiers) John Loughkn. Robert
Loggia Altar a legal loophole al­
lows lus wit# and son's kWars to go
Stave Condos, Chuck Groan and traa, a man teaks tut own form ot

Jimmy Slyd* demonstrate and dis­
cuss thaw individual style* ot tap justice. Q
9 ) 0 CRAZY LUCE A FOX Whan
dancing
440
0 9 ) NFL FOOTBALL New York
Jots at Miami Ootplunt (Live)
® 0 M L FOOTBALL Dates Cow­
boys at Washington Radik ms ILIva)
m 0 M OW "No Highway In Th*
Sky" (1941) Jama* Stewart. Mar­
ian* Diatrich A mask matakurgist
warns that a new anknar may b*
mad* of detective malarial*
(U X0B J/LO R O
0 I0 M U 8 K M T M E
00M AN M X
540
(0 D A N C L BOONE
_ ( 0 FMNQ LMC “It Reagan

8
Doing Right?" Guests include
Hobart Dornan (R-CaM )

Rap

Harry dwappaart. Harrison and
tom* ot Ms lather's street friends
learn up lo find Mm
® 0 NORTH ANO SOUTH West
Point cadets return to their homes
as war becomes imminent; Bdty and
Brett are married at Mont Royal:
th* attack on Fort Sumlar forces
tha inavttabia schism between that
Hazards and the Mama Morgan
FaircMId. Hal Holbrook star. (Part 9
o te ig
0 ( 0 MYSTERY1 Death ot an
Eapart Witness" DMgHwfTt investi­
gation ot Lorrimer's murder is
hampered by two precae ot missing
evtdanc* - a blood-stained lab
coat and pages tom from Lorruner's notebook (Part 3 ot 6) g

0 (D STAR SEARCH Quasi*
1040
Sherman Hamsiay. Maude Adams. d ) 0 TRAPPER JOHN, M D Oon-

week yytth d a w

niim n r r
0 (10) QOURMCT COOKINQ

3:35
0 WORLD AT LARGE

3:30

1045

(D O

5:30

mi

5 9 ) MUPPCTS
(M ) MOVIE "HerA's Song" (No
Data)
0110) JOY OF PAMTMQ

146

(9

9:35

(Q ANDY GRRFTTH

( 0 MWTOSYS APPLE Fi

640
m

zo i guttnand produces evidence
that Trapper'S friend and cokaagua
(Harold Gould) was a Nab mass
murderer.

Alligator Yacht
F or th o s e w h o
th in k h a v in g an
alligator emblem on
their polo shirts is a
sign of status, now
there Is the ultimate
In label prestige —
the alligator yacht.
The Lacostc emblem
has moved into the
big time with the
L a c o s t c 42, a
42-foot-long yacht
w ith th e fam ilia r
a

l

l

i

g

a

t

o

r

emblazoned on the
s a il. T h e y a c h t,
created by Chantiers
Y a c h tin g F ran ce.
S.A. and sold
d o m e s t i c a l l y by
Euro Sailboats Ltd.
In N e w Y o rk , is
priced at $139,995,
which ought to buy
a bit more status
than a polo shirt.

That is the unadulterated differences. T h at's the goal to
opinion of Marcy Carsey and be sought."
Tom Werner, producers o f the
c o u n try 's current fa v o rite
“ B ill Is th e c o n s u m a t e
sitcom.
actor." Carsey pul In. "The
show is a positive image for
While they were ABC-TV's everyone In all age groups and
chief programmers, the team of Tor both sexes. This is one
Carsey-Werner provided the black show where the charac­
network with such bet! ringers ters arc not struggling with
as "Barney Miller." "S oap ." economic problems.

"T a x i" and "Mork A M indy."

"T h e r e ’s no need to em ­
phasize Ihc blackness of the
family. 1 think the show is as
quietly revolutionary as Bill.
He's made a big Impact on
society without stressing that
he Is black. He relies on humor
and how to get through the day
"W c can't explain the won­ with civility and love.
derful success of the series
"W e're not thinking about
except that Bill Is fabulous,"
what viewers want. We are
Carsey said. "And maybe it's
looking at family relationships
dangerous to exam ine the
through Bill's eyes. He has
show's success because we
dealt with those situations In
might draw some wrong con­
his com edy throughout his
clusions."
long and successful career.
Clearly they can pick win­
ners and both agree "T h e
Cosby Show” Is one o f their
very best, thanks to Its star,
who participates In every phase
o f the sh ow 's w riting and
production.

"Sometimes It's destructive
to assume a show is good on
only one level." said Werner,
who lets his partner do most of
the talking.

"B ill has a great deal to do
with the stories and premises
and he should. He Is present at
Ihc Inception of every script
right on through the first and
C a rs e y is an a t t r a c t iv e second drafts. If there are
woman with teenagers o f her problems, he fixes them ,"
own. W erner,' thoughtful and
"A s long as Bill Is Involved
soft-spoken, Is a parent too. It's not difficult to keep the
Both are Hollywood based and quality up." Werner said.
have made personal sacrifices
"B ill refuses to take a stan­
to produce the scries. They
dard
plot and turn it into an
commute to New York, where
the show Is taped, alternating unbelievable ending.” Carsey
every week, spending what said. "H e won't even allow
lime they can spare with their anyone to dictate a natural
pause In the script fo r a
families in Hollywood.
commercial. When It's time to
Says Werner. "W e’re good break for a commercial It Just
sounding boards for each other. happens."
Although wc both work in the
"W e often don't haVe stories
same areas, we could never do
In
the conventional TV sense,"
it alone.”
Werner said. "Som etimes the
They agree the success of network can’t believe we go
their hit scries has little or ahead with a simple premise
nothing to do with the fact that like grandparents coming for
they arc dealing with an upper dinner or the first day of school
m iddle class black fam ily. or the day the pet goldfish
Race, in fact. Is rarely an issue dies."
In the story lines.
Carsey laughed and said.
“ W c arc not p ro d u c in g "T h e show grows out of Bill's'
sp ecifically black h u m o r.” perception of life. There arc no
Carsey said. "It Is specifically neat resolutions at the end of
universal. It's not necessary for each show"
n black ensemble show to deal
"B ill Is a genius," Werner
with black Issues. But neither said flatly. "H e is in the same
do wc take pains lo keep racial league with Jackie Gleason.
elements out o f the show. Buster Keaton and Charlie
White shows don't deal with Chaplin. Now he has found the
race problems.
right format for his humor.
"Bill Is opposed to raising He's wonderful with the kids In
racial Issues. He says If a the cast.
"E very one looks forward to
comedy show is going to get
Into that area, let Bob Ncwhart com ing to work every day.
They enjoy each other and the
d o it."
"Essentially, the stories deal way the show flows. Bill is
with fam ily relation sh ips!"^ responsible for that, too."

�f-lW w h n H fiM , tstrfpfS, 81.

Friday,*W«v. s, 1fS»

Daytime Schedule
CHET UPS OF T.K. DEARS fS

7:18
9 0 0 A M MATHER

7JO
C H A U E M . OF T

• iM g M jg W W W Q

7JO

QD TM S M R M COUNTRY

S ta s s E s s r*

!s a tS K r’

® S M JO F TH E C M ffU R Y

O P fM IJC TM N i

lysnL.^.

MMtHSATHCUFF

•JO

rroM
I j l ) PATALEBRT

9 M BATMAN

m

«W ff(M 0N)
W IW »(M H S

IJ6

11 J O

)T o3 A N O JERRY

MMWMS CW I
1(9) BRADY BUNCH
140
IT) 9

EYEWITNESS DA'

32 HAZEL

9 (W1A.M WEATHER

Mr

7*0

•J6

32 I LO V l LUCY

S m o L io i

|W| FARM DAY
OF

t h bwu mv v
oc
l tr
m io n ,

1&lt;W »
® YOUR NUMBER
NUMSCfTS US

9

EVENING

6 *0

(D C S 9 ( S O NEWS
(38) JEFFERSON®

(10) MACNCIL / LEHREH
NEW8HOUR
9 (9) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
6:05
a

DOAN TO EARTH

6:30
9 9 } NBC NEWS
D O CSS NEWS
( D O ABC NEWSq

(U) (38) TOO CLOSE PON COM­
FORT Henry find* it difficult to tolerste hit free-spirited niece who t
staying with the family.
9 0 ) LA VERNE A SHIRLEY
6:35
32 SAFE AT HOME
7:00
® St00.000 PYRAMID
9
PM. MAGAZINE En­
trepreneur Arthur Jonea (Nautilus)
and hi* wile; Ba/bl Benton.
( D O JEOPARDY
33! OS) BARNEY MILLER
9 0 0 ) ALL CREATURES GREAT
AMO SMALL
9 (•) CARSON'S COMEDY CLAS­
SICS

S

7:05
32 ROCKY ROAD
7:30
9 (3) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with Matt Dillon

Q D Q PRICE IS RIGHT
O WHEEL Of FORTUNE
(M&gt; BENSON
9 O ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

S

7:35
32 SANFORD AND SON

8:00
9
®
TV S BLOOPERS AND
PRACTICAL JOKES A young actor
plays a practical |oke on actor and
former football player John Matuszak; Justine Bateman of "Family
Ties" Is tricked into thinking that
her brother Jason is In Jail.
X I 9 SCARECROW AND MRS.
KING Melrose attempts to solve the
murder of a friend, a bank presi­
dent who was involved In an embez­
zlement investigation.
CD 9
H A R O C A STLE AND
MCCORMICK A murderer lurks
backstage at a game show and
Mark appears lo be the neat contee!ant on the killer s list, g

•
RLYMU

(M l MASK? OF WATMOOL-

OtOM VSTM IIffWOS

9 &lt;wt a l l

c reatures g reat

AMO SMALL (THU)

November 11

11:30

■ 9 ® NSC NEWS SPECIAL "AIDS
* Fear / AIDS Feet” Tom Brokaw
host* a look at myths, preventative
(30) HART TO HART
measures and research for possible
(10) IN SEARCH OF ANCIENT
CUT9ft Ot ttM d k l l i M
MYSTERIES This documentary of­
G D O W K R P IN CtHCtNNATI
fers speculation on the Idee that
© (30) HAWAII FIVE-0
Earth was actually colonized by be­
9 ( 0 ) TWILIGHT IONS
ings from another planet.
9 (*) THORN BIROS Mery Carson
1 2*0
(Barbara Stanwyck), owner of a
9 ® BEST OF CARSON From
sheep station In Australia, tempts
June 1084: Dolly Parion and Elmer
the ambitious Father de Brtcassart
Conrad Join host Johnny Carton.
(Richard Chamberlain) by threaten­
(R)
ing to leave her huge eetate to her
&lt;D 9 REMINGTON STEELE
brother Paddy Cleary (Richard Kt( D O NEWS
lay) rather then to the Roman Cath­
9 (t&gt; MOVIE “ Diamond Heed"
olic Church. (Part t ot 3)
(1963) Charlton Heston. Yvette
Mimieua.
8:09
IQ MOVIE “ Giant" (1930) Elizabeth
12:20
Taylor. James Dean. Based on the
32 M O W "Jamaica Run" (1953)
story by Edna Fsrbsr. Texas ranch
Ray MiUand, Arlene Dahl.
life and the pursuit ot oil weatlh ef­
fect three people.
12:30
CD
ABC NEWS MOHTUNC
9:00
3D (38) CHICO AND THE MAN
9 ® MOVIE "An Earty Frost"
|Premiers |Aidan Quinn, Gena Row­
1*0
lands. A family's peaceful existence
9 ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVE)
Is shattered by their son's revela­
LETTERMAN Scheduled: Emmanu­
tion that ha is a homosexual - and
el Lewis, Chicago Bears defensive
tackle WUUem "Refrigerator" Perry,
that ha's contracted AIM . q
comedian Jerry Setnfefd.
X ) 9 KATE 0 ALUE AtUe has a
brta! fling with ■ visiting English
CD 9
M O W "Virgin Island"
professor (Franc Luz).
(1939) John Cassavetes, Virginia
Miskill,
CD 9 NFL FOOTBALL San Fran­
cisco aPeri at Darner Broncos
31 (30) BIZARRE Sketches: Father
(Ltve)q
Cappaltuccl; Super Dave In a spin(Q) (33) QUINCY
ning target stunt; two fsith heslsrt
compart notes: the Sen Francisco
9 (10) GOLD LUST Orson Waites
narrates this account of a modern
Straight Parade.
gold rush in Brazil, where thou­
1:10
sands ot workers battle to become
X ) 9 M O W "A Shining Season"
millionaires.
(1979) Timothy Bottoms. Altyn Ann
McLsrle.
9:30
X ) 9 NEWHART Stephanie s fa­
1:30
ther (Jose Ferrer) and Dick wind up
31 (30) 8CTV Sketches; Lab assistin jail as ■ result of their untoward
ant Ed Grtmley (Short) stirs up a
behavior during Stratford's Colonial
love potion in the movie "The Nutty
Oays festival, g
Job Assistant." Guest: John
Cougar Mellencemp.
10:00
X ) 9 CAGNEY 0 LACEY
2:00
(33) INDEPENDENT NEWS
3D(3S)GUN8MOKE
(10) UNKNOWN SOLDIER The
40th anniversary of the end of
2:20
World War II la commemorated In
32 M O W “ AIDS'' (1906) Michael
this history ol the Tomb ot the Un­
Caine. Shelley Winters.
known Soldier and personal profiles
ot alx American servicemen who
2:30
never returned from the war.
CD9NEW S
9&lt;9)ROCKFOROFILES

8

10:30
33) (30) SOS NEWHART

11*0

I ® CD 9 NEWS
tARCHM BUNKER'S PLACE
(m O A V E ALLEN AT LARGE
(

IU S H T
iHOSFfTAL

9 iw iinu &gt;ab5 s6mtus)

2:90

(D 9

M O W "Follow The Fleet"
(1930) Fred Astaire. Ginger Rogers.

3*0
® 9 CSS NEWS MQHTWATCH
O
(36) WHAT'S HAPPENING

(IS)

ART OF

SSTOman

■ jM W AN t A OOMMMTARV BY
•WYNNE O T W (WSD)
■ (IS )N O V A (TH LB
3 *6

1 *6

4*0
ITHUNOERCATSa
(SAME STREET (R )q
_
|HE-MAN AND MASTERS OF
THSUNMRSC

•

4*9
32 FUNTSTONES

November 12

TU ESD AY

CD 9 WHO'S THE BOSS? Michael

6:00
9 ® X ) 9 ( D 9 n ew s
3J (36) JfF PERSONS
(W ) MACNCIL / LEHREN
NCWSHOUR
9 («) HAPPY DAYS AGAJN

9

6*5
(DANOVQRNFTTN

8:30
I ® Ml

(D 9 A B C N E W S g
31 (30) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Murtsl end Henry wonder if
Sere is their reel daughter.
9 (0) LAVERNE 0 SHIRLEY

6*38
32 CAROL
FRWNOS

BURNETT

ANO

7:00
9 ® I K » .0 0 0 PYRAMID
CD 9 P M. MAGAZINE A treasure
hunt organized by Mat Fisher:
Angela Lantbury.

CD 9

jeo pard y

8

(36) BARNEY MILLER
(10) NATURE OF THINGS Fea­
tured: the Canadian Rockies: the
plants and birds ol Point Petee,
Canada's southernmost point.
9 (0) CARSON'S COMEDY CLAS­
SICS

7*05
(D MARY TYLER MOORE

7:30

9 ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with Dtahann Carroll.
® 9 PRICS IS RIGHT
&lt;D 9 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
3J) (36) BENSON
9 (0) ALL IN THE FAMILY

7:35
02 SANFORD ANO SON

9

8 *0

® A-TEAM Pro wraatlar Hulk
Hogan and announcer Gene Okerkjnd star as themselves as the ATeam enters the world ol profes­
sional wrestling to find a group of
mobslsra who are trying to close
down a youth center, g
X) 9
NORTH BEACH ANO
RAWWOE A hard-nosed »x-convict
(Wlillem Shatner) rehabilitates ur­
ban delinquents by shoeing them
the meaning of responsibility while
they work on hie dude ranch. Also
stars Christopher Penn and Tata
Donovan. (Part 1 of 3)

Q LEAVS fT TO I

3:30
&lt;D (S I) JAVCI AND TN I
WHBBJD WARN0RS
O(10)MMTER ROSSRS(R)
9(S)M JLSJL

lA N O TN M WORLD
) ONS U F I TO LIVE
.D A N D Y GROWTH
I (W ) B R U T CNSFS OF CM CA)(T U « )__________
(10) WOOOWRHHT* SHOD
(WED)
9 (W ) WORLD CHESS CHAMP!

8

o

TO
*9F COMFUTMB
W W W lF IM n O

) SANTA I

2 *0

m os te r fm c s th e a tr e

Nm T iTMACY: AN S t

3*0

9
(W ) ARTHUR &amp; CLANKS*
M VSnW OUS WORLD (TU I)

________

a W HAT* l|

1J0

1J0

9 m
(TUB)

)M*A*S*H

* IsT^M M IM B WITH HjOHA

I AS TNS WORLD TURNS

(D O I IHOUR MAGAZINE

MONDAY

R

MO

X N M C TM
) JOKER* WILD
W lSO N S

H1SUOV OF FABfTWB (TUB)
MS) MAGIC OF (ML FABfflNO

DAYS O F OUR LIMB
ALL MV 01W ORM
IOCR VANDYKE
IA N O M A DORM: TNG *
S A F TM P N M

m g

fJ O

(D 9 &lt;

8

) ALL-BTARBLTTZ
. . r p l o r e m b t y ie
I (M A IL ABOUT US (TUBERS

) ® d iv o r c e o o u r t
) 9 DONAHUE
) 9 TIC TAC OOUSH
J(36) WALTONS

IMPORT
MB AND

W H AT* HOT1 W H AT*

1 1 *0

M 6

$S2oo5rf

4J6

1SJ0

0 (9|K)vOTlCH

M O

•

)CAFTTOL

12*8

0SON

Is mors determined than aver to
gain custody of Jonathan. I Part 3 of
3 )g
(TD(35) HART TO HART
9 (10) NOVA "Child Survival The
Silent Emergency" An examination
of UNICEF efforts to Immunize chil­
dren in Third World countries
against preventable diseases, g
9 (•&gt; THORN BIROS After Mary
Carton's (Barbara Stanwyck)
death. Father Ralph (Richard
Chamberlain) leaves for Sydney af­
ter betraying Maggie (Rachel Ward)
and her (amity for the take of hit
career; he returni when a fire el
Drogheda results in tragic loaaea
lor the Cleary (amity. (Part 3 of 5)

5*5
32 NBA BASKETBALL Phoenix
Suns at New York Knicks

8:30
(D O GROWING PAINS While on
vacation. Maggie and Jason worry
about the kids when they phone
home and no one answers q

9:00
9

® RIPTIDE A Journalist hires
Cody. Nick and Murray to rind out
who's trying to kill her and why
X) Q
MOVIE "Wild Horses'
|Premiera) Kenny Rogers. Pam
Dewber. A former rodeo champion
quill his humdrum Job on an a v
sembly line and heads tor Wyoming
to taka part in a wild horse round­
up g
CD O MOONLIGHTING David
faars Ihat the estranged husband ol
a former girlfriend may be trying to
kill her. q
31 (38) QUINCY
O (W) WAR: A COMMENTARY BY
GWYNNE OYER The need to find an
alternative to war is illustrated by a
history of armed conflicts and
peaca movements since World War
tg

NM l

9 ( M ) M 0W V F U B L1 (THU)
9 (M ) ART OF SSMS HUM
(FRO

9 (•) 10RSAM OF JEANMS

5:36
(B BEVERLY HR.lEB.LMf
look at some meteneta - dfficovered by accident or deotgn — which
altered the course ol history. (R) g

9 (•) ROCKFORD FILES
10:20

52 MOVC "Pillow TaA" (1950)
Rock Hudson, Done Day. An Interi­
or decorator reluctantly agrees to
share e party Nne and Is angered lo
learn that the other party le a
romancing songwriter.

10:30

31 (35) BOS NEWHART

11*0
9 ® ® 9 (D 9 hrws

© (38) ARCHM BUNKER* FLACt
9 (« 0 ) OAVC ALLEN AT LARGS
9 (6) NIGHT GALLERY

11:30
9 ® TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson Scheduled ventrUoguM Jay
Johnson, singer James Taylor.

X ) 9 WKRF MCMCMNAT!
(D O ABC NEWS MOHTUNE
(ID (33) HAWAN F1VS-0
9 (•) TWNJQHT ZONE

12*0

SIMON 0*SBAON
CD 9 COMEDY BREAK WITH
MACK ANO JAMM Ousels: Mary
X) 9

Frann. Jett Altman.
(•) MOV* ‘‘Captain Horatio
Hornblower" (1931) Gregory Feck.
Virginia Mayo.

9
9

®
REMINGTON STEELE
Steele's date with a beautiful client
could prove most expensive when
ha realizes that ha may have tust
atoned away the detective agency
CD O
SPENSER FOR HIRE
Spenser becomes embroiled In In­
ternational intrigue when a client
asks him to protact her sister, an
attractive former spy g
3J (35) INDEPENDENT NEWS
9 (10) CONNECTIONS: AN AL­
TERNATE VIEW OF CHANGE The
Long Chain" James Burks takes a

12:30

® LATE MGHT WITH DAV®
LETTERMAN Scheduled: Pete
Townshend. aportacaster Mary Al­
bert. also, a stupid pel tricks seg­
ment
CD 9 MOV* "Thank You. Mr.
Molo" (1937) Peter Lorre. Sidney
Blackmer.
ID (M ) CHICO ANO THE MAN
52 MOVIE "My Six Convicts'
(1953) Millard Mitchell. Gilbert Ro­
land

1:00
3D (33) BIZARRE Sketches: cheap
surgery; Super Dave meets a pNe
driver

10:00
9

US

■HAV10R&lt;TUE) ■
9 (M) NSW LITERACY: AN BSTROOUCnON ITO

1:10

X ) O MOVIE "Hunt For A Lonely
Girl " (1973) Jamas Farentlno. Ray
Milland

1:30
3D (33) SCTV Sketches: Mali Sedaks (Levy) In "Farm Film Report";
"Days ot the Week.”

CD O

1:40

M OV* "SevagM " (1974)
Andy Griffith, Sam Bottoms.

2*0

3D (33) GUN8M0ME

’

l)&lt;! I.i

s x r .
O G E T SMART M O N )
9 d o o n g m l m w ( t u b FRS

4JO

® m C o8b AI

i IT S A M A T L M (TUG-

�Friday. Ww, t, im —»

V ie w e r Locates D ynasty's M o ld a v ia N e a r Russa
DMMMcki A n D m e m t m i m I writers of
"D ysM tf" a v a n that MaMavla la a stats la
ths U t i l , sf a ff m la a t s lj 13,100 sgsars
■Usa with Klsfcieev as Hs capital? If as, why
did thsy ass It as a aukgteal-mjrstieaJ ceeatry la
thsir story lias, urfeea, la reality, It Is a
commMMlst eseutry aad aa aallksly placs far
Iks eharactsrs sf “Dyaasty"? — K.D., Hsastsa,
Tsaaa.
T h e nam e Is the o n ly th in g the "D y n a s ty " w riters
borrow ed from re a lity. A c tu a lly , a cco rd ing to m y
atlas. M oldavia la a region o f R om ania. T h e area yo u
describe la the M o ldavian Soviet Socialist R epublic,
w hich Is adjacent to the region know n as M oldavia.
M oldavia Is next d o o r to th a t other real place that
sounds fake. T ra n s y lv a n ia . T h e "D y n a s ty " episodes
gave M oldavia a sea coast w h ile the real M oldavia Is
landlocked, so there o b vio u sly was no attem pt to
copy real life. T h e y Just th o u gh t the nam e sounded
rem ote a n d som ew hat ro m a n tic.

Dssr Disks la tks Otaris, “Ths KlUisf Fields,"
what la ths name aad composer of ths opera
Sam Watsrstoo la listening to In his Now York
apartment after ho rotnrna from Cambodia? —
H.C.i Amarillo, Toxaa.
T h a t w as an excerpt from P u ccin i’s "T u ra n d o t.”

Dear Disks Recently, one of yenr corre­

W EDNESDAY

November 13

dtecuaa memory W SOMtea(R|g
• 0| THORN SOWS WMh Mph
(Richard ChsnbartS n) unStm id a
in Roma, Maggie (Rachel Ward)

MO

LukaONeS^Syan Brown); a na-

ijU X n
MS

(9 AMOY QfMFFTTH

O MOWS "World War HT (1002)
(Part 1 oi 2) Rock Hudaon, David
m Dacambar 1M7. a aartea of

*90
EWSn
0S) TOO Cl OSS
FOOT A aaWeffacing Monro* tah*a
an aaaarttwana*a-lrS
mat luma ISn Mo on i
• 0 ) LAVISH! *J
t:3 6
Q

C AR O L

S3

SURMKTT

oovm

u n o rt m o m e w on o 10 m e

AND

married long enough to attend thair
surprise 201h-anntveraary parly, g
CD • DYNASTY m n prsud* to
“Dynasty N: The Co^rya." CSMomte
CDMJfOOASOV
potentate Jaaon Colby (Charlton
(fjj(34)BAR
NEYM
ILLE
R
«*
* &gt;enu
-» uvnvr otnusn
---mowo
iwLm
nssionj
• (i«t--------------Carrington
(John
Foraytho)
tec*
oS
iucc**a«u*y ri
aaS pup ah* r*acu*d and attampta in tha MSa High CNy. g
____
to reunite Iwr aunt and th* Canadi­ 8 0S)QMNCV
(W&gt; NON-FtCTtON T11SVWI0N
an scientist (David Birn*y) (Part 3
o!2)g
■ 0 ) CARSON’S C O M 0VC LAS- ly gay San Franctec
Harvay MM. and hte i
•White la aumlnad In Mite 1SS4
7106
Acadanty Awsd'winning documen*
O MARY TYLER MOORS
tary.g
PM. MAOA2MS Tony Dani*. a man who haa mad* a foriun*
liquidating bu

790

*90

. ---1.— .. i.i. j■o—
fwc.—
i «

imsrvisw wniri

®®

1

7:35

1190

® TONMKTHoS: Johnny Car-

arrhaa to
te: AaSrod'adtet i
® • EQUALIZER Th* E«Mdnr la
cSted upon to dtecovs who te
puaNng drug* lo prep-echool Su(Q) (3S) MOCFCNOSNT NEW!
■

0 ) ROCKFORD FUSS

1095

T h a t’s M ark H a rm o n , w ho plays D r. Caldw ell on
"St. E lse w h e re ."

Dear Dick: Can you toll mo whatever hap­
pened to BUI Elliot?—W.F., Joplin. Mo.
W ild BUI died in 1965 at the age of 61.

November 14

1190
® ® «® l

v e in s n i m.
w®

to prevent tha aaaaaSnaUon d a

• 0 ) HARRY OATS AOAM

*06

Sovts Union toad Mw world to the
brink S r

f ln m

too

c t&amp;

®

(AND JAMS
Kama, Carrte Snow.
• (R MOWS "The Lady In Th*
Lake" (1947) Robart Montgomery.
laon Am**.

Tha RuSi family
round S bickoring whan ►
cktostomakaouthtewS.
• 0UAV
___
Q CAROL OURNSTT AN0
HUM S

1290

790

(IMS) Brodarich Crawford. John

1290

• ® LATI MGHT WITH 0AVS&gt;
LITTfRMAN Scheduled: Martin
Short, lood acufpluro domonatra® ■ MOWS "l‘l B* SaSng You"
(IM S ) Qingor Roger*. Joaoph Cotten.

0 0S) CMCO AND THS MAN

190
0 0 f ) ETM 0RU: THS M QHTMAASCONTMUSS

1:10

® • MOWS "My* By* bravarman" (IS M ) Oaorga SagaL Jack
Wardan.

IV

F M MAOA2ME Nancy
r* halrdraaaar; an ownar S
an Saborate honaymoon raaort.
--------------AAOV
09) BARNEY MbACR
_ (10) NATURt Tha yas-iong so­
journ S arttet and naturalist KaNh
Brockla on Scotland** tel* S May te
captured on Nm. g

i

sr

290

O MOWS "Th* Mack Orchid"
(19SI) Sophia Loren. Anthony
Quinn.

990
• C m I S M MQMTWATCH
(34) ILOVC LUCY

990
® • MOWS "A MS OI Divorce­
ment" (1S32) John Barrymore, Ka-

( S MOWS "Tha Wreck OI Th*
Mary Daara" (IS M ) Gary Coopar.
Charlton Heston. A ahip'a Shear te
I by Mw SUppar S a
in ctearing hte nama S i

O0MRHOOA

1090

(D0MRHOOA

Ikuiaa
inenne i epouni.

796

4:40

( I f ) THIS OLD HOUSS Lighting
for th*

®

•

1990
®

•

MQHT M A T A i
&gt;luma bite a night-

Bum. Charite Cabas, Jsmte Jonaa.
• f k MOWS "Cam* FB Ths Cup"
(ttS I) Jama* Cagney, Gig Young.

_ l ((10) m m JOURMSYS
Author
8WINtem
'
Showcroaa travel* the
0S)OUSfCV

Mekong from Ho CN MW\ City (formarly Saigon) to the tomptao ot
Angkor WS. g

®

1890
®

MMON S MM0N The

ENtabath (Caran Kay*) and i
Hv* 8am Penny (Robert Lanaktg) to
tw Woo on Mw oniy recorded
i from Alcsrar.

• ®

LATI MQHT WITH D A W

Harwwr, comedian Sam Kamtteon.
® 61 AT T H i M O W S Schaduted
review*. “TargS" (Malt DOkm,
Gan* Hackman); "ThS Was Than...
This te Now" (EmHo Estevaz);
"Bring on the Night" (Sling).
H o i ) CHICO AND THE MAN

190
(D ■
M O W "Good Morning.
Mtes Dove" (1PM) JanSter Jonas,
Robert 8teck.
&lt;D) 0S) H A R R B Sketches: Richard
M|Irei mi

a I/,r

— «- ||u min nl w

O tnwTlUfl* lO f rT O O N O n i, in O D iy O la ,

a U S with Sister Fredrika Pteroa.

1:10

1090

m u . STRmr sm m
• KNOTS LANOBfS VS and

plane; Gary thinks hs may bo Mw
toMwr S Varo twbw. g
® • SO / M Schaduted: Hugh

796

imnsusMTsom

• ® C H O RS Th* boya s Mw bar
con)ure a phony roaponoo to C s la'aporaonSad.

® P fTP rriM fM SH T TOfSOHT

flk fRALL St THS FAIRLY

) 0S) HAWAS RVS-S

1290

een e e wui tim kwivnun.

CD m FISCS • RKJHT
^ m WHOBLOF FORTUNS

1190

® TOfSOHT HoS: Johnny Car-

"Fado In" (1PM) Burt

wlwn ha falta to g S along with his

® m M O W "Mteelon To Glory"
(1177) Richard Egan. Ricardo Mon-

Q

190

0S) SCTV

Como (Levy) hypos hte
SCTV*

■

®

COSBY SHOW can glvoa

para* to buy har SrS c s . g
® 0 M AO ISM . SX

contracting
them to aohw a

S bathing

TO HART
A vteM to

to ob-

to th* re-

8 10)
V 3THORN I

tar tha birth of har dauohter. MaoOte (RachS Ward) goaa Son* to an

- ' ' (I

i a report on "Photon," a
nun-vecn cope a rooaeri gemei o

(D 0M Q UN SM O KI

CAN STAR WARS MAKS US
SAFCT A critiquo d Mw proposad

&lt;D MOWS "Th* L-Shaped Room"
( 1M3) Loaite Caron. Tom BoS.

g P k M o e je e e ff

cohort* ambark on * i
It-nMSon buried
SUIford.CNpf
®0SHADO
lore) Trevor Eva and Dannte Dugan

490

O WORLD AT LAR S!

■

2 *f,

• ® fSSHT COURT Don's fired

790

0 0S| A FTm SSNNV HRX

490

FAkSLV IM S Atea'a

*90

Q MARY TYLB I MOORS
m

!

0RARCM SM
(10) DAYS ALLSN AT LARGS
(RNKtefTOALLKRY

® m WKRPMCSfCMSfATI

*06

1890
a
.hi m rn
-------&gt;
ssiretr
u m on—
w gw in s

HD0S)BOSNSWHART

O MOWS "World WS NT (1*02)
(Part 2 of 2) Rock Hudaon, David
Soul. In Dacambar HS7, a astea of
increaaingly hoatha confrontadona

® • TJ.H 00M W Hooks flghta
through government fM tope end

® M NM S

*00

Dear Dick: Who Is the good-looking man who
docs the Cooro boor commercials? — Mrs.
C.A.H., Houston. Tonus.

later. Dana (PhMp AnghmK
gte'a bSovad ton by Ralph, announcaa Ihat has entering tha
prlaShood. (Part 4 S 5)

(10) DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE
0)MGMT GALLERY

290

® ST.

"E a s t of E d e n ," w h ich starred Ju lie H arris as
teadlng la d y, was m ade In 1995. M eryl Streep w as
b o m in 1949. She w ould have been 6 years o ld
w hen "E a s t of E d e n " w as m ade, h a rd ly old enough
lo cavort w ith Jam e s Dean. Miss Streep’s first m ovie
was " J u lia " In 1977. It Is possible yo u r wife is
th in k in g of the 1981 T V version of "E a s t of E d e n ."
but the leading lady w as Jan e Se ym o ur.

TH U R S D A Y

® M MOWS "Dlnnar At Tha RKt"
(1937) ArwwbSte. David Nlvan.
0 0E)O U N EM O K E

1090

Dear Dicks Please help settle a dispute
between my wife aad myself. Meryl Streep had
the lead la “The French Lieutenant's Wemaa."
My wife claims ska also played the lead la
“East of Eden" but I disagree although I cannot
remember the asms of the fsasals lead In "East
of Eden." Please settle this dispute. — W.D.,
Eulamaeoe.

1190

290

I (S) ALL M THS PAMS.V

8

IS

'ift 'Mi product, including i
couple who have been log**
M yoara and an *» waitr*** in
(R)

(D M0VW "Ai Tha King** Man"

7:00

■ ® HMkHWAY TO HSAVSN
Math and Jonathan try to ravHalMo
a tmanciady aSng minor loaguo
baaebaMteam, g
CD •
WORTH KACH AND
RAWMOC Rawhideand tha Conn*#y boya band togathar to pruront
Cassidy from revoking th* ranch Ncana* Jamaa Otaon, Lori LoughKn.
(Put 2 o!2)
(D O IMSPSAS Foa and Mackay
diacovar avidanoa linking an inter*
nations vaaapona doolor wMh a
drug-deaMng motorcycte gang. g
0S) HART TO HART
(TO) THS SRASt An aasnSaSon
or change* ths occur m tha brain
during teaming: actress Kitty Carbate. author Georg*

spondents asked yon abent a small electronic
devise to repel nogs, it had boon shewn on
“Mason h Mason" aad yon answered that the
“liman I Simon" people told yon It woe a real
devise, bat they did not know Its name. I can
tell yon It le called a Dog Chaser, and anyone
Interested la It can write to Electronics For
Industry, 8730 8.W. 131st 8t.. Miami, PL
33188. - H.L.C., Clayton, IMI.
Thank yon for that Inforautlon, aad my
correspondents thank yon. I doubt whether
any dogs will thaak you.
Dear Dicks Didn't Parker Stevenson of
“Falcon Crest" marry Klrstlo Alloy la 1934 or
was It 1983? They were married some time
before Chrlstasas. Are they still married aad
will he appear In future episodes of “Falcon
Crest"? - M.N.. LaPucate, Calif.

® m W KRM t CStCSeiATI
f f i 9 ASC NSWS MOHTUNS
O0S)HAWASnVS-O
M 0 ) TWSJQHT ZONS

hop* that a tansy wM
down. (Sari 3 of S)

• (S) HAPFV DAYS AOAM

Parker a n d K lrstie . still h a p p ily un ited , w ere
m arried in Decem ber 1983. He Is no longer a part of
"F a lco n C re s t." how ever.

290

Strategic Oafanao teWSha ("Star
Ware") Including ascan** bom a
World Affaire Council s rTiiTarftT

®SNEW S

view* mHh membert of the media,
mtitary, ecebevnlc end lepN convmunMee knclustino Seeretenf off De-

B C m NEWS MQMTWATCH
■ MOWS T a k e AJ Ot Me”
(1971) Richard Johnson. Pamela

S

York Tlnwo
Smith hoot*.
• 0ISOCKFORDFUS

(D 0 S ) I LOVE LUCY

290
990

990
(D O S ) AFTER SOSIYMLL

1096
O MOWS "The WTwSar
(1903) Jama* Gamer. Las
A rich Taaan travels to Nan York to.*

*•t

,%#'/

490
(D)0S)RHOOA ’
....................4 :3 0
. ...
IQ fW R H O M . . -

�I

§ -iw * H HocH, SoMsrd, FI.

F r t -y .W j.

G O GUIDE
Golden Age Games Saturday,
Nov. 9. Sanford. Track and
field, 9 a.m.. Seminole High
School; shufficboard, 9 a.m..
Fort Mellon Park; horseshoes.
9:30 a.m.. Fort Mellon Park;
croquet. I p.m.: Fort Mellon
Park.
Great Day In the Country
sponsored by Oviedo Woman's
Club. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.. St.
Luke Lutheran Church, State
Road 426. Slavla. Arts, crafts,
entertainment and food. Free
children's sculpture workshop.
S h o w S t o p p e r s C lu b , a
non-profit children's theater
group, presents Dracula at 7:30
p m.. Friday. Nov. 8. and 2
p.m. Saturday. Nov. 9. and
Charlotte's Web. Saturday.
Nov. 9 at 7:3 0 p.m. and
Sunday. Nov. 10 at 2 p.m. at
the U n iv e rsity o f C entrul
Florida's Black Box Theater In
the Science Audltorlum.Tlckcts
•3.
Dcllona-DcBary Rotary Club

new Item and services auction,
starting at 10 a.m.. Nov. 9 at
Dew ey-Boster Park. Saxon
Boulevard. Deltona. Food and
beverages available, but bring
your own chair.
Lo ch H a ve n A rt C e n te r
Sunday Brunch. 11:30 a.m..
Nov. 10 featuring operatic
tenor Louis Roney. Brunches
will be held on second Sunday
or the month through May.
Volusia C ounty Fair and
Youth Show runs through Nov.
12. weekdays 4 1 1 p.m.; Friday
Nov. 8. noon to 11 p .m .:
Saturdays, noon to 11 p.m.;
Sunday. Nov. 3. noon to II
p.m.; Nov. 10. noon to 6 p.m
State Road 44 East at 1-4
Interchange. DeLand. Free en­
tertainment.
.
Halley’s Comet automated
show at John Young Planetari­
um. Orlando Science Center
B10E. Rollins St. .Orlando.

General Sanford

Museum

and Library. Fort Mellon Park.

520 E. First St.. Sanford. 2-5
p .m .. S u n d a y . W c d n c sday.Thursday. and Friday. Ex­
hibit of art work by Helen
Hickey and E.B. Stowe.
Seminole County Museum.
H i g h w a y 1 7 -9 2 at B u sh
Boulevard, in old Agri-Ccnter-County Home building. 9
a .m . to 1 p .m ., M o n d a y
through Friday. Call 321-2489
for evening and afternoon ap­
pointments. Sunday. 2-4 p.m.
Auto Fair '85 featuring 1.000
cars to be consigned to the
antique-classic car auction, the
car corral, the car show and the
new-car display. Nov. 8-10.
Central Florida Fairgrounds.
W. Highway 50. Orlando.
Handicap Singles Nlghtblrds
Dance. Weslmonte Park. 500
Spring Oaks Blvd.. Altamonte
Springs, every second and
fourth Friday. Hours. 7:30-9:30
p.m. Admission 35 cents. Call
C laudia Harris. Weslm onte
Park. 862-0090.

Artists League of Orange
County gallery. Casselberry
Wilshire Plaza. Stale Road 436.
Monday to Saturday 10 a.m. to
7 p.m. Free to the public.
Florida's Hidden Heritage, a
collection of wildlife paintings
by National Geographic artist
Diane Pierce, will he on display
at DeLand Museum of Art.
through Nov. 17. 449 E. New
York Avc.. DeLand.
Program of Schubert, De­
bussy and Sehumunn pres­
ented by pianist David Renner
at the University of Central
Florida. 3 p.m. In the music
rehearsal hall. 83 donation to
the music scholarship fund.
Seminole. On Stage presents
Noel Coward's Private Lives, 8
p.m. Nov. 18 and 25 at the
E n zlan T h eatre, H ig h w a y
17-92. Maitland. Call 339-3548
Tor details.
Nature hike each Saturday.
10 a.m.. Weklwa Springs State
Park. Extended dav hike. 12:30

p.m .. every third Saturday of
the month. Two-hour animal
and plant Identification trip
12:30 p.m.. each first Saturday
Call 889-3140 for Information!
Canoe lessons each Saturday at
8:30 a.m..
Thlrty-*two exhibits on Ijooks
a n d m a n u s c r ip t s front a
Babylonian clay tablet to the
present time. Morse Gallery of
Art. 151 E. Wclbourne Avc..
Winter Park. 9:30 a.m. to 4
p.m'.. Tuesday through Satur­
day and 1-4 p.m. Sunday.
Admission $2.50 for adults: I I
for children. Parking available
on Center Street. Through Feb
2. 1986.
University of Central Florida
Madrigal Dinners. Dec. 10-14. 7
p.m .. UC F Student Center.
Proceeds go to Music Depart­
ment Scholarship Fund. Tradi­
tional yule dinner und enter­
tainment. For reservations and
Information, call the Music
Department at.275-2867.

Queen of Daytine TV' Cultivates Loyal Fans

By Dick K
Kleiner
lataar

2.500 fans — from us far awav
away
H O L L Y W O O D (N E A l —
as Australia — showed up. It's
Deldrc Hall. In many polls, a big event and gives fans u
walks aw ay with the title. chance to chat with Deldrc
"Queen or Daytime T V ." There personally. Last year. L o i
arc a couple of other ladies — Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley
S u s a n L u e c i und J a c k ie proclaimed Deldrc Hull Day
Zcrnan. for example — who during the festivities.
might contest that crown, but
She has a carefully arranged
eertulnly Deldrc Hull Is way up network of fan clubs that she
there in any such balloting.
personally supervises. There Is
There are several reasons a newsletter that rivals large
why Miss Hall - Dr. Marietta corporate newsletters In jour­
Evans on NBC's "Days of Our nalistic skills.
Lives" — is so popular. She Is a
And her fans return her love
good actress playing a sympaand loyalty. Some time ago. the
th c tlc r o le . S h e is v e r y
beautiful, but women enjoy show's storyline threatened
Marlena Evans' lire and. hence,
watching her as well as men.
the continuing presence of
But perhaps her outstanding
quality Is that she cares as Deldrc Hull on the show .
much about her fans as they Hundreds of her bins showed
l itre about her. Most stars lake up ill the studio to picket and
protest, und hundreds more
the attentions of their fans for
called with angry threats.
granted and barelv deign to
acknowledge those attentions.
"I like to associate with my
Deldrc Hall, on the other fa n s ." say s D e ld rc . " O n e
hand, goes out of her wav to reason Is that people respond to
cultivate her fans. She re­ the good things in Marlena. 1
cognizes that It Is because or don't get the crazies. I get
the fans that she is popular s u h s t a n t lu I. w e ll-fo c u s e d ,
and. therefore, she w orks well-directed people. Cult funs
(MThaps as hard at pleasing don't gravitate to Marlena."
them as she docs at acting.
Because of her outstanding
Every year, for example, she relationship with her fans, she
puts on a "Deldrc Hall Lun- Is about to launch something
chbrcak." which lasts for an brand-new. She’s going to apentire wcekeiul. At the most jH'ar In u video und plans to
recent of those galas, some produce others commercially

vit u,m
_______ ____
"It will never uppeur on
television anywhere." she says.
"It will only be sold to people
directly, to view In their own
homes. It will consist of many
elements — me visiting with
som e of my fans, a tour
through my house, going to my
local ham burger stand and
going to the beach. Wayne
N orth rop, w h o played my
husband on the show at one
time, drops by.
"It's all personal stufT — my
neighborhood, my house, my
dogs and my eats. The working
title Is 'Private Session.
"It allows a celebrity — me.
In the first one — to talk openly
und have the right of privacy
and the right of censorship. In
mine. I talk about a love affair I
had with a fan. I would never
talk about that any other place,
because I would have no con­
trol over It. but here I do."

. .
She says she has a year to go
on her present contract with
the show. (She won't say how
long she hus been on the show,
because then, she says, "peo­
ple start counting on their
fingers and try to figure out
how old I am ." But NBC says
she has been on the show for 8
Vi years.)
Chances are good she will
renew the contract. A s she
says. "I have a lot of equity In

DON'T GET CAUGHT
WITHYOUR PLANTS DOWN!
The Next
Cold Spoil May
Be Too Late!
Greenhouses from 8'xl'
lo 10’»20' fully equipped.

Msksssgrsat Christmas gift!

QAZBBOS
•Custom Designed
• Over 40 Models On
Display

Social Security Disability
We Specialize In:

•

. •*?!? ClA,MS * ^ considerations
•BENEFITSCUT OFF •HEARINGSBEFORETHEJUDGE

W A R D W HITE ft A S S O C IA TE S
ifvcr 30
m i rrs.
x per
IOver
Yrs. lExperience)
Free Contuffatton

•
Marlena." But she Is also doing
other things now. She has
guest-starred In show s like
"H o tel" and "Hot Pursuit."
and co-starred in a TV movie.
" A Reason to Live." with Peter
Fonda.
Her career might serve as a
good example to other actors,
w h o feel that fa n s are a
nuisance. Deldrc Hall Is prov­
ing that fans can be a big boost
up the ladder.

“ MIIS BRONSON’ "

D epth [fl/lvM J

lojmwooo

IUSB.BVr.lMl
'. 8

• Sizes From
6’x6’ to 24'x50'
• Free Set Up-Free Delivery

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218141">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, November 08, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218142">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218143">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on November 08, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218144">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218145">
                <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;, November 08, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218146">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218147">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218148">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218149">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21849" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21453">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/7c67a944185835666aa57540e9ef7cd1.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d6825fba9fce1ee9c616adf632326673</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218160">
                    <text>Foul Play Ruled Out In Skeleton Finds
By Susan Loden
Herald S ta ff W riter
An Ovldeo police detective today pondered a
Wednesday morning human bone find on church
property In his city and said the remains, portions
of three skeletons, were apparently burled at an
organized site. Foul play was ruled out. he said.

D ru g

Mars said that apparently was a rather common
burial practice for migrant workers who died In
the 1930s or '40s. the estimated time these
bodies were burled.

Indicates they were located In an orange grove,
not an olTlclal part of a cemetery.
Two of the graves were seven feet apart and the
other was 12 feet away. He said authorities will
not explore the area to try to locate more graves,
but more may be found as construction con­
tinues.

However, detective Lou Mars said, officials are
theorizing the burial site was never part of an
official cemetery associated with the First Baptist
Church of Oviedo of 45 W. Broadway St., which
owns the site, but were apparently burled
between the rows of an orange grove.

“ We're Just guessing at this point." he added.
Three graves were unearthed after workmen
digging a trench to lay electrical conduit for the
church started uncovering bones about 100 feel
from a site that at one time had been an official
church graveyard. The bodies had been moved
from that official graveyard. Mars said, to make
room for church construction. They had been
reburied at another location.

Health department officials and the county
medical examiner visited the site Wednesday,
Mars said, and found no problems with how the
find Is being handled. A portion of a set of
dentures found with the bones helped to date the
find.

n ____ .
. , _ , .
Bones found In Oviedo
m igranfs.

Mars said the spacing of the graves and orange
tree roots found growing between the separate
graves, found at about 9 a.m. Wednesday.

The bones: a skull, leg bones, vertebrae and
possibly rib bones. Mars said, were turned over to
the Seminole County Sheriffs Department.

,
.
.
m ay have been of

Sanford Firm
Officials To
M eet Bush In
China Today

Test

County Principals
Propose Program
For Local Athletes
By Sam Cook
Herald Sporta Editor
Darvln Boothe, principal at
Lake Brantley High School and
president of the S em in ole
Athletic Conference (SAC), said
Wednesday that the SAC has
begun preliminary work Into
adopting a drug-testing program
for Its athletes and expects It to
be Implemented for the 1986-87
school year.
Boothe said lie and the other
principals of the first-year con­
ference — Seminole's Wavnc
E p p s . L a k e M a r y 's D o n
Reynolds. Lym an 's Carlton
Henley. Oviedo’s Charlie Webb
and Lake/ Howell's Dick Evans —
have formed a committee to set
up guidelines.
"Our Intent Is good hut we
haven't thrown out the first ball
yet." Boothe said. “ We're In a
very preliminary stage. If our
p r o g r a m Is s o m e t h i n g
worthwhile, we'd like to go do It
for a year and then introduce It
as a state project."
Boothe said another step
toward that objective will be
realized Friday when Lake
Brantley will hold an Inscrvlcc
day for all county coaches from
7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The
Inservice workshop will deal
with drug and alcohol problems
at the high school level.
Reynolds said the Importance
of Friday's meeting could not be
emphasized enough. "Friday’s
meeting Is very important."
Reynolds said. "Hopefully, we'll
get the backing of our coaches
and then we'll be the first
conference In tire nation to
Im p le m e n t an h o n est -1o g o o d n e s s e f f e c t i v e d ru g-

deterrent program."
Reynolds, a Florida delegate,
said he came upon the Idea at
the National Activities Associa­
tion meeting in Lexington. Ky.
last summer. "Tw o schools from
Wisconsin or Minnesota were
talking about It and I thought.
'Boy. that's a great Idea.’" he
said. "We're reallv excited about
It."
Reynolds said he already has
the support of the National
Coaches Association. He and
Tom Roll, drug education re­
source person for the Seminole
County School Board, met with
the NCA's national director.
Carey McDonald, last month and
Reynolds said McDonald gave
ills complete support. " If we are
successful, fhrrc could be pro­
grams all across the country like
tills." Reynolds said.
Testing of athletes, however. Is
Just part of the program. Boothe
said. "We're studying a total
drug education counseling and
enforcement program for our
conference." Boothe said. "W e
are going to study for possible
usage of random drug testing.
We believe we will have some­
thing intact for that by next
year."
Boothe said although the pro­
ject Is in the preliminary stage. It
has already gotten the backing
of the county's principals and
athletic directors. He stressed,
however, that an undertaking of
tills magnitude would need the
support of everyone Involved.
"There's a lot of work to he
done." he said. "W e need the
backing of the school board if we
do something as drastic as
See DRUG, page 6A

H *r«M PlMto by T im m y VIncant

Prom otion P in n e d
Seminole County D irecto r of Public Safety
G ary Kaiser pins assistant chief's insignia
on collar for new ly prom oted T erra n c e L.
Schenk, 33. Schenk was B attalion F ire
Chief. Kaiser said Assistant Chief Schenk
w ill be in com m and of one of three shifts
of firefig h ters and param edics operating
to protect the unincorporated areas of the

county. The flre /re s c u e division operates
ten fire stations serving m ore than 120,000
residents. Schenk is a g rad u ate of the
U n ive rs ity of C entral F lo rid a w here he
m ajo red in public ad m in istratio n and Is on
the Seminole C om m unity College faculty
as an instructor In the F ire Science
pro g ram .

Police Kill Blacks Near Cape Town
CAPE TOWN. South Africa
(UPI) — Police killed as many us
six people In renewed racial
rioting In segregated townships
near Cape Town, raising the
death toll In two days of violence
to at least 10.
Police said today they shot two
blacks — one In the Athlone
township near Cape Town and
another In Soweto near Port
Elizabeth — In battles with

r io t e r s o v e r n ig h t . P o lic e
wounded three other blacks In
Athlone and arreted at least 40
others.
The government Wednesday
withdrew the passports of eight
white Afrikaans students from
the University of Stellenbosch
near Cape Town who were
planning to meet with the Afri­
can N u tlon al C on gress In
Zambia.

President Pieter Botha Is
chancellor of Stellenbosch, a
staunchly conservative and
pro-government university. He
denounced the proposed talks
between the students and youth
wing olTlclals of the ANC.
The Ministry of Home Affairs
In Pretoria said the meeting
between the students and the
See K ILL, page 6A

Star O f Sanford A sked To Pay $30,000 For Dumping
T h e s ta te D ep a rt m e n t o I
Environmental Regulation has asked
the Star of Sanford to pay 830.000 for
allegedly dumping sewage three
times Into the St. Johns River.
The payment Is not only to punish
the Star of Sanford cruise line for the
reported dumping, but to serve as a
warning to other users of the St.

Johns that the DER considers the of Sanford, could not be reached for
issue ail Important one. said George comment today. Earlier, however, he
Glonis. manager of the DER's en­ said If something was dumped Into
the river from the ship It was not
forcement section In Orlando.
Glonis said he expects Star of sewage but gray water which con­
Sanford officials to contest the tains kitchen and bar water, and
830.000 figure. Graham Norman, treated sewage.
If ship officals balk at paying the
general manager of Star Line Carp.,
which owns the 364-passcnger Star amount the case could go to court

D o c to r T o S to p G iv in g
O f E x e c u te d P r is o n e r s

B r a in

T is s u e

To R e s e a rc h e r

"Dr. Hamilton followed the
WEST PALM BEACH (UPI)
letter of the law and the
— A Gainesville medical exam­
guidelines of the medical ex­
iner will no longer donate
aminer’s office.” he said."I
brain parts of executed in­
mates to a researcher without
had no problems with what he
consent of next of kin. the
did."
In her study. Leonard was
chairman of a regulatory body
looking for evidence whether
says.
Dr. William Hamilton, medi­ childhood trauma was linked
to adult violent behavior.
cal exam in er o f Alachuu
Florida law says those who
County, removed brain tissue
of 11 of 13 men who have died . die in prisons must undergo
in Florida’s electric chair since
an autopsy to find cause of
death. But Hamilton's dona­
1979. He gave the matter to
Dr. Christina Leonard, a pro­
tion to Leonard of the brain
tissue has come under fire.
fessor of neuroscience at the
"T o me. medical research
University of Florida, for re­
does not Include whether child
search.

violence "may not lead to any
Immediately conclusive re­
sults. but may suggest further
avenues of investigation which
ultimately prove to be of con­
siderable public benefit.
"It is my belief that such
study Is both medically and
ethically sound." Hamilton
said. " T h e p o ssib ility o f
tr a u m a tic In ju r y , t o x ic
exposure or natural disease
providing an organic basis for
violent behavior is not a novel
suggestion."
Florida Attorney General
Jim Smith said last week the
research appeared to be legal.

b e h a v i o r l e d to v i o l e n t
behavior, which led to execu­
tion ." said Susan Cary, a
lawyer who had helped defend
the death row inmates.
She said neither the families
nor attorneys of the executed
were told brain matter would
be used for such research.
Studies of the brains of those
with a history of criminal

"H o w ever, there remains
certain m oral an d ethical
questions which are legiti­
mately raised and which need
to be resolved ... ." he said in
an Oct. 11 opinion.
The commission voted to
appoint an Advisory Commit­
tee on Ethics for Medical
Examiners that Graves said
woul d discuss the issue-

" D r . H a m i l t o n w i l l do
autopsies on prisoners, will
retain brain tissues, but is not
going to send slides over to Dr.
Leonard, and Dr. Leonard 1s
not going to look at slides."
said Dr. Wallace Graves Jr..
head o f the state Medical
Examiners Commission.
But Graves said Hamilton
will not be disciplined.

i

i

where a Judge would deciding the
amount of liability.
"They have indicated they don't
think It is worth that amount and the
department Is trying to establish a
precedent." Glonis said.
The cruise company had fuccd up
to a 870.000 liability settlement.
See SHIP, page 6A

Craxi Resigns
Autopsy Shows Klinghoffer
Was Shot In Head, Chest
ROME (UPI) — Prime Minister Bcttlno Craxi
resigned and dissolved his Italian government
over his handling of the Achille Laura hijacking
toduy and doctors confirmed the presence of
bullet wounds In the head and chest of American
hostage Leon Klinghoffer.
Craxl's resignation was forced when the
Republican Party withdrew- from the five-party
governing coalition Wednesday because party
leader and Defense Minister Giovanni Spadollnl
was outraged at last week’s releusc of PLO official
and suspected hijacking mastermind Mohammed
Abbas.
In Genoa, the Achille Lauro pulled Into hurbor
to thunderous applause Wednesday night. Itallun
officials boarded the luxury liner earlier this week
to investigate the hijacking and said they
"cleared up every detail" of KlInghofTcr’s killing.
But U.S. officials said five FBI agents would
board the ship today to begin their own
investigation and would remain aboard. If
necessary, during the ship's next cruise, sched­
uled to begin later in the day.
Kllngholfer's body washed ashore in Syria
Sunday. It was Identified by U.S. forensic experts
In Damascus Wednesday and shipped aboard a
commercial night to Rome, where It was taken to

Sanford businessmen were to
meet today with Vice President
George Bush and Chinese of­
ficials In Guangzhou. China, to
f in a liz e p lan s to b u ild a
helicopter plant In that city.
The official sign­
ing of the Jointv e n tu re m u l t i ­
million dollar con­
tract between Or­
lando H elico p ter
A irw ays and the
G u an gzh ou T o o l
T roy
Ma n u f a c t u r i n g Simmona
Company Is scheduled for Oct.
28. said Lisa Simpson, office
manager for the company based
at the Sanford Airport.
Ms. Simpson said today that
company chairman. Fred Clark.
Its vice president. Bradley Clark,
and Troy Simmons, vice presi­
dent In charge of sales, arrived
In the Chinese city Tuesday after
leaving Sanford Friday. Ms.
Simpson Is In dully contact with
the Americans through a wire
service.
T h e S a n fo rd c o m p a n y 's
helicopter know-how drew the
Interest of the Chinese for two
reasons: It "rcmanufactures"
helicopters from surplus and
salvaged parts thus cutting Us
purchase price 76 percent: and.
It makes the only helicopter on
the market that runs on regular
gasoline, according to Simmons.
Bush was to meet with the
Sanford men and the Chinese
officials in Guangzhou as part of
his 5-day tour of the country.
Bush had been scheduled to
meet with the delegation Wed­
nesday but the get-together was
apparently postponed, perhaps
fo r s e c u r ity rea son s. Ms.
Simpson said.
Guangzhou Is China's tenth
largest city.
The 20-year contract creating
Guangzhou Orlando Helicopter
Ltd. calls for the construction of
u 25.000 square-foot factory.
See MEET, page 6A

g

TODAY
Action Reports......3A
Bridge......... ........ 2B
Calendar..... ..........5A
Classifieds.. ....4B.5B
Comics........ ..........2B
Crossword... ......... 2B
Dear Abby... ......... IB
Deaths........ ......... 6A
Dr. Gott....... ......... 2B

V '(
i.

Editorial...... ........ 4A
Horoscope............. 2B
Hospital....... ........ 2A
Nation......... ......... 2A
People......... ....1B.3B
Sports.......... ...7A-9A
Television.... ....... 3B
Weather................ 6A
World........... ......... 6A

N o t Disconnected
Fears that the Golden Age Games might
be behind the 8-ball — as far as the billiards
events are concerned — arc apparently
unfounded.
Ernie Butler, chairman of the competition,
got a shock when he tried Tuesday to check
with Wooglc's Pub. 3863 U.S. Highway
17-92, where the event Is scheduled to be
held, and found It closed.
Butler said he
also tried the company’s four other pubs In
Seminole County as well and got a recording
saying the phones had been disconnected.
For the past few years the popular Golden
Age Games billiards tournament has been
held at the pub because it has six pool tables
— more than any other place In Sanford.
With the annual senior citizen games
scheduled to begin Nov. 4 a frantic Butler
asked the Games Executive Committee
Wednesday to suggest alternative sites.
But Wooglc's owner Donald L. Bajgier.
when contacted at his home later Wednes­
day. explained the telephones at the pubs
have all been disconnected and pay phones
Installed because too many people were
using them. He said the pubs are not closed.
The Sanford Wooglc's was closed temporari­
ly Tuesday night because of a power
problem there and It will, he said, be
available for use during the Games.

—Jsas Csssslbsrry
4

Bss RESIGNS, page 6A

i

�2A — E v e n ing H t r i l d , S an to rd . F I.

T h u rs d a y . O ct. IT , 1985

NATION
IN BRIEF
Suspect In Fatal Bombings
Identified; Charges Pending
SALT LAKE CITY (UI’ I) - Authorities plan to file
weapons chart's against a man ertlleally woinuled by a
bomb that exploded in bis ear and say they consider him to
be a suspect In booby-trap bombings that killed two other
people.
The suspect. Mark Holman. 30. was ertlleally injured
Wednesday when a bomb exploded In his ear in downtown
Salt Lake City Officials salt! they searched Holman’s ear
and home and uncovered "Incriminating evidence" against
him.
Holman sold a controversial document raising questions
about the origins of the Mormon Church It) one victim of
Tuesday's booby-trap bombings. Steven Christensen. 31. a
businessman and Mormon bishop. The other bombing
killed Katherine Sheets, 50. the wife of Christensen's
partner in a failing business.
Police Chief Hud Willoughby and Jerry Miller, an agent
for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
said Wednesday Holman was a suspect in the bombings,
thill ill least three other victims may have been targeted,
and thiit other people may have- been conspirators In the
bombings.
“ We re seeking it complaint charging Mark Holman with
violations of federal firearms and explosives laws." Miller
said. "We have (other) possible victims, There are some
people named three more possible targets.”
Holman was in critical condition today at LDS Hospital.
Miller said agents believed revenge was a possible motive
for the attacks but would not elaborate. He said there were
"possibly other people we will be looking at. maybe
co-conspirators."

Unfair Trade Probe O rdered
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan has avoided
tougher measures in ordering unfair-trade investigations of
European wheat exports and Korean patent laws but his
move still puts teeth in U S. trade policy, officials say.
But members of Congress, particularly front areas hard
hit by the Hood of imports into the American market, say
Reagan’s action is too little and loo late.
Today House Democratic leaders planned to unveil their
comprehensive trade package — the results of a task force
formed last spring to counter what they then called "the
Reagan administration's inaction on trade."
Like the Republican trade package unveiled last week,
the Democratic plan Is expected to Include steps to counter
the overvalued US. dollar, curb unfair foreign trade
practices and Improve U.S. export promotion and financ­
ing.
It also would provide assistance to workers and
industries displaced by imports.

Estrogen Risk Said Serious
BOSTON (UPI) — Women who undergo estrogen therapy
lor menopause are 3 1a times more likely to develop uterine
cancer, and the risk does not decline after the treatments
stop, medical researchers warned today.
The team of Boston University doctors said a study of
more than 1.200 menopausal women showed the use of
estrogen also greatly Increases the danger of cancer
spreading beyond the uterus to other organs. They said the
risk arises in women who have taken estrogen fora year or
more
"The risk remains elevated for many years after
cessation of use." said the report, published in the New
England Journal ol Medicine.
The doctors did not recommend banning the treatments,
but said women who have not had hysterectomies and who
have used estrogen for a year or more should lie considered
lor long-term gynecologic surveillance, regardless of when
the hormone was last used.
Scientists have known since the late 1970s the risk of
cancer increased with the use of the hormones to counter
adverse effects of menopause. But it was generally believed
the danger was confined to cancer of the uterus and that
the risk subsided once tfit- treatments stopped.

Balanced Budget Questioned
WASHINGTON (UP!) — House Democrats, while
embracing the idea nt balancing the budget, used the first
day of talks with the Senate to debate the specifics of a
Senate-passed measure that would bring lederal linances
into the black.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski. D ill., leader ol the House
conlerees. said Wednesday he wants to reduce the deficit
"as much as any of the other men and women in this
room." But he cautioned that he hoped "in our sincere
search lor fiscal self-discipline we don't lose our sense of
fairness and balance."
He also said the primary concern ol the conference is to
lilt the federal debt ceiling from SI.8 trillion to $2 trillion
"to keep the government solvent."
The balanced budget proposal is licit to the debt ceiling
Increase, likely to lie needed by the end of the month.
New budget director James Miller, making his first trip to
Capitol Hill since replacing David Stockman, said Wed­
nesday the balanced budget idea, backed by the White
House, would force Congress and the president to work
together

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hotpilal
Wednesday
ADMISSIONS
Santord
Mattie Ewanv
Sherry L Evany
B edie B Hulchmion
L o a F Langley
Kevin A Pierce
M ary G Smith
Jack E Klingelymith Deltona
Robert C stoute Deltona
Nancy R Marimon Oviedo

Werner E Hugh. Winter Springs
DISCHARGES
Santord
Dorothy C Fowler
je a n M Murgrove
Greg E Stattord
Sheryl A Sauer DeBary
Renee Burke and baby girl Santord
Kathy E Irvine and baby boy. Cayvelberry
BIRTHS
Robert J and Liya D Keller a baby girl
Santord

Frenchman Wins Nobel Literature
Prize For First Time Since 1964
STOCKHOLM. Sweden (UPI)
— Avant-garde author Claude
Simon today won the 1985
Nobel Prize In Literature, the
first French writer to be awarded
the finest distinction in letters
since 1964.
The Swedish Academy said
Simon. 72. in his novels "com ­
bines the poet's and the paint­
er's creativeness with a deep­
ened awarness of time in the
depletion of the human condi­
tion."
The announcement was made
lit four languages by Academy
Perm anent S ecreta ry Lars
Gyllenstcn in the 18th century
stone building housing the
A e a d e m v an d th e S to c k
Exchange.
"He was happy and said he
will be coming in December."
Gyllenstcn said in describing
Simon's reaction to learning of
the prize, which will be awarded
in Stockholm Dec. 10.
No French author has won the
literature prize, worth S225.000
this year, since Jean-Paul Sartre

declined It in 1964. He argued
that crowning a world champion
In literature corrupts the rcccplent.
Simon, the 13th laureate from
France since the prize was first
awarded in 1901. Is a novelist,
playwright and essayist.
Best known for his stream of
consciousness. Sim on's two
most important novels arc "Le
Vent" (1957) and "La Routes de
Flandrcs" (1960). which depicts
minds In a wild flux of turmoil
fueled by the forces of nature.
Gyllensten. spokesman of the
18-member Academy, said. "It
takes hard work to read Simon
and it requires a good memory.
You have to read him several
time."
Simon was a favorite of Artur
Lundkvlsl. 79. the powerful
Academy member who has kept
British novelist Graham Greene
from winning the prestigious
prize.
Sim on, born In 1913 in
Madagascar to French parents,
began to be noticed at the end of

the 1950s In connection with the wrote, would be lo "literally
great Interest in the so-called doom mankind to suffocation
and dlspalr."
"new novel" in France.
The Academy is known for
Gyllenstcn cited Simon in
particular for his 1981 novel occasionally selecting littleknown authors like last year's
“ Les Gcorglqucs".
Simon's sentences, like those winner. Jaroslav Seifert of
o f 1950 la u re a te W illia m Czechoslovakia.
Earlier In the week. American
Faulkner, are virtually without
punctuation and oRcii lyrical. He Franco Modigliani won the Nobel
employs Faulkner's Jumbled Memorial Prize for Economic
chronology and abrupt transi­ Science for pioneering theories
on savings and for fathering
tions.
Simon combines the traditions corporate finance. Americans
of fellow Frenchman Marcel Michael S. Brown and Joseph L.
Proust and Irish James Joyce, Goldstein shared the prize for
two authors who never won a medicine for discoveries about
Nobel, with practitioners of New cholesterol that could help pre­
Novelists such as Alain Rob- vent heart attacks.
The Peace Prize, awarded in
be-Grlllet.
Simon originally wanted lo be Oslo. Norway, went lo the
a painter and he idolizes the Boston-based group interna­
tional Physicians for the Pre­
work ol Paul Cezanne.
Simon. In an article in 1966 vention of Nuclear War.
All the Nobel winners will
discussing the role of writers In a
changing world, said art and receive their awards Dec. 10.
literature answer "lo human T h e N o b e l p r i z e s w e r e
need as basic as hunger, thirst, established by the 1895 will of
Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel,
even the need to breath."
To supress literature. Simon inventor of dynamite.

Public Hearing Set On Annexation
By Jane Casselberry
Herald S ta ff W riter
Longwood City Commission has given
preliminary approval to annexation of 16.5
acres south of Charlotte Street, west of
Miller Road. A public hearing and final
action are scheduled for Nov. 18.
The property, industrially zoned by the
county, is being annexed at the request of
the owners. Robert and Talley Hattaway of
Altamonte Springs, in order to gel water
service from the city.
I'I icy had previously been denied water by
Longwood because the property was outside
the city limits.
Commissioner Ed Myers expressed con­
cern at Monday night's commission meeting
that the [imposed Industrial park might be
used as for storage of hazardous waste, but
Wanda Guest, planner for Hattaway In­
vestment Corp.. assured him that this Is not
l lie ease.
She said although the area had been
designated as suitable for hazardous waste
storage and transfer, at a preliminary
hearing it was decided not a good location
because of the high water table, the rough
railroad crossing and Its proximity to
schools and hospitals.
Ms. Guest said the property Is In the last
stages of platting with Seminole County and
has received preliminary approval.
The commission voted unanimously to
declare 3.78 at res of city property located
outside the city limits on Longwood-Lake

Mary Road surplus and put it up for sale.
After the property is appraised, the city will
accept closed bids from prospective buyers.
City administrator Greg Manning said
proceeds front the sale will go Into an
interest-bearing escrow account earmarked
for the future acquisition of properly
suitable for parks anti recreation.
Appointed to serve on a charier review
committee were Alice M. Lewis. 106-1
Second Place; Lynedc Dennis. 263 W.
Palmetto Ave.: Edward Kanaskl. 1010
Alameda Drive: Rick Bulllngton. and James
Klelnmann. 700 Mendez Way.
The Commission voted to accept a site
plan for the SAW Building located on the
north side of State Roati 434. west of Grant
Street, but tabled action on ltie site plan for
Sanlando Shopping Center, located at tin*
southeast corner of State Road 434 and
Savage Court until City Engineer Charles
Hassler has a chance to* check out the
drainage situation behind the property. The
city's consulting engineer Dyer. Riddle.
Mills, and Precourt has determined there is
sand in the drainage system and It should
be cleaned out and grading in the retention
area corrected.
A proposed resolution that would have
established policies and procedures for
issuing permits to park buses, pole trailers,
semi-trailers, trailers, trucks, and/or truck
tractor for a period exceeding one hour
during a 24-hour period on residential
streets and property as authorized in the

eomprchenslve zoning ordinance was unan­
imously voted down on Manning's recom­
mendation. Manning said it would set a bad
precedent lo allow I lie [larking of this type ot
vehicles in residential neighborhoods. "W e
are making progress In cleaning up the
city," Manning said, "and litis would tie a
setback and open the door to anyone
wishing to park their school bus or truck. 1
think we should amend the ordinance to
eliminate any reference to permits."
The matter first came up when a
Longwood woman, whose trucker husband
has an expensive tractor rig. asked how you
go about getting a permit as required In the
ordinance and it was discovered tlit* city had
no set procedure.
Tite commissioners were also eoncerneo
that the ordinance not lie so restrictive that
it bans moving vans from unloading or
companies doing repairs which must have
their truck parked al the customer's resi­
dence.
The problem is being tossed to tin- city's
Land Planning Agency to look Into.
In other business the city commission
• Adopted a five-year capital program
through the 1989*90 fiscal year in a
non-binding resolution referred to as a
"wish list."
• Honored Anthony Taddeo and Walter
Fleck for their service on the Code En­
forcement Board. The men had asked not to
be reappointed.

Churches Sued To Clarify Tax Law
ORLANDO (UPI) — Orange County's
property appraiser Is suing two Baptist
churches In a test case to clarify the tax
exempt status of church land not used for
religious purposes, the appraiser's attorney
said Thursday.
Appraiser Ford Huusmun contends 45
acres owned by First Baptist Church of
Orlando and about It) acres owned by First
Baptist Church of Pine Hills should be
taxed, because the land is vacant.
"The property appraiser Is trying to be
consistent in his approach to exempt
properties." said the property appraiser's
attorney, Steven Bechtel.
"There are other instances in the county
where he has always applied tlie principle

that there has to be actual use on the
asscssmcnt date of Jan. 1 in-order for the
exemption to be granted."
Bechtel said the suits, filed Monday In
circuit court, may move through the 5th
District Court of Appeal In Daytona Beach
and the Florida Supreme Court before the
issue is settled.
The disputed land lies on a vacant area
Hausman valued at $525,062 in the Orlando
congregation's 156-acre sanctuary complex
and on orange grove property assessed al
$561.240 belonging to the Pine Hills group.
"It's acknowledged that's the future
intended site of a Christian school," Bechtel
said of the Pine Hills property. "It's not
there now.”

The churches contend tite lots, though
vacant, are being used for religious
purposes.
"That land lias been prayed on since the
day after we bought it . " said Jim
Spoonhour. attorney for the Orlando con­
gregation. He named other religious uses,
such as overnight ramping by a church
youth group.
Slate law provides tax exemption for.
"Only those portions of properly used
predominantly for charitable, religious, seientllie or literary purposes."
Hausman said, "The question here is
whether praying over property or [Hitting a
tent on it for a picnic justifies a tax
exemption."

Features Smothers Brothers, Elizabeth Dole

Florida Homecoming Coming Together
GAINESVILLE (UPI) - Ap­
pearances by the Smothers
Brothers comedy team. U.S.
Secretary of Transportation
Elizabeth Dole and rock star
Sting highlight homecoming ac­
tivities this week at the Universi­
ty of Florida.
The school's homecoming
features something for Gators of
all ages, from political gather­
ings to athletic events. Topping
things off Is the "Gator Growl"
— billed as the world's largest
student-produced show and pep
rally which traditionally in­
cludes big name entertainment,
a laser show and fireworks.
The week's homecoming activ­
ities kick off Thursday at noon,
with Gator Expo, an exhibit of

university research, clubs, stu­
dent activities and academic
departments.
But the meat of the fiesta for
University of Florida alumni
begins Friday at noon with the
annual homecoming parade, for
which all of Gainesville essen­
tially closes.
The parade this year features
the Gator Marching Band as well
as 11 other high school and
college bands. 37 floats and
special marching units and the
Budwelser Clydesdales. Steve
Spurrier, coach of the USFL
Tampa Bay Bundlls, and the
Gators' only Heistnan Trophy
winner, is grand marshal of the
parade.
Florida Blue Key, the student

leadership organization re­ Cosby.
sponsible for most homecoming
At 12:30 p.m. Saturday, the
activities, will hold Its annual Florida Gators will host tite 3-4
invitation-only Blue Key Ban­ Southwest Louisiana Ragin'
quet In the Stephen C. O'Connell Cajuns at Florida Field.
Center Friday night.
Athletic Department officials
The banquet annually attracts salt! they were expecting a
prominent political and business capacity crowd of more than
figures from around the state, 72.000 for the annual fall
who this year will hear Dole as classic. The 4-0-1 Gators beat
the keynote speaker.
the Cincinnati Bearcats 48-17
The Smothers Brothers will be last year in (lie homecoming
the featured entertainers for contest.
Gator Growl, which gels under
Movie and rock star Sting will
way immediately following the appear at the O'Connell Center
Blue Key Banquet. Billed as the Saturday night In a concert,
largest student-produced show following the game.
and pep rally on Earth, the
The Orange and Blue Golf
Growl has featured acts such as C la s s ic w ill w rap up the
Bob Hope. Robin Williams and weekend Sunday ut 8 u.m. on
last year's entertainer. Bill the University Golf Course.

Study Shows Causes Of Depression For Housewives

E iT n in ^ H e r a ld
IUSPS 411 210]

G A I N E S V I L L E ( URL) Housewives who have no social
life outside the home, low in­
comes or poor family rela­
tionships are more likely to be
d e p re s s e d than o th er
housewives, a University of"
Florida sociologist said Wed­
nesday.
"The fewer social contacts a
housewife has and the more
isolated she Is. the more likely
she Is to become depressed."
Connie Shehan. a professor ol
sociology at the school said.

)

"Reliable friends outside the
immediate family are important
to t Ite m e n t a l h e a l t h of
housewives, since they provide
valuable help and emotional
support.”
It's healthy lor all women to
have support outside the family.
Shehan said, but it’s especially
important for younger wives and
those who have no children al
home.
"Most Americans enter mar­
riage with little preparation for
marriage and parenthood. They

Just don’t have the skills neces­
sary to run a home." Shehan
said. "And that's why young
wives need to turn outside their
homes for advice on how to
manage budgets, do household
chores and deal with their
children."
Women whose children have
left home need support outside
their households because it adds
meaning lo their lives, she said.
Shehan and co-researchers
Mary Ann Burg and Cynthia
Rcxroat compiled their study

using mental health profiles on
528 white housewives In the
Southeast to find what leads
them to depression.
But their study showed u few
surprises. They had expected to
find that housewives with less
education would be more prone
to depression, but Instead found
the amount of education does
not affect housewives' suscepti­
bility lo depression.
"W e also expected lo find that
housewives who had been pre­
viously employed but were not

I

currently working outside the
home would be more likely to be
depressed than those who had
alw uys been h o u s e w iv e s ,"
Shehan said. "W e found there
was no difference In the groups."
The satisfaction u woman feels
w ith fu lltim e h o u s e w o rk .
Shehan said, depends on the
alternatives she has.
"If her alternative is to work in
a tow-paying, frustrating job.
being a housewife can be more
s a tis fy in g and f u lf illin g . "
Shehan said.

Thursday, October 17, 1985
Vol. 78, No. 48
Published D aily and Sunday, c ic ep f
Saturday by The Santord H erald ,
Inc. 100 N. French Ave., Santord,
F la . u r n .
Second Class Postage Paid a t Santord,
F lo rid a t t t t l
Homo D eliv ery : W eek. s i .10; M onth,
M .7J; 1 M onths. S M .lIj s Months,
tir.DOi Y a a r, Sil.OO. By M a il: Wool)
tl.S O i M on th . tt.OOi J M onths,
S H OO] t M onths, 111.SO; Y a a r,

SiO.OO.

Phona (90S) 111 1*11.

1

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thuridpy, Oct. 17, IMS—3A

W eek's 3rd Burglary In Subdivision Reported
A Luke Mary couple were
victim s of the burglary of
thousands of dollars worth or
Jewelry and rare coins last week
alter their s was the third rcsldence In the Kceneland Downs
subdivision to he burglarized In
a week. Mr. and Mrs. James S.
Sutton. 7-17 Keen eland Pike,
bake Mary, reported the brcak-ln
to bake Mary police early last
week.
Police reports slated the suspect(s| entered the house, be­
tween 5) a.rn. and 2 p.m., by
•'titling a pool screen and
breaking a bathroom window at
the rear ol the house, The house
next dour It) the Sutton's was
similarly broken Into a few days
before this incident and Jcwlcry
was taken in that theft. No
suspects have been arrested in
that theft either, according to
police reports.
"I had |ust left the house to go
to my part-time Job and 1 made
sure everything in the house was
locked tight because of the
break-in next door. 1 had a
strange Iccilng something was
going to happen." Kathleen
Sutton said. She said the robberls) ransacked a strongbox In
her closet containing priceless
handmade gold Jewelry and then
went through her dresser draw­
ers, The robbcr(s) then went to
•he Sutton's refrigerator and had
some lunch before leaving a
half-empty soil drink can on her
husband's dresser, according to
Mrs. Sutton.
"Most of the gold Jewelry was
handmade by my cousin in New
Vork and can’t be replaced at
anv price. That’s why it Is so
hard to estimate prices on all
Mrs Sutton said. "We
th is .
travel a lot and Just recently
m oved here and we never
thought to put all this in suTe
deposit box. you Just can't
believe how lids feels. We do
have insurance under our
homeowner's policy, so we may
get something back from this
but. it is such a shame. It's hard
to say how I feel about the
robbery. I never would have
thought someone could come
into my home and do this to me.
I double-checked everthing bel o r e | led, p makes you feel so
violated "
Among the Items the Sutton's
reported missing were:
—,i new 35mm Pentax camera
with Hash:
—live gold rings. Including a
ladles gold topaz ring that was
squate-cul and surrounded by
clear stones, a one-fourth karat
ladies diamond ring with one

Action Reports
;

★ Fires
★ Courts
★ Police

pearl In the center and a quarter
karat diamond on each side, a
ladles white gold ring with two
diamonds and two pearls, a
ladles Union Endlcott High
School ring with a black stone In
the center and the Initials K.E.K.
on the Inside and a man's gold
1964 Fordham University class
ring with a red stone In the
middle;
—seven gold and sliver chains
including a Doncmorc 12 Inch
gold colored chain with a little
"D " hanging from It. a gold
colored chain with a small,
round locket and painted flowers
on lhe front, a gold colored chain
with three "lovers knots" on It, a
silver chain with a small silver
heart, two gold colored plain
chains of different lengths, a
gold colored chain with a black
onyx diamond fn the center;
-forty-n in e rare coins In­
cluding 44 silver dollars (five of
these were 1800s era coins) and
five gold Krugerrands;
—Tour silver Western-style belt
buckles, all of them oval shaped,
one with a gold coin In the
center, one with a small horse in
the center and the other two
with sliver dollars In the center;
—$30 In U.S. currency;
—three one-ounce silver coins:
—three pairs of pierced ear­
rings including a pair of silver
Cameo earrings painted blue
and white, a pair of rhinestone
solitaires and one pair of 24
karat gold small hoop earrings;
—one crystal diamond-shaped
pendant without chain;
—two children's necklaces In­
cluding one starfish with a gold
colored chain and one butterfly
with a red stone in the center on
a gold colored chain;
—two pairs of earrings in­
cluding one gold-cross shaped
pair and a heart-shaped pair of
earrings:
— an an tiq u e w rlstw a tch
valued at $700.
—Michael J. Lawrence. 22. of
120 S. Lake St.. Lake Mary,
reported to Lake Mary police on
Sunday that u 25 horsepower.
19H3 Mercury outboard motor,
valued at $ 1.400, was stolen
from his home between Friday
and Sunday. Police reports
stated that the motor, with a
serial number of *6424907. was

taken off a boat In the Lawrence
driveway.
THEFTS AND BURGLARIES
An Altamonte Springs woman
told sheriffs deputies someone
broke Into her apartment and
took $60 from her purse.
Mary Beth Maloney, of 375
Wymorc Road, said the incident
occurred between 7 and 8:30
p.m. Monday. The thief entered
her home after removing a
screen from a bedroom window.
A $260 dish washer was taken
from a construction site on
Goldstone Place In Lake Mary.
William Makuskle. manager for
General Homes of Lake Mary,
said the theft occurred between
7 a.m Oct. II and 9:41 a.m.
Tuesday.
A New York woman reported
$200 worth of traveler cheques
were removed from her purse
probably while she was at a
moving party. Jane Redmond.
23. who was In the area visiting
a brother, said she was at a party
at 5129 Lake Howell Road, for a
few minutes and someone took
her purse and contents Includ­
ing driver license, car registra­
tion and credit cards.
A microwave oven was re­
moved from a model home In
Longwood after a Realtor left the
building unlocked. Kenneth
Russell, 49. a builder from Lake
Monroe, said the Realtor was
showing the house at 1345
South Ridge Lake Circle and
didn’t lock up. The Incident
occurred between Oct. 11 at 3
p.m. and Tuesday at 10:34 a.m.
A roto tiller valued at S850
was removed from the fenced
yard of Robert King, 71, of 9972
Carolina St.. Oviedo. King said
the theft occurred between 8 '
p.m. Oct. 10and 5 p.m. Friday.

complex.
The man. a 47-ycar-old busi­
ness manager, has denied the
girl's accusations and said he
only walked with Ills arm
around the girl.
The allegations are under In­
vestigation.
SODA BOTTLE ROBBERY
A man robbed a Fern Park
7-Eleven Store after smacking
the clerk In the side of the face
with a soda bottle.
Bengamln Fields, 26, clerk al
the store located at 190 Oxford
Road, said a man entered the
store around 12:45 a.m. Wed­
nesday and gut a 16-ounce bottle
of Sprite. Fields said that when
he opened the cash drawer to
take the man's money the man
struck on the left side of the face
with the bottle. He then grabbed
the cash drawer, took money
from the drawer, and lied. The
amount of money taken was not
reported.
Fields described the suspect as
a black male. 5-foot-9 weighing
150 pounds, lie had a short afro
and was wearing a lish net shirt.

black pants and tennis shoes. He
also told Fields not to cause
trouble,
POT IN PURSE
A deputy curious about a car
leaving a cemetery learned the
car had the wrong license plates
on It and subsequently arrested
the driver for possession of
marijuana.
According to a sheriffs depu­
ty's report, the officer saw an El
Cumluo, a truck-like ear. leave
the Oaklawn Cemetery In Lake
Mary though a computer check
said the plates belonged on a
four-door car After the officer
stopped the car the driver told
him shi1 didn't have a driver
license and the marijuana In her
purse was not hers.
Being held in lieu of $5,000
hood Wednesday on charges of
possession of more than 20
grams of marijuana, driving
without a license and driving
with wrong tags was Debra
Elaine Watson. 20. ol 215 Route
4. Longwood.

BALKED IN BAR
A woman who was told by an
officer to leave a bar after she
was Issued a warning to leave
was arrested at Fern Park Sta­
tion for trespass after warning.
According to a sheriffs deputy
report, the 28-ycar-old woman
was an "unwanted guest" at the
Fern Park bar. The officer issued
the warning and the woman still
refused to leave.
Arrested and charged was
Kacey Avery, of 2090 Miracle
Lane. Chuluola. She was re­
leased without bond.
BEER BUST
A husband and wife, re­
portedly caught In the act of
stuffing a six pack of beer into a
purse, have been arrested on
charges of retail theft.
The manager of Publlx. 1080
W. Slate St.. Sanford said he saw
a man helping a woman put the
beer In her purse.
Arrested and held In lieu of
SlOO bond each In the Seminole
C o u n ty Jail w ere A n d rew
S c h r iv c r . 42. and C h e ry l
Shrlvcr. 38. of Plant City. Ohio. '

Pedestrian Rescues Two
A p o s s ib le tra g e d y was
avoided Tuesday when a pedes­
trian rescued a unconscious girl
from a burning car and rescued
a woman who fainted while
trying lo get the girl out.
Tony Short. 28, of Fern Park,
was walking along County Road
427 around 7:30 a.m. when Insaw two cars crash In traffic at
Marvin Avenue, according to a
Longwood police report.
Robin Dean. 17. of Longwood.
was on her way to Lyman High
School when her Dalsun run into
the rear of a 1968 Mustang

driven hv Teresa Carson. 65. of Emergency personnel arrived
L o n g w o o d . Ms. C a r s o n 's and put out the fire within 5
M ustang then lilt a 1978 minutes, according to a report.
Plymouth driven by Jeffery Sis­
The women were treated for
kind. a counselor at Lyman High cuts and bruises. Neither Sus­
School. Gas spilled from the kind nor Short were Injured.
Mustang onto the Dntsun’s hot
The Mustang was reported as
motor starting a fire. Suskind a total loss In the accident which
then drove lo gel police and fire tied up traffic for about 40
help while Ms. Carson started to minutes. Jackson said. Susr e s c u e M i s s D e a n , s a i d kind's car received abut $300
Longwood officer Tom Jackson.
worth of damage and Miss
Ms. Carson tried to rescue Miss Dean's car $4,000. Miss Dean
Dean who was slumped against was charged with failure to use
the steering wheel but fainted. due care.
Short then rescued the women.
—Deane Jordan

Robert Rodriguez, 33. of 403
Oakwood Court, Altam onte
Springs, reported someone re­
moved a $250 propeller from a
boat motor on his boat. The boat
was at his home in the carport at
the time, he said. The Incident
occurred between 7 a.m. and 3
p.m. Tuesday.
FONDLING INCIDENT
A 16-year-old girl told a
sh eriffs deputy a man lias
fondled her five or six times
since August 1985.
The South Seminole County
girl. 15 at the time of the latest
Incident, said he fondles her
when she visits a friend who
lives In the same apartment

Talks Resume Today

Chrysler Strike Enters Second Day
DETROIT (Ill'll — A strike by some 80.000
Chrysler Cnrp. workers in the United States and
Canada entered its second day today and United
Auln Workers President Owen Uicber said major
obstacles blocked the road to a settlement.
' I lie pace has picked up a little hit." Bleber
said Wednesday of contract talks, which were to
resume early linluy. "There are some tough
Irit lion points — more than friction points. There
are some boulders."
The strikes at 43 U.S. plants In 15 states and
six plants in Canada, which began midnight
Tuesday, will cost Chrysler an estimated $60
million tills week and $90 million next week,
analysts salt). The com puny earned a record $4
billion m profits lor 1984 and the first six months
ol I !PH5.
Job security and wage partly for workers —
who earn S I3.23 an linttr. six cents an hour less
than their counterparts at Ford Motor Co. and
General Motors Corp. — have been the major
stumbling blocks In the talks. Bleber said.
He said outsourcing — the practice of using
non-union plants to make parts — also has been a
key issue.
C'ltrysler's chief U.S. bargainer. Thomas Miner,
said soon after the strike began the two sides

were near an agreement on parity but Bleber
disagreed, saying; "There is no parity offer on the
table here.”
The UAW represents about 70.000 Chrysler
workers In the United States. In Toronto, talks
were expected to resume for 10.400 members of
the Independent Canadian UAW. Union officials
In Canada reported little progress Wednesday.
Some 3,750 Chrysler workers at five U.S. plants
that produce Chrysler parts and parts for other
automakers have remained on the Job. If workers
at those plants went on strike It could force other
car companies to lay off UAW members.
Chrysler workers appeared committed to the
strike in hopes of winning a larger share of the
company’s record profits.
"W e gave up a lot four years ago. Now It's time
for us to get the gravy." said Joe Gagltardl of
UAW Local 136 in St. Louis. "W e got back some
(In the last contract), but we didn't get It all
back."
In Toronto, union sources and officials
speculated Chrysler officials ordered a virtual halt
in Canadian negotiations Tuesday when It
became clear a U.S. walkout could not be averted.
A U.S. strike would have halted production In
Canada because of parts shortages.

REALTY TRANSFERS
C lrlu * L G n lllth Jr 6. Wl Patricia to
France* M G lim Li J Blk A Oviedo H i*
SW BOO
Leroy C OMrander A Wf Pamela 0 lo
W illaim L Armstrong A Wl Joan M . LI 4 The
Springs y\ado*v.ood Village*104,000
Richmond Amef Home* lo M ike W#bS
Home* Inc Lai 4 01* B Belle Meade 141,600
Roger M Grant lo H Thoma* Smart Jr A Wl
Sharon 0
Lt 10 Bits B Summeriet North
160 000
Robert W Yager A Wl Carolyn to Billy W
Chiton A Wl M enle L L t* 10 A I I Blk F 2nd
Rcpl W 600 ol Tr 10 Sanlando Spring* 197,700
Anden Group to Robert G Kodilt A Wf
Patrir'A LI 67 Orange Grove Park Un 2
**4,100
Mabel Amo* to David M Ja rre ll A Wl
Sandra C S 70 ol LI S Blk G Fern Perk E ttt
*72.700
James Ervin A Wl Ima J lo Guy H Gardner
A Wl Judy C Land in Sec I I 21 32* 15.000
Anden Group lo Carl S Johnion II A Wl
Wanda J LI 44 Orange Grove Pk Un 3 *14.400
Longwood Markham Dev lo Sun Land
Bldr* Inc Li 22 Markham Glen *47.700
Abcom II Inc to Ronald C Segall A Wl
Cindie LI 66 Lake Sylvan E tl* *60.000
RCA lo David W Goodwin II *7 Hidden Lake
Ph II I Un I *74.400
FRC Inc lo Deborah L Craig A Je**e B
Thprne Jr . LI 66 Summcrhlll Ph 1174,600
Urban ol Tuicawlila Inc lo Phylll* M
Curnmmg* LI 2 Blk 36Ca*a Park V illa i Ph II
*64.400
Sun Ridge Ltd to Mary E Mahoney Un 104
Bl II I Sun Hedge II I *72.700
Jame* A McGauvran A Wl Carol lo Robart
M M ar well A Wl Piiylht LI 0 Ounavontwir
H I*
Del Prop Etc lo Jame* T Barr Un 73 Bl 4
Hidden Sprlng*Cond 164 000
Cornelia W Moore to John A Rayburn A Wl

Janice LI 61 North Cove *142.600
LLoyd Boggio Tr lo Jeck K Rodrlquei Jr A
L u ll R Valeiquej A Wl Letty Un 39 Bl B
Summit Village Un I I I 173,700
John P Kelly A Wl Chrlillne to Hutchiion
Home* InC Lt 14 Blk H North Orlando
RanchetSec 2A 113.300
Equitable Reloc M G M lo U rtule M Magyar
Un 2120 Palm Spring* Cond At The Spring*
*93.200
John R Noll A W l Jewell to Robert B M iller
A Wl Alica O , L t* 14 A 16 Blk GF Cattalbarry
*440.000
Walter Judge A W l Suian lo Ronald B
Heendlge*. LI a Blk F Sweetwater Oak* Sec

2AII.100.000
Roger Reinke A Wl E ll! to John J Evan* A
Wl Karan M , LI 64 Highland* Sac a *100.000
F ilig ereld Prop lo Philip N Styne A Wl
Barbara D LI I Lake Brantley Club PH II
*34,400
Bonaire Dev lo Mercede* Forero A Pablo
Holla Un 433 Carmel By the Lake Un I
1109.200
Edward L Lombardi Co Inc lo W allar J
K e rtiu ll* A Wl Joanna F.. L I 69 Tuicawlila
Un 121140.000
Egerton K van den Berg Trutlee lo The
Club At lhe C ro iiln g t Inc., Beg NW cor Lot 9
Blk A Greenwood Lake* Un I *399.700
T e rry J u k e * A W l Joanne (0 G ary
Canglalotl A W l Gall Lt 7j Tuicaw lila Point
*92,900
Kenntth W M arlin A Wl Joiaphlna to Bruce
E M a r lin L I 404 L aka o l lha Wood*
Townhouie* Sac 12*12.000
Winiar Spg* Dev lo B G Adklnt Comir LI 21
Tuicaw lila Un 12 *42.400
Richmond A m tr Home* to Av.lumb A Co
LI la Blk A Balia Maada *39.300
Joteph F a r la tt rapr a i l lo Jntaph L
Johnston A Wf Loille A S 74' ol LI S A N 24’ of
3 rtp i Wekiva Camp Sile* *44.000

L F Hlggln* A Hb J K to Charfet W Rucker
A W l Blbi A . LI 64 The Spring*. Whliperlng
Pine* 2nd Addn *166.600
Kevin R Knapp A Wl Kay lo M ark B Cotter
A Wl Pamela A LI I Ce*a Aloma *92.200
Phillip J Mutcelo A Wl M ary to William L
Flu A Wf Dorothy L LI 101 K Searcy Shore*
*99 900
General Home* lo M erlin A Kllcoyne A Wl
Margaret A L 112 Deer Run Un 10163.200
General Horn#* lo Gerard J Trotta A Wf
Georgina M LI U9 Alalaya Wood* Ph I Un A
*73.400
Ryland Group to W illiam E Payne A Wl
Patricia LI ID7 Deer Run Un 11 *69.000
Ganeral Home* lo Julie F Troum A Hb
M ark S Lt 14 Greenwood Lake* Un 3 *99.400
General Home* to Jam e* E W ollt A Wf
Palrlcla Lt 9) Greenwood Lake* Un 3 *96.100
Bel Aire Home* Inc to Joteph R Oetllnger
A Wl Holly LI a llO a k Foretl Un 4*100.200
Kenneth Roitrucker lo Robert Herrington
A Wl Catherine Un 62 Southport Cond Ph 1J
*691.900
Ryan Co to John M Batchu* A Wl Cynthia C
LI 27 Blk T Howall Cove 1110 *00
Craven Dev to Michael E Slecy A Wl
Jennifer Lt 140 Weklve Cove Ph 31161.000
Parkview Crp to John W Mahan A Wl Lee
Lt* 24 A 26 Aloma Park *114.900
Compatt Inv Prop lo Robert E Brown Sr
Tru*t*e LI 13 Big Tree C rottln gi Ph Two
(311.100
Marvel Zona Truitee lo Edward Englander
A Wl Phylll* S Lot* 1IA end IBB Seminole Ind
Park 2nd Addn *722.200
Grelchan R Children Wid lo John J Gough
Lt 16 Blk F Druid H ill* Park *99 100
Key ReeDy A Dev lo Charlet Sallilei A Wl
Eva Li l Sacral Laka Short* *76.400
Hallm ark Bldr* lo Paul C Chrlttlan LI I Blk
la Tow ntilaN Chuluola *42 900

The new Check-Credit Account loan from
Household Finance is important news for homeowners.
Now at the introductory rate of 9.5% ...W ith no points
charged. And no prepayment penalty.
Your Check-Credit Account gives you a personal line of credit
based on the equity in your home. It provides you with checks to use
anytime, anywhere, just like a regular checking account. Open a
Check-Credit Account for any amount from S5.000 to S 150,000
or more. Beginning January, 1986, interest will be com­
puted monthly at the low annual percentage rate of
onlv three points over the prime rate as quoted in
The Wall Street Journal. A one-time loan par­
ticipation fee and standard closing
costs are charged when the loan
is approved.
We’ve extended our business
hours. Saturdays 9:00am to 1:00pm,
and evenings by appointment.

WFRK BACKING YOU#
For more information call the HFC office nearest you.
Or 1-800-621-5559 after normal business hours.
I IRS E. Altamonte Drive
(Highway 436)
Altamonte Spring*
(3051 830-9216

Zayrr Shopping Center
943 N. Uth Street
Lectburv
(90*1787-5220

2122 E. Colonial Drive
Orlando
(3051W4-8131

812 Dixon Boulevard
Cocoa
(305(636-4351

Brevard Mall
13% S. Babcock Street
Melbourne
(3051777-0555

K-Man Shopping Center
7901S. Orange Bluoom Trail
Orlando
(3051859-7720

113Voluna Avenue
Daytona Beach
(904)255-5316

IN E Fin* Avenue
Ocala

Zayrc Plata
2954 Orlando Drive
Sinford
(305)323-8910

(904)622-5110

I

�Evening Herald
iU S P S 411-310)

3(X) N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Thursday, October 17, 1985—4A
W a y n e D. D o yle, P u b lish er
T h o m a s G io rd an o , M a n a g in g E d ito r
M e lv in A d kin s, A d v e rtis in g D ire c to r

Hnm r Dtlivt-rv: Week. S I 10: M oiiiti. S-t 75; 3 M onths
SI-1 25; li Mntuhs. $27 00; Year. S S I 00 Hv M ail Week.
S I SO. Month. SG 00 3 Months. S IH 00; 6 Months. S32.50
Y e a r . $ 0 0 OO

Bilingual
Education
Bilingual education should make students
fluent In English. That should be its sole
purpose. Education Secretary W illiam J.
Bennett Is right when he says federal policies
toward bilingual education have in the last 20
years becom e "confused as to purpose and
overbearing as to means.”
He said In a recent speech in New York that
the Reagan administration is drafting new
regulations and will ask Congress to give local
school districts more autonomy in deciding
how to teach students who are not fluent In
English.
There should be such flexibility and home
rule. Just last year a Southwestern Elem enta­
ry School District decided to give all instruc­
tion in English, after a pupil is classified as
proficient in English. In other words, no more
maintenance o f the Spanish language, no
more teaching arithmetic or social studies or
any other subject in Spanish. Students will be
immersed in English as soon as possible.
The school district Is on the Mexican
border. More than 70 percent o f its 2.700
students are native Spanish speakers with a
limited ability to speak English. That is pne o f
the highest percentages o f any school district
in the nation. The decision by the school
board and the district superintendent reflects
the real concerns o f the parents o f Spanishspeaking children about their ch ild ren ’s
language disability and the importance of
correcting it.
Let there be no misunderstanding. The
inability to speak English is a great handicap
for any American. It will always be so. It is
not prejudice or discrimination to say that
those who grow up without an ability to
speak, understand, w rite and read our
com m on language suffer a severe lifelong
disability in their capacity to participate as
citizens in our system o f self-government and
in our econom y.
Those who are closest to the problem know
how serious it Is. For them . It is a m atter of
survival. Th ey know' the tragedy of A m eri­
cans who have graduated from high school
without learning how to speak English and
then find them selves condem ned to a lifetime
o f menial work.
T h ey rem em ber the pathetic stories of
children in our public schools w ho were put
in classes for the m entally retarded simply
because they could not understand English.
Th e main purpose o f the bilingual program Is
to p reven t such tragedies, either when
entering the public schools or when leaving
them.

george

M cG o v e r n

Is There A Democratic Alternative?
The announcement by Democratic Rep. bar­ Ronald Reagan In 1980 and 1984 have
ren Mitchell, 63, of Maryland that he will quit apparently demoralized the liberal center of the
Congress after 16 years’ service comes as a Democratic Party. Beyond this, the enormous
disappointment to me and to many others federal deficit stemming from the Reagan
acquainted with Mitchell's record. Since being formula of higher military spending and lower
elected to Congress In 1970. Mitchell has been taxes has made it much harder for congressmen
an eloquent voice of conviction and Intelligence to support adequate funding for social services
for traditional Democratic liberal values. As and such concerns as the environment, trans­
much as anyone in Congress, lie waged the portation and housing.
In domestic policies, budget priorities und
battle to shift excessive military spending into
greater Investment in Jobs, education, health foreign affairs, most Democrats — after feeble
care and social services. In short, he Is my kind resistance — have largely gone along with the
popular president. Mr. Reagan has succeeded In
of Democrat.
convincing many Americans that selfishness is
In leaving Congress. Mitchell says he is "not
not only respectable but is. in fact, their
at all happy" about ihc conservative drift of the
American birthright. He has also appealed to the
Democratic Party. "The Democrats should stop
macho Jingoistic streak In our nntional charac­
trying to out-Rcpubllcan the Republicans. It’s a
ter. so that even the self-defeating and bankrup­
serious mistake for the party and a serious
ting arms race with the Soviet Union Is sold as a
mistake for the nation."
highly patriotic priority.
These arc the reasons why the voluntary
To this I say. amen. Congress Is a dispirited
place these days, with few effective voices being departure of a courageous, common-sense
raised against the Reagan policies. The defeat of Democrat such ns Mitchell Is bad news for those
a number of articulate, liberal congressmen and who yearn for an alternative to Rcnganlsm.
sen ators in 1978 and 1980. plus the Likewise, the retirement decision of another
overwhelming presidential election wins of Maryland politician — thoughtful, moderate

Republican Sen. Mathias — Is bad news for
those concerned with where Mr. Reagan Is
taking the nation.
Mr. Reagan is said to be the "Great Com­
municator” and apparently he is. judging by the
election results and his obvious popularity with
the nntional press corps. Ccrtutnly he is
communicating effectively with the economi­
cally comfortable, the white majority and the
macho crowd. Doubtless these elements repre­
sent at least a temporary majority. But 1cannot
believe — despite Mr. Reagan’s penchant for
optimism and good cheer — that the present
political trends deserve Democratic acceptance,
nor do 1 believe that they arc in the Interest of
the nation.
No one can say for certain what it will lake for
the Democrats to recapture the Senate in 1986
and the White House in 1988. Bui ihc basic
function of a political party Is to organize a
group of voters around a program that offers a
meaningful contrast to ihc opposition party or
parties. If the voters do not perceive a significant
contrast and the hope of a better life with
Democratic leadership, why change the present
leadership?

ROBERT WALTERS

DON GRAFF

A New
China
Hand

Radical
Solution
For Farms

FUZHOU. China (NEA) — Tom
Manton. who holds the world record
for the longest Journey by motorcy­
cle — 25,000 kilometers from
Singapore to London — is a man of
unusual accom plishm ents and
background.
But not primarily for that reason.
He comes from a family that has
had a long and continuing associa­
tion with China. The story of that
association says something about
China yesterday and today.
It begins with his grandmother.
Elizabeth Fisher Brewster, original­
ly of London. Ohio, who arrived In
this city — then known as Foochow
— in 1884 as a 22-year-old woman
with a mission. Thai was to educate
the women of China, which she set
about doing by learning Chinese
and founding schools.
She married Manlon's grandfa­
ther. whom she had met on a visit
to Ohio, here in 1890. The honey­
moon trip was to Putlan. a city
some lOO miles southwest of here.
They were the first foreign residents
there and remained Tor 26 years,
continuing her work together until
his death.
Manlon's mother. Ihc oldest of
their seven children, all born in
Putian. taught in China for four
years. She then returned to Ohio to
marry Manlon's father and continue
the family’s work in her own way by
recruiting missionaries Tor China.

Elizabeth Fisher Brewster stayed
on in China, through the years of
revolutionary turmoil, war and civil
war. She finally left In 1951 at the
W e have lost sight o f the individual In the age of 89, not because of the
argu m en t o v e r bilingual education. The political situation but because she
Interests o f the teachers and school ad­ felt her work was done. She was by
ministrators. intent on promoting bilingual then responsible for the existence of
education for their own selfish interests, have more than 150 schools, as well as a
been allowed to overshadow the interests o f college, clinics, churches, printing
the students. Politicians have appealed to presses and an agricultural in­
group loyalties and prejudices. They confuse stitute.
Tom Manton. as a 12-year-old.
the question with irrelevant issues, involving
the role o f the Hispanic minority in the remembers her as "about 4 feel 8
Am erican com m unity. Such issues may be Inches and diminishing, but a
legitim ate in a broader context and yet may woman of spirit and already a living
be harmful when it comes to the problem o f legend."
Despite the long family associa­
teaching this child the best English he or she
can learn.
tion. Manton is not himself an old
China hand. He did not see the
Yes. Secretary Bennett, let us keep the country until 1972, and then as a
purpose o f bilingual education clearly before
result of a very diff-rent mission.
Some years earlier lie had become
us. Let us not be distracted by irrelevancies.
And let the local school boards, like the one convinced that American policy
on the Mexican border, have full indepen­ toward China was wrong and
damaging lo the interests of both
dence in achieving this purpose.
countries. The question he asked
himself was whether China was
really an implacable enemy or
whether we had painted her as such
m our minds.

BERRY'S WORLD

MINNEAPOLIS (NEA) - During
the 1930s. in the midst of the Great
Depression, the federal government
sought lo aid the nation’s desperate
farmers by establishing what were
supposed to be modes! and tempo­
rary agricultural assistance pro­
grams.
I hey initially cost the country's
taxpayers only one cent for every
dollar of profit earned by the
average farmer. Today, however,
tile federal treasury spends 43 cents
lo enable the typical farmer in make
that same dollar.
Despite the soaring cost of the
vast array of direct and indirect
agricultural subsidies now In place,
they have failed lo achieve their
principal goal — to "save the family
farm."

SCIENCE WORLD

In Doubt, Toss It
By Gayle Young
UPI Science W riter
N EW Y O R K I UPI | - Food
poisoning appears to be on the
Increase in the United States as
more of us indulge in lightly cooked
meats, raw fish and exotic imported
foods.
"It's not an epidemic, but a slow,
steady increase." said Douglas L.
Archer, deputy director of the Food
and Drug Administration’s division
of microbiology. "Many people
think of food poisoning as a mild
nuisance but some types can have
serious consequences."
Archer said no exact figures tire
available because food poisoning Is
not closely monitored by the gov­
ernment. But lie said enough
doctors have reported an increase in
incidents that the FDA's Food and
Safety Division has launched an
information campaign against food
poisoning.
A salmonella outbreak traced to a
dairy In the Chicago area earlier this
year affected 16.000 people und
killed al least six. Another deadly
rash of food poisonings in California
was traced to listeria bacteria found
in imported cheeses. Both focused
new attention on the seriousness of
food poisoning.
Most cases of food poisoning are
caused by staphylococcus, a com­
mon bacteria found on human
hands. The bacteria can be easily
transferred from cook to food, where
ll grows unchecked if the tempera­
ture Is above 45 degrees Fahrenheit
but below 145 degrees
Staphylococcus causes gastro­

intestinal Illness in people about six
hours after it Is injested. Sufferers
will feel nauseated and sometimes
experience stomach cramps.
This type of food poisoning is so
common some doctors estimate an
average American may experience
it as often as two times a year. But it
is rarely serious and few cases are
reported, according to Dr. Patricia
Griffin, who receives reports on food
poisoning cases for the Centers For
Disease Control in Atlanta.
Most of the remaining cases of
food poisoning are caused by enteric
bacteria or viruses, which usually
result in mild bouts of diarrhea but
can cause a host of other maladies
from diarrheal dehydration to
kidney failure. Archer estimates
some 80 million Americans will
suffer from this more serious form
of food polosontng this year. He
estimates 80 of those will die.
Salmonella is an enteric bacteria.
Campylobacter is another, and al­
though it is lesser known than
salmonella it is much more com­
mon, said Archer.
Enteric bacteria are found in
many raw meats and fish and the
feces of some animals, including
cats, and can be easily transferred
to foods Ingested by humans.
"Most bacteria spread because
food is prepared Improperly." said
Archer. "You use a knife to cut a
raw chicken, rinse it for a second
then use 11 to cut lettuce for the
salad."

Indeed, as federal farm programs
have become more elaborate and
expensive during the past halfcentury, ihc number of family farms
has relentlessly declined — from 6.3
million In 1930 to 2.3 million today.
Earlier (his year, the Minneapolis
Star und Tribune, (tie largest daily
newspaper serving the nation's
North Central agricultural region,
assigned a team of reporters to
examine that paradox of escalating
subsidies and farm failures.
After six months of study, in­
cluding more than 100 Interviews,
the paper recently published its
findings in an impressive and
comprehensive series. Its principal
conclusion:
"Eliminating price supports —
a l l o w i n g t h e f o r c e s o f the
marketplace to set food prices —
would not only stive the taxpayers
that enormous investment but
would also slow the rise of food
prices, thus saving Am erica's
food-buying public billions more
dollars without endangering the
food supply."
Acknowledging that "this is con­
troversial stuff." the Star and
Tribune presents a compelling case
for serious evaluation of programs
that have cost the nation's taxpay­
ers $130 billion during the past 50
years and will require an additional
$200 billion in government spend­
ing by i he end of this century.
During the past five years, federal
agricultural subsidies totaling $52
billion have not prevented 100,000
farm failures. During the next five
years, estimated outlays totaling
$81 billion probably will not halt a
trend that now produces an average
of 66 farm abandonments every
day.

JACK ANDERSON

Sudan Embassy Security Questioned
By Jack A n derson
And
Joseph S p esr

"Y o u lik e p ro te c tio n is m a s a ‘w o rk in g m a n .’
H o w a b o u t a s a c o n s u m e r? ”

WASHINGTON — The frightening
Increase In terrorist actions against
Americans overseas in recent years
doesn't seem lo have jarred tiie
State Department out of its bureau­
cratic lethargy.
Four months ago. we reported the
department's Inexplicable indif­
ference to the Beirut embassy's plea
for a modest $130,000 to beef up
protection for beleaguered U.S.
personnel there. The bureaucrats'
response was a stern lecture on
budget restraint, a piteous com­
plaint about the problem s In
Washington, and an admonition to
go through the proper paperwork
process when asking for security
money.
Now we've learned that the Beirut
embassy is not alone in its security
problems. Foreign Service duty* In
Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, is

I
f
’

)

every bit as nerve-racking — and
apparently Is evoking Just as little
sympathy from Washington.
Sudan, we might note. Is close to
(he top oi I lie list of lousy assign­
ments for our diplomats abroad.
The climate is grim in the best of
times, and recent years have hardly
been the best. Drought, famine,
economic collapse, refugees from
neighboring nations — all this
u i'jld be bad enough. But Sudanese
politics has been chaotic for nearly
two decades, culminating In a coup
last April The adoption of a strict
Islamic code two years ago made life
even grimmer for Americans sta­
tioned n Khartoum.
Under the circumstances, you
might think the Stale Department
would take diligent care of the
security ol Americans bused there.
But an expert hired by a U.S.
government contractor told our
associate Donald Goldberg that the
security arrangements in Khartoum

are outrageous. We've confirmed
the details of his story through State
Department sources.
As in other embassies, the rnuln
Job of protecting the compound is
entrusted to U.S. Marines. There are
nine on duty In Khartoum.
To make up for the lack of
Marines, the State Department has
hired Service and Supply Interna­
tional, a small firm with head­
quarters in Athens. For roughly
$1.4 million, some 700 Sudanese
guards were hired as "watchmen"
to protect the embassy and Ameri­
can personnel's private residences.
The expert discovered that the
guards were untrained in security
operations. But some of them had
received other training — at a
terrorist camp in Libya. At least one
of these terrorism-school graduates
was on duty at the embassy itself.
Stutc Department officials pointed
out that the Sudanese guards carry
no weapons — which was evidently

supposed to be reassuring. An
official of the security service told
us, " I think we are doing an
excellent Job."
But the expert is still concerned
about security In Khartoum. While
he was thrre. he lrarncd that
several Individuals known to lie
Libyan soldiers arrived at the
Khartoum airport carrying Sovi­
et-made AK-47 automatic rifles und
ammunition. The weapons and
a m m o w e r e c o n f i s c a t e d by
Sudanese officials, but the Libyans
were allowed to enter.
The security expert learned also
that unidentified Individuals had
stopped to' chat with the hired
guards at various locations In
Khartoum, asking suspicious ques­
tions.
The expert reported Ills misgiv­
ings to Sen. Warren Rudman.
R-N.H. The senator is looking into
the situation.

�Brothers Plead Guilty

Evening HaraId, Sanford, FI.

Sanford Honors Late Civic Leader

To C ruelty To A llig a to r
By Deane Jordan
Herald S ta ff W riter
T w o brothers accused of
suurlug and butchering an
alligator In Lake Jcsup have
pleaded guilty Monday to cruelty
to an animal. They were two (if
I 1 people whose eases were
heard recently.
Victor Earl McKinnon. 27. and
Carl McKinnon. 2*1. both of 183
Lorlann Lane, Winter Springs,
entered the pleas before Circuit
Judge Robert McGregor who set
Dee. 3 Tor sentencing. They
could receive up to a $1,000 fine
and it year in the county Jail
each. The brothers were original­
ly charged with poaching an
alligator but pleaded guilty to
the lesser included charge of
cru elty to an anim al. The
poaching charge against the
brother's father. Cralcn Edward
McKinnon, 53. of 1902 Boat
Club Road. Oviedo, was not
prosecuted.
According to court records, a
witness told Seminole County
sheriffs deputies that on April
27 he saw two men capture an
alligator In the lake southeast of
Sanford, haul II lo shore and
butcher It by taking Its tall. He
gave the deputies a description
of the men and their boat. The
witness later identified two men
in a photo lineup.
Officer arrested the brothers
July 15 on a warrant Issued by
the Stale Attorney's office. The
elder McKinnon surrendered iti
authorities on July 19.
In other court action:
— Hetty Knight. 28. ol -108
Palmetto Avc,, Sanford, arrested
Ma r c h 22 on c h a r g e s ol
possession ol cocaine and mari­
juana. was sentenced to 5 years
probation with the stipulation

tlml she serve 90 days In the
Seminole County Jail. She was
also ordered by McGregor lo pay
the Public Defender's office $200
and pay court costs of $200.
—James Harper. 32. also of *108
Palmetto Avc., Sanford, arrested
M a re h 2 2 on c h a r g e s of
possession of cocaine and martj ua n a . was s e n t e n c e d by
McGregor to 5 years probation
with the condition that he serve
4 months In the county Jail. He.
too. was ordered to pay $200 to
the Public Defender's office and
$200 court costs.
—Harold Collins. 23. of 3631
Lincoln St.. Sanford, arrested
March 12 on charges of false
Imprisonment and aggravated
assault af t er he fo rced a
28-year-old woman from her
home at knifepoint. He was
sentenced by McGregor lo 30
months probation and ordered
not to go near the victim. He was
also ordered lo pay $200 court
costs.
—Freddie Lee Davis. 22. of Holly
Avenue. Sanford, arrested June
18 after a burglary in Sanfod. He
pleaded guilty to burglary In
August and was sentenced by
McGregor lo 5 years probation
and 40 days in the Seminole
County Jail. The Jail time Is to be
served on weekends. He was also
ordered to pay the Public De­
fender's office $350 and pay
$200 In court costs.
—Karla Marali Daniels. 19. of
100 Castle Brewer Court, ar­
rested May when she tried to
cash a stolen check, was sen­
tenced by McGregor to 3 years
probation with the stipulation
that she serve 30 days in the
county Jail and pay $190 in
restitution. McGregor also or­

dered her lo pay $200 In court
costs and $350 to the Public
Defender’s office. Miss Daniels
pleaded guilty in August to
uttering the forgery.
—George Lnducc, 22. of 21
East brook Apartments. Winter
Park, arrested July 26. has
pleaded guilty to uttering forg­
ery. He could receive up to a
year In the county Jail when
sentenced Dec. 3 by McGregor.
—John Homer McCaw, 19. of
Altamonte Springs, arrested
July 30 after he greeted a former
school chum with a punch In the
mouth, pleaded guilty to battery
and agreed to make restitution
lo the victim In the amount of
$1 OOO. He could receive up to a
year In the county Jail when
sentenced Nov. 13 by McGregor.
—John Edward Shirley. 48. of
1500 Gladiolus Drive, of South
Seminole County, arrested July
I I after reportedly pinning his
wife to the floor with his foot
then sticking a gun In her face.
He pleaded guilty to aggravated
assault and could receive up to a
year in the county Jail when
sentenced by McGregor Nov. 13.
Shirley was arrested Oct. 10 and
charged with aggravated assault
and battery after he reportedly
held a knife to his wife's throat
during a dispute.
—David Carlos Bateman, 28. of
Melbourne, arrested April 27
after leaving the scene of an
accident with Injuries, pleaded
no contest to the same and DUI.
The incident occurred when he
pulled his motor home into the
path of two Ohio motorcyclists.
They received minor injuries.
Bateman could receive up to a
year In the county Jail when
sentenced Dec. 3 by McGregor.

Joseph A. •‘J o e " Orttt

S&amp;L Robbed

Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8
p -in . We kl v a Pr esbyt eri an
Church. SR 434, at Weklva
Springs Road. Closed.
Lougwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling
Hills Moravian Church. SR 434.
Lougwood. Alanon. same time
and place.
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m.. St.
Richard's Episcopal Church.
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same
members on flute, violin, guitar,
and harpsichord.
MONDAY. OCT. 21
MADD ( Mo t he r s Ag a i n s t
Drunk Drivers) Seminole County
Chapter will meet al 7:30 p.m. at
Florida H ospital-Altam onte.
Stale Road 436. Speaker Assis­
tant Stale's Attorney Jeff Dean.
PEP Personal Exercise Pro­
gram. 9 a.in.. Wc s t mo n t c
Center. 500 Spring Oaks Ulvd..
Altamonte Springs. Indoor light
exercise program for those with
arthritis and other disabling
ailments.
Seminole County Extension
Home Economics program on
G e n e ric rs. Store vs N a tio n a l
Brands — h h W o rth th e PriceV.
9:30 to 11:30 a.m.. Seminole
County Agri-Center. 4320 S.
Orlando Drive. Sanford. Free to
the public. To register call
323-2500 Ext. 179 or 183.
Reims Club A A. noon and 5:30
p.m., closed. 8 p.m.. step. 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebus at noon, closed.
Apopka Alcoholics Anony­
mous. 8 p.m.. closed. Apopka
E p i s c o p a l C h u r c h . 615
Highland.
Al-Anon Step and Study. H
p.m.. Casselberry Senior Center.
200 N'Triplet Drive.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. closed.
1201 W. First St.
Fellowship Group AA. senior
citizens. 8 p.m.. closed. 200 N.
Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Overeaters Anonymous. 7:30
p.m.. West Lake Hospital. Slate
Road 434. Lougwood. Call Mary
at 886-1905 or Dennis at 8627411.
SATURDAY, OCT. IB
East-West Ki wants Club. 8
a.m.. Sanford Airport Restau­

TO TA L IN SU R A N CE
S E R V IC E
REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

rant. Sanford.
Fa l l F e s t i v a l o f C r a f t s
sponsored by Pre-School Center.
First Presbyterian Church. 8:30
a.m. to 3 p.m. in Centennial
Park. Park Avenue and Fourth
Street.
Annual one-day yard sale and
bazaar. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
grounds of Good Shepherd Lu­
theran Church, north of Sanford
Plaza, on Highway 17-92. San­
ford.

Sanford City Commissioners
unanimously adopted a resolu­
tion of appreciation and com­
mendation to the late Joseph A.
“ Joe" Orltt and expressions of
sympathy to his widow and
family.

The citation also called atten­
tion lo Orltt and his wife. Stella,
as being Instrumental In having
the historic Sanford Downtown
clock restored and placed in the
Magnolia Mall.

Orltt was cited for Ills years of
r o m in u n i t y s t r v l c v a n d
specifically for Ills three years
service as chairman of the Hoard
of Bond Trustees.

Mayor Hettye Smith read a
l e t t e r from Mrs. O r I l I
acknowledging the tribute to her
late husband and expressing her
gratitude to the board for Its
action.

com men l on lhe robbery saying
only that he was not free to
discuss the matter. Overman

said 111lie Informal Ion was avail­
able because the robbery hap­
pened late in the day.

A casual l y dressed man
wearing sunglasses entered the
People’s First Savings and Loan
at Loehmann's Plaza, on west
State Road 434 In Altamonte
Springs, and robbed a teller of an
undetermined amount of cash
late Tuesday afternoon, accord­
ing to Altamonte Police.
O p e n
F r i.
The man. entered the savings
and loan building al 2:41 p.m.
and gave a teller a note deman­
ding money. According to Alta­
monte Police Officer Jim Vlners
the man did not produce a
weapon and no one was hurt
during the Incident. Vlners said
the man lied on foot from the
building and police used Irack­
ing dogs to try and locate his
escape route.
People's Savings and Loan
President Tom Burrell declined

Extended Hours
This Weekend Only
9 a .m
S a t.

9

-

.

a .m

.

1 0
-

6

p .m
p . m

i l l W Flrtt Ft.
r*. 322-57F2
*•*»•*
Wllllwn h ! “ Bill" Wight C.P.C.U.
0 * r»ld W . M vy*i
P ia .ld a n l
Account Rapratanlallya-

.

1100 S. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FL.
on* iio n c i i tun
n m t o*ir

322-7953

Oil U "l Dm

a,

lw

VETERANS

Who Have Honorably Served Their Country In Time of War or Peace
Because of th * lack of bu»».ii
an.-i the diM a^c*
of the Ndlionai Cemetery m Florida a *
assigning
spaces id Velsrant G trdsn of Velor. Oahlawn
Mamorlal Park As an honorar y discharged veteran of
the United States Armed Forces you may be Qualified
tor Ff*e Burial Space HoApyp' you must register to*
this You must bf* able to show proof of Honmabi'e
Discharge There are a Hmited number of Veterans
spaces avat'a&amp;ie Certificates lor spaces *«n be tssued
on a first come first served basis To assure reservation
mai* th * coupon be«o* to

O A K IA W N M E M O R IA L PARK

■ tT M

P0

Bo. »2» L»k* M ity FL 17746

P lftiift S tru t My Vnlnran of Sarvlca Eligibility C arllllc a ta

m a im

NAME
ADDRESS
Branch a l Sarvlca

Na. In Family

S3

.M

There’s Someone Special
Waiting To Hear Rom You.
There’s someone who would love to
hear the sound of your voice. Give
them a call. It means so very much.
And costs so little. Compared to the
cost of postage, time or travel, long
distance is a very inexpensive way to
keep in touch. Call today. There’s some­
one special waiting to hear from you.

MARYLAND CASUALTY
COMPANY

K A H N S
IM M UUICI M M C T a ,

.

N O T IC E T O A L L

CALENDAR
THURSDAY, OCT. 17
Square dancing for the handlcapped, 3:30 lo 5:30 pin..
Easlnionle Center. Altamonte
Springs. Fee is $1 a month. For
Information call 862-0090.
International Trai ni ng in
C o m m u n lea t i o n G re a t e r
S em in ole Club ( previ ousl y
Toast mistress), 7:30 p.m.. Alta­
monte Chapel Education Build­
ing on Slate Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.
Sweet A delines (w om en 's
barbershop chorus). 7 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N. L a k e T r i p l e t D r i v e .
Casselberry.
Recovery Inc., a community
mental health group. 2 p.m..
Senior Citizens Center. 99 E.
Marks St., downtown Orlando.
For Information about this
sell-help method call 660*2003.
Sanford A A. 1201 W. First St..
5:30 p.m.. closed discussion, and
8 p in., open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed.
First United Methodist Church.
Overeaters Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m.. Community United
Methodist Church. Highway
17-92. Casselberry. Newcomers
meeting. 7 p.m. Call Jean at
830-0995. Also. 7:30 p.m.. in the
annex conference room behind
Florida Hospital-Altam onte.
Stale Road 436. Altamonte
Springs.
FRIDAY. OCT. 18
Central Florida Klwunls Club,
7:30 a.m .. Florida Federal
Savings and Loan. State Road
436 at 434. Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls
Club. 7 a.m.. Airport Restaurant.
Sanlord.
Op t i mi s t Cl ub of Sout h
Seminole. 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
luii. Wymnre Road. Altamonte
Springs.
Gentle Exercise for seniors.
10:30 a.in.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Florida Hospi tal -Al tamonte
Branch, 601 E. Altamonte Ave..
9 a.ui. to 5 p.m.
NARFE.2 p.m.. Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Lake

Thuridey, Ocf. 11, i l l ] - jA

So u th e rn Bed
A

B D 1 SOUTH Company

ALREADY IN TOUCH WITH THE FUTURE?

J

�* A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Oct. 17, l°85

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Kidnapped President's
Daughter M a y Be Freed Soon
SANTA TECLA. El Salvador IL'I’ ll — Archbishop Arturo
Rivera y Dumas said lu* received a taped message from iIn*
kidnapped daughter nl President .lose Napoleon Duarte
and indicated she might he released In ‘a lew hours or
days."
The head of El Salvador's Catholic Church said
Wednesday he met In Suehilolo Tuesday with leltist rebels,
who nave him the tape and told Inin hies Guadalupe
Duarte Duran. 35. and her friend. Ana Cecilia Vtlleda. 23.
were safe.
Rivera v Dnmas said he did not see the women, who were
abducted in a hall of gunfire Sept K) in trout ot a private
university in I he capital A bodyguard was killed
"I think there is something more Important than seeing
her. and perhaps in a few hours or days you will know
about the efforts made, and that they have yielded a
positive result." Rivera y Dumas said.
A branch of the rebel Earabundo Marti National
Liberation Front, or FMLN. claimed responsibility, de­
manding the authorities tree 22 political prisoners and
account for nine missing Insurgents
The government had demanded 23 mayors held by the
rebels be included in the deal.
The archbishop was selected by the government and
rebels to act as a mediator when talks between the two
sides broke down.

Closed Seaway Strands Vessels
MONTREAL (UPt| — Canadian authorities, under lire
from Great Lakes port officials and facing at least one
lawsuit over the shutdown of the St Lawrence Seaway,
said it will be weeks before a broken lock can be repaired.
Marine sources estimated repairs could lake three to
eight weeks and that some vessels could be left stranded ill
the Seaway when the system doses lor winter on Dee. 15.
Bill O'Neil, president of the St. Lawrence Seaway
Authority, told reporters in Ottawa Wednesday he could
not say how long it will lake to reopen the seaway — closed
earlier this week when a 150-foot section ol a lock collapsed
in the Welland Canal, which bypasses Niagara Falls and
connects Lake Ontario to Lake Erie
"There are Just loo many elements ol the repair program
that are indefinite at this stage it is going to be a matter of
weeks, not a matter ol days. " O'Neil said
He said he had received notice ol at least one lawsuit
against the authority because ol the breakdown that has
paralv/ed the 2.3-12 -mile Seaw.iv s y s te m
Port officials in Michigan. Ohio Illinois, and Minnesota,
meanwhile, said closure ol the Sea wav i mild cost their
cities hundreds ol thousands nl dollars

Cabinet M eets; Fighting Goes O n
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — The Lebanese Cabinet met
today lor the lirst time in two months and lighting broke
out along the Green line despite an agreement between
Christian and Moslem warlords to end a decade of civil war.
The Cabinet meeting — called to discuss the peace
agreement and create a new blueprint for Lebanese
political life — was the lirst in two months Absent were
Shiite Antal militia leader Nalnh Bern and Dru/e militia
chief Walid Jumblait. who have boycotted most ol this
year's meetings because ol dillerenees with President Amin
Gemaycl.
Sporadic lactional clashes continued along the Green
Line despite the Syrian-mediated tentative accord reached
between the Christian Lebanese Forces, the Shiite Moslem
Antal and Druze Moslem Progressive Socialist Parly
militias. No casualties were reported
Militia sources said they dispatched field commanders to
trouble spots on the Green Line, which separates Beirut
Into Moslem and Christian sectors, in a bid to avoid an
escalation in lbe fighting.
Prime Minister Rashid Karatni. a Sunni Moslem, called
today's Cabinet session alter meeting with Gemaycl for the
first time since fierce lighting between rival Moslem
militias erupted In Tripoli in September, state-run Beirut
television said.

Fashion: 'Sea, Sun A nd Sex'
PARIS (UPI) — Wallpaper light was the rule a s the Paris
19H6 spring-summer ready-to-wear shows got under way
Forty-nine designers are showing their wares through
Oct. 23 under tents in the Tullcncs Gardens near the
Louvre museum and another 50 are unveiling in hotels
and salonsaround Paris
The opening ol the Tuilcries shows Wednesday billowed
the reportedly general trend to mold the body and lorgei
the baggy look that reigned lor years until the .July shows
of hand-made, costly high tashion swept it into oblivion
Designer Chantal Thomass. catering largely to the young
and trendy, paraded sequined-edged knit short dresses that
clung to every pore lore and ait
Some tight, bare-mldritt mini outfits had tiny rubles in
the buck of the skirls and at the necklines The rear end ol
one swim suit consisted of one small ruble to match the
Thomass slogan, "sea. sun and sc\
One model who reportedly applied to work in the
Thomass show was not hired because she was an
eighth-of-an-inch too big in the hips and could not manage
the tight skirts.
More wearable lor most women was Thomass' lullskirted belled coat dress, a beauty both in tangerine linen
and In blue denim stitched in vv lute
The blue denim series also me huh'd long, buttockhugging skirls.

Four Charged In G andhi Plot
LONDON (UPI) — Four Sikhs accused ol plot ting to
assassinate Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi were
ordered held without bail when they appeared in court in
the town of Leicester today.
One of them was also charged during the 15 minute
hearing before Leicester magistrates with possessing a
revolver without a firearms cert IIb ale
The four were earlier charged with plotting i&lt;&gt; murder
Gandhi during a two-day visit to Britain this wee k Gandhi
left London Tuesday for the Commonwealth lie-ads ot
Government Conference in Bahamas
The four were remanded into custody without bail (or
seven days.
Some 150 Sikh supporters demolish,tied outside the
court. Many wore orange turbans signifying they winprepared to die lor the cause ol an iude-prudeui Sikh
homeland in India.
Police held a dozen people under the Prevention of
Terrorism Act In the days leading up to Gandhi's visit but
refused comment on reports they had lolled a plan to
assassinate the Indian premier. All but tin- lour charged
were released Monday.
Gandhi and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher agreed on
new moves to curb International terrorism during their
London talks.

...Resigns
Continued from page 1A
the Legal Medical institute for an autopsy.
Medical experts determined In a preliminary
examination late Wednesday that the 69-year-old
New Yorker had been shot in the head and chest.
They also said his left leg was mutilated und his
rlghi forearm tom oil. possibly by fish after the
hijackers threw his body Into the Mediterranean
Sea Oct. 8.
The full autopsy, which will be "long and
laborious." was to begin today as soon as an
American anatomical expert arrived from a
NATO base in West Germany. Officials said the
autopsy would establish the cause and approx­
imate time ofKUnghoffer's death.
Four Palestinians seized the Achillc Lauro off
Egypt Get. 7 with 511 people aboard and
demanded the release of Palestinian prisoners In
Israel. They surrendered two days later and were
promised safe passage out of Egypt,
But U.S. |ets Intercepted the Egyptian airliner

...Ship
Continued from page 1A
which is not a line. Glonis said.
He said the DER has evidence
the ship dumped sewage for
seven days with the knowledge
ot ship officials while it was
docked at the Port of Sanford
earlier this year. The S30.000
figure was (nr three days of
dumping sewage Inlo the river
from the ship's holding tanks, lie
said.
Notice of the consent order
was sent by registered mail to
the company early this week.
Glonis said. The company nas
20 days from receipt to reply.
Glonis said the consent order
also Included provisions that the
ship will not dump anything In
the river or Lake Monroe, and If
it did so would not only notify
lhe DER bul local news media as

carrying the four hijackers and two PLO officials
to freedom and forced It to land at a NATO base In
Sicily last Friday.
In Cairo, the pilot of the Egyptian Boeing 737
said Wednesday the American pilots had threat­
ened to shoot him down unless he landed In
Sicily. The White House denied the allegation.
Italy Jailed the four hijackers but released
Abbas and his associate despite U.S. and Israeli
claims they could prove Abbas mnstcrmlnded the
hijacking.
Abbas' release triggered a political uproar that
Intensified Wednesday when Spadollnl’s Re­
publican Parly quit the governing coalition and

GNP Climbs

removed Its three Cabinet ministers.

economists,

Craxl still commanded a slight mnjorlty but
chose to resign rather than face a divisive
parliamentary debate over his handling of the
hijacking aftermath. He announced his decision
to the parliament today,
Political observers said the resignation could
satisfy Spaollni and permit Craxl to bring the
same five parlies together again in a new
coal i ti on, a v o i d i n g new el ecti ons.

well to warn people of possible
hazards.
Glonis said the DER is very
interested in the case.
"We are trying lo protect the
environment, and it seems the
only way to to It Is through
disincentives." he said referring
to the S30.000 liability payment.
"People understand the dollar
a little better." he said.
The alleged incidents were
investigated after ship workers
provided photographs and sworn
statements about the purging of
the ship's holding tank to fish
and game Warden Jesse Baker
of the Florida Game and Freslt
Water Fish Commission.
Baker said in May the ship was
visited four times ul tls Port of
Sanford berth by a truck to
remove sewage since a sewage
line did not extend to its pier
until June. H ow ever, ship
employees said the ship would
have needed to be pumped ou*

...Drug

keep themselves in good shape
physcially and mentally. This
will verify It."
Continued from page IA
Epps also said the program
urinalysis."
can be a good deterrent and
Hoot he did. neverthlcss. em­ strengthen tin* athlete as a role
phasize that the program is model on the campus. "Hope­
definitely needed. "W e think fully, It will discourage anyone
there could be some very posi­ f r om e x p e r i m e n t i n g wi t h
tive uses for drug testing." he drugs." he said. "It will allow the
said. "W e're involved In the athletes to be good examples for
welfare of these young people. If the student body. That's the
your athletes aren't the people basic principle behind It. It's
who are leading the healthy better lo lead by example than
lifestyles, then you have pro­ words."
blems. We also think that some
Boothe said Lake Brantley
l e a d e r s h i p v a l ue s can be athletic director Bob Peterson,
strengthened."
SAC executive secretary Russ
Epps said he heartily endorses McGonegal and Roll arc all
the program. "The time has Involved with the project.
come for something like this."
All three attended a drug
he said. "1 think our athletes awareness program In Ocala last

...Kill
Continued from page 1A
ANC youth group was "unac­
ceptable".
"It is tiie declared policy of the
ANC to bring about changes in
the Republic of South Africa
through violence." the ministry
said. "In the process, deeds of
terrorism are perpetrated, in­
cluding murdering civilians."
The government has said it
will nol talk to the ANC until the
guerillas renounce violence as a
means of political reform in
South Africa.
Five prominent white busi­
nessmen and the leader of the
liberal white parliamnelary op­
position party, the Progressive
Federal Party, have met with the
ANC In the past month.
Th e meet i ngs reportedl y
focused on ending the racial

vi ol ence and devel opi ng a
power-sharing formula suitable
to all race groups. Botha de­
nounced the talks.
In a no t he r d e v e l o p me n t
Wednesday, the controlling body
of South Africa's medical pro­
fession expelled a white doctor
for failing lo treat Steve Blko. a
black political detainee who died
of brain damage after six days in
police custody in 1977.
The 34-member South African
Medical and Dental Council an­
nounced in Pretoria Wednesday
It had expelled Dr. Benjamin
Tucker, the district surgeon in
Port Elizabeth during Biko's
September 1977 detention.
Police shot and killed two
people near Cape Town Wed­

STOCKS

The combination of the weak
0.3 percent advance In the first
quarter and a slight rebound of
1.7 percent In the second
q u a r t e r me a n s t h a t t he
January-to-Scptember period
expanded by only 1.8 percent
over the same period In 1984.
To reach the Reagan ad­
ministration's forecast for a 3
percent growth rate for 1985.
more often than that to keep Its the fourth quarter would have to
tank empty during that month, soar at a blistering 6.7 percent
indicating the sewage was rate, a Commerce Department
dumped into the lake. An in­ economist said.
vestigation into the valve on the
The gross national product —
ship's holding tank showed It
the
measure of the nation's
was set to allow the tank's
content to flow out when the goods and services — totaled
$13.5 billion for the third
tank was half full. Baker Said.
quarter.
Personal spending
Contacted when the Incident
was first publicized. Norman climbed 4.8 percent with a
denied the cruise ship was substantial 20,5 percent rise in
dumping sewage Into the river spending on durable goods such
as cars und home appliances.
or lake.
"W e most emphatically are
Previously economic reports
not polluting the river." he said. lor the third quarter showed
"If we did It. it was an accident large Increases In spending in
and we apologize sincerely."
auto sales as dealers tried to
"They say we are dumping out clear 1985 inventories.
toilets overboard and that’s a
Government spending also
crock ... " Norman said the
material the ship is accused of increased beyond expectations
purging into the river was gray showing a 16.1 percent rise
water, not sewage. He said the overall with federal spending
ship's gray water contains water climbing 33.4 percent and stale
from the kitchen, bar and and local governments Increas­
ing their spending by 5 percent.
treated sewage.

month, which was coordinated
by former Minnesota Viking Carl
Eller. The cx-NFL All-Pro ad­
mitted to cocaine addiction
during the final years of his
playing career and is considered
one of the foremost authorities
on substance abuse.
Boothe said Eller will be the
leatured speaker at Friday's Inservice day.
Fred R o z e l l e . e x e c u t i v e
director of the Florida High
School Activities Association,
said the program had been
discussed before at national
meetings. " I ’d have to sec the
results of tt," Rozelle said Wed­
nesday. "I'm Interested to see
how tt works out."
While no poll or sampling was
taken, there have been several

reports of widespread use of
drugs and alcohol among stu­
dents. although no study has
been made lo show how much
that might spill over to athletes
lu the school system.

nesday and wounded three —
including a 2-year-old child — in
a clash with black riolers who
threw stones and gasoline
bombs at old Crossroads, a
squatter camp on the eastern
border of the city.
Residents of the city's black
and mixed-race townships said a
14-year-old black girl was killed
in another clash at the Nyanga
railway station and a mixed-race
youth was killed near the Hewitt
teachers training college in
At hlone.
More than GO people have died
in two months of racial violence
around Cape Town, the worst
unrest in the city's history.
Police confirmed the shooting
o f the tw o b I ae k in e n a t

Crosstoads, hut declined to con­
firm the other reports. At least
11 people were wounded by
police Wednesday and eight
were known to have been ar­
rested.
Officers fired shotguns at mix­
ed-race youths who gathered at
the place where police am­
bushed rioters Tuesday, killing
three people — including a
12-year-old hoy.

hit the southern Rockies and the
southern high Plains early today
j) r o d u c e d It e a v y r a i n .
Alamogordo. N.M.. was dren­
ched with an inch and a quarter
of ruin, while El Paso. Texas, got
nearly an Inch. A Hash Hood
w a l e h was p o s t c d for
southeastern New Mexico. Ocean
breezes in southern California
Wednesday boosted the humidi­
ty level, which had hovered near
z e r o s i n c e t he s e r i e s of
hrushfires begun Monday, and
provided a break from the up to
50 mph Santa Ana desert winds
that had fanned the names.
Officials sill cl favorable weather
predicted for today would help
firefighters control the blazes.
Elsewhere, cloudy skies covered
much of the south half of the
Great Plains region, and clouds
and fog were prevalent In the
southeastern purl of the nation.
Dense fog cut visibilities to near
zero In central North Carolina

and southeastern Georgi a.
Strong, gusty winds swept
across Montana and Wyoming
Wednesday evening, gusting to
58 mph at Sheridan. Wyo.. and
to 61 mph at Billings, Mont. The
high temperature for the nation
Wednesday was 94 degrees at
I he Cecil Naval Air Station in
Jacksonville. Fla.
EXTEND ED FO R E C AST:
Florida except northwest —
Partly cloudy with warm after­
noons. A chance of showers or
thunderstorms mainly south
Sunday and Monday. Lows in
the 60s north and 70s south.
Highs mid 80s lo near 90.
B O A T IN G F O R E C A S T :
Jupiter Inlet to Key Largo nut to
the Bahama Bank — Small craft
should exercise caution. Wind
northeast to east 15 to 20 knots
through Friday. Sea 4 lo 6 feet
and higher in the Gulf Stream.
Widely scattered showers and
thunderstorms.

Said one principal who asked
not to be identified: "W e think
the biggest problem is drinking.
There have been repealed In­
stances at some schools where
athletes have gotten in trouble
over drinking. The main reason
Is to relieve (he peer pressure.
This test gives them an excuse
to say no. It will give them an
out.
1 here are an estimated 2.500
to 3.000 students involved In
athletic programs

the school district.

th ro u g h o u t

The witnesses said trouble
erupted when youths protested
the police refusal to release the
body of one person killed Tues­
day so his parents could honor
Moslem religious law requiring
him to be hurled before sunset
the day after his death.

WEATHER

AR E A F O R E C A S T :
Today...partly cloudy and warm
with widely scattered showers
and a few thunderstorms. High
near 90. Northeast wind 10 lo 15
Continued from page 1A
mph. Rain chance 20 percent.
Orlando Helicopter will get 60 Tonight...partly cloudy. Low in
percent of the Interest and the the low to mid 70s. Northeast
Chinese. 40 percent.
w i n d 5 l o 10 m p h . F r 1During the next year. Orlando day...partly cloudy and warm. A
Helicopter will send 10 choppers slight chance ol afternoon
and spare parts to China, thunderstorms. High near 90.
followed up the next year by Wind northeast around 15 mph.
more |&gt;arts and training techni­ Rain chance 20 percent.
cians. By 1989. the Chinese will
he a s s e m b l i n g I iteir o w n
NATIONAL REPORT:
helicopters in the Guangzhou
Showers and thunderstorms
factory.
The com pany's helicopter doused the southern Rockies
which attracted the Chinese is and southern high Plains early
the Bearcat, a "hybrid" of mili­ today, prompting a flash flood
tary copters and st rapped parts watch for parts of New Mexico,
which carries up lo 10 passen­ while temperatures dropped
gers and 2.000 pounds of cargo. sharply in the Great Lakes
region and the northeastern part
It costs about $230,000.
of the country. In southern
California, ocean breezes helped
firefighters extinguish all but
seven of the urea's 19 fires
Wednesday, und a forecast of fog
today increased chances for an
end to tlte blazes that have
these quotations provided by m em bers ot
the National Association of Securities Dealers
charred 80.000 acres and de­
are representative in te r dealer prices as of
stroyed two dozen homes Fair
n n d m orning today In te r dealer m arkets
skies in the Great Lakes region
change throughout the day Prices do not
include re ta il m arkup m arkdown
and tiie northeastern part of the
Bid Aik
nation allowed temperatures lo
Atlantic Bank
)9 ’ « 40*4
drop rapidly following afternoon
American Pioneer S&amp;L
•Id
9
Barnett Bank
highs in the 40s and 50s. Early
Florida Porter
today,
the mercury had fallen to
&amp; Light
24 la
the 30s over much of the area,
Fla Progress.......................
26*- 77
Freedom Saving*
while northern lower Michigan
10*4
II
MCA
had wintry temperatures In the
Hughe* Supply
22*o
upper 20s. lu Alpena. Mich., the
M orri*on’»
.t iU
-a .
NCR Corp
mercury hit 26 degrees shortly
M i -j 71
P le tte r
after
midnight, tying the record
Scotty*
low for that date set in 1977.
Southeast Bank
...........j u t
SufiTrutt................................
Some of the thunderstorms that .

.. .Meet

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
nation’s gross national product
climbed to a healthy 3.3 percent
during the third quarter, fueled
by stronger spending by con­
sumers and government, the
Commerce Department reported
Thursday.
The figure rose above the 2.8
percent Hash estimate Issued
last month by governm ent

AREA DEATH
ROSE M. CHAPIN
Rose M. Chapin. 67. 501
Goodridgc Lane. Fern Park, died
Tuesday. She was born In
Pennsylvania. She was a home­
maker and a Methodist. Sur­
vivors: husband. Russell; sons.
" “^^TSwrn^crnMVu/TLove

(Hollins

Phillip Copare. Orlando. Mike
P r o v c n z a n o . J i m m y Provenzano. all of Washington. Pa.:
sister, Louise S k Iv i a t .
Washington: 11 grandchildrenBrevard Memori al Funeral
Home. Frontcnuc.

OAKLAWN
• f v m u a l m m • e n m n • nowst
IS TOUMIUT CMKt
Om UmI Ow n Take* Cm Of

44A At M m M.

S S V 323-1204

U n i* A* CmtrW flterM*

S22-42M

�SPORTS
E v e n in g H e ra ld , S an fo rd . F I.

T h u rs d a y , O c t. 17, lfS 3 — 7A

Boyle Adds Professional Touch To DeLand Invitational
Most ol the top (-ontcmlcr.s for the
stale- c ross country ( IA through 4A)
titles will be- on hand for Saturday's
De-Land Invitational at ilu* De-Laud
Airport.
Hv the- e-nel ol last we-e-k, thc-re we-re99 teams entered. according te&gt; .John
Doyle-, DeLand luvitathmal meet
dlreetor.
Hoyle Isn't worried about the meet
coining &lt;*ll well lie- said It will he
better than last Veter's meet.
"Last year's meet went real we-ll."
Dovle sold. "Dot I'm trying to make- it
a lot better this ye ar. A le w things we
didn't elo last year were hand out
ribbons tit the- eltule and have- printed
entl results. This year we- will do
both."
Doyle, who alsee was meet dlreetor
tit Inst year's stale me-i-t and will elo
the- same agiilii this season. Is a
professional til miming oil meets —
literally.

"I put on races professionally and
they've never had anybody like (hat
elo it before," Doyle sold. "It's what I
do,"
This year's DeLand Invitational
starts ai 10 a.m. with the 1A-2A
Junior varsity Kiris. FollowinK will la­
the 1A-2A JV boys. 1A-2A varsity
Kiris. IA-2 varsity boys. 3A JV girls.
3A .JV boys. 3A varsity girls, 3A
varsity boys. 4A JV Kiris. 4A JV boys.
■IA varsity Klrls and 4A varsity boys.
The linal race is scheduled to start la
4:20 p.m.
Doyle said the course Is In Ittir
Condition and thtil ft has been
ehtuiKed a bit.
"The course Is lookiitK Ittir coinpared to where It was exactly tit this
time last year." he said. "There are- a
couple of spots thtil it real muddy
because of the had rain we had last
week."
"And we’ve uttered it somewhat."

Verne's Precision
Serves Cut Tribe
Lyman Falters

Chris
Fister
SPORTS
W RITER

added Doyle. "Where it used to go
inside the fence, now goes outside the
lenee on the first loop so the runners
lire runniiiK on Kood, solid Kround. It
should be- a faster course."
Doyle said almost all of the state
contenders have entered with one of
the- few exceptions being Clearwater
Countryside, the top ranked boys
(4A) team.
nu u

pointing loss to Kissimmee Os­
ceola on Tuesday, now stands at
13-3 overall and 5-2 in the SAC.
The Lady Lions can clinch the
Orange Belt Conference (8-1 re­
cord) tonight at home against

Leesburg.
“ The teamwork was much
better tonight than against Os­
ceola ." Oviedo coach Anita
Carlson said. "Hut we re still not
where 1want us to he."
Meanwhile, it was serving that
and a breakdown In c o m ­
munication that kept the Lady
Semlnolcs out ol the match. The
Tribe now stands at 5-4 overall
and 2-4 in (In- conference.
Seminole takes on Lake Nowell
(2-2 in SAC) lonighl at 7 In an
SAC match at Lake 1Inwcll.
"You can't plav like six Indi­
viduals and expect to win."
Seminole coach Belli t orso said.
"Serving killed us. too. Thenare no excuses tor the serves
that went out (ol play I and the
lack of team play."
Seminole High played well in
the very beginning ni tin- match
as it limit a 5-0 lead. Sheri
Peterson served a pair nt points
and 1.1/ Long served three.
Jackie Farr's block and an ace
by Long led the way.
Alter the teams traded serves.
Stephanie Nelson came on for
the Lions and served six straight
p o i n t s as O v i e d o e r a s e d
Seminole's lead. Three of the
senlor standout's serves were

Volleyball
aces Included the one (hat put
tile Lions ahead. 6-5.
Oviedo went on to take a 9-6
lead as Verne served three points
but Seminole came back with
lour straight on Peterson's serve
lor a 10-9 lead.
Cindv Wood served three
points for Lady Lions fora 12-10
lead and, alter Allison Smith's
spike returned it to Oviedo.
Nelson served to more points for
a 14-10 lead.
Seminole made ll 14-1 1 on
Farr's serve and. idler an Oviedo
missed serve. Seminole got It
back. Dut Kelly Price got in a
spike to return serve to the Lions
and Lisa Knapp served the final
point of the opening game.
To start the second game,
Sem inole's Peterson hit her
serve Into the net. Verne then
served three points, two of them
aces, for a 3-0 lead. The teams
then went through an entire
rotation with only three [Mints
scored as Oviedo had a 4-2 lead.
Verne then put the Lady Lions
In control. The smooth senior
served seven straight (say that
three times fast) points, only one
of which was returned, for an
11-2 Oviedo lead. Verne's ace
provided tile fifth point and
Nelson's spike accounted for the
I Hit.
“ Kim IVernel is getting more
c o ns i s t e nt e v e r y m a t c h . ”
Carlson said. "Site served really
well today. She set well and
played the hack row well, too."
Oviedo went on to take a 14-4
lead before Seminole made It
14-6 on Yolanda Robinson's
serve. Oviedo got it back and
closed out the match on Jill
Knutson's serve.
Seminole missed seven serves
in game two. ) 1 for lhe match.
LYM AN STRING SNAPPED
Lyman High's 12-game un­
beaten streak came to an end
Wednesday night when noneon ft*n ie c e S p r u c e C r e e k
claimed a 1-15. 15-8. 15-10
upset victory at Lyman High.
See LYM AN. Page 8A

will include winners advancing from
preliminary competitions.
A limited number of children who
could not compete at Clermont will
be permitted to register directly for
the national competition by contact­
ing the Ironklds national head­
quarters at (619) 756-2413. These
participants will be required to obtain
a letter from a lifeguard or swim
instructor demonstrating swimming
ability.
Youngsters compete in two age
divisions: Juniors (7 to 10) who must
swim 100 meters, bike five kilome­
ters (3.1 miles) and run one kilometer
(.6 of a mile). For the Senior age
group (11-14), the distances are
doubled.
At Walt Disney World, the top boy
and girl finisher at each age level will
win $1,000 in U.S. savings bonds.

'Noles Confront
No. 8 Sondcrabs
By S im Cook
H erald S ports E ditor

—

By Chris Fister
Herald Sports W riter
The way slu- serves with such
efficiency, you might think Klin
Verne carries a slide rule In her
hack pocket so slu- can find out
the precise spot to stand and the
exact number ol incites to hit the
ball over the net
The Oviedo High senior knows
that it doesn't take a math
wizard to he a consistent server,
ll lakes expel lenee and plenty at
practice.
Verne, also an outstanding
seller, served It) points in the
second game Wednesday night
In lilt the Lady Lions to a 15 1I
15-6 victory over Seminole High
In Seminole Alhlelfe Conlerem e
action til Oviedo I ligh
Oviedo, coming oil it disap­

1985 Road Racing Calendar:
• On Saturday at 8 a.m.. Centra!
Florida Masters will hold a three mile
cross country meet at the DeLand
Airport prior to the high school
DeLand Invitational. For more In­
formation. contact Boyle at (904)
7360002.
Other upcoming events on the
Central Florida Masters schedule
Include a three mile prediction run on
Dec. 31 at Daytona Beach and a half
marathon-5K road race on Jan. 19 at
DeLeon Springs.
• On Sunday. Walt Disney World
will host the finals of a unique
triathlon program for children — the
Colonial Ironklds National Champi­
onship.
The event caps off a new scries of
short-distance triathlons which con­
sist of swimming, cycling and runn­
ing for boys and girls ages 7 to 14.
Participants in the Ironklds Nationals

Bolstered by their first win of
the season. Seminole's Fighting
Semlnoles Journey to Daytona
Beach tonight to battle the
Seabreeze Sandcrabs in District
4A-5 football at 7:30, The kickoff
Is one-half hour earlier than
usual.
■
•'
After losing the first four
games of the season. Seminole
knocked off Lake Brantley last
week. 17-0. It was the first
1
victory for Dave Mosurc as the
.•■ ■E
j
ft1*1
,1
•
Scm inalcs’ new coach. The
. m
If-»: Jp-• Y" • “ jTrnTTTl
i.
Tribe is 0-1 in 4A-5 while
Seabreeze Is 1-0.
The Sandcrabs. 4-0, had last
week olT and are currently rest­
ing comfortably in the No. 8 slot
of the Florida Sports Writer:.
Association prep football poll.
The Sandcrabs have whipped
Spruce Creek. Oviedo. Titusville
Astronaut and Daytona Beach
Father Lopez.
Seabreeze slipped past Oviedo
on a muddy field, 14-6. The
‘Crabs took care of Astronaut.
12-0. Seminole lost to Astronaut
In the season opener. 24-0. but
Mosure said his Tribe has im­
proved Immensely since then.
Dave Rape, Seminole's flashy
wide receiver, said the Tribe Is
ready despite the one less day to
prepare. "W e really worked
those weeks after we lost the
first four games and coach
Mosure hasn't changed the
schedule any Just because we
won," Rape said. "W c know If
we play our game, no turnovers
or mistakes, we’ ll come out with
a win."
Rape said Seabreeze ranks
with Lake Mary and Astronaut
as the 'Nolcs toughest foes but
he pointed out one difference.
"W e've played big and slow
teams and we've played small
and quick teams." he said. "But
Seabreeze Is big and quick. They
can give it to you with both ends
of the barrel."
The Sand Crabs have been
tough defensively but they
haven' t scored much. Two
touchdowns have been the max.
H #r*ld Photo by Bonnio WtoboMt-Toytor
A fact that disturbs Mosure.
"They are Just doing what Is
necessary
to win. they're that
Lake H o w ell’s A nita Cechowski concentrates on her set as
good."
Mosure
said. "They've
M onica Scheider braces fo r the retu rn . Howell hosts
been off a week and this is their
Seminole and Lake M a ry hosts Lym an in volleyball tonight,
homecoming. They're Just like a
powder keg walling to explode."

'Slick Cech'

Football
Scminolt O lltn tc : Veer
Split end............................ Dave Rape (M l
Tackle
Alan Kendall (M )
Guard..
Carl Tipton 161)
Center
Jame» Rowe (M l
Guard
Wltion Hooks (661
Tackle..................
Jack Jackwn ( 79&gt;
Tight end
Sonny Osborn (17)
Flanker
Herb Hlltery (4)
Quarterback
Jett Blake (2!
Halfback
Willie Evans (301
Halfback
Dwayne Willis (5)
Kicker
J J Partlow (24)
Seminole Defense: Pro 4 )
End
Mike Luster 158)
Tackle............................Alan Kendall (66)
T a c k le ......................... Kenny Morris 177)
End
Eddie Banks 111
Linebacker.....
Earnie Lewis (55)
Linebacker................. Brian Brinson (57)
Linebacker......................... Rick Kelly (52)
Cornerbeck.............Dennis Lewrence 144)
Cornerback..................
Daryl
Taylor t i t
Saftey............................ T her on Llggons (6)
Safety....................... Dexter Franklin (41)
Punter............................Sonny Osborn (17)

"W e'll have our hands full."
Mosure said he hopes Rape,
tight ends Sonny Osborn and
Eddie Banks along with running
backs Dwayne Willis. Willie
Evans and Curtis Rudolph will
have their hands full. too. — of
passes from quarterback Jeff
Blake.
"W e're going to try and throw
the ball." Mosure. who spotted a
weakness In Seabreeze's flat
coverage, said.
Seminole came out throwing
against Lake Brantley but the
first three tosses from Blake
were dropped. Then. Blake
overthrew several receivers. The
strong-armed sophomore
finished the first half with Just 2
of 9 In the first half.
In the second half, though, he
really put It together, hitting 6 of
8 attempts and one TD to Hillerv
for 14 yards. Hl l l ery also
dropped another easy toss in the
end zone. Blake, the county's
leading passer with 573 yards,
was protected well and had his
first game without an intercep­
tion.
Defensively. Seminole came
up with four Interceptions —
three by Daryl Taylor and one by
Dennis Lawrence — to hold off
the Patriots. “ They moved the
ball on us. though." Mosure
said. "That's something we have
to do a better job of against
Seabreeze."

M issou ri M atch : C a rd in a ls, K.C. A d v a n c e
C la r k 's

H o m e r

D u m p s

LOS ANGELES |UPl) - To pitch or
not to plU'li to Jack Clark — that was
the ninth-inning question. Fortunately
for the Cardinals. Tommy Lasorda
arrived at the wrong answer.
With Los Angeles leading 5-4. the
Dodgers manager allowed reliever
Tom Nicdenfucr to face the St. Louis
first baseman with two out, runners on
second and third, ami Andy Van Slyke
on deck.
It took Clark one pitch and about
380 feet to destroy the strategy.
He pounded a waist-high fast hall
deep into the left-field bleachers, and
the startling blow gave the Cardinals a
7-5 triumph in Game 6 of the National
League pluyolfs, and the pennant.
"I thought they would gel the count
to 2-0 and try to make me lilt a bad
pitch, or go uht-ad and put me on."
Clark said amid the sweet smell of
champagne. "But they came right
after me: they wanted me to make the
out. They went for it and lor some
reason, the percentages eume out In
my favor."

D o d g e r s

S u n d b e r g

N.L. Playoffs
ages In pitching to Clark. Los Angeles
had issued nine intentional walks in
the series — and gotten the next baiter
out every time. Slyke was balling .100
for the series: Clark was a .350 hitter.
"It’s the easiest thing In the world to
say I should have walked him ."
Lasorda said. "But If he lift a deep lly
to center field and they caught It for
the third out, not one guy would say 1
should have walked him.
"Anyone can second-guess. I have to
make the first guess."
After losing the first two games of
the series. SL Louis meets the Royals
In Kuusus City Saturday for the start of
the all-Missouri World Series. It's the
Cardinals' second pennant In four
years and their 141h overall, u league
record.
St. Louis won the scries without

— r ia n in iiiF * —

Show-Me State
Rejoices Twice
On opposite edges of the
Show-Me State, baseball fans
rejoiced at the prospect of the
lirsl all-Missouri World Series
since the St. Louis Browns and
Cardinals faced olT In 1944. and
the first ever between Missouri's
two largest cities.
More than 5.000 fans were on
hand at Lambert Airport hours
before the St. Louis Cardinals
were to arrive home late Wed-

Sec SHOW-ME. Page BA

K n o c k s

TORONTO (UPI) - The Kansas City
Royals entered the American League
playoffs believing their left-handed
starters could carry them past the
Toronto Blue Jays.
They were right.
Unexpectedly, though, those lefties
who normally start excelled In relief
roles.
Using a left-handed starter out of the
bullpen for the second straight night.
Kansas City capped a remarkable
scries comeback with a 6-2 victory
over Toronto, creating an all-Missouri
World Series against the St. Louis
Cardinals beginning Saturday at
Kansas City, 8:35 EDT.
The Royals became the fifth team In
baseball history to erase a 3-1 deficit,
and now will need to travel only the
250 miles along 1-70 Instead of ihe
proverbial road home.
Left-hander Charlie Lelbrandt’s 5 1-3
Innings of five-hit. two-run relief, along
with the hitting of Pat Sheridan and
Jim Sundberg. reversed Kansas City's
tradition of playoff failure.

O u t

T o r o n to

A.L. Playoffs
" If you pitch, and If you don't get
blown out of ballgnmes." said Royals
manager Dick Howser after the AL
West champion beat the East winner
for the first lime In five years, "you've
got a chance."
"I'm disappointed. I’m frustrated."
Toronto manager Bob Cox said after
ace Dave Sticb gave up a solo home
run to Sheridan, who scored three
times, and a bases-loaded triple to
Sundberg. who also had an RBI single.
"W e didn't have the luck." Cox said.
"Luck and Willie Wilson. We'd hit a
bullet up the alley and Wilson would
run It down. He made a lot of good
catches."
The difference, though, was pit­
ching. Kansas City's left-handers, and
eventually Its right-handers as well,
choked ofTToronto.

■ M SUNDBERG. Page BA

�•A —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Oct. 17, 1985

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Boosters H ave Sem inole Fever,
Catch It A t M e e tin g On M on d ay
Seminole Fever — Caleb
It
That’s the ’85 slogan of
the Seminole IIl|*h School
Monsters Club as it plans
for its October sports meetittH Monday at 7:80 p in. in
the hlnli school gymnnsinm.
"This meeting is lor all
card-carry inn mem hers,
parents and fans." Gayle
Tipton, secretary ol the
boosters, said Wednesday.
"The booster club needs
Donalyn Knight
more members."
Monday’s meet inn will teal tire addresses from football
coach Dave Mosaic, cross country coach Guv Hlaekvvell.
swimminn coach Donalvn Kuinht and volleyball coach
Mctli Cnrso.
The clubs' officers lor tills year are Rose Futrcll.
president. Wendell Sprlnnlicld. vice-president, and Wayne
Albert, treasurer.

Chicken Charged In Lawsuit
DAVENPORT. Iowa (UPII — A Cleveland Indians pitcher
testified today that Ted Glannoulas. performing as the
Famous Chicken, tackled him at a 1981 old-timers' game,
causing a shoulder separation that has hindered his
baseball career.
Don Schulze. 23. of Rochelle. III., filed a $2 million,
personal Injury lawsuit in federal court three years ago
against Glannoulas. who performs as the Chicken
^formerly known as the San Diego Chicken) at sporting
events throughout the country.
Schulze said "the Chicken" grabbed him in a bear hug
and flipped him over onto the ground at an old-timer’s
baseball game June 21. 1981. at John O'Donnell Stadium.
Schulze was a member of the Quad Cities Cubs at the time
of the Incident.
"I was tackled by the San Diego Chicken." Schulze told
the jury. He also said the injury hurt his pitching career
and left him with persistent pain in his left shoulder.
Schulze — a 6-foot-l-ineh. right-handed pitcher — was
4-10 this season with the Cleveland Indians and had an
ERA of 6.06.

O xygian , M e a d o w la k e In D erby
HALLANDALE (UPI| — Tartan Stable's Oxygian and
Saron Stable's Meadowlake. a pair of standouts in this
year's crop of 2-year-old thoroughbreds, headed a list of
130 Early Bird entrants Wednesday for the March 1
running of the 6500.000 Florida Derby
Moth horses scored impressive victories up north In
Grade 1races this year.
Oxygian. a powerful 2-year-old son of Damascus, won the
Belmont Futurity by nearly 10 lengths earlier this fall. The
horse had scored bv 2 V*j lengths and 8
lengths in his
previous starts.
Meadowlake turned in an even more astonishing
performance, running the fastest 6 furlongs of the
Hawthorne meet with a .22-length victory in his maiden
effort, then capturing the Grade I Arlington-Washington
Futurity by almost 10 lengths.

M o n d a y D ead lin e For Doubles
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS — The Sanford/Lukc Mary unit
ol tile American Cancer Society will be holding its 4th
annual men's and women's doubles tennis tournament at
Sanlando Park. Oct 23-27. according to Cindy Markin,
loumoment spokesperson
The tournament which is being sponsored in conjunc­
tion with Coppertonc. will benefit the local American
Cancer unit.
The entry lee w ill be $30 per team. Each participant will
receive Coppertonc t-shirts and tanning products. The
winning team will get $150.00 and the runnersup will earn
$100.
Deadline lor entry is Monday (Jet 21 For further
information call the American Cancer Society olflce at
322-0849 or Markin at Sanlando Park at 869-5966,

O ser Leaves Decision To Judge
NEW ORLEANS |UP1) — The Judge presiding over the
Tulane basketball point-shaving ease agreed to let another
Judge decide today whether he should bow out of the
upcoming trials ol four defendants
Orleans Parish Judge Alvin Oser. who dismissed sports
bribery charges against former Tulane star center John
Mot Rod
Williams, refused to step down when
prosecutors said lie could not possibly be fair to the other
defendants, but agreed to let Orleans Parish Judge Patrick
Quinlan decide whether he should be removed from the
eases.
Oser and three assistant district attorneys involved in the
Tulane ease were expected to testify at today's hearing.
Prosecutors have said Oser lias "personal hostility and
preconceived notions" against them

...Lyman
Continued from 7A
The Lady Greyhounds. 12-1.
return to SAC play tonight at
Lake Mary. Lyman Is 6-0 in the
conference.
"The girls played absolutely
specatuclar in the first game."
Lyman cuack Anne lie Grlifin
said. “ But they went Hal in the
second."
Spruce Creek built an 11-5
lead in the third game before
Lyman came storming back but
the Lady Greyhounds couldn’t
come back all the way.
"It was a totally different team
the second and third games,"
Grilfin said. “ But Spruce Creek
deserves credit. They are very
scrappy and picked up some litis
I never thought would be hit
back."
Grilfin said although it was
disappointing, it was better to
lose now then in a conference
match.
"The monkey’s oil our backs
now.** she said. "The winning
streak is over and now we can

get back to basics and work the
game plan way we want to run. I
think it will do us good in the
long run.
"There was a lot of extra
pressure on llie girls and they've
been through an emotionally
draining week.” added Griffin.
"In lhe third game, each person
was trying so hard to do it
themselves. They wanted so bad
to win they didn't work together
as a team."
The extra pressure Griffin
alluded to involved Lyman’s
coach Karren Newman. The
3 6 - y e a r - o l d N e w ma n was
seriously injured in an aulomihlc
accident Saturday night and
remains paralyzed from the
waist down in the intensive care
unit at Orlando' s Humana
Lucerne Hospital.
Grilfin. who coached tile Lady
Greyhounds the past two years
while Newman was acquiring
her doctorate degree, and assis­
tant Jerri Kelly are coaching the
team in tier absence.
Lyman High's junior varisty
defeated Spruce Creek Wed­
nesday for its first win ol the
season.

Trinity Dunks Lethargic Rams
By Chuck Burgess
Special to the Herald
Lake Mary’s Ramphibians took to the
water Wednesday against their 3A county
rival Trinity Prep at Trinity and came out on
the short end of the stick.
Head coach Walt Morgan said the Rams
Just happened to have an off day. "Some of
their times were olT today," Morgan said.
"Some have been working extremely hard
and others Just haven't been coming to
practice."
Lake Mary lost hard-fought battles in both
meets. However, the stronger and more
dominant Saints handed the Rams a 102-65
setback In the boys and a closer 91-76 loss
In the girls.
Although the Rams' girls team had beaten
the Lady Saints previously this year in a
quadrangular meet, the water Just wasn't
splashing the Ramphibians' way. according
to co-coach Clyde Hayes. "W e were doing
fairly well by having a lot of second and
third places," Hayes said. "They (Trinity)
were just killing us by all of their first
places."
Even though first places were few and far
between for the Rams, they did manage to
win several events. Among the winners lor
the girls included freshman Kcllv Wise (100
fly 1.07.5), Elisa Maher (100 free 1:02.971

S w im m in g
and Juimie Brosnan (50 free 27.141.
"There were a lot of close races." Hayes
said. "So the score can be deceiving. It was
actually closer In the water then it was on
paper.”
Close races played a large part In the male
Rams' performances. Even though they
didn't win any events, the Rams bail a few
second place finishes which were close to
wins.
Among the second place finishers were
Todd Stcbblus (200 free 1:56.96 and 50 free
23.92). David Purkerson (diving 28 points).
Wes Slmccek (100 back 1:05.72). Joe Rosser
(100 free 55.98), Steve Kostowlcz (100 11V
57.81) and Todd Ravburn (100 breast
1:12.48).
Despite the loss. Hayes said he feels his
team will bounce back in the next two
weeks. "W e have a lot of young talent and
potential." said Hayes. "W e have two of the
biggest meets of the year earning up. We
swim Lake Brantley next Wednesday and
then take on the defending conference
champions. Lyman, the following Tues­
day."
trinity, which won 19 of 22 events, was

led bv All America Rachael Weight man In
the girls and the quartet of Brian and Chris
Donahue. Robbie McMIchael and Robert
Penn for the boys.
Wclghtmnn. who has only lost twice this
year, swam weak events and still managed
victories. Welghtman won the 200 Individu­
al medl ey In 2:17.73 and Ihe 100
breaststroke In 1:16.63. She swam on the
it iitnifiif 900 fiirillr

Other winners for the Lady Saints in­
cluded A spin wall (200 free 2:13.19 and lOO
back 1:10.84) and Smith (500 free 6:15.84).
In the boys meet, the Donahue brothers
continued to keep Ihe winning tradition in
the family by winning four events between
them. Chris, the oldest, won the 100 free.
49.74. 500 free. 4:56.88 and helped Ihe 200
medley relay team ol McMIchael. Penn and
brother Brian to a victory with a winning
time of 1:43.86.
Brian, on the other hand, cruised to a
victory in the 200 free with a lime of
1:53.29.
Other winners for the victorious Saints
were McMIchael (100 lly 55.73 and 2(H) I.M.
2:06.0). Llovd Asplnwall (100 breast
1:06.34) and Penn (50 free 23.911.

D e B a ria n
Snags Bass
From H id in g

Butler, Lucas Spark
Seminole JV To Win
By Sam Cook
Herald Sporta Editor
Derrick Butler was "Mr. De­
fense" and Leonard Lucas was
"Mr. OfTcnsc" Wednesday night
as the Seminole junior varsity
football team captured its fourth
victory In five games with a 32-0
whitewash over Lake Brantley at
Altamonte Springs.
Butler, a 5-10. 220-pounder,
clogged up the middle for
coaches Bill Zeiss and John
Brady. The sophomore tackle
collected 15 tackles and four
assists. "He stopped everything
that went In the middle." Brady
said.
Lucas, meanwhile, did a little
bit of everything for the offense.
The sophomore slasher ran lor
132 yards and reeled in 58 yards
on pass receptions. Lucas ac­
counted for 20 of the Tribe's
points with two TDs rushing,
one receiving and a two-point
conversion.
The 'Noles. which hosts Lake
Howell next Thursday, opened
the scoring when Ken Button
bolted 41 yards for a touchdown

Football
on Seminole's second play. On
Seminole' s next possession.
Tracey Turner capped the drive
with a 15-yard TD run for a 12-0
l e a d . A 35- y a r d J e r r v
Blankenship to Walter Hopson
pass and a 38-yard run by Lucas
set up the score.
In the second quarter. Lucas
ran for a 33-yard touchdown and
also muscled in for the two-point
conversion for a 20-0 halftime
lead.
Blankenship pushed the lead
to 26-0 in the third quarter when
lie fired a 30-yard scoring toss to
Eugene Byam. Seminole's last
score came in the fourth quarter
when backup QB Mike Edwards
di r e c t e d a 6 0 - yard dr i ve
Edwards capped it with an
eight-yard pass to Lucas, who
set up at flanker on the play.
Blankenship finished the night
with 4 completions In 8 attempts
for 100 yards and one TD.
Batton ran for 71 yards while

Dell Ahernethy. owner ot the
Osteen Bridge Fish Camp, said
the high water in Ihe St. Johns
River enables the bass to hide.
They couldn't hide Iriini Pain
Holloway on Wednesday, how­
ever.
Using a plastic worm. Pam.
the wile ol Mickey Holloway ol
DcBary. hooked an K pound.
3G ounce bass neat the Osteen
L e o n a rd Lucas did a little b it
Fish Camp.
o f e v e r y t h in g o f f e n s iv e ly
"That was a real nice catch."
T h u rs d a y n ig h t. He rushed Ahernethy said “ The speck lishfor two scores and cau g h t a Ing has picked up. too li hasn't
pass for a n o th e r. He also ran really turned on but it lias
o v er a tw o point conversion
picked up."
Ahernethy said Iasi weekend
as the T rib e ro u ted L a ke
several anglers were hauling m
B ra n tle y .
35. It) and 50 specks per day. lie
Turner added 74. Edwards hit 2 also said lishermeii wen- getting
oi -l passes lor one score, Byam their limits on bluegtlls and
caught three passes lor 50 yards.
shellerackers.
Butler recei ved help d e ­
"I'm looking lor a pretty good
fensively from John Starkey who weekend.” Ahernethy said. "The
had four tackles and four assists summer weather is hanging in
and Nick Cafiello who had four there and II the wind stays down
tackles, three sacks and a fum­ it should be good lishiug.
ble recovery. Willie Campbell Specks, bass, bluegtlls — lake
came up with an interception.
your pick."

TRC, Sessions
Win; Battle
For First Next

SCO REBO A RD
■Oct If*’S’ LawsI ISpm
•Oct J4t&gt;Ki*utC’, I Dpm
■
Od IT»t (mill Citt I S3 prn
Tlt»fl**rNiftlTI TV»48&gt;*
iilAKnurr
KimKiii Pliptth
AUTO RACING
!l*tt«l Stitiil
1Xit - ESPNIMcn 'X
LtlfwfCXimpanhipWritl
tOXINS
*tm**l Lairwa
Is™ - ESPN S.petc.’t ot Tit N
L
*. A.-.|«l*tIt ITUnit
ii, ,t «r Ns-’a* Ifft-bc IC
jrtfiuHinaitntt.3)|
I’t
Oct I LotAngt-ft4.S' Law'll
3pm- ESPN"e: 36-ii e .1 jatRii
Od ’0LetAngcit|S' LawsI
HARNESSRACING
Oct 'I SI Low14L«4.gfn)
pm- ESPNP,pm'c-.t-i Pi:t« j,
Oc* t) St LOwNII. LotAmge-et1
&amp;i US* LowS3LasAngers1
TALK
ct !| St Lewis T, Los Angtiti s
in in - aiisaii i' i; SpcciTti CO
A'8**'iir"N*,io'i* Ltigwtpmnan'
* mC—t-ep’c R.tic
AmtncaoLtigm
Kiasai Citpis Ttrtnlp
IRitaIswialArtft 3)|
JA I ALAI
Od iVor-ct Ki-tsasCitri
AlOrlAnfeStmmtlA
Oct AToronto! Kans*tCt|S ’Om
nnjs
tttdntUlAtAll'll
Od 11 KfisisCitH Tp-pn'as
IIt(ANN
Oct tsToronto3K4*l*tC'f'
i0f#Z*--*5*
T« IX SAC Oct !] AinusC'trl Teon’oO
iZuflit E'CI*
*43 SAC Oct tsKansasC'tfS Von'o)
' P‘AA-***
Sti
Oct 13 Kanin C'11 1 Tc'cn'o )
Q'141S3X PfliHtlA] TI] AIIA3MS
RoiA'S» nAnntf,canLtagwtptnnant
3«A(I mi
Apia*!
7X5* 5*5
•Z.mj,»
IX S&lt; KANSAS CITT
TORONTO
SScA'K
4Ac
i t ’Dll
AIrki6■
Oil 313AA3.PtlliAtil, THIS) HI 14
Jm■« t i C70 S*’t 4 It S11 1
M|IM
If
.C
'4
1
C
0
0V
:
citCi tt S0CG
se pmaaaa
i 3o343 ir .
A It’ Cf s0C0ViiM&gt;1 ]p 1 0 2
1OaaOiA'
SAP 3«C B
]c i ccc leg IP 3GGO
:&amp;*tC14-4-1
4K V:-t”
Bit 8' 3toe JPCI4. t i 52 '
QHSI33K PlMIHAIS T lU IIIT tX
S’ff a#* rf 432 •
a* &gt;CC0
rh|4m|
pi t-.’ t J“s:
s- 2G0G
3Ee*x
Sac343 SK 5.fa
4; •c
i ' 2 i Sf '
3&amp;*-«»
14X SX A* '4ttit 1: 4
0 11 A’ •• t
32•0
tV14
4AC PAlt#•• II 4c':
p
*
' Ctc
osin.i): Piiiintrs Tinnini:
E
lf*
4
9
r!
31' G
StA(imi
4l •c
(P‘AZ»"A,A
'IK 3*3 ’IK Tiljli
IS3•2
4Mm
343 Sic Kl’Ul City IS111 Tilili CISIM
W,- *
ll.43l3l'V4
SaC
M
CeiSKt- 2
ti
e &lt;•*! SAK P1431AAK T113)1All X Ta'ia
0
*m
r
*,**
n
gR
tl
S
.'O
M
'J
li
QDLIS1I34J313A6
E-Fc****: DP-Tp-on'o lC6l'l|3*4
C t| S V c'-p A 1S -V * n il i t
l V'1 E6-31
lit 3*1 443 •»-!*!
ilps'i* (e*4-J»: 3S-5.'R*'S "5
5D.**-}: * 8*.-4.4
S30 IK S
443 ’c u- i
IP MR|R11SO
OI.'AlAtK PIASI131It TIASSISIC13
* 4»S*lCltf
Tt-Himf
S
A
C
*d
|
)ff
3C 1
Cai-’G I
*K IX 4It It t'A’ S’ (A 11. S13) t3 Z
I S
IG* 4Z*"4
ISAC IX C.
IS 3 c 3: :
3E;’*&gt;* T:-4i
4X
T1rente
0 Ml 1114RII |l(Al{ T&lt;&gt;]».*!* *:
S’ At L t t
S3 J 1 1 1 I 1
Is*(*mi
si i 0 ; : s
(X 4It 4X Ace
tC.**--)'-’ aZ.t
-EP -e, ! i a " 4’M* Q1 . c t . S’ ft
1*-#' Z.m|,a
IX IK VcR
*t T-I if A-3I M
i Vii a-af
4K
0111133*; P&gt;|ii ATI: T&lt;•t11ACTAC
RS|4mi
llS
14-4-4,; 4-;4
K 1*3 3AC ST LOUISAlTAll LOS ANOE
41rAA1
sOA AL*:*
IK ’ X v:Off £' 31)1
131
lOt'SlNliA
4X Jm&gt;4 tt 3M 1L**3-1*4! cf s;
i :4* •
Qlll S3A3Fill ISACTi|i SJSISAC
-4” It ): Cici p‘ ' t C0
IRA(imt
P I) O.ff'f-s If u
) ®C* LttA
443 ’ X 1It C'A’ISIp
,14»* 3! CI Via s:» 3tt i 1 A
*
iD.-a-j;* a4-ja
143 IK Pea t’s
A’M't:* ll sc::
n
it
IV44Zl-t
) 43 Pp,t(. { 4i : io:: Vl-I’A
ti
4
01) Siam; PlStllKAC Till 13IT]X
.*-a',- 1 A1103: ct: • t 3;1 c
lit*|4mt
-a. *' p : 1I 00'S!4 t 2 GC
I 0* AV*-:
'143 4K 3K A
jI; 2g
(.* t ’
It J3*' It
iEst-acf*-*’
143 SaC !’
A;«i e oses —
4-1’ tf- tt ) ;110
;c*t~e 6t
433 (4
34*3 P' ’ tot N484-'.4# P■«;go
0ISA) 1443 PII SItrS3 Till, lit 1:
c1 P o t a t
P'&lt;C4 I31)4&gt;1 o'i »4.fl'll a; Cjrtifir' Oi,
T
If
A11 311122Tstin
a t1 s
us3ii x
3
1
Lti'l
K' M
CKJ- 1
IRA(4mi
lA
l
A
n
g
f.ft
u»«t
810- J
SEt-A.A
ttAC Sit iK
Oa—
A* *9Rfti -C*”
1ii-ct'3A
lit IK
E -A --.,*- OP-S’ 10. s
l Oo -S’
44-AmJiC
S43 .0.1
T .04 A.jtf) I il-0..;4OIIAjSAK PllA'SXK Till II CASK A-0.
*’ jl-Sm itn
D.nci**R
CD14II'list
Vaoxi 3 Va- s- a
Ci - i
SI
’StA31mi
*0
.n
c
*n
1
I
V
cO
ff
I
S
P
-0
w
f"A
t;
tC*e-tV*-a
ix in sx
IT
It
III
II
SO
SO* **!•••
ik JK
I Lans
(:-*-{ pjc
SX AnoS
S I3 3 I )
0134,1!43 P&lt;3SIMIC T&lt;33II USX Al"t.i*' PI ’(
a
1t i j 3
00113)1)31134X
Oaitr ti :
1 o1 1 0 a
1-1Jl). H-UIUI)
Lai Angers
Mr's' st»
HI I A 1 I
N
tarn
iat a Ji aaa 3s s i 1
BASEBALL
T-J S3 A-SS X*
MtnfSewt
(RtiS*3ItvtflJ
NHL
Opt li*tlUnuiCilr I Sipm
MMasPaii Irsttts
Oct X«tR*nutC,t| I Stpm
twt*«l Van-t* 3
Odnest L*w-t 1 sipm
A t e -SNA4 TermHliOTl
Oct ))#&lt;J' Law* I Sipm

TV/RADIO

4

17/TONIGHT
Football: Varsity
7 : 3 0 p .m . — S e m i n o le a l S e a b re e z e ’

Football: Junior V arsity
7 p.m. — Lyman al Lake Mary
Volleyball: Varalty/JV
6 p.m. — Seminole at Lake 1lowed
6 p.m. — Lyman at Lake Mary
Swimming: Varsity
4 p.m. — DcLand at Seminole

18/FRIDAY
Football: Varsity
H p.m. — Spruce Creek al Lake Mary
8 p.m. — Oviedo al Lyman
8 p.m. — Lake Howell at Winter Park
8 p.m. — Wesl Orange al Lake Bra ill ley *
* homecoming

PiWpeg4Oftro'3
p"st.tg* S.C" CAJMOT.
Ess'on1V4'-co-.4') OT
EdmontprnN» It*-«'! 1
St Lows! C4J4'r I
Las Angtew4 Nf* Tsr4 S4n}4'S3
TnwrsPtrsOllfUS
HA'tlsrgItNr*IttlAr T)Jpm
&amp;jft»C4tPn AdepniTlIpm
Dt-ot *’ Vnnriit* I 33pm

TAw'sIai tI4me
.m"044*&gt;40-41:4 (pm
f'tiil lOemtl
Sa-.:tC'tw. 4*L4I4Vf'r If n
0. &gt;Jf4,,r,’ »’ Ip.4.4tt;*4 4’An*4'Ps’l (pAfs’ OrA-ge4’L4*f fl-A-.tfr lp-

ODDS

VOLLEYBALL
S4m,n*ifAlfi'tT.CCAANrtRCA

Turn
'*&gt;»rr'4T
0. *oc
Ii6«t
*: t
H 'tV r ,

M L GB
4 0 —
S 7 t*
2 2 &gt;
2 i 4
I 4 4j
1 s s

i|

AM

•1

1

J
3 s
s 4
j I
:C

Afdn*,44, irilwItllSAEl

0. 43C3St”1*5AIS‘C SA
St" CDflfrtAct
Sp-.&lt;4C-44, al(m*n t)J ill s 3
Tn.rsSAr tSACmAtcArs

S*m't 44'14-t"Cne ’ ™
.1-4* 4’.4*4V*-r ’pm
Nt"CAnN'fnci
.41St.-j4’ C. 43S I f n

RENO ’li. u»
A«44f3 NFl **3
:t ip*Matit pc-.-ia*'*’•*' t*f*: Ti-of
Iw-’tiai
nfl
F4,c-tT|
P4t
.A Sl-t
*4*V41C*,
‘.A* ('4-t UC
D*4»p- 0
N» 0*"l
All’ »JV I
0* it
p- 434p- A4
V**4tC4
3**0igc If
*44A O'44*t
t-4-4 ;
la Riaet
C4,1**« 1
®’’it.';*
3’ la. i 3&gt;
-a***M t
B.”*c E
C*; ***•
Hftrt's* l
Vi*
T*»m Cl, 3
0f*,4*
Vf*”4 3
N’ ,t-t
Na» E*g4*3
**4*944
C-t*g:
0*44* El, i ;
C4IIJ4
C* ’s" A

SOFTBALL
IrntA'dMensFill StttlJil Leeg.e
T|*m
LtH Gl
’ - 6|'«ito*'4;'o*
10 \ iitt o*t A, 2- *;
’C 1 &amp;t,tf Stt't-i
1 j 2)
**P4*A.4-3C44• S S
‘■*:«41Oi.f L.*4-'
1 l SA
'..*’ *•a
3 i f
a;.*- EArmp
3 I t
C*-a-* 'a.im«,
0 It .
P'lNtAfi sleswits
Cd'Adwn I S.tW
I 4-9]
Stst pns 4GriseSrCemf J
V:*41J4.4CP-t-t| Tnar-4.4'a)
Vwncjrsrttalll
■•CPnr L*n3 4 CO”,n«d pn 3
ieiteSrt-t-t |CA-e-AtlW.ltr»sI
Vi'eeSe.i Ci-tn-i; B'pnnls.e- 4

FOOTBALL
fac'D-i l|f«rkiiA|»
Wmizni*
Tlim
M
r L Gl Oil1AH
.*•« V*-,
2 1- 3 1
Ll-r**
1 1 - 1 1
1 1— J J
0. iK
1
1 3 3
L*&gt;**%•♦
3*mAll
1 ) 1i 1 4
ii&gt;i
c 1 11 t 3

i ’A't
Na-4 £3* * *
Ng Ca- o **
N tt-itu
I' *C t
Th a i Th P
v *-, **a
- 'I * *
Save* Cg igi
'if
CtJA’4
P c* S’
Hi-ii-a
B-o**
Gfo-gi
A KD41 *
*A*tAI
0* A’ pmj
Ccp4*tt
A ALA-4A
A-&gt;**t*t
A,4 Fo-ct
A.C."
A #f 4'g’o*
UCLA
F’«»*a 3’
I f l i 3*
SVu
si, o. 3U

i'An’ce '&gt;
Ct V * A 3 ,
P.48.A 'J
A-m, J j
'ip Cl-; -4 S' 3
V its.- II
y , ( * i i ’ 5- 4
R tf 11
R.-gct 3 .
A n f f i- n ' 4
4 ’ 9 * A Tt(* II 1
Aft’ Vi'J * * 3
C9 .m p *li
Pfl*t»’p41’)
SlftUM T
Otftmo.m 1
C044l*ll I 1
Y eat-i i t '»
Np'm»tl‘C* I
AA’ til 3M)
Vgm. F ti A
'GOA S’ 1 1
T***41141 3
Tfitt 3
Co O'430 S’ IS
Cffl-j A T*t* f
O'tgo'i S’ JT
Att* X(’Gr S’ t t
N»» IN i tiS 'X
T .tlJ I
ftAifOA T
Ta ia i AAV t
Ip iN U i t 1
IG«A 1

By Chris Flster
Herald Sports W riter
The Tim Raines Conncciion
rolled. Sessions Well Drilling
survived by ihe skin ol iis leeih
and Thorne Laud Clearing
lloundered In Suulord Men's Fall
Softhall League ai lion Wed­
nesday night al Pinehwrst Fie ld
The Comieiiiou rapped oul 20
hits eu roule in a IK-3 druhliing
ol Smmitand TRC reniainc-d in a
tie li&gt;r llrst place willi Sessions,
both with 9-1 records. I RC and
Sessions square ol! in Ihe second
game Monthly. aptmiMmaielv
7:30 ji.m.
Alter a scoreless tirsi inning.
Ihe Connection rallied lor live
runs in ihe second willi Billy
Grillilli's two rim homer and
RBI singles by Hobby Robinson
and Brian Sieusirom leading (luway.
The Connet lion jiul ihe win on
lee willi three in the third, live in
tin’ lourth and lour m die lilth.
Rohinsoii added anoiher RBI
single in Hie ihird. Lloyd Wall
cracked a two-run homer and
Ned Rallies a solo shot in the
fourth and Raines added a
two run homer in ihe IIIih.
Sessions Well Drilling look a
big lead early willi an elgln-rim
third, but had m hold oil a late
rally by Geyser Svslems lor a
14-13 victory.
hi the second lor Sessions,
I’ ei er Harrison unloaded a
ihrcc-nm homer while Willie
Harrison and Tommy Graeey
added rmi-seoriog singles.
Geyser Systems goi hack in
ihe game with five runs in ihe
bottom f)f Ihe fourth. Cliff
Reynolds’ two-run, Inside ihepork homer and Rico 1’elcrson‘s
I wo-run single led the way.
Sessions iotjk a 14-10 lead imo
the hoi tom of the seventh when
Geyser scored ihrec limes.
Geyser had the bases loaded
with lwo mils Inn couldn't come
uj) wit lying or winning runs.
I wo days aher stunning the
Tim Raines Connection. Thorne
Land Clearing drojipcd a 5-3
decision to McKee Development
McKee scored three Mines in
the second with Mike Rotunda's
double leading the way and
added iwo inure In the fourth,
one on Mark Whitley s single.
McKee held Thorne Land Clear­
ing to Jusi one run and four hits
alter tile first inning when
Thorne scored iwlcc on three
hits including an RBI double by
Ray Chambliss.

�...Su n d b e rg
Continued from 7A
Howscr entered the series knowing
the Blue Jays, who fell one victory
short or 100. went only 30-28 with
left-handed starters. With Charlie
Leibrandl. hud Black. Danny Jackson,
he had three starters to shoot at
Toront o along with righty Bret
Saberhagen.
Jackson revived a team that was one
game from elimination with an eighthtl shutout, and Howscr revised his
plans. He reinserted Mark Gubieza into
tile rotation and decided lo use his
lefties as the first men out of the
bullpen.

...Cardinals
Continued from 7A
relying on Its most potent weapon. The
club that swiped the NL Last crown
with 31-I steals at a 77 percent success
rale was Just 6-for 12 stealing against
the Dodgers.
"W e did It without the stolen base,
and that s a tribute to us," said second
baseman Tommy Herr, who hit .333
lor the series. "People thought we were
a one-di mensional ballelub. We
showed 'em we're more than that."
Mike Marshall had given the Dodgers
tile 5-4 edge in the eighth when he

O w n e rs:
To TV

That made Cox remove the lefthanded hitting starters he platoons:-,
and left the Blue Jays bare of lefthanded hitters in the late innings.
"H e criss-crossed t he m. " one
baseball man said. "He stripped them
bare. Toronto didn't do a thing the last
three games. And Kansas City won it
wit h four innings of offense a game."
Dowser's strategy worked, "because
I laid the players." he was careful to
point out.
After Leibrandt was waxed In the
opening game, Kansas City’s left­
handers held Toronto to 1.-Iff earned
runs per game. They allowed six runs
and 31 hits in 30 1-3 innings after
compiling a 1.97 regular-season ERA
against the Blue Jays.
It's that kind of pitching Kansas City

will unleash on the St. Louis Cardi­
nals, a much better hitting club
against right-handers despite the pre­
sence of five switch-hitters.
"W e could have scored a few more
runs." Cox said. "All we had to do was
win one of two games at home. I
thought that coming home would be
an advantage. But Wilson and Lonnie
Smith ran down a lot of balls."
What Toronto needed was for some­
one to remove the right field fence.
That would have given Its outfielders a
chance lo run down some of the
Kansas City hits.
"That ball Sundberg hit." Cox said
of the sixth-inning hall that lilt off (lu­
mp of the fence and bounced back onto
the warning track, "was a routine
pop-up. The wind was very strong. It

homcred off eventual winner Todd
Worrell. The drive looked like a routine
fly to right center but kept carrying
until it sailed Just beyond the reach of
a leaping Van Slyke, much to the
delight of the 55.208 fans at Dodger
Stadium.
Game 7 was two outs away when
Nicdenfucr fanned pinch-hitter Cesar
Cedeno to open the ninth. But Willie
McGee singled and dared lo steal
s e c o nd , b e a t i n g cut el l er Mike
Seiosciu’s one-bounce throw.
Nicdenfucr then walked nemesis
Ozzle Smith — selected the series Most
Valuable Player after hitting .435 —
and got Herr to ground out as the
runners moved up. That set the stage

for Clark.
"They said before the series that as
Tom Nicdenfucr goes, so goes the
Dodgers." said the reliever, who served
up Smith's game-winning homer in
Game Five. "I didn't have a good series
and we lost. It hurts: it hurts real bad."
The Cardinals appeared to be the
ones in trouble, trailing 4-1 in the
seventh against starter Orel Hcrshlscr.
who entered the game 12-0 with a 1.14
ERA at Dodger Stadium this year.
But Darrell Porter and Tito Landrum
led off with singles and one out later
McGee grounded a two-run single to
center. Nicdenfucr came on and Smith

B F G O O D R IC H

-2- r / M
» I/M

h ig h t e c h
r ADIALS

m

SSrn

WE MAKE CARS PERFORM

RONT BRAKE j o b

Continued from 7 A
nesday night. Although the St.
Louis County Police had dis­
patched an extra 150 officers lo
the airport, they and Cardinals
officials were asking any other
fans to stay home.
Sundberg

The Royals were expected to
arrive In Kansas City at 2:30
p.m. today

Leibrandt

blew it out there.
"And Sheridan's home run. that was
wind-blown, too."

P e o p l e began l i n i n g up
downtown to buy tickets lor
bleachers and standing-room
only positions at Busch Stadium
for the series.

greeted the familiar face with a
run-scoring triple into the right-field
corner to tie the score.
In the bottom of the inning. Mariano
Duncan — who had three hits —
smacked a triple Into the right-field
corner. But with the infield in. Herr
battled tlie sun and caught Ken
Landeaux's pop on the edge ol the
outfield grass.

In Kansas City, fans were
honking horns, waving banners
out of ear and building windows
and screaming from sidewalks —
even more than an hour after the
game. Firecrackers were heard
throughout the city following the
linal out for Kansas City's 6-2
victory over the Toronto Blue
Jays.
The drcam-come-true for
Missouri baseball fans across tIn­
state, the "1-70 Series" was just
what one follower of tin- spurt
has ordered for years.

And after intentionally walking
Pedro Guerrero, the Cardinals came up
with tile key defensive play of the
game — turning a 6-4-3 double play on
Bill Mudlark, the Dodgers' lop run
producer in t lie series who had
itomered In the filth.

2 .3 9

P ram
F Fits
i l Most
t eCars
rs

rztim*

. '"expensive

LIGNMENT
IL CHANGE 4

8 J ;J O

%French Avc
S u nt ot d

n—

M

I r v c D

r ir . v

m

L M U O tk te A U I
I

I

L

79

• #

11

L r'

Sizes to
fit most
Domestic
carta
Trucks

Champion
Non-Resistor
Spark Plugs
.89 D o m e s tic Cars

10 M in u te Flush
or
R a d ia to r Se alan t
or
w a te r P u m p Lubricant

Champion
Non-Resistors

.99

1 1

1 .4 9

g allo n

Trldon
w iper Blades,
or Refills in

W indshield
washer
Fluid

83-11B. -15B. -15B
■16B 17B. -18B
85-15R. -16R. -1BR

1 . 9 9 to 3 . 4 9

Turtle Wax
Super-Hard
turtle!
Shell
,wax
car wax,
liq u id o r P a s te
T 1 2 7 T225

i 1 8 . 9 5 1 ooj

Battery Charger

Automatic
Transmission,
Filter Kits

2.49

l1 7

16.49

Resistor Plugs

Mosr
Demesne Cars

Firs M o s r Cars

A u to s u re
M a s t e r C y lin d e r s

49.95

Im p o rte d
o r A lu m in u m
M a tte r C y lin d e rs

Kr

Q

1i o f t

e - iv S S

1.69
Rain-X

3 9 .9 5

.89 O f iro n « Type F

S u rf

60 Month Batteries

Castroi Automatic
Transmission Fluid iQts i

A I L B A T T E R IE S W IT H E X C H A N G E

1.39

n o Rebate Book in
u u every 12-Pack on
— 16 quality car
care products.

Series 7J

STOP H ighe r-

69

7 ounce

16 .9 9

Glass
|
Treatment I £ 3 ]

S ize t o fit
m any
d o m e s tic
cars

RX-714
Disperses
Rain, Sleet
&amp; Snow on
Contact

Blower
Motors/

Point

S ize s t o fit
m o s r cars

. o|

Cassette Stereo Radio
w ith 2 speakers

V

50 Month Batteries

B29B48

C45

2 3 .4 9 ^ ‘ ^ i V ^

36 M onth
AutoSure Batteries
3 2 .9 5

Condensers
Fits most cars

W!
w it h

EXCHANGE

eachX
Round High or Low
sealed Beams

59.95

99.95
E n g in e e re d fo r S m e lle r C a rt.

Holley 4 Barrel
Carburetor
.1 8 5 0

’44.95

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0

1

im p o r t e d Cars /

Solder seal

t . . A _

8 11 M o o n

'

E E 3

A utovalue
Air
Filter

EAVY DUTY SHOCKS „ „
•STALLED (each) *12.95

A O K TIR E M A R T

i

1.79

*44.95

Above Prices Good For
Most Curs &amp; Light Trucks

• Over 90 000 parts and accessories for Dom estic l
Im port Cars T r u c k s a n d v a n s -in Stock or O vernight1
• We il m eet or beat A il com petitors advertised prices'
This includes an identical, in stock item s Check stores
for details

i

*44.95
*14.95
LUBE *9.95

RT. C.V.
OOT REPAIR

Life insurance
■or Your Car

'.T T ,W ; C L M aU U *

U R BRAKE JOB

3413

...Show-Me

R e p la y

2 y Back 12-Pack

» rl

Thursday, Oc». 17, 1985-TA

N o

NEW YORK (UPH - Propo­
nents ol using television replays
to ait) certain calls by NFL
officials may lie |usl a bit ahead
of (heir time.
Wliilc owners Wednesday
voted down tin- idea lor this
year's playoffs, the vote was
close enough lo Indicate such a
plan may lx adopted in the near
future.
"A lot ol 'em didn’t give the
reasons they voted no." said Tex
Schramm. Dallas Cowboys pres­
ident and leader of the proreplay pack. "If they don't want
it. they don't want it. I think it
was a step lorward. Other people
disagree with me. And a tot ol
people voted lor it It failed
narrowly."
With 25 of 28 chibs present.
Iff favorable votes were needed
to pass the proposal. There wore
16 in favor, eight against and
•»n&lt;- abstention. Minnesota.
Seattle and Tampa Bay were not
present for the vote.
The proposal had endorse­
ment of tli*- Competition Com­
mittee. which Schramm heads.
Under the plan, replays would
be us e d to a i d c a l l s on
possession-type plays, such as
receptions and fumbles. Tiltleague experimented with replay
system in pre-season. NFL of­
ficials reviewed 28 exhibition
season plays, and overturned
one. Ol tire rest, oltiefats' calls
were confirmed 17 times, four
were inconclusive, and there
were no replays available on six.
Under the plan proposed
Wednesday, tile league would
have Us own video-cassette re­
c o r di ng syst em to ensure
availability ol replays on all
reviews.
However, the replay system
has llaws. While viewing re­
plays. officials might spot other
officiating mistakes (missed
penalties, etc.) which they would
not ire able to change. Also,
other angles might be made
availablc later in the week from
NFL films or club films that
show officials were originally
correct on calls that were
changed
"A lot ol people were con­
cerned about changing a chull
and then another replay shows
s o m e t h i n g else — do ubl e
Jeopardy." said New Orleans
president Eddie Jones.
"When you talk about some
things for str long, the negatives
come up.” said Washington gen­
eral manager Bobby Ileal hard,
who voted lor use of replays.

M on

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

600 C F M

Hedman

6014 Round M i'iow Beams
A65i Rectangular Hign or low
465! Sealed Beam Head lights

Headers!
improves performance L gas mileage
Sizes for Most v 8 s

2 99
4 99

60S! Rectangular Hi/low Beams 7 49

-P R IC E S G O O D T H R O U G H O C T O B E R 2 5 rd 1985
m

Poi0PM
to 7City
DAYS
A

A

M

•» r

u v t

A WICK

■

ORLANDO
1311 Fairbanks Ave.
at Edgewater Dr
6 2 8 -8 7 9 0
4050 Oak Ridge Rd.
3 5 1 -6 7 6 6

APOPKA
M T. D O R A
W IN T E R G A R D E N
123 W. Main St.
Golden Triangle Ctr
West Orange Shopping Center
8 8 6 -8 8 2 0
3 8 3 -8 1 3 5
606 South Dillard St.
LEESBURG
SANFORD
8 77-2861
618 South 14th St
605 W. 25th St.
3 2 8 -2 5 8 5
3 2 3 -4 4 7 0
_______________________

cat* ( m i
f ('# •( €*»•»—

f

t

W f RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UNIT Q U A N T IT Y

�10A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Oct. 17, ITU

14"

Sweepster
PUSHBROOM
No 00544.

A n y b o d y 's A d Pri ce

• N o H a s s le !
• N o C ard s! j

^

W

M eet

Goop" ADHESIVE
and SEALANT

Choose from No. 03112
household; No. 16112 auto­
motive; or No. 15112
plumber’s. 4.5 fl. oz. tube.

R * l 2.47

Your Choice.

GENERAL

ELECTRIC
See sioft* for
details

Silicone CAULK
Exterior white and clear or
bathroom white. 10.3 fl. oz.
cartridge.

TOOL MATE II

Rig. 2.59

£■{. 12.99

(Tools not included)
No. 08-101.

Your Choke:

1| D U R A C ELL
j EMERGENCY
"
LIGHT

Gypsum
WALLBOARD

Comes with 6-volt lant
ern battery. No DFE.

Rig. 21.99

Solid gypsum encased in
special fibrous paper 1 /2 ”
x 4' x 8 ’

Store More™ Closet
ORGANIZER SYSTEM
1 2 " x 3 1 " x 12" No. 101
$«f A ft8
shelf m ultiplier. . . . Reg. 14.98
I *
1 2" x 12" x 30" No. 201
stacker ................... .Reg. 19.88
IO
12" x 12" x 36" expands to 5 ‘
No. 301 single-arm
S liilftft
o rg an izer........................... Rig.29.88
Two 12" x 12" x 3 6 ” cabinets expand to
6' No. 401 single-rod
$ A 0 8 8
twin organizer........ Rig. f 7.88
^ m
Two 12" x 12" x 40" cabinets expand to
9' No. 501 triple-arm
S K A ftft
tall stacker . . . ........ Rig. 64.88
3 7

Kraft-Backed
FIBERGLAS
INSULATION
't h e h ig h e r Ih e Rvalue,
the greater the insulat­
ing power Ask your
Scotty’s salesman for
Ihe fact sheet on

MEASURING
TAPE
1" X 2 5 ’ blade
locks into
position
No. CT7525.

Rig. 5.88

R -values

“Nail-lt”
Construction
ADHESIVE
10.5 fl. oz. cartridge
Insulates and seals large
openings caulk can't fill.
12 oz. net weight.

Indoor-Outdoor
CARPET

See store tor
details

Rig. 5.69

Steel construction. 4 cubic foot
capacity

In green, blue-green, co­
coa. and Mexican orange
12’ width

Prefinished
Cellular
MOULDINGS
Lauan backing, 3.0 mm x
4' x 8' in lauan light pecan
or tropic birch.

U IH
w

Available in walnut, pecan, white, birch and
brilliant oak.
_
Batten - 8

Rig. 8.89

Primed galvanized steel con
struclion Rugged door, ta

Inside Corner - 8

Outside Corner - 8

Galvanized GARBAGECAN
Tapered sides, snug
cover
20 gallon
No ST-203

0k

£ |

5

M M

V

Pressure Treated
MAILBOX STAND

m
Casing - 7

Rig. 5.79

Made of pressure treated 4 x 4 ‘s
70" high

M
CDX sheets Agen
cy approved 1 /2 '
x 4 ’ x 8 ’ (3 ply)

( •

1

jr a j-

y^M

1
1*

4

J
T

k

1
1

.
^
9 m. m

O PEN

ORANGE CITY

ALTAMONTE 8PRIN0S

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

O PEN
SANFORD

700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254
Scotty sC 1886

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Thursday, Oct. 17. 1915—1B

Garden Show Features Plant Clinic BSP Chapter Slates

The Harry P. Leu Holunlcnl
Gardens in Orlando, will be ihe
wi l i ng f'&gt;r Hu* third Annual
Central Florida Lawn and
Garden Show, one ol the largest
Hiifh shows in the Southeast.
Featured will he exhibits by
l oeal pl ant s o e l e t i e s and
l uwn-and-gardeu-eare busi ­

nesses: plant sales; a plant
elinlc: a fern-featured flower
show; a hromelald show; and
talks by local horticultural
experts: Ameri ca’ s ’ ’ master
gardener,’ ’ television personality
and writer Jerry Baker: and Mel
Bartholomew, author of ‘‘Square
Fool Gardening".

FRIDAY
Special
6 P.M. TIL 8 P.M. ONLY

20% OFF STOREWIDE
* *i

Collectables”
Make Great
Christmas Gifts

EMMETT

PH. 3210780
228 E. FIRST ST. HISTORIC DOWNTOWN SANFORD

a/igavtd

B e tw e e n
O r la n d o

HWY. 17-92

and
S a n fo rd

FRIDAY • SAT. &amp; SUN. 8*5 m
A m erica's Largest Market
n t C r A d m is s io n

^

* _
__

All IJmk-r 1 Ktxif

I ’arklnc] f t f . n tc r t.iln m e rit

** * ^ * ' *

A Day A t 7ke Co/ixtyy fa ir .
A T T E N T IO N L A D I E S
NOW OPEN!!!
Lake Mary’s "First” and
"Most Fashionable" Consignment
Center Is Now Open
At Last A Store To P a m p e r Your B u d ge t

The P h a se II S h o p
Ladies1 Consignment Center
M any ladles have learned how they can
not only save m o n ey, but m ake m oney.

How Does It Work?
The Phase I I S h o p is an a ttra c tiv e ly designed
shop th at sells lor you, the item or Ite m s th at
you no longer need and you receive 5 0 % of the
selling price. Don’ t give your nice clothing away,

L E T L IZ S E L L T H E M F O R YO U !!

T h e P h a s e II S h o p
THE S H O P P E S O F L A K E M A R Y
Mown
Minn, I rI.

Located: 120 L d kr Mary Blvd.
la k e Mary. FL 3 2 7 4 6

I2 6

Sdl.

10f&gt;

Phone: 3 2 1 -6 0 4 6
3 2 3 -6 1 2 0

v is a ,

me

an rx

OFF
v. \

.

..

:

95
Regular

12 95
V. 4* .
A *v*nit** ip K .a ii inch.*
p w l only

Wnh Coupon

14 C o lo r P o rtie k e
Two B x lO ’s • Two 5x7’«
Ten W a lle t*

G ro u p s a n d
F a m ilie s W alco m a

CLIP THIS COUPON
AND SAVE

["“ 5.00 OFF

"

8
One Coupon Per Family
s Save $5.00 ON OUR REGULAR
|
$12.95 portrait package.
|
|

OFFER GOOD ON DATES LISTED BELOW
Present this coupon to the photographer

Limit one special package per subject. Black end white beckgrounde |
end special effects portraits NOT available in advertieing package.
5 D A Y S O N LY • T h u rid a y . O c t. 17 thru M o n . O c t. 21
Im o to c w ^ sH o u r.. ^Q.QQ . 8 : 0 0 D a i l y 1 2 : 3 0 - 5 : 0 0 S u n d a y |
llOCAttON

3 6 5 3 O r l a n d o D r iv e , S e m in o le C e n t r e
S a n f o r d . F lo r id a

Visitors are encouraged to
bring examples of ailing flowers,
vegetables, turf, shrubs and
trees for diagnosis at a free plant
clinic that will be set up Just
inside the entrance to the show.
Gardening experts will analyze
plant samples, test garden soil.
Identify plants and answer
questions about gardening In
Central Florida.
For the best diagnosis, gather
a good sample of the problem
---- a plant limb with good and
bad portions present, a Jar con­
taining several examples of of­
fending Insects or a square foot
of sod the includes both good
and bad protions of the lawn.
Soil tests can be performed with
Just a pint of soil brought in a
Jar. box or bag.
In addition to admiring the
Indoor and outdoor plants being
exhibited, gardening enthusiasts
wi l l be abl e to p ur c ha s e
specimens to take home and
rear.
In conj unc t i on wi th the
Central Fl ori da Lawn and
Garden Show there will be a
Horticulture Symposium on
Friday, Oct. 18. beginning at 7
p.m. The s y mpos i um will
feature P r o m i n e n t
horticulturists who will make
presentations and answer ques­
tions. The Horticulture Sym­

posium Is free and will be held at
the Agriculture Center, 2350
East Michigan St. Orlando.
T h e hi st or i c Leu House
Museum, which Is furnished
with turn-of-lhc-eentury an­
tiques, has taken on a fern
at mospher e for the show.
"Echoes From The Past" is the
theme of the standard (lower
show being held in the Leu
House by District VII of the
Florida Federation of Garden
Clubs. The house is open at no
additional charge.
The Bromclald Society of
Central Florida will hold Us
annual show In conjunction with
the lawn and garden show.
There arc more than 300 entries
from around the southeast Unit­
ed States including Florida,
A l a b a m a .

G e o r g i a

Grocery Give-A-Way

According to Brenda Elswiek.
the gratid prize will be SlOO
worth of groceries from Publix
plus a variety of other prizes
from local merchants to be given

¥ *■

a n d

Louisiana. Experts from the so­
ciety will be available to answer
questions about brumclnid
culture.
The Gardens are at 1730 N.
Forest Avc.. Show hours are 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday. Oet.
18: Saturday. Oct. 19 and Sun­
day, Oct. 20. Complimentary
shuttle service will be running
on Saturday and Sunday be­
tween Kogcr Office Complex
( b e h i n d O r l a n d o Fas hi on
Square) and Leu Gardens. Gate
admission to the show is S2
adults; children under 12 free.

/

V

s\

/

V\

Dad Wears Glasses,
But Won't Admit To
A Hearing Problem
DEAR ABBYi My problem is
my dad. who Is 65. He’s not
ashamed to wear bifocals, but he
refuses to admit he can’t hear.
Yesterday, the telephone rang
and it was only 10 feet away,
and he didn’t even hear It! Worse
yet, he drives a car and he can’t
hear the siren of an ambulance
or fire e n g i n e until I t ’ s
practically on top or him.
When my brothers and 1 try to
talk to him about this, he gets
belligerent and Insists there Is
nothing wrong with his hearing
and we should mind our own
business! Our mother has given
up. She Just repeats everything
two and three times and yells at
him.
If older people aren't ashamed
to wear glasses, why arc they
ashamed to wear a hearing aid?

away.
The sorority members will also
lie selling home-baked goods,
candy, ceramics, other crafts
and photographs. A 10 x 13
family portrait with choice of
f r a m e is a v a i l a b l e f or a
minimum price and will he
delivered In time for Christmas.
Proceeds from the event will
benefit several needy families
with children during the Holiday
Season.

Gamma Lambda, a local
chapter of Bela Sigma Phi. will
sell tickets Friday and Saturday.
Oct. 18 and 19. from lO a.m. to
7.30 p.m.. in front of Publix.
Sanford Plaza, for the Second
Annual Grocery Glve-A-Away.

py

20%

D ear
Abby

PANTYHOSE • THIHIGHS • STOCKINGS

21S-220 E. 1st %%.

definition of a "godmother” Is
one who sponsors a child at its
baptism. You would be wise to
ask your f ri end what Bhc
perceives your responsibilities lo
be. If she Is vague, ask her to
please consult her clergy person
and then let you know.

Downtown Sanford

323-3524
HOURS:
M O S THXUS S SAT. * »
FBI. 9 -S

DEAR ABBYt I have been in
love with this man for five years.
I’m 40 and he’s 42. Three years
ago he moved tn with me. I’ve
always been a good Christian,
and It bothers me to know that I
am living In sin. He's divorced.
His wife left him for another
man. which really tore him up. I
was a 35-year-old virgin when
we met. I never knew what love
was until he came along.
He is a good and faithful man.
but he refuses to marry me until
he is sure he loves me. Abby. I
am not dumb. I realize he may
not be sure for another five years
and I should send him packing,
but keep hoping he will marry
me. He has a good job and no
responsibilities, so I can't un­
derstand why he won’t marry
me now.
It was his Idea for me to write
to you about this problem. What
do you say?
HAD ENOUGH IN INDIANA
DEAR HAD ENOUOHt I say
you've had more than enough.
Give him three months to make
up his mind, and If he still Isn’t
sure, send him packing and get
on with your life.
DEAR ABBY: A rather new
friend of mine has asked me to
be ihe godmother of her son. My
question: Exactly what are my
obligations as a godmother? I
have heard that I have to pay for
the child's christening outfit, as
well as the church fees for the
christening.
Also, what obligations will I
have to this child throughout the
lifetime?
Hurry your answer, I may not
be able to afford this honor.

V a lu e Is A l w a y s I n F a s h io n !

SA LE ST A R T S
THURSDAY
PRICES 600D
THRU SIT.

W n tfiU S t u tt
2(57 HinrtOM H I

ORLANDO

APOPKA

941 R. Scmorsn

2 1 0 1 1. Stmwin
(Piedmont PIu j
Al Wttnrj)

SANFORD

FERN PARK

1112-14 Orlando Dr. 91 Semens BM .
Hwj. 17-92 it
L N t H irr t hd.

OUR STORE IN

APOPKA

\&lt; v m

2306 E. Sem oran Blvd. |
P iedm ont Plaza
A l W ekiva

Now ArrivalI

SAND PEBBLE CREPE
100% polyester for
easy-rare stylo
1 to 3 yd. lengths

Floral

O y

149
I Yd.
—r

motHer Job
■**«■£*■?*

DRESS PRINTS

45" in 1te
3 yd. lengths
ComporobU
savings ef 5094

Yd.

Jk

ji
1
1

RIBBON REELS

SILK DE CHINE

Solsrt fro m g ro ig ro in , to tin , fa n tio i_
a te lU c tib l*,

Popvlor Prints in
(
10094 polyester in m M
exciting celerotions.
y j
60’ wide.

SVdtt* 10Yd,.
r ,. l a

!%/&gt;/■

By PERRY EUIS
60" wido in an array
y f fashion shodos ^ 1

R•nd

98V

^ C o s tu m o J A flg S j^ ^ ^

YOUR CHOICE
FABRICS
Super Value 6
Selection Bettor
Droee Febrlce

54” wide
Decorator colors
MPerfect !.« • Yd.

' I ft Smart to bo Thrifty'

WATERBED SHEET
ENSEMBLE

77
Sol

FULLY QUILTED
COMFORTERS
Son S Flully
Doc,on Filling
S IM * To King SIM
S on * SUoMly
lm p*rticl
(Apeak* Onlytl

14*1

Ycj^

f PRINTED CORDMOY

HALLOWEEN
BUCK FABRIC
Perfect for Witches • Goblins

1Toeetwot

Rolls for

SWEATER K

■SP

■ t m to King »Im

m

B o t h e ll* A Crochet

l$ r ,

• __“ "ft P»Tt«n
, ' ^ i a . S*ot2E"

*
Yd.
^

OffrayvSJ
ia v S j

Priatad

SU M A Pmcsls, Print* 4 t
U qoq* i Oejeti

DEAR NEEDS: The broad

5.XJ

Z

A LOVING DAUGHTER
DEAR DAUGHTER: That’s a
good question, especially since
some of the newer-model hear­
ing aids are practically Invisible.
Nagging will only make your
father more defensive and ir­
ritable. but don’t give up trying
to help him. Ask his physician to
Insist on a hearing test as part of
his next physical. My mall tells
me that a surpising number of
people who suffer a hearing loss
turn a deaf car to those who try
to help them. Vanity? Insanity!

FALL
SALE

60" wido oasycc
care
Comp.
.ot4.9B

,

2 ^ 8

MATTE JERSEY

Now Americanleehl Hot
tiopicol retort inaaetk
thedei. 60" wido.
Machine w a ih a b i*

Peech

BASKETS
trim wtrii

With Handles

Im *. rihhc

•otoned
painI.

l i t CREATIVE

99S.11

LYON’S TYPE

VELVET
A s s o rte d C olore
F ine W u e lliy
1 to 3 yd. L e n gth s
A p o p ka O n ly I

99
Yd.

t

�3B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

BLONDIE
i

1—

A T E TW O

mistakes

by Chic Yogng

Thursday, Oct. 17, 19S5

W H E N I B R IN G S O M E O N E
A .V R O N 3 O S O E R , I
H A ^ E TO E A T
IT M Y S E l_ P
p

Handling Depression
Am ong The Elderly

DEAR DR. G O T T - My
85-ycar-old mother tried to
commit suicide last year by
taking a whole bottle of sleeping
pills. She said she was lonely.
She now lies in a nursing home
and Is very happy, bul I still feel
guilty about it. How common is
suicide among the elderly? What
could I have done to prevent
by M ori Walker
this?
WOW THATfe
'S WHAT )
DEAR READER - Many peo­
I CALL ATOSSEP
TOSSEPA
ple. as they age, become over­
6ALAP/HH.
whel mi ngl y lonely and de­
pressed. The reasons are obvi­
ous: loss of health and abilities
and a spouse, children who grow
up and leave home lo lead their
own lives, and so forth. What
your mother apparently needed
— and has now been supplied —
is companionship. I doubt that
there was very much you could
have done to prevent her suicide
attempt, short of living with her
and providing constant support.
by Art Sansom
This option may not have been a
realistic one for either of you.
I think it is time for you lo lei
go of your gulli. Such feelings
may contaminate your relation
to your mother during the re­
maining years of her life. Rather
than dwelling on the past, you
will feel more comfortable look­
ing to the future and living in
today. Make an effort to visit
your mother on a regular basis.
If possible. Include her in holi­
days and celebrations. Write her.
Telephone her. Let her know
______ by Bob Montana
that she Is still an important pan
of your life. With support from
m s . Bl a c k w e l l c a l l e p
you. your family and (he nursing
IN SICK, MS. FARMSIMORT
home, your mother may he able
HAD TO TAKE HlS WIFE
to find new enjoyment iu life: her
TO THE HOSPITAL,
MB. SIMMS..
depression may become an un­
pleasant memory.
Unfortunately, suicide in the
elderly is a disturbingly common
event, but it can be avoided If
families anticipate a parent's
needs and seek professional help
when aging mothers and fathers
seem to lose hope and appear to
retreat into the quiet loneliness
of old age.
__________ by Howla Schneider
DEAR DR. GOTT - Mother is
62. 145 pounds and in pretty
WEIL UJE^i-.FUlL PtMOCRACY
good shape, except lor stomach
problems. She says il Iccls like
AT LOWS LAST...
she has butterflies in her stom­
—
r

BEETLE BAILEY

M C-AI
n 4*i,___

THE BORN LOSER
ON(HO-HO-HO-KAH! I SEE
m ooew XXJK LITTLE
c h a r m s ! i 'm ioobdov^

ARCHIE
S M i T H E R S , I '/ V I O F F
T O T H E /M A IN O F P / C E . '

I HAVE A N i w i p o u t a n t
/M EETING C O N C E R N IN G
A B S E N T E E IS M IN T h E
C O M P A N Y ...

EEK &amp; MEEK

MEV USTE/UTO-TWlS...
COUSWUEUTS CAK) fJCXU
S IC
COOGRESSMEJU..

ach. Sometimes she Is sick to
her stomach, and she also has a
sour burning In tier throat. She's
had upper G.I., gallbladder,
gastric and other tests. Do you
have any suggestions?
DEAR R E A D E R - Your
mother may have a sensitive
stomach that Is readily alTectcd
bv anxiety or stress. This
ACROSS
15
9
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
22
24
26
29
33
34

Breckinridge
Poetic fiction
Make a
promise
Presence
Japanese
aborigine
Noun suffix
Fencing sword
Dole
French yes
But (Lat.)
Barbara
Geddes
Dutch pottery
Oiminutive suffix
God (Sp.)
Cell parts
Lives
Yemenite
Ruin (2 wris .

*11
36 Electrically
charged parti­
cle
37 Caldron
3B Air (comb.
form)
39 Man
40 Chooses
42 Mottled stone
44 French city
46 Greek letter
47 Extinguish
50 Poverty-war
agancy (abbr.)
52 Pounds (abbr.)
55 Actress Merkel
56 Charged
■ particles
58 Small sorghum
59 Mental
components
60 Equal
61 Himalayan
monkshood
62 Foot part
63 Go by car
64 Steno's blunder

Answer to Previous Puiile

3 Teach anew
4 Chemical suffix
5 Broadway
musical
6 Street sign
7 Explosive
(abbr.)
8 Country festival
9 Stringed
instrument
10 Egg (Fr.)
11 Warront
19 Bulling insect
21 Language suffix
23 Law degree
(abbr.)
25 Language
peculiarity
26 Wheel hub
27 Russian river
28 That is (Lat.. 2
wds.)
30 Debt
31 Loaf about
32 Large knife
35 Conjunction
38 Studio
39 Married
woman's title
1

7

usually responds satisfactorily io
periodic minor sedation. Howev­
er. before assuming she has a
"nervous stomach." I think it
would be wise for her to have
gastroscopy. This is a simple
and safe test.

A Y A H
O S L O
N E E D

H A
A L

Is

N T
T O

E E N

51 Old slave
53 Rader screen
image
54 Indifferent
(comp, wd.)
57 Egg (comb
form)
5B Small rug

41 950. Roman
43 Soldier's
address (abbr.)
45 Ruled on land
use
47 Resign
4 8 U n fa sten

49 Facilitate

3

12
15
IB

Sf

DOWN
t French women
(abbr.)
2 Cry of pain

(C) i s s s ti, M * Inc

W IN AT BRIDGE
By James Jacoby
, j .i ?

by Hargreaves A Sellers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY
\N -\A "

“TQ

L ?

•

A

/P7C 3 —£V\
7 VV'lT^- —'l —
l

l\A5 wa- ' h a c
A 3-35 fib N W
CAS"CO\.. N

What a complicated game
bridge Isl So many rules — so
much to think about. 1 know
that you. dear reader, arc a good
player. Have you given much
thought to how you can keep
your partner from making a
mistake?
North-South played a simple
system. Three spades was iiatu-.
ral and forcing after the two
no-trump opening. North' s
four-club bid showed a max­
imum opener with good spade
support and the club are. but
South had no interest in aeecpting a slam invitation.
The opening lead of the nine of
hearts was won by East's king,
decl arer pl ayi ng low from
dummy. East did not iliink ii
possible that West had a single­
ton heart, bul certainly West
could hold ihc diamond ace.
Having figured that out. lie led

his lone diamond. Now I'll give
you something to figure out.
How In the world did declarer
make his contract?
Easy. West decided that his
partner had two diamonds plus
the nee of spades. He ducked the
diamond seven, hoping that
when East won the spade ace. he
would return Ids other diamond
to West's ace and gel a ruff. He
was half-right — East did have
the spade are. hut the other low
diamond was In declarer's hand.
Who made the mistake?
Strangely enough. East de­
serves most of the blame
because he can eliminate any
brainstorming by West. All he
has to do Is cash his spade are
before returning his singleton
diamond. Now West has no
alternative: Hi- must lake the
first diamond and give his
partner a rulf for the setting
irlrk.

NORTH

ll-ll.li

♦ K y 9 5
v ay2
♦ K J 6 2
♦ A K

EAST

WEST
♦ 7
»9 8 7

♦ A 42

♦ K 10 6 5 3

♦ A 10 9 5
+ y 96 42

♦ 7

♦ J 873
SOUTH

♦ J 10 8 6 3
VJ 4
♦ y 8 43
♦ 10 5

Vulnerable: Roth
Dealer North
Wml
Pass
Pass

North
2 NT

44

Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

South

3a
44

Opening lead V 9

H O RO SCO PE
What The Day
Will Bring...
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thavat

} ANPPRIPE.OF COURSE. )
S IS T he M.PPLE CLASS ,

1
\

SUE
FOf\ CLASS

0
0
o
vs

K\

aTY

t

j m ctwra

i, 'S»e‘, U#vtr&lt;Jfcatur* *wr'*tJC«l« If*

TUMBLEW EEDS

(0-17
by T. K. Ryan

SO, IF

HEAR CATTY REMARKSAT TOWS

MA99ACK*, itXSU. KNOWtVHK

i

.4

YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 17. 1985
Unique opportunities will
come your way in the year ahead
through channels you’d least
expect, lie ready to move swiftly.
Promising proposals may he
made by people you know only
casually.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oet. 23) You
are well endowed with polite­
ness. charm and tact. Don't let
these important virtues desert
you when dealing with friends
today. Major changes are ahead
for Libras in the coming year.
Send for your Astro-Graph pre­
dictions today. Mail $1 to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
Box 1846. Ci nci nnati . OH
45201. Be sure to slate your
zodiac sign.
BCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22)
Take no actions today that are
not in accord with your highest
ideals and standards. If you do

something of which you aren't
proud, it 'll he revealed.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) II you give loo much time
today to iioii-essenKal interests,
It will severely lessen your
momentum for the truly impor­
tant.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Your chances for getting what
you go after today look rather
good. However, be careful not to
use others to gratify your de­
sires,
AgU ARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
So c i a l s i t u a t i o n s wi l l be
managed correctly today, but in
career matters you might be all
thumbs. Do your best in both.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Confusion is a probability In a
situation that calls for teamwork
today. Each party might wrongly
expect things from the other.
ARIES (March 21-April I9J In
your mind's eye. you will have
bright Ideas on how to handle
what needs to be done today, but
self-doubts could cause you to be

Indecisive and ineffective.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Circumstances will force you
later to lake care of tasks you
neglect today. Unfortunately,
they'll hi- even more unpleasant
at this time.
G E M IN I (May 21-June 20| Ik­
on guard today because Cupid
might place forbidden tempta­
tions in your path. If there Is
s o m e o n e wi t h wh o m you
shouldn't get involved, steer
clear.
CA NCE R (June 2 1-July 22) Go
slowly at work today. I f - you
experiment with shortcuts or
labor-saving devices, they might
turn out to he anything but that.
LEO IJuly 23-Aug. 22) Do not
be Indifferent or too complacent
about a serious matter today. If
you play things loo loosely, you
may I k - inviting problems.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Scpt. 221 This
could lurn oul to be a rather
expensive day because you arc
financially impractical. Be
budget-minded.

ANNIE

by Laonard Starr
MMM. DOESN'T LOOK AS
IF Th£ GROUNDS HME
seen tended

TO IN A WHILE.

COME IN QUCMLY,
LITTLE M IS S Y /' iOU
MUST BE SOARED
TO THE
SHIN/

HAW, I'M OHAY,
PUNJAB/ AMITY |
LOANED ME

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

EKU A lum ni, F rien ds
In vited To R ecep tion

Vow s
Sp o ke n

Keniuckv lUniversity
lm i- n r c ii. .
Eastern Kentucky
alumni and friends living lii
Florida fire Invited to attend a
rccepllon Saturday. Oct. ID.
The reception will be held
from 4 to 6 p.m. al ihc Couri of
Flags Hotel. Orlando, prior to ihc
EKU- Uni ver si t y of Central
Florida football game, al 7 p.m.,
'In the Orlando Sladlum (Citrus
Howl). Orlando.
EKU President and Mrs. Manly
Funderburk, membrs of the EKU
Alumni Association and EKU
Colonel Club (athletics boosters)
and other university repre­
sentatives will greet alumni and
other friends during the after-

Jcannlnc K. Payne and
Leslie R. Wilson ,Jr. were
married Aug. 10. al 7 p.m.. In
tiH? Church of the Nazurcne,
Sanford. The Rev. J.J.
Hinton performed the double
ring and candlelight eeremony.

The hride is the daughter
of Suzanne Payne, 1601
Forest Drive. Sanford, and
Ja me s A. Payne Sr. of
Central City. K y . The bride­
groom's parents are Mr. and
Mrs. L.R. Wilson Sr. of St.
Augustine.

“

noon poolside reception, at*
cording to Hr. Hon Wolfe. EKU
director of alumni affairs.

.

* )tu i

tii

I

m s ¥ir,*nut •owr* stmoKO

]&gt;

f-—
T JVO
YAJ
V
V

CHUCK NORRIS

Usher-groomsmen were Paul
Payne and John Wilson.
Rachel Martin was the
(lower girl and Justin Payne
was the ring hearer.
The reception was held tit
the Sanlord Garden Club.

J'COUES COUSTEAU

■ MISSING IN A C T IO N ?

Assi st ant s were Lcnnl e
Jim Inez, Kelly Payne and Liz
Payne.
The newlyweds tire making
their home in Orange City
where the bridegroom is
employed by Hall's.Stucco.

BURNETT

3:25

I
■

I p La z a

SEAFOOD and SPIRITS

B t n i i
SPECIAL
SCHOOL
• HOLIDAY MATINEE

,

C

First Annual
HALLOWEEM COSTGME PARTY
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26
PRIZES INCLUDE:

•F R I.-S A T .-S U N .2:1 5 only ]
} The movie thor
■ will moke the
whole family
Care-a-Lor.

AND

7:00
0 1 4 )1 1 0 0 ,00 0 PYRAMID
J O P.M. MAGAZINE Modeling
agency head Eileen Ford sapphire
mtnet in Vugo Gulch. Mont
I 1O JEOPARDY
II US)BARNEY MILLER
(D (10) OATELINE: U S S R . /
U S A . Taped coterage ol a satellite
linkup between Moscow and Wash­
ington 0 C . allowing |0urnalisls in
both countries to discuss media
coverage ot recent world events
CD U l CARSON'S COMEDY CLAS­
SICS

7:05
91 MARY TYLER MOORE

7:30
O (4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with Jennifer O Neill
J O PRICE IS RIGHT
&lt;M Q WHEEL OF FORTUNE
I I (33) BENSON
CD ID ALL IN THE FAMILY

7:35
33 SANFORD AND SON

8:00
0
4 COSBY SHOW Clitl gives
advice to a young man (Joseph
Philhpsl whom he d like to be Sondr a t steady boytnend
(J O MAGNUM, P.I. Magnums
teemmgiy easy |0b as a hotel de­
tective is complicated by the pres­
ence ol an eavesdropping prosti­
tute and a cal burglar
J 1O TALL QUY Colt searches lor
a missing NaJi treasure while film­
ing a movie in Italy : j
,1) US) HART TO HART
(D (10) WIL0 AMERICA Marty
Sloutler searches lor signs that the
maturing fishers can turvive their
first winter in tha wild (Part 2 ol 2)
d ) ( l | MOVIE
Audrey Rose
(1977) Marsha Mason. Anthony
Hopkins A couple learns that their
tormented young daughter is the
reincarnation ol a child killed in a
fiery auto crash

8:05

0 4 NIGHT COURT / PLAYOFFS
Chnstinr. s t.Khi'i &lt;?j!,*s tor the lust
ftm«* »n viM fi nudfils invade ihe
courtroom (May f** pre empted for
a seventh ML Playoff game »t r*c e t)

g.e Dickinson Clitl Robertson

10:05
1} PORTRAIT OF AMERICA: VER­
MONT

10:30
,11 (35) BOB NEWHART
ED (10) FANTASY OF FLORIDA

11:00
0 )4 J o
7 a NEWS
II (35) ARCHIE BUNKER S PLACE
0 ) 110) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
CD (3) NIGHT GALLERY

11:05
) ) MOVIE The Mountain Road
(I960) James Stewart Glenn Cor­
bett An unscrupulous major in the
Army learns compassion alter
bemq charged with blowing up vil­
lages bridges and roads against
advancing Japanese during World
War II

11:30
0 14 TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson Scheduled Steve Lawrence
S o WKRP IN CINCINNATI
7 O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
H (35) HAWAII FIVE-0
CD Ul TWILIGHT ZONE

12:00
(} o NIGHT HEAT Kirkwood lAl­
lan Royall witnesses the apparently
work related slaying of a man at a
shipping plant
7 O COMEDY BREAK WITH
MACK AND JAMIE
CDUIMOVIE Billy the Kid 11941)
Robeil TaylO' Ian Hunter

12:30
0
4 LATE NIGHT WITH 0AVI0
LETTERMAN Scheduled
Julia
Child comedian George Wallace
7 O AT THE MOVIES Scheduled
reviews Remo The First Adven­
ture |Fred Ward Joel Grey) ' Sil­
ver Bullet tGary Buseyl
II (35) CHICO ANO THE MAN

1:00

(U MOVIE Nighl Passage (19571
James Stewart. Audie Murphy An
outlaw daserlt tut gang whan they
hold up a tram guarded by his
brother

6:30

1:10

(J) FAMILY TIES / PLAYOFFS
the Keatons ora stunned when they
finally gel to meet Mallory s ultramacho boytnend (May be pre­
empted tor a seventh NL Ptayoll
game it necessary )
CD ( 10) THIS OLD MOUSE Installing
a redwood ga/ebo and stockada
fonca

( j i O MOVIE Night Ot The Claw
(19871 Robert tanking N eell Tal­
bot

0:00

91 (3S| 8CTV Sketches the results
ot Caballero s forgery. Jerry Lewis
iShorll stirs irv Scenes from on Idi­
o ts Marriage

M ® CHEERS / PLAYOFFS A
twist to the Cmderell* ' Story finds
Oiane trying to tocata • man who
left his locket at Cheer* (May be
pre-empted lor ■ seventh NL
Playofl game it necessary I
(1) O
SIMON S SIMON The
Simon* try to locale • research
writer who may be involved m *
murder,

CFJ O LADY BLUE Katy kUampts
to track down &gt; Sitter whose quarry
includes Vietnamese eipetrtstes Q

4:00
(II (36) RHOOA

4:30

1:15
d l MOVIE Arnvederci. Baby*
(1966) Tony Curtis Rosanna Schialfmo

1:30

2:00
11(36) OUNSMOKE

2:30
( |) O CB8 NEWS NIOHTWATCM

3:00
(J ) O MOVIE Honor Thy Father"
(19721 Rat Valtone. Richard Casta)lin o
91 (33) I LOVE LUCY

W.4

S

■ m SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
35 Q YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS
0 LOVING
(33) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
(•) WHAT'S H0T1 WKACS
NOTT

6:45

7:00
I ® TOOAY
) Q CBS MORNtNG NEWS
) O OOOO MORNING AMERICA
) (35)01. JOE
) (10) FARM DAY
( I) VOLTRON. DEFENDER OF
THE UNIVERSE

91 MOVIE

7:35
91 FLINTSTONES

8:00
(35) JETSONS
( l | HEATHCUFF

8:05
9 1 1DREAM OF JEANNIE

8 '3 0
I t) (35) FLINT STONES
f f l (10) MISTER ROGERS (R&gt;
® ( » ) FAT ALBERT

8.35
91 BEWITCHED

8:00

I (Tl DIVORCE COURT
oD O N AH U E
) O TIC TAC DOUGH
!) (35) WALTONS
) 110)SESAME STREET(R)g
id )B R A D Y BUNCH

9:05
(D HAZEL

9:30
) LOVE CONNECTION
J O I.JOKER'S W1LO
0 (Id
1 ))6MY THREE SONS

9:35
9 1 1LOVE LUCY

10:00

I (T) YOUR NUMBER'S UP
0 HOUR MAGAZINE
)Q B A R M A SY JONES
(35) MG VALLEY
) (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
d ) CAROL BURNETT

91 MOW

10:05
10*30

CD SALE OF THE CENTURY
(10)3-2-1 CONTACT g
( I) 0 0 0 COUPLE

*

11

w h eel

11:00

or fo r t u n e

PRICE B R IG H T

THREFBACROW DIR)

W l l M v l S p M\

l **ss •

A

Sem inole Centre
3653 Orlando Drive

-

1

J

1:05

LAWN|AN0*GAR0EN

1:30

FERTILIZER

IT) Q AS THE WORLD TURNS
(Q* (33) QOMER PYLE
O HIO ) PAINT)NO CERAMICS

2:00
) ANOTHER WORLD
J ONE UFE TO LIVE
)(15&gt;ANOY GRIFFITH
) &lt;10) PAINTING WITH ILONA

2:30
(T) a CAPITOL
i f f (35| GREAT SPACE COASTER
S&gt; (10) MAGIC OF WATERCOLORS

2:35

91 WOMANWATCH

7:30
I f (35) CHALLENGE O f THE
OOBOT6
f f i (10) SESAME STREET (R) g
® (l)ROSOTECH

•

1:00

7:15
S ) (10) A.M. WEATHER

w t 1 M v t S W K fm l

»&gt;ll * *r

) DAYS OF OUR LIVES
| ALL MY CHILDREN
) (33) DICK VAN DYKE
) (10) FL0R10A HOME GROWN
)(■) MOVIE

6:30

EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
I (10) A M . WEATHER

■v------ T.

- t ---------

12:30

91 NEWS

)O

t f

WAL-MART

12:05
9 J PERRY MASON

(D ( II BATMAN

J ) O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
® O ABC'S WORLD NEWS THIS
MORNING □
(35) TOM ANO JERRY
FUNTIME
(D(I)SUPERFRIENOS

12:00

MIOOAY
( D O NEWS
(38) BEWITCHED
(10) WONDERWORKS
1(I) FT’ S A GREAT UFE

O THE SAINT
(33) NEWS

0 (D NEWS

S a n fo rd

AFTERNOON

5:00

LNBCNCWS
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
QD O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
9Ji (33) OOOO OAYI

3 2 3 -1 9 1 0

8S

iUMMHSMI
WEVhnlWmM

6:00

A UMUlL OCXOP*m
tfWANT MLlAM

11:30

FR B AYL

5:30
(3) 2 'S COUNTRY
BEVERLY HIUBILUES

Adiacent To the H oliday inn
At the M a rin a

SCRABBLE
_ ALL-STAR BLITZ
(10)
• no FLONDA8TYLE
9&lt;
t)ALL ABOUT US
( t)

I I |3S) RHOOA

10:00
0
4 HILL STREET BLUES /
PLAYOFFS laRue sets out to tind
Ihn man who M.ibbed a lellow delecti.e a man with cancer contin­
ues his cross-country run despite
the thcll ol his belongings (May be
pre-empted tor a seventh NL
Playott game it necessary I
5 O KNOTS LANDING A psycho­
pathic Sheila fisher stalks Val.
Mack cuts a deal with the gover­
nor s aide (J
7 O 20 / Z0 Scheduled Barbara
Wallers interviews former vicepresidential candidate Geraldine
Ferraro LJ
I I US)INDEPENDENT NEWS
ED 110) NEW YORK'S MASTER
CHEFS
CD d)ROCKFORO FILES

(1 'O M O V IE BigMo |1»T3IBerme Casey. Bo Syenson
j)
(35) BIZARRE Guest Redd
Foi&gt; Sketches hold the onion*,
world famous psychic the ultimata
movie le t s Make a Deal tuner al

0

3:30
11 (36) LEAVE rr TO BEAVER

Dinner Cruise for 2 on the Rivership Romance.
Jewelry Gift from Kader Jewelers.
Dinner for 2 at the Holiday Inn.
And Many More.

(38) DALLAS
(10) WE RE COOKING NOW
(3) INOAY NEWS

13 MOVIE O.erboard 11976) An-

9:30

635
M
CAROL
FRIENDS

fOCT. 31.

[H

•
•
•
•

I t (35)QUINCY

6:30

DRESS UP AND
WIN PRIZES

E V A S IO N U.SJL

M r. and M rs. Leslie R. Wilson Jr.

ED BO) UNDERSEA WORLD OF

0 1 4 NBC NEWS
'* O C BS N EW S
&lt; 7 * 0 ABC NEWS p
i l l US) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Safa * reputation it on the
line when the accepts a dinner date
and a promotion from the bant
manager
CD UILAVERNE A SHIRLEY

H A LLO W E E N :
C O STUM E
PARTY

TUES. • SUN. 4 P.M. • 8 P.M.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY, LARGE DANCE FLOOR

J77 171b

•«

TONIGHT'S TV

ANOY QRIFFITM

JOIN US FO R
H A P P Y HOUR

■eesvis

Bridesmaids were Rmh
Daughterv and .Jeanette
Shepherd. Their gowns were
identical to the honor atten­
dant's.
Jimmy Hall served the
bridegroom as best man.

6:05

ctintM . r u in m cun
i t i i i v srufito o m c m » | P Q E
in to CHUNK m o d oi
■ooiito nouaoi*
_■
miDCMicii*
w#
\ll thnitrr* liu’lmU' S.1/.1J li.it ILikrtl nr t
I n u l l‘nr.ini U nlit* I (rub Cupplh

HOLIDAY BANQUET FACILITIES
AVAILAILE. CALL DIANA 322-310S

7 Joans

M0VII lANO O')

6:00

Choice Ol:

AND SANFORD

St

f t tx r fiH A
\S
)7l SHOW

a r l y b ir d

' Served: Sun., Tues.. Wed.,
Thur. 4 P.M. - B P.M.
Frl. G Sal. 4 P.M. ■ 6 P.M.

yOVERLOOKINC LAKE MONROE*
ON HWY. 17 92 BETWEEN t i ‘

IraFloyd Theatres

JIM Hunt attended the
bride as maid of honor. Sin1
wore a dusty rose gown,
fashioned along the empire
silhouette.

o &lt; 4 ) r i) o r z jO N c w s
11 (35) JEFFERSONS
CD (10| MACNEtL / LEKRER
NEWSHOUR
CD (•) HARPY DAYS AGAIN

T

SPECIAL

HEMMIHtltr'UT. 10:30-11:10
lETOflWOM »UB. 13:30
_

For addltinnol Information,
call the EKU Alumni Office at
|(i()r&gt;) 022•1200

^ a 4 e

,

ORLY l i t l i t
31.10 IB 144

Given In marriage by her
Lit her, the bride ehose for her
vows a Belgium laee gown
e m b e I I |s h e d w I i h
embroidered organza flowers.
Lace ruffles bordered the
controlled skirt and sweeping
cathedral train. Her veil of
silk laee was attached to a
halo of roses Interspersed
with seed pearls.

EVENING

Thursday, Oct. 17, 1985—3B

3:00
) (T&gt; SANTA BARBARA
) Q GUIDING LIGHT
) Q GENERAL HOSPITAL
5(33) SCOOBY DOO
) (10) FLORIDASTYLE
)(•) INSPECTOR GADGET

3:05
91 BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS

3:30

91

(33) JAYCE ANO THE
WHEELED WARRIORS
&lt;10| MISTER ROGERS &lt;R)
( 8) M A S K .

6- 6-6

100% ORGANIC NiTROGEN
tv,%(UTUnAl
* t by% SYNTMTnC

Ml akBrfn
20 K ILO G R A M S
„

r ..

r - rr-\

Lawn and Garden
Fertilizer
44 lb. bag covers
2,500 • 3.000 sq. ft. of
lawn area.

3.97

4:00
AMERICA
) ® OIFFRENT STROKES
) O MERV GRIFFIN
' (33) THUN0ERCAT8 Q
)(10) SESAME STREET (R )g
) ( l | HE-MAN ANO MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE

3

*{&gt;J
•1 %

q

y i1
(a -

A)

4:05

9 1 FUNT8 TONES

a

4:30

THREE'S COMPANY
(S3) TRANSFORMERS
(I) SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF
POWER
1* * •

4:35
91 BRADY BUNCH

i

5:00
: NEWLYWED GAME
| y*A*g*H
I HEADLINE CHASERS
) (33) WHAT'8 HAPPENING!!
1(10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
) (I) 10REAM OF JEANNIE

5:05
O LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

S'30
0 ® PEOPLE'S COURT
JEo c d b n e w s
9 J (31) ALICE

0 (1 0 ) ART OF BEING HUMAN
0 ( 3 ) WORK ANO UtNOY

6:35

91 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

YOUR CHOICE
40 Lb. Bag

Cow Manure
Top Soil or Peat Humus
. ■ St-H

98

* Wt I '&gt;»'!!% ItM I t*M *

A I 1V

SalB PrtCBB
Good Thru
Sunday,
Oct. 20

t*

M.ir

�4B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Oct. 17, 19BS

Woodruff Cam paigns For
Indigent Health-Care Bill
ORLANDO IUIM) - Tlu- campaign lor Indlgnil
health care reform In Florida reached about
midpoint Wednesday with Rep. Tom Woodrulf
stumping at Orlando Regional Medical Center
and, as Is his practice, with newspaper editors.
Woodruff, a St. Petersburg Republican, lias
profiled legislation that would raise up to Sf)20
million for an Indigent health care program by
adding one-half of 1 percent to the state's 5
percent sales tax.
He is not shy about selling the bill be says
would save citizens millions of dollars in
Insurance premiums and out-of-pocket expense
now passed on by doctors and hospitals uncom­
pensated for Indigent care.
"When you go In and look at your hospital bill
when your wife has a baby ami say to yourself.
'My God. why does it cost $5,000 to have a baby?'
— maybe $1,000 of that bill is because a hospital
... has had to write off $10 million to $20 million
In overhead expense because of Indigent care."
Woodruff said.
To apply what he calls "a little political

pressure from the folks back home," Woodruff
lias taken Ills case to newspaper opinion writers
hi Tampa. St. Petersburg. Clearwater and Or­
lando. Still on the Itinerary nrc stops In
Jacksonville. Miami. Pensacola, Tallahassee and
"points In between." The proposed bill would be
administered through existing bureaucracy In the
Department of Administration, costing about 1
percent of the money raised through the
additional tax.
Qualified members of Florida's estimated 1.6
million uninsured Indigent population would be
issued insurance cards and use them at health­
care facilities Just as people Insured at work do.
"If you're going to set up a program to take care
of the indigent. It ought to be set up in a
business-like way rather than the traditional
government way." Woodruff said.
"W e've always said on our side of the aisle that
government does have some obligation to help Its
population. It's Just that we've always been faced
with plans that are typical government
approaches and we've had to vote no."

EAL Eyes Pacific Skies
MIAMI |UPI| - East­ I I I g li l s a n d L o s
a final decision until
A n g e I v s •t o - II a w a 11 the end of October. At
ern Airlines filed an
application with the ilights since last year.
that point. President
Department of Trans­
"We think it will be a Reagan will have 60
portation Tuesday to profitable route that
days to approve or re­
enter the lucrative Pa­ will help out with our ject the takeover, the
c i f i c ma r k e t wi t h
DOT spokesman said.
traffic between Miami
flights from Seattle and and the Northwest."
" If Eastern has al­
Portland to Tokyo.
ready filed an applica­
s a i d
E a s t e r n
A Depart ment o f s p o k e s m a n Gl e n n
tion. we might not re­
Transportation
quire that they file
Parsons.
s p o k e s m a n In
a n o th e r
o n e ."
th e
Three airlines now
Washington said it
spokesman said. "This
fly from Seattle and
w o u l d be s e v e r a l
one might suffice."
months before a hear­ Portland to Japan.
In its application.
ing would be held on They are Pan Ameri­ Eastern said it would
the application and can World Airways.
fly widebodv DC-10United and Northwest
ot her ai rl i nes also
30s to Tokyo, and
would be invited to Airlines DOT has said
noted that it has has
if United is successful
apply for the route.
been living to Seattle
in Us plan to acquire
Miami-based Eastern
and Portland for 20
Pan American's Pacific
has no flights In the
years from its hubs at
Pacific, but began fer- D i v i s i o n , it c oul d
Atlanta. Kansas City
conduct bearings to
ry i ng passengers
and Miami.
across the Atlantic for de t e r mi ne whet her
Eastern also hopes to
the first time in July another carrier should
e x p a n d i ts traitsbe admitted to that
when It took over
A 11an 11c net w o r k .
market
to replace Pan
bankrupt Air Florida's
Parsons said the carrier
Am
old Miaml-to-London
filed preliminary doc­
route.
u me n t s wi t h DOT
DOT has tentatively
Eastern has had its a p p r o v e d U n i t e d ' s
seeking to fly from
eye on the Tokyo route,
takeover ol Pan Ain's
Miami to Madrid, and
as well as possible
Pacific routes, but is also hopes to even­
A 11a n t a - 1o - T o k v o not scheduled to make
tual! v flv to Frankfurt.

New Threat To Citrus
won't be known until
at least Friday.
"W e 'r e hoping to
know something by the
end of week but we re
not certain." Humon
said Wednesday. "We
just keep going out­
ward until we don't
find it any more."
He said any control
measures will not in­
clude aerial spraying,
which has been used
lor the Mediterranean
is
In te n d e d
to
d e t e r m i n e h o w fru',i iVv.
"It will be strictly
wi despread the i n­
ground control, but we
festation is and what
will have to be done to don't know vet if it will
be chemical or biologi­
eradicate it.
cal." he said.
F l o r i d a ' s
The insect sucks the
Sl-btlllon-a-year citrus
industry has been en­ nutrients and water
from citrus Irutts and
dangered In recent
years by citrus canker. leaf cells, causing the
leaves to yellow and
Mediterranean fruit
flies and freezes. Now. the fruit to drop from
the scale Insect has trees before it is ripe.
"It is certainly not as
been found several
times this week on serious as citrus canker
because it is an insect
citrus trees in Miami.
Dr. Avas Human ot and you can see it. so
the agriculture d e ­ we can survey very
partment's inspection el let lively for it." said
Ed Burns, chief inh
e
a
d
quarters in Gainesville. s p e c t o r f o r l h e
Fla., said the extent of agriculture department
the problem probably in Miami.

MI AMI ( U P I ) Nearly a dozen Florida
Department o f
Agriculture Inspectors
pressed a search
through the city's Lit t|f Haiti section Wed­
nesday l ooki ng for
shiny black insects
that deform oranges
and dry out citrus
branches.
The search for black
parlatoria scale insects

CELEBRITY CIPHER

C w tx rt, Cipher cryptogram! art ciaatad from quotav&gt;oni t&gt;, tamoui
paopia. p m and praaaor
Each w*ia&gt; &lt;r in* ophw
tor
anotfiar Tout, i ciut C aguari j
b , CONNIE WIENER

“ MURACUKMDYEJZT

JZ

LBULEB

OMJHB

OVU

R Y D ’H

JDHBM8JBOJDF
RYD'H
OVU

LBULEB

HYEA
RYD'H

WMYDA

WUM
MBYG."

OVU

LBULEB
—

QYLLY.

PREVIO US SO LUTIO N "Hot lead can be almost as
effective coming from a linotype as from a firearm " —
John O 'H ara

BLOOM C O U N T Y
F n m . 'n w , m

The shiny, rectangu­
lar insects that look
round to the naked eye
have never been found,
before in the continen­
tal United States, said
Burns.
"W e're seeing how
far it is from the origi­
nal location." he said.
"Then we can make a
decision." about an
eradication program.
The insect was first
discovered Oct 7 dur­
ing a routine canker
inspection on a sour
o r a n g e t r e e 1n
northeast Miami's Hai­
tian neighborhoods.
Inspectors have since
found them In 20 of 25
b l o c k s s u r v e y ed
around the original
site, said survey team
supervisor George
Gwin.
He said they have
been found on several
kinds ol fruit trees,
including sweet and
sour oranges, grape­
fruits and kumquats.
Burns said the extent
o I the i n lest a t ion
should lie determined
by the end of the week.
"I don't even expect
a lo get out of the Little
Haiti area." said Gwin.
The adult parlatoria
si ale insect Is about a
tenth of an Inch and is
covered by a waxy
shell, making It dif­
ficult to control with
Insecticides because
the shell protects It
from contact poisons

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF THE E IG H T E E N TH
JU D IC IA L C IRCUIT,
IN AND FOR
SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
C IV IL ACTION NO.
U-llOI-CA-Ot-G
A M E R IF IR S T F E D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,
vt .
JOHN J. CO PPING ER. at al..
Defendant*.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that on the Ith day of November.
1985, at 11:00 a m. at the W elt
Front Door ot the Courthouse of
Seminole County. Florida, al
S a n fo rd , F lo r id a , th e un
derilgned Clerk will offer (or
tale to the hlgheit bidder lor
cath the following detcribed
real property:
The North 70 feel ol Lol 30 and
Lot 79. lets the North 65 feel
thereof. CUTLER COVE, ac
cording to the plat thereof a i
recorded In Plat Book 13. Page
it. ol the Public Records ol
Seminole County, Florida
Including specifically, but not
by way ot limitation, the follow
ing equipment
Range. Disposal. Dishwasher,
Fan/H ood. Heating and Air
Conditioning, Water Heater
Together with all the Im
provements now or hereafter
erected on Ihe property, and all
e a s e m e n ts , r ig h t s , ap
purtenances. rents, royalties,
mineral, oil, and gas rights and
profits, water, water rights, and
water stock, and all fixtures now
or hereafter attached to the
p ro perty, Including replace
ments and additions thereto.
This sale is made pursuant to
a Summary Final Judgment In
Foraclosure entered In Civil
Action No. 85 2703 CA 09 G now
pending In the Circuit Court In
a n d fo r S e m in o le C o u n ty .
Florida.
D A T E D th is 7th d ay of
October. 1985
(CO URTSEAL)
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
CLERK OF THE C IR C U IT
COURT
By V ivaJ Pope
Deputy Clerk
Publish October 10. 17. 2*. 31.
1985
D E K 59_________________ _____
IN THE C IR C U IT COURT
OF THE E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
C IV IL DIVISION
CASE NO: 8S-341-CA 09-G
AM ER IC A N SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
FLO RIDA,
Plaintiff.
vs
JAM E5 R FORD. ATLANTIC
BANK OF ORLANDO and MR.
----------- AMATO,
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO JAMES R FORD
Residence Unknown
Address P 0 Box 7774A
Orlando. Florida, 37854
YOU ARE H ER EB Y nollfied
that a Complaint to foreclose a
Mortgage encumbering ihe lol
lowing real property
Lot 78. Block 12. H E F T LE R
HOM ES HO W ELL PARK.
SECTION ONE, according to
the Pial thereof as recorded In
Plat Book I). Pages 45. 46. 47
and 48 Public Records of
Seminole County. Florida
has been tiled against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ot your written detenses, II any,
10 (I Ob JOHN M McCORMICK.
Attorney tor Plaintiff, whose
address is Post Ottlce Box 3373,
SOI East Church Street. Orlando
F lo rid a. 37801. and t i lt the
original with the Clerk ot Ihe
above styled Court on or before
November 11. 19IS, otherwise a
default may be entered against
you lor relief demanded In Ihe
Complaint
WITNESS my hand and seal
Ot said Court on October 7, 1985
(SEAL)
0 A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
By /s /J a n e E Jasweic
Deputy Clerk
Publish October 10. 17. 74 31 ,
1985
DEK 57_______________________

CALL TOLL FREE
I-M 8-M M B1I

by Berke Breathed

a

ir m r s jx m x p k vrt
o c s m iv u w s c

u o x w iH E .m i.

swwHrrr.

MRS(MLLASf

___,

V € ’M M W &amp; W - u em tM J}

l

He said officials suspcc! that It got to Dade
County In fresh fruit,
possibly from the Car­
ibbean. that was eonlaminated by the in­
sect.

Legal Notice

M ZAF0U L.

—

AtHP IT

w a ve or

vex. # u rr i ?
w e n m v

\

v e r 'f X

60ts re rc A .

\

o
w
.s
o
Jim ,
m m i
\.

Legal Notice
IN THE C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIR C U IT,
IN A N D F 0 R
SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
CASE NO. 85 5565 CA 64 0
IN RE: THE M AR R IA G E OF
PATSY A CRAIG,
Petltloner/WIte,
and
K E V IN M . CRAIG,
Respondent/Husband
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: K E V IN M CRAIG
ADDRESS UNKNOWN
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that a Petition For
Dissolution ol M arriag e has
been tiled against you seeking a
dissolution ol marrlgae and sole
parental responsibility ol a
minor child with no visitation
rights, and that you are required
to serve a copy ol you Response
or Pleading to the Petition upon
the Petitioner’s attorney. N.
D IA N E HOLMES, ESQUIRE.
709 East Ridgewood Street. Or
lando, Florida 32801, and tile the
original Response or Pleading In
the Ottlce ol Ihe Clerk of the
Circuit Court on or before the
7th day of November. 1985 It
you fall to do so. a Default
Judgment will be taken against
you for the relief demanded In
Ihe Petition.
DATED at Sanlord. Seminole
County, Florida, this 3rd day of
October. 1985
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
B Y : /* /J a n e E Jasewlc
A t Deputy Clerk
Publish: October 10. 17. 74, 31,
1985
DEK-51
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT,
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IRCUIT,
IN AND FOR
SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
C IV IL ACTION CASE NO.
B5-0J9O-CA-O9 D IV IS IO N 0
E M P IR E OF A M ERICA FSA, a
Corporation,
Plaintiff,
vs.
A U D R E Y L. JOHNSON and
G E O R G E L. J O H N S O N ,
husband and wife, el al.,
Delendants.
N 0 T IC E OF SALE
Notice is hereby given that,
pursuant to an Order of Summa
ry Judgment ol Foreclosure
entered In Ihe above captioned
action. I will sell the property
situated In Seminole County.
Florida, described at
Lot 16. SANORA SOUTH. Unit
1. according to Ihe plat thereof
as recorded in Plat Book 19.
Pages 76 and 77, Public Recordi
ot Seminole County, Florida,
at public sale, to the highest and
best bidder lor cash, at the
Front Door ot the Seminole
County Courthouse in Sanlord.
Florida at I I 00 A M on the 6th
day ot November. 1915
D A T E D th is 7th d ay ol
October. 1985
(SEAL)
DAVID N
BERRIEN.
CLERK
By: Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clerk
Publish: October 10. 17, 1985
DEK 56

IN THE CIR C U IT COURT
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JUD IC IA L CIRCUIT,
IN AND FOR
SE M IN O LE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
C IV IL ACTION
CASE NO. 857044-CA 09 G
THE FIR ST, F A. formerly
f ir s t f e d e r a l s a v in g s

AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
O RLANDO, a co rp o ra lio n.
Plaintiff.
vs
JACK P HODGESand
LORETTA HODGES, hlswile.
FIRST A M ERICAN BANK AND
TRUST, KO LTUN&amp;
G R EENBERG . P A . a Florida
Corporation: BARNETT BANK
OF CENTRAL FLO RIDA. N A
and THE U N IT E D STATESOF
AM ERICA,
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice Is hereby given lhal
pursuant to the Final Judgment
ot Foreclosure and sale entered
In the cause pending in the
C i r c u i t C o u rt In a n d fo r
Seminole County, Florida, being
Civil Number 852044 CA 09 G,
Ihe undersigned Clerk will sell
th e p r o p e r t y s itu a te d in
Seminole County. Florida, de
scribed as
L o l 59. W E K IV A C L U B
ESTATES. SECTION EIGHT
according to the plat thereof as
recorded in Plat Book 24, Pages
70 and 21. Public Records ot
Seminole County, Florida,
at public sale, lo the highest
bidder tor cash at 11 00 A M on
Ihe 12th day ot November. 1985
at the W eil Front Door ol the
Seminole County Courthouse in
Sanlord. Florida
Dated this 7th day ol October
1985
(SEAL)
D A V ID N B ER RIEN
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
By Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clerk
Publish October 10, 17. 1985
DEK 55

NOTICE OF A
PUBLIC HEARING
TO CONSIDER
THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE
BY THE CITY
OF SANFORD, FLORIDA.
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held al
•he Commission Room in the
Cily Hall In Ihe City ot Sanlord.
Florida, at 7 00 o'clock P M on
October 28. 1985. lo consider the
adoption of an ordinance by the
City ol Sanford. Florida, as
loilowi
ORDINANCE NO. 1715
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D .
F L O R I D A . A M E N D IN G
CHAPTER 2 OF THE CITY
CODE BY CREATING ARTI
CLE X IV TO ESTABLISH A
H U M A N R ELA TIO N S A 0 V I
SORY BOARD. P R O V ID IN G
T E R M S OF O F F IC E A N D
D U T IE S OF T H E BOARD:
P R O V I D I N G
F O R
S E V E R A B IL IT Y . CONFLICTS
A N D E F F E C T IV E DATE
A copy shall be available at
the Ottlce ot the City Clerk lor
all persons desiring to examine
the same.
All parties In Interest and
c ltile n i shall have an opportuni
ty to be heard at said hearing
By order of the City Com
mission ol the City ot Sanford,
Florida
H.N. Tam m , Jr.
City Clark
Publish October 17. 1915
DEK 100

Legal Notice
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT.
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IRCUIT,
IN AND FOR
SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
CASE NO. 85-1065-CA-04-O
IN RE ; The M arriage ot
K ATHLEEN KERSTING.
W lle/Petltloner,
and
RAYMOND KERSTING.
Husband/Respondent.
NOTICE OF ACTION
THE STATE OF FLO RIDA TO:
RAYMOND KERSTING
Address Unknown
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that K A T H L E E N
KERSTING nas filed a Petition
In the Circuit Court ol Seminole
County, Florida, for Dissolution
ol M arriage, and you are re ­
quired to serve a copy ol your
w ritten defenses, It any, on
CLAYTON D SIMMONS, ES
Q U IR E , o l S T E N S T R O M .
M d N T O S H . J U L IA N . C O L ­
BERT &amp; W HIG HAM . P.A., Post
O ttlc e Box 1330, S a n fo rd ,
Florida. 32771. Attorneys for Ihe
Petitioner, and file Ihe original
with the Clerk of the abovestyled Court on or before Nov
ember tl. A D.. 1985. otherwise
a default and ultimate judgment
w ill be entered against you lor
the re lie f demanded In the
Petition
WITNESS my hand and of­
ficial seal of said Court on this
7lh day ol October, A.D , 1985.
(CO URTSEAL)
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
CLERK OF C IR C U IT COURT
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
By: Viva J Pope
Deputy Clerk
Publish: October 10. 17, 24. 3t,
1985
DEK 58

IN THE C IRCUIT COURT
FOR SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
PROBATE DIVISIO N
File Number
IN RE: ESTATE OF
ROSALIE MORONESE.
Deceased
NOTICE OF
A D M IN ISTR A TIO N
The adm lnlslrallo n of the
e s t a t e ol R O S A L I E
M O R O N E S E . deceased. File
Number
, It pending In Ihe
C irc u it Court (or Sem inole
C o u n ty . F lo r id a , P r o b a le
Division, the address ol which Is
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida. 32771
The names and addresses ot
the personal representative and
ihe personal representative's
attorney are set forth below
All Interested persons are
required lo tile with Ihis court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FROM THE DATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE
( I ) all claims
aqainsl the eslale and (2) any
objections by an Interested
person to whom notice was
mailed lhal challenges Ihe valid
ily ot the will, Ihe qualilications
•Ot Ihe personal represcnlalive,
or the venue or lurlsdlclion ot
Ihe court
ALL CLAIMS ANO OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W IL L
BE FO R EVER BARRED
Publication ol this Notice has
begun on October 17. 1986.
Personal Representative
ROSE M A R IE DOLFI
3916 Lake Sarah Drive
Orlando. Florida 37804
Attorney tor
Personal Representative
ROBERT K MclNTOSH. ES
Q U IR E
P o ll Ottlce Boa 1330
Sanlord. Florida 32777 1330
Telephone (305) 377 2171 A 834
5119
Publish October 17. 74. 1985
DEK 88
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
OF THE E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N D F O R
SEM INO LE COUNTY.
FLO RIDA
C IV IL ACTION NO.
85 1950 CA 09-EOS
FIRST F ED ER A L SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, acor
poralionorganlied end existing
under the Lawsol The United
Slates ot America.
Plaintiff.
vl
IG N A C IO B E R R IO S a k a
JOSEPH H BERRIOSand
HAZEL H BERRIOS, hlswile
FEDERA TED DEPARTMENT
STORES. INC d b-a
BUR DINES OF FLO RIDA.
A D V ENTIST HEALTH
SY STEM 'SU N B ELT. INC
d b a FLO RIDA HOSPITAL.
JUAN VASQUEZ and ESTER
VASQUEZ AUTO M O TIVE 1
PARTS SERVICE, INC . and
A G M . INC . a Flonda Cor
poration.
Delendants
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that pursuant to Fianl Judgment
of Foreclosure rendered on the
15 day ot October. 1985. In that
certain cause pending In Ihe
C i r c u i t C o u rt In a n d lo r
S em ino le C o u n ty, F lo r id a ,
w h e re in F IR S T F E Q E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION OF SEMINOLE
COUNTY, a corporation orga
fuzed and existing under the
Laws ol The United Slates ot
America, is Plaintltl, and IG
N A C IO B E R R IO S a / k / a
JO S E P H H B E R R IO S and
HAZEL H BERRIOS, his wife.
FEDERA TED DEPARTMENT
S TORES . INC
d/b/a
B U R D IN E S OF F L O R ID A .
ADVENTIST HEALTH
S Y S T E M /S U N B E L T , IN C
d /b /a F LO R ID A HOSPITAL
JUAN VASQUEZ and ESTER
VASOUEZ: A U T O M O T IV E 1
PARTS SERVICE. INC ; and
A G M . INC . a Florida Cor
poration. are Delendants, Civil
Action No 15 1950 CA 09 E. I,
D A V ID N B E R R IE N . Clerk ot
the aforesaid Circuit Court, will
at 1100 a m . on the 15th day ol
November. 1985. otter lor sele
and sell to the highest bidder lor
cesh at the West Iron! door ol
ihe courthouse in Seminole
County, Florida. In Sanlord,
Florida. Ihe tallowing described
property, situated and being In
Seminole County. Florida, to
wi t
Lot 28 ol HOWELL ESTATES
S U B D IV IS IO N R E P L A T , ac
cording to tha Plat thtreol a t
recorded in Piet Book 18. Page*
47 and 48 of the Public Record*
ol Seminole County. Florida
S a id t a la w ill ba m a d e
pur*uent to end In order to
*a litly the terms ot said final
judgment
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
CLERK OF THE
CIR C U IT COURT
By; Jean Brlllent
Deputy Clerk
Publish October 17, 24. 1985
DEK 101

l

CLASSIFIED A D S
Sem inole
322-2611

O rlan d o * W in te r Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
i _ i I ip e
M
8:30 A.M. &gt;5:30 r,8 .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 * Noon

RATES

1 tint*........ 67C ■ lint
3 conttcutlva tlm«« 61C a line
7 conttcutlva tint** 52C a Ont
, J ^ „ cuti„ tim## 46C a lint
c#ontr, ct
Available
3 Lines Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Doy Before Publication
Sunday * Noon Friday
Monday * 11:00 A.M. Saturday

21— Personals

33— R e a l E s t a t e
C o u rse s

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
ABORTION COUNSELING
F re e P re g n a n c y T a il* ,
C o n f id e n tia l- In d iv id u a l
a s s is t a n c e . C a ll lo r
appointment- evening hour*
available........................... 321 7495

25— S p e c ia l N o tic e s
BECOME A NOTARY
For Details: I 800 437 4254
Florida Notary Association
* M ARY KAY CO SM ETICS*
Skin care and color llalr
C O N N IE ........................... 322 7734
*25 CASH REW ARD for Into
leading to raturn of whlla pit
b u ll, dockad ta ll.c u t dew
claws, brown spot on right
ear 173 3620.or373 1420.alter 5.

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF A
PUBLIC H E A R IN G
TO CONSIDER
T H E ADO PTIO N OF
AN O RDINANCE
BY THE C ITY
OF SANFORO. FLO RIDA.
Notice is hereby given that a
Public Hearing w ill be held al
the Commission Room In the
City Hall In the City ol Sanford.
Florida, at 7 00 o'clock P M on
October 78. 1985, to consider Ihe
adoption of an ordinance by the
City ol Sanlord. Florida, as
followi
O RDINANCE NO. 1777
AN O R D IN A N C E OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D .
F L O R I D A . A M E N D IN G
C H A P T E R
7 AD
M IN I S T R A T I O N . OF T H E
C IT Y C O D E BY A D D IN G
ARTICLE X III - HISTORIC
PRESERVATION ORDI
NANCE, I D E N T I F Y I N G
PURPOSE. P R O V ID IN G DEF
IN ITIO N S . ESTABLISHING A
H IS T O R IC P R E S E R V A T IO N
B O A R D . P R O V ID IN G FOR
C O M P O S IT IO N , T E R M S OF
O F F IC E , C O M P E N S A T IO N .
O R G A N IZA TIO N . O FFIC E R S .
R U L E S A N D M E E T IN G S .
ESTABLISHING AN IN IT IA L
H IS T O R IC D IS T R IC T A N D
P R O V ID IN G A M E T H O D FOR
TH E E S T A B L IS H M E N T OF
S U B S E Q U E N T H IS T O R IC
D IS T R IC T S , D E S IG N A T IO N
OF HISTO RIC LANDMARKS.
C E R T IF IC A T E PROCEDURE.
N O T IC E . R E A S O N S . A N D
APPEAL. ALLOW ING O RDI
NARY M A IN TE N A N C E AND
R E P A I R S FOR P U B L I C
SAFETY. AND ACQUISITION
OF H IS T O R IC E A S E M E N T .
P R O V ID IN G FOR N O T IC E
BEFORE ALTE R A TIO N OF A
LAND M A R K . P R O V ID IN G A
PRO CEDURE FOR U T IL IZ IN G
F E D E R A L G R A N T S . PRO
M U LG A TIN G REGULATIONS.
IN V E S T IG A TIO N S A ND RE
PORTS. R E Q U IR IN G M A IN
T E N A N C E A N D R E P A IR .
P R O V ID IN G P E N A L T IE S ,
IN J U N C T IO N S , C O N F L IC T S
A N D E F F E C T IV E DATE
A copy shall be available al
ihe Olhce ot ihe Cily Clerk (or
all persons desiring to examine
the same
All parlies in interest and
citltens shall have an opportuni
ly lo be heard at said heannq
By order ol the City Com
mission ol the City of Sanlord,
Florida
H N Tamm, Jr
Cily Clerk
Publish October 17. 1985
DEK 99

F IC TITIO U S NAM E
Nohce is hereby given that we
are engaged in business at 7661
M a g n o lia A v e . S a n fo r d .
Seminole County. Florida under
the fictitious name ol THE BUD
&amp; VASE, and lhal we intend to
register said name wilh Ihe
Clerk ol ihe C ircuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the provisions
ol Ihe Fictitious Name Statutes,
To wit Section 865 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
/ * / Savetla Thorne
l \ l Judy Triplett
Publish October 3. 10. 17. 74.
1985
DEK 18

F IC TITIO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged in business al 100
Drew A v e , Sanlord. Seminole
County, Florida 37771 under tha
fictitious name ot G R EA TER
AG APE' SHARING C EN TER ,
and that I Intend to register said
name with tha Clark ol tha
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida in accordance with the
provisions ol the F ictitio us
Name Statutes. To wit Section
865 09 Florida Statutes 1957
/ * / Dlannetla W. Alexander
Publish October 10. 17. 74, ) l.
1985
OEK 52

★
★
★
★
• Thinking ot getting a •
• Real Estate License? e
We offer Free Tuition
and continuous Tralnlngi
Call Dick or Vicki for dotails:
671 1667...173 3100...Eva. 774-1050
Kayasof Florida.. Inc.
59 Y««rs E«p*ri*nc«l

55— B u s in e s s
O p p o r t u n it ie s
BEAUTY SHOP 4 stations 7 ara
rented. II7.000/T E R M S I. Cell
alter 4:30 : 323 9679
Own your own Jean-Sportswear,
Ladles. Childrens or Large
s ite store. 100‘s ot N a t'l
b ra n d s . 815,900 in c lu d e s
110.500 Inventory, fixtures,
supplies and mora. Call Todayl M r. Tata 1704) 174 5965

61— M o n e y to L e n d
NEED MONEY?
Everyone does at some time It
you own a home and hava a
job. I f i eaiiar than you think

CREDIT?
NO PROBLEM!
834-1900
F R E E D L A N O E R , INC.
The Mortgage People
710 E. Altamonte Drive
_ J _ U c *n s *d M e rt£ *£ « ^ B ro k # ^ _

63— M o r t g a g e s
B o u g h t &amp; S o ld
We buy 1st and 2nd mortgages
Nation wide Cell Ray Legg
Lie M tg Broker. 940 Douglas
Ave .Altamonte 774 7752

71— H e lp W a n t e d
Acrylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coaling on
cars, boats and planes. 15 to
t i l per hour, We train For
work In Sanlord area celt
Tempo 111 8*6-7151.
A LL TYPES JOBS
START WORK NOWI

LABOM / ^ n w c f f
1 NO
^
FEE I
Report ready lor work at 6 AM
*07 W 1 st St
Sanlord

3211590
Avan Christmas Earnings
Two W aysl.B ea Representative.
321 59)8.............................. I l l le u
AVON EAR NINO SW O W IM
O PE N T E R R IT O R IE S N O W tll
121-1555 or 112-0659
Back ho* Operator needed im
mediately lor piping project in
Sanlord area Call 313 2*40
BO O KKEEPER
t t t Any knowledge ol home
Improvement type operation e
plus) Handle purchase orders
and tile payroll! Quick ralMSl

j f f e k Employment

flU l

323-5176

2531 French Ava.
CO M BINATIO N
R E C E P T IO N IS T
SECRETARY
BO O KKEEPER
Computer sk ills * plus, 373 8435

DELIVERY DRIVERS
Full or part time 84 00 per hour
♦ mileage &amp; tips Average
S3 88 per hour. Must be 18 with
car A insurance Cell P in e
Kwlk, alter 4PM 371 8330
D R IV E R W A N TED
Cell: CurrtlsH ell
349 9794
D R IV E R S W A N T E D
P a rt
time Must have valid Fla
driver's license Cell Terl
323 &gt;047.4 X P M TPM_______
E X E C U T IV E SECRETARY
W ith or without shorthand!
P r a te r r a b ly W A N G w ord
processors Needed In Ihe
Lake M ary Area
Ablest Temporary Services
___________ 111-7940___________
Exp In Dry Cleaning 8, Press
Ing. Exp Counter Person
needed also 377 0377.327 1870
E X P E R IE N C E D .
REAL ESTATE ASSOC
Full A Pert time
O VIEDO REA LTY.IN C .
165 6403
Experienced Auto Mechenl
M ust have own tools ar
transp ortation Salary d
pends on experience Cel
321 3190
Experienced person need
scrubbing A waxing Ikx
M a tu re , bondeble, A c
transportation S3 hr 814 41
FASHION MODELS
for fash
Ion designer. TV. catalogs, all
ages 423 *139_______________

HOUSEPARENTS
F IC TITIO U S NAM E
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 1*0
S.R
419. W in te r S p rin g s ,
Seminole County, Florida under
th e f i c t i t i o u s n a m e of
A U T O M O T IV E E Q U IP M E N T
SERVICE CO , end that I Intend
to register said name with the
C lerk ol the C irc u it Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes,
To wit: Section 865 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
ROGER OWEN REA LTY.
INC.
B y : Roger E. Owen. Pres.
Publish October IB. 17, 26, ) | ,
19*5
DEK 54

Couple, matura adult Chris
tlan Shelter lor abused A
troubled teens 149-5*99

JANITORIAL
PERSONNEL
For Sanford R etell
Cleaning mornings 8 1(
Ideal for retlred/seml
Call 819 3111 (or Intorm
JOBS JOBS JOBS
Immediate full time, part tlr
and evenings available P
manenl positions
Never a Feel

TEMP PERM-------- 774.13
LABORERS
RelU bl* workers needed
ter first shift
AWest Temporary Services
&gt;113*48

\ **

�•; 71— Help Wanted
Lake M ary Correspondent to
write a weekly social column
tor the Evening Herald from
your home Must live In the
Lake M ary area and know
how to typ e
C a ll D oris
Olelrlch alter 3 P M dally
337 7*11

LANDSCAPE LABORERS
Permanent positions p hour
377 8133
LEGAL R EC EPTIO N IST
1700 week *
Hot spot for a
‘professional looking for a ca
reer close to home! No legal
background needed! Rare op
porlunlty!

Employment

323-5176
7333 French Ave.

LIGHT INDUSTRIAL
No lee
Weekly Pay!
San lord Area Assignm ents!
•Call im m e d ia te ly lor Into
Phone
678 31 13

MANPOWER
TEMPORARY SERVICES
LPN or RN needed, 3 l l shift.
Good atmosphere A benefits
F ull lim e position Apply at
Debary Manor., to N. Hwy. 17-92
Pebary.................................... EOE
M A C H I N I S T with lathe
I'irperinece M ust have own
.tools Waqes comm ensurate
with experience Call: 331
1783
M A N A G E R tor 10 u n it apt
b u ild in g M a in te n a n c e e»p
preferred 371 SWOeve
NURSE'S AID E'S and Live In's
needed im m e d ia te ly 3310 per
“week plus room and board
E x p e rie n c e re q u ire d C a ll
Wanda at
M ED IC A L PERSONNEL
POOL
_371 70W

NURSES AIDES
O R O ERLIES
A ll s h ills Good atmosphere
and benefits Apply al
D rB a ry M anor 60 N Hwy 17/93
D ettary E O E
OH ice M anaqer lo r San lo rd
D a lly Labor O ffice Hours I
to 6 Monday Thru Saturday
J? I 1390
O f f SHORE *4 5 0 'tl4 0 0 wk .
s k I l|i&gt; i) , u n s k i l l e d .
Men Women a ll trades, tree
details stamped envelope PO

Bon 6 ii9, Del Iona, Fi. 3773S
P a rt tim e, women or men work
from Irorn home on new tele
phone proqram Earn up to $3
to 310 per hour Call 373 4741

PEST CONTROL
ROUTE PERSON
Needed P refer I yr e ip e ri
ence Call Mon th ru F rj 9 to
3 373 0730
PHONE WORKERS
Good v o ic e
34 00 h r p lu s
bonuses Longwood. 699 3367
Pre School Teachers pa rt A lu ll
tim e
E x p e rie n c e a p lu s !
H a ppyA cres 331 TOPS
REC EPTIO NIST P a rt lim e lor
Santord c h iro p ra c tic office
Must have basic c le ric a l skills
and encellent personality lo r
dealing w ith people Expert
ence helpful but w ill tra in
qualified person To apply,
phone 173 3911, 10AM NOON
RETA IL SEC U R ITY F ull lim e
E xper lencc p re le rra rl Inquire
Jtjy catting 133 3760
S o fd e re rs , A s s e m b le rs P C
B o a rd A M e c h a n ic a l. In
spectors Apply in person
Mathews Associates. Inc., 773
Hickm an Drive. I 4 In d ustria l
P a r k _______________
T AI L OR OH SEAM STRESS
t-xpe riencec1 in a ll phases ot
wearing apparel alterations to
work in Oranqe C ity Branch
A p p ly In person
Coston s
Laundry A D ry Cleaning, 774
S t in Ave (V ia n d
Telephone Operator W ill tram
E x p e rie n c e d e s ire d
A lta
monte Springs 814 6100
Trade Man needed tor punch
out
d ry w a ll. ca rp e t, door
lianq M ust have tools 371
&gt;88 J tor a p pointm ent________
WAREHOUSE/STOCK
HANDLER
E ntry level Only hard workers
need apply M F . 9 AM 3 PM
CALIBRON COUP., 400 LAKE
EM M A ROAD. LAKE M ARY
WHOLESALE NURSERY
SALES PERSON Local area
only M ust have good d riv in g
record and some knowledge ot
landscaping plant m a te ria l
S700 w e e k ly d ra w a g a in st
rom rrnssion Call 149 5370

91—Apartm ents/
House to Share
SHARE a h o m e w ith 7 Other
ad u lts 3130 a m onth total
37 1 8461
______________

93— Rooms for Rent
Furnished room with private
bath and kitchenette 37S per
week includes all utilities Call
331 9613 or 371 6947__________
SANFORD Furnished ro o m ! by
the week Reasonable rales
M aid service Call 333 4307
5 7 PM 4)3 P a lm e tto Ave
THE FLO RIO A HOTEL
300Oak Avenue
371 6104
Reasonable Weekly Rales
Winter Springs F u ll house p rlv i
leges 365 per week 669 0613
f10A M I P M 699 479*

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
SANFORD
I Bdrm apt 336S
month. 3300 deposit Refer
'tricesrequired Call 661 4801

A V A IL A B L E NOW
Furnished Studio Apartment*
One Bedroom Apt*
Two Bedroom Apts

FLEXIBLE LEASES
SENIOR C ITIZEN S DISCOUNT
R A N C H STY LE L IV IN G III

SANFORD COURT APTS.
___ 323 3301
Turn. Apts, lor Senior Citizens
118 Palmetto Ave
J Cowan No Phone Calls
L o v e ly I B d rm .* Close lo
downtown S7S week plus
u lillllle s
Security deposit
•S7S0, cell 333 9637, or 371 *947
Lbvily 1 bdrm. w/llreplece A
fenced yard 1100 week r 1330
security deposit Call 373 7369
or 173 9632

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

107-M obile
Homes / Rent

Newly remodeled I bdrm., apt.
Perfect tor a single or mar
rle d couple No children
Electric and water furnished
MS per week Call week days
a lte r 5 P M
and all day
Saturday, 327 3696 ________
Sanford Studio, I adult, no pels,
a ir. quiet residential S72S
monlh r- deposit 323 &gt;019.
I B d rm
Close In i N e w ly
paneled S6S w k.+ only SS0
utHllles/mo a 371 3990/eve
I Bdrm.- S9S week, utilities
Included, plus deposit. 323

I A 7 bdrm. Trailers- Highway
477 Weekly rates. *150 depos
It Lease required 788 9537

I Bdrm, Elflency- Private bath,
complete privacy. SSO week +
3150 security deposit, Includes
utilities Call 333 7269 or 323
9632__

KIT.*N' CARLYLE &lt;?by Larry Wright

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
M a te r Appliances Repaired,
bought, and sold. Fully guar­
anteed. Call;717-4784.________

113—Storage Rentals

Reconditioned Appliances
Irom *81-W ARRA NTY.
BARNETTS..... CASSELBERRY
638-SI 13.............................. 610 *431
Uted W ith e r*- P ari* 4 Service
tor Kenmores.................. 323-0497.
M OONEY APPLIANCES

Mini Warehouses
M0 * Up............................ 173 0470

117— Commercial
Rentals

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
311 315 E. i n ST................317-5477
3 couches I lazy boy, 1 wing
back, 7 washers. 7 T.V.s. end
tables. Priced lo sell. 377 4015

Retail A Ofllce Space 300 up to
7.000 sq It. also storage avail
able 372 4403_______________
Sanford- 7 unimproved lots.
Zoned C 3 W. Mallciowskl,
R EA LTO R .................. 373-7981.

7 E ll Apts Newly decorated 8.
ready! 1/ *45 wk.. 1/ *87
Includes util 371 3990 eve

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo

121— Condominium
Rentals

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

SAN FO RD
7 B d r m ,
microwave, washer, dryer,
pool, courtyard Was a modal
1495 per month.
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
100 E. Airport Blvd.
M E G A T R E N D PRO PERTIES
t Bdrm., I Bath....................... sioomo.
774 4054___________
3 Bdrm , l Bath.......................*323mo.
LAKE M A R Y
Schools, new 7
P H O N E ...................................... 32: &lt;«lt
Bdrm with den, wet bar, pool,
clubhouse *595per month
M E G A T R E N D PRO PERTIES
774 4054___________
1120 Florida Ave.
P IN E RIDG E CLUB

FRANKLIN ARM S323-6650

I bdrm . I bath
* j | j Mo
3 bdrm . H j bath
S350 Mo
Each apartment has patio or
balcomy overlooking court
yard All appliances, laundry
room, and pool
M A R I N E Rt S V I L L A G E - 1
bdrm S110, 7 bdrm. S360 and
up! Adults only 373 8670.
SANFORD 2 bdrm.. I bath
Move now. pay no rent 'tit
November 1350 discounted
B ritis h A m eric a n R e a lty ,
679 1175.
SANFORD OUPLEX 3 bdrm .
la u n d r y ro o m , p r iv a le
backyard. S3SQ per monlh,
372 0787, 337 0345, or 323 5711

LUXURY CONDOS
1.2,3 Bdrm . 7 bath, washer,
dryer, vertlcles, relrlg , dish
washer Starting at *375
GOLD K EY M G M T ., INC.
*71-7271___________
SANFORD 7 Bdrm . living and
family room, eat In kitchen,
Inside laundry, new carpel,
p a in t and pool *375 per
month
M E G A T R E N D PRO PERTIES
___________ 774 4054___________
SANFORD Brand new, 7 bdrm.,
71a bath *165 mo 867 7679, or
473 3556

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE

S IN G L E STO R Y
L IV IN G

MOVE IN SPECIAL!
5299.00

Lease Terms to Fit
Yout Needs!
Furnished or Unfurnished.

* F A M IL Y A ADULT •

2 BEDROOM.
C« ll..................................... 323 2970
SOUTHERN RENTALS I and 2
Bdrm apartments tor rent
Call 37? 1469 after 3 P.M .
S p a c io u s A p a r t m e n t s Laketronl. pool, lennls, adults,
no pels, laundry Starting at
3303 a mo Call 123 0747 to see.
I and 7 bdrm Also furnished
efficiency from S75 week *750
deposit No pets Call 333 4507
5 7 PM 415 Palm etto
7 bdrm
I • a bath newly re
modeled Private backyard
3400 mo plus 3400 security
deposit 371 0715_____________
7 bdrm 1 bath Deluxe Apt
Deposit *750. *170 mo One
Monlh Free! 371 6 158________
2541 M Y R T L E AVE N U E
7 bdrm , 2 bath, fully carpeted,
appliances, vertical blinds,
large living area, screened
back porch *400 month 321
3*39_________________ ______
*99 For l it months rent with
approved credit 1.7,1 Bdrm
RIDGEW OOO ARMS
2580 Ridgewood Ave.
Sanford Call ...................173 6470

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

Carports...............Private Patios
Lush Landscaping.Pets.Children
W ATER B ED SACCEPTEDI

Call................ 321-1911
125— For Lease
H i Acre Industrial Site
For
lease or sale. 3 Buildings, total
ol 5500 sq.lt. Fenced and
private 177 4754.

141—Homes For Sale

i t \ i .i . h i :u n
itivimit
WE HAVE RENTALS!
D U P L E X - E-Z purchase lor
llva-ln buyer*. Large bdrm.
w it h k it c h e n e q u lp p e d l
Central a ir A carpetl Pricad
below m arket! (74,000
H ID D E N L A K E E S T A T E S I
G reat location I 3 bdrm. 3
b a lh t O b i. g a r a g e l A lr f
Fenced I W /w c a rp e l, ktt.
equipped, tp rln k ltr. Commu­
nity pool A tennis! *61,(00

FR EE MONTHS RENT
ON ANY 1 YEAR LEASE,

WE N E E D L IS T IN G S I

On these
All New Award Winning

7*0* HW Y. 17-97

323-5774

ON SITE M A N A G E M E N T !
Children A P e ll Welcome
Senior C lllltn s Discount!

CANTERBURY VILLAS
321-3827
• . e IN DELTONA • * •
e e HOMES FOR R EN T a •
_______ e a 1741434 e a_______
LARGE 3 bdrm . 7 bath S375
month Take as is 867 7679 or
473 3556 ____________________
R E N TA L S 3 bdrm 1375, 7
bdrm *175 1st. last A sec
Ret 1904) 775 4517___________
S A N F O R D - R avenn a P a rk
Very nice 4 bdrm . 7 bath,
central air-heat, fenced yard,
appliances Newly decorated
No pets 1500 mo plus securi
ty *7'* 7649 or 171 3176________
SANFORD 3 Bdrm , I bath,
well shaded. 1385 per month
Call 331 4697or 372 776?_______
SOUTHERN RENTALS
two 3
Bdrm houses tor rent Call:
372 i 469 alter 3 P M__________
STO N E IS L A N O - E xclu sive
area 3 bdrm 7' j baths, split
plan. Lrg Fla room, allying,
screen porch, garage Yard
service included! S590 1st .
last, deposit 121 7197________
1510 Elliot SI 7 Bdrm . bath,
living room, eat in kitchen,
carport S300 month. *300 de
posit Call 799 4139.__________
7 bdrm H i bath, large fenced
back yard, appliances, air.
Ulitllies on *400 mo &gt; depos
it 668 6758 between 10 A 7
3 Bdrm . near schools and
shopping Call 377 4991

STEM PER AGENCY, INC.
_________ REALTOR_________
1 bdrm . 7 bath (150 month (150
dam age
C a ll *9 5 1 ) 7 9 .
evenings___________________

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
Front 7 bdrm . I bath, living,
dining, kitchen equipped
Back- Fully furnished. I bdrm ,
1 bath, kitchen equipped. 504
W 8th SI -377 4697. after 5
LAKE M ARY 7 Bdrm deplux
Carpel, air, appliances, lust
painted, no pets. (315 per
month with lease. 377 7967.
Santord 7426 S Lake Ave &lt;W
25th Stl 7 b d rm , carpet*
drape*, appl . hook up*. CHA,
carport. *370mo 830 05A1
7 bdrm., I bath, appliances,
hook-ups, screened P»Ha.
*310 *600. 171-1313___________
7 Bdrm , air, caporb water and
trash pick up Included *300
per month Call 373 9I5S

LAKE M A R Y (795 down. *595
per month m ake* you an
owner of a lovely 3 Bdrm., 7
bath home Call: 167 4154.
C O U N T R Y W ID E REA LTY
Reg. R.E. Broker.............771 8715
470 Hwy. 41*. Osteen, Fie.
PRICE R E D U C E D III
Owner must transfer II you see
II, you'll want to buy It 3 7
split plan, over sited rooms A
large screened Fla porch
Beautifully clean, nicely land
scaped, established lawn
Florence Thompson, Real
lor Associate 333 3700. alter
hours. 377 9432

keues

•I i

m

f

Repossed Property In Dellona 3
bdrm , llreplace. cathedral
ceilings, pool. Asking *55.000
Fleel Finance Center. 332 8965

SALE BY OWNER
R e d u c e d b elo w a p p r a is a l.
Beautiful home with beautiful
v ie w ot L ak e M o n ro e . 3
Bdrm . 3 bath, llreplace, new
appliances and roof, enclosed
tropical pool, fenced yard,
sprinkler system with well
Many extras Don't miss see
ing this lovely redecorated
home Must sell Immediately!
SI39.000 C all
377 7*16 or
323 1313____________________

SANFORD REALTY
R E A LT O R ........................171*324
Sanford- New Duplex 3 Bdrm.,
7 bath each unit Fireplace*,
v a u lt e d c e i l i n g * . F u lly
equipped kitchens, single car
garage*, many extra*, one
year builder warranty. Great
ln v e *tm e n t p ro p e rly . 1500
Magnolia Ave. (140.000
Call......................................333 1834
** I

a

141— Homes For Sale

i i nns

STEMPER
G ENEVA- Home on I acre*,
zoned A -l. Horses allowed.
Price reduced. Now *67.900.

If

ACRES*90,006.

P u b lic

C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A LT O R ........................ 317-4*91

%

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Real Estate Broker
HORSE LOVER'S DO N'T MISS
THIS! 5 6 acres, 3 side* chain
link lenced. 70x70 screened
building, 37x80 stebte shelter.
4" well, ISO deep AM this,
*44.900

COLOR T E LE V IS IO N
RCA 75” color TV In walnut
console. Original cost over
*800 Balance due (196 cash or
p aym ents *75 month NO
M O N EY DOWN With war
ranly. Free home trial, no
obligation Call 867 5394. day
or n ig h t.___________________
G O O D U S E D T .V 'S *21 and UP
M ille r'*
?419Qrlando Dr. Call 37? 0357
Television 19 Inch portable
color. Solid State. Excellent
condition *115 Call 862 5960

187— Sporting Goods

191-Building
M aterials
BUILDING S- all steel 50 x 11
*10.990,- 100 x 775 (49,960;
o th e r* tro m *2.75 sq It
1-791 626) (collect)

321-0759 Eve.-322-7643

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

2 lot* lor tale

STENSTROM
REALTY-REALTOR
Sanford's Sales Leader
WE L IS T A N O S E L L
M ORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEM INO LE COUNTY
FANTASTIC HOME- 1 bdrm., 7
bath, vaulted beamed ceiling
In livlng/dlntng rooms, eat-in
k itc h e n , c e n tra l h e a l/a ir ,
EASY ASSUMPTION. (52.000
O W N E R M O T IV A T E D - 3
b d rm ., 3 bath, tp lit plan,
dining room, central h eal/air.
Area pool A lennls. F a d
growing value area. *43.000

(3,500 each.
Volusia County. Orange city
area. Low down, owner Banclng Call: 774 1409.

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale
NEW SMYRNA BEACH Open
house October 19th,4 20th. Sea
coasl Gardens three. 4151 S.
Atlantic Ave Apt.1414. Spot
less 7 Bdrm., 7 bath, furnished
ocean view. *91,900. Owner
(305)869 6759

157-M obile
Homes / Sale

URBAN ELEGANCE- 1 bdrm.,
7 bath. Wood boamod ceiling
In l i v l n g / d l n l n g ro o m s ,
fireplace, central h e a t/a lr,
lenced yard, 19*2 root. M9,*00

I Pair Minature Goats
C a ll:...................................371 1666
2 Brittany Spaniels. AKC Good
blood line! (700 at, or best
Otter 831 3777

203— Livestock and
Poultry
DOMESTIC PIGS $25
_______323 89)5

CARRIAGE COVE
M O B ILE HOME PARK
New 4 resale. Contact:
Gregory Mobile Homes
323 5700

Come to Upsal* Road. Sanford,
near transfer station lor a
hug* 4-lam lly garage sale!
Children's clothe* 4 toys,
sailboat, furniture, dishes 4
much morel Sat. 4 Sun. 9-5,
E S TA T E SALE
Everything
Must Go This Weekend! 727
Meadow St. (oil Lake Mary
Blvd 4 Art Lane) F ri 4 Sat 9

lo 4_______

M O V IN G SALE
F u rn itu re ,
tools, m iscellaneous Call
349 5864____________________
PORCH SALE- 9 4. Oct 18 4 19.
Furniture 4 miscellaneous.
70] S.Oak Avenue___________
Two F a m ily
G arag * Sal*
Thur* Sun. I A M.
? Route
»477 near 5 points. Santord
Y A R D S A L E - M iscellano us
Items Come see! 407 Colonial
Way, Santord, F rl 4 Sat., 8 5
YARD SALE- 107 Wilkins Circle.
Santord. oil 70th SI. All sate
items must go Air condl
tloner. Bally pinball machine,
folding bed, much more. Frl .
Sat 4 Sun . Oct 18. 19. 70 9 5.
No early blrdsl______________
I

Day only! Yard sale and
Christm as b araar On the
Grounds ol Good Shephard
Lutheran Church (Next to
Penney'*) Saturday October
19th, 9 5 P M
3 F A M I L Y Y A R D SALE!
H o u s e h o ld Ite m s , to o ls ,
clothing 4 mlsc Frl. 18th.
Sal
19th 9 to 5 at 1707
Palmetto Ave

213—Auctions
BRIDG ES AND SON

219—Wanted to Buy
U t:A lum lnum Cans..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Metals........... Glass
K O K O M O ......................... 323 HOP
Baby b ed s, c lo th e s , to y s ,
p la y p e n s , sheets, tow els,
perfumes. 321-8377-322 9304

223—Miscellaneous
ADULT BIKES Big selection
3 wheelers
Beach Cruisers,
also B M X . Best prices 4
service, too! Lifetime war
ran ty. Bike Headquarters.
7710 French Avenue 322 4403
ANSW ERING M A C H IN E (Un
Id en ), new w /phone, reg
* 14 9 .9 5
O N L Y *6 9 95.
C O R D L E S S P H O N E (U n
Idenl. 1000 It. range, new reg
5 149 95 O N L Y *4 9 9 5 .
KEROSENE HEATER
(Sanyo), 14.600 BTU, new reg
*179 95 O NLY *49 95
FLEA W O RLD.......... Sat. 4 Sun.,
Row D...................... Booth* 63 65.
Complete White Bamboo Dbl
bdrm. set. 1 mo*, old Paid
*1700. Asking *350 Small chest
freezer, almond/brown top
(150. Elec clock alop a 4 shell
stand *70 904 789 6094 alter 5
For Sale- 16x30 above ground
pool with deck. New liner and
inter Call 321 0516._________
HOT WA T E R H E A T E R Rheem Used 6 years New
elements. *55 333 6461_______

Auction last Sunday
ol the month 1 PM

NO Q U A L IFY IN G - 3 bdrm., 7
bath, central heat/alr, fully
equipped kitchen, dining area,
p o r c h , p r i v a c y le n c e d .
A S S U M E
1 7 . 7 1 %
M O RTG AG E. *41.100
PARADISE FOUND- 3 bdrm ., 1
bath en * acres, ceiling Ians,
llreplace, large com er pantry
In e a t-ln k itc h e n . M a ile r
bdrm, with skylight In bath.
So much m orel S16.000

"M orris The C a l” - neutered,
de clawed, friendly. 3 yr* old
F re t to good hornet Evening*
373 7075____________________
NANDAY CONURES I pair.
*75 M ale bird talks Call:
373 5059 anytim e____________

WE BUY EVERYTHING!
Hwy 46............................... 323 2801

14 Years In Santord
S E L L IN G O R B U Y IN G A
M O B ILE HOMET
LETUSHELPI
New Or Used
O ratory Mebtto Hemes.373-*708.
1975 17 x 45 7 bdrm. 7 bath,
heal air, 1 celling tans. Priced
to sell! *4500 Days 373 0409. or
eve 149 5649________________
197* S K Y LIN E M O B IL E HOM E
17x64 7 Bdrm. split plan, gas
heal, central ac. shed, pallo
and awnings. Fam ily section.
S6.500. Call 371 7479 weekdays
alter 6 P .M ., all day week
ends_______________________
1987 SCOTT- 7 Bdrm.. 7 bath,
central heat and air. utility
shed, carport. * I f , 500. Call:
371 6434

215— Boats and
Accessories
IS tt. fiberglass boat. 60 hp Scott
m o to r and Iria to r. Clean.
Ashing *900 Call: 668-8074.
1944 IS' Bass Boat with trailer
and IIS hp M ercury motor.
Alto have trolling motor. Call:
373 8576 att&gt;r 9 P.M ._________
24' Cob!*, new engine 350. new
outdrlveO M C 775. less than 5
hours. Easy load tr a ile r ,
8I2.SOO Call: 372 7682.________

217—Garage Sales
BIO PORCH SALE!- F r l., Sal..
Sun. Open 6 AM. 2570 S. Elm
Avenue.

F I.

Thursday, Oct.

217—Garage Sales

I Browning 17 Gauge Pump 1 In.
magnum. 1 Browning 44 Cal
Lever/Action Model 97. Call:
377 3129

7640 Senford Ave.

LAWSON GAS
SPACE HEATERS
3 sites, 100 to choose trom.
“ Best buy In tow nl". Make
o tte r. C a ll John Ashlord:
321 3150____________________
Ofllce desk, *40
12x12 beige carpet. *60
Full mattress and box spring,
*300 373 6780 after 6 P.M
R E A L IS T IC 40-ch ann el CB
w/antenna. 1 d rill presses, key
making machine w/blanks.
After 5,333 8508_____________

REBUILT KIRIY VACUUM'S
6 ff.50 4 U P...............We finance I
Celt • • • 131-5440

231—Cars
Bad Credit?
No Crodit?
W E F IN A N C E
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
Santord Ave.4 17th SI..... 721-407*

17,

ITU—SB

231-C ars

★ DAYTONA A U T O *
★ AUCTION ★
Hwy t7 ..................Daytona Beach
* * * * * Hold* a * * * * *

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
E v try Thur*. N it * a t 7:30 PM

★ W here Anybody *
★ Can Buy or S e lllw
For more detail*
________ 1-804-2*1 6311_________
D tB ary Auto 4 M arin * Sales
Across the river, top at hill
174 Hwy 17-87 O eB iry 440 0540
•

FU ESA U TO SA LES e
We buy. sell o r trade!
F inancing A vailable
550 Wade SI---------- .Winter Spgs.
_________ * 777-2*87 *_________

★ INSTANT C A S H *
★

* * W E W IL L B U Y * •
• YOUR U S E O C A R a a
• CALL P H IL B E T T IS *

COURTESY PONT I AC..323-2171
REPOSSESSEOAUTO
'7* Olds Cutlass
Best O iler! ______
372 1965
1t72 M E R C U R Y M A R Q U IS
Low miles, run* and looks
good *810 or best otter Call.
371 1829 ____________ _______
1913 OLOS 91
Diesel Fully loaded
Call
........................... 372 4015
1983 Trans Am While. Loaded.
Good condition 77.000 mi
Price *8.000 or assume 73
payments ol *1/0 00 mo. Ph
165 2474 or 131 1709__________
'75 Red 4 White Olds Toronado
Fully loaded. w/CB 4 F u ll
Buster. Exc. cond . low mile
age *1,700 862 7847, alter 4
'79 Olds Cutlass Supreme- 7 dr .
loaded.small V / l . (450 dwn
C H IC O 4 TH E M A N ........499-0900
'10 M E R C U R Y CAPRI- Blue.
2 door. 4 speed 17.700 134
0971 ______________________
• I Plymouth Horlien 4 door, ac.
am Im radio, standard, run*
good, reliable transportation
asking *7400 Call 323 8856

233—Auto Parts
/ Accessories
Rebuilt Automatic Tran* *150
or can pull &amp; rebuild your*
*225 Steve 371 6876

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
Buses / Vans
1944 Chevy 3/4 ton service
trucks Custom bed, built in
tool box. power lilt gate. a/c.
auto matlc. power steering
and brakes Five to sell. 327
1434________________________
’ 77 D O D G E C U S T O M IZ E D
VAN- Complete. 1249*.
CHICO 4 TH E M A N ........699*900

237—Tractors and
Trailers
1*11. Scotty Waller. Good Condi­
tion. Asking *800. Call: 311

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
Globa 70 ft. camper
Asking 81.800.
________ Call. 17? 3179.________
Oo C a r t • L ik e n ew w ith
Kawasaki engine with positive
traction.
Was 6750 asking
1250. Call: 349 5167 Before 10
A M or altar 4 PM .

243—Junk Cars
TOP Dollar Paid for Junk 4
Used cars,trucks 4 heavy
equipment. 377 5990.

• G EN E VA OSCEOLA R D .a
ZONED FOR M O B ILES I
5 Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
70% Down. 10 Y rs .a l !2% l
From *16,1001
I I you are looking lo r o
successful care e r in Real
Estate. Slenitrom Realty is
looking lor you. Coll Leo
Albright todoy a l 111-7476.
Evenings 771-3887.

C A LL A N Y T I M E

322-2420
7545 PARK A V E ..............Santord
90) Lk, M ary Blvd.........Lk. M ary
Will trade (7.000 equity in home
tor time share or like value 1
bdrm 11z bath 1 yr old home
Closed garage Mint condition
Can 373 7769_______________
LAKE SYLVAN Like new 2
b d rm ., fire p la c e , g ara g e ,
large fenced lot *59.900 Anna
Kelley. 149 5670 Real E itate
One. REALTORS 669 6100
YOU CAN OWN tor *395 month
w Sl.OOO down Seller will fi
nance Charming (like new), 7
b d r m .. w a ll/w a ll c a rp e t,
central heat/air, appliance*
Day* only 3?) 3190__________
400 PLUMOSA D R IV E
• 3bdrm , 2 ’ zbath
a Formal living 4 dining room
• Enclosed patio 4 game room
• Extra large home
• Large corner lot. 173X115
• Owneror FHAIInancing
• No loan or closing costs
• Exchangeor trade

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR____________ 122-7691
LONGWOOD
1 Bdrm.. P i bath home in a
pleasant neighborhood Also
has FI room and eat in kllch
en
DAViOBOOUE
Realtor/Associate
321 1700. alter hours 121 6387

Additions A
Remodeling
REM0DCUNG SPECIALIST
W * Handle
The Whole Ball Of Wax

B. E. LINK CONST.
322-7029
_^^lnanc|n^vaUabl^^^
Appliance Repair
Allans Appliance Strvict
74 hr. Service .No Extra Chargel
I I Yr. Exp..... 668 *461......*14-8413

1 4 5 - Resort
Property / Sole
NEW SM YRNA BEACH- Owner
w ill pay S4.000 closing cost on
new mortgage. Beachslde 4
bdrm.. 7 bath pool home with
detached g a ra g *. Steps lo
ocean and public handball
courts *44.900

Cunningham and W it* Home,
ollic*. or apt. cleaning. Dally,
weekly or monlhly. Extremely
reasonable. 371-7514._________
Heed Carpal Cleaning. Living.
Dining Ream 4 Hall (19.88.
Sola 4 Chair, *3*. I l l - 1S66
JUST G EN IE S
Professional cleaning
C all..................................... H i 4661

Electrical

BO O KKEEPING thru financial
statement, payroll, and taxes
Will pick up and deliver. Call
331 1016 or 365 4177__________

Building Contractors

General Services

Bookkeeping

C o m m e rc ia l •
R e s id e n tia l
Seminole Forms 4 Concrete
Remodeling, Repairing.
Licensed Florida Builders
Free Est.1........... 373 4917, ext 11

Carpentry
All types ol carpentry 4 ra
modeling 27 y rt. exp. Call
Richard Gross 371 5977

Wholesale Prices- installed by
Dealer. Samples lo your doer I
C a lh B M IM c C a r ty ^ ^ J 7 T * 0 3 7

Catering
JUNIS'CATCaiNO
ALL OCCASIONS!

Cleaning Service
Catlag* Cara I k .............4 H 4 M I
Lie. Insured, Banded.
*18 per hour, all demesne (obi

Landclearing

Cleaning Service

Anything Electrical...Since 1(701
Etlim ates....24 Hr. Service Calls
Tam's Electric Service...311-1779
D 4 S Electric.................. 1736050
New 4 remodeling, additions.
Ians, security lights, timers
plus all elec, services Quality
Service L kensed 4 Bonded

Carpet/Floor
Coverings

Beachild* Really, REALTORS
904 427-1211..............Open 7 O aytl

LIST W IT H USI

153—AcreageLots/Safe

SANFORD- Cypress Ave.- Im
maculate 3 bdrm., t bath.
Corner shaded lot, garage,
screened porch
Wallece Cress Really Inc.
Realtor..............................371-0577

w a te r .

O TH ER HOMES, LOTS,
ACREAG E, IN V E S T M E N T
PRO P ER TY

CO M M ERCIAL SPECIALIST
SALES AND APPRAISALS
BOBM. BALL, JR. P.A..C.S.M.
R EA LTO R—,................ 173.41 la

DEBARY- 7 bdrm., I bath. Fla
room, utility, carport *13.900
Alter ?PM. 668 4670__________
Extra Nice! 3 bdrm. 3 bath,
e a t In K it c h e n , c e n t r a l
alr/h eal, carpel. Ians, lenced
373 84)5/ Don; Eve. 373 7919

SANFORD- 7 bdrm., 1 bath,
concrete block home. 7 extra
rooms, pottlbte 3rd bdrm. A
den. Extra clean. Now 647.M0.
7 bdrm., 1 bath. U tility shod.
Only (77,(00

149—Commercial
Property /S a le

BY OWNER- 3 bdrm , 2 bath,
central alr/h eal. paddle Ians,
on one acre. Lots ol trees
*59,900 371 0156. Call before 1
P.M .. Sunday aler 1 P .M

W I L L B U IL D TO S U IT !
Y O U R L O T OR O U R S I
E X C L U S IV E A G E N T FOR
WINSONO DEV. CORP.. A
C EN TRAL FLO RIO A LEADE R I M O R E H O M E FO R
LESS M O N E Y I CALL TO
DAY I

2 Bdrm., 2 Bath Patio Homes
Nestled In quiet country setting,
Near shopping and schools.
Minutes tram
Downtown Orlando via 1/4.
CHECK THESE FEA TU R ESI
• Frost Free Refrigerator
• Garage
• Attic Storage
• W asher/Dryer Connections
• Some Units with Fam ily Room

Evening Herald, Sanford,

G EN E VA LA NDCLEARINO
Lai/Landclearing..........Fill dirt
Topsoil ...Ponds .Drain ditches
Site Preparation Call ..349 5970
THORNE LA NDCLEARING
• F IL L D IR T .................CLAY •
• SHALE 4 HAULIHQ333 34130

Landscaping
HAUUNG....HII Dirt...Top Soil
Sand..............Call 345*140 alter 3.

Lawn Service
Expert Lawn Car*
“ The Grounds Keeper"
___________ 377 4405___________

U R N S MOWED I TRIM M ED
Spring Yard Clean-up*...313-) t »

Quality Lawn Car*
At Al fordable Prices 111 4973

Masonry
Handy Man
C a rp e n try . Painting. . Repairs
Lawn Work. Total Maintenance!
Call J im ................657 7819 after 4
Carpentry... Painting...Masonry
Plumbing Repair* Specializing
In mobile home 4 foundation

r#palr^33 4917^xM^^^^

Complete Concrete Company I
Best Quality tor Lass Money I
Commercial 4 ...........Residential
14 Y rt.E x p ..................... Free Est.
Reasonable!..................... 17)7100
Oraanlee 4 Sans Masonry
Quality al resonable prices
Specializing In Flreplaces/Brlck
C all:............................ 103 331 0716

Home Improvement
Calltor's Building 4 Remodeling
Na Jab Tea Small
Sll Barton Lana. Santord

321-4421________

Moving A Hauling
LOU'S HAULINO - Appliance*.
|unk, firewood, gargag*. ole.

CalllTlOSJTOamto^n^^^

Home Repairs
CARPENTER
R epairs and
remodeling. No (ob toe small.
Call: 333 8»4*._______________
Plumbing Repairs 4 Ilia work,
act. Work guaranteed.
Licensed 4 bonded 774 9751
W IL L IS HOME R E P A IR
Remodeling........Addition*........4
A ll Types Repairs).........Insured
No |eb too sm all..............321 7740

I

Nursing Care
1

JANIS'S A L TE R N A TIV E
SENIOR CARE
24 Hour loving c a r* lor senior
citizens. Fam ily environment
and home cooked meal*.
C a ll:...................................365 7140
Lovely private room lor elderly
lady. Musi be ambulatory and
non smoker. 700-7905.

Nursing Care
OURRATESARELOW ER
Lak*view Nursing Center
*19 E. Second SI., Santord
171 4707

Painting
C U NNING HA M A N D W IF E
Inter/Exterior/Pressure Wash,
*30 4 up .........................371-7514
Painting..........Any Wallcovering
Vinyl Flooring Ref..4 Resonable

VeryRellabto^MJflTEx^t
Paper Hanging
N 4 L Wallpapering Q alt
Free Es!..........Work Guaranteed
774 1708...... .......................33) 9173

Secretarial Service
CUSTOM T Y P IN O - Big ar small
assignmants. Call: D.J. En­
terprises. (365) 377 7497.

Tile
Ceramic 4 Quarry T ile .-M a rb le
Werh....Mew Jab*. Repairing, or
Re mode ling 1... Licensed Builder
Free Estimates........30 Yrs. Exp.
• • C o ll n t - T I M b •

Tree Service
All Tree Serv.-t-............ Firewood
Waadspiltor lor hirer
Coll After 6 P .M ............... 3730000
A L LE N S T R E E SERVICE
You've Called the Rest
Now Call the Basil
PAY LESSI.......................331-SMi
ECHOLS T R E E SERVICE
Free Estimates) Law Priors I
Uc...Ins...Stum p Orledlng.Teet
313-7338 day or nito
"Let the Proton lam I* de If".

Well Drilling
SAVE M O N E Y I I Shallow Walls
tor lawn, pool, garden, etc. I
BUSH SHALLOW W E LLS
L ie....... Reasonable....... 3210657

�* ____E v * n ln8 H t r a l d , San fo rd , F I.____ T h u rs d a y , O ct. 17, iv is

I

O C T O B E R 18 th &amp; 1 9 th
fv^ lSIDEWALK SALE

- r - j ___x
l

• | *
• I'*,i
v
* l\ . m
* ***|, • ,* i &gt;1 '\l , -•
•. ■1' .•* *\ «b. -7
•

i :

FK£B

\ i i -

INSULATED CEIL­
ING PANELS
2 ’ x 4 ’ panels with 5 /8 "
insulated backing. W a ­
shable. Class A fire rat­
ing. 10-year limited w ar­
ranty against sagging
and warping.

| YOU CAN WIN a 1986
I Cherokee C hid by AMC/Jccp
I Valued at Over $19,500

NFL Golden Trivia
Game with 1200 excit­
ing questions. FREE
with the purchase of 3
cartons or more of
Fiberglas®
ceiling panels.

JU .

I It s Easy! Here's All You Have To Do!
b,ank ,ln'1 &lt;,t‘POS,, " ,n ,ho d ,a w '"« »*» °«

See store for details.
Special Value

R tf 2.29. .. .
Terra

Ref. 2 .6 4 ___

_$&lt;JD5
.....* ^ 1 *

Pebble

R e f 2 .9 9 ___

• •••••

*0 *9

_ S ta ll!.

Nova (R19 backload
capacity) R t t 2.99.
Sculptured

Occupation
1attest that I am 18 years of aye or older and meet eligibility requirements
S IG N A T U R E ______

R e t 5 . 5 9 ...............

Stonebrooke III
|3 ” backing)...............

LOWESTADPIUCKS

lillK A XTIil;]

|»
*&gt;WI

We guarantee our prices to be as
low or lower than any local
competitor s advertised prices.
If you find an advertised price that
is lower than Scotty s. brtng us the
local, current ad and we II match
their price and give you an
'" '" ’ ediale. additional. 1 0 ", discount
off the competitor’s price on the
item! (Maximum discount ol (SO 00
per store visit.)

( l &gt;• N N&lt;,

F ib e r g l a s
FREE NFL Poncho with your favorite
team name and logo. Retail value
"^ha same durable, vinyl sta­
dium poncho that protects some of the
NFL s best players - yours with the
purchase of 10 squares or more of
Owens Corning Fiberglas* shingles

IM | t

See store
for details.

IMS UrwsadAsi*it

Zip.

Telephonu

Choose Great Coverage

\4

nearest Scotty's store F,ll ,n .he blanks

Fiberglass SHINGLES
Three-tab in white and colors 20year limited warranty. Square.

This offer applies only to identical
items with the seme manutacturer
end model number and w e must
have the Item in stock. No
rainchecks. No ad errors, no
clearances, and no closeouts will
be honored. Scottv s reserves the
right to limit quantities. Available
only tor cash and carry sales.

Save t %u
I

o r W e ’ll g iv e y o u

A n y b o d y 's A d Price

* N o Hassle!
• N o Cards!

RULES A N D R EG U LA TIO N S
No purchase necessary Winner must be
r. at east 18 years ol age and have a current
va .d driver s license Winner rs subject to
all local and state license title and
insurance fees and taxes Pr./e is as stated I
and is not exchangeable or redeemable lor
other merchandise or cash Employees ol I
ocotiy s affiliates, subsidiaries, advertising
and promotion agencies and families of
each. AMC Jeep Corp and their families
ore not eligible All eniry forms must be
received deposited nol laier than 9 p m on
Saturday. October 19. 1 9 85 Odds of I
winning are based on number of entries
received Winner will be selected at Scotty’s
Corporate Headquarters in W inter Haven
on Friday. October 25. 1985 and notified
by telephone and or mail One entry per
Jfmily per day Official entry blanks only
You need not tie present to win

I

y

— ----------------------------------------------

Lauan
PANELING

V.

V

•fc.

3 0 mm x 4 ' x 8' sheet
Choose from Georgia pecan
or Saratoga hickory.

i
v

ill
l/l
J

HOID THE I J g ON HIGH EMEROT T O T S

ij i, | SIDING
Ilf
I 'I 4 x 8 shee*s T -1 11 pine 4
|» J 1 1 o.c. or 8" o.c. or reverse board
I) J
I in n r i k n »(r
l

11
1

O W I N S ( ( )R N i N&lt;,

FlBERG LA S

and batten plywood, 12" o.c

Save

rki?,|

i

11
,
_ T

Unfaced
ATTIC BLANKET

Georgia Fbcific

O vn tn l
LsminxlM
Corporation

I

8 ” x 2 3 ” (25 lin. f t ) roll. R-25*

* |2 * 9
UlvUhin

i

I LNn-t «

_______

fXhM*f

1 * 1 2 »»
14.99

m

Hi-Dri Jumbo
TOWELS

1

Decorator prints and earth
tones.
.
2

23*

Limit 8. please

rI

10" Electric
Chain SAW

Roth
h

Landscape
TIMBER

i ------------------------ ^

Pressure treated 8' long

No 5010

Kleenex
Boutique
Facial TISSUE

R * l 45.87

9 oi. aerosol can.

/

/

? 7 9 95

R * l 99.95

Assorted colors
Package of 4.
r

Kleenex Facial
TISSUE

A « « .W

in

.&lt;

CONCRETE
MIX

Limit 4 each item

R«f

No Dealers, please

169.00

fO BER

4 0 lb. bag.

m e a n tm

i

O PEN

“Q
Good
.October 18 &amp; 19

Each Bag With Counon

7pm

OrtNMOk - M T . 7JO AM
IUIMT M N — t PM *

x

piece
colors.

1Vi hp motor. Includes 17"
weed trimmer and 9" brush
cutter blade No. 2 8 4 /2 8 5

R Y A N

C k * k i:

M o n y i

Car

Gas Powered
Weed
TRIMMER/BRUSH
CUTTER

I

Family size box of 250.

Each Can With Coupon.

No 9 2 4 2 /9 2 4 4 .

R Y A N

Delsey
Bathroom
TISSUE

Lubricant
SPRAY

I

Patio
PUSH
RROOM

motor 17” cutting swath
No 2 6 4 /2 6 5

MMO
G oo d
October 18 &amp; 19

in

Gasoline WEED
TRIMMER
1 '/? hp gasoline-powered

Colors and prints. Box.

Limit 2. please

$4 1 99

&gt; tv

$1 4 9

19 ONLY!

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

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

'
w
m ir t b H H
o n t im oow n pKkwmm

O PEN

«W*'IMI| lor • wnM a * ,-,

SANFORD
700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

T

nwrchwi*M

'p m

675 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254

ONkNOa - M l 7JO «M

luiur • AN- 1PH

Scotty »c 1966

f
l

it

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218131">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, October 17, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218132">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218133">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on October 17, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218134">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218135">
                <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;, October 17, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218136">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218137">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218138">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218139">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21848" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21451">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/1008e91e46ba27b6a0b91abf1818b1c8.pdf</src>
        <authentication>46374de092978b454b6232096ac42697</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218161">
                    <text>Evening Harald -

3, 1985—Sanford, Florida

71th Vtar, No. 33. Tutsday,

(USP5 4H-M0) -

Prlco M Conti

Wekiva Cobin Owners Sue To Stop Evictions
.

W e k iv a for a decade.

Wekiva. which flows north, runs from
Wekiva Springs, west of Altamonte
Spring' to the St. Johns River north
and w ev of Seminole County. The river
Is the boundary along three counties.
Seminole. Orange and Lake. It has been
designated by the state as an aquatic
preserve and adjoins a state park.
Governor Bob Graham and the cabi­
net. also named In the suit, voted last

■•raM t u f f Wrttar
A suit to forestall the eviction of 39
campers or the destruction of their
several dozen cabins on the Wekiva
River, or both, has been filed
Seminole Circuit Court on behalf of the
Wekiva Cam p Owner’s Association.
Association members and the state
have been squ abb lin g about their
presence on Islands In the upper

month to evict the cabin owners, a
move that the state estimates could
coat as much as 8100.000.
According to the suit, filed by the
association's attorney. Michael Jones,
or Winter Springs, the association
maintains the state has not proven It
owns the the Islands on which the
camps are built. The association is
asking for an injunction to prevent the
state from tossing them off the sites

...
. l _the
. . .state
..
k . .has
&lt;1,1.
In to
lhathe nf tofnk.
U .ru
U/hlta
lhathe
atale
doei
OWIown
Lake
Mary.
While
state
does
until
proves
title
land.
The suit also aska for an injunction
preventing the destruction of the
cabins by the state In the meantime.
The suit may have been filed In
S em in o le C irc u it C o u rt b ec au se
Seminole County, unlike Orange and
Lake counties, has recorded quit claim
deeds Tor some of the Island squatters,
according cabin owner Rowland Goble

City Delays
Bond Issue

Longwood
Polls Open
Votor Turnout Light
A "light but steady flow o f
voters" was reported turning out
at the polls In Longwood city
hall today to elect three city
commissioners.

City Clerk Don Terry said at
10 a.m. 158 voters had cast
ballots. He had predicted a 35
per cent turnout o f the city's
4 .84 3 voters, but said this
morning that might be a little bit
high.
•
In District 1. Mayor Harvey
Smerllson. 43. who Is seeking
his second two-year term Is
opposed by former mayor and
commissioner Steve Uskert. 72.
In District 2. Incumbent com­
missioner June Lormann. 61.
has no opposition.
There Is a three-way race for
the District 4 scat with Incum­
bent commissioner Harold "E d "
M yers opposed by C h a rle s
"C h ic k " Pappas. 68. a former
commissioner, and John Hepp.
45. a former mayor and com ­
missioner.
The polls will remain open
until 7 p.m. after which the
ballots will be taken to the office
o f S u p e r v is o r o f E le c tio n s
Sandra Goard at the Seminole
County Services Building In
Sanford for counting. Ballots are
counted by computer.
Mrs. Lormann's only oppo­
nent. Dr. Fred Pearl, dropped out
of the race after his wife was
Injured In an automobile acci­
dent. but the charter requires
her name to be on the ballot
anyway.
—Jane Cw aw sselb
M
l I J »»
J ’
w w w . w erry
— - - ^

land along parts of the river, some of
the campers have had cabins on the
Islands for up to 40 years and have
deeds from previous owners. Goble said
In an Interview' sometime ago at his
river cabin. The river flows through the
Wekiva swamp which was once the site
of cypress lumbering by land owners.

By Enron T alloy
Herald Staff Writer

IM
N

M

MrsM SM S Sr T ssm w Vlscwt

Becoming
A
Lazy Boy

Sanford Posfmasttr Jamas Covington, who ratlras today attar 36
yaars with tha postal sarvlca, trlas out tha racllnar-rockar ha was
givan this morning, a gift from post offlca amployaas. Surrounding
ara, from laft, postal suparvlsors Martin Locka and Jarnlt
Wardwell, carrlar Dan Haacock and
Wardwall whaals In ratlramant caka for calabration before the
office opened this morning.

Chiles Doing Fine After Bypass
LAKELAND (UPI) - Sen. Lawton
Chiles. D-Fla.. was awake and alert
early today and had tea with Dr.
Gordon Moor, the cardiovascular
surgeon who performed his quadruple
heart bypass surgery.
"H e Is doing fine." said hospital
spokeswoman Pat Hcnnessy. "H e Is
alert, awake and sitting up. He Is a
little weak, but may be up walking
later today.

Lawton Chiles
—

“ He is In good spirits and Jubilant
over the outcome of the football game
last night." she said, referring to the
38-24 victory of the Miami Dolphins
over the Chicago Bears.
Hcnnessy said Moor was at the
hospital at 4 a.m. (EST) to have tea
with Chiles. She said Moor promises
his patients he will be at the hospital
8 « « CHILES, page 8 A

S a n fo r d h a s d e la y e d Its
825-mllllon wastewater m an­
agement program bond issue
and will hire soil experts to
testify at Its Yankee Lake con­
demnation proceeding. Mayor
Bettye Smith and city staff
members were to spend this
afternoon giving depositions and
data to the attorneys repre­
senting Nicholas Pope, defen­
dant In the condemnation suit.
T h e city com m ission w as
scheduled to meet at noon today
to authorize sale of the bonds.
They would have then been
offered on the New York finan­
cial market this afternoon.
City Manager Frank Faison
said this morning the authoriza­
tion will be delayed several days
while the city seeks bond Insur­
ance. Once the Insurance Is
obtained, the bond issue stands
a better chance of receiving a
triple A. or top credit rating.
Faison said.
A portion of the bond sale will
be used to purchase Yankee
Lake If the city's condemnation
suit Is successful. A s a means of
"bolstering" Its case, the city
will hire soli experts. Faison
said.
The 7.2 million gallons of dally
eflluent capacity that can be
accommodated at Yankee Lake
makes It the only viable location
for the city's spray disposal

system. Faison said. This Is bom
out In a study undertaken by
Conklin. Porter and Holmes, the
city's engineers, and will be
expounded upon by the soil
experts, according to Faison.
He said the supporting testi­
mony Is necessary In light of the
"battery of attorneys the other
side has amassed" to defend
against the condemnation suit.
" I suspect w e ’ re In for an
attack." Faison said.
S in c e p u r c h a s in g th e
2.867-acre Yankee Lake pro­
p e rty last w eek. S e m in o le
County, in addition to its own
legal department, has hired two
Orlando law firms that specialize
in eminent domain proceedings.
Defendant Pope Is an attorney.
He is agent for Jeno Pauluccl
who sold the property to the
county. Pauluccl Is utilizing two
of his in-house attorneys and has
also hired Sanford attorney
Mack Cleveland to defend his
interests. Sanford's legal force
consists solely of City Attorney
William Colbert. Faison said.
Although no longer the pro­
perty's owner. Pauluccl's inter­
ests In the suit Involves a clause
In the county's purchase con­
tract calling for sewer capacity
for his Heathrow development.
The county plans to build a
waste disposal plant at the
property .and has guaranteed to

Bee DELAY, page 8A

Space Agency Chief Indicted For Conspiracy To Defraud U.S.
'*
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - NASA Administrator
James Bcggs and three former colleagues at
General Dynamics conspired to defraud the
government of $3.2 million through overcharges
for the Sgt. York anti-aircraft gun that was
canceled because It did not work, a federal
Indictment alleges.
Bcggs. a former General Dynamics executive,
said he was Innocent and NASA officials said he
was not expected to resign because of the
indictments.
. ..
The charges are the latest in a scries of similar
problems for General Dynamics, the. nation's
third largest defense contractor.
Bcggs. former executive vice president and
member of the board of directors of General
Dynamics before being named administrator of
the National Aeronautics and Space Administra­
tion In 1981. and three current General Dynamics

executives were named Monday In a seven-count
indictment.
.
. ,
„ _
The Indictment alleges that the four managers
at General Dynamics' Pomona Division Juggled
the books in an attempt to recoup millions of
dollars in non reimbursable cost overruns on Its
$39 million contract to build two prototype
models of the Arm y's DIVAD anti-aircraft gun.
also known as the Sgt. York.
They arc charged with one count of conspiring
to defraud the Defense Department from January
1978 to August 1981 and with six counts of
making false statements.
If convicted, the corporation faces a maximum
fine of $10,000 on each of the seven counts. The
Individuals face maximum sentences of five years
in prison and $10,000 fines on each count.
A spokesman at General Dynamics head­
quarters In Clayton. Mo., said the firm and the

...................... ..................... . . . . k .u rhardM
individuals "Intend to contest these charges
vigorously."
.
, .
"T h e Issue Is a highly sophisticated regulatory
and accounting matter which should be resolved
in a civil forum, not In a criminal case, the
spokesman said.
.
. .
Sen. Charles Grassley. R-lowa.. who chairs a
subcommittee that oversees defense procure­
ment. said Beggs "should step aside as head of
NASA.
Beggs. 59. said that based on what his
attorneys had told him. "1 can state that 1 am
Innocent of any criminal wrongdoings and I
Intend to vigorously defend the case. ... I am
confident that after all the evidence is aired. I will
be exonerated."
At a Los Angeles news conference. U.S.
Attorney Robert Bonner said the indictment was
part of the government’s "continuing crackdown

Unloaded

Enclavo* A t l$$uo

A wr$ck$r crow chains a topheavy truck for righting after it
toppled Monday during a too
hasty turn on Gen. Hutchinson
Parkway in Longwood, spilling a
load of utility poles. Blocked
tra ffic caused a 3-mile long
traffic lam for two hours. The
driver, Donnie Ray Brown, 35, of
1506 Mulberry Ave., Sanford, was
charged with failure to use due
care and carry a driver's license.
The truck, owned by Danella
Construction, Melbourne, re ­
ceived $5,000 worth of damage

County To Challenge
Oviedo Annexation
The Seminole County Commission voted un­
a n im o u s ly today to challenge In court the
annexation by the city of Oviedo of 1.500 acres in
the Rlvcrwoods subdivision.
The county agreed to notify the city before
filing the suit.
The county Is claiming the annexation creates
two enclaves, county land surrounded by city
property, which arc forbidden by state law.
Deputy County Attorney Bob McMillan said the
suit will be dismissed If the enclaves are annexed
within the next three months. McMillan said the
county property appraiser s
had r
received within the last two weeks p e t it io n s J e
annexed from property owners of the reputed
enclaves.
Oviedo annexed the property In November. The
county has until Dec. 18 to challenge the
annexation.
Oviedo City Council Chairman Jane Dees said
the city had accepted a p pil e a t ions by p ro ^ rty
owners in the out-parcels, which she called the
fir's! step toward annexation.
McMillan, however, said the county had reclved
such petitions.
County com m issioners In today s regular
com m ission m eetin g, called the m ove to
challenge the annexations the fairest way to
clear up the enclave question with Ovfrdo^

on defense
defense contractors
contractors who
who through
through fraud
fraud sare
nn
pillaging the United States treasury."
He said General Dynamics, "rather than absorb
these losses" In the Sgt. York project. Illegally
shifted $7.5 million to overhead accounts reim­
bursed by the governm ent." The Pentagon
actually reimbursed about $3.2 million, officials
said.
,
..
The Sgt. York was supposed to provide
anti-aircraft protection for ground troops, but the
complex weapon — two radar-aimed cannons
mounted on a tank chassis — did not work and In
August. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger
canceled the order.
General Dynamics has been rocked for more
than a year by charges that It defrauded the
government of millions of dollars from Pentagon

HarsWWwMbyTammyVtacaat

PQIIq I Seeks Municipal Pool, Roc Centers

»

\ JB B *+ B

By Kazan Talley
Herald Staff Writer
A municipal swimming pool and a
network of community centers. In­
cluding one specifically for seniors,
were top suggestions in a report the
Sanford Youth Advisory Committee
presented to an impressed and sup­
portive city commission Monday.
Committee representatives from
Seminole High School and Lake view
Middle School have targeted In­
creased leisure activities for Sanford s

8aa BEGGS, page 8A

TODAY
Action Reports....................... 3A
Calender............................ -"-3A
Classifieds.........................4B'5B
Dear A bby.............................. JB
Deaths................................... ®A
Editorial................................ fA
Florida...................................
Hospital................................. 3A
Nation.................................... 2A
Sports............................... 5A*7A
Television...............................IB
Weather................................. 2A
W orld..................................... 2A

# Shuttle lands today, 2A
e Paola boy recovering from
a rifle wound, 3A
e Robbers In bullet proof
vests steel $9 million In a
Brinks hold-up, 2A

»

young and young at heart.
Topping the committees list is a
recommendation that the Airport
A u t h o r it y 's sw im m in g pool be
opened to the community. The
commission endorsed the proposal
and Commissioner John Mercer said
he will utilize his membership on the
Airport Authority Commission to
lobby for the faculty.
____
Although the pool is
utilized by the Sanford Bath and
T e n n is C lu b , dim inished m em ­

bersh ip has forced the c lu b to
consider dropping Its lease, according
to city Parka and Recreation De­
partment Director James Jemlgan.
Mercer, however, said although he
favors turning the pool Into a com­
munity facility, some of his fellow
authority com m issioners do not
support Its continued use because
"they don't feel It's conducive to the
surrounding industrial area."
" U seems to me there would be

M VS'TH. CHRISTMAS

t

�t t - l w m n wm * .

Ft.

T— day, Pk . &gt;, w»

NATION
NBREF
Proaeacutora Aak Delay; Judge
Soya N a y; Ha Goea To Ja il Today

1

|

CHICAGO (UP!) — A federal Judge ordered ailing former
Teamsters President Roy Williams to begin serving a
10-year prison sentence today, denying a request for a
delay by prosecutors because Williams "w ould say
anything" to stay free.
Williams, 70. who suffers from emphysema, was ordered
to report to a federal prison hospital in Springfield. Mo., by
5 p.m. EST today. He was convicted in December 1982 of
conspiring to bribe former Sen. Howard Cannon, D-Nev.
U.S. District Judge Prentice Marshall Monday rejected a
Justice Department request lo delay the sentence by 60
days so Williams could continue helping prosecutors
investigate links between organized crime and the
Teamsters union.
"Roy Williams today would say anything, anything to
keep that door from shutting behind him,” Marshall said.

Supports Baloncod Budgot...But

ij

1

W ASHINGTO N (UPI) - White House chief of staff Donald
Regan says the administration basically supports balanced
budget legislation but not at the expense of seeing “our
defense posture crippled" by the measure.
The balanced budget legislation, attached to a bill to
raise the national debt ceiling to a record 42 trillion, is
before a House-Senate conference to resolve differences
between the two chambers’ versions. Both measures are
aimed at ending the annual budget deficit of more than
4200 billion by 1990.
Conference leaders said last week they were nearing
agreement.

The administration has generally supported the effort,
but disagreements over specifics could hamper the
legislation's passage.

Congross Faeos Moro O f Same
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Congress has begun Its final
push to deal with unfinished business, including the

troublesome issues of the national debt, farm aid. and tax
reform, before going home for what is left of the year.
With the Thanksgiving break behind them, congressio­
nal leaders said Monday they hope to wind up their work
Dec. 13, but acknowledged the session may not end until
Just before Christmas.
’T d like to be here one week and I expect to be here two
or three weeks.” said Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole, of Kansas.
House and Senate negotiators were reported close to
agreement on some form of a balanced budget measure
tied to an increase in the debt ceiling, but they had yet to
settle on cuts in Medicare and Medicaid and how much of a
reduction to make during the current fiscal year.
The Pentagon’s share of cuts continued to be a touchy
issue for the administration.

Stato's Rights Fight Again

i
j

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court, faced with a
challenge to the Social Security system, must decide this
term if Congress can force states to keep their workers in
the federal pension plan.
The Justices Monday accepted an appeal from the federal
government, which is challenging a lower court decision
that found unconstitutional an amendment to the Social
Security Act barring states or their subdivisions from
pulling employees out of the system.
The government says removing state employees from the
system could cost between 4500 million and $1 billion a
year.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Marcos Sets February Elections;
Aquino Announces Candidacy
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) — Shortly after President
Ferdinand Marcos signed a bill setting Feb. 7 presidential
elections today, the wife of slain opposition leader Benlgno
Aquino announced she will run against Marcos.
Aquino. 52. was responding to a growing grass-roots
campaign to draft her for the Feb. 7 election, which
originally was to have been in 1987.
Her decision to challenge Marcos came one day after a
three-judge court acquitted armed forces Chief of Staff Gen.
Fabian Ver and 24 other military men from complicity in
her husband's murder two years ago on his return from
self-exile in the United States.
Marcos signed the bill today, after the National Assembly
approved it 109-52 Monday night before recessing until
after the election. The law calls for a 57-day campaign
period ending Feb. 5 and revives the office of vice
president, which was abolished when Marcos Imposed
eight years of martial law In 1972.

Lebanon Threatens Retaliation
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — Shiite Moslem leader Nabih
Bcrrt warned his militia will attack settlements in northern
Israel if Israeli troops and their affiliated forces continue to
shell villages in southern Lebanon.
Berri also held a lengthy meeting Monday with Druze
leader Walid Jumblatt In a bid to save their alliance, which
almost fell apart in last week's bloody battles in west
Beirut.
In Beirut. Christian and Moslem militiamen clashed
along the city's Green Line battle zone throughout the day
with rockets and machine guns and fired shells Into
residential areas, police said.
At least three civilians were wounded In the firing, police
said.

U .S .: No Cuban O AS Admittance
CARTAGENA. Colombia (UPI) — Secretary of State
George Shultz says the United States expects attitude
changes by Nicaragua if they are to resume talks and sees
no reason to readmit Cuba to the Organization of American
States.

Addressing 31 OAS member nations Monday on the
opening day o f the 10-day session. Shultz also urged Latin
American countries to adopt an economic plan proposed by
Treasury Secretary James Baker in October.
In a brief news conference before his speech. Shultz said
he disagreed with a Colombian proposal to allow Cuba to
rejoin the O A S. The O A S also plans to consider
membership for Canada and Belize.
Cuba w as expelled in 1962 because "its behavior did not
lead to good relations.” he said. "T h is attitude has not
Improved so 1 don't see any reasons for Cuba to return to
the O A S.”

Atlantis Comes Home Today
EDW ARDS AIR FORCE BASE.
Calif. (UPI) - The Jubilant crew
or the shuttle Atlantia closed up
shop for landing today to wrap
up a "super” flight that included
the first tentative steps toward
space station construction.
As Atlantis sailed through ltd
last "nigh t" in orbit, engineers
geared up for an afternoon
touchdown and what N A S A
hopes will be the last scheduled
landing In California before the
resumption of landings at the
Kennedy Space Center in Florida
later this month.
A tlan tis sk ip p er B rew ster
S h a w a n d c o -p ilo t B r y a n
O 'C o n n o r p la n n e d to fire
Atlantis's big braking rockets
over the Indian Ocean to begin
the hourlong descent to Earth

and touchdown on a concrete
runw ay at E dw arda after a
h ig h -s p e e d d a s h o v e r L o a
Angeles.
S h a w . O 'C o n n o r an d
c re w m a te s M a ry C le a v e .
Sherwood Spring. Jerry Rosa.
Rodolfo Nerl o f Mexico an d
Charles Walker, an engineer
w it h M c D o n n e ll D o u g l a s
Astronautics Co., began their
final eight-hour sleep period in
orbit about .12:30 a.rh. E ST
today.
"The (control team) would like
to thank you for Just a super
flight and we'd like to wish you a
good entry." astronaut Sally
Ride told the crew from mission
control in Houston.
During Atlantis's 2.8 m il­
lion-mile weeklong voyage, three

Man Held In
Wife Slaying
BOYNTON BEACH (UPI) - A retired dairy
farmer was held without bail today In the
shooting death of his wheelchair-bound,
82-ycar-old wife who had often told a
neighbor she would "rather die" than be in
the shape she was in.
Investigators said they were trying to
determine If Elsie Dixon was suffering from
Alzheimer's disease, but they refused to
label her death Sunday a "m ercy killing.”
Dixon’s husband. Bill, 74. was charged
with first -degree murder in the case. Dixon,
a retired dairy fanner, was booked into Palm
Beach County Jail.
"A llegedly, Mrs. Dixon suffered from
Alzheimer’s disease and other ailments,”
sheriff s spokesman Mike McNamee said. He
said autopsy findings would be available
later today and that authorities were not
calling the shooting a mercy kilting.
Neighbor Russell Dancer, who has known
the couple since 1955. said Mrs. Dixon had
talked several times about dying.
"She always told me she’d rather be dead
than the shape she’s in — that she'd rather
die." Dancer said.
In March, retired engineer Roswell Gilbert.
76, shot his 73-year-old wife. Emily, dead In
their Fort Lauderdale area condominium.
She was suffering from Alzheimer's, a
degenerative brain Illness, and osteoporosis,
a crippling bone disease.
GUbrt is appealing a first-degree murder
conviction and mandatory life prison sen­
tence In what he claimed was a mercy
killing. Throughout his trial. Gilbert said the
illnesses left his wife incapacitated and that
she had begged him to kill her.
Deputies rushed to the Dixons' home west
of Boynton Beach Just before 9 a.m. Sunday
and found Elsie Dixon dead, "apparently
from one shot to the head.” McNamee said.

communtcatlono satellites were
successfully launched to earn
NASA 435 million and Walker
operated a drug processor that
utilizes weightlessness to pro­
duce ultra-pure quantities of a
hormone expected to help ane­
mia sufferers.
But the highlights of the 23rd
s h u t t le m is s io n w ere tw o
spacewalks by Spring and Ross
to build a 45-foot tower and a
pyramid-shaped framework to
practice techniques that will be
used when NASA builds a per­
manently manned space station
in the 1990s.
Landing originally was sched­
uled for one of the broad lakebed
runways at Edwards, but recent
rain has left the normally dry
landing strips soggy.

That prompted NASA to ordi
Atlantis home one orbit early t
allow touchdown on a concret
strip at the sprawling air baa
something the agency prefcm
to avoid because of concet
about previous brake problems.

The last shuttle landing at th
Kennedy Space Center's reh
lively narrow runway w as |
April when Discovery touche
down in s stiff croaawtnd an
suffered a blown tire and loeha
brakes on its right landing gear.
Since then. NA SA has in
plemented a new system t
allow shuttle pilots to steer th
spaceplanes with the none lard
ing gear Instead of using varlabt
power on the main landing get
brakes.

Dam age N il In Bombing
LU X E M B O U R G (U P I) An b om b
exploded harmlessly near the Klrchberg
European Center Monday as traders of the
Common Market nations began a two-day
meeting amid tight security in hopes of
adapting the organization to changing
needs.
Police sources said the explosion struck
Just before 6 p.m on a road used by
motorcades carrying the 12 European Eco­
nomic Community heads of government to
their meeting at the Klrchberg tower.
"It was apparently a small hand-made
charge, most probably thrown from a
passing car." a police source said. "Damage
Is very limited."
Minutes after the blast, police blocked
traffic on the road and bomb teams moved
in with specially trained dogs to search the
area. Unconfirmed reports said a second
charge was found that had failed to gooff.
The tiny nation’s police force o f 800 men
had already been mobilized and reinforced
with several hundred conscripts for the
conference because of a series o f 14 bomb
attacks in recent months In Luxembourg.
The targets have included high tension
power pylons and an aviation instrument
landing installation.
Inside the conference hall. Jacques Delors
of France, president of th e Common
Market's executive commission, expressed
"cautious optimism" about the meeting but
said there were still some wide-ranging
differences among the members.
"it is very .difficult to make a diagnosis
now." he said, "because a meeting of
foreign ministers is quite different from a
summit meeting.”
“ The length of our debate shows the
'difficulty and the complexity o f the matters
we dealt with." said Luxembourg Foreign
Minister Jacques Poos after presiding over
Ihe preparatory meeting.

"Substantial divergencies remain on
crucial points, which will have to be passed
on to the heads oT government and decided
bv them." hr said.
Poos and a number of experts worked late
into the night to prepare a summary of the
debate for the heads of government.
The ministers have been debating for
months proposals to revise the founding
treaty and Include In It new areas of
cooperation, such as in the political and
monetary fields.
To achieve these alms, the ministers were
trying to simplify the decision-making
procedure by making more use of majority
voting In the Council of Ministers Instead of

unanimity.
That would help the Common Market act
more promptly and efficiently in achieving
such alms as creating a real single market in
Europe and in implementing common
technological and environmental policies.
Objections to expanding authority at the
expense of national sovereignty came from
Britain. Denmark and Greece, which all
|oincd years after Ihe six founding countries
- France. Germany. Italy. Belgium, the
Netherlands and Luxembourg — had turned
it Into a going concern.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
had disputed ihe need for any treaty
changes, but the British stand has become
more flexible — to allow consideration of a
treaty change if that is the only way of
improving European cooperation.
The Danish Parliament is hostile lo any
treaty change and particularly to giving
more powers lo the Common Market.
Greece, Ireland and Denmark also have
strong misgivings about the Inclusion of
security aspects In proposals to tnalilullon a lize p olitical cooperation among
Common Market members.
I

Robbers Escape With Up To $9 Million
By B UI Beacon

PARIS (UPI) A team of
highly organized thieves wear­
ing bulletproof vests held 11
people at gunpoint and robbed a
Brink's depot of up to 49 million
Monday in one of the largest
robberies in history, authorities
said.
A group of about 10 thieves
forced iw o B rin k's security
transport company employees to
open vaults at the depot In the
northwestern suburb of Colombes while their families were
held al gunpoint in their homes,
police said.
No one was injured, police
said, and the thieves made off
with between 48 million and 49
million in cash and checks.
It was believed to be the 10th
largest peacetime robbery in
history and the third largest

mainly cash robbery in France.
Police said at least 11 people
were held at gunpoint during the
eight-hour robbery but that no
shots were fired.
They said the thieves burst
into the home of a Brinks
employee Sunday night and held
Ihe man's wife and his 10-ycarold son hostage in their housewhile he was taken to the depot
and forced to open doors for the
thieves.
A second employee was picked
up at his home at about 4 a.m. to
help the thieves get into the
vaults and past the depot’s
elaborate security system. The
employee's wife and 20-year-old
son were also held hostage in
their house during Ihe robbery.
Police said about five Brinks
employees who arrived for their
shifts during the night were also

held at gunpoint by the robbers.
The thlcyes. armed with rifles
and bludgeons and wearing
bulletproof vests, cleaned out the
vuults in an hour without trip­
ping the alarm system and sped
off In waiting getaway cars,
police said.
They said the robbers com­
municated with walkie-talkies
during the opcralloti.
Seven armored car personnel
and two police officers have been
killed in a rash of attacks on
security companies in France
lIlls year, including an anti-lank
grenade attack b y•thieves on an
arm ored van May 31 near
Marseille that killed all three
men In the vehicle.
A driver and two police were
killed May 30 in Paris in a
robbery against a security van
that netted thieves about 45

swirling winds made travel haz­
ardous In the G reat Lakes.
B li n d i n g s n o w s q u a l ls In
n o rth ea ste rn O h io M onday
triggered numerous auto acci­
dents. and parts of Interstate 90
had to be closed because blow­
ing snow reduced the visibility
to near zero, officials said. Winds
in Ohio gusted to 50 mph,
pushing wind-chills as low as 24
below zero. "I am definitely not
ready for this," said Monica
V eres, an office w o rk e r In
dow ntow n C o lu m bu s. Ohio.
“That intersection out there is
like a w ind tu n n e l." Nearhurricane force winds strafed
Pennsylvania, with gusts to 74
mph reported in Johnstown
Monday, the National Weather
Service said. Last weekend's
storm broke or tied record low
temperatures in 40 cities in 12
states Monday, closing roads,
schools and airports. At least 51
deaths have been blamed on
wintry weather that began grip­
ping the nation Nov. 24. Includ­
ing 10 in Iowa; six In Kansas;
four each In Illinois. Wisconsin
and Minnesota; three each in
Nebraska, Rhode Island and
C o l o r a d o ; t w o e a c h In
Massachusetts. Missouri, South*
Dakota. Texas and Michigan;
and one each In New York, New
H a m p h s lre . C a lifo rn ia an d
Idaho.
A R E A R E A D IN G S (4 a.m .):
temperature: 52; overnight low;

4 8 ; M o n d a y ’ s h ig h : 8 3 ;
barometric pressure: 30.22: rela­
tiv e h u m id ity : 63 percent:
winds: north at 9 mph: rain:
0.46 Inch; sunrise: 7:02 a.m.,
sunset 5:28 p.m.

million.
It was ihe second major rob­
bery in two months In the Parts
region. On Oct. 27. five thieves
held employees and visitors at
gunpoint In broad daylight at the
Marmotten Museum and made
off with nine paintings. Includ­
ing Claude Monet’s "Impression
of the Rising Sun." valued at
413 million.
Thieves look 411.5 million in
an armed robbery of the Calsae
d’ Epargne bank In Paris in
November 1980 and 49.8 million
in July 1976 from the Societe
Generale Bank, in Nice. France.
The largest pcactime robbery
ever was of 439 million in gold
and diamonds stolen Nov. 26,
1983. by masked gunmen from
Brink's Mat. a subsidiary of
Brink's, al a warehouse at Bri­
tain's Heathrow Airport.

WEATHER
N A T IO N A L REPORT:

A d ead ly snow storm that
tram pled the Midwest In a
furious holiday assault moved
slowly Into Canada today, raking
the Great Lakes with nearhurricane force winds, teethrattllng wind-chills and more
snow. Another wintry storm
battered the Northwest with
snow and high winds. The storm
dumped up to 2 feet of snow on
the Sierra Nevada range In
California Monday, and threat­
ened up to 2 feet of snow in the
Rockies today. Arctic air that
chilled the Midwest pushed into
the deep South today. Freeze
w arn in gs w ere issued from
southern Louisiana to coastal
North Carolina, and a hard
freeze was expected in southern
Alabama.
In International Falls. Minn.,
the m ercury dropped to 24
degfees below zero today to set a
record low. the fifth recorded in
the past ten days. In Midland.
Texas, a reading o f 19 broke the
1934 mark of 20. Bismarck.
N.D., reported a bone-chilling 13
degrees below, and In Min­
n e a p o lis , h a r d - h it b y th e
weekend storm, the mercury
dipped to 10 below. The Midwest
storm produced record snows in
Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota,
d u m p i n g 21 I n c h e s o n
Minneapolls-St. Paul. As the
storm moved across southern
Canada today, more snow and

A R E A FO R ECA4T:
T o day...su n n y breezy and
cool. High in the mid 60s. Wind
n orth 15 to 2 0 m p h . T o ­
night...mostly fair. Low upper
40s to low 50s. Wind northeast
W E D N E S D A Y TIDES:
10 to 15 m p h . W e d n e s D aytona Bosch: highs, 12:12 day...partly cloudy. High in the
a.m.. 12:36 p.m.; lows. 5:57 low to mid 70s. Wind northeast
a . m . , 6 : 5 0 p . m . ; P o r t to cast 15 mph.
C an averal: highs. 12:04 a.m..
BO ATD IO FO R EC AST:
12:28 p.m.; tows. 5:48 a.m., 6:41
St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
p.m.; B ay p o rt; highs. 4:30 a.m., out 50 mites — Small craft
6:48 p.m.; lows. 11:21 a.m.. advisory is In effect. Wind north
12:03 p.m.
20 to 25 k n o ts g r a d u a lly
E X T E N D E D FO R ECAST:
diminishing to 15 to 20 knots
Partly cloudy with a chance of tonight then northeast 15 knots
showers north Thursday and Wednesday. Sea 5 to 7 feet. Bay
south Friday and Saturday. and Inland waters rough in
Lows from the 40s north to exposed areas. Partly cloudy.

mostly 60s south. Highs from
upper 60s extreme north to the
70s south.

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Coafral Florida tottaMi Hm » h S|

T u rin

ADMISSIONS

Sanford:
. .Sldnoy A. Murphy
William F. Davit, Dolton*
Edmond H. Lanon, Dolton*
EarlaJ. Pslgo, Doltona
Victor E. ftIvora. OaHana
J ooooti Loyoro. LaMMary
Patricia M. Carpontor. Oransa City
Wlnnla D. Carroll. Orango City
•llllo E . Eanmod. Oranga City

�n

Boy Wounded In Hunting Accident
A 16-ywr-old Pools boy who
•hot himself tn the left leg while
hunting Sunday wss treated st
Plorlds Hospltal-Altamonte
Springs and is recovering from
the rifle wound.

Action Reports

Kevin Kempke of 6094 Peather
Lane w as hunting near his home
with a 16-year-old companion at
a b o u t 3 :4 5 p .m . w h e n he
climbed a tree while carrying a
rifle, a sheriff's report said.
Kempke dropped the gun and
as It fell It hit a limb and
discharged sending a single shot
Into his leg. the report said.
T h e c o m p a n io n c a lle d
Kempke's father to the scene
and the boy was taken home and
then transported (o (he hospital
by ambulance, the report said.
The shooting Is being consid­
ered accidental, the report said.

persons, most of them teenage,
reported to Seminole County
s h e riffs deputies they w ere
harrassed, assaulted and or
robbed In the Williams. North
and Jackson streets areas on the
outskirts of Altamonte Springs.

A U.S. Navy official from the
Orlando Naval Training Center
w s s called on by Seminole
County sheriff's deputies to
evaluate a load of torpedoes with
markings o f "secret*' found In a
U.S. Navy flat-bed truck on
Tuskawllla at Red Bug Lake
roads In Casselberry.
It w ss determined the 12
torpedoes In canisters were
enroute from West Palm Beach
to Y o rk to w n . Va.. an d the
Caaaeberry driver of the vehicle
w as contacted at his home and
ordered to “ remove the cargo In
a proper manner." a sheriff's
report said.
The load w as found after
sheriff's deputies were called to
the scene of a "suspicious vehi­
cle" Friday, the report said.
TOOTHACHE R A P E
A 23-year-old Sanford woman
told Seminole County sheriff's
deputies she was raped at about
7 p.m. Saturday by a man she
had spent several hours with
before the alleged assault.
The woman said after her
sister left the couple the man
raped her in an abandoned
warehouse behind Hunter Ice
Co., on 13th Street in Sanford, a
sheriffs report said
After the alleged attack the
w o m a n c o m p la in e d of a
toothache a n d ’ the suspect took
her to Central Florida Kegionul
Hospital in Sanford, where he
reportedly entered the woman
Into the hospital using Informa­
tion from his wife's Insurance
policy, sheriff's spokesman John
Spolski said.
At the hospital the woman
reported the reputed rape and
s h e r iff’s In v e stiga to rs were
called to the hospital, the report
said.
Sheriff's deputies have the
name of a possible suspect and
the Investigation continued
Monday.
ALTAM ONTE ATTACKS
In separate incidents several

CALENDAR
T U E S D A Y . DEC. 3
24-Hour A A group beginners
open discussion. 8 p.m.. Second
and Bay Streets. Sanford.
17-92 G ro u p A A . 8 p.m..
closed, Messiah Lutheran
Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road.
Overeaters Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m.. Florida Power &amp;
Light. 301 S. Myrtle Avc.. Sarfford.
Handicap clogging begins 6
p.m. at Eastmonte Recreation
Center. Altamonte Springs. Fee
is 61 per month. For information
call 862-0090.
Wheelchair tennis lessons, 6-7
p.m., Westmonte Center. 500
Spring Oaks Blvd.. Altamonte
Springs. No experience neces­
sary. no charge. For Information
call 862-0090.
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30
p.m., closed. 8 p.m.. step. 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air ftebos Club. noon,
dosed.
Freedom House AA (women
only). 8 p.m. (closed), Lake
Minnie Road. Sanford.
Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p.m.
(closed), W est Lake Hospital.
State Road 434. Longwood.
W E D N E S D A Y . DEC. 4
Full Gospel Business Men's
F e llo w sh ip International
breakfast meeting. 6:30 a.m..
Holiday Inn. State Road 436 and
W y m o r c Road. Altamonte
Springs. For details call 6564255.
Casselberry Rotary breakfast.
7:30 a.m., Casselberry Senior
Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive.
S a n fo r d R o t a r y - B r e a k f a s t
Club. 7 a.m.. Skyport Restau­
rant, Sanford Airport.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch, 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford, 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. F lo rid a H ospitalAltamonte Branch. 11 a.m. to 7
. p.m.
i
Sanford Optimist Club, 11:45
j a.m.. Western Slzzlln Restau­
rant. Sanford.
Sanford Klwania Club, noon,
Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford Serenaders Dance for
seniors. 2:30-4:30 p.m.. Sanford
Civic Center. Free live band.
Seminole YMCA Sllmnastlcs

* W fffI

* Courts
it Pof/co

At about 12:30 a.m. three
victims reported being attacked
by five suspects on Williams
Street. They had necklaces
pulled from their necks, a
sheriff's report said.
And at the same time and on
the same street, seven youths
reported b ein g su rro u n d e d ,
harrassed and battered by a
group of about 30 who sur­
rounded them and they also said
other suspects had entered their
cars and were waiting for them,
a sheriff's report said.
At 6:40 p.m. Saturday Brian
Keith Monglin, 16, of Altamonte
Springs, told sheriff's deputies
he was hit in the stomach with a
tennis racket by a suspect who
had been hiding behind a tree on
North Street at Jackson street.
Deputies reported finding a
tennis racket behind a tree at
that location.
an hour earlier, at 5:40 p.m.
Robert Earl K ing. 19, told
sh eriffs deputies a man he
knows look 510 from him on the
same street corner. The cash
was recovered from a suspect
who reportedly said he found It
In the roadway, a sheriff's report
said.
There were no reports o f
serious Injuries in the Incidents.

An accused ehooUlter held far
Altamonte Springs police by
Burdine'a eecurity officers at the
Altamonte Mall, had chargee of
posseseon of less than 90 grams
of .marijuana and possession o f
another wom an's driver's license
added after being accused of and
charged with shoplifting five
articles o f clothing.
Charlotte Irene Williams. 16 of
754 O retna Terrace. W inter
Springs, w as arrested at 1:50
p.m. Saturday. She has been
released on 61.000 bond and Is
scheduled to appesr In court
Dec. 16.

WVEBATTHRBD
A 32-year-old SAnford man
accused o f hitting his wife,
bruising her face and eye. has
been charged by sheriff's depu­
ties with battery.
Michael Lee Eotlngh. 32. of
3500 S. Sanford Ave.. *2.. was
arrested at his home at 11:15
p.m. Sunday. He has been re­
leased on 5500 bond and Is
scheduled to appear In court
Dec. 11.
The following persons have
been a r r e s t e d in S em in o le
County on a charge o f driving
under the influence:
— Mary C arr Henderson. 52.
2960 W . 23rd St.. Sanford, was
Jailed at 2:30 a.m. Sunday after
her car w as involved In an
accident after traveling on the
wrongside of Airport Boulevard
in Sanford and cutting in front o f
a motorcycle colliding with the
bike, a Florida Highway Patrol
report said.
—Richard Carroll Pratt. 24. of
Orlando, at 9:22 a.m. Sunday
after his speeding car foiled to
maintain a single lane on eastbound State Road 46 and onto
Magnolia Avenue in Sanford. He
was also charged with reckless
driving.
—Richard Wayne Shumsky Jr..
30. of Orlando, at 2:15 a.m.
Saturday after his car crossed
the centerline o f State Road 46.
west of Sanford.

monta Springs, reported to
Seminolei County sheriff's deputics a
he met at an
Altamonte Springs motel returned with him to his home.
which Is for sale, to make him an
offer on the place, drugged him
and stole his 620.000 watch, and
67.500 worth of other Jewelry.
The theft occurred early Sat­
urday after Sams had a drink
with the woman and noticed
some powdered residue in the
bottom of the glass he had drunk
from, a sheriff's report said.
He felt dizzy and weak and
passed out. When he awoke at
about 7 a.m. the woman was
gone along with his truck, which
was returned by about 8 a.m „
while he was still feeling dlszy
and weak. The woman didn’t
return and she and Sams' Jewel­
ry are still missing, the report
said.
Scott J. Bray. 24. of 2000
Fernwood Drive *1 1 2 . Fern
Park, told sheriff's deputies his
1982 Honda motorcycle worth
61,000 w as stolen from his
home Sunday.

Mayor'a

Ap

Nancy McQuattsrs, nth g r«d tr at Saminola High School,
studies areas of planned annexation by the city with Sanford
Mayor Bettye Smith during 6tudent#,work d a y." Ms.
McQuatters earned the honor of working with the mayor by
being one of the winners In an essay contest sponsored by
Sanford's Rotary Club • Breakfast.

Mass Funeral In South Africa

J O H A N N E S B U R G . South
A frica ( UP I) — Aut hor it ie s
agreed to permit a mass funeral
for 12 people killed by police In
the worst such Incident since 20
people w ere killed near
Ultenhage March 21. a white
clergyman said today.
The 12 were among 13 people
slain Nov. 21 when police fired
Into a crowd of 50.000 people
marching to protest high rents at
Mamelodl in Transvaal province.
Estimates of the num ber of
wounded ranged from dozens to
hundreds.
The Rev. Nico Smith, a con­
troversial Afrikaner churchman,
Q UE STIO NED * C H A H O E D
said today police had agreed at a
T w o m en q u e s t io n e d b y
meeting In Pretoria to allow the
Seminole County sheriff's depu­
funeral to proceed Tuesday and
ties after being spotted In a car
to stay away from the scene.
parked at the westbound rest
A police official confirmed the
area of Interstate 4 near
Frank Walther. 45. of 3801 meeting but not the result. He
Longwood have been charged
Orlando Drive. Sanford, reported said he was not aware of any
with possession of illegal drugs,
to sheriff's deputies his 1981 restriction on the funeral.
drug paraphernalia and one with
Ford pickup truck worth 67.000
On Sunday, the leader of a
possession of an unspecified
was stolen along with 62,000 new trade union federation en­
concealed weapon.
worth of tools Saturday.
dorsed calls for the withdrawal
Deputies in a search of the
of U.S. Investments from South
suspects and their vehicle re­
The owner of the Music Shack. Africa and labeled white minori­
ported finding a small quantity
1429 Sem oran Blvd.. Butler ty government leaders drunkof marijuana, wahlte powder,
P l a z a . C a s s e l b e r r y , R o n aids and criminals.
seven pills, and various Items or S h u l m a n , 28. r e p o r t e d to
Also Sunday, an American
drug paraphernalia including Seminole County sheriff's depu­ executive said a group of nearly
cigarette rolling papers.
ties three guitars and -a sax­ 2 0 0 A m e r i c a n c o m p a n i e s
Michael Wayne Paugh. 19. and ophone with a combined value o f operating In South Africa had
Michael Thomas Severance. 2V, 61,649 were' stolen from his asked the white minority gov­
both of Orlando, were arrested at b u s in e s s a r o u n d m id n ig h t ernment to abolish apartheid
and Im prove ed u cation fo r
3:19 p.m. Saturday. They have Sunday.
blacks and mixed-race people.
been released on 5500 bond
In Port Elisabeth, black resi­
Bobby Joe Sams, 53. of 1151
each and are scheduled to ap­
West Lake Brantley Drive. Alta- dents pledged to resume a con­
pear In court Dec. 16.
sumer boycott If apartheid —
South Africa's system o f racial
segregation — Is not abolished
by mid-April.
A sim ilar boycott w as
expected In Pretoria today In
class for women. 6:15 p.m. in 7:30. a .m .. F lo rid a F ederal
support of demands for black
Teague Middle School gym. Call Savings and Loan, State Road
political representation and an
862-0444 for Information.
436 at 434. Altamonte Springs.
end to more than four months of
Sanford Born to Win AA, 8
S em inole S u n rise K lw anls
emergency rule.
p.m., open discussion. 1201 W. Club, 7 a.m.. Airport Restaurant.
Police today reported only a
Sanford.
First St.
few Isolated incidents of violence
COPE support group for fami­
Optim ist C lu b of South
during the weekend.
lies of mental health patients. Seminole. 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Officers fired shotguns at
7:30 p.m.. Crane's Roost Office Inn. Wymorc Road. Altamonte
blacks throwing gasoline bombs
Park. S-377, Altamonte Springs.
Springs.
at buses In Langa, about 30
Altamonte Springs AA. 8 p.m.. ^ Gentle Exercise for seniors.
miles from Port Elizabeth, but
(closed). Altamonte Community
10:30 a.m.. Casselberry Senior
no one was Injured, they said.
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Chapel. 825 State Road 436.
Arsonists torched store rooms
REBOS AA. noon and 5:30 and Drive. Casselberry.
and a house in Paarl. north of
8 p.m.(closed). Rebos Club. 130
Central Florida Blood Bank
Cape Town, but without causing
Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
F l or i da H o s p l t a l - A l t a m o n t e
serious damage.
C a s s e l b e r r y A A , 8 p.m. .
Branch, 601 E. Altamonte Ave..
T h e N o v . 21 k i l l i n g s at
(closed). Ascension Lutheran 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Mamelodl marked the worst
Church. Ascension Drive.
REBOS AA. noon. 5:30 and 8
p.m. (closed). Reboa Club. 130
Casselberry.
T H U R S D A Y . DEC. 5
Normandy Lane, Casselberry.
Employment help for senior
Weklva A A (no smoking), 8
citizens. 10 a.m.. Casselberry p . m. W e k l v a P r e s b y t e r i a n
Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Church. S R 434. at Weklva
Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Springs Road. Closed.
Alzheimer's Support Group of
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling
Sanford. 7 p.m.. Howell Place. Hills Moravian Church. SR 434.
W. Airport Boulevard, Sanford.
Longwood. Alanon. same time
Sweet Adelines, 7:30 p.m., and place.
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m., St.
N. Lake T r ip le t D riv e .
R ichard's Episcopal Church.
Casselberry.
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same
REBOS AA. noon and 5:30 time and place.
( c l o s e d ) . R e b o s C l u b . 130
Sanford A A Step, 8 p.m., 1201
Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
W. First St.. Sanford.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St..
24-Hour Crossroads A A. 8
5:30 p.m., closed discussion, and p.m. (open discussion). 4th
8 p.m.. open.
Street and Bay St., Sanford.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed.
S A T U R D A Y , DEC. 7
CRYSTAL
First United Methodist Church.
East-West Klwanls Club, 8
Overeatcrs Anonymous, open. a.m., Sanford Airport Restau­
7:30 p.m.. Community United rant. Sanford.
Methodist Church. H ighw ay
Osteen E lem entary School
17-92. Casselberry. Newcomers PTC Christmas Bazaar. 9 a.m. to
meeting. 7 p.m. Call Jean at 3 p.m., school cafeteria. Open to
830-0995. Also. 7:30 p.m.. In the the public. For table reservations
annex conference room behind exhibitors may call 574-8004.
Florida H o sp ltal-A ltam o n te ,
Santa’s Secret Shop. 10 a.m.
State Road 436. A ltam onte to 4 p.m., Lake Orients Elemen­
tary School.
Springs.
Square dancing for the handi­
Sanford Womens' AA. 1201
capped. 3:30 to 5:30 p .m ., W . First St.. 2 p.m.. closed.
Eastmonte Center, Altamonte
Casselberry A A Step, 8 p.m..
Springs. Fee la 61 a month. For
Ascension Lutheran Church.
Information call 862-0090.
FAA Aviation Safety Seminar Overbrook Drive.
s p o n s o r e d by the S o u t h
L o n g w o o d / W ln te r S p r in g s
Seminole Flying Club, 7:30 p.m., Area C ham ber o f Commerce
Skyport Restaurant banquet Installation and awards banquet.
room. Sanford Airport. Free and Quality Inn, Longwood. Social
open to the public. Door prizea hour. 6:30 p.m.; dinner and
and refreshments.
program. 7:30-9 p.m. Open to
F R ID A Y , DEC. 6
the public, for reservations, call
Central Florida Klwanls Club. 831-9991.

police clash with black de­
monstrators since 20 people
were shot and killed at Langa.
near Uitenhage. on March 21.
Su rv i vo rs said they w ere
marching to government ad­
ministrative offices to protest
high rents. They said they
thought police had condoned the
march, but officers suddenly
opened fire. Some reports said
officers fired from a helicopter.
Mass funerals frequently have
led to new and often fatal clashes
with police. Authorities have
b a n n e d s u c h s e r v i c e s on
grounds that they have become
a forum for the expression of
political dissent.
Mobi le Oil Co. executi ve
Patrick O'Malley said Sunday In
Cape Town that 186 American
companies doing business in
South Africa sent a letter to
government ministers Friday
urging an end to apartheid and
segregated schools.
"W e told them there can be no
equality under segregation."
O'Malley said. " W e said they
must at least create one overall
education ministry, even if they
cannot immediately abolish
segregation."
Elijah Barayl. elected presi­
dent Sunday at a rally to cele­
brate the formation of the
500.000-member Congress o f

South African Trade Unions,
said. "C O S A T U is in full support
of disinvestment."
"Disinvestment would work
t o w a r d a d i s m a n t l i n g of
apartheid if It w as properly
applied.” he said. and. although
blacks w ould suffer, whites
would be equally heavily penal­
ized.
Calling the white government
"d ru n k a rd s and criminals."
Barayl said President Pieter
Botha should resign1to make
way for Jailed African National
Congress leader Nelson Mandela.
Barayl addressed about 10.000
trade unionists in a sports
stadium In Durban. The crowd,
waving banners saying "W e
hold the key to power." sang and
danced and applauded when he
gave the government six months
to abolish apartheid.
"This is a last warning to P.W.
(Pieter) Botha to get rid of the
passes. to get rid of the troops
from the townships before the
house burns down." he said.
Barayl said blacks would bum
their identity books, known as
"passes." tf the deadline was not
met.
Police shot and killed 69
blacks tn the last pass-burning
protest at Sharpevllle on March
21.1960.

Simple Pi pe Cleaning
Caused Bnopal Disaster
NEW DELHI. India (UPI) —
The w orld's worst Industrial
disaster began when a
supervisor at the Union Carbide
plant tn Bhopal ordered the
Inside of a pipe cleaned on the
evening of Dec. 2. 1984, said an
Investigative report by India
Today magazine.
The process takes several
hours and as a safety precaution
a metal divider Is usually placed
at the end of the pipe to prevent
water leaking into the rest of the
system.
On that night, however, the
divider was not Inserted, ac­
cording to the magazine's In­
vestigative u port.
Water Hushed into the pipe by
a plant operator passed unhin­
dered into Tank No. 610, holding

40 tons of volatile methyl Iso­
cyanate. a highly toxic chemical
used In pesticide production.
A U n io n C a r b i d e safety
manual warns plant operators of
a violent reaction If water mixes
with MIC. as it is known.
That is what happened. India
Today said.
The reaction inside Tank No.
610 generated heat and an
Increase in temperature inside
the vessel.
Shift workers who arrived at
the plant at 10:45 p.m. noticed
the higher pressure but believed
it was deliberately Increased to
move .ne MIC out of the tank to
the pesticide-manufacturing unit
and took no immediate action,
India Today said.

KEROSENE HEATER FUEL

UNVENTED

hWH w v n

$099
OH

VENTED

SEMINOLE PETROLEUM C0 .f INC,
3 2 2 - 2 7 8 4

ONE-STOP CENTERS

0 / ie S t.o p

�E ven in g H erald
(U t P t « 1 * M )

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Are* Code 303-322-2611 or 831-9993

Tuesday, December 3, IftS—iA
W a r n fit. Otyle, FeMMlMr
Tim m Wardens, Menatint IdWar
I d llB B lI l1---m
mVwa is■WevNCeww

**-*--»—

Home Delivery: Week. 91.10. Month. e4.75; 3 Months.
014.29: 6 Months. 027.00: Year. 051.00.’ By Mall: Week.
01.50: Month. 96.00; 3 Months. 018.00; 6 Months. 032.50;
Year. 060 00._______________________________________

Interest Avoided
By Most People
Congressional sponsors of legislation to cap
the interest rates on bank and retailer credit
cards admit their bills don't have much
chance of passage. Congress traditionally
defers to states on Interest rate ceilings, and
banks have powerful lobbying clout on
Capitol Hill. But the sponsors, among them
New York Reps. Charles E. Schumer and
Mario Blaggi and Sen. Paula Hawkins of
Florida, nonetheless want to jawbone the
finance rates that average 18.6 percent when
the prime rate is 10 percent. Consumers, they
say, are being gouged.
Members of Congress are not alone in
wondering why credit-card rates, which shot
up In the high inflation of the late 1970s. have
been so slow to fall as interest rates and
inflation have subsided; some economists arc
puzzled, too. Still, the stickiness of consumer
interest rates is not of itself reason enough for
Congress to intervene.
For one thing, the lawmakers pushing for
interest ceilings, who call the United States
" a nation of credit-card Junkies." only
propose to help the Junkies get a cheaper fix.
With personal savings rates at an all-time
low\ It is economically perverse for members
of Congress to suggest that consumers are
somehow entitled to the low rates on credit
cards that prevailed in the past.
For another thing, the proponents of rate
caps underestimate American consumers.
According to the Consumer Federation of
America, only 30 percent of credit-card
holders paid finance charges last year on their
card purchases. On the $200 billion of goods
and services purchased by the 91 million
Americans with credit cards, only $8.6 billion
was paid In interest. U.S. consumers may be
on a record credit binge, but most don't need
Congress to tell them that borrowing on
plastic is the dearest way to finance
purchases.

Indeed, the care with which the majority of
consumers shop for credit seems likely to
create far more downward pressure on
credit-card rates than congressional jawbon­
ing. Alert credit-card holders who watch their
Junk mall know that money-center and
regional banks have been aggressively m ar­
keting their bank cards around the nation,
often offering low annual fees and reduced
finance charges. Already, some big banks
have responded by lowering their rates. In an
industry as competitive as consumer finance,
credit-card holders — at least those who want
to do so — seem capable of protecting
themselves from gougers.

Salary vs Value
Virginia Slims, the cigarette people who
equate women's progress with smoking, has
commissioned a poll on the changing status
of women. Among other things, it found an
increasing number of housewives think they
should receive a salary. In 1974. 24 percent of
the women surveyed declared they should be
paid for housework. Today. Ihe percentage in
favor of housewives' salaries is 42 percent. [Of
the men polled. 65 percent rejected the
proposal.)
As with all surveying, the wording of the
question is of great importance. Would as
m any women have indicated that their
husbands should pay them weekly salary to
remain In the home if the question had
pointed out that the arrangement would, in
effect, make housewives employees and
husbands bosses — thus formalizing a
position of subservience for women within the
marriage relationship?
There is something sad in an assumption —
reinforced everywhere in American life — that
money alone confers value. But there is
something sadder still about a society that
cannot freely acknowledge the honor that is
earned by women — and men — who keep
their households running.

SSNWATTSNStaO
He's A Soaring Eagle, Not A Lame Duck
Some post-summit observations:
1) Will all the people who hove been laying
Ronald Reagan is a lame duck now please eat a
dish of lame crow? It was always a silly story —
after all, a president who doesn't face re-election
has more freedom of action, that Is. more power,
than one who must soon face the voters.
If it was a silly idea before. It is preposterous
now. By choosing to negotiate, at length,
one-on-one with Gorbachev, the president has
made obvious what should have been obvious
before: that he — not his staff, not the
bureaucracy, not the Congress — will set the
broad directives In foreign policy. Reagan,
believe it or not. hold on to your hat. has
s u d d e n ly b e c o m e A m e r i c a 's N o . i
Kremllnologist. or Gorbachologlst. You can win
a lot of arguments with hawks, or doves, or
senators, or congressmen, by saying. "A s 1 told
Gorby..." or. "A s Gorby told m e...." And when
you say that, no one calls you a lame duck.
2) Thank God the "mounting threat of w ar" is
over! You do remember the mounting threat of
war. don't you? The Soviets have said it's been

• « *00^ M*

"I liked walks In the woods, this time of year,
better before there were CHAIN SAWSI"

byproduct o f o big-power summit. See the
smiling leaders! See Nancy and Raisa! See the
pretty city with the pretty fountain!
Under such a visual onslaught. It is hard to
think o f Soviet genocide in Afghanistan. Bui it is
a genocide: women and children are being
purposefully murdered, and the process has
intensified since Gorbachev has taken office.
Gorbachev has also turned up the heat In
Angola. Central America and Southeast Asia.
It Is going to be hard now for Reagan to talk
about the Evil Empire If he's going to do the
necessary big-power summit dance. But that is
no excuse for the rest of us to forget that the
Soviet Union is indeed an Empire, and. so far.
it's quotient o f Evil dispensed has not noticeably
diminished.
3) As ever, the big action will be In Congress.
They can read the Fireside Summit in two ways.
Hoorav. they may say. we can now relax! Or.
hang tough, let's not undercut our non-lame
Kremllnologlst-ln chlef as he tries to keep the
pressure on to make some real progress.

SCIENCE WORLD

EDWARD J. WALSH

Stress Of
Striving
Perilous

Big Bucks
In How-To
Biz Books

By Jon Z ltg ler
UPI Selene* W rite r

W ASHINGTON (UPI) - John
Henry was a legendary black man
who outworked a steam drill by
hand, but then died of the strain.
According to Sherman James, a
University of North Carolina re­
searcher. many poor and workingclass people also may be In danger
of making themselves sick or even
dying from their efforts to overcome
disadvantage.
James calls the stress of striving
for a better life John Henryism.
James Is in the midst of a two-year
study of whether such stress In­
creases the risk o f high blood
pressure and other stress-related
illnesses among low-income people.
" I ’ m not advocating that poor or
working-class people give up their
pursuit of a dream, but there are
some additional stresses and strains
they may encounter and they
should be aware of them as best
they can so they don't end up
paying an extra price." James said
In an Interview.
James was Inspired in his re­
search by a man he met in 1978. At
the time. John Henry Martin (not
his real last name) was 74. but
when he was 20 years old he had
vowed his life would be different
from his sharecropper father's.
Like others of their type. Martin
and his wife never gave up. They
worked night and day for five years
to buy 75 acres of farmland, where
they have lived ever since.
By the time Martin had reached
middle age, however, he had high
blood pressure and ulcers. Although
genetic factors arc involved In the
development of both diseases, it is
believed stress can aggravate them.
Martin "worked himself very hard
and took on a lot of things that were
worth taking on. but without ade­
quate resources. He paid a very high
price for some of the economic
things he attained." James said.
"His life story and Ihe conse­
quences of having lived his life as he
did reminded me a great deal of (the
legendary) John Henry." James
said. "I got to thinking about the
great number of other men I had
met in my life who were like him ."
James initially studied 132 black
men. finding those who had not
finished high school but had a
strong will to succeed had signifi­
cantly higher blood pressure than
black men with equal drive who had
finished high school.
James’ Inspiration. John Henry
Martin, and his wife have eased
back somewhat over the years.

WASHINGTON WORLD

Filibustered Farm Bill
B y S onja H U lgrea

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Thrashing
around about wheat was the last
straw.
At 3 o 'c lo c k on a Saturday
morning, bleary-eyed senators were
hog-tied in a parliamentary mess.
John Melcher. a bulldog of a man
from Montana, was leading a filibus­
ter over the level of farm subsidies
he deeply believes are needed to
maintain stability in economically
fractured rural America.
Conflict over the farm bill —
reflective of uncertainty over how to
respond to the worst farm crisis In
50 years — was the latest controvery to keep senators working
longer hours as days grow shorter
with onset of winter.
Wyom ing's Alan Simpson, with
finesse of a humorist, rose to attack
Melcher.
" I can remember farm Issue after
farm issue after farm issue on this
flo o r w h ich , in som e w ay or
another, has been stalled by the
senator from Montana, my neighbor
to the north," Simpson said.
Wyoming farmers ask Simpson
why they must plant wheat every
year without knowledge of the
government program. He explains
that a neighboring wheat state
senator repeatedly blocks action.
"T h ey say. 'W ell that Is odd."’
Simpson said. "I say. 'Yes. It is. It Is
quite odd to me. too.'"
D istressed senators, m issin g
scheduled trips home and weekends
with their- spouses and children,
recessed at 3:43 that Saturday
morning and resumed work about
nine hours later.

As M elcher and Republicans
worked out a deal in private,
senators went beyond Simpson's
criticism of the filibuster at hand to
complain about general overuse of
tactics that have brought the Senate
to a "state of Incipient anarchy." as
Missouri's Tom Eaglet on described
It.
Even the chaplain. Ihe Rev. Rich­
ard Halverson, gently and indirectly
got into the act with an opening
prayer about the American political
process.
"Forgive us when*we abuse it and
misuse it. but forbid it. Lord, that
we should ever forsake it." he
prayed.
Some changes would be us simple
as limiting roll calls to 15 minutes.
Other senators com plained the
problem runs deeper. The political
system, the special interest groups
have made senators "operate as
selfish individuals." Montana's Max
liaueus said.
Some people have said Senate
work habits are reflective of com­
plexities of modern society and are
an Inside problem. Arkansan David
F’rvor said.
Bui it is a national problem, he
said, "when the federal government
does not know if it is going to
function the next day. when the
veterans do not know If they are
going to get a check, when the
Social Security recipients do not
know if they are going to have a
check in the mail next week."
Is it good for the country, others
asked, to have senators struggle to
maintain their humanity?

Once upon a time. American
businessmen thought their biggest
problems were narrow-minded bu­
reaucrats. bullying unions, and
foreign competitors. In the past five
years at least, a new nemesis has
a p p e a r e d : th e J o u r n a lis ts ,
economists, and politicians who
believe that all the problems of the
U.S. economy, from manufacturing
job losses to toxic waste spills, are
caused by bad management.
The newest American Industry
isn't computer software or robotics.
It's hawking books about how
greedy and stupid American man­
agers have been, and pushing
notions of "creative.” and "peo­
ple-oriented" management. In 1982
Thomas J. Peters and Robert H.
Waterman published In Search of
Excellence, purported to be the
blble o f "n e w " management. Peters
and Waterman recommended such
eye-opening solutions as paying
atten tion to custom ers' needs,
keeping staffs lean, and rewarding
productivity. To which most Ameri­
c a n m a n a g e r s a r e te m p te d
sarcastically to reply: Why didn't 1
think o f that?
In Search of Excellence was ac­
c o m p a n ie d by th e release of
Megatrends, by John Natsbett,
which offered n broad-brush view of
what the U.S. will be like in another
generation. Naisbelt Is now out with

R e -In v e n tin g th e Corporation,
which suggests that People Express
airlines is successful because Its
em p loyees have a " v is io n " to
"m ake a better world.”
To be sure, cocktail party man­
agement theory like this sells books.
It also helps camouflage the central
econom ic reality In the United
States, which is that management
must respond to public policy.
Through the seventies and early
eighties. American managers were
forced to make decisions based on
deeply imbedded inflation, raw un­
ion power, and dictatorial regulato­
ry policies.
Instead of looking to themselves,
the policymakers responsible blame
the victim s. W illiam E. Brock.
Secretary of Labor in an ostensibly
pro-business administration, an­
nounced that he blames manage­
ment for the uncompctitiveness of
the U.S. auto Industry. The literary
hacks counsel "Japan esc-stylc"
management techniques. Ignoring
the fact that the Japanese learned
their skills at American business
schools. Peter Druckcr. who knows
a scam when he sees one. labeled In
Search o f Excellence "a book for
Juveniles."

JACK ANDERSON

Seek A lte rn a tiv e s T o P h ilip p in e Bases
By Jack A nderson A nd
Joseph Spear

BERRYS WORLD

mounting for five y e a n now. although no one
ever stipulated who was going to do what to
whom. Were the Russians going to drop a Cat
one on Pittsburgh? Were they going to invade
Western Europe? What were we going to do?
Bomb Kharkhov? Send American troops to
Afghanistan? Now that the mounting threat of
war has dismounted. It's clear that It was never
there. It was a Soviet propaganda ploy, which
they may even have come to believe, designed
to scare the West and force us to back off.
3) Reagan, apparently, is an Intuitive political
genius. Perhaps the toughest part of a presi­
dent's East-West problem Is to get American
opponents, from right and left, off his back.
Well, doves are now applauding Reagan for
being civil to the Bear, for agreeing to meet
again and again. The hawks are applauding
because he didn't give anything away, hung
lough on Star Wars. etc. They’re all off his back.
Smart fellow.
41 Reagan, alas, did give the Soviets one very
big. free gift. His presence In Geneva provided
the world with a picture of communism with a
human face. This is the inevitable media

WASHINGTON - As Philippines
President Ferdinand Marcos tries to
reinforce his dictatorship with an
election mandate early next year,
hard-eyed strategic planners in the
Pentagon are quietly preparing for
the worst: the eventual eviction of
U.S. military forces from Subic Bay
and Clark Air Force Base.
Marcos’ opposition has already
announced its determination to get
rid of the U.S. bases. Even if Marcos
isn't unseated this time, he can't
live forever. And the longer he
survives with U.S. support, the
greater the resentment will be when
his opponents Inevitably take over.
The Reagan administration is
trying to prevent disaster by cooling
its once-ardent love affair with
Marcos. But just in case this doesn't
work, serious consideration is al­
ready being g iven to optional
strategic bases in the Southwest
P a cific. Our associate L u cette
Lagnado has asked congressional
&gt; and ad m in istration sources to
evaluate the various alternatives.

Here's the rundown:
— Guam. This long-time U.S.
territory, which has a non-voting
delegate in Congress (Rep. Ben
BIaz). heads everyone’s list. The
residents are American citizens and
show no resentment to the sub­
stantial Navy and Air Force pre­
sence on their Island — an impor­
tant consideration.
The Pentagon has been openly
courting the Guamanians lately,
perhaps a little too obviously. We're
told that the recent "goodw ill" visit
by Deputy Assistant Defense Secre­
tary L. Wayne A m y was viewed
with some suspicion among the
locals, who aren’t accustomed to
such attention. Sure enough. It
turned out the Pentagon wants to
renege on its promise of a few years
ago to turn over about 2.000 acres
to Guam's home-rule government.
Some o f the land may be needed for
expansion o f U.S. bases If the
Philippines boots us out.
Although Guam is politically the
favorite, it might be difficult to find
enough locals to operate bases on
the scale o f Subic Bay and Clark Air

Force Base, which employs 50,000
Filipinos.
— Tinian. This tiny island in the
Marianas. Just north of Guam, won
a footnote In history as the base
from which the B-29 Enola Gay took
off to drop the atomic bomb on
H irosh im a. At best. It w ou ld
supplement the facilities on Guam.
The Pentagon has negotiated an
a g reem en t w ith the N orth ern
Marianas government for the lease
of several thousand acres of Tinian,
and consideration Is being given to
construction of a major airfield
there.
— Palau. Another island group with
grim memories for World War II
veterans, this small republic has
also been the object of Pentagon
negotiators* attentions since the
growing troubles In the Philippines.
Palau is closer to the Philippines,
but not enough to make a signifi­
cant strategic difference. What Is
con sid ered s ig n ific a n t b y our
sources, though, is the recent
agreement the Pentagon got from
the Palau government to convert
certain areas into military facilities

If the need arises. American forces
— primarily the Navy and Marines
— would be permitted to use these
bases.
— S in ga p o re. T h is b u s tlin g
mini-state has the port facilities, an
adequate airport and more than
enough manpower to maintain ma­
jo r U.S. bases. A Congressional
Research Service study a few years
ago gave Singapore high marks for
s u i t a b i l i t y . B ut its o b v io u s
drawback is political: There'd be no
way to guarantee against a replay of
the Philippine uncertainty that In­
spired the Pentagon's search for real
estate In the first place.
The experts w e 'v e consulted
agree that the U.S. bases in the
Philippines are superior to the other
options. But they also agree that the
worst policy of all would be to make
no plans for the loss of those bases.
Footnote: Rep. S teve S o la n .
D-N.Y.. chairman o f the Asia and
Pacific Affairs subcommittee, la
closely monitoring the Reagan ad­
ministration's efforts to restore de­
mocracy in the Philippines.

�Brinson
Wins
58th
School
Aw
ard
Coaches Honor Senior ■ H r ___
PfTtfttCMsAi M M !

With 2 Other Awards
Brian Brinaon. the heart and
aoul of Seminole High's football
team, w a s nam ed the 58th
w inn er o r the Peter Schaal
Award Monday night at the
Seminole football awards ban*
quet at Seminole High School.
Brinson, a senior, received a
standing ovation as he w as
presented with the distinguished
award by Seminole High School
Asalstant Principal B obby
Lundqulst.
“ Brian Brinson Is pound for
pound one of the best defensive
football pla y e r In F lorida.”
Lundqulst said about the stocky
5-9, 205-pound defender. “He Is
a leader off the Held and In the
classroom . Brian Is a hard
worker who la going to ’be a
success In whatever field he
chooses.”
The Schaal Award Is believed
to be the longest consecutivegiven sports award In the United
States. Schaal. a former sports
editor at the Evening Herald who
passed away in 1979, gave the
first award In 1928 to Lofton
Edenfleld. The decision is made
by the Seminole coaching stafT.
"H e definitely deserved it,”
Seminole Principal Wayne Epps
confirmed. “ He w as the most
consistent player I've seen at
Seminole In a long time. Brian

Football
gave an excellent performance
every single game and the kids
looked to him for leadership
and off the field."
S c h a a l c h ar a c t e r i z e d the
award as the "player the
could not do without," generally
regarded as Its most valuable
[ilayer. Brinson had no trouble
ivlng up to that billing for coach
Dave Mosure's 4-6 Semi notes.
An A ll-C oun ty and AllConference first-team choice a
year ago as a defensive tackle,
Brinson made the switch to
linebacker at the urging o f
first-year defensive coordinator
James Paul. “ When 1 first saw
him in the Jamboree. I knew he
had all the tools," Paul said. “ He
moved right in at linebacker and
had a tremendous year."
Brinson, who was also named
Seminole's Defensive Player of
the Y e a r a n d O u t s t a n d i n g
Linebacker of the Year Monday
night, led the county with 165
tackles (101 s o lo s an d 61
assists). He had four sacks,
caused three fumbles, recovered
two fumbles, blocked two kicks
and intercepted one pass.
” 1 got a b u n c h o f great
Ses A W A R D S , P ag * 7A

Seminole's Brian Brinson gets a congratulatory kiss from his mother Peggy

Riggins, Asplen,
Forsyth Spark
County Victories
■ y C h eek Im rgeee
S p ecial to the H erald
The Lady Fighting Seminoles
basketball team opened its regu­
lar season Monday night with a
come-from-behind-win over vis­
iting DeLand, 45-35, before 50
fans at Seminole High.
T h e Lady Sem inoles. 2-2,
out scored the Bulldogs. 14-6, in
the third period as the play of
freshman Aretha Riggins along
with seniors Catherine “ Kitty”
Anderson and Kim “Big W heel"
Johnson ignited the turnaround.
Johnson was the catalyst in
the third period w h e n she
popped a quick four points with
3:39 remaining in the period.
Anderson added another shoot­
ing threat when she hit two key
shots In pressure situations.
Anderson connected on six of
her nine points in the third
period to bring the Tribe to
within four as DeLand held a
32-28 lead.
The beginning of the fourth
quarter started much like the
third as Johnson hit a short
layup to bring the ’Nole girls to
within two points.
With 5:48 left to play. Riggins
took control of the game. The
Lady Seminoles were down by
one as Riggins swiped the in­
bounds pass and sank an easy
layup to give the Seminoles their
first lead of the game at 36-35
with 4:18 left to play.
"T h e key to the game was
when coach (Charles) Steele put
in Kitty (Anderson)." Riggins
said. "O ur two big girls just took
a little while to get going and the
rebounding wasn't there until
Kitty came in."
Riggins, who tossed in another
basket to add to her game-high
18 points with 3:03 remaining,
extended the late comeback lead

Openers: *
B y C h ris F lstsr
H e ra ld B p arts W r it e r
Defense and rebounding are
the main concerns of Seminole
High coach BUI Klein as the
Fighting Seminoles open the
season tonight at 8 at DeLand.
After tonight's game. Seminole
will return to action Wednesday
In the W i n t e r Park Rotary
Tournament. The Tribe will take
on Oak Ridge Wednesday night
al 7:30. Pregame tickets wUI be
on sale at the high school today
and Wednesday.
With high-scoring forward Rod
Henderson and postmen Rod
Fossltt and Craig Walker control­
ling the inside, and Robert HU1
and Andre Whitney the outside
threats. Klein isn't worried about
the Tribe’s offensive firepower.

Miami Bursts
Bears' Bubble
MIAMI (UP1) - The Chicago
Bears’ bubble has burst.
The Miami Dolphins, owners
of the only perfect season In N FL
history, made sure the pre­
viously unbeaten Bears did not
equal their 1972 achievement by
beating Chicago 38-24 Monday
night before 75.594 fans tn the

Basketball
to 38-35. The bucket
have come at a better time
the Tribe and Steele.
“That’s what did it for us."
first-year coach Steele said. "W e
played a great game at the end
and started to get things rolling
after a slow start. W e're kind of
lucky to get a win.”
Steele w as happy because of
Riggins' play In tn latter stages
of the game. Riggins hit the last
five points in the home stretch to
give the 'Noles a 10- point lead.
The Lady Bulldogs started the
game with the outside shooting
of Junior guard Shawn Lane.
Lane, who led the Bulldogs in
scoring w(th her 16 points, sank
four of Deland's first six points to
open the flrst quarter.
The Seminoles took an early
10-6 first quarter lead, but
quickly lost it when they were
outscored. 20-4. In the second
period because of the shooting of
Lane and C.C. Hayden.
Hayden put in eight of her 11
points on the night in the second
period to pace the Bulldogs to a
26-14 lead at the halftime in­
termission. Much of Hayden's
success came from the lack of
defense put on by the Tribe.
"I don't know why we were so
lethargic in the early going,"
Steele said. “1 didn’t have any
problems with our small girls
playing agresslve and going after
the bell, but our big people Just
weren't playing intense ball to­
night.”
The beginning of the third
looked like the Bulldogs were
going to lock this one up for the
night when Kathy Wyche hit a
15-foot Jump shot to start things

" I f we can rebound and play
defense I think we can play with
anybody,” Klein said. "Those
are the two big question marks.
W e have the size but size by
itself doesn't rebound."
Both Walker, a sophomore,
and Fossltt, a senior, stand 6-7
while Henderson, a powerful
Junior, is 6-3 but plays like 6-7.
The Tribe also has size on the
bench In 6-8 junior Brad Baird
and 6 4 Junior Steve Hathaway.
Henderson has the most expe­
rience of any of the Inside
players having started as a
sophomore a year ago.
“ He's one of the few we have
with varsity experience." Klein
said of Henderson. "W e're look­
ing for him to have a great year.
The kids Mok to him for leader-

after being selected the 51th winner of
Peter Schaal Award Monday night.

Aretha Riggins, middle, goes up for a jumper against
Oviedo. Sem inole's freshm an guard ignited a.com eback to
top DeLand Monday night.
off for the first 1:21 of the period.
H o we v er , w h e n J o hn s o n .
Anderson and Riggins got red
hot, the hope of holding off the

charging Seminoles was all but a
memory for DeLand.
Boa IGNITE, P a g e 6 A

The Bean, now 12-1.
bidding to become the first N F L
team to go 164) in the regular
season. Miami, now 9-4 snd tied
first in the A FC East, won 14
regular season games and three
playoff games in 1972.
“ I am very, very proud o f this
team." said Miami coach Don
Shula. “They saved the Dolphin
record for us old guys. That's
important to us. The important
thing for the now generation is
that it puts us in a tie for the lead
In the AFC East (with New
E ngland and the New York
Jets.)"
The Bears have clinched the
NFC Central title.
“ Nobody's Invincible." said
Chicago coach Mike Dltka. “ No­
body's perfect. We're going to
bounce back. It will be good for
us.
“ Life operates like that. Som e­
times you get on top and you
start thinking all kinds of things
and you start believing the
papers ... Now we either feel
sorry for ourselves or bounce
back."
T h e Dolphins raised their
home record in Monday night
games to 16-3, while the Bears
are 0-9 on the road on Monday
night games.
The Dolphins pulled the plug
on the Bears dreams of a perfect
season with a big-play offense
that, as usual, centered around
q u a rterback Dan Marino.
Marino, who consistently came
up with the big play in the first
half, had three tou ch d o w n
passes and finished 14-of-27 for

Football
go with the three touchdowns.
Miami scored on all five o f its
first-half possessions to take a
3.1-10 lead after 30 minutes. The
Bears, had posted two straight
shut outs and had allowed only
127 points com ing Into the
game. The 38 points were the
most given up by Chicago since
as 38-24 loss to St. Louis on Oct.
14 of last year.
Marino threw scoring passes of
33 and 6 yards to Nat Moore and
42 yards to Mark Clayton. Ron
Davenport scored on two 1-yard
runs, and Fuad Revets had a
47 -yard field goal. C h icago
s c o r e d on t wo 1 - y a r d
quarterback sneaks by Steve
Fuller, a 19-yard pass from
Fuller to Ken Margerum. and a
30-yard Kevin Butler field goal.
Chicago running back Walter
Payton set an NFL mark by
recording his eighth consecutive
100-yard rushing game. Payton,
the N F L 'a l e a d i n g all-time
rusher, finished with 121 yards,
but didn’t care much for setting
the record in a losing cause.
"I want to w in." he said.
"That's the key."
Miami wide receiver Mark
Du per had 5 catches for 107
yards, the 11th time In his
career he has passed the 100yard mark. Fuller completed
ll-of-21 passes for 169 yards,
the touchdown and two In­
terceptions. Jim McMahon came
off the bench In the fourth
quarter when Fuller sprained an
ankle and completed 3-of-6 for
42 yards and an interception.
Gam e balls were given to
defensive line coach Mike Scarry
and offensive line coach San­
dusky. and to Marc Buonlcontl.
the paralyzed son of former
Miami great Nick BuoniconU.

Noles Visit DeLand; Lyman Hosts Bo
Basketball

starter." Klein said. "H e wUI
play as much as anyone. He can
play for Andre (Whitney) or
Robert (Hill) whenever we need

him ."
ship even though he's Just a
Junior."
Klein said Walker played the
end of last season on varsity and
looked good In spurts while his
Inexperience showed at other
times. Fossltt played all of last
season on Junior varsity where
he was one of the team's top
scorers and re bounders.
Whitney, a 5-10 sophomore,
will run the point with Hill, a 64)
senior, the ofT guard. The Tribe's
sixth man will be 5-9 senior Mike
Wright who will play both point
and offguard.
"Mike (Wright) is Just like a

Others who will see plenty of
action for the Tribe include 64)
senior Joe Holden. 6-0 Junior
Jerry Parker, 5-6 Junior Mike
E d w a r d s . 6 - 0 Ju ni or Mi ke
Franklin and 6-1 Junior Todd
Kniebbe.
“ Everyone can play and will
play," Klein said. “ The guys are
ready to go. T h e y ' v e been
practicing for a long time and
want the season to start."
W hile the Seminoles open on
the road, coach Tom Lawrence's
Lyman Greyhounds will tip off
against the Boone Braves tonight
at 8 In Longwood. Lawrence.

entering his eighth season « a
head coach, seeks to erase last
year’s 5-20 rebuilding year.
" W e don't talk about last
year." Lawrence. 35. said Mon­
day night. "W e did get a lot of
experience for our younger kids,
though, which should help."
Ralph Phllpott. a 6 5 senior
center, who has started since his
sophomore year Is one big re­
turnee while 5-10 senior T.J.
Scaletta, 5-10 Junior Robert
Thomas and 6 3 senior Brett
Marshall all started last year.
Marshall has been hampered by
a sprained ankle.
Phllpott. Scaletta and 6-3
super soph Craig Radzak will
Join newcomers Vince Florence
and Matt Fitzpatrick In tonight's
starting lineup. Shawn Newton.

a 6 3 senior. Shawn Hester, a 6 6
Junior, and Ricky Moulton, a
611 Junior, complete the 16
player roster.
L a w r e n c e is h i g h on
Fitzpatrick, a m ove-ln from
Ohio, who he calls "the best
fu n dam en tal p la y e r on the
team." Florence, a 6 1 Junior
leaper. played two years at
Luther before coming to Lyman
this year. "V in c e la a real
player," Lawrence said.
Lawrence said he is viewing
the year with guarded optimism.
"W e have really shot the ball
well in practice." he said. " W e
should be able to run the (fast)
tweak some and with our experi­
ence and new kida have very
respectable y e a r ."— Bai

�TseedRy, P k . h m »

Ruttman Soothes Bruised Ego With Cracker 200 Win
NEW SM RYNA BEACH - Looking
as good m he did tn 1972 when he
took New Sm yrna's World Series title
at the wheel o f Stan Vec's Chevelle.
Winston Cup regular Joe Ruttman
won the eigh th an n u a l “ Florida
Cracker 200" Late Model State Cham­
pionship on Sunday afternoon at New
Smyrna Speedway.
He was closely followed by former
track champions David Rogers, LeRoy
Porter and Jack Cook, with all four
cars completing the full 200 laps
distance. Fifth was defending champi­
on Bruce L a w r e n c e fo llo w ed by
Tommy Duckworth who started last
because he missed qualifying, as he
also competed in the Kelly American
Challenge at Daytona the same day.
Then came talented Bill Blgtey. Jr.,
Greg Froem m lng, Lee Faulk and
current track champion Joe Middleton.
Ruttman’s last victory had taken
place over a year ago In Bakersfield.
Cal. "It's hard on your ego to go such a
long time without winning." Ruttman

...Ignite
C oatlu u ed from 8 A

One of the key players for the
Tribe who didn't score her usual
high numbers on the board was
Tcmlka Alexander. Alexander
had assist after assist as she
continually fed the ball to the
light person so they could put
the bite on the Bulldogs' com­
eback aspirations.
"She (Alexander) did a fine Job
for us tonight." Steele said. "She
didn't score that much, but was
one of the few people who went
after the ball."
Seminole returns to action
T h u rsd ay at h om e again st
Spruce Creek at 7:45 p.m.

said. "S o it was nice to come back here
after all these years and see that I
haven't forgotten my trade."
Driving for long-time friend BUI Bill
Bembtnster In a Bemco-chassled 1996
Firebird, with power by R and B
Engineering. Ruttman moved up on
the point on lap 41. after diving Inside
of early leader Daniel Keene.
Ruttman'then started making gutsy
moves, going three abreast between
lapped cars, and outbraklng the faster
ones In the turns, while lapping most
of the Held.
At halfway. Ruttman led Rogers.
Porter. Cook, Lawrence and Mike
Goldberg. The caution flew on lap 118.
with Ruttman and Rogers pitting for
rubber and fuel. At the restart. Porter
was the new leader.
On lap 147. the race was red-flagged
to allow the ambulance to drive over to
the grandstand side to transport a
severely HI fan to the hospital. While
Ruttman sat on the track waiting, his
left front tire went flat and he had to

High.
The Lady Patriots. 3-1 overall
and 1-0 In the SAC. return to
action Wednesday at home In a
nonconference gam e against
Orlando Boone.
Lake Howell managed to stay
within six points after both the
first quarter. 16-10. and the
second quarter. 25-19. Brantley
had taken a 21-12 lead early In
the second period but 12 turn­
overs enabled Lake Howell to
stay close.

U

Auto Racing

COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
c*ll*|t Fail Sail
Sy IMM Prtu irttnthM
MAJMlkOtriNOfNTJ

Pfwi Sxh
W.«ml, FX
Arm,
for'44 S&gt;4*9
S« Uttt&gt;9*.
An* Vlr|M*
V-).ft1 Ttc»
hoft-t Cl-ftf
P-ISurjft
Cftcmul.
Sa,m C4f»'ft|
Vm
b 'x Ce«gt
Va~pft, S'g-a
£«• Cr» -4
*14"
L».»• ie
T.eu

Wl T Ph OP
11 11 Ml IX
19 110 id
1 19 129 IT)
1 10324 hi
7 4J179 IN
7 493U 18
7 31m 14
1 29274 IX
1 192* 84
1 2 1 193 117
2 19 18 Ml
2 49 24489
4 7 928 28
4 7 928 V
3 7 3 m 24]
1 11’4» 244
1 19 144244
1 19a 28
3 t 9 '94 0
1 X 1 '44 3)4

AMStum
wirmor eirmor
’mi UV 7 10251US t I3U«1K
Ana-,4,
i zcz:j 47 • 2C1S2It#
Si,:*
I 33:«* *7 i it in ip
Tim,
i 2! U '7t I 3 3 JH 215
»SVJ
S IQKi'H i 4 3 3 4 7 1 7 4
HO.I'S2 2Sid321 4 7 9 223 38
til
2 I3'|72H ) isniA
Tf* Ttc» I 7HM!|1 i 70 144 340
TCli
1 13 Kill 1 I t ' U

{, M4i|eMtv cankftMiclunpanft.il

wiOAMiiiuecoMdtkct
CtatviMt All Gum,
■ LTPliOP WLT At,0#
B*3 G'
I 332*1I2l I* tt Id &gt;72
Wta
7 Mlig'S# t 2'24*211
C Weft
t J31771IJ 2JJ!*41H
he III
4 43139111 479174211
#1 Weft
4 4117J117 4tl 1432IJ
f Veft
) *314*214 47fl 11*222
64 H
] 43*241 I 473293213
Tg-att
1 *3131:#* 479 til’17
Aa-* Si
3 19111199 &gt;I92U277
Oftl# U
3 79111240 310191X3
OMIOVALLIT
AIK
NLTAh OP* ITAHOA
W*(Tiwi
7 99119tl 1191141141
UgfS*
1201I41H 7II24}Uf
2 29II41X I 19171191
E»»i
Aaron
1 31332t7 I 10111lit
4 30141Id I Itilt 149
Ynjt'Oatn
2 II 9918 19*194191
AytAilf
111174119 1191177314
TgnnTteft
I 79 dm 119*14187
M«rtSt
no tin

AAGinn
PITHlOA NLTAh OP
7 1934*lit tl 11413143
inn
Wcft'|*n
4 11231 M I Kill 71
lllinort
&gt; 2121220* 441271X3
Ohio St.
I 39331til I 1911*20*
w I c I 9 * 7191 4 41 0 1
MiM.
4 19174193 I 1117187
PurAt
3HUMP 1 19197X4
I 49137304 1 4131114]
Witcgnift
iftrfim
I 79114340 I 792211a
hr•tltrn
I 79 91321 ) II17918
U0II0MT
Canlanno AJIGvnn
WlTAhOA NLTAhOP
799179 It 9 11)11 N
OUtftcn*
NtkritU
I Hill 97 « 21291114
4 1911' 197 I 1938124
04IA St
Color*4o
4 19149 79 7 49111124
1 49111)31 I 49115111
l**A S*
2 19119111 I 1139481
ttlU)
(44 SI
I *9 S)») 1111191392
Miitwrl
I 4011731* 1199204143
HOstr

Cvilartaet AAGina,
■ ITAhOA PIT Ah0A
« 19334117 « 1103203
I 111*3IN It I9U71SJ
S 2139*111 7 492M21I
4 19221233 9 II4II1D
149311391 111243X1
I Ml* 191 ) 1983427
I It NtU J It 1472*9
1II14119* | 19394434

WtITIMATMlfTICCMAMIhCI
CMN9KI Afl 09099
PlTPtl OP PLTA19 0*

AifFrt*
ITU
HN4*
UUft
Coo Si
S0SU
UKW
*99
UT|P

71187IIT ItMANX)
111018 19190#18
4)1X718 4212432X
1)1034 1430289
4492824* 279810
2412*418 11119X7
319)17319 3900411
1491)1X3 3191970
111&lt;8344 199180
IVTLIA6UI
Cwtewct All 6««(i
NLTPhOP NLTPhOP
Aim
1 10'23 tl 7 311971*1
Hir.tr*
1 31Id tl 7 20191134
Pflfttttfl
3 19127 H 1 29111111
*rg»ft
4 Mill |] 1 41200'21
Tie
3 21HUM 4 411018
Dg-tmift
3 41 91192 1 71144199
Ceiu"
2 2910*127 3 7912718
Cglgmftii,
3 79 14)4] 9100 72)31
PCAA
Cvrttrgftct AMG*a#t
NLTPhOP NLTPhOP
FftegS'
7 38147&gt;11 19910 293
Fgiigftft
I 29:47:91 1 203XX1
UhLV
4 21 11118 1 11 :i*2'0
loft) Bcft
4 33'8 '40 1 49)39X7
3 43127'll 219177111
U’ift St
Si" JOU
3 41171174 2 112 389
"it' (
1 2918Hi 1 7981X1
hl&gt; Mil
e ri'diu 1199'99XI
tOUTHIASUM
Certarvui AMGene
NLTPhOP NLTPhOP
Tg-w
1 1918 42 1 12299133
LSU
4 111*4 X 1 11111 a
Aliumg
4 111)7117 1 H84 17I
4.9.-*
3 19139 94 1 lint 173
Gte|i
111IX 97 7 11294121
V„
1 1311)171 4 112193)4
Vi-esn
141 8111 J 71'44X4
1 29 74143 119194)11
W91Si
9 19'8 194 1 49217IN
2 l|t|| 79 9 117MHI
» F'e it
irni*anh,getmt)
ATLANTICCOAST
Ceknui AMGte#t
NLTPhOP NLTPhOP
We,i*«4
4 99193 91 1 1181171
GlTacft
1 1 • lie 12 1 2181 III
Virgin.*
4 1118IX 4 1134)117
Otmwn
1 11X718 4 1181018
1 2 4 2 113 3 #1 1 1
Dali
1 11 97174 1 71II#21)
xc. St
3 M81IN ) 11IN301
Nil! For
14) 8171 ( 713113d
S0UTHMN
M an
A46ewi
NLTPhOP NLTPhOP
Fgrmid
4 Mill tl 19 11X41M
4 1118 21 1 1910IX
*W&gt; SI
Ox"
231X1 17 1 1918111
WeiMii
i n 93in 7 11113197
Citexi
3 41 It Id 1 inn 84
N c»r
3 411911)4 4 4117)211
141« t|9 3 7118123
VWI
OiaiAe,
1 tl 2118 III! 94)1*
ITvwSI
1 71 H1U 11911)9271
MISSOUIIVAUIT
Carrhnnca AllGamt
NLTAhOP *L TPhOP

• Vu
Wtit t»i
HI SI
• Iftd St.
WlCftll*
aS#w III
Drpftl

2 *919110 I 293740
i 1I1MId i mti3d
1 It N 74 4I1MIX
1II Id 1)2 *4987241
111ININ ) 7914928
1M 8 117 479)17214
I M11718 4 79X4112

PACIFICI#
Cnhrwct
NLTAhOP NLTAhOP
UCLA
4 118118 I tllllIN
5 2*19181 I 14244ISO
Arli. SI
Ariisni
S191)4It) I 192311)1
S MIM1)4 1 M3IIM
Nun.
4 111*4 N 2 M81127
use
0r**M
1 1*89Id 1 118789
1 II IN171 4 7911281
Waft Si
2 11Id 8/ 4 Midi!)
Slpnlir*
Or*. SI
I M 1728 2 19IdW
I 71IdH2 4 142882
Cain

* er V a# O
h..

NCAA OliitlM I littlllli,
C*o*ll*4 »T TW
O NCAA
Wild*, km.. Oh. i
OiilrltiltP *9 UPI
Ttie IlllUtUl
I **r 7N#**W7481
114974117 ltd V4]
194471209 1441 2X1
'0474121749)1 Ml T

NIXMl SIM 31)1

11437871 1437 Ml
11X4841 MX 3924
114X819 lit! 3911
II *432*22 4)8 2424
It4472124448 2191
'92X1)24 448 2)14
PnmiQih—
4flc*#n4r*Xr**t
BTU
ta xiaaax u*i
Pgrfct
471 811)17X8 Mil
Mi
W 871489114 nil
PI*
XI 142121828 81)
4248)1187119 289
LSapeftSI
ha* Mai to
81 mitSdll 819
SOtool!
07 349)11447)4 871
Iiln*il
44389l78fl't 3739
Sot'on Cal
ill 34988X1) 2492
449 188118X Mi
U-#ft
TattlC
I Mr, r*i ifIMr*H*
BTU
13 9U4C73 1311 U43
hatrtUi
II 14111971)44 IDS
II HI HU S717449S
htaWli n
10*4
II I'lim 4)11 4441
Prt4"0 Si
I! 121X79 SIM till
W* Fit
n 0X8 Lid 4U

Aitft St

SOtfoSt
Pjf*A
Ofinoni

11 UOSI Sill 4411

II 87843 438 di­
ll 9234X1 MX 4X2
19 777418 1)17 01

Icvnf04h«t

f
n
11
ti
11
11
to
12
tl
it
11

Fwo 11
in*
Air Feet
w.#mr F;»
hternu
Arm,
BTU
me
Fed* S*
Boo n# G»te

Ml
XI

Vi
Vi

X)
XI
1)9
XI
137
HI
lit

I car* it*Mi***
II PO 78 2111 79)
11)24 79) II ) 81
114*1991 1) t 81
110'999 It | 8 9
" 4241117 It | oil
11X2118 II I 832
lltdllM 1111 « )

UCLA
Oaitftomi
Gavji
SfricuH
Ion*
We*')*"
Pilh(Kr*P
LIU
Arum
Air Fore*

010 4917171)
38121* 14 11964
3810 1417X34
011SI till 1413
01211 1#1) 1371
0 133419 9184
01X1 1) 11161
3111X1 121)1161
010 4(1)1149
010 241911)4
irtcmplirt ,At#ph

98rt#a*h.Wcft at) IX 4111)19 XI)
Ba". Ftp

0 IX 1X17)1 184

Le*.l#M

81 811288 74 1139

FewhcOkUSt 324 1291211119 IMS
SftaU.AU
Tti,e*#W«Fl|
Boko. BTU

28 IX 1)0 X 1X9
323 2141)33X31 1491
424 11)8X438 1411

SeWUT.FrtwiSt 8) in 1 34C414 idi
€nr#rt, Pu

420 2121101 8 143)

Giyfte. LBa#Si 0 m iilid 19 idi
lieu# hraMrti: IN #mh 4*»e&gt;
4rV08 F#rhr«u*t# hr 01 w|»
04408 own tr*n I9Utftrwg 1981
TeeOhm
p in m i m
Cwrtlt. Pvrfc#
i'lim 190)
tao. BTU
13709 733111
Gtrur.LBMSt
01442 2909
Tn'4f*t.W*Fu
0 no 7)00
horwrtL K#ft
2433314 29X79
212814 17X41
Trudwu. IU
47)01 *107
Itl* me
8107 7401
Lore IN#
Sm
ilft. WuSI
030 270 4
4133*27 11287
Ruttv.hWtuc#
IttifHRf
| tt KhXchX
119*198 4 tt
C#rt#r. Par#ag
Walhr.Stehr#
1 8 124 4 14
Viiileh. Ill
II *21*47 | 77
suaft'e.sotsi
1) 131971 19 11
Itre. TuHn
II 81117 3 11
B,ftam. OrggeSt
19|1 83 7 |l
U n *71 7 61
M'tftr,. Ute
Bfiaa. BTU
X 10#7) 13 11
EtWl. Keia
11 81100 4 11
LKkfrt. LB#tSl
It H M 11 17

I01XW 11 4 RM

II0 111! 1911 1X7
1)4441X7 II | 1X1

rXMrXri
IX 8 1*■941 1 :«l

Criftgma
Tim Ttcft
tire

Tiim AW
Oft!* SI
Cert Weft
Ntil Midi

Tg-arto
Ktnut SI.
TXXC

Oft'Mmt
MrdUfff
Tfl#**
CWtft

0
0
in
44#
0
78
0
0
0
M
Id

m |N*9#N HO

NMt* Weft
Plime. Tim*
J*UWL Ut
The** OSU
Se«m. W*m0
Wort Vi
Data. NN
0up#4 SMU
le-4io.C*Si
Wirt, w«est

114 17I 13*44 182
81 441410 3 1173
224 IX14144' 4 181
Ml 18X1113 7 181
18 1X141377| IP7
XI 9411} in 7 txi
XI 14417118 4 1X1
38 1141|12274 111)
83 1X11118 7 IdI
I F#r&gt;tN *•* wr*xi

X until n 7 till
II IN381 41 I 8)4
11 74)3X1 Ml) XII
X 473X0 MU XI)
II 711X11 41X Pi 7
II 7dX7*4|l|181
II 783X1 41X XU
II 7U3X1 4.til XIt
II 7X1111 4)8 01
It 783X9 1411 Ml

II IX X)

II «

111

II 18 1IJ
tl 18 81
II 18 HI

.Jl

Aft."a Tin,
A#ur. ICar*
lim e * . CAFall
P#wft. Arm,
i#WWA^ Feu
AmMa Prtl
W«arg. 0«:ee,*S'
hgrwl. Is*4
Pup. Sricaaa
Norllwahn Or*
Srtft#9L Ak Fee#
Hear. C#hr0
tm. Ik#
Cetarl. AaWrt,
Smilft. Wuiu-ge
rentftiA. Tow
Mer. aumau
Sparer. B"V
CrweM. FarW
Me&lt;#Vft&gt;Weft SI
taMtm
Tatlur, Ute
MirlM. Boat Cel
fcketa. SrncuM
tar. Pram Si
Jeraw. We*
Tftarrne. Till* Tel,
Scftnhhr. NN
Iraki, TCU
EimorW. ArtetM
Odoma. Nhc

|ft*H4N p#
ii *xi i n
m m *
'0 1 14 1 80
10 7 X 9 8
131IO 1 47
II 7IX 9 14
II 7174 1 14
II 7n 9 *4
11 7 U ( *4
11 7 8 1 41
ns #t|
23 471
11 410

u dt

27
8
X
44
U
U
M
«S ,X
X0
X0
34 0

4)1
42)
dl
U1
441
447
447

X ta#
1 34)
1 171
3 141

77Id III)

13 0 1161
)l 48 1 111
X 0 1 111
II 111 1 Ilf
d 0 I 116
14 0 9 114

*•

Ftdtort 111Mpa&gt;-1.

■■■an#m■»A■(
/wwi U
mPi i
a; 8 1
u ui|.Qglaad

*

Up UaPwa; U«ar Fwtor: 141. Oa*W Ra»wt:

»S

iS *S *i*rn k -r - '
tn u n b c b c a m

TMUNMRCARS

Faatott Qualifier: Harry Brataa. Wkrter tafng*.
10.1606.
PiratSeaMPlapa) —1. Sram.
____
,
bona hast (I lap*) — I. The#ne* taunt. Vantca.
Fla.
Faatwra (M lap*) - 1. Harry Brant. Winter
Sprlnpa; * *•*• Merr. Cacaa. f Bans Shed**.
Lenfweed; a. Jeey Wermeek. tontord; »• Jim
Ftoiftof, ApapM; 6 Gary 0eftor«en. bejtomeeci ».
Dai Kin*. Tltue*llto; 8 Jeff BtaSr. DayHna. *. At
Gray, HawImyma Batch: IP. Jeff Way*r,Orlando
POUB CVLIN0IRS

Plrtl heet (I lap*) —1. Batty Start. Oitaan.
Sacan*hast (a lapa) -1. Gay Linge. Orled*
Faatwra IIS lapa) — 1. Jarry Symana. Has Smyrna
Batch: 1. Batty Start. OUaan; J. Gana Van Alttine.
KachMaa: a. Billy Haavan. OrlanPa; 1 Curtl*
Millar, tontord; 8 Owy Lin**. Ovledi; 7. Jack
Hayat. Ocaat: 8 Bill Marlin, Santarp; 8 Jaff Btaw.
DaLand; 18 Dattla Hu*htr1, Hally Hill.

_

_ _

Faatwra (W lapa) — f-JJ*"*
J *".
Sprm*a; t Jarry FHeh, HSB; S
Oattana: * Granny Tatraa. Orman* Batch: 8jU
flraw MB- A Th§mm Mlkftir riWWfri* f* vftf
FtW rm ScaHtmaar; 8 JWn Kjnp,^TjMdWar8
Pata Starr, Cacaa; *8 Ruddy UhtHwa. Daytona
FOUR CVLIMOiBS _____
i fWFW
Faatwra IIS laapa) - I. Jarry Syma~f*W
Smyma Batch; 8 Bahhy S a ^ oaiaan; 8 BWy
tadpa: -8
Haavan. OrlanPa; 8 Gana Van ANlina.
Gvy LWM OvIaPa; 8 Ml Martin. SantorP;_7. Jack
HayaaTocaaa; 8 Bill Rata. Ortoita; 8 Ray Symana.
NSB; t*. OaSMe
Faatwra OS lapaT^1*T*»wny HHa

1. Mika Pnmama. OrlanPa; 8 Jeff Rhinahart.

Oaytana; * Mika KwSanafc. LanpnaaP; 8 U warP
Oatlatf. Ha* Smyrna Batch; 8 Data Hawar* Uka
HaIan; 7. Will Oraka. Stwart; *. Jahn Hack.
Lan*waaP; 8 Oan loan Jr., Falmatta; 18 Ba*
Mlnarvinl, OrlanPa

SCC's Golden Opportunity
Arrives With No. 1 Falcons

V

LEADERS

STANDINGS

» ^ » t*lrwKrSLwiPMa.rfcIfowToeLwa

Good and great. Sometimes
there's not a whole lot o f dif­
ference between the two. A
bounce here. A rebound there. A
desperation shot from over
(here. The great teams get lucky
Kim Forsyth poured In 23
and the good teams stay home.
points as Lyman successfully
Seminole Community College
opens Its prep basketball season
basketball conch Bill Payne has
with a 49-42 District 4A-9 victo­
stayed home from the state
ry' over Apopka at Apopka.
tournament for the past three
Forsyth, who already signed a
years. His teams have been
letter of intent to play at North
good, but not great.
Carolina State next year, tossed
They had beaten several o f the
in 10 points during the fourth
final eight contestants each year,
quarter as the Lady Greyhounds
but they had not beaten them at
erased a 33-31 deficit.
Lym an outscored Apopka. the right time. In each of those
three seasons. Payne’s teams
18-9. in the final eight minutes
and converted six free throws produced 20-victory seasons.
Still, the frustration of not mak­
down the stretch to ensure the
win. Latonya Johnson added ing the trip to Edmunds Center
eight points and Chandra Rob­ in DeLand for the elite eight
gnawed at Payne.
erts chipped in six.
So he worked a little harder.
Coach Dick Copeland's Lady
Greyhounds host Boone tonight He recruited a little better and
came away with a legitimate big
at 6:30.
man which was lacking in preLYMAN &lt;4t) - Chandra Robert* 4, Booty
A Forsyth 13. senior Lotonya Johnson I, viousyears — 6-8 Vance Hall
Drake* A LeOuke 3. Steven* 3, Totals: 17 from Si. Petersburg. He needed
15-114*.
more depth at guard so he went
APOPKA (41) — Paramore 10, McKinney out and got 6-1 Tony Roberts, a
5. Lewis S. Damp* I. Winchester *. Davenport
transfer from Western Kentucky,
•.Totals: 1181343.
Halftime — Lyman it, Apopka 17. Foul* — the brothers Gallagher (David
Lyman IS, Apopka 11. Fouled out — Johnson, and Darris). two Jets from Or­
Paramore. McKinney. Technical —none.
lando Edgewater. and Efrem

The inside play of Kim Wain
and Laurie Rivers carried the
Lady Patriots in the first half
while Tammy Lewis and Kellee
Johnson led the way for Lake
Howell.
Asplen then found the touchd
early In the second half and Lake
Howell couldn't hand the hotshooting senior.
SCMINOLE (41) - Rlggln* tl. AncHnon f.
Behind Asplen for the Lady
Johnwn I. Alexander 4. M*il«y 4. Hartman
Patriots. Wain pumped in 15
I Total*: 1014-1*41
DELANO - Lana 1*. Haydan 11. Wycha 4. points. Tracy Brandenburg had
K Wycha J. Lovttt J Total*: 420-435
Halttima, Oaiand I*. Saminoia 14. Foul* — a season -h igh nine points.
A sh ley T h om as contributed
Dtland 11. Saminoia 14 Foulad out — non.
Trehnleal —non*
eight and Rivers seven.
No player for Lake Howell,
which stands at 1-3 overall and
‘ICE’ COOLS O F F H O W E L L
Sherry ic e " Asplen poured in 0-1 In the SAC. scored in double
16 of her game-high 20 points in figures. Kelly Grider was high
th e s e c o n d h a l f as L a k e with seven points while Jolee
Brantley’s Lady Patriots rolled to Johnson and Lewis had six
their third straigh t victory. points each.
It was the second victory in
59-42. over Lake Howell’s Lady
S ilv e r H aw ks In S e m in o le three days for Lake Brantley
A th le tic C o n fe ren c e a c tio n over Lake Howell. On Saturday,
Monday night at Lake Brantley the Lady Patriots won thanks to

&gt;toond heet t# •**•» -

"FtorSS* CrscSar M TgPN-we” (N Up*) — 1.
DsvM Hasan. OrtanSa; t. LtRey Nrtor. Orlando; S.
Daniel Km m . Tampa; a. Jss Reftman. OafcSara,
NC; a taa Fa*)k. Orjota; &gt; «d Warsa w.

pit. relegating himself to last place at
the restart.
On tap 183. leader Porter and runner
up Rogers, who almost got by Joe as
the checker flew to end Sunday's race,
gets his awesome power from a very
unusual R and B-bulit Pontiac motor,
assembled mostly with competitionproven Grand National parts.
With no less than twelve cars fully
capable of winning, doing battle on the
high banks, the race turned out to be
the best M O tapper ever held on the
half-mile o f pavement.
Other weekend winners were thundercar chauffeur Harry Brazee (twice)
and four-cylinder pilot Jerry Symons
(twice also).
Sixteen-year-old Mike Williams and
veteran Tom m y Ellis topped the
roadrunner action.

30 of 54 free throws. Monday
night. Brantley bettered Its free
throw stats by hitting 21 o f 26.
— C h ris F la ta r
LAKE HOWELL (41) - K. Johnaan J.
HankIn* a J. Johmen 8 Grider 7, Lewi* 4.
Wlnitan8 Katten7. Kuhlf. Tatals: 1181043.
LAN! SKANTLEV (It) - Jh- Aiplan 30.
Thom** 8 arandankuT* 8 Rlvar* 7, Wain 18
Hagan 8 GarPln 0. Akaray 8 Su. Atpian o.
Total*: 1*31-1* It.
Halttima — Laka OranIlay 31. Lakt Hawaii
it. Foul* — Laka Hawaii It. Laka Brantlty t.
Fault* out—Nana. Technical —nont.
L Y M A N OPENS W IT H W IN

Pn»M*tMMG*&gt;‘- 1 .M * 1

uStnSt*.

r

V

^

3

SPORTS
E D ITO R

B ro o k s , a d o - c v c r y th in g
backcourter from Lake Howell.
Payne needed a bit more scoring
punch, so he plucked James
Morris, a 6-3 swlngman. from
Orlando Jones.
The rest of the cast — 6-7
power forward Greg " S lim "
Johnson and 6-5 Carl Poellnttz
— Joins Hall on the backboards
to give the Raiders a devastating
rebounding trio, another thing
they lacked In the formative
years. The Raiders have pelted
the o ffe n s iv e b oa rd s hard
enough to make (he difference in
several victories.
W ith a ll p a r ts m e s h in g
smoothly. SCC has bolted to an
8-1 start. The early spurt has
impressed the state's coaches.
Monday, they voted the Raiders
the No. 2 team In the state's

0 0e

Stale Jester CalNf* Fell
1. Florida Collage 00...................UOItOO
I. Seminole 81............................... 70
3. Santa Fa 81................................ 71
4. Cull Coatl 8A............................. M
J. Miami Dada North81.....................44
4 Manat*# 8!...........................
U
7. Daytona Beach0 1......................... 4t
t Ptn**co&lt;*8]...............................14
t. FlerIPeJester 88....................... ..IS
18 Chipota a*......................
14

GATOR

CAUFORNIA

JacksonvHte. Fla D ec. 3 0

Fresno. CaW. Dec. 14

F lo r id a i t . v o jO h la h o m a I t .

F r t s a o t t s t * v s , B o w l in g O r s s n

CHERRY

BLUEBONNET

Pontiac, Mich. D e c 21

Houston, D ec. 31

M a r y l a n d to . B y r a e n a t

INDEPENDENCE

m
\X
&amp;
a
*
T

Sam
Cook

Junior college poll.
And guess who comes to town
tonight? The No. 1 team. The
Florida College Falcons, who
have Inflicted the only mar on
SCC's record. Invade the SCC
Health Center for a 7:30 p.m.
tipofT. There is no charge for
admission.
Sure, it's still early In the cage
season. But the SCC cage pro­
gram has never been In a better
position. A victory tonight would
acquire the state's No. 1 ranking
and put the Raiders almost
halfway toward another 20-wln
season and one-third of the way
toward Edmunds Center.
The golden opportunity has
presented Itself Will the Raiders
grasp It? A bounce here. A
rebound there. A desperation
shot from over there. That's how
good teams become great. And.
as Bill Payne sincerely hopes,
this Is the year to go to state.

Shreveport. La Dec. 21
l i i n n s s o t a v s . C ls m s o n

UBERTY
M em phis. Te n n D ec. 2 7
L o u i s ia n a t t a t a v s . B a y l o r

ALOHA
Honokjiu. D ec 2 8
A l a b a m a v s . S o u t h e r n C a l if o r n i a

i
□
□
i

A ir F o re # u s. T a a a s

HOUDAY
San Diego, C a lf. D ec 31
A rk a n s a s v s . A ris o n a S ta ta

PEACH
Atlanta. D e c. 3 1
A r m y v a . Illin o is

COTTON
Dadas. Jan. 1
A n b u rn vo. T o x a a A B M

FLORIDA CITRUS

FIESTA

Orlando. Fla D e c 2 8

Te m p e . A n z. Jan. 1

B r i g h a m Y o u n g v s . O h io S t a t e

M ic h ig a n v a . N e b r a s k a

SUN

ORANGE

E l Paso. Texas D ec. 2 8
G e o r g ia v i . A r i s o n a

m

Miami, Jan.1

P e n n S t a t a v a . O k la h o m a

ALL-AMERICAN

ROSE

Bem ingham . Ala. D ec. 31

Pasadena. Calif J * \ . 1

O e o r g l a T e c h v e . M ic h ig a n S t .

FREEDOM
Anaheim, Cafct Dec. 3 0
W a s h i n g t o n v s . C o lo r a d o

AAPvytMlunar,
nnAiH kr|*i 7*91
WcCiiVft.Hif
111*24184X24101
Ptimtr, Tifftp
1)141)1 H17431917
Sawn. WilOn
ISM434 17103 1739
*ft.tt.M'Cft5t
190* 8 119X1719
JtcaiOl. 4-0
&lt;7*4 7) 91*814*1
Hemet. INI
nil 87147X11X«l
Thamti. 0SU
'SU 9*IX181XI9
Gram. Lou
3041770117X1271
Clurry, &gt;•
190414)012X109
S)ft*v.S0St
XX7117710181

PUNOta
Durtr.cft. Ml SI
Irma Tam,
Ian*ui. Arlan#
La. UCLA
J«#v. Waft
W*nc6 Pern St
Wtri Taut
Nwhy. Kanftd,
Sdmi#9. FU St
Gvl*m*n. W«mC

U C L A v a . Io w a

SUGAR

□

N e w Orleans. Jan. 1
M ia m i ( F la .) v s . T e n n e s s e e

MTU#
lge*l PrtW*
88 m w
X34 0 HI
88 7» )N
8)1 18 Itl
ini m iti
Mil 0 Ml
Mil 81 171
XI* 18 173
mt m in
XX 4fl III

Kpfth. Bah* Gm
Jakon. Aufturi
Atari Tm
Nhh. W.cft SI
G##*. Tah#
tali. Front Si
WcCaHimk. Mery
H#u#Ml.n. Ur#
Scftm
UT. FU SI
Sum. W«mi0

Na#1*h*H
It 1 III4X4
If 9 90 »)
1X24« *1
171 |l« 9)
171 1X1 93
111X0 91
IS9 1 N 99
14117 V II
IdX 94 II
X I I N II

UdxNBde
Tudor. Uhft
Gat*. La
OuKM. WrUm
CUM. (Car#
■Mtn#. SW LM
Hern 0m* SI
t a FU M
McCtflvni. Nkr,
►am Mol* Date
XWor. UTIP

* H» M #t*
N 0 t »l
8 W 1 96
ii m B94
X • 1 84
8 IU 1 16)
IS 0 t IU
IT IX 1 U!
x at 1 IU
X 0 1HI
M91 1 HI

GAMEBREAKERS
Callapa Faattoll Gamakraakar*
Bp UnttaP Fr**a latemattanal

Top ptrtarmar* from Saturday'* Dlv. I-A and I AA colies* football
Sam**:

Rw*Mns

Alabama'* Gene Jelka — 1*3yard*and 1TDon llcarrlat.
Auburn'* Bo Jackion — M3 yard* and 2TD* on 31 carrle*
Vonderbl lt'» Carl Wood* - 117yard* on 14carrle*.
Georgia'* Lari Tate — 1 » yard* on IS carrle*.
Georgia'*Cedric Hendertoo— 111 yard*on 17carrle*.
Hawaii'* Nuu Faaola IJ* yard* and l TD on tcfwol record )S
carrle*.
Houiton’t Gerald Landry — 104yard* and 1 TD* on M c*rrle*.
Oklahoma Stata’* Thurman Thoma* — 100yard* on Z3carries.

Rirt
»•
* TO*.
Tulan*'* Kan Karchar - 37-0-44tor 310yard*and i TD.
^ininna**0 *« Darryl Dlcfcay—33af-33torIf* yard* and3TO*.
FtorIda'* Ricky Natttol - Scatch** tor 16) yard* and3TO*.
Florid* State'* Hauan Jone*—s catche* tor 1Myard*.
Florida'. Frank)* Nl.l - 3c*»cftw* toMO* y a r d i^ T D
Rica'* Oarrall Goaltby- 4catch** torN yard*.
t Tulan*'. Mark Zano - tchool-rtcard 13catch* tor MByard* and 1

» Ay ^ &amp; l « T p ™ '" “ *
I'* Greg Co* - 3IHWgoal*.
am*'* Carlo* r
*

,IKlUd,nt

Fautag

Rhoda liland'i Tom Ehrhardt— 4^ot-70 tor 471yard* and I TO*.
Miami'* Vinnla Tatlaverd* — 13of 31h r U4 yard* and 3TO*.
Eaitarn Wathlngton'* Rick Worman — 24of S3 tor 324 yard* and )
TO*.
F lorIda'* K*rwln Bell — t4of 33 for 343yard* and 3TD*.

W 'N - 01-yardstart return tor TD and I
iniffCtpiKin*.
Gdergia Tach'* Gary Lae- M-yardktcksdreturntor TD
Miami', t a l k Sled** - 61-yardpunt r*turnta Td. ihi.McandW
S*

�FI.

SPORTS

SC O R E B O A R D
a -m

TV/RA0IO

NBREF

. ivi

S/TONIOBT

FW i
I #.». -

iprtMMfli

Defending
StataChamp Lyman
1.a - IM C
M IU
Opant Soccar Saatem WmTrtba

a Ii am O
wm m
m
S O M* - T H MA. Oikifi M i »

UmwftUMLtU

• * * high-scoring forwards
SheUa Mandy and Dawn Boycaen. talented midfielders
Alyson Barnes and Diana Bo yesen. All-State defender

graduation. Top returnees for nhe Tribe Indude" AILState
forward-goalkeeper Sherri Rumller. forward Vicky "SpuiTy"
Pakovlc and defenders Angela fre e m a n and Cindy Benge.
wX* matchup features 41 high-scoring Lyman team
that could surprise the favorites In the Seminole Athletic
Conference. Leading the ‘H ounds are Brian Ocasck and Pat
Howard both of whom scored over 20 goals last season,
leading the w ay for Seminole., and first-year coach Carlos
Merilno, are Matt Albert. Chris IRay and Sidney Griggs.

\Laka Mary Chan#at Schadulat
The Lake Mary-Apopka varsity and Junior varsity
Ibasket ball games scheduled fo r tonight at Lake Mary High
[School have been cancelled due to a schedule conflict,
[according to Lake M ary athletic director S haron
[Baumgartner. Apopka already has a game for Tuesday
(against Clermont.
I T riday's varsity boys and varsity girls soccer matches
gainst Lake Howell have be&lt; &gt;n moved to Thursday at Lake
[Mary. The boys will play at &lt;3 p.m. and the girls will clash
it 8 p.m.
Friday’s freshman basketball game at Lake Mary against
ake* Howell is been rescheduled for 5:45 p.m. Instead of
1:30 p.m.

Stetson Startem Double Up 0-CC
DELAND — Stetson's Ha titers used double-figure scoring
from all five starters to turn back Bethune-Cookman
f College. 103-78, before 2.336 fans at Edmunds Center.
Stetson Improved to 2-1.
Gary Coachman led thie pack with 21 points white
freshmen Jimmy Kuhl (2 0 ) and Terry Johnson (18) were
next in line. Andrew Wooc'iward chipped In 12 and Charles
Stevenson added 10.
Frank Wilson tossed i n 28 points to lead all scorers.
Former Seminole Com m unity College standout Delvtn
Everett added eight.

Mercer's Boandwork Downs UCF
Mercer used a 45-26 (rebounding edge and 51 percent
shooting to hang a 81-6&gt;7 setback on the Central Florida'
Knights Monday night In college basketball at UCF's gym.
Coach Phil Carter's Knights fell to 1-3 while Mercer
improved to 3-1. Faront e Robinson had 18 points for UCF
and George Beaton addc d 10.

Wllander

In Quarters

MELBOURNE. Australia (UPI) — Defending champion
Mats Wllander cruised into the quarterfinals of the $1.5
million Australian O p e n Tuesday by defeating Tim
Wilklson in straight s c is in a rain-delayed match.

...Awands
C a a tla u s d fro m 5 A
t e a m m a te s ." B ri n s o i 1 said.
"Without them. I would n't have
been able to do It."
In addition to Brin.- ion. six
other varsity players all ong with
two Junior variety : i n d two
f r e s h m a n p e r f o r m e rs w e r e
honored for their ou islanding
s e a s o n s . E ach c o a ch a n n ­
o u n c e d his players in dividually
and then talked a bout the
players as a group tjefore an­
nouncing the award.

Tipton and Bonnie Zawaki.
a l o n g with Jim “ D o c ”
Terw illiger's trainers. "W h en
you're 0-4 like we were, you can
put your friends in the cup of
your hand," Moaure said. "But
those, girts stuck through thick
and thin with us."
Terw illiger said it w as an
almost Injury-free year and cited
the extensive conditioning pro­
gram by the coaches as one of
the reasons. “Our kids worked
real hard, too." he said. “There
were Just a few minor injuries to
treat."
AP AP AP

Mosure thanked Sun Bank and
First Federal for providing the
A s s i s t a n t c o a c h R o g e r chicken for Monday's dinner
Beathard named sc nlor Mike along with Mark Carll who
Luster as the Outstanding De­ handled the chef work. The
fensive Lineman, asst slant Greg parents provided the side dishes
Register awarded senior Dexter and desserts.
Franklin as the O utstandlng
Mosure presented pen-andDefensive Back a n i l assistant plaques to his coaching stafT
Glenn Malolini cited senior Alan along with his scouting team of
Kendall as the Outs.tanding Of­ Jeff and John Lttton along with
fensive Lineman.
Tony Colon.
He also cited Bill Painter,
Moaure, who coached the of­
fensive backs, n a m e d senior owner of the Colonial Room
Dave Rape as the M ost Valuable Restaurant, for cooking the
Receiver and Juni or Dwayne Fr i da y pr eg a me meals and
Willis as the M u s t Valuable Benny and Rose Futrell (presi­
Offensive Back. S ophom ore dent of the Seminole Boosters
quarterback J e f f Blake w a s Club) for picking up the tab for
selected as the Off enslve Player those meals. The Futrells. prob­
of the Year. Blake, the first-team ably Seminole's biggest boost­
A l l - C o u n t y q u a r t er bac k as ers. will be moving to Ocala In
selected by the cc mnty coaches, January and Mosure said they
tossed for eight I D s and 1.084 will be sorely missed.
"It will be a great loss for the
yards.
Junior varsity coaches Bill school," Mosure said. “ They
Zeiss and John Brady named have done just a tremendous Job
Tracey Turner as their Most for the school. Even though
Valuable Defensi ive Player and they'll be In Ocala, 1know they'll
Leonard Lucas as their Most still be Seminole fans."
Mosure also thanked academic
Valuable Offensive Player. The
adviser Whltey Eckstein, team
JV finished 6-2.
Freshman coutches Mike Fer­ physician Dr. Jim Quinn and
rell and Ernie JtfcPherson cited athletic director Jerry Posey for
Jarod Jones as their Most Valu­ their support.
man
able Offensive 1?‘layer and Willie
M
iss
T
ipton
also honored
Grayson as the ir Moot Valuable
S
a
m
m
le
S
em
in
o
le (Jen n ifer
Defensive Playe r. The freshman
Page) for her contributions to the
finished 6-2 .
M o a u re a l s o p r a i s e d the team this fall. It waa the first
Seminole cheerleaders of Gayle year for the Seminole mascot.

&gt;

0-14-1 P-14-1
J -S J
144P

Pray laekafbani JV/Varaity Beys

-7A

Wolves
Return
To Norm

6:15/8 p.m. — Seminole st DeLand
5/8 p.m. — Boone at Lyman

The Michigan basketball team
had
a hectic two weeks: two
Prep Basketball! Varsity Ohrts
gomes in Hawaii, thieves In the
6:30
p.m.
—
Boone
at
Lyman
I S » B - - U F X Ff i AIS*IHO*MU
SO
so
hotel In Springfield. Mass.; a
Prep l esser: JV/VarettyOhrla/Beys
1am. - tvx *snn own cm
ragged victory over Georgia
4/6/8 p.m. — Lyman at Seminole
RIPMIM - CMcnMiffM m i l.
Tech:
and a loss of its No. 1
w*r m F«Mr » n a t o m 14
4/8/8 p.m. — Winter Park at Lake Brantley
y y n Oiiim t n
Swwti a h
ranking.
5/7
p.m.
—
Edgewater
at
Lake
Howell
AOM i- MUM (M !m *TMbW
Monday night provided a re­
7 p.m. — Lake Mary at Oak Ridge
FAUIM-Cklc40»F"Nr II-I1H4I.
turn to normalcy of sorts — an
N*4m 1444 M O I I I U
M
O rM B liin
87-52 blowout of Tennessee In
4/WBDNBSDAT
NFL
M CtIVIW - CMc4»C«ult IPI,
the home opener at Ann Arbor.
im »s Pu b in
■tt
B a sk e tb a ll: V a rs ity B ey s
NATMNAl FONTUU U M S t
Ob o n m 441, Ob * t I S 00 m4 M m
Mich.
A a trlfll (M lllH M
7:30 p.m. — Seminote vs. Oak Ridge
UlDmlW.CMPMlM
The robbery came Thanksgiv­
A
14
Onl
HP.
at
Winter
Park
Rotary
Tipoff
Tournament
• I T U P IN
AT JM
ing Day while the Wolverines
11 1 i m t 14 M M m 1 a
1 it mmm
B
a
s
k
etba
ll!
JV/Vareftty
O
ir
la
anSMHVA
t n m mm
were preparing for Saturday's
6:15 p.m. — Mainland at Lake Mary
WTIKIPTiOOV-Okjw Fret* V IP.
• it m m m
Hall of Fame Tip-Off Classic.
OONVInOUMU 14 6. IlKlBMi 14
IN I S M S
6:15p.m. — Boone at Lake Brantley
t II I S N S
" W e w ere gone all d a y .”
W
ree
tH
a
gi
JV/Varetty
ill.
Michigan
coach Bill Frteder said.
6:30 p.m. — Seminole at Mainland
1 tt js m m
"W
e
went
to practice, then to
4 PI N I N W
6:30
p.m.
—
Lake
Howell
at
New
Smryna
NBA
CWlmtfl
1 11 o w n
have T h a n k s g i v i n g dinner.
1 11 jo in in
m t n s u . w n r o u as
When we got back, our rooms
llltlfA CiAl4PVAft
• it si m m
were ransacked. All we lost,
H U M
really,
w as equipment. They
11 1 si Bps m w n
took shoes, sweats and some
I I JS I
I T« I M W M
NATIONAL NOCtlT K A M I
• » S
I
money."
B M rm w •» ufi
P N 411 I
S a Ia i C u l t r M i i
•Mrt" I
TNb k m an FknB
Maybe their shooting touch as
1 u m in*
■ l » u Pf N
» l T Ha 44 14
well. The Wolverines shot 18
• it s s n i
percent in the first half against
SOFTBALL
1 s 1 sis J» nt
1 11 » m m
NT ItlaWrt
^ m U r t t N SMI
Georgia Tech before regrouping
I f l 40 S I IS
NT I m p
for a 49-44 victory. The un4 t I JO S I SI
iWMIOrlliai
artistic s h o w in g dropped
tmOmiHw
ti 11 m m mi
Gmar SyaBnt
Michigan to No. 2 In the poll.
p 1 • j o at ■
MdUrDwiNpaa
4^^*i tfU*4.Ua
Life was easier against Ten­
I PI 411 op si
PTMiPhtnilKiTIC
1 PI 40 IPIsi
ThaiBUMCNaMi
nessee.
1 II I .III 141 SI
MIM
Glen Rice, one of the nation's
U (MW
I 4 1 40 01 »
top freshmen, scored 14 points
1 « FtmcIka
I I I 411 w 01
on 7-of-l 1 shooting and keyed a
1 II S M S
e L TIN. 41 4A WcX«Dm NmmbHNRtbmImmII
first-half surge that sent the
1 II I .114 10 SI
S
m
a
N
m
IP
.
C
vN
ea
1
N I 10 FI 14
GerwrW bmMi SimUs*I
v tm11
ia N R
W o l v e r i n e s to their fourth
• I S
Ik
I II * IIU N
SUMI S, o ia p 14
straight triumph. With Rice and
I N .444 PW
1 11 414 PI IIP
1 n si rt
i u 1q pi w
Garde Thompson in the lineup.
AIU*N*K4Mm 0 Y I a b .
MAJOR IN000N I0CCIR LIA44JI
411 jo m
tu n
Michigan hiked its lead from
0"l""Clnc*n"l. I*i*
M
111 .up tiw
IP 4 117 111M
Ot**l* » « ( * • * I
■ l m. M
12-6 to 39-16 shortly before
u • 1n ® i&lt;
uwi m
} I J14 •
laABIMH n TOlkUAlAM
1 u 1a M 114 FmMeyt
halftime.
S M N w m wumpiAiMM
MinmM
4 ) 447 _
1 ti 1 a « in
M a u s G m ip .iA M
t 1 i » &gt;k
At Durham. N.C.. Mark Alarie
(A A T m im
1 11 1q » 111 leftmrf
Otvdtnd
1 4 JN 14
NmmOrtm * 14. Lm N, 1a m .
Om««S IN b T w4P:Sam
scored
25 points for Duke. 6-0, In
0*1"
l 4 m 1
U t a l A M t p i , PNam
NT S M I MMM. 1AM
Us home opener. The previous
o»MmsiMiiU4AM
cnc« m
1 4 I4J 4
M n N0m M ( : I 1A
NM
LAM a n el Ow*r. 4a m
FNNO»N S D"r*l P:»a b
night the Blue Devils won the
to ON"
•mUNIt—Am .I» A M
NVGMi "H m " m , i p b .
I I .714 INWSNMeaD*nN.P:SAM
preseason National Invitation
Tea**
TiM pliy MINBBMIA 4AM
1
&lt;
m
4
NBMiStMBLASAM
WlMlppaitT. lilaKn I Hpm
Wclli'4
U n w rp it I n ONp I mm
4 1 HI 1
CMopSlMTBIBMANMB
Tournament in New York. Leon
ChicipawwwtAi h a *
t u r n . Dm . 1
F e w Cit*
4 I HI 1
oms em um wi am
la m p a ue U p tm. n o a *
Bass had 20 points for East
it Lwi
LA No t it I m Freua. I a m
taeAmte a ton*. » ■
1 4 m 1
M m* t ,Bk .M
L
m
A*"I
m
Carolina.
I
4
IN
I
I
HaiMacaprr-«W
CStepNNYNN, II 1 »B
MaMBU.laniupl
At St. Louts. Georgia Tech
W
a
N
u
g
b
p
i
§
t
fg
^
if
Ni
Carnal
IcMiulai
iVBM Otp M Obww. « mb
VaetewaaomcMpI
encountered trouble against one
Tu S l T I m i
M M f.Rm M
WIM|B|a NT. la w n opt
MMaAtimapt
M N u t n im p iA M
Ticamaa lamnart. PH m*.
OM«raiaajBAM|tit
INsJaaya Tam apt
of the weakest teams on Us
Cl*Cmi««MP|MAl4M
OiiupaoaiM.i ha*
OanHamMwp.nNM
la.Lama unn.aw
schedule. Tom Hammonds had
Grawt*r"D"r*F.I»M
i*.
iw
t
a
w
w
i
1
h
a
m
CNupsnBaAi.M#e
Ham " CMw41am
l a m a la own apt
16 points for the Yellow Jackets,
POLLS
I m tapw a Ian OBp. « H a m
l « B M 4 Tape lay I a m
2-1.
St. Louis was led by Kevin
MW TORN 10411 - TIBUMMIi m
tNemNSAlMAlAM
MW TOM IU41I - TFb « W F m
Williams’ 14 points.
mbmdmi i m a Cmcui Tp s caipi
N T G m S D m .lA M
melWWlmaCaecUiTaMW
• a C p m T p W catlap
D E A L S
kaUNai rasp- F***"» m m n
aw Ant- i m m « a
w
laiIfBBlKeelNMiONBB.Ia*.
"W e stayed with them and
crtia|MMB iTaaMeMiimpii
IMelpMAtflaiDHptAM
that g a v e u s c o n fid e n c e ."
p m Nr H I M UN»*cMA"tl
li pMM Nr led (Mo. U Nr mcpN dc ).
U U m H U II m M a *
ImM mLAUAn 4am
Bttltkens coach Rich Orawer
Waft Cawwe IN) (Ml
in
T V nm v a t o n T i e
wi i
IBaMP- ttawaMFipMatter&gt;tcapnd said.
mer.DK.M
Mkttpe t » IM)
at
I QUPaw 0) III)
HP1
Nmb ( m
S N * i I am
Oae ill (H I
«
i am usd
mi t Z f f X S L m * id" JM
Elsewhere, Buck Johnson's 28
Oaape Tack IM)
Sc
IMLI
a a m (Fiat is n
mt
NAVyprcRNKt
points sent Alabam a over Utah
tftem os
ia t RMtUpa III II
« !
FMiaPpMa - NaaaM IM* Rakarfa
P IH 4-M
K4MP O il
IIP A NMrPw tin
m I
MkM N ip t pFcklMf MifNllNr. At*y 89-69; Jamie Benton hit for 17
Carptaa O S
»
N » PA-S
P. T a m IM S
M I
points as Boston College dropped
M w k r OH
SI
4 AM Fata III II
1P4 P
Wii B n u pm Abb Mata*
W N ta Vkpi (in
m I. I r m a Tart* (1411
HAW
McQpa* FNriMi m ^ N c r m lP t w a New Hampshire 78-55; Larry
L OHMata 041
IPP N IrrV t-t MM Will
IRmatUkl H I
IW n
Mlddleton'a 27 points. Including
. LanWan i m (Ml
in
tl Tcbm AAM (II)
M 14
C M -rm 1n* i s a *uaii: 11
12 consecutive field goals, pow­
. iiikata O il
la
W e-IC Rmti tf. AM
tt Artawa (II)
IN 0
•atp - RaNpaMNraad IFyMttaaa
. am Daw (HI
IIP tt UCLA W ill
IN 11
Oatl" - tipaM NrwrM Jar V k m N • ered Clemaon over Rider 101-63;
. u. jaat on
n
Hit PmimwbI 1 fvm (Navatt UUI
14 A N Im Will
N I
Apacp e a tu N m .
Minnesota topped Eastern Illi­
ia
w a n on
s II AM** wn
■ I
CMIG M a s t *
14 ON* MM OH
11N
tmm D M — NawMMattFai M&gt;NMall n o i s 8 7 - 6 9 b e h i n d J o h n
«2a»4MMam I
J II. FNrlp INN wn
Mte Bu r p ’ ' cat iRmti Lick)
cad
Nil
S h a s k y ' s 22 p o i n t s : N a t e
Aaka* (Ml
h 14 Frasa MM IN4II
11 n
11)1
WpaaN|- Nawd D M (rfckwt NMai
McMillan struck for 16 points to
Mn Baal 1 p a Am Mara
law IM)
S
II Marta* WI)
II l
lasaw lie
a
IR lalll kick) IMP
Tna Tack - Nana* Op * McWitiMw carry North Carolina State past
a Artawj -wn
ai
- * &lt;■ N * |.„
M—
fawli
PlfWt WM*e^
NW: Ry p a w l aw «a N a m
TkH
Faatkatt esack
T am pa 88-64; Penn rocked
Mciata* a BakaWaN Caadaa a «•
Gnat. Gaarpa Gaa^ta Tick. Mtdupa UM.
Oit-FaNr I rva IMakick] I H
ikt SML Naw ia prSaHM Np We OHdama INN. Taaat a* Wad vepw
Ma-Ciartan d pw M m Meta
Artaw (U1FLI - Lpad pmkack Rick Southern Cal 63-54 with Chris
lAA mi (taltfikla Nr Hw NCAA
IRmti kict) IIP
Elzey scoring 20 points; BUI
aapaa a » NwnpNN Nr T p M aw
t-aer
CM SapntM 11 p m k«M Futar
I Sutler kick) 11}
* m ek— p— tU camMaaan ky &lt;*a
INp Ry
i Plk la Aetancw NkaaaN - la* PNnawi Cra* lr*a Donovan's 20 points lifted Pro­
H laari a Caadaa Tkaatiy tuck NaMitut FaWdi Cat
andCNN Fry* a* ript atay Jin krtkNa* v i den ce o v e r N o r t h e a s t e r n
■MhlWaSMi.
NCAA a
HaKaint
NSfrinfMdlCHLI
83-66: Steve Brown's 20 points
pushed Stanford past
Callfornla-San Diego 108-69:
Wendell Owens made a pair of
free throws with eight seconds
left and Texas Tech edged Or­
and Ed Sweeney added KBI egon 69-68: Pepperdine dumped
Sessions Well Drilling clinched
singles.
a tie for the Sanford Men's Fall
Nevada-Reno 10069 on Eric
Geyser Systems erupted for 11 Wh it e 's 18 points; J o hn ny
Softball League title with a 17-2
runs In the first inning in Us win Rogers scored 24 points and Tod
rout o f Cardinal Industries
Monday night at Plnchurat Field.
in other games Monday night. over Sunnlland. Calvin Gaines Murphy 21 as Cal-Irvine beat
highlighted the rally with a Nebraska 87-80: and Colorado
Sessions ran its record to 18-2 Geyser Systems unloaded on
three-run homer while. Jeff defeated Santa Clara 101-71
while the Tim Raines Connec­ Sunnlland. 24-8. and McKee
Brake slugged a two-run shot behind 18 points apiece by Matt
tion is one game back at 17-3 Developm ent downed Brown
and Ray Mack hit a solo homer.
with one g a m e rema in ing. Boveri. 10-6.
Bullard and Scott Wilke.
McKee Development came
Sessions can clinch the title
And In Portland. Ore., there
Sessions wrapped up the vic­
back from a 6-2 deficit with eight w a s a s et bac k for m odern
Wednesday with a victory over tory early Monday with 10 runs
Thorne Land Clearing. The on 11 hits In the first inning.. runs In the bottom of the fifth. architecture. The Portland-Idaho
Key hits Included RBI doubles State game had to be shifted to
Connection needs a loss by Wlltie Harrison stroked a twoby Terry Russl, Randy Forrest Howard Hall, a 58-year-old gym.
Sessions and a victory over run triple. Chuck McMullan
and Brett VonHerbulis and an because of a leaking roof in the
Brown Boveri Electric to tic for rapped a two-run single while
RBI single by Mark Whitley.
first place.
new facility.
Ray Bowling. Don Causseaux

»

Seminole High will ho*
* soccer tripleheader with
powerful Lyman High to­
night with junior varsity
boys action starting at 4 .
varsity g irls at 6 and
varsity boys at 8 .
The jdns matchup will
be a Seminole Athletic
Conference game. Lyman
recorded a 344) record last
season in winning the 4A
state title and the Lady
Greyhounds, with all but
one player returning, are
the favorites to win it
again.

5p.m . — Indian River atSCC Women
7:30 p.m. — Florida Colfege at SCC Men

T a m e ift Pst. 1, 1

ml

- I M Cm

On*

j

Sessions Digs Closer To Title
Softball

Don Covey Sweeps,
Wins Oviedo Crown
Don Covey clinched champi­
onship the Inaugural Oviedo
Wom en's Softball League title
Monday night by sweeping a
doubleheader at the Oviedo Lit­
tle League complex.
Covey, which now stands at
11-0 with one game remaining,
downed the Tub-Master Mice,
9-3. and drubbed Nuckill'a Slick
Chicks, 10-5.
A g a i n s t the Mice, L a u r a
Morgan was 4 for 5 for Covey
white Sharon Shank, Debbie
Cl ar k. Robin Bagg et t. T.L.
Dancy and Carol Strum had two
hits each. Ruth Tempests was
the winning pitcher. Connie
W alburgcr's two hits led the
Mice.
A gain st the Click Chicks,
Morgan pounded out. two more
hits while Shank. Dancy. Strum.
Linda Lewis and Tempcsta also
added two hits. Kathleen Green
had two hits for the Slick Chirks
who were held to aix hits by
winning pitcher Jackie Rosa.
In Monday’s third game. Cigt's

B u y tiie s th e ea sy wcy.„watn
T h e P e rfo rm a n ce

Softball
Steel Belted Radial
Llteeaver XLM*

MisfUs thumped Dynamic Con­
trol. 19-9. For Cigt's. Dot Wilson
ban ged out five hits. Mary
Wilson had four while Liz Odom
and Donna Johns contributed
three apiece.
Following Covey in the stan­
dings are the Mice at 7-4. Slick
Chicks at 5-6. Cigt's at 3-7 and
Dynamic 1-10.
The season concludes Monday.
Dec. 9. On Wednesday. Dec. 11.
Covey will play the all-atars from
the remaining teams in a 7 p.m.
game. Awards for the season will
also be given out Wednesday.
In last week’s women's play,
the Tub-Master Mice swept a
doubleheader for the first time
this season. The Mice pounded
out 39 hits In the two games
which Included a 21-2 rout of
Dynamic Control and a 14-3
thrashing of Clgl's Misfits.

AS LO W AS

r

�U - t v w t m HtfiM, toward, FI.

T— May, P k . 1 ,1«t»

N «w District Lines Proposed
N ew cou n ty commlmalon
district boundary lines and
precinct changes have been
drafted by the Planning De­
partment in anticipation of a 20
percent Increase in registered
voters in Seminole County by
1990.
T h e changes were m ade
because the supervisor of elec­
tions has determined that a
maximum of 1.700 voters can
be processed at a polling facili­
ty. County Planning Director
Tony Vanderworp said.
Seventeen precincts now
have more than 1.700 regis­
tered voters and that number
will grow to 31 by 1990.
according to recent statistics
which project the population
within the five districts to grow
16 percent over the next five
years.
The planning department
requested that the county
commission approve the new
eommlsslon boundaries and
precincts which have been
drawn up at Monday's work
session.
According to Vanderworp.
the county staff has designated
20 additional precincts and
recommended changes In the

county com m ission district
boundaries. Including:
District 1 and 2 - change the
northern boundary o f precinct
SO lo Include the voters in the
City o f Winter Springs who live
north of Bear Creek, east o f
Howell Creek and south o f the
railroad and also change the
district boundary to follow the
northeastern boundary of new
precinct 50. The change would
result In a shift o f 216 people
from district one to district two.
District 3 and 4 - combine old
precinct 69 with the new pre­
c in c t 48 and re d ra w the
boundary to change the district
b o u n d a r y to f o llo w ’ th e
northern and western bound­
aries o f p recin ct 48. T h e
change would result In the shift
of 3.600 people from district
three to district four, residents
of the Springlake area,
Most of the new districts will
have 1.400 to 1,600 registered
voters in 1990. Vanderworp
said.
He said the commission will
be considering a resolution
approving the new boundary
lines and legal boundary de­
scriptions, after which polling
places would be established.
— S a ra h Nunn

Primera Makes Proposals
To City Commission Today
After a stormy confrontation
with the planning and zoning
board, representatives of the
$500 million Primera hotcl/office
development project will present
their site proposals to the Lake
Mary City Commission today at
5 p in
A representative of city plan­
ners. Camp Dresser A McKee, is
also expected lo discuss their
proposed transportation plan for
the widening o f Lake Mary
Boulevard to four lanes. Both
Seminole County planners and
the East Central Florida Re­
gional Plann ing Council In
Winter Park have recommended
widening the city's main trans­
portation artery lo handle traffic
from scheduled development
near Interstate 4 The transpor­
tation plan will become part of
the i liy's comprehensive land
use plan when adopted.
Last week Orlando developer
and tnsuranccman Glenn 11.
Martin heard Seminole County
representatives, among them
Planning and Zoning Director
Tony Vundcrwork. Public Works
D irector Larrv Sellers and

I delA l/O/rt/

...Cabins
Continued from page 1A
According to legal documents
filed in related eases In other
circuits, the state maintains the
river is classified as navigable,
and thus by definition, main­
tains it has ownership of the
islands which would legally be
considered part of the riverbed.
The state maintains it inherited
authority over the river and Its
bed from the federal government
when Florida became a state. It
also claims the federal govern­
ment inherited sovereignty over
the navigable waterway when It
purchased Florida and naviga­
tion rights from the King of
Spain. From the slate's point of
view, the cabin owners are
lute-day squatters.
fh e ta m p e rs association,
however, maintains the river
was not included in the stale of
Florida's original survey of navi­
gable rivers which would then
■ lassilv u us a meandering river.
By legal definition, the state
would then have claim to pro­
perty along the river's banks,
but not its bed and islands.
In a r e l a t e d i t e m , a
moratorium by the legislature
that expires in October prevents
the campers from seeking relief
under a 22-year-old property
title law. the Marketable Record

...C hiles
C ontinued from page 1A
early the day after surgery to
have coffee with them, but In
fb ile s ' ease, he doesn't drink
coffee so they had tea.
Moor said after M onday's
nearly four-hour operation that
t Jules. 55. came through in good
shape and Is expected to return

County E ngineer J e rry M c­
Collum. state that they might
have to donate up to $7.5 million
in p rop erty for a proposed
"c lo v c r le a f" Interchange on
Lake Mary Boulevard. The 815
to S20 million Interchange is to
be a part o f the proposed
w id en in g o f the b o u le v a rd
expected to take place before the
year 2000.
City Manager Kathy Rice said
she expected Prim era repre­
sentative Dean Hall to be on
hand for the "w orkshop" meet­
ing and that issues discussed at
the P&amp;Z meeting concerning the
construction development order
will be dealt with In the meeting
at city hall.
"The city Is responsible for
seeing that adequate provisions
are made for transportation and
that ordinaces governing the
development order and zoning
are carried out." Ms. Rice said.
"It is not Just Primera that will
he affected by that clovcrleaf but
also other property owners on
the south side of Lake Mary
Boulevard." she said.

Title Act. Under that act. the
courts have denied the state's
claim to certain waterways that
were not classified as navigable
in old surveys.
Goble said cabin owners help
the river more than harm it
because they pick up after
boaters and canoeists. Clean-up
days along the shallow river by
The Friends of the Weklva have
produced tons of debris, mostly
beer cans. Goble said slate
officials are being pushed into
eviction action by people jealous
of the campers and by those who
want lo develop the area as a
real estate venture.
Put H arden, p resid en t o f
Friends of the Wckiva. a group
that Serves us a watchdog over
tf.e river regaiding nearby dev­
elopment and pollution, said the
battle of the campers against the
state puts the Friends In an
awkward position.
She said the campers and the
Friends have been allies in past
projects to protect the river. But.
she said, the Friends also un­
derstand the state's effort to
evict the campers.
She said it is a skirmish in
which the Friends probably will
not gel Involved.
The case has been assigned lo
Circuit Judge C. Vernon Mize Jr.
No hearing date has been set.
Jones could not be reached
today for comment.

to a normal, active life.
"I don't think he should do
any skydiving In the next couple
months but other than that, he
should return to a normal, active
life." Moor said.
Moor was assisted by Dr. Peter
Graper and Dr. John Vcrner.
Chiles' family physician.
Chiles was visited in the In­
tensive care unit at Lakeland
Regional Medical Center Monday
by his son Lawton and later by
his wife Rhea.

STOCKS
These quotations provided by members ol
trie national Association ot Securities Dealers
are representatlye Inter dealer prices as ol
mid morning today. Inter dealar markets
change throughout the day Prices do not
Include retail mark up/markdown.
BM Aik
American Pioneer SAL.................jvs
B«rntH Bank.......... .— ........... JtH Ok*
First Union?............................44W 44V*
Florida Power

A Light................................... 24'» »
Fla. Prograss............................. 21’. 21' i
Fracdom Savings........................ 10*. Ill*
HCA......................................... 33H 33t»
Hugh** Supply............................. 23W 24
Morrison's..................................It*# II*.
NCR Corp...................................34!* 27
PIassay.........................................U 2Hi
Scotty's.............;......................13W 13*.
Souths#*! Bonk........................... 34H 36».
SunTrust....................................3*H J*V»

Com m jsslom m Split O n Issue

Security: How Much Is Too Much
&gt; y S arah fhuui
Haraltf S ta ff W rit e r

Seminole County Commissioners dis­
agreed over a proposal to beef up security at
the county courthouse during their work
session Monday.
The shcrlfTs department Is asking the
commission to consider implementing a
8100.000 security program, according to
Deputy County Adm inistrator Richard
George.
The county would Install three metal
detectors at a cost of 815.000 as the next
step toward cnchanclng security at the
courthouse. George said.
Just two months ago, the county funded
positions for four new bailiffs lo monitor
courthouse visitors at the front tobby
entrances using hand-held mcial detectors.
Now. concern for security at the court­
house annex, and the possibility that the
county may have to hire more security
personnel, has prompted the- shcrlfTs de­
partment to request that other security
measures be taken at the building. George
said.
The entire "security package" would

include installation o f video monitors, metal
detectora and silent alarms in the court­
rooms and money collection locations, he
said.
Initially, the county would spend 85,000
apiece for three walk-thru metal detectors at
the lobby entrances and annex door. George
said. Tw o of the devices would be paid for
with courthouse facility fees and the other
by the shcrlfTs department, he said.
The commission Instructed county staff to
look Into the matter further, with Commis­
sioners BUI KlrchhofT. Fred Streetman and
Bob Sturm asking that neighboring counties
be polled on how they handle courthouse
security.
C o m m is s io n e rs S a n d ra G len n and
Barbara Christensen said they approved of
the plan, but the other three commissioners
questioned the need for added security at
the building.
KlrchhofT said he sees a conflict between
security and the public's right to enter a
building paid for by tax dollars.
Calling the proposed Installation of metal
detectors "overreaction to a situation." he
said."we don't need to spend the taxpayers

m oney on something that Is an insult to'
taxpayers."
* 'This Is the public's building and to say.
th« -y can't enter the building unless they go!
through (a deteciorjls too much security.',
Y ou can't slop someone who Is determined
to &lt;lo swnethlng.and I think we need to look
at t his very carefully before we spend a lot o f
m oney.” KlrchhofTsaid.
S-iurm said he feels while the county
needs "a good, basic security system, we
m a y b e reaching the point of overkill."
Likening Increased security to the "B ig
Brot her" syndrome. Streetman said. " I
don t think the courthouse Is in any more
jeop ardv than arc other public buildings."
Commissioner Glenn, however, said she
favors increasing courthouse security, say­
ing i he cost of Installing the detectors would
be ti .*5s than hiring more balllfTs at the
conn;house entrances.
" T he public pays for the right lo enter and
a lot of other things but they also have to
abide-by the rules." she said.
Fiv c people have been arrested on charges
of coi wealed weapons and Illegal drugs since
Oct. I . when the new security measures took
affect

516 Unvaccinated Students Expelled
With one confirmed case of
'seven day-hard red' measles at
Lake Howell High and another
undiagnosed case at Seminole
High, public school officials In
Seminole County expelled 516
unvaccinated students Monday.
The students were from 21 of
the county's 41 schools.
The students will not be able
to attend classes until they have
medical verification that they
have been vaccinated.
Karen Coleman, public In­
formation director for the school
system; said parents have been
sent letters Instructing them of
the serious consequences of the
contagious disease and Dr. Jorge
Deju. the county health director,
has ordered that the two public
health units be kepi open for an
extended time.
Ms. Coleman said the Sanford
office at 240 W. Airport Blvd.

...Delay
C ontinued fro m page 1A

phase-ln 3.5-million gallons of
dally sewage treatment capacity
for Heathrow’ during the next 20
years.
Early this afternoon. Faison.
Mayor Smith and City Utilities
Director Paul Moore were to give
d e p o s itio n s to P o p e 's and
Pauluccl's attorneys. Faison said
the city officials were to be
accompanied by a cartful of
engineering and administrative
reports that were also subpoe­
naed.
The depositions were to be
given at the Sanford law office of
Mack Cleveland, whom Faison
described as "th e man who
wanted lo settle the case with

and the Longwood office at
W. Church will be open from
Monday through F rid ay
students to receive the
munization.

174
6-5
for
Im ­

She said most of the students
refused ad m ittan ce M onday
were from the county's six high
schools as they are the largest
schools In the system.
On October 15. an outbreak of
mcaslcsat the "K ids W orld" day
care cen ter In C a s se lb e rry
prompted Dr. Deju and Superin­
tendent of Schools Bob Hughes
to conduct a computer health
record check o f the school dis­
trict's more than 41,000 stu­
dents. Dr. Deju determined that
some students might not have
been g iv e n Im m u n iz a tio n s
because of religious preferences,
because they were new lo the

d ip lo m a c y " In referer&gt;ce lo
C leveland's having said last
month he wanted to negotiate
with both sides to keep the suit
from having to reach court.

area or because of medical p ro ­
blems.
At that time Dr. Deju Issued a
directive giving parents 30 days
to produce an Immunlzatln n
certification from their doctors
showing they have been p ro ­
p e r ly Im m u n ized . He s a id
children without shot records
would then be given an addi tional 21 days tp produce their
certificates or be suspended from
classes until they received their
shots.
That period ran out Nov. 27.
Mrs. Coleman said, and school
board officials were busy last
week malting letters to the more
than 4.400 parents involved
advising them of the situation.
Dr. Deju said 136 school
children were immunized at the
Longwood facility Monday and
12 at the Sanford clinic were
given shots. As o f 11 a.m. today
49 students at Longwood and 19
children at Sanford had visited
that facility. Deju also said some
additional staff members from
the tuberculosis testing unit
were called In to assist staff at
the clinics.

...Beggs
Continued from p age 1A

contracts, t he allegations have prompted at least
eight federal Investigations.
Earlier this year. Weinberger withheld millions
of dollars from the company pending an audit of
Its billing practices. The company also was fined
$676,283 for giving gratuities to retired Adm.
Hyman G. Rlckover and there arc allegations it
covered up massive cost overruns on nuclear
submarines. The FBI still Is Investigating man­
agement procedures dating to the 1970s.
In the 1984 fiscal year. General Dynamics
ranked third among contractors with 86 billion In

It proposed that the centers
accommodate the tastes and
Interests of all residents by
Continued fro m puge I A
offering a spectrum of sports and
room
for everyone," Mayor cultural activities.
For Sanford's older popula­
Bettye Smith In support of the
tion. the committee requested
committee's proposal.
The group also suggested a the city pursue grants as a
system of five neighborhood means of opening a center that
community centers, at locations would provide a v a riety of
enabling easy accessibility to all leisure activities and health
the city's residents. The city has services.
The youth advisory board
a lakefront center and one on
Persimmon Avenue. It recom­ would also like to sec an ar­
mended the city work with the rangement made for evening
Salvation Arm y to open the a n d w e e k e n d u s e o f th e
orgar.lzaton’s 24th Street facility S e m i n o l e H i g h S c h o o l
to the com m unity and also gymnsalum. City commissioners
locate recreation centers In the said they will discuss the pro­
southeast and southwest quad­ posal when they conduct a
Joint-meeting with the Seminole
rants of the city.

"W e had one confirmed case of
'seven day-hard red' measles at
Lake Howell High (In Winter
P a r k ) y e s t e r d a y a n d oneclinically unconfirmed case at
Seminole High In Sanford." Mm.
Coleman said.
"W e are treating this very
seriously because this Is such a
contagious disease and It is the
most serious of all childhood
diseases because it can lead to
encephalitis (a brain Inflamma­
tion). mental retardation or even
death." she said. "I think these
p aren ts a r e n 't ta k in g this'
seriously enough because they
under estimate the severity of
this disease and because having,
measles is not that unusual for
adults." Mrs. Coleman said.
•

"W e are very anxious for every
one of these kids to get their
records updated and to get back
In school. I would urge these,
parents to have either a private?
physician o r county health
doctors examine their chlldrerf
i tnd allow them lo return ttf
&lt; ’lasses." Mrs. Coleman said.
—J im Baorls

Pentagon business .
Also Indicted wit. h Beggs were:
• Ralph Hawes Jr.. 54. o f Claremont. Calif.,
formerly corporate ■ vice president and general
manager of the fir m’s Pomona. Calif., division.;
and now corporatt • vice president and general
manager of the flrn Ts Valley Systems Division In
Cucamonga. Calif.
• David McPhcrs on. 45. of Alta Loma. Calif.,
who was program director for the DIVAD project
at the Pomona Divt: don. and is currently a vice
president for rcscarct 1 1nCucamonga.
• James Hansen. 53. of Upland. Calif., who
was assistant progr; im director for the DIVAD
project, and now directs the company’s Stinger
missile program.

C o u n ty S c h o o l Board next
month.
An umbrella recreation com­
mittee is proposed by the group
as a means o f coordinating the
city’s myriad o f recreation offer­
ings. The group would meet
twice a year and address filling
In gaps when recreation activi­
ties are lacking as w ell as
avoiding duplication of services.
Committee membership would
involve reprcscnrtatlves from
organizations such as the San­
ford recreation department, local
churches, the Salvation Army
and youth althetlc programs.
Supervision for the commit­
tee’s ambitious recreation pro­
posals would be by Increased
professional and volunteer staff.

Sufflc lent professional staffing
could be provided by tapping the
city's own talent lo run athletic
and ci dural programs, according
to the group. Also, an organized
volunt) ?cr program would pro­
vide personnel to enable the
propoM cd y o u th c e n te r s to
operate six days and evenings a
week.
The r eport was hailed by the
city con imission for not only its
detail, but the fact that the
young p eople had considered the
needs at id Interests of the entire
commur illy. The Youth Advisory
Cnmmitt ce was chartered by the
com miss inn In August and Is
coordinal ed by Seminole High
S c h o o l A s s is ta n t P r in c ip a l
Bobby Lit ndquist.

Friar's Circle, Lake Mary, died
S u n d ay at South S em in ole
Community Hospital.
Longwood. Born June 28. 1920
W IL L IE M A E M A S O N
in Macon. Ga.. he moved to Lake
Mrs. Willie Mae Mason. 50. of Mary from Jacksonville In 1984.
120 N. Country Club Road. Lake He was minister and elder of
Mary, died Friday at her resi­ Neighborhood Alliance Church.
dence. Born Nov. 26. 1935 In He was a member of several
Alabama, she moved to Lake Lions clubs and past president of
Mary from Sanford earlier this the Lake County Lions Club,
year. She was an assembler for ministerial member of Christian
an ecology company.
a n d M is s io n a r y A llia n c e
S u r v iv o r s in c lu d e t h r e e Association.
daughters, Virginia Coleman.
Survivors Include his wife.
DeBary. Donna Soils, Fcllsmere, Edna Hall; sons, the Rev. Rich­
Brenda Morales. Sanford; four ard Leon. Java. Indonesia, Philip
brothers. J.P. and Pat Morgan, Lawrence. Lake Mary; daughter.
both of Sebastian. Sam Morgan. M arilyn Drummond Shields,
Chlchamunga, Va., and Jim my Longwood; brother. James W..
Morgan. Falmouth. Va.; five sis­ Detroit; sister, Marie Drummond
ters, Geneva Slmcs, Barbara C a r r o l l . C a l l a h a n ; e i g h t
Rihermlre. Velma Heats, all o f
S e b a s tia n . Su e B oh a n n o n .
Ftawet^Sctn^ftttfrLov^
Wabasso. Kathleen Stone. San­
ford.
G ra m k o w F u n e ra l H om e.
Sanford. Is In charge o f ar­
rangements.

grandchild, ren.
Baldwin -F airch ild F u n eral
Home. Alta monte Springs. Is in
charge of ar rangaments.

...Pool

AREA DEATHS
S Y L V E S T E R TH O M AS

Mr. Sylvester Thomas. 56. of
1436 U.S. Highway 441, Mount
Dora, died Saturday at Chat­
tahoochee. Born March 29. 1929
In Sanford, he moved to Mount
Dora from Sanford In 1950. He
was a retired laborer and a
Baptist.
Survivors Include his two sis­
ters. Mattie S. Jackson. Alta­
monte Springs, and Katherine
Boles. Mount Dora.
Marvin C. Zanders, Apopka, Is
In charge of arrangments.
A L L A N C. TEDDER
Mr. Allan C. Tedder. 39. 1701
W. Carlton St,. Longwood. died
Sunday In Lake Mary in an
automobile accident. Born Sept.
19. 1946 In Tallahassee, he
moved to Longwood from there
In 1974. He was a car dealership
manager and a member of First
Baptist Church. Tallahassee.
Survivors include his wife
S h e r y l: d a u g h te r . L au ren .
L o n g w o o d ; s o n . B ra n d o n .
Longwood; parents. Mr. and Mrs.
W. Curtis, Tallhassee; brother,
Samuel C. Tallhassee; sister.

Rebecca Ray. Tallahassee.
B ald w ln -F alrch lld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is In
charge of arrangements.

G R E G O R Y A. FRAKER

Mr. Grego ry A. Frakcr. 27. of
1626 N. A tlantlc Drive. Alta­
monte Sprlr igs. died Sunday in
Lake Mary . is the result o f an
automobile i iccldcnt. Born Nov.
17. 1958. In Vincennes. Ind„ he
moved to Al tamonte from Fort
Branch. Ind.. last year. He was a
truck driver.
Survivors lr iclude his parents,Mr. and Mrs. f tobert Fraker, Fort'
Branch; broth er Gary; maternal
and paternal g Tandparents all of
Fort Branch.
G ram k ow F u n eral H om e.
Sanford. Is It i charge o f ar­
rangements.

(Eolltna

mmms

IV E Y L . D R U M M O N D

Mr. Ivey Leon Drummond, 65.

g

, r &gt;

3 2 3 -1 2 8 4

t

�/ 5

^

; %' V

f
*

Mayor Smith Initiated
As Member O f Alpha Nu
Chapter, Alpha Delta Kappa

'

Mayor Bettye Smith was Initi­
ated as an honorary member
Into Alpha Nu Chapter o f Alpha
Delta Kappa, honorary teacher's
sorority, during the November
meeting at the home of Mary E.
Dunn In Casselberry. The cere­
mony was conducted by Hazel
Madden, vice-president, and
members Barbara Vincent. Beth
Whlgham. and Geneva Cochran.

(l

Alpha Delta Kappa chapters
arc limited to two honorary
members each and Mayor Smith
is the first to be so honored by
Alpah Nu Chapter In the twenty
six years since It was formed.
Honorary members are approved
at the stale and national levels
on the basis of. outstanding
contributions to the Helds of
education, the sciences, the
humanities, the arts, and to the
community.
Mayor Smith, although not a
career educator, has contributed
slgnlHcantly to the field o f edu­
cation at both the college and
community level. Her contribu­
tions to community Improve­
m en t and e n r ic h m e n t arc
extensive and Impressive. Fol­
lowing the initiation ceremony,
she was welcomed by the vicepresident and other members of
I he chapter.
The regular business meeting
was followed by a social hour
during which refreshments were
served by the hostess.
A d m ira l R ic h a rd F o w le r.

Klmm It pictured with the Homecoming Chief, Andrew Diaz,
of Tampa, Fla.

M itt Kimm Lisle Crowned
FSU Homecoming Queen
MIkh Klmm Lisle, daughter nr
Jerry and Evnn Lisle of Alta­
monte Springs, was erowned
homecoming queen ut Florida
State University on Nov. 16.
Klmm is a 1982 graduate of
Lake Brantley High Sehnol. She
is now a senior al Florida Stale.

majoring In final tee. Klmm is the
president nr the Delta Gamma
Sorority as well as Omieron
D elta K appa, th e N a lion u l
Seholnstte Honorary.
Miss Lisle will graduate cum
laildc from FSU tills December.

TONIGHT'S TV
T U E S M fl

6;00

® ($ e ® e w w 8
(3f)JEFFtA40 NS

8

(M| MACNEIL / LEHRER

ncwshour

)(f&gt; HARPY DAYSLOAM

6*5

4XAM0Y0NFOTH

Manfred von wenthoten. more
commonly known aa tha Rad
Baron, it studwd from hit chddhood lo tea controvararal iaal doghght

10*0

•
® REMINGTON STEELE
Staate and a lormar collaagua
(Richard Lawton) loam up to hnd
out who a trying to maka it appear
sail achant isdaad
® •
SPENSER: FOR HME
Spanaar coma* to tha aid ot a tormar proahluta who a Doing Iranted
on a woapona-poaaaaaron charga

6:30

I ■Aacm m g
CSMO M M
■ cm m m

a t) too close for COM­
PORTAn ctd ktentf «tti a pandwnt
tor practical pfcaa tala Marry up
■rlh a gorgeous blonde to a ratlauranl
■ (SILAVERNE« SHIRLEY
8:35
O CAROL BURNETT AND
FRKNOS
a760
■ ® | 1Q0jMf PVRAMK)

TIRNATE VKW OP CHANGE "Vaatarday. Tomorrow And You" Jamaa
Surka Stostratea common tactora
caualng technologKal changa at ddtoranl timaa and m dtflarant places.

10:30

(UKMIBOBNEWHART

11*0

■ ( 10) OCCRETS OP A OMERT
MA A took at tharangaol Rah, low)
and mammala MiaMng ma Daaart
Saa. located batiaaan mainland
Mauce andthaBata Panmaula.
■ M|CARSON'S COMEDYCUBSCO Guam Robart Blaha. Joan
Embary. JackWabb.

■ ® TOMOHT Octet! boat; Joan
Rivara Schaduted: Brtgnta Nwiaon.
Tom Jonaa. Patar Falk
® ■ WKRP M CMCMNATI
0 O ABC NEWS WGHTUNE
(ft (M) HAWAA FTVE-0
■ (f) TWILIGHT ZONE

7:30

■ ® ENTERTAMMENT TONNMT
intarvtewwithChevy Chaaa.
® B PACE IBRIGHT
® B WHEELOFFORTUNE
Ot) LITTLE ORUMMER BOV
Arimatad a klnd-haartad drummar
boy » datarmmad to hnd a ball
maker's savor canaona that have
baanrapoaaaaaad bylaa co-clots
Voicaa: Zero Uoatei. Graar Oartor
■ (f) ALL INTHEFAMILY

7:35

qsanporoanobon

8*0

■ ® A-TEAMThaA-Taamtrlaato
pravant larronata trom kidnapping
an attractrva rock alar (ValarM Stavanton) :j
® ■ RUDOLPH THE REDNOBEO REMOEER Tha datwc
Yutetida mutica) About a ramdaar
who it rMkcutod by Ins ChristmasvtBa paart bacauta ha hat a shiny
no— Songa include Iha titla tuna.
"Hotly Jody Christmas" and "Sdvar
andOotd." (R)
• HERTOMORROWS
(9f ) PM0 CCHN7S CHAMTMAB
Tha trua moaning ot Chriatmaa
sterwa through lor Pinocchlo whan
ha trlaa to aarn monay tor Qapatlo'a gift
■ ( 10) NOVA Tha carponlsrt, maaona. waawart and angmaara ol tha
animal world ara obaarvad at work.

8

Si (t) MOVIE "Conrach" ( 1974)
Jon Voight, Paul Win—Id A white
achoottaachar atrugglaa to bring
teaming to a group at knpovartanad
black duldraninSouthCarolina

8.-06
O MOW "Mtrada On 34th
Straat" ( 1t 47) Mauraan O'Hara
John Payne. An old man ranted
Krts Krlngla w Nrad by MacVa to
play Santa Ctaua In iha ThanfcsghrIngDayparada.

6*0

• ® RPTBE Tha ftpttda boya
taka on a countertwtmg caaa m-

fOWnfl 1 (nOOwFVOI)l WODsn nOOu

(Q WORLDAT LARGE(FRO

6:30

■ (D THIS WEEK M COUNTRY

® ® 9 ® 0 N n n
(31) APCHW BUNKER'S PLACE
(Ml DAVEALLEN AT LAME
(SIMOHT GALLERY

11:30

80

COMEDY BREAK
(l)ST.JUOE

12:20
8J MOVIE "Tha Gotdan Hawk”
( 1952) Rhonda flaming. Starting
Haydan

12:30

■ ® LATE NMHT WITH 0 AV»
LETTERMAN FromJuno 1995 Don
Johnion. comadian Gaorga Mi—r

(RI

® O MOW "Tha River a Edga"
( 19S7) Ray Millard. Anlhory Quinn
(ID(Ml CHICOAN0 THEMAN

1:00

1:10

® O MCCOY McCoy bait* a trap
lor crookad fund-raisers (R)

1:30

(ID p f) ECTV Skatchaa Maroarat
Thatcher (OHars) and Tip O'NsM
(Candy) ara guatts on "Highttlna
Malonvrile"; a parody ol soanceAction Mma ol lha 1950a

2*0

0 O MOW "Traaaura 01.Ruby
Hina" (1955) Zachary Scott, Carole
Matfwwa.

JDPHOUNSMOKE

2*6

O

MOW "Caaaar Tha Con­

queror" ( 1990) Cameron Mrtchal.
DomlnlquaWilma.
® ® NEWS

2*0

3*0

(Walter OikwwtcD.
® • CBS NEWSMQHfWATCH
® ■ mem WAR After Jarwy Om CM OOM O
(Oyan Cannon) narrowly avoids dte3‘20
cowry oy mi Nim. mo t rcuruioa
wNh har aon and lhay'ra amuggted ffl ■ MOW "Marty Ma Again"
out ol tha POWcamp withGaalapo (tS53) ManeWllaon. Robart Cumnv
cteaf Main (Robart Hardy) only a Inga.
Mapbaltind lltamaa may(tea to tha
Oarmanbordar. (Pari 3 ot 2)
1*0
MOOMUBHTfBI Raprioo el (UPS) I LOVELUCY
®
won pramtera- Oavtd'a wfd4*0
and-craiy brother arm— In town
(DPDBnHTM ENOUGH
..............Mb lor Maddte.

4*5
&amp; Ot) BKLV GRAHAMCRUSADE OWORU)ATUUMt
4*0
&amp; (If) THE BB&gt; BARON Tha
—taxing Wo ol Oarman tighter dm (O BETSMART

12*6
12*0

0*0

HPORT
YOUNG AND THE RBBT-

■CNEWG
CBS EARLY MORNBIO
' ■ EYEWTTNESBDAYBREAK
(M)QOOODAYI
NEWS
(f) BATMAN

6*0

■ ®WWB
® » CBS EARLY MORNBIO
® ■ ABCS WORLD NEWt THM
MORMNOg
PS) TOMANOJERRY
(BFUNTME
■ PISUPCRPRMNOt

5:45

S

O CYCWITNCSBDAYBREAK
( 101AM. WEATHER
)TOOAY

7*0

i

pstauoc
( 10) FARMDAY

P) V0 LTR0 N. DEFEN0 ER OP
THEUNIVERSE

7:15

■ (to) AM. WEATHER

7:30

XD^M) CHALLENGE OP THE

S

LOVMG

n

WHATS HOT) WHArt

1*0

■ ® DAVSOPOURUV1 S
® O

a llm y c h a d r en

81 (M) OCX VANDYKE
• ( 10|ONSTAGSAT WOLF TRAP
■ | 10)WADAMBNCA{TUE)
■ ( 10) NATURE(WED)
■ (IS) NOVA(THU)
■ ( 10) SKRITS OP A DESERT
SCA(FW)
■ (f) MOW
QMOW

I GOODMOANMQ AMERCA

( 10) SESAMESTREET(R)g
(f)ROGOTECH

7:35

1*0

® ■ AS THEWORLD1URNB
QPOGOMERPVLX
• ( 10) EPTER ADRMNe THE
MOTHER TERESA OF SCRANTON
(TUE)

2*0

ANOTHERWORLD
ONI UFETOLIVE
JANOYQFJFFTTH
(10) INNOVATION(MON)
I ( 10) GREAT CHEFS OP CHCA&gt;(TUE)

8

(10)

8:05

8 2 1DREAMOP JCANNK

8:30

iJT) (34) FUNT8T0NE3
■ (tt) MMTERROGERS(R)
0 (S) FATALBERT

6:35

) KATHY'SKITCHEN(THU)
_ ( 10) FIORNM HOME GROWN
® •CAPTTOL
at (36) GREATSPACECOASTER
■ ( 10) MORE MAGIC MCTH00 G
M0 R. (MON)
(H7) JOYOFPAMTINGfTUE)
(10) MAGC OP OK. PAMONG
(WED)
B ( 10) MAGC OP WATEROOLORSfTHU)
■ ( 10) PAJNTMO WITH KONA
(FW)

8

12 BEWITCHED

9*0

) DIVORCECOURT
IDONAHUC
I TICTACDOUGH
) WALTONS

lift SESAMESTREET(Rtg
|BRADYBUNCH

9:05

9*5

8 2 1LOVELUCY
1 0 *0
}® YOURHUMBERTSUP
) •HOUflMMAZMi
B ) BIGVALLEY ■
0 SIDJCTNC COMPANY(R)

[Si
Insii

I MOW

Local K mart manager. Jim
Walker. Is busy preparing the
store for a "seniors on ly" shop­
ping spree to be held on Dec. 7.
from 8-10 a.m. The store is
loeated at 3101 Hwy. 17-92.
Sanford.
The store will provide senior
citizens with special customer
services, such as:
•Frrc gift wrapping
• Mailing services
'H oliday door prize (850 gift
certificate)
•Seating in an o|&gt;rn area Inside

I he store
•Gilt suggestion center located
ai the servIre desk
•Special shopping hours from
8-10n.ni.
S a y s K m art C h a irm a n .
Bernard M. Fauber. "For over 23
years. K marl has grown up with
senior citizens. These people are
special lo us. Many or them have
helped make K mart what It Is
loday-lhc place where American
families shop. This is our way of
thanking them Idr coming bark
to K m art."

Mother-In-Law Pressed To Be
Baby Sitter As Well As Nurse
D B A S A B B Y : Several months
ago. our 59-year-old mothcr-ln*
law had lo quit her Job to stay
hom e and ca re for ou r fa­
ther-in-law. who had a massive
stroke that left him iD ta lly help­
less. They have six married sons
and 11 grandchildren — the
youngest ts 4 months old and
I lie oldest is 10 years old.
The folks are on a limited
budget, so all the sons must help
nut financially. Wc wives don't
care for Pop because he has no
control over his bowels or kid­
neys. and wc do not feel like that
is a Job for a daughler-ln-law. We
are also very busy with our own
lam Hies.
We don't mind our husbands
h e lp in g th eir parents with
m oney, but w e think Mom
should repay the favor by keep­
ing our kids every weekend. It
would give each one of us a
"vacation" from our kids every
six weeks. Our husbands don't
think their mother should be
obligated to baby-sit. but we do.
After all. wc are obligated to give
them 820 a month. What do you
think?

are a sexually tra n s m itte d d is­
ease with an Incubation period of
about 15 years, al which time
they becom e an a c u te
r e p h a la lg la (head a c h e ), a
rervlcal strain (pain In the neck)
and a maximal pain in the
gluteus maxlmus (butt). And like
herpes they can be forever.
D.O. D f OHIO
D E A R D.O.: Please be careful!

every weekend.
D E A R A B B Y : I am a sailor In

(he U.S. Navy and an avid reader
of your column. A few weeks
ago. "Kathryn in Rock Island.
III." w rote that pedestrians
should walk facing lraffle, and
asked If you would mcnilon It In
your column. You wrote back
and told her that in ease pedesirlans didn't know It. they were
supposed to walk on the left side
of the road.
Well. Abby. Stars and Stripes
is the paper where I read your
column, and where I am sta­
tioned wc would be walking on
the right side to be facing traffic.
Sorrv to be so plckv! Sign m e ...

Heaven help the child acciden­
tally conceived by your care­
lessness.
D E A R A B B Y : My friends and
I have a question that only you
an answer. When you catch a
bouquet at a wedding and the
marriage ends in divorce, are
you still going tn be the next to
lx* wed?
J U S T W O ND ER ING
D E A R W O N D E R IN G : The
catcher has no guarantee that
she will be the next to wed
regardless of how the marriage I urns out.

P IC K Y IN J A P A N
D E A R PIC K Y: I would say
that overlooking the fact that
I raffle flows In the opposite
d ir e c tio n in m an y fo r e ig n
eouniries is a monumental gooL
Others wrote to remind me. Mca
culpa.

D E A R
D O T !
Y o u r
nmthcr-ln-law already has her
hands full earing fur her Invalid
husband, and to expect her to
baby-sit every weekend ts the
height of insensitivity. If you
D E A R A B B Y : After
daughtcrs-ln-law need a vacation experimenting with parenthood
from your kids, take turns look­ for almost 40 years, I have come
ing after each other’s children lo lhe conclusion that children

PORKY’S KEVENg

8

MAYOR FOR A DAY / THE

s i n THE STARS WENT OUT

8%I THE MAGtCSHOP /C0N-

CRETE! RAM(PRO

3*6
82 BUGS GUNNY AllD PRMNDG
3*0
8J (S I) JAVCS AND THE

WEDNESDAY
FAMILY SPECIAL

COUPON

Eight Piece
Thrift Peck

Three Piece Chicken
Dinner

mto—■&gt;Ftewi tine** Cm
M M Me N«*» •• « •

iPIMASJC

4*0

RCAWION. WEDI STREET(TUB
M STROKES
I (MON, TIN.

10*6
® SALIOPTHECOITUNV
110) 3^-1 CONTACTg
PI OOOCOUPLE

4*6

||sM«An

1 1 *0

(Hwy. 17-41)

SANFORD
MS Preneh A*
(Hwy. 17-SE)

82PUNTBTOMS

■t£BCRABGLf

SANFORD
ISOS PtessN Am .

iSSffiU

l® «
)• «
!

$6*1

ERCATGg

11*0

m

K mart To Hold Senior
Citizen Shopping Spree

3:00

10*0

!

B e g in n in g Jan . 7. 1986.
Seminole Community College
will offer a Nursing Assistant
course leading to state certifica­
tion.
Classes will be held Monday
through Friday. 8 a m. to 3 p.m..
for eight weeks. Cost or the
course Is $80.
Nursing Assistants In Florida
are now required to be certified
by the Department of Education.
To register, go to the Ad­
m ission s O ffic e In the A d ­
ministration Building. For more
Information, call extension 282
at 323-1450. from O rlando
843-7001.

Beverly Huffman, right, President of the Junior Woman's
Club of Sanford, Inc., presents a check for (200 to Rosalie
AAorace, left, a member of the Seminole County YWCA Board
of Directors. The check Is earmarked for their building fund.
The YMCA hopes to begin construction of their facility early
In 1986.

EANTAIARGARA
GUONG LIGHT
GENERALHOGPTTAL
1SS)SCOOGVDOO
(WIFLONOABTYLI
(S) THE LAST LAUGH / THE
I MUSTGOON(MON)
■ (f) THE FOREST OP MMFOATUNE/THEMAGC IKRNOR(TUE)
i DAYDREAMS / RUNAWAY

9:30

■ ® LOVECONNECTION
0 O JOKER'SWAD
■ P) MYTHREESONS

SCC Offers
Nurse Course

D O T IN G E O R G IA

2*0

B (S) HCATHCUFF

82 hazel

1*5

(PRO

82 FUNTST0 NES
8*0
3 C(35) JETSONS

(ID (M) BIZARRE Skatchaa tha

Church ol Punk, an intarvtew with
Sirhan Suhan. tha hitura Johnny
Carton, thaRav TV Seawall
■ (ft MOVIE "Tha Unfimahad
Danes' ( 1947) Margarat O Brian.
Danny Thomaa

110) MYSTERY!(WBN
l (M) ALL CREATURES 1
P SMALL(THU)
I ( 10) WONDERWORKS(FI
inirSAORUTUPB

5:50

12:00

® O SIMONA SIMON Tha Simon
brottwu mvaatigata whan an i—aionitr (Donald O'Connor) la
accuaad of murdaring a rival magicianjfl)

THEATRE

O WORLDAT LARGE(TUQ

!

M e m b ers p re s e n t w e re :
Marcella Brandcbarry. Geneva
Cochran. Mary E. Dunn. Hazel
Flynt. Faye Gaines. Elizabeth
Gallant. Mary Grace Kosky. Kay
Lee. Hazel Madden. Kate Nash.
Marlon Nichols. Helen Richey.
Blanche Rucker. Belle Rumbley.
Marie Stumpf. Barbara Vincent.
Beth Whlgham. Lorraine Whit­
ing. and Elols Wilkins.

1 2 *0

5*5

10:05
O NBA BASKETBALL Chicago
Buka at Sacramanto Kmga (Uva)

i

7:05

5*0

® V THESAINT
(fp (Ml NEWS
f l GETSMART(MON)
BOSNSWHART(WED. THU)

img
■ (SIROCKFOROFILES

® • PM MAOAZME Lorn*
Oraana and Wdiaal Larvtor. how
exercise heioed a ■ofna'i recover
fromaw n acodonl mpjrwa.

82 MARY TYLERMOORE

i

Bf ALL-STARBUTZ
(WIFLOMOASTnE
P)AU ABOUTUS

vice-president of Friends o f th e’
St. Johns. Inc., was the speaker
o f the evening. He gave a very
comprehensive and graphic slide
presentation showing the pres­
ent deplorable condition of the
St. Johns River. Hr told mem­
bers that the goal of the Friends
o f the St. Johns Is to alert
residents tn the vicinity o f the St.
Johns to the current pollution
problems of the river and to
make them aware of what Is
being accomplished and what
remains to be accomplished to
save this natural resource.

41 N. Hwy. 17-SJ
•31-4111

4*0

®BTH RBG COMPANY
(D w

t r a n b o iB

rb

i

41 N. Hwy. 17-41
•314111

�II

■ «*•■»' M

T— iO y , 0* . I, \m

I M g l g H w M , HaMri, Ft.

I I

h

RADIATOR
{" S W
B f U a

*

1 DAY H R W C E k m )

Ul-1741

BEST PR IC K S Ilf

fit Hit

mi

HUT. 17-92

Evening Hendd

Cott 322-2611 Howl
• put

root lasMiss on tni row

H c s a ld A d v e r tis e r

$ugge£ki
A

Experts In Auto
And Marine Paint,
Body Work Specialists.

Bicycle

••A Frofeeelonel Bike Shop”
One D ay S ervice A v a ila b le On
R epairs. W e 8*11 A ccesso ries
FREE P ic k e p s a d D elivery.

HWY. 17-12 (Next To Banwl! Bank)

322.3424

i Fair Airie l

M O O l FRIRCH AVI.

• F U R N IT U R E * B O A T S • C A R S

"WO Treat Tern ftmotor* DM M r litiy Cart"

NOW IS THE TIME TO 0MOMTIN TOUR STILL OOOO FURWTURI
• LAROE SELECTION OF MATERIALS *QUALITY

• Fa ra fart Stripfins
By HaMl

FRtt ItTIMATKS
FREEPICKUPS6 DELIVERY

• In Nome Twich-Up
And Repairs

490 N. 17*91
Neil To M A T M

Phone

Sho#

LONGWOOD, FLA.
&lt;308) 991*1900

322-7496

_____

L l-ll

DAVE'S UPHOLSTERY

LO V ELA N D ’S REFINISHING

(305 )

F ro m

TNE BICYCLE C0NNECTI0M

Full Auto Detailing Available

Mon ■Frl 800 AM • 600 PM

Sanford

N s 'll Brim The
Best In Oicoratinf
Right To Your Homo

BOMB SATELLITE TV

B trtM m w

Susan Koch, owner of the Bicycle Connection, with her dad, mastar bike
builder and mechanic Dick Koch

CUSTOM DRAPERIES • BEDSPREADS
WOVEN WOODS - MINI BLINDS • VERTICALS
.CARPET • VINYL * WALL COVERINGS

Exclusive Central Fla. Dealer

D IS C O U N T

F R E I ESTIM ATE
NO O M M A TK M

Satellite
tv
CENTERS

322-3315
322-7042

P h ilip
s “T "
Inllu.inru Stntr JUSI

Lowest Prices In Cciur.tl Florida

• SALES * PARTS * SERVICE
2 1 0 9 P reach A v c .

N p m * ky AUwrth Mu 0 *1. U

S a n ta .

BODY- MOP

506 W . 13th 81.

Review

O F**«_______
•AT. u se

A t R AUTO CARE

loss

** *

S an ford

lie w . m e

321*7466

Distinctive Mirror Designs
FOR EVERY DECOR

C ou n try Service C enter
l i t D J I A VC. U M T O M

323-3966

GLASS

Precision Sharpening Center

HOME MADE COUNTRY CRAFTS

FOR EVERY
PURPOSE

f f i w it m i

st.

MADE TO ORDER WOOD CURTAIN RODS
WE HAVE HOMEMADE DOLLS AND MANY
COUNTRY WOOD ITEMS_______
S to p By &amp; Visit O u r Show room !!

Mechanical end Electrical Repairs

u ^ urS

VOLKSHOP

Specieliiine In Service A Parts For
-W.'i, Toyota end Oaliun
(Corner 3nd A Palmetto)

At The Bicycle Connection
Bikes Are The Only Business
Nmv is the Him- lor that Christinas layaway. Al
lilt* Bicycle Conned Ion al 2200 S. French Ave..
(Highway 17-92) In Sanford, we not only have a
large selection of bicycles In stock, but also have
access lo almost any brand you might want.
A professional bicycle shop, we offer a 10
pereenl discount on all special orders.
Think about renew ing thal old bike lor
Christmas. It's not as expensive as you might
believe. We can remove most rust and make that
old clunker look like new. ■
Those of you who buy your bike In boxes,
please bring them lo a professional lo build. We
will stay open late on Christmas Eve to offer this
special service al it very modest price. Please
don't attempt to assemble your child's hike
yourself. One serious mistake and you can
endanger your child's life. You would not lake
your ear lo an amateur, would you?
Dick Koch with over 40 years experience In
bicycle repair is one o f the most experienced
repairmen in the state. This relates to tremen­
dous savings to the public. Having the ability to
go right lo the snursc of the problem means be
can save von dollars.

We also oiler free pick up and delivery. We olfcr
same day repairs and repairs while you wall. We
also offer custom wheel building In 24 hours. We
have a large selection of used parts for those of
von on a tight budget.
We have a large selection of new parts lo
custom build a special bike or repair your old
bike. We offer checkups on all new hikes lhal we
sell. Our used bikes (we have a large selection) are
also guaranteed. W e have a complete line of
safely equipment.
The Bicycle Connection boasts one of the most
successful BMX Racing Teams in Ihc slate,
having no less lhan five state champions on the
team led by Mark Koch. Number I Cruiser rider
in ihe stale, followed by his dad. Number 4
Cruiser rider In I he 41 and over Cruiser rlass.
We have the best in BMX bikes and accessories.
The Bicycle Connection will not be undersold.
Come here last for tremendous savings.
Hours are 9 a.in. lo 5:20 p.m.. Monday through
Saturday.
Plan now for Christmas. Call the bike prolesslonalsat 221*1906.

2M S. Palmetto Avo.
SANFORD
PHONE

Supreme Court To Hear Appeal

321-0120

By Drug M aker In Bendectin Case
THE

0

FURNITURE HOUSE

P H O N E 3238B56

1740 NORTH HIGHWAY 17-93
SOUTH OF FLEA WORLD
FIRST TRAFFIC LIOHT —
NORTH OF HIGHWAY 434
ACROSS FROM HANDYWAY.

B&amp;L

NEW-USED FURNITURE
ANTIQUES

F U E L O IL S E R V IC E
PROMPT • METERED DELIVERY

Serving Sem inole County
I

ROBERT l. DONALDSON
POST OrriCE SOX 968
U.S.N. (RET.)
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA 33746

l

4

VtRY U T T lf MARKUP-LOW PRICES
V~]
LAVAWAY-Wf DCUVER
Y CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 321-2003

WASHINGTON IUPI) - The Supreme Court
Monday stepped into the legal battle over
Bendectin. an anti-nausea drug blamed by
hundreds of women for birth defects in their
children.
The Justices agreed to hear an appeal by
Bendeclln’s maker. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals
of Cincinnati, of u lower court ruling that said
lawsuits filed by two foreign women who took
Bendectin were Improperly tninslerred lo federal
court.
The case, while Involving a technical mailer of
jurisdiction, could determine whether Merrell

i I’vrw
IN 1

MADAME KATHERINE

h r Ih t 1PTU ADS

PALM-CARD-CRYSTAL BALL READING

Fe a t • P m e e t. F itir e

that M M SUM UP...

HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL
AFFAIRS

us« tie

YOU A HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON!

BUSINESS REVIEW

O u r G ilt T o Vint

• UFI • lOVt • MMUMI • H IM S I

■ EM M H U M U S FOB 50 Y U M
M PRIVACY O F MY HOME

(305)

595-7005
-NMVi

Call: 322-3611

• N ita tM ta lb lK to ito .
VOTED BEST PSYCHIC FOR 1964 BY
CENTRAL FLORIDA SCENE MAGAZINE
•W h HH| Far U With TXnM

i’ i rs

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

LUNCH S P E C IA L
M-Sat. 11-3 PM

2 Pc. Chicken
Cole Slaw, Mashed
Potato**, Gravy

PL

June Dunwald

3pc Ctilckw. cftooMany 3
CO*# l*M
bak#d bunt, $ A A A
m«n*d potato m mmw

r

322*9442

* 6 .5 2

3300 S. Franch Avenue, Sentord
(Samlnola Service Canter)
Corntr W. I3nd A Franch Ave.
MON. •TUES. - THURS. 9:00-1:00
All other Times Or AppehdmoRt
__________ To A v id Watting CALL 333-1400

(94.MCMck#nOnly)
MTh 11930pm
F* 6*1 11-1030pm
Sun. 134pm

■e

ten Tor den

Hearing Aid Center

tfiyOsy 8pc. cfiicMn.

Ipl uua

«

2 DOOR. 4 DOOR CARS

(SOUND DEADENING)

BBLTONE

•BUDGET SPECIAL*

A U TO GLASS
TINTING

UNDERCOATING

• F R E E In-Home
Service
-W EDNESDAY SPECIAL-

NOW TILL CHRISTMAS

$55

The ease also could affect more than 200
Dcndrclin lawsuits filed by Ohio residents that
have been on hold In state court pending
resolution of the jurisdiction matter.
Unaffected by ihc case are all lawsuits filed
against Merrel Dow by U.S. residents living
outside of Ohio. Under Jurisdictional rules. Ihosc
cases had In be tried In federal court.

if you can beat our "price A
qualify" you gol a great deoil

PROFESSIONAL

SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22'e FILE0
ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES. MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES

Don't know what to buy • a Gift
Certificate ii the Ideal answer.

Corner of 8th 0 17-92
Sanford, Florida

"T h e Ohio law prohibits the manufacture of
any drug which is misbranded or which Is sold
with false and misleading advertising." they said.
"Therefore. It Is lor an Ohio court to choose the
standard It will utilize In determining legal
culpability."

BLAIR AGENC

AUTO
DETAILING

• F R E E Hearing
Test and Analysis

FRIED CHICKEN

* * 323-9099

V N '.
IIV i x
' * ’ -*•■■■

• FR EE Check-Up—
Ot All Hairing Aids

Southern

Complete
Perms
U"*' 0'&gt;-ki tji i? »sas

2000 HIAWATHA ST.
Ju i' “ , ?!!on I b M H Coats Corn.*)

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL

0

• 1 .9 9

)00
■w w

Don't daisy, Karl your ad
in tha next iitue....

HOURS 8 AM - 9 PM 7 Days A Week
s moots M e n of bosirmx es.
^eiM jR M V M T ad tl

"B n t Chk'ken In Town "

LIKE TO WICK

in S o lti cut Profit!,

Dow will have to fare trial In Ohio slate court on
charges of fraud, negligence and breach of
warranty In the manufacture and sale of
Bruderlln.
Bendectin. an anti-nausea drug used by
pregnant women, was sold from 1956 through
1982.
Lawyers for Merrell Dow. In their appeal, said
the fith U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was wrong
when it ruled the Bendectin lawsuit centered on
questions of state law.
"It looked beyond the cause or action which
raised the federal question and examined the
entire complaint to see whether (Ihc women)
might prevail on the slate law negllcncc claim ."
they said. "T h u s a new rule of law was
articulated."
The foreign women, from Scotland and Canada,
said their claims should be considered In Ohio
court because federal drug law does not set up
any legal channels for private negligence suits.

CAR
CARE

323.7m

Senring Sentord lor 27 Veen
OPEN MON. THRU FRL M

C A LL BLAIR A N D COM PARE”

323-7710 or 333-3366
2S10A OAKAVI. SANFORD
Comer of 6. Farit Ate. • Oak

r*
4m . V

O.O.I

�H E N D R IC K 'S A N T IQ U E S
Annum!

30% OFF SALE

DURING ALL OF NOVIMHR
Hey 4M 2 MM. N«rth el M M *
O M N • I * I - 1 DAYS A W K K

aBTR tBSSSo

i re a m

p la za

L k

^ ^ ^ A B R I C S

lit-

•

-

3 6 5 -3 74 0

mm

17-ts l a m

n iA « M U (frt, 1st, fsa.1

RUGS

and

FLOWERS
FOR ALL

&lt;?

DRAPES

p*.

FAST LOCAL n a JV tK Y

3LarttmmTUI

a#
^ ''C J'lP j '
'

PH

i ; / *•/» I * .

• III. iAN FO aO A V I.

UWFytD

l .V SOM*

OAKLAWN FWWIRALI

».■. U •U U t l MARY

A

f u n

S P I N

A t

E V A L U A T I O N

1. Frequent He

2. Low tech or Hlp-Fein

“. Dullness or Loss o* Sleep
. Numbness of Hends or Feet
'. Nervousness
. Neck Fein or Stiffness
. Armend Shoulder Pein

T h t stiff of A lin's Fibrics in d mgs, lift to right, Lilli* Simpkins in d Silly
Pirrish, upholstorors, Frink McQuaan, window docontor, in d ownor Jim
Coffin load inothor nowly upholstorod sofa for dolivory.

G ift Certificates Available
For Alan's Fabrics &amp; Rugs'
Interior Decorator Services
For u giH that will a gift that will really be
appreelated and can be enjoyed for a long time to
come, give a gift certificates available for holiday
giving at Alan's Fabrics at 2559 Park Drive.
Sanford. The are good for any of the Interior
services offered by Alan's, which has been
serving area homes for more than 23 years.
They offer, in addition to custom upholstery,
full Interior and decorator services, including
curpetlng. wallcoverings, and window treat­
ments.
Alan's has handhooked. braided. Oriental, and
special design area rugs.
They will com e to your home and bring
samples of fabrics, mini or vertical blinds, woven,
wood and decorative pleated window shades.
There Is no obligation of course. Call 322-5783 for

an appointment lor home cstlmuics. shopping or
decorating sessions.
Jim Coffin, owner of Alan's recently acquired
Gayle's Upholstery located at 387 Highway
17-92. In Casselberry two-tenths of a mile north
of Seminole Plaza. The phone number there is
831-8818.
Plans call for expanding the Casselberry shop
to offer full Interiors and will be renamed Alan
Gayle Upholstery and Interiors to better serve the
South Seminole County area.
Frank McQueen of Longwood. in photo above,
creates those eye-catching store window displays
for which Alan's Is known.
Jim and his staff wish to extend season's
greetings and a prosperous new year to all the
people that have helped to make Alan’s progress
possible.

• MM** **0*»» 9-«r» M*tO*VVUMil »0*Mvef** Ml •&gt;*»' *0M'UM*0
M. CMCIi MfW** 0*Mmmmuro*MM****0*Mt0'*l» UMP I■»&lt;*•*.«

*e* o &gt; 'e t n n ’ iM «iin i&gt; 'iM lo u i* iM , o r«io * 'K &lt; &gt; 'i* iM o «&gt; ii* »
»***o
m*«ovf*mm»' &gt;o*tmp* iiiiki nieniro» o*nm’w»’

SANFORD PAIN C0NTR01 Cl INIC
OF CHIROPRACTIC. INC

H .1 M Ti i I'

nt.

\A

lit.

A t. «

PAPER A SUPPLIES SPOT
Discount
Papor, Offlca, A Janitorial
Suppllas
Rontol Equipmont
IR IS N . H W V . 4 17
L iq e ifl. F I
II Ul H 0(434)

76 74 0 6 7
IMtSUO
•at.tat

Haney AviewFmiiipe.

fkere t*t &lt; t « ttjb m *

f f . to U € Mm

W I WASH...WAX...SHAMPOO INT1XIOR
C H A N IN G IN IS...C IIA N VINYL TOPS...
ADO 0 U « OWN SPIOAl MILLION DOLLAR SHINS

Car HerciRf
Custom Made Jewelry

TOP CASH PAID

•S-

♦SO**

Jewelry Repairs
Jewelry Cleaned

U ll

OfFT CtKTIFICATlS
NOW A V A ILA tlf

MON.-FRI. S-S FM

CTM S. NLAHM ML
SANPB», FI 32771

321-8911

Gold • Sliver • Diamonds • Coins
Sterling • Dental Gold • Pocket Watches
Gold • Silver Coins • Collectables

WE SELLt
Diamonds At Wholesale Prices
New And Preowned Jewelry
MEMBER SANFORD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Troflaur# isiond Jo w iry |
(Near Te Driver's tlrwue Bvreev)

•SANFORD GULF SERVICE, INC.

MQVA S. Sanford Avsnuo

OR-—
noun

mmifmu

3 2 2 -0 3 2 *

" ° J f'

©ill

WEIGHT
LOSS
CENTER
No Drugs — No Contracts —
No Prepackaged Food*
Free Consultation
•NCATMO • AM COMOmONMO •TUNSUMHGlNI MFAIR

•FROMT-fWWO AUQNIKNT
•OTLCHAMOtSlUei

um nci

•TISSS A BATTIWIS
• WHCRL SALANCf

•m

u

simnct

2 8 18 S . FR EN C H A V L , S A N T O R O

_

322-4924

Treasure Island Buys
And Sells Diamonds,
G em s, Gold And Silver
„
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
*,

Come to Treasure Island and you'll find a
treasure of sparkling diamonds, gem stones and
gold. At Treasure Island Jewelry, located at
260114 S. Sanford Ave. at the corner of 26th
Street Just south o f the Driver’s License office
building, you can still even order custom work
done and get It In time for Christmas.
Treasurer Island opened in July and is
managed by Don and Wanda McAllister. They
moved to Sanford 114 years ago and have 15
years experience In the Jewelry business.
They specialize In custom Jewelry at Treasure
Island will use your gold or thelr’s to create any
kind of design.
If you want something done, they will do It
quickly. They also set stones, clean and repair
Jewelry and pierce ears.
T h e y are o ffe r in g la y a w a y s e rv ic e for
Christmas. Anything not In stock can be ordered
for you and they will have It within a couple of
days.
- They buy Just about anything o f value and pay
top cash for gold, silver, platinum, diamonds.
emeralds sapphires, rubles, pearls, bronzes.

0

WEIGHT LOSS
2970 Orlando Dr.
(Zayre Plaza) Sanford

323-6 50 5

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES

Tiffany, coins, sterling, dental gold, pocket
watches, clocks, broken or unbroken Jewelry and
collectibles. They also buy paintings, glassware,
antiques and total estates.
They sell diamonds and gold chains wholesale.
They have new and preowned rings and Jewelry.
Come In for a free appraisal or get your Jewelry
cleaned free while you wait.
Treasure Island Jewelry Is a member of the
Greater Sanford Chamber o f Commerce. Store
hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.. Monday through
Saturday. Call 322-0528 for further information.

Tfc# rfrettfk
It U U K HU
HU MereM M n h Review

■m

CAU 132-2*11

“THE"OFFICE SOURCT

»

-

m

t

» m

CARLOS M. 1ANT1A00. JR

831-3400

�Hsrsld, Sr r — r«,

&lt;B— t v t iM m

T gs « 8s t * Psc- s, m s

FI.

Volunteers Aid Belize
By Cheryl B.

Jole from U.S. drug
companies.

Chapm aa

"Once when I went
there the district hospi­
tal al Punla Gorda had
only eight antibiotic
tablets le ft," Walker
said.
As Nichols put It.
"Going on one of these
m edical missions is
kind of like going to
war.”
A m i g o s s e n t 12
medics to Belize this
y e a r : Dr. G e o r g e
Skip worth.’ Columbus.
Go.: Nichols. Dr. Tom
C o o p e r . D r . J im
Holton. Dr. Ernest
B rady. Dr. A n drew
Quiroz, surgical nurse
Lnrulnc Jewett, nurse
anesthetist Bill O’Neal,
and medical assistants
De bbi e Mor ri s and
Carolyn Jones, all of
Tyler: Dr. Mike Kennebrew. New Orleans:
and medical assistant
Cheryl Chapman.
Dallas, who also is n
UPI reporter.
T h e g r o u p s pl it .
S k l p w o r t h . B ra dy ,
Nichols. Morris. Jones
and .Chapman conti­
nuing to the Jungle and
Holton. Kcnnebrew.
Quiroz. Cooper. O’Neal
and Jewett staying at
the hospital In Belize
City.
The trip by dugout
from Punta Gorda to
th e Interior Mayan
jungle village of Crique
Sarco look five hours, a
long lime to sit mo­
tionless on a narrow
wooden boat scat.
“ T o l e d o Di st r i ct
sometimes Is called the
forgotten district." said
u ti r s e D o r o t h y
Wingard. a Mcnnonitc
health care worker In
Crique Sarco. " it ’s the
one furthest from the
&gt;v.it of government,
and perhaps the most
Isolated."
The medics brgau
work Immediately as
twilight fell.
Wingard ac com­
p a n i e d S k l p wo r t h .
Brady and Nichols to
the thatched hut of the
C h o c f a mi l y . Candalaria Choc was hav­
ing problems In the
final week of her ninth
pregnancy, but she
refused to leave her
husband and eight
children to gel care.
C h o c ’ s hus b a nd ,
stricken with malaria,
lay passively in his
hammock. The dusty
room stank of fever and
chickens trailed in and
out through the door.
’ ll she doesn't want
in go to hospital, nurse.
I won't make her." the
husband said. "If God
wants her. she die. If
He doesn’t, she wnn’l."
Som e stories, like
t hat o f S t e p h a n i e
Johnson. 3. a cripple,
had happier endings.
Stephanie, daughter
ol village schoolteacher
their
In divid ua l
Genevieve Flores, had
churches
hern playing outside
'In early 1970. we their former home In
struck an agreement B elize City when a
with the government ol heavy hurricane door
Belize promising them propped against the
r e g u l a r — but in- house fell on her leg,
u rm ittcnt — dt ntal
’ The doctors there
and medical service."
enuldn t set it." Flores
B e c a u s e m e d i c a l said. "They Just put a
supplies are hard to east on It the way It
■uttie by in Belize, the was."
Amigos take along ev­
The knee Is growing
erything they can ra- awav from the child's

CRIQUE SARCO.
Bcllzr |UPI» - Every
year volunteer medical
team s from A m igos
Inlernarlonatcs travel
from thr United States
to tiny. Impoverished
Uollzr where the care
available is sporadic
an d th e s u f f e r i n g
chronic.
Or. David Nichols, a
d en tist from T v lc r.
Texas, has had his
share o f frustrations
d u rin g trips to the
m u lti-ra cia l C en tral
American democracy.
"Y o u 'r e not going
down there to cure all
i he deformities In the
c o u n t r y . " he said.
‘You’ re going to get
the pus out of their
mouths."
Shipwrecked British
seamen founded little
Belize by accident In
1638 and the nation's
progress from British
colony to protectorate
to .Independence has
been marked by that
s a m r a d •h o e .
scat-of-tlie-pants quali­
ty.
F o r m e r ly Br i t i s h
Honduras, B elize is
snuggled against the
C a rib b e a n b etw een
G u atem ala and the
Mc x l c a n s t a l e of
Quintana Roo. It never
was the most remote
n a t i o n in C e n t r a l
America, only the most
inaccessible, thanks to'
a treacherous 190-mlle
offshore reef.
Until air travel, it
w a s so tough gelling to
B e liz e that A ld o u s
Huxley was moved in
remark in 1934. " If the
world had any ends.
British Honduras
would surely he one of
i hem."
flic nation scatters
1 1s p o p u l a t i o n o f
160.000 over a Jungle
about the si/e of New
H ampshire , some
H.867 square miles.
One-third ol the people
cluster in Belize City,
the n a tion 's largest
town and l eadi ng
vap ort. .» metropolis
with no traffic lights
and a sewer system
dependent on catfish.
The pathway that
reaches from Texas to
B e lize is paved bv
philanthropy.
"In 1962 a group o f
men In Athens. Texas.
I o r m e d a n I n •
i e r d e nniii I nal i ot i a I
philanthropic organizailo.ii — A m ig o s In ­
ternationales," said Dr
K e r Io o t Walker,
d i r e c t o r o I I he
I'yler-S m lth Count y
Heal t h D ep artm en t,
whit h coordinates the
e x p e d itio n 's . " T h e y
wanted to put their
energies and money
together to reach out to
people in ways other
than those practiced by

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ctpfw* cryptogram* ara craatad trom quotation* try lamou*
paopta paat and pratant
Each lattar mtha cipnar nand* (or
anomar Today «cba U aquari J.
by CONNIE WIENER

**XH

PAL

LZOP,

*PDE'

S EHOXM LTLM

JHNJSRW

VLSZJOL

KZTRO

GXTOP
•EH L,'

XP

M LBZTPJTL
JH X P W ."

XO

PAL
GTEK

—

UEL

GTZHRLN.
PREVIOUS SO LU TIO N : "If you go only once around the
room, you are wiser than him who sits still." — Estonian

proverb

body at About o 30
d e g r e e i n g l e . Ar&gt;
r an gem e nt s wi ll b e
made through Amlgoa
to bring an orthopedic
surgeon from the Unit­
ed S tates to B elize
Hospital for the correc­
tive surgery. Sklpworth
said, "an d after thAt.
she'll grow and run
and p la y like a n y
healthy child, like it
never happened."
Nichols said most of
the I nd ia ns ' health
problems were caused
by diet, especially the
popular highly aweetcned coffee, which he
said eventually killed
Its devotees.
"Because their (the
Indians’) teeth rot out
early on, they want you
to pull all thoae teeth.
They don't realize that
when they get rtd o f
their teeth, t he y 'r e
cutting about 20 years
off their lives, and this
loss of teeth Is a real
factor In their short
lifespan." he said. "It's
Just s u g a r , s u g a r ,
sugar, and once their
teeth arc gone, all they
can eat are tortillas
soaked in that old
sweet coffee."
Clinic began shortly
after daybreak with the
village's most critically
ill.
Initially. Sklpworth
suspected Martin Pop,
10. had Hansen's dis­
ease. commonly called
leprosy. His parents
were convinced the
child w a s u n d e r a
curse and had been
treating him with

charms.
Albina Choc. 36. was
another suspected
victim of Hansen's
disease. Juan Isham
Jr. came In with malar­
ia: Timothy Bo. 7. had
bcefworms.
Most patients had
parasites.
" I f you could whip
the enteric (intestinal)
diseases, they'd be the
healthiest people In the
world," Wingard said.
But parasites pull
d o w n m a n y o f the
children and adults so
they succumb to de­
hydration or m inor
ailments.
"T h e people have a
closed system of deal­
ing with human waste,
and as far as they're
concerned, it w orks
very w e ll." W ingard
said. "T h e pigs eat It.
Then the villagers eat
Ihc pigs."
"From Crique Sarco
the medical team re­
turned to the coast, to
the Black Carlb village
o f Barranco scattered
back f rom the
shoreline through
g r o v e s o f hi b is c us ,
mango and sawgrass.
Barranco is a regular
stop, and the word of
the team's arrival Is
run up the path by
children while the dugout hodltng the doctors
and s u p p l i e s s t i l l
wallows In the chop
several hundred yards
off the dock.
The Black Carlbs of
Barranco. descendants
of African slaves and
man-eating Red Carlb
Indians, tend to gloss
o v er suf fer ing with
cheerful carelessness.
D
i
s
­
tri ct n u rse Vi c k i
Nolberto hustles pa­
tien ts Into noisy,
laughing lines, trying
to get and keep those
with more serious
complaints up front.
High blood pressure
is endemic because of
the Black Carib's salty
seafood diet.
The litany o f com ­
plaints varted.
Paula
Pouleno. 82. who has
lost o n e b r e a s t to
cancer, had a heart
m urm ur. R ob erto
Isabel complained of
" s w e e t b l o o d ” and
t e s t e d p o s i t i v e for
diabetes, in addition to

CLASSIFIED ADS
Saminola
3 3 3 -2 6 1 1

*
h f e

a

,'1 - a n

50.

mvzrm
7MNKT

\

w

soMsry is

k N U L M IP A

JBrrrCHt

W $ ir T

SUM #

• w

D EA D LIN ES
N o o n T h e D a y Before Publication
Sunday - N o o n Friday
M o n d a y *11: 00 A . M . Saturday

-

0 s
ii^ r v v M v w v i

ABORTION COUNSILINO
F n i Pregn an cy T # »t*.
Confidential- Individual
a s s is ta n c e . C e l t l# r

A Charlie Brown Christmas

LOST- M r* Urge O T T tong)
Rod M a c a w . C a II T aiii
fooetov: 331973*at MMMI.

.8)7*9*

The Peanuts Christmas tree
gets a spark of puppy love from
Snoopy* as the beagle helps
light tha Yuletlde symbol* al­
ready aglow with loving atten­
tion, thanks to co-Peanuts
Charlie Brown (on ladder),
Lucy (left), Frieda and Linus.
The Peanutlsm that a tree only

needs love to be beautiful is
expressed In A Charlie Brown
Christm as* aw ard-w in ning
animated special fo bo rebroadcast Wednesday evening*
8 to 8:30 * on CBS Television
Network* WCPX-TV (Channel
6 ).

■ having parasites col­
onizing his feet.
Diseases rare In the
United States turn up
with oppressive regu­
larity.

c ha nc e' o f r e c o v e r y
zero.
Back ut the clinic,
the next patient wasn't
In much better shape.
Enrique S e rra n o ’ s

" I thought leprosy
was dead and gone but
It's not. not here." ob­
served medical assis­
tant Carolyn Smith.
"It's a chronic, com­
municable disease, and
we've seen it In several
forms. 1 don’t know
what can be done for
them (lepers) in the
Jungle."
Mostly, they die. as
do the syphilitics, after
years of misery.
Madalelne Satnbulo,
85. bedridden from feet
swollen to the size of
buc ket s, smi l ed
sweetly and toothlessly
at Sklpworth In her
hut. C a ta r a c t s had
blinded her: syphylls
had d e a f e n e d her,
eaten away her nose,
an d c o l l a p s e d th e
bones in her legs. She
was partially paralyzed
and open sores pat­
terned her body. Her
temper was sunny, her
outlook optimistic, her

urgent care. In addition
the 60-year-old man
was diabetic, blind In
one eye and had had
his left leg broken al
the hip socket. The
hernia swelled visibly
dur ing exami nati on
and the doctors cut
clinic short in make an
e m e r g e n c y surgical
run in the Punla Gorda
hospital.
Serrano. In his best
shirt and nautical cap.
perched In the dugout’s bow.
A s to rm hit Just
north of Barranco. For
h o u rs the d u g o u t
bucked northward
along the coast, salt
waves smashing over
tt. rain driving tn side­
wa y s. all av ai labl e
tarps covering the pre­
cious medicines and
e v e r y b o d y balling.
T h e r e were no life
jackets, and because of
the sharks, nn need for

h ern ia

dem anded

them. Serrano sat

er­

red. unflinching.
The storm blew in­
land at dusk as the
battered dugout limped
into the quay at Punta
Gorda. Nichols touched
S e r r a n o on the
shoulder to pass the
elderly man with the
m oorin g rope and
Serrano fell backwards
into the backpacks, out

cold.
Bystanders and the
doctors carried him
two miles to the hospi­
tal and checked him tn.
Perhaps he made It.
Perhaps he did not.
"I don't feel like I
finished what I
started." Jones com­
plained. " I want to
know the end of the
stories. I want to know
If the man with the
hernia lived. If they
operated or Just let him
lie there. When we see
patients In Tyler we
sec them until they’re
well. But we d o n ’ t
know — and won't
know — what hap­
pened to the ones we
treated on this trip."

Edwards Admits Mistakes
...Denies Ever Conspiring
NEW O R L E A N S
{UPI) — Gov. Edwin
Edwards testified in his
fraud and racketeering
trial he " m a y have
made some mistakes"
but denied he ever
conspired to cheat the
people of Louisiana out
of "honest, loyal" gov­
ernment.
Edwards, expected to
face cross-examination
today from U.S. A t­
torney John Volz, also
testified the FBI greatly
e x a g g e r a t e d bis
g a m b l i n g losses by
putting them ut $2
million.
The prosecution Is
offering the gambling
losses as a motive for
the governor's alleged
role in a scheme with
seven codefendants to
obtain and sell hospital
and nu rsing home
construction permits
for $10 million.
Edwards spent the
day Monday respond­
ing to questions from
James Neal, his lead
defense attorney, who
asked the g ov ern or
s t r a i g h t o u t I f he
plotted to defraud the
state of Louisiana and
Its citizens of "honest,
l o y a l and fa ith fu l
services” as alleged In
his indictment.
“ I may have made

mcH.ce course. imesiwe

seamy wish tmt Severn,
WOUPmSSAU THfM-

mcH.aFcouae. a just m

T tn ou v fi*EW*W5JW5

M m COHmOKM lM
— AIMYS ,
CAtmiNf

z

'

7 « « « ■ * • S am I K « S w

tSSSntmm "IZiirti

UMLY 00 00 CWNCEFS

M pm m M JTA
makes m y

\

.

^

■

1-mmwnvE

.AWTbtHFmtRCNeK
Hate a\p we xrw m iep.
THUS SHE oers FWtKlCA
AHPt OerUFELONO
ftWTlON M PFM EM }.
/

# 3 1-9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
HOURS
»— ■

BLOOM COUNTY
see fkstipkkout
a onti eem m se pks ...
m re hcr a Feweerms...
FK0FV5€ sew SOW* PCM#
to me M fta &amp; Z K -

Orlondo - Winter Pork

*

som e mistakes. Mr.
Neal, but I gave I hem
the

best

I

h a d ."

Edwards said.
Edwards appeared
confident after bis day
on the witness stand
and promised. "T h e
best Is yet to come" as
the two-month-old trial
nears its end.
The governor has ac­
know ledged earning
abou t $1.9 mi l l i on
f r o m f our hospi t al

ventures when he was
out of office, between
his second and third
terms.
Edwards also
allegedly saw to It that
health d e p a rtm e n t
employee John Landry
was promoted 10 civil
service grades at one
Jump as a reward for
making sure certain
hospital permit
a p p lic a tio n s were
approved.

Plains Blacks
Threaten Suit
PLAINS. Ga. |UPI| Blacks In former Presi­
dent Jimmy Carter's
h o m c t o w tt h a v e
threatened to file a
federal lawsuit and
possibly boycott busi­
nesses If their can­
didates do not beat
w h i te s in electi ons
Monday for three city
council seals.
The town of 687,
wh er e of f ic ial s say
blacks comprise about
60 percent of llie popu­
lation. has 314 regis­
tered voters — 150
black. 164 white. It has
not In recent years bad
more than one black
among its six council
members.
The one black coun­
cilman. Bowman Wiley
Jr.. Is running for his
scat again against two
white challengers. A
black and a white are
squaring off in both of
ihc olher elections.
All the council seats
are chosen ut large,
rather than In districts
— a system blarks de­
nounce as unfair.
They held a protest
m a rc h Saturday to

m obilize voters, but
only 35 people showed
u p. B l a c k l e a d e r s
b la m ed

the

sm all

showing on a large
p o l i c e f o r c e t hat
escorted the marchers.
Brenda Pickett of the
Plains Concerned Citi­
z e n s Group, wh i ch
sponsored the march,
said blacks want some
positions of political’
power. Jobs in whiteowned businesses and
election by districts.
"W hat we’re trying
to do is get district
voting." she said. "If
we can’t get It this way.
we'll file a suit. We
have asked since last
year about redistricting. We feel it’s lime for
them (the council) to
do this.
"W e ’re going to wait
until after the election,
and if all three don't
get in. we're going to
f i l e suit w i t h the
Justice Department."
Pritchett said.
She said blacks also
arc c o n s i d e r i n g a
boycott of white-owned

businesses.

N B T K IIM O A a
FICTITIOUS A M M S TA TV TI
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notkn is komby given rapt foe

CHRISTMAS T R I I I I State
Farmers Market MM French
Ave. Sanford. MM

"pictiHAM G T L J F

Cheafor S tfjf. Florida Ma m a s .
Will reglaler wHR IRA Ctarfe At food ts move inventory foie fo
Itw Circuit Csurf, In end Mr
IIIMM. Call:333-7*93 M-F.,
Sentinels County. Plans* p
t3:3S-4:3SP.M.____________
receipt St *r**t i t IRa JUMNAJANIS’S ALTERNATIVE
non sf (Me notice. IRA tMmws
SENIOR CARE
name. tA-wtt: ATLANTIC RIS- M Hour loving cere for eenfor
TAUAANT A REFRIOERA
cittaww. Family environment
T IO N E Q U IP M E N T E N ­
and heme cooked meets Call:
TERPRISES unSar wRIcR I Am
MATHS
•ngapad in builntu At *11
* MARY NAY COSMETICS ~
Prelrla Lake Drive, Fern Parti,
Skin Car* and color flair
Florida
That ttw party intaraaiaA in CONNIE ........ ............333-7IW
MM bwalnau enterprise la a*
27—Nursory A
fellow*:
PATRICK J. 01 VASTO
Child Car*
Dated at Orlando. Oran#*
County,' Florida. November «,
wm#5ysim^nyTem#r
IMS.
Samlnote High School Ares.
Publiih November 11, 19, le A
^ tw n eJ J H U S T ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
December 1, IMS.
0EL7J
33—Rm I Estate
NOTICE UNOIR
FICTITIOUS NAMI LAW
Courses
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that tha underlined, dealring to
• e * *
engage In business under the
e Thinking ol gettings e
ItctlMout name of OHIO FORGE
* Rm I Estate License? *
COMPANY el number 377 E.
Altamonte Or., In ttw City of
W* otter Free tuition
and continuous Trainlngl
Altamonte Spring*. Florida. In­
Call Dick or Vicki lor details:
land* to r*gl*t*r the m M name
with the Clerk ol tho Circuit *71-1*67...333 3300 ..Eva 774 I0M
Kayos ot Florida . Inc
Court of Seminole County,
Florida.
59 Yters ol Exparloncel
Oated al Atlanta. GA. Ihl* lit
day of October IMS
THE HOME DEPOT. INC.
by Arthur Blank,
President
by L.A. Smith.
Aiilit. Sac.
Publlih: Novambar 13. 19. 3* A
OecamberX IMS
DEL 74______________________
NOTICE UNOIR
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the undertigrwd. desiring to
engage In butlnru under the
fictitious name ol DEFIANT
LOCK COMPANY at number
177 E. Altamonte Dr., In the City
ol Altamonte Spring*. Florida.
Intends to regtoter the said
name with the Clerk ol tho
Circuit Court ol Seminole
County, Florida
Dated at Atlanta, GA. this 1st
day et October IMS
THE HOME DEPOT, INC.
by Arthur Blank,
President
by L.A. Smith,
Assist. Sec.
Publish: November I], If, la A
December ]. IMS
DEL 7*

NOTICE

[

KNIGHTS
OF

COLUMBUS

JACKPOT&gt;250
SIGN *250
X *250

NOTICE OP A PUBLIC
HEARING OF PROPOSED
CHANGESAND
AMENDMENTS IN
CERTAIN DISTRICTS AND
BOUNDARIESOP THR
ZONINO ORDINANCE
OF THR CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA.
Nolle* Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held In
Itw Commission Room ot ttw
City Hoi I In the City of Sanford.
Florid*, at 7:00 o'clock P.M. on
December 7J. IMS. to consider
changes and amendments to tho
Zoning Ordinance ot the City ol
Sanford. F lor Ida. at follows:
A portion ol that certain
proparty lying batsmen 11th
Street and Seaboard Coastline
Railroad Right-of-way and be­
tween Myrtle Avenue end Elm
Avenue it proposed to be retoned from MR I (MultipleFamily Resldantlal Dwelling
Olstrlct) to GC-1 (Generol
Commercial Olstrlct). Said
p r o p e r t y being m ore
particularly described at
follows:
Lott I. I. end 1. Block IS. Tier
a, Town ot Sanford, Public
Record* ot Seminole County,
Florida.
All parties In Interest end
cliiient ttw11 hove an opportuni­
ty to be heard at Mid hearing.
By order of the City Com­
mission ol ttw City ol Sanford.
Florida
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: It
a person decides to appeal a
decision mods with respect to
any metier considered at the
above meeting or hairing, he
may need * verbatim record ot
ttw proceedings. Including ttw
testimony and evldwica, which
record It not provided by the
City ot Sanford. (FS3M.0ISS).
H. N. Tamm. Jr.
City Clark
Publish: December 3.13, IMS.
DEM#

THE
BREAKTHROUGH
IN
M V 4 U S E 8 CAR l i f t
cam m-*»n

*39-940990
T W i.

f t

S«a. 7 *.a.

29 *4 44K AVE.,

Ir a n i s m u m i

Saturday M 5 P A
Wednesday M S F.M.

All Regular 6saws
$50.00
17S5 l i t cam Mod.
(Career Ftavidaata EM.)

OettMU, FL

K1WARIS CLUB
Of CASSCLKORY
rSMAT MEET 1 P A
S2S-SSAS1SS
(2) S2SS 1ACXF0TS

Saarat Lake Park,

E v e n in g H e ra ld
CLASSIFIED

DEPARTMENT
322-2111

-W v •

•

v

�KTTtrOAm.YU^tfUrnrW rfgM

71—HtlpWanted

71— 1

PL

. t* HBB—I I

I"

141— Hm m b tor Soto

w ~ i

UNLIM ITIO IARNINOS. Start
hi

^ **■

RCA W i
/ r * ‘? i ,i3

|k,
■la repair and
*•
canditlan at Mg __ ..____

Hyawha**aawtaal*

tPaaMgpMl Baa* I* ready to
hire newI

W* buy HI and M
Hatton wide. Call: R a p 'tin
Lk. Mta Broker. M Deuflai
Ave,, Altamonte. 774-77S

71— Http Wanted
apply protective ceetlng an
car*. b**f» and plana*. U la
tit par Mur. W* tram. Par
work In Sanierd area call
Tampa tita ta m i.
M tlM K lftt
ATTBNTION man- M M hr.
tar madirn manufacturing
plant. M an., strong. rallaMa.
own transportation. I aval
Oppartwnty Cmploypr. Permanant pulttone. Navar a
Paal

TEMP MUt.

774-1341

B O O K K IIP IR
*M0 weak*. taper opportunity
with an* at la H W f i (taut
flrmtl Taka charpa and yaw'll
taalathamaharpl

323-5171
t* n Preach A«*.

Convenience (tor*. Top calory,
haapltalliallan, t weak vaca­
tion each * month*. Other
benefit*. Apply:
m N. Laurel Av*.. Sanlard. PI.
* » • * : » Monday ■Friday.
COST ACCOUNTANT
Experienced. apgrestive, and
matwro parton with ttranp
coat accowntlnp hlttory tar
•rawing Sanford bated
manufacturing company,
mum*’ or apply in
to : Cable Boat Com
apny. C/O Partonnal manag
PO BOX 1097, IM Sllvor
»Bd.„ Santord, PI. 3277t.
ILV WORK/DAILY PAT
TWO* KNOW I

" H f H &amp; lB T

T-rr-nTTTTr

p « r » » l n f , selling1

5,

i

^ a u f it g

WPPWallfM'*

I NO V «E I
I2MM0
lmm*dlat*ly. up I* M
hour. Apply Domino'*
1*10 French Av*. tan
Call: 321-5000._________
R-SALISMAN. Truck
rout* talesman needed
rice retail building ma
I dealer*. Out of town 2
per week. Mutt be 11.
e meet DOT standards,
'tent In ilmple math,
willing to work hard,
plu* commission. Good
-y benefit*. BROWN
LDING COMPANY. Inc.
Monroe. FI 223 1043

a w

A a la lm

COUNTRY WIDE REALTY
Reg R .l. Breber

RICIPTIONIST

LeMmneedeZ
__________13M3t3.__________
Hetratytkto FuM A Part time
far new talon in Santord.
Salary + comm luion B
hanattt*. Call LoratntWSWM.
Housekeeper, governee* llvo-ln or full
t have awn car,
Call: m « « a i or

W. Metktewtkl.

HU French Ave.

Pull time. &gt; ii Mitt. Charge
paoltkn. Apply at:
DsGary Manor... M N. NwytjMB
Refloat* people to grow with up
comlnt plattlc* forming
cempanylnaroa.
Call:.............................3274140
RN Needed Part Thna on day
•Nit*. Oaad atmaephare 4
benefit*. Apply at:
Oabary Manor....M N. Nwy 17-41
OaBary......... ...................BOB
SALIS
Penan mutt have exeerlance In
lh* tale at turglcal tuppiiet.
Will bo urvicing, private
practice* In local areal
Growing rapidly I Excellent
‘

T IL L E R TRAINEE
To IS hour. It your good with
ffeuro* and have tome cath
———— —1 —— ——

NURSBS

M DATS TILL CHRISTMAS
Start earning M Nr the Holiday*
now) Staff relief and homo
cart thlfl* available for
R.N.’s. L.P.N.’S. and Nun*
Aide'*
CALL US TODAY I
Call: Santord. 321-704for
Orlando, m a tt 1.
MIDICAL PIRSONNIL

1 4 [a

- ——*

M*pWr IWTrCMr 1*1IB RW*

t* tor you! Gnat hourit Fan
taatk bonafitil

323-5175
t m French Av*.
WAREHOUSE

ATTENTION M IN I Shipping,
Receiving. Able to lift SO lb*.,
own transportation. M an hr.
Permanent poaJtkni. Never a
tool

IMF WM-------- 774-1311
WILDERS
M hour*. It you have good
aluminum or Iron woldlng
experience, you could win Ihlt
•poll Company need* good,
•toady n Itable perton to |oln
their teemI

iTnpNtyrnfvii
thirt*.
and benefit*. Apply at:
OaBary Manor..M N. Hwy ll/fl
OaBary...... ...................E.O. I .
Part time, woman or man work
from homo on new telephone
program. Earn up to 15 to *10
per hour. Call: MHM I.
PART TIME HOUSEWORK
SOME TYPING REQUIREO
Call:.............................M l * n
PIRSONNIL N fCIPTIO NIST
Flexible perton needed tor let!
paced otflca. General office
tklllt. Permanenot Petition.
Never a Feel

323-5176

a ii

TEMP H&gt;M____ 7741341
Prepram AaUelant tor adult Mh
facility. Prefer experience
with disabled, child car* or
nursing facility. Ml 7 »l.

EXCITING NEW THINGS ARE
HAPPENING AT
THE

Looking tor a roommate Ibdrm
house, dbk lot. 1250 mo every
thing included. Call aft Ipm
H I *734. Santord area ott 15th.

91—Rooms for Rent
Clean, newly painted, near
town. *55 wk. plu* security.
Call: W WWovonlnp._______
IHkancy with private both A
r e f r i g e r a t o r . Complete
privacy. *45 a week A 5IX
security depoilt. Include*
util If lei. Call: 111 11** or
32&gt;MP-___________________
THE FLORIDA HOTEL
100Oak Avenue............ 131*104
Reasonable Weekly Rato*

Per*. Apt*, tor I
111 Palmetto Ave.
J. Cowan. No Phono Call*
IANFORD thdrm.. adult*, no
pat*, air, quiet rotldtnllal.
MW mo. plut depotlt. I P *01*.

$100 SECURITY DEPOSIT

STUDIOS

1 A 2 KDftOOM APTS. AVAILABLE
APUITt AND FAMILES WtLCONE

Jutt bring your llnant and
dlthot. Single ttory living,
sound controlled wall*.
Abundant ttorage.

2714 RIDGEWOOD AVE., SANFORD

SENIORCITI2EJI DISCOUNT
FLEXIBLELEASES

323-7900

97—Apartmtnti
Furnishtd/ Rant

193— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

SANFORD • t Bdrm., apt. U tl
month, IMS deposit. Refer­
ence* required. Celt: 44*4*01.

DIBABY 1 Bdrm., l battT
central heat and air, newly
painted. 1410 par month 4
security. Ml 5713evenings.
I O V L L W I L D I SCHOOL- &gt;
bdrm., Pam. Rm„ air/heat.
Fenced yard. No pets. MM
plu* security. M i l l to.
e e e IN D E L T O N A ***
e • HOMES FOR R IN T # #

99—Apartments
Urrivmithtd / Rant
BAMBOO COY■ APTS.
IM I . Airport Btvd.
t Bdrm.. t Bath.,,..4.*.**,.(300too.
1 Bdrm., t Bath........... DM me.
...................MS mo.
............... ................. M f d j
LA K I FRONT- I and 1 Bdrm.
apt*. Pool, tonnnlt. Adult*, no
pot*. Flexible deposit.
Call:......................... m m a
LA BB IIFFICIN CY- Ideal tor
I adult or couple. Reiiabk
perton* wonted. Resonable.1

M i n t . _________________
Nice elllclency near towm.
Clean. NS per week. Call:
3H-J4M.___________________
. NIDBIWOOO ARMS APT.
no* Rtdpeweod Ave.
SPACIOUS 1BBOROOM
IW FOR 1ST MONTH’S BINT
NOVIMBIR ONLY!
PHONB m*4M.FOR DBTAILt
ROOMY 1 bdrm.. 1 bath. U70
mo. *150 security. I MONTH'S
FREE RENTIt Kldt o.k.
rotiso.

.j i t me

* * * * * * * * * *

THANKSGIVING
SPECIAL

e * «7»tO* • e
Labe Mery Bdrm. children o.k.
Greet area. tttS m*. Call Ju*r
Sullivan: Eve*. Off-It 11. Pat
Gastl Proportk*. Inc. 7IMN3.
SANFORD 3 bdrm.. 1 bath,
paddli lane, central heat/alr,
blind*. &gt;1)1777or W &gt;»1*.
107 Idyllwlld* Drive. 3 bdrm.. I
bath, large patio, i car port,
storage, new paint and carpet.
Good schools. NICE. MOO a
month. Will consider Icon
option. Call: 33J-S441 eve*.,
l i e 5311dayi. ____________
3 Bdrm.. 1 Ba t h. Fenced
backyard Sanford. MOO par
month plus socurlty. Coll:
331 3W4,0:00to 5:00._________
3 Bdrm.. I bath, *175 par month.
tm deposit. Coll: M15W0.
Reference* required.

• Furnished 1bdrm. apt*
• Unfurnished I bdrm. apis
• Unfurnished! bdrm. apis
d With or W/O utilities

Feybylhaseaeh.
tocetton.

with this ad.

0*323-4507
411 Palmetto Av*.
* * * * * * * * * *
l bdrm., I bath Cande In San
delwood Villa* In Sanford. MOO
par month. Call: 4111714
pk4sa leave messao*_______
1 bdrm., extra larga and com­
fortable. Eat in kitchen,
wathar/dryer hook up. Fully
carpeted. Call: Ml 7700.
1 Bdrm.. 1bath. *100 per month.
Call: 133 1M7 or 3271144, 1
P.M. ioJ DOP.M.

101—Houses
Furnished / Rent
1295

DELTONA Furnished, 1 bdrm.
Also Florida room with closet
usable at bedroom Neel,
clean, attractive. No pett.
Available. Yearly (eat*.

574-1040

n &gt; s »i

113—Storage Rentals
SS0 A Up......................333am

Rontals
107* Sq FI. Free standing build­
ing with ample parking. Im­
mediate occupancy. I S year
!**(* available. 123 7304
Retail A Office
7.000 sq.t». also storage
able m 4401_______________
sea Sq FT. 310 additional It
naoded. Ample parking. M00
Sq FI. Laka Mary. I to 5 year
leas* available. 372 7304.

121-Condominium
Ronfols
New 1 Bdrm.. 2 bath luxury
Condos. P o o l , tennis,
wosher/dryer. security. S445
per month Landarama FI..
Inc. Call: 201 r
SANFORD 3 Bdrm.. pool,
wosher, dryer, micro. Wes
model. 5445 par month. 774
4054or S14 7421._____________
SANFORD 1 Bdrm. townhouso.
Living A family room. pool.
*175 per month. (Option to
buy) 7744054or U4-7431.

SINGLE STORY
LIVIN G
UaoTonntBTH

127—OHico Rontals

To List Your Business...'
Diol 322-2611 or 831-9993

AENOOEUNCSPECIALIST
We Handk
ThaWhok BallOl Wax

B.LUNK CONST.
322-7029

Financing Available

Cleaning Service

Home Repairs

Paper Hanging

•44MJM
Cattap* Care Inc
Lk. Insures
SI* per beer, all demostk lab*

C A R P B N T lI^ T to p a lr^ T n d
remodeling. No job too small.
Call: X&gt;H45.

PAPER HANOINO RetidenlTi
A commercial. Free E»l. Call:
Roy Taylor HI 40H.

Lendctearing

Pressure Cleaning

GENEVALANDCLEARINO
Lot/Undckarlng........ Fill dirt
Topsoil....Ponds....Drain ditches
S jt^ ie g a ra tk v ^ C a l^ W S m

CUNNINGHAM A WIF I
Average 1 Bdrm. Home, SIS
Average Mobile Homo. 110
Call:...;......................H17514

Head Carpel Cksntog Living
Dtotog Ream A Hall Sit.*#.
SetoACkak, til. m -M M
SPIC N* SPAN CLIANINO
Homes, offices, etc. Cleaning
supplies furnished.
Santord...................... 333 10*0

Masonry

Appliance Repair

Electrical

Mens Applimce Sinks

Anything Electrical...Since 1*7*1
Estimate*....N Mr. Service Call*
Tent's itoctrk Servke...m-mt

34 hr. Service-.Me lit r e Ckerpel
17 Vr. lip.... J4PS441,... J7444U

Carpentry
All type* of cepentry A re­
modeling. 17 years axp. Call
Richard Groaa MM472.
GARY’S CONSTRUCTION
All Phaeat. new construction,
additions, decks, etc. alte
concrete wark. !1 years expe­
rience. Call: Gary SX&gt;IUt

General Services
ePACN’ SINOe
it * E. Commercial St.Santord.
m - 1117Packaging A Shippinq

Home Improvement

Secretarial Service

Quality at retonabk prices
Spectail ting in Fireplaces/Brkk

CUSTOM TVFING- M er smaTl
Call: D.J. la. i B H » i m _

Moving A Hauling

Tree Service

LIGHT HAULING

All Tree Service -f
Woodsplltter tor hire
Call Alter 4 P M. :M&gt;WOO
ALLIN'S TBBK SIBVICI
You've Called the RestNew Call the Basil
PAY U t il............ m ms
ECNOUTREE SERVICE

ANDDILIVKRV
Call)......
LOU'S HAULING- Appliances.

B k. llrewoed. pargsge. etc.

^ l»N W ijh t o t g i^ ^

Nursing Care

ilU w P rk M I

’ " l u r n r i u i i low
•n

m -m t day emit*

m -m t

m i.

WILAtSNOMB REPAIR

M..

Painting
2SN3n9ton^mr^RtoTTxpert

All Types
i-ttotobtoi

-JBvnat

p a i n t i n g , f ai r prices.
.Call:W-7SM.

CALL BART

DOWN Freo
MMfatkn. Call BM-flNi day

191-luiM M f
t d Hgawle
sMf nA ■
vwu
p
BUILDINGS- all stoel. m T oT
I'O.SW; 1*0 x 735- I4P.N0;
athprt trpm *3.15 *q- ft.

IISINOi Icolkcl)

213— Auctions

201
Well Drilling
Weil*
•A V I MONIYM
tor town. pwl. Bordsn. etc. f
BUSH Sh a l l o w w i l l s
171-0557
Lk...

Lake Mery Btvd Frentege
1074 Sq Ft. Freo standing build­
ing with ample parking. Im
madiate occupancy. I S year
lease avallabla. 322-7204.
Offices tor rent. On 17 43. From
100 to 400 sq. tt. Coll: 131174#
or 1210100._________________
40* Sq FT. 210 additional It
naeded. Ampk parking. M.OO
Sq Ft. Laka Mary. 1 to 5 year
leas* avallabla. 131 7104.

BT OWNER Country Club Rd.
Auumabk. Almost now. 3
Bdrm., 1 Bath, flrptact. dou
bk parape. deep wall. STS.toO
HOMEttCKI Call: 311 7371
YOU CAN OWN ter SIN month
W/E3.0M dawn Setter will IInanco. Charming (Ilka new), 3
bdrm.. wall/wall carpet,
central heat/alr. appliance*.
Days antv: 31111*0.
3 Bdrm., 1 bath, all equipped
kitchen screened perch.
- enckead perap*. comer lot
with foncad yard, central
jw a t^ a jr jt o m x r iijli^ .

COMMIRCIAL SPECIALIST
SALE* AND APPRAISALS
BOB M. BALL JR. F.A..CSJL
REALTOR................. ItMltB

CALL ANYTIME
REALTON..................ttMHI

LOT FOR SALE- Chela* 14Small tot on smalt lake. Faved
(treat City water. *4.W0.

LIST WITH U ll

OVIEDO REALTY,INC.

^

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

Sjhfgrfi SafeslooBof

Auction last Sunday

t Jet Mto t m 440 ten** w/
custom bultl traitor. tU M tor
. a lL m M t t a lt o r ljm ^ ^ ^

219—W anted* Buy

149-Commorcial
Prupurfy/Salu

OTHER HOMES. LOTS.
ACREAGE, INVCSTMINT
PROFIRTV

SANFORD AVI.- Owner flnanc
Ing. ■ ts.S acres, Improved
pasture.
Wallace Cm* Realty Inc.
»1-W77
I7M
water. M25 per acre. Reel
^ jta to O w m n o o ^ ^ ^ ^

Baby bad*, clatba*. lay*,
playpaa*. sbaet*. tewalt,

Brawn River rock step
Dltt. bee reck dry well*,
benches, stop*, f tower pet*.
Miracle Concrete Company
300 Elm Ave................ 133 5751
flow Surplus Lumber For Sale
up to 00% saving*. Call: 3310154 after 3pm Sunday end
before 3pmweekdey*.
PIANOS...ORGANS...GUITARS
Christmas clearance. Apollo
Musk Cantor. 2330 S. French.
Ave.. 321-4403
I Inch
Slate. Excellent condition.
M lO jgu m ovo^ O ^ J to ^ ^ ^

U l— Can

155—Condominium!

Co-Op /Sato

★ IM Y T O M M n O W

PRKtniRTHCR RfDUCfDI
1 bdrm., 3 bath, range, ret.,
dishwasher, disposal, washer
A dryer. Pool A club house.

WE LIST AND SILL
MORI HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

Sondlewoed Villa*. *11.000.

jh jR u it jS t e r ^ e m m

157—Mobile
Homos/Solo

AIN'T IT CUTB4 1 Bdrm.. I
hath. Dining area, central
heat and air, carport con-

NO MONET DOWN
Assum* payments on 11x40
moblk home. Adult Section ot
Carriage Cave.
Call:...... .................. 3P-I

etomentory tchnW. setjM

WHIN ORDINARY WONT DO
1 bdrm.. t batb, lake vkw,
central haat add air. fireplace,
peel with patera cleaner, utili­
ty room, fenced yard. S7IJM
DOUBLI HEADER- Vary at­
tractive duplex- batb ibdrm.,
1 batb. central beat aad air.
bltcban, near high scheel,
perfect ter fbe Investor.
175,IM
WILL BUILD TO SUITI YOUR
LOT OR OURSI EXCLUSIVE
AGENT POR WINSONO
OIV. CORP., A CENTRAL
PLORIOA LIAOERI MORE
HOME FOR LESS MONIVI
CALLTODAYI

MVearaln
S E L L IN G OR B U Y IN G A
MOBILE HOME?
LETUSHELPI
New Or Used
RenLuMebik Heme Center
buytog*r tolling
Ceil Us

IM S . French Ave

ni-Tttl

. 3 Bdrm.. I bath. 10x10 screened
porch, double root, air condi­
tioning. gas hut. large shed.
Call: 331PC7or4444434

'70 Grand Prl* SUM
'10 Dedge Aspen WgnStitS
74 Cougar 1445
7* La Baron » )W
5M Wade SI
Winter Springs
eSn-MOle
Pont. Grand Prlx/LJ-1471. Exc.
cond. New tires, tinted wlndows. S3S00.137 3405W. Sprgs.

CHICO A THE MAN.....JH-U70
14P1 PONTIAC TRANSAM I
owner. 11,000 miles.
*0345. Call: 7MM7I.
75 CAMARO LT- Full gauge.
runt grut. *1500.;
U TRANSAM- Fully loaded
33,000 mile*, clean. *7,000 or

.131-7*3*
Call:.
70 FORD LTD statknwegonVary good condition,
but otter. Call: 133 5317.

111—Appliances
/ Furnituro
MICROWAVI OVEN
TAPPAN
New MS model. Family slit,
left In layaway, still In box.
10-year factory guarontu.
balance ol S33S or t il month.
To su. cell 4*3 5144 day or

CMi ANYTIME

113—T*l«visk&gt;n /
Radio/StorM

322-2420

Miller's

Ml* Orlando Dr. Call: S H W

235-Trucks/
Bum/Vans
Pick up V4 ton.
Call: n&gt;*175.

241—Rtcrootional
Vohictet/Campors

OOOOUSIOT.V*SS2SandUP
got Lk. Mnry Blvd...... Lk. Mary

Acreuthnrtur. topof MM

174tony t l^ i DnBary t
‘ m i. blant*.

.Runt

5Acre Country tract*.

3545 PARK AVI......

Fori
I4U35S-W11

greet. Good transportation.
*150. Call: 33I-S5M.
IN I MUSTAND 4 cydindtr. air.

ZONED FOR MOBILES!

It you ar* tooblng tor a
successful career In Real
Estate. Stonstrom Realty Is
tubing tor yea. Call Lu
Albright today at 133141*.
Evening* 133-JM3.

MTO AUCTION

e F U I I AUTO SALES*
# SUPER SPECIALS*

• OINIVA-OSC KOLA RD •

Well treadonpaved Rd.
ION Down. 10Yr*. at 11%I
From*11.5001

ro g u e

Every Tkvrs. Ntto*t7:M PM

Body rough. 1375. Welded
steel JO gal. fuel tank and
Stand, *50.30 3344._________

PEA C EFU L FORRBST- I
bdrm.. I batb. ent-to kitchen,
central haat and air, I
SS4.4M

Hxrytl...

* Whoro Anybody *
a Con Buy or S oli!*

FOR PEOPLE ON THE GO- 1
kdrm.. i bath
md air.

117-Commore la I

Carport*............ Private Patks

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Largo older heme In excellent
condition, *50.*00.

REALTY*REALTOR

Furntsbudor UofotoMfeA.

CONSULT OUR

Cosy Ibdrm on Summerlin Ave.
Only *37.M0

3 bdrm. duplex. Appliances.
Carpet, air. hook ups. S175
Adults. No pets. 0*3 *040.

1stS^pNNM

If you can And a bettor dutTaboR

ATTENTION INVESTORS!
Large house on West lit St.
Zoned GC3.E5i.000.

STENSTROM

Ip Room* with maid service

• FurnIthedefficiencies

STemper

105—DupluxTripltx / Runt

Ywr Nm Us!

Additions a
Remodeling

.m s n *
SANFORD m I . 10 St.- 4
Bdrm.. Ito bath, tip-top con
dttton, appielnces. hoot/alr.
gar apt, wooded comer tot.
good neighborhood. Buyer
pays *M50 down on new !1%
Fha Loan, softer pay* all wan
and closing costs. *55,000.
Coll:.......................M1I543

REALTOR.

Call..

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

APARTMENTS

«iw»n*t* **

1521 French Av*.

91—Apartments/
House to She ra

LONOWOOD well kept &gt;
Bdrm.. &gt; both, family ream,
paddle fan*, work shop,
privacy fence, sprinkler
system and more. Greet
Lecatton. Aiixmebk tot *f
534.000 at 0% Asking H U B .
MuUSaet.Call: 111*407.
n i c e R ie u c iD tt
To *45.000 tor Ihlp spa* km
family home on large lot In
quiet location in town. FHA
financing availabk. One kek
will convince you.

R IA L ISTATI
REALTOR___________ 0174(0

MU Preach Ave.

BAM
U ttB
i 1m a * r t W I M y—l
iw W i B
rwa *9
V Hfwh ln

and health mauranca. Apply
Pormltm, Inc.. Port of San­
tord off Orange Blvd. Apply
P it and 1-3, Monday through
Friday.

It *»

r»

323-5175

Pd a n Manor.. M N. Nwy. 17-Pi
MAIQS-Help u* dean up.
Driver'* LI cent* required.
Call Pap- In* w ane.________
MICA
Worker* far Tap Shop. Sam*
experience with router*. table

REALTOR................... ta-tm
SANFORD/ LAKE MARY
Dream Hemet Avatlahto
Now I All Price*. Somlnoto
and Valvtia Countlet Great
Term*. Call tor Free
Computer Search Today 11

323-5175

LPN or BN aoodad, 1-tl NUN.
Oaad atmu phen A boneftt*.
Pull time paaitlan. Apply at:
OaBary.....____________ ....aiid

StiH In warran

M M .I
Lake Mary- Ponced.
a/I. home. Fireplace and
l a r f * s c re e n e d parch.

Uaa year ihllk and
parianaitty N land
MW Preach Ave.
lepai lanced weman w/ret. ta
car* N r « moo. aid m U .
— Mary Name. Man-Prl. » 1 M
PAST POOD PREPARATMMTap talary, hoapitatitatton, t
wok vacation each • menthe.
Other benefit*. Apply: m N.
L a u r e l A v e , Sa n fo rd .
»:M&lt;:»,MendevPrtdev.
Pkelhk haur* new evalkhN Nr
hatch time hour*. Student*,
hautawiva* and ratlraa*.
PNaaa apply In portan. Raa.
HOI W^Hwy 04. Lanewaed

Original prtca over MW.
BptoacP dug BtlB caNur told
aver ppyawnto MS a

u t

V H B I r l l ■*i g n l

call: atpMM afNr is P.M. ar

-&lt; $ &gt; « •
ready for work at * AM
W. lit. St..».......... .Santord

M /m p

For Sato MFt Terry Travel
Traitor. Salt contained. A/C
and awnInq. 3234017.

ARISTOCRAT MOTOR CARS

141—Homos For Salo
HOME FOR SALE By owner.
Off Markham woods Road.
3410 Dawn Crt. (Basldo
Hanover Wanda). 4 Bdrm, 2
Bath, larga lot. Priced to sell I
Coll 3H-1S07 lor appointment.
(Owner Realty Assoc.)______
SANFORD )M CLUB RD- 1
Bdrm.. super shape In/out.
new appliance*, heat/alr.
Only SUM down on new 11%
FHA loan, owner pay* loan
and dosing costs. (44.000.
Coll:....................... DI-lMl

II \ I I It I VI H

iti w urn
DUPLEX- B-X porches* tor

wltb kitchen eqxippedl
Central air * carpet! “
I
HIDDEN L A K I BSTATBII
Gnat tocattMl 3 bdrm. I
hatbt Obi. f areBet Alrl
Pancedl W/w carpet, bit.
nNypaWA t o m S S w 'lS r * 1^

323-5774
SMNRrV.IPM

1977oios.

%

one

1910 CADILLAC
ELDORAOO —
197$ GRAND
F A IR .....................
1977 HONDA

*6595
S T ....*4295
$995
w V»T
■ANN
I I __ *13
A G f 995
V v t f
*1495
1911 FLY.
1971 DATSUN
REUANT.............
*2595 1-210................ *1995
197SOLDS.
1990 FOND
FAIRMONT__
$2595
*1995 CUTLASS
BUY HERE, P A Y HERE
SOME MODELS
CUTAL$$.....................

9 9 9

• *#**•*•

4175 S.
Sanford

»

365-3300

�, , . r..

•

*—»*w * t -*—•*. . •

.f* •# •

4S—IvM taf MoraM, SaMarS, PI.

BLONOfC

TwmSay, Ok . 1,19M

start youhanv

BEETLE BAILEY
W e OHOULPN*T
HAVE SA*»E?S
P O » IN TUB

by M o d W a f t *

HE'S M E S S Y
AMP SM ELLY
a h p s h e p e ...

LET M E W O R K

SOMBTH IN S OUT

TH E B O R N LO S E R
( B U T I -THCUbHr.,.^
------------

(

A R C H IE
r—

I WANTED

T O TE L L Y O U A S O O T
P E S O R A , O U T I 'V E
F O IE G O T T S N W H A T I T
W AS. R E G G IE .'

.

/»•»
EEK A MEEK
TD COVET IS WOT
W ectS S A R lL V I D l c v e ...

TO LO/E IS NO T
WtCtSSARlLV I D H AVt.

y

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

r

t V I ,*w.

■*’-?•*?. Tonies And Elixirs
With DHtoront Nemos

n a a iK T

an

.

r* '*1*

Years ago, health tonics were syrup. Omnl-Tuss suspension,
widely believed to be beneficial p y r l b e n s s m l n e expectorant, h
agents that helped cure disease. ' Romex. Silence Is Golden Cough
They made people feel better. Syrup. Sorbose Cough Syrup.
T hey were popular over-the- Triamtnieol Cough Syrup and * If. In the appropriate case, an
Tussionex suspension
alcohol-free medicine la desired,
counter medications.
You may ask: What purpose is the patient should have the right
Ton ics have been replaced
now with new formulations. served by this boring index o f * to choose. The recent reaction to
Since scientists discovered that medication? The answer is: 1 reports that som e so-called
alcohol was the major ingredient believe we need to know the "a lc o h o l-fre e " beers actually
In many tonics, the public de­ constituents of medicine we feed c o n t a i n a l c o h o l ( a l b e i t In
veloped scorn for old-fashioned to ourselves and our children. amounts o f less than 0.5 per­
brews. Yet elixirs and ionics arc One tablespoon of a 20-percent cent) focuses attention on labels
still very much with us — under a l c o h o l p r ep a ra ti on Is the that are misleading or downright
equivalent of one ounce of wine. dishonest.
different names.

T o d a y ’ s p r o d u c t s arc
marketed primarily for cough,
c old s and con gestion . T h ey
contain new chemicals, but the
chemicals arc still diluted with
alcohol. More than 500 pro­
MO
p rietary m edications contain
PO M
alcohol In concentrations o f up
M lO b fc P
to 68 percent (136 proof). Many
arc liquid vitamin mixtures.
This alcohol Is not Innocuous.
It can Increase gastric acidity,
by Art E n i o m
d ep ress brain function and
produce dangerous reactions In
m satbth e
recovering alcoholics. Of more
potential Importance arc the
long-term effects of administer­
in g al cohol -contai ni ng c o m ­
pounds to young children.
Prescription drugs may con­
tain alcohol — for example:
D onnatal El ixi r (23 percent
alcoh ol, plus phcnobarbltall.
Elixophyllln Elixir (20 percent
a lc oh ol). Quibron Elixir (15
percent). Benadryl Elixir (14
percent). Propadrlnc Elixir (16
percent) and Tcrpln Hydrate
by B ob M ontana
Elixir (42 percent).
NOW X REM EM BER'
More significantly, common
H E * FA TH ER S O U G H T
A U L M F OTk%*»
nonprcscripllon liquid prepara­
tions contain high concentra­
tions o f alcohol: Drlstan (12
percent). Nyquil (25 percent).
Vicks 44 (10 percent) and Gcritol
(12 percent). Children are fre­
qu en tly given Novahistinc
e x p e c t o r a n t (5 p e r c e n t ) .
Phcncrgan expectorant (7 per­
cent). Tylenol Elixir (7 percent)
and Chcmcol (3 percent).
Many consum ers arc c o n ­
cerned about the overuse of
alcohol in medicines.
Fortu­
b y Howl# Sch naidar
nately. ninny reputable drug
companies share this concern
TD HAVE IS HOT
and arc manufacturing alcoholNECESSARILY TD WJAAJT *
free medicines. Some common
liquid medicines (hat contain no
a
l c o h o l arc: Ac l i f c d- C
# !
expectorant. Codlmal
expectorant. Conar A. Glycntuss
syrup. H ycom in c Pediatric

ACROSS

I

1 Bad (comb.
form)

S Kind of p i
11 Ptfltoil
12 Contemporary

Answer to Previous Punts

4 Of (Fr.)
(aifer.)
• Spooky

7 Bird elm
| fating alcovo
• Loot swoon of

1 3 C ry of doepoir

10 Of the (la )
14
--------------- stands
11 Asian country
15 Modi oditinf
14 Mine antranoo
mark
18 Fomata saint
17 Honshu bay
&lt;•«*.)
I I Saving
18 Coastal sms of
substances
Ithtapta
1t Trsvslon
20 Consign
t------- a---- 1
norisosvK

S E O D

D D E

22 Noun suffix
23 Dawn goddess
hast
38 Genus of
28 Street (Fr.)
24 Vetch
maples
28 Latin greeting
37 Commence­
28 Ritual
27
--------------- to Joy ment
2 4 Potyncstan god
28 Compete point
38 More foxy
27 Not in
30 t urmoso
38 Dry, oa wine
28 lasic machines
31 One (Oar )
41 Raich'c wife
30 Front-runnsr
32 Most esthetic
42 Track sections
21 Osad

c o n e

□ o n e n n n ehddo
anon non nnnn
nnnnnnn nnnnn
□nn non
nnnnn nnnnnnn
□nnn ennn nnn
n n n c o n n rcnein
nnnnnnn nnnnn
non nnn
nnnnn □nnnnnn
□□nn nnn nnnn
znnn nnn nnen
□nnn nnn nnnn
44 Norse night
48 Wont by ear
87 Economic
indicator (abbr.)
88 Fifth iodise
sign
88 8# mistaken
52 Iridium symbol

3 3 Chamicai suffix

34 River in
Yorkshire
35 Housetop
feature
3 7 C IA

predecessor
40 lank payment
(ebbr.)
41 Move quickly
42 Domination
43 Actress Selin
48 Unpredictable
47 Collector (of

facts, etc.)
80 French river
81 Squatter
52 laiybonas
53 Maker of
osrthonwsro
84 Musical symbol 47

DOW N
1 Kings
2 W arm s

3 Expel

00*0

(C)tses by NtA. Inc

W IN A T BRIDGE

i
/as

MR. M E N A N D LITTLE MISS

by H argfsavaa A Sallara

).U.^

|THROW

So

I A T TM ff

•»OH ■

‘u i

L
B U GS B U N N Y

b y W am ar Brothara

WELL. AT LEAST CXT
ON TAiS TwOPlCAU
ISLAND. THgBgS NO
war THAT VVABBlT
CAN STEAL
CAWW O T S

J OPMT CO U N T
ON A C V V IM E
W A V E .,

3S
itf-U
by B ob Thavaa
V

U "

i r &amp; EIAS Tb ME THAT
'’ HOW m a n y i n 'Ibug
H O U S E H O L D ? ’&gt;
BE A

w o u l p

*IM P L £

QUESTION 7b A MSWEft,
PP.

J fJ e Y L U .

Th AM*.) IX-J

. ..
G A R F IE LD

by Jim D arla
\
J V
'

l*y?

s

XSSS&gt;S R

B um
BnMmn—rMi.«imatm.&gt;»

TUMBLEWEEDS

•OTCA rto ftiF S K ti PATBUNe:

StQMVSUUH/

$tESfr Jiii

P E S E B .T ,
'E N O X 7 N C

At the other table, on the
replay, the bidding was ihc
same, but this lime East had no
trouble with tired eyes. He
smartly covered the queen ol
diamonds with the king. De­
clarer. of course, won ihc ace.
Now*, however. South could do a
little card-placing. If West had no
king of diamonds for his opening
hid. shouldn’t he at least have
tlu* spade king*? And mightn't
iliat key card be sitting In the
West hand unprotected? Accord­
ingly. declarer banged down the
spade ace and caught the single­
ton king to make his contract.
That's not the percentage play
when you're missing three lo the
king, unless you arc very close
to certain (hat the hand behind
you must hold the king to Justify
the bidding.

NORTH

|U

♦ 10 7 5 3

VJt)
♦Q

♦ KQ8S4
WEST
♦ K
♦ A 84 2
♦ 10174 3

EAST
8 tt
*Kt7
4 KJ03

♦ AJ5

4 1083 1

SOUTH
♦ A QJ9I 2
♦ Q 101

•

♦ A83
♦ 7

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer West
W t fl
1 ♦
Pus
Pus

N o r tb
Pass
34
Pass

Ea s t
18
Pus
Paxa

Saotfc
24
44

Opening lead: ♦ 4

HOROSCOPE

FR AN K A N D ERNEST

Jtn »VT6

B y Jam es Jacoby

Myopic Minnie Dot loins was
silling East on this deal during
our fiction al Christmas-time
bridge mulch. After the fourspade contract had been passed
out. • M i n n i e ’ s partner u n ­
surprisingly led the four o f
diamonds. Once again Minnie’s
nol-so-young eyes mixed up the
king and Jack, and so she played
the diamond jack on dum my's
lone queen. Thai (old a story to
declarer — namely, that the
diamond king was actually held
by West. Of course ail of us know
iK’ltcr. since our eyes are fine,
but the declarer saw no oilier
line o f play than to go ahead and
lake the spade finesse, since it
seemed that the spade king
inlgiu very well be with East.
And so — down one.

by T. K. Ryan

AC£ PESILK SOUANPE^EP
A DOLLAR! GOT HIS SECOND
HAIRCUT IN ONE MONTH!

f D E S E R T -H
L P B N O I^ C E R ?

I

What The Dov
Will Bring...

others disagree.
more product Ivfc. thereby im­
P ISC E S (Feb. 20-March 20) proving your chances for In­
Ambitious objectives are now creased earnings.
T O U R B IR T H D A Y
attainable. Lady Luck will In­
LE O (July 23-Aug. 22) Take
D E C E M B E R 4. 1085
.
tervene when she secs you're m e a s u r e s t o d u y to t r y to
Tw o people you have long doing the best you can.
establish a relationship with
known in a purely social sense
A R IE S (March 2 1-April 19) An
som eone y o u r e c e n t l y met
will play helpful roles in vour llfc old relationship that has lain
whom you'd like to know better.
In tite year ahead. One Is a male, dormant for many months is
This person feels the same way.
the other Is female.
going lo be revitalized. This
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec. friend no longer lives in your
not let y o u r conf id enc e be
21) You could be extrem ely vicinity.
shaken today regard in g the
lucky at this time regarding new
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20) A outcome of an Important event.
ventures or projects that you positive change will start to stir
Hold positive thoughts and act
originate. If you have something today In a situation that is accordingly.
ready to go. don’t waste more financially important to you and
time.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If
another. Hindrances will be alle­
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jail. 19) viated.
you've been contemplating In­
You are going lo com e out better
volvement in a new social circle,
G E M IN I (May 21 June 20) this is an excellent day to start
than you first thought regarding
an old obligation that has been Alliances you establish in (his making some Inroads. Contact
owed you for quite a while. Sit time frame with people of integ­ the "In " people.
rity have excellent chances of
tight.
SCO RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22) Try
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) working out for your collective to divest yourself at this time
Your hopes are Justified per­ good.
from unprofitable arrangements
C A N C E R (June 21-July 22) so that you can make space for
taining to something important
y ou ' v e been wi shi ng would Work habits can be revised t h i n g s t h a t w i l l be m o r e
happen. Keep the faith, even If beginning today so that you'll be lucrative.
A N N IE
- I COULD O'SWORN W
OTHER TUNNEL WAS EACH
7MB WAY/ 8UT I CONT
M B IT/ SANDY/.

by
WE'D S E T T E R .A W S 7 - A
S rr.SETT/ft'H A R B .
T* BMATHKm

Starr

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218121">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, December 03, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218122">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218123">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on December 03, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218124">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218125">
                <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;, December 03, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218126">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218127">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218128">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218129">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21847" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21452">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/e3e061f921134789d961c3d94eae043a.pdf</src>
        <authentication>c157775c311934ee09acfb7cdb7a6631</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218150">
                    <text>■

78th Year, No. 29, Wednesday, September 25, 1985—Sanford, Florida

Evening

Fiercest Hurricane
In A Decade Rages
Toward East Coast
MIAMI (UPI) — Powerful Hurricane Gloria, Its
150-mph winds making it one of the fiercest storms In
a decade, raged toward the East Coast today.
Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center In
Miami advised people In mid-Atlantic coastal states to
pay attention to weather advisories and “ be ready for
quick action." They said a hurricane watch might be
issued for parts of the mid-Atlantic Coast later In the
day.
"This Is one storm you don't wont to stay on the
beach for." said forecaster Gil Clark said. "O f course.
It’s still a long ways from land but there Is a threat to
the East Coast, particularly the Carollnas northward
through New England."

A

At 6 a.m. EDT. Gloria was centered about 700 miles
south-southeast of Cape Hatteras. N.C.. near latitude
25.5 north, longitude 71.5 west.
The storm was located about 550 miles cast of
Miami and on Its northwest course was no threat to
south Florida.
It was moving northwest near 15 mph. a speed and
path expected to continue today, about 300 miles cast
of the Bahamas. Hurricane warnings remained In
See 8TORM, page 2A

ft

\

Kr

-

(USPS

481-280)

—

Price

25

Cents

Suspect Tricks Jail
;
Destroys Incriminating Note
A little sleight o f hand by a
suspected drug dealer has embar­
rassed Winter Springs police and
protected numerous drug customers.
While booking the man Into Jail
Saturday, officer E.W. McDaniel re­
ported finding a list of about 20 names
with prices beside them In the sus­
pect's possession. The list was left on
a table near the suspect while the
officer made a phone call.
When McDaniel returned the paper
was gone, the report said.
"You can do what you will with me.
but leave my customers alone, " the
suspect said, according to a police
report. He had flushed the paper down
the toilet, he said.
Winter Springs Police Chief John
Govorhuk said the man apparently
"palmed" the paper and had a Jail
worker escort him to the restroom
while McDaniel was at the phone.
Gavorhuk said Tuesday no action
has been taken against the officials
Involved and he doesn't anticipate

any action. However, he said, this will
be a lesson both to his men and to Jail
personnel to not take their eyes ofT of
evidence until It's safely out of the
reach of suspects.
The man had been arrested after a
traffic stop after 11 p.m. Saturday on
State Road 434. Winter Springs police
noticed his car had an expired tag.
After smelling marijuana In the car.
police searched the vehicle.
Discovered, according to police re­
ports. was more than 20 grams of
marijuana, several boxes of small
plastic bags also were reportedly
found, along with four bags contain­
ing pot. four partially smoked pot
cigarettes, cigarette rolling papers. 10
yellow pills, and other drug-related
Items, a police report said.
Rlckl Gene Flippen. 30. of 1765
Holiday St.. Casselberry, has been
released on $2,500 bond and Is
scheduled to appear In court Oct. 7.
—Susan Loden

Gas In Groundwater Feared

’T

DER O rd e rs C lean-U p

kH ifK

Big Bang Theory

H*r«M PtMto by U m CatMlfesrry

When John Knapp, United W ay of Seminole cam paign
chairm an, bangs this gavel everybody listens including
M a jo r Industry Division C h airm an Sharyn Dickerson, who
was the only division head to report donations at the kickoff
breakfast for top cam paign w orkers Tuesday. A fo rm e r
cam paign chairm an, she got the 1985-86 cam paign rolling by
reporting a total of $9,375. M a ry L e M a y w ill be assisting her
with recruiting m a jo r industry contributions.

County Turns Down
Office Park Plan
Residents ul the Markham
Woods Road area finally reaped
the rewards of persistence last
night when county commission­
ers denied 4-0 a much-contested
request for rczoning that would
have allowed an offlec park
development on that road near
the Intersection of State Road
434 and Interstate 4.
Commissioner Sandra Glenn
was absent but had left word she
favored the staff recommenda­
tion to turn down the request.
Approxim ately 60 people,
most of them residents of that
area, attended the hearing to
voice opposition to the zoning
change that had been denied by
the county's Planning and Zon­
ing Commission.
Proponents of the zoning
change told commissioners the
high noise, air. odor and visual
pollution of the property caused
bv 1-4 made it unsuitable for
residences, allowed under Its
agricultural zoning.
Opponents of the project said
it would not be compatible with
the residential nature of the
area, would have a "domino
effect" on surrounding areas
being zoned for commercial use.
and adversely impact traffic on
Markham Woods Road.
"One of the problems with an
office park Is it has a lot of uses
that cun go in there and no one
knows what will go in there until

Herald

It's rented." Commissioner Fred
Strcctm an said. Strcctm an
moved to deny the motion and
suggested residents In the area
get together with owners of the
property to talk ubout what type
of lund use would be acceptable.
He also noted that he disagrees
with the domino-effect theory.
In other action commissioners
voted unanimously to:
—Rezone 3.5 acres north of
Lake Drive and east of Jamie
Lane from single family dwelling
to country home.
—Rczone I Vi acres on the
northeast corner of C.R. 427 and
Dog Track Road near Longwood
from multi-family residential to
retail commercial.
—Rczone 84 acres south of
Chapman Road and 3/4 miles
west of Alafaya Trail from
agriculture to single fumily
dwelling.
—Continue until their Nov. 26
meeting a request to permit a
private school and extended day
care pre-klnder program to 6th
grade on the west side of
Tuskawiila Road. 1/3 mile south
of Red Bug Lake Road.
—Continue until their Nov. 22
meeting a request to rczone from
agriculture and retail commer­
cial to travel trailer park and
campsites lOVi acres on the west
side of C.R. 15 southeast of
Interstate 4.

By Janie Gnat
Herald Staff Writer
'Just bdeaut* you can't
Leaks In underground gas
too It doosn't moan It's
storage tanks at three petroleum
______________
__
not harmful.'
contamination
sites In Seminole
County are under investigation
bY the D e p a r t m e n t 0f Environ"It was common back then to
mental Regulation and a tough ask (owners) to clean up what
new law may require owners of you could see and not worry
those sites to spend more than a about the rest," said Doug
year trying to clean up the areas.
White, environmental specialist
The three sites are Floral with DER In Tallahassee. "Just
Heights Grocery. 3300 South because you can't see It doesn't
Sanford Ave., Sanford, a Gulf m ea n I t 's n o t h a r m f u l . "
service station. 5355 Red Bug Therefore, the new law was
Lake Rd.. Winter Springs, and established.
the Seaboard Railroad In San­
"W e have more stringent laws
ford.
than any other state, except
Those sites are Just a drop In maybe California, concerning
the bucket of 266 petroleum underground gas tanks." said
contamination sites all over the George Glonls. environmental
state that may be leaking at least manager, enforcement section of
one cancer cau sin g agent, the district DBR office.
benzene. •
Because of Its history. DER
A lt h o u g h th e S e a b o a r d tested the ground around the
Railroad site was reported leak­ leak at the Seaboard Railroad
ing diesel from an above-ground site and found a possibility of
pipe In 1079. the diesel was groundwater contamination.
cleaned up from the surface Since then the company has
water but no check was made for hired a consultant to begin the
groundwater contamination. lengthy clean up process.
About 10.000 gallons of diesel
A DER Operational Response
Team was scheduled to visit the
was believed lost In that leak.

Lake Mary OKs Office Complex Site Plan
Final building plans were
approved for an office building
complex called Commerce Point
by the Lake Mary City Planning
and Zoning Board Tuesday
night, while a company called
Prlmera presented preliminary
p la n s fo r a 1 8 6 - a c r e .
2.2-mlllion-square-foot hotel and
olTice complex.
The board approved the final
site plan for Commerce Point 4-1
with member John Percy ob­
jecting over denial of a left turn
out of the complex.
Lame duck board member and
city commissioner-elect Charlie
Webster said. " I don't think a
left turn onto a road that busy
would be appropriate In terms of
five or ten years down the road.
A left turn In is accepted as a

Propane Leak Blast Kills 4, Injures 8
DAVIE. Fla. (UPI) — Propane gas leaking from
an underground tank exploded and demolished a
muffler shop "like a great big bomb" Tuesday,
killing four people. Injuring eight others and
damaging several nearby buildings.
"I thought the world was coming to an end.”
said Russell Vining. whose truck was rocked
violently by the blast as lie passed the Midas
Muffler Shop on University Drive.
"I was right In the middle of It. There was
debris everywhere." Vlnlng said. "It sounded like
a great big bomb."
Rushing to the shop, where only a ripped
American flag was left fluttering atop u 40-foot
pole. Vlnlng said he and another bystander saw
several men In the rubble.
"W e found one guy dead and one guy
breathing." he said.
Rescue teams, feuring another blast from the
gas leaking from a buried 250-gallon propane
lank behind the m uffler shop, searched
cautiously for other possible victims, but found
none.
.
Fire Chief Michael Donatl said the four victims
were men who were In or near the Midas Muffler
Shop when It exploded at 7:35 a.m. EDT. when
only a few employees of the shop and businesses
In the Davie Shoplng Center across the street had
reported for work.
Seven of the Injured were treated and released
at hospitals and one underwent surgery for head
Injuries at Hollywood Memorial Hospital and was

Flora) Heights Grocery site In assessment of contamination."
June, but It Is nol known Glonls said. "Then DER de­
w h e th e r th e y d is c o v e r e d termines If the assessment is
groundwater contamination at adequate or proper."
the site or how extensive any
If contamination presents a
contamination may be. In 1983. problem the owners of the site
the Sanford fire department arc required to remove the "free
alerted DER to the possibility of product." the petroleum floating
r. 1 -., L, . . .
11. ____i r t t - n ____ • __ __ , . .
.
..
°
a
leak at that .site
and DER was on the top of the water.
Since
sending the team because of that some of the petroleum will
history.
dissolve the owner must then
During Chevron Oil’s takeover hire a contractor to determine
of Gulf OH Company. It reported whether contamination of the
a leak at the Gulf Station In gro u n d w a ter has occu red.
Winter Springs In January 1985. Glonls said.
The amount of diesel fuel lost
A contamination assessment
was unknown, but about 25 report is then done, describing
gallons was recovered. The new the area of contamination, types
owners have hired a consultant. of contamination. Its concentra­
Geraghty &amp; Miller, to assess tion and extent.
—
possible contamination.
. " I f contamination Is minor and
The law. which received final
approval In August of this year. there is little possibility o f con­
Is explicit about what types of tamination of someone's well we
studies must be done, steps to may accept a restitution fee
take In compiling the studies, without ordering clean up.
and requirements for DER's ap­ G lo n ls said .
proval of the studies. Although
A fte r the c o n ta m in a tio n
there are time limits by which to assessment report Is approved
complete the studies. It could the owner (or the consultant)
take years before any clean up Is must submit a plan for cleaning
started. Glonls said.
up the area which must also
"W e require the owners do an meet with DER approval.

In unstable condition.
"W e were very fortunate simply because If it
Just had occurred a little later a lot of the other
businesses would have opened and the casualties
would have been much higher," said Police Lt.
Tim Hill.
Davie police Identified the dead men as Keith
Metzger. 30. Lauderdale Lakes; Jerry Bernard
Hall. 38. Davie; Michael Turk. 41. Plantation; and
William Blocker. 23. Miami. Police did not know
whether all the men were Midas employees.
Among the eight people Injured were a
neighbor who suffered a heart attack and a man
pulled from a vehicle he was driving down
University Drive when the explosion occurred.
One of the eight, Michael James Andres,
remained In unstable condition at Hollywood
Memorial Hospital after undergoring surgery for
head Injuries, a hospital spokeswoman said. The
other seven were treated at various hospitals and
released.
Donatl said propane gas leaking from the
underground tank caused the explosion. He said
the gas was used for torches to cut metal for
mufflers.
*
"The gas leaked Into the building and built up
Inside." he said. "W e don't know what caused the
Ignition. Somebody could have turned on a light
switch, lit a cigarette or started up a car Inside.
We just don't know at this point.”

necceslty but the turn out Is nol
necessary."
Commerce Point is a planned
two story multi-use office com­
plex containing 17,500 square
feet of office space on 2.4 acres,
lt will be home to 60 workers
and will be located on the
north-east corner of Rinehart
Road and Lake Mary Boulevard.
Dledrich Mohrlng. the devel­
oper for Commerce Point, said
he would like the convenience of
the turn lane and had expected
It would be no problem. Building
and Planning Department of­
ficial Stan Welling told the board
Rinehart Road would eventually
be paved for four lane and It was
his opinion that It would suffice
for exit. Mohrlng went on to
explain that other objections the
board had expressed about
routing of power lines, access for
fire trucks and signs for parking
and exit had been planned for.
The board went on to other
subjects such as waste water
removal and storm water reten­
tion and as a group seemed
pleased with the plans.
Talmadge then called for a
vote and suggested to board
members that In the future It
should be accepted board policy
not to allow left turns onto Lake
Mary Boulevard and that he

would approve this plan only on
that condition. Mohrlng ap­
peared- to accept the decision
and voiced no objection. The
board then voted and approved
the plans without the turn lane.
Prlmera Company President
Dean Hall addressed the hoard
about preparations for his com­
pany's presentation to the devel­
opment review committee of the
East Central Florida Regional
Planning Council In Winter Park
on Thursday. He said zoning
changes to accommodate the

186 acres of office complexes,
plaza shopping center, fitness
center and 500 room hotel were
90 to 95 percent completed. He
said. "W e (company) still have
several weeks before our Nov. 26
presentation to the city uiul that
gives us time to ^appeal any
changes in plans th*at we might
have to make."
Hall said the construction
would be completed In three
phases with final completion
being scheduled for the year
Sec SITE, page 2A

Watch' Group Gets Into Action
Members o f Nclgnborhood
Watch In the Georgetown area of
east S an ford have proven
themselves as crime stoppers by
recently assisting police In nab­
bing three burglary suspects.
Sanford Police Chief Steve
Harriett said Tuesday that
Neighborhood Watch patrolmen
Earl C. Myers and Artis Hardy
Jr. were Instrumental In the
speedy arrests of three suspects
arrested shortly after midnight
on Sept. 18. who had allegedly
Just before midnight burglarized
the home of Charlene Boynton of
411 Willow Ave.

The neighborhood watchers.
Harriett said, reportedly spotted
the suspects loading a television,
a microwave oven and other
items Into their vehicle from
woods near Ms. Boynton's home.
Those Items and Jewelry with a
total value of $3,800 were stolen
from Ms. Boynton and recovered
when the suspects were ar­
rested. Harriett said.
Myers and Hardy contacted
police by Citizen's Band radio
and then followed the suspects
until police arrived and arrested
the three In front of 821 Rosalia
Bee ‘WATCH1, page 2A

Much A do About Not Much
S E A T T L E (U P !) - L o c a l
astronomers say Halley's Comet,
already the subject of T-shirts, scat
cushions, hats and neckties, may
lay an egg In the Pacific Northwest.
"T o quote Dickens. It's the best
of times and the worst of times for
comet-watchers this time around."
said Dennis Schatz. an astronomy
specialist at the Pacific Science
Center.
.
"U's the best of limes for the
scientific community, because of
all the technological advances that

have been made that will allow an
unprecedented study of the comet.
"Bui It's the worst of times as far
as the view," he said Tuesday.
"Relative to 1910 (when It last
appeared), we in the Northwest will
have Just about the worst view of
the comet."
He said the murky weather In the
area and the Northwest's position
in relation to the comet and the
Earth will make the area a poor
viewing spot for the long-awaited
spectacle.

TODAY
A c t io n R e p o rts.......... 4 A
C a le n d a r ..........
C l a s s if i e d s ....... ...8B -9B
C o m i c s ............. ....... A B
D e a t h s .............
D r . G o t t ............ ....... A B
E d i t o r i a l ..........
N a t i o n ..............
P e o p le ..............
S p o r t s .............. ..8A -11A
T e l e v is io n .......
W e a t h e r ...........
W o r l d ...............

Sea BLAST, page 2A

~

# ... ... *

. ..»

•k A V

* «• K f

i_ i s n A rfa

» —« - - —

1

�2A—Evening H T ild , Sanford, FI. Wedweeday, Sept. I I , m »

M exico's Q u ake Toll W ill Reach 5,000 I
4

NATION
IN BRIEF
G e o rg e Shultz, S h evard n ad ze
M e e tin g To P re p a re Fo r S u m m it
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) — Secretary of State George
Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
get down to business today In preparation for their leaders'
November summit amid reports of a new Kremlin arms
proposal.
Their U.N. rhetorical Joust over, the two men sit down at
the Soviet U.N. mission for a scheduled four-hour meeting.
The session is expected to deal with preparations for the
Nov. 19-20 summit between President Reagan and Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev and Issues that divide the
nations.
Friday. Shevardnadze meets President Reagan at the
White House, a meeting that U.S. officials will study for
signs of Soviet seriousness on reaching an arms control
agreement at talks in Geneva. Switzerland.
Shevardnadze. In the Kremlin's latest pre-summit public
relations blast, delivered another attack on the U.S. "Star
Wars" space-based anti-missile defense program Tuesday.
In an address to the 40th U.N. General Assembly.
Shevardnadze called on the world body to reject
Washington's "sinister plans of Star Wars" and endorse a
Soviet "Star Peace" proposal for space exploration.
He also said Soviet negotiators had brought to the arms
control talks In Geneva "substantial, large-scale and
far-reaching proposals" to achieve a "radical solution" to
the Impasse.

MEXICO CITY (UPI) - Work crews
lumlgated and demolished buildings in the
earthquake-crushed heart of Mexico City, a
sign that authorities had little hope of
finding more survivors trapped in the ruins.
The official death toll from the two quakes
that rocked central Mexico Thursday and
Friday climbed to more than 4.200 people —
Including five Americans — and a govern­
ment spokesman said Tuesday It would
reach at least 5.000.
Rescue workers continued to search for
thousands believed trapped in the rubble of
buildings that collapsed during the powerful
quakes.

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Marriott Corp. announced
Tuesday It will buy the Howard Johnson Co. for $300
million, keeping 418 restaurants for Itself and selling the
rest of the food and lodging chain to a national hotel
operator.
Prime Motor Inns Inc. has agreed to pay the Marriott
hotel and restaurant chain $235 million for nearly all of
Howard Johnson's motor lodges and hotels, its franchised
restaurants and the Howard Johnson trademark.
Marriott will keep 350 of Howard Johnson's nonfranchised restaurants. 68 turnpike restaurants, plus the
company's vending, manufacturing and distribution
operations.
Marriott also will retain one of Howard Johnson's
Plaza-Hotels and management agreements for three others.
The assets acquired by Prime Motor Inns Include about
125 motor lodges and hotels operated by Howard Johnson,
375 franchised motor lodges and 199 franchised restau­
rants.

S u p erfu n d Financing C onsidered
WASHINGTON (UP!) — The Senate is ready to vote on a
$7.5 billion plan to expand the Superfund toxic waste
cleanup program, but says an alternative financing method
should replace a controversial proposal fora new tax.
But even though lawmakers agreed Tuesday they do not
like the proposed excise tax on major manufacturers, they
stopped short of ordering changes In the funding formula.
With work virtually complete on the Superfund package,
the Senate scheduled a final vote for Thursday. Sen. Robert
Stafford. R-Vt.. chairman of the Environment and Public
Works Committee, predicted the measure will be approved.
The legislation calls for creation of an excise tax to raise
$5.4 billion for Superfund over the next five years.
Continuation of an existing tax on manufacturers of the
chemicals and petroleum products most often identified as
hazardous wastes would raise another $ 1.5 billion.

AREA DEATHS
SELMA L. BURD
Mrs. Selma Larson Burd. 82. of
119 W. Jenkins Circle. Sanford,
died Monday at Lakevicw Nurs­
ing Center. Sanford. Born Oct.
13, 1903 In Omaha. Neb., she
moved to Sanford In 1971 from
there. She was a retired regis­
tered nurse and previously
owned and operated a gift shop
In Winter Park. She was a
member of Grace United Meth­
odist Church.
She is survived by a brother.
Carl E. Larson. Sanford; three
sisters, Ellen Davis. Wahoo,
Neb., Ethel Hall and Anna Huxhold, both of Seattle.
G ram kow Funeral Home.
Sanford, is in charge of ar­
rangements.
HELEN NAPIEARL8KI
Mrs. Helen Napfearlskl, 64. of
1005 Keats Ave.. Orlando, died
Sunday at her home. Bom April
16. 1921. in Bath. N.V.. she
moved to Orlando In 1952 from
Bath. She was a retired worker
for James E. Strates Shows and
was a Baptist. She !b survived by
her husband. Frank: four daugh­
ters. Carol Cohen. Kathleen
Hessler. Jeanne Rodriguez.
Shirley McDonald, all of Orlando;
seven grandchildren.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary, is In charge of arrange­
ments.
NORTON PRATT
Mr. Norton Wilder Pratt. 69. of
Spring Hammock Trailer Park.
Longwood. died Monday at
South Seminole Community
Hospital. Born May 21. 1916 In
North Adams. Mass., he moved
to Longwood from Oakland.
N.J.. In 1965. He was a chemical
salesman and an Episcopalian.
l4e was a member of Gray
Masonic Lodge. NorihAdams,.
Survivors Include his wife.
Janet; two sons. Robert, Rlva.
Md.. Douglas. Hawaii; a daugh­
ter, Shelia Khachadoorlan.
Mlllls, Mass.; mother, Gertrude
Legrand, North Adams: sister.
Harriet Sherman, Longwood;
five grandchildren.
Gram kow Funeral Home.
Sanford.

ESTELLE KINO
Miss Estelle King. 90. of 3355
Semoran Blvd., Forest City, died
Monday at Florida Living Nurs­
ing Center. Forest City. Born
Sept. 2, 1895 in Tennessee, she

moved to Forest City from
Zellwood In 1982. She was a
homemaker and a member of
Zellw ood United Methodist
Church. She was a member of
the Garden Club. Zellwood.
Survivors include two neph­
ews, Edwin W. Fly. New Smyrna
Beach, and J. W esley Fly.
Winter Park.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Apopka. Is In charge of
arrangements.

EDWARD P. FITZGERALD
M r. E d w a r d P le a s a n t
Fitzgerald. 64, of 404 Sunset
Drive, Sanford, died Tuesday at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal. Sanford. Bom Aug. 21, 1921
In Stuarts Draft. Va.. he moved
to Sanford from Hawaii In 1959.
He was a retired Navy chief petty
officer and a member of First
United Methodist Church. He
was a member of B. Duke Woody
Branch Fleet Reserve Associa­
tion.
Survivors include his wife.
Lucille; five sons. Edward T..
Orlando, Steven S.. Tallahassee,
W illia m L ee. D anny, and
Michael R.. all of Sanford;
brother. Sam uel Franklin.
Staunton, Va.; sister. Myrtle
Eavers. Staunton, Va.: six
grandchildren.
G ram kow Funeral Home,
Sanford, Is In charge of ar­
rangements.

Rescuers said the child was apparently
saved because It had been sheltered from
falling debris by a dead body. The baby,
whose sex and age could not be immediately
determined, was given oxygen and taken to
a nearby hospital.
R ica rd o A m p u d la. a p re s id e n tia l
spokesman, said work crews fumigated
devastated buildings In the heart of the
capital, where rescue teams feared at least

Gale warnings along the Con­
necticut and Massachusetts
coasts were lowered.

...S to rm
Continued from page l A
In place for the central Islands,
Including Eleuthcra and the
Abaco Islands.
Gloria’s maximum winds are
estimated to be near 150mph.
Meanwhile, forecasters wrote
their final advisory at 9 p.m.
Tuesday on tropical storm Henri
as Its remnants moved northeast
at 15 mph Into Rhode Island.

...'W a tc h '
Continued from page 1A

M a r r io tt Buys H o w a rd Johnson's

Shortly before 1 a.m. today, a baby was
rescued alive from under the rubble of the
maternity ward of the General Hospital, a
complex where several buildings collapsed.

Drive, Harriett said.
S a n fo rd p o lic e arc now
m on itorin g C itize n ’ s Radio
channel 9 as part of an anticrime drive In conjunction with
the Neighborhood Watch pro­
gram.
Harriett said - calls from CB
radios can now be made directly
into the police dispatch center.
He said Neighborhood Watch
members on patrol in private
vehicles in various areas In the
city report via radio to police
when th ey see suspicious
persons in their neighborhoods.

Clark said a cold front over the
United States will start to push
Gloria more to the north, com­
peting with a high pressure
system of warm air that has
been nudging It west.
"A big trough of low pressure
of really cold air over the mid
United States will deflect it more
to the north," Clark said,
Gloria wqs a strong number
four hurricane on a scale of one
Although the citizens have no
power to arrest or detain they
can help police pinpoint (rouble.
Harriett said.
In the Georgetown case. Brian
Knight. 19. or 2441 E. 21st St..
Sanford: Joseph Louis Ruffin
Jr.. 19. of 2581 Crawford Drive.
Sanford; and Thcodls Jones. 48.
of 302 Teakwood Lane. Alta­
monte Springs, have been
charged with burglary and
grand theft. Harriett said. Jones
and Ruffin have been released
on $5,000 bond each and are
scheduled to appear In court Oct.
7.
Harriett praised the efforts of
Neighborhood Watch and said
the group plans to continue to
assist police In this way.
—Susan Loden

street, blew parts of a restaurant
roof Into a parking lot. and
rocked vehicles on the street.
Continued from page 1A
"It sounded like a bomb. We
knew It was an explosion as soon
Hill said one man suffered a
as wc heard It." said a cashier In
mild heart attack In the blast.
the Publlx Supermarket. "The
Another was pulled from a noise lusted about five seconds
vehicle he was driving down and then windows blew out and
University Drive when the muf­ a lot of ceiling fell in."
fler shop exploded.
Larry Porzlnot, an attendant ai
Two Midas workers watched
an Amoco service station a block
later as the bodies of the victims
away, described the blast as
were taken in black bags from powerful and loud.
the rubble.
"1 was just sitting Inside and
"I could have been any one of the next thing I knew I was lying
those." said a worker, who on the floor," he said.
identified himself as "Charlie."
"It’s a very lucky tiling, for
The explosion shattered win­ University Drive this time of
dows in the Publlx Supermarket morning Is very busy," said
and a travel agency across the
Steve Simon, commander of
Broward County Emergency
Medical Services. "An hour later
and you might have had God
knows how many Injuries."

...Blast

Funsral Notices
FITZQERALO. KDWARDP.
— F u n e r a l u r v l c t i fo r E d w a rd P.
Flttgerald. M , Of 404 Sunset Drive, Sen lord,
who died Tuesday, will bo Thursday «t noon
In Gremkow Chapel with the Rev. George A.
Bute officiating. V liltelio n todey * » p.m.
Burlol will bo In Staunton, Vo. Gremkow
Funeral Home In charge.

PRATT. NORTON
—Mem orial tervlce* for Norton Wilder Pratt,

Of. of Spring Ham m ock T ra ile r P a rk ,
Longwood, who died Monday, will be Thursday at 10 a.m. In Gramkow Funeral Home
Chapel with Father Roger M iller officiating.
Gramkow Funeral Home In charge.

BURO.SILMA L.
— Mem orial eervicet for Selma Larson Burd.
•2. of tl» W. Jenklnt Circle. Sanford, who
died Monday, will be Thurtdey at 2 p m at
Gremkow Funeral Home Chapel with Rev.
W illiam Boyer officiating. She will be Inurned
e l W a it Lawn end H lllc re it Cemetery,
Omaha. Neb. Gramkow Funeral Home In
charge.

2.000 trapped victims were dead beneath
the ruins of some 450 buildings.
Ampudla said the fumigation was aimed
at protecting the city's 18 million people
from disease.
The first quake, which struck Thursday,
mensured 7.8 on the Richter scale. A major
aftershock Friday measured 7.3 on the
Richter scale.
A spokesman for the Sclsmologtcal In­
stitute said there have been 51 aftershocks
since Thursday — including several Tues­
day — but most have been too weak for
people to feel.

to five — five being most severe
and meaning a storm's steady
winds are 150mph.
“ It won't be long," Clark said.
" If It keeps on strengthening.
It'll be a category five."
Few storms have been so
powerful In the last 10 years. In
1980. Hurricane Allen's winds
hit an estimated 175 mph. while
David hit 150 mph In 1979 and
Anita also rose to 150 mph in
1977.
He said a lack of wind shears
above Gloria and warm water
have helped It grow. A storm

builds when excessive air blows
into the center and Is funnelcd
up n "chimncy-likc" outlet: wind
shears prevent this. Clark said.
"It's like a fireplace out of
control." he said. "You have a
Hue on a chimney. If you open
the Hue wide open. It's not
blowing the fire out. It's making
the fire bigger."
He said the eye of the
"very tightly" wound.
from an A ir Force
naissance plane say it
miles across.

storm is
Reports
re c o n ­
Is eight

Sanford Annexes Land
O ver County Protest
B y Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer
Over objections from Seminole
County, the city of Sanford
annexed two parcels of property
and prom ised to fight the
c o u n ty ’ s opposition to the
Supreme Court If necessary.
"W c think ... wc have good
legal grounds," Sanford City
Commissioner John Mercer said
today referring to the annexation
made Monday.
Mercer said the majority of the
commission would be willing to
buck the county's opposition all
the way lo the Supreme Court.
The annexed parcels, ajolnlng
each other, were annexed at the
requests of the owners, records
show. The city commission look
the action during a regularly
scheduled meeting at Sanford
City Hall.
The first annexed parcel is
bounded by State Road 46, a
vacated Seaboard Coastline
railroad right-of-way, Oregon
Avenue and Kennel Road. The
owners are Viola H. and Harold
K. Kastner Sr.. Ruth S. Bethea
Dye and Testamentary Trust.
The second parcel ts bounded
SR 46. the abandoned right of
way. Upsalu Road and Oregon
Road. The land Is owned by Jcno

...S ite

Continued from page 1A
2000, lie said phase one Is
planned for 1986-1989 and
would see construction of 29
acres of office complex and
medical testing center and
sports com plex com pleted.
Theta quotation* p rovided b y m em ber* of
the N ational A ito c ia tlo n o f Securltla* Dealer*
Phase two from 1990-1995 will
ere rep re*entellve In te r dealer p ric e * e* of
sec
development of a 500 room
m id m orn in g today. I n lt r d t a lt r m a rk e t*
hotel, a "plaza core" consisting
change throughout the d a y. Price* do not
include re ta il m a rk u p /m a rk d o *n
of high rise office and retail
Bid Ask center on 45 acres and phase
Atlantic Bank.....................................37&gt;*
37's
three from 1995-2000 will he 32
American Pioneer SAL................... ...IU
l li
Bernelt Benk............................
3 i'y 3S*aacres of offices.
Florid* Power
The development, according to
A Light...............................................21
23'&lt;
H a ll, lias a p r ic e ta g o f
Fla. Progress.................................... 2S‘ »
25'v
Freedom Saving*................................. 12
I2W
S400-S600 million and In the
H C A ........................................................ *0»r
4t
next twenty years will generate
Hughes Supply.................................... 22W 23
Morrison’* .............................................1|1»
1» an estimated $4 million in pro­
NCR Corp............................................. 33'• 31»»
perly taxes for Seminole County
Plessey................................................2l'«
2l»*
and $900,000 In property taxes
Scotty’s...................................................13
13'*
Southeast B a n k ................................... 2»
2»»&gt; for Lake Mary. "W e are looking
SunTrust........................................... 31U
31*.
forward lo getting started." Hall
said.

F. and Lois M. Pauluccl.
Assistant county attorney
Lonnie Groot said today the
city's action broke a slate law
that prohibits annexations that
create "enclaves" off city pro­
perty into county areas. The
state law. he said. Intends that
annexed property he compact so
not to hamper police, fire and
water service.
City attorney William Colbert,
however, said the law requires
that the property be adjacent to
the city. He said the city can
provide the necessary service to
the area.
Groot complained that the
county was not notified of the
Pauluccl annexation request. Ills
point was countered by Colbert
who said the annexations were
properly advertised In the
E ve n in g H erald. Sanford.
Groot said a decision has not
been made whether to contest
the city’s action and take the
Issue to court. He said the
county objected lo the annexa­
tion as a matter of policy.
Woody Price, deputy county
administrator overseeing the saclinn. could not be reached to
explain why the county wus
against the annexation.
The city commissioners at the
meeting also told Groot It is the
decision of the land owners not
the county whether they want to
Join a city not a decision to be
made by the county.

STOCKS

€%**ning l i e m id
IU SP S 411 2101

Wednesday. September 25, 1985
Vol. 78, No. 29
Published Dally and Sunday, e ic e p t
Saturday by The Santord H erald ,
Inc. 300 N. French A ve., Santord,
Fla. 12771.
Second Class Postage Paid a t Santord,
Florida 12771
Home D elivery: W eek, S I.10; M onth,
U . l h 3 Months, 114.IS; t M onths,
*27 00; Y e a r. SSI.00. By M a il: Week
St.SO; M on th , tt.OO; 1 M on th s,
SII.OO; t M onths. 112.SO; Y e a r,

uo.oo.

Phone (10SI 122 7411.

YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT!
You can find out by
watching and taking th e
THE NATIONAL NUTRITION QUIZ
with Jane Brody, David Watta , M.D.
You are what you eat. If this statement is true, then most ot us are walking storehouses
of cholesterol, saturated fat, a dozen different kinds of sugars and enough salt to cure
a fair-sized side of beef. Of course you're thinking, " I'm not like that." Well, you can
find out by watching, and taking, The National Nutrition Qulx, hosted by nationally
known health advocates Jane Brody an/J David Watts, M.D. You'll be led through the
bewildering maze of foodstuffs that looms so large in our lives. The quiz explores facts
and fantasies about nutrition and, In a fun and entertaining way, presents up-to-date scien­
tific data on the protective and destructive properties of the awesome array of things
we swallow during a given day. By the time you get through with the quiz, you should
know the relationship of nutrition to obesity, diabetes and major killers such as heart
disease and cancer, as well as to simple good health and overall fitness. Good Luckl

MONDAY, SEPT. 30 at 6 p.m.

CHANNEL 24

WMFE-TV

Praaanlad in part by:

Central Florida Regional Hospital

.....

H CA

100
t

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1985—3A

W O RLD

Polling Places Moved For Bonds Vote

IN BRIEF
C o lo n ia l Buildings S urvive Q u a k e
W h ile M o d e rn Structures Topple
MEXICO CITY (UP1) — Mexico's national cathedral, built
In 1525. lowers over the Zocnlo main square, while a Tew
blocks away there are piles of rubble from modern office
buildings that collapsed In last week's earthquakes.
Next door, the 17th century presidential palace that was
built on top of Montezuma’s palace Is Intact, while dump
trucks haul debris along cobblestone streets that once
bustled with traffic.
Amid the shattered ruins of the oldest city In the
Americas, both Mexicans and visitors are surprised to sec
thal 400-ycar-old colonial buildings arc still standing.
You don t have to think too long to know who the belter
builders were." said Mario Barajas, a civil engineer
directing the salvage of furniture and files from an
evacuated office building.
"All the new is gone, while the beautiful remains. That Is
the only consolation In all ofthls tragedy."

PARIS ILIPI) — The army chief of stuff today was named
bead of tin* French secret service In a shake-up prompted
by the intelligence agency's role In the sinking of the
Greenpeace flagship in New Zealand.
Gen. Rene Imbot was appointed to the post at a cabinet
meeting that focused on the political crisis over the sinking
of the Rainbow Warrior. The attack killed a photographer.
The general was ordered to "restore order In the service,
reorganize it and draw up a report on the recent events."
government spokesman Georgina Dufolx said.
Imbot. GO. who has served as army chief of staff since
1983. replaces Adm. Pierre Lacoste, dismissed Friday as
chief of the secret service after he refused to answer
questions about the intelligence agency's role In New
Zealand.
The new defense minister. Paul Qullcs. former minister
tor urban affairs, transport and housing, was ordered to
continue an investigation of the General Directorate for
External Security, the DGSE, or French secret service.

The proposed S100 million school bond
issue, if approved by voters, will go to
finance building a new elementary school,
build a new centralized maintenance center,
renovate 40 or the school systems 41
schools nnd buy land for a new high school.
Mrs. Goard said the six site changes were
necessary because the bond issue falls in an
odd year when no other elections were
scheduled and because the polling places,
usually churches and schools, were booked
in advance for other activities. "This sorl of
thing (changing polling sites) is not that
unusual, it happens all the time." Mrs.
Goard said. "W e Just weren't anticipating
the bond Issue vote this year."

—Precinct 12. formerly at the Florida
Federal Savings and Loan Association, will
move to the activity center at Spring Lake
Elementary School, off Orange Avenue, in
Altamonte Springs.

ir

E V A L U A T I O N

Central FtorWa Reg tenet Hasp!tat
Tuaeday
A D M IS S IO N !
Sanford:

F re q u e n t H e a d a c h e *
L o w B a c k o r H ip P a in
D iz z in e s s o r L o s s o t S le e p
N um bness o l H ands or Feet
N e rv o u s n e s s
N e c k P a in o r S t if f n e s s
A r m a n d S h o u ld e r P a in

Laxhunda D. Hartsfleld
Maggie J. Marshall
M ary C. Murphy
Thao V. Mosley. DaLand
Kathleen 5. Reardon, Lake M ary
Dorothy V. Gorman. Orange City
L o ls j. D avit. Os teen
L arry E . Robeson. Oilcan

[n lu itw i Indvdtc Ponturt Mkrwv h u ts * In i, Sbert
Lt| Tot. Shart Atm Tatt M talk With Doctor

8 P M
SANFORD

C H IR O P R A C T IC ,

IN C .

DISCHARGES

«...

GIRTHS
Laihunda 0 . H a rlifle ld , a baby
Santord
Loretta L. Moul a baby bnv, Orland

boy,

^ OLD MILWAUKEE
BEER
Q heStop
CENTER

’6
I D

BARTLES &amp; JAMES WINE

"Many of our present polling places are
taking as many as 3,000 voters lor some
elections and liicy really shouldn't process
more than 1.700 maximum And
with
census projections Indicating increasing
population growth we really should redistrict now while we still can." Mrs. Guard
said. There are presently 72 polling places
in the count v.

C E N T R A L F L O R ID A COIN C LU B

BOATING FORECAST: St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Small craft should nol
venture far from port south or
Cape Canaveral. Wind northeast
around 15 knots today becoming
north 15 to 20 knots tonight
then northwest 10 lo 15 knots
Thursday. Seas 3 to 5 feet today
and 4 to 6 feet tonight with
moderate southeast to cast
swells tonight. A few showers or
thunderstorms.

COIN SHOW
O R L A N D O C E N T R O -P L E X
500 L IV IN G S T O N STREET
O R LA N D O , FLO R ID A

Friday, September 27 - 10 00 a m, to 6 00 p m
Saturday, September 28 - 10 00 a m to 6:00 p m
Sunday, September 29 — 10 00 a.m. to 5.00 p m

BUYING/SELUNG
HOURLY DOOR PRIZES
Contni Florida Com Club it a nol for profit
Stale Chartered Organization

FREE
ADMISSION

FREE APPRAISALS
EXHIBITS

iw H H n m iim im m » iiiiH iw u in ii»

TO D IS P L A Y COQQNAOD STON E
I
homeowner* m the general arm wHI bo given the mportuntty f* sew n — Cwsnodi ttm o
applied to thatr heme, with eptlonel decorative work (siding. trim, abutters, replacement
wlndm a. efarm wtndwes and deers) e l e very lew cett.
This entering new stone bet captured the Interest at homeowners throughout the United
State* whe ere fed Dp with constant painting end ether maintenance em it. ttpreitdeiinsuletten summer and winter, a t wait as the protection. Our new preduct can l a used an
every type el heme. Including frame, aluminum, vinyl end sleet tided heme* M m cancrate a lech, m SgUm. shicto. etc. Veu hem e Cheka e« I t dtHOronl earth tenee. It k n e w
going to be introduced to me Orange, SemtMte, Udw, Vognte, Ooaeaie, Merten l H ow s
County M em . Your heme « e i be e ehowpMoe In me count*, and we will ttwfce a wens year
emlte It we can wm yeu home ter advertletne. 1SD% bank Itnmetng emtHbie wtm no down
mpi»i"tm*nt with our pretmmonM »warier miiQwef.mm »mntn idqrename

■i

E n tir e In v e n t o r y M u s t B e S o ld
‘V u r L o s s

T o T h e B a r e W a lls

Is Y o u r G a i n "

FURNITURE
; u n " " , n x pAm.
&amp;
bedding
« r “s

/

L

PEPSI GATORADE
HUGE

SAVINGS

KMMMe
leMCTTUe
e tta u i e M TTK U U e UMTS e

a m encm cte m o i i w

*147

n

PER C U S T O M E R

14
Lake Mary
near

1 1*4 mi S .R . 46
|
Sanford

S A i l

l.U U P

C ELER Y
Sanford

t H i m &lt;&gt;&lt; T

avi . 1 1201

I

i .i

A IR P O R T
Sanford

from^ 9 7

AU FAMOUS BRANDS 6

OUT THEY G0U

ow?*

tanners

r ,7 0 %

14 9 S e V
fit

LAKE MARY rlvr

Permit s 8

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE

ORANGE

11T O N E I T E M P E R C O U P O N

t l

19 8 5
AREA READINGS (9 a.mj:
temperature: 77: overnight low:
73: T u e s d a y 's h ig h : 91;
barometric pressure: 30.00: rela­
tive hum idity: 94 percent:
winds: north-northwest at 7
mph: no rain: sunrise: 6:15 a.m..
sunset 7:19 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES:
Dsyton* Beach: highs, 7:18
a.m.. 7:44 p.m.: lows. 12:47
a . m . . 1 :0 0 p . m . : P o r t
Canaveral; highs. 7:10 a.m .
7:36 p.m.; lows, 12:38 n.m..
12:51 p.m.: Bsyport: highs.
12:40 a.m.. 12:30 p.m.: lows.
6:28 a.m.. 7:14 p.m.

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC

EleneG Oakes, Sarlord
Shelby J. Dlckinton, DcBary
Cora M . Morgan. Deltona
Deborah L. Morgan, Deltona
Lawanda D. Colllntand babyglrl, Sanlord

2 4 7 1 S A IR P 0 H 1 B I V O
S A N tO H U
323 5 7 6 3
• A i U iu a i TTha S » i t , i ■ I t I H i t O R l A N D U H4S 0.169

0 I 1 B

"W e must have our rc-d 1striding done
prior to Jan. 1. 1987," Mrs. Goard said.
"Alter that time period the stale puts a
freeze on the border lines of our school
districts to prepare for the census that is
done once every ten years. We would like lo
have this work done by tin* time our new
voter 1.1). cards are Issued Jan. 1. 19H6.

Ralph C. Boy tax

• tHI
XHl) AST OtHtHRIRSONRtSPOHSIBUYOHPAYMENTHASARIGHTTOREFUSETO
PAT CANCEL PATMESt OHBEHEIMBURSEDf0« PAYMENT fOHANT OTHIHSERVICE E1AMINA
tION OHTREATMENT WHICHISPERTOHMEDASARESULTOf ANDWITHIN77HOURSOf HISPON
OINGTOTHE AOVIRTISIMENT fOHThe TREESERVICE, EXAMINATION. OHTREATMENT
8 AM • A N F O R D R A IN C O N T R O L C L IN IC
O F

Mrs. Goard added (hat the county will
need 21 new precinct polling places by 1987
because of the rapid growth of Seminole
county, the overcrowding of existing sites
and because of preparations for the 1990
census.

EXTENDED FORECAST:
Friday through Sunday — p a r t ly
cloudy with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms north Fri­
day. spreading to central Satur­
day and Sunday. Seasonal tem­
peratures with lows In mid to
u p p er 60s north and 70a
elsewhere. Highs In the 80s..

HOSPITAL
NOTES

WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES

10

—Precinct 68. formerly at St. Peter and
Paul Catholic Church, will move to the Elks
Club, off Howell Branch Road, in Goldenrod.
—Precinct 70. formerly at the Church of
the Annunciation, will move to Si. Stephen
Lutheran Church. 2140 State Road 434. in
Longwood.
These precinct changes arc for the Oct. 22

school bond Issue referendum and are not
permanent changes said Mrs. Goard.

jlllimillll l llllllllllllllllllll llllllllliiiiiii

AREA FORECAST: Toduy mostly sunny with only a slight
chance of afternoon showers or
thunderstorms. High near 90.
Wind northeast around 10 mph.
Rain chance less than 20 per­
cent. Tonight — fair. Low in
lower 70s. Light wind. Thursday
— mostly sunny with high upper
80s to low 90s. Wind northwest
around 10 mph.
NATIONAL REPORT: Cold
temperatures in the nation's
mldscclion dipped as far south
as Texas early today, breaking at
least one record, while a travel­
ers’ advisory was posted for
parts of Colorado where up to 5
inches of snow was forecast.
Elsewhere, fair skies and cold
temperatures extended from the
northern and western Great
Lakes across parts of the upper
Mississippi valley to eastern
North Dakota. Early morning
readings were mainly in the 30s
across the area. The low In
Chicago Tuesday was 35. tying
the record low for that date in
1942.

ROME (UPI) — A time bomb exploded today in the
British Airways office near Via Veneto. Injuring at least 11
people and virtually destroying the airline office in the
second bombing In the posh district in less than two weeks.
Witnesses said police seized a suspect who appeared to
be from the Middle East. They described the suspect as
young, small and slender and said he was smiling as he
was arrested.
The bombing came nine days after a grenade attack on a
Via Veneto cafe that injured 38 people. Including 11
American tourists. A Lebanese-born Palestinian was
charged with that bombing.
A organization called the Revolutionary Organization of
Socialist Moslems claimed responsibility for the cafe
bombing and warned it would attack again In Italy, Britain.
Spain.

IANCI At SIGNMINTS
ACCEPTED*
*$ub|Mt Ta Polk it Ibeltt*

—Precinct 42. formerly at the First
Assem bly of God. will move to the
auditorium of Pine Crest Elementary
School. 400 W. 27lh St.. Sanford.
—Precinct 57. formerly ai St..Augustine
Catholic Church parish hall, will move to
Ihe Lake Kathryn Village Clubhouse, at the
end of B Street and off Somluola Boulevard,
in Casselberry.

WEATHER

Bom b B last A t A ir lin e O ffic e

S P I N A L

issue referendum arc:
— Precinct 2. formerly at the Paola
Wesleyan Church Annex will move to the
library at Wilson Elementary, off Stale Road
431. in Paula.

Mrs. Goard said there Is no cost to the
taxpayer Tor the poll shifting and that the
school board pays all costs for the elections.
About 8.200 voters will be affected by the
move.
The planned site chunges for the bond

France G e ts N e w Spy C h ie f

F R E E

Six polling places urc to be moved to
facilitate the Oct. 22 Seminole County
School Board Bond Issue referendum, ac­
cording to Seminole Supervisor or Elections
Sandy Goard.

u

• Sealy

from* 2 9 9

• Bassett
• Broyhlll

L w ^ * o o in $ * t

• Peoplounge

• Action Recliners
AU. mass subnet to
-ftu
• Thomasville
priorsals.
• SI 5U0 INSTANT CREOIT • TERMS • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH •
r• • •

ALL SALES HNAl • NO IAYAWAYS • DELIVERY ARRANGEO

blvd

Positions AvoUoMo - Apply 202 N. Unarol Avo., Sanford 323-3643

ta r o o is

■
rS iT n l
k !I
I T l l l I l I V M 1— LULU
FURNITURE SHOWROOM

5 B 5 N . H W Y . 17- 9 Z
LONGWOOD
I'.nn north ol 434)

7U

« F i g ot£ £ » _ |

r_ ^
5*

M o n ^ lV IT /p m
Sat 10a m - 6 pm
Sun 12noon- 6 pm

I

�E v e n in g H e ra ld
(USPS 411-210)

:u)0 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Wednesday, September 25, 1985—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director

Nome Delivery: Week. SI 10: Mnalh. S4.75: 3 Months.
SI4.25; 6 Months. S27.00: Year. S5I 00 Uv Mall: Week.
SI 50; Month. SG OO: 3 Months. S1H 00 G Months. S32 50
Year. SGO OO

Pre-Emptive

Bankruptcy

HELEN THOMAS

W hite House A id e s Lowering Profiles
By Helen Thomas
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Top While House
aides arc lowering their profile.
Chief of staff Donald Regan Is reported to be
“ gun-shy" after a spate of critical published
reports that questioned his take-charge manner
and his uncompromising approach to Congress.
Critics have called him "Mr. Prime Minister"
and "deputy president."
He also has been accused of being "politically
naive.” particularly on Capitol Hill where his
predecessor. James Baker, now in Regan's old

Job as treasury secretary, was well known for brought In his own team.
massaging dissidents In Congress and com­
There have been turf wars and some feuding,
promising when necessary.
but that was even more so In the first term when
Regan lias been generous with interviews and Baker and counselor Edwin Meese. now attorney
refreshingly candid on where he stands and general, locked horns and stopped having their
breakfast meetings to plan the president's day
where the administration Is going.
and strategy.
But now he Is keeping his head down, hnvlng
President Reagan, as always, is above the fray.
suffered a critical barrage from the media and He weighs in only when it Is absolutely
insiders In the White House who retain their necessary, and he docs not appear to be one who
anonymity.
wants "creative tension,’’ as some managers of
Some of tlie holdovers from the first term were the day do. Instead, he obviously wants a happy
resentful of their loss of power when Regan ship.

ANTHONY HARRIGAN
W here the Manvillc Corp. pioneered, the
A.H. Robins Co. is following. Just tike the
manufacturer of asbestos, the manufacturer
of the Daikon Shield intrauterine device has
filed for bankruptcy protection — not because
its business is in any way falling, but to get
out from under the lawsuits filed by the
victim s of its product. There's talk about
Union Carbide trying bankruptcy next, to
handle its own liability problems stem m ing
from the Bhopal disaster and the Institute. W.
Va.. gas leak.
Robins’ birth-control device, marketed for
two years (1972 to 1974). turned out to cause
pelvic infections, spontaneous abortions and
sterility. The company has already paid out
$378 million in damages to 9.230 women,
and last year it set aside $615 million more in
a reserve for settling the remaining 5.100
claims filed against it — and the nearly 400
new ones being added to that roster each
month. But all that now looks like It won’ t be
nearly enough.
Th e rem ain in g lawsuits. Robins says,
threatened it with insolvency, and that m ay
be true. The courts have been making larger
and larger awards in these cases, as more and
more evidence has come out that Robins
knew all along o f the device's dangers and its
ineffectiveness but sold it anyway. Indeed,
since 'm id -1984. when a form er Robins
attorney testified that the com pany had tried
to destroy the documents that proved its early
knowledge, and when a federal Judge d e­
n o u n c e d R o b in s f o r “ c o r p o r a t e I r ­
responsibility at its m eanest." the average
size o f the awards and settlements In Daikon
Shield cases has more than doubled.
This is patently not the kind o f trouble the
nation's bankruptcy law was designed to
help. Neither was Manvillc's. Even though the
Manville case, after several years, now seems
to have been resolved satisfactorily, the
Daikon Shield victim s are right to worry that
this bankruptcy m aneuver could end up
delaying and reducing their awards and
letting Robins o ff the hook.
For that matter. Robins Itself Is taking a
risk: In this new' use o f the bankruptcy law.
there is no telling how the com pany will
finally be restructured to meet Its obligations.
The Manville settlement was Just short o f
draconian and will leave that company under
the control of a victim s' trust fund and
probably with little in the way of profits for
another 20 years.
The problem Is that there is no other
mechanism around for coping with these
kinds of massive liability cases. Congress has
rightly resisted the efforts of various manu'
facturers to change the nation’s product
liability laws in their favor. Those changes
would have made it more difficult for victim s
to sue and thus undercut a powerful incentive
for safe and responsible business practices. At
the same time, the courts have refused to
consolidate the Robins cases in one m anage­
able forum, in which, if nothing else, at least
the legal fees o f all sides could be drastically
reduced. T h a t’s what filing for bankruptcy
protection will achieve — albeit through the
back door. Since Congress has failed to
develop legislation to handle these situations
more efficiently but still fairly, it's hard to
complain about the bankruptcy strategy.
Com plex product-liability litigation la now
what bankruptcy Judges arc supposed to
handle, but apparently they’re going to have
to learn. One can only hope that on a
case-by-case basis they will be able to achieve
the kind o f solution Congress has not been
able to produce in a law meant to cover all
cases — a solution that’s fair to victims, that
doesn’ t fall back on the taxpayers for relief,
that maintains effective penalties for com ­
pany fraud, yet is not so punitive as to defeat
its whole purpose by putting the com pany out
of business. It’s a tall order at the wrong soda
fountain. But there it is.

BERRY'S WORLD

Then
After
The Lull
Where have all the protestors and
demonstrators gone? What's hap­
pened to the groups that opposed
aid to the Nicaraguan freedom
fighters, called for a unilateral
nuclear freeze, urged abandonment
of the MX missile, and opposed
deployment of cruise missiles in
Europe?
They have been quiet over the
summer, especially so as they lost
key battles In Congress and the
court of public opinion. But they arc
still out there. One can be sure of
that. One can also safely predict
that they will surface again tills frill.
Left pacifism remains an element
of American life, albeit not a
decisive force.
The left pacifists, who have made
a united front with groups hostile to
the American economic system,
find a base and sustaining support
to radicalized church organizations
that promote such projects as the
so-called sanctuary movement that
calls for the harboring of illegal
aliens, though the law clearly
forbids such activity.
The radicalized elements in Amer­
ican life — and such elements exist
in all Western countries — increas­
ingly seem bent on civil disobedi­
ence.
T h is turn to u n d em ocratic
methods bothers many traditional
liberals. One of these is William
Phillips, editor of the Partisan Re­
view, one of the oldest and most
Influential of liberal-left political and
literary Journals. P artisan Review
always has been left-oriented but
hostile to Stalinist leftism.
In a recent essay in P artisan
Review, Mr. Phillips said: "In the
last decade the Ideology* of pacifism
and neutralism has reached stag­
gering proportions in a way some­
what reminiscent of the thirties
when fellow travelers and liberals
were taken In by pro-Soviet pro­
paganda. and the media and the
universities were literally swamped
with Illusions and lies about the
promise of communism.”
Note that this isn’t the Judgment
of a conservative. Mr. Phillips
doesn't usually arrive at what often
is seen as a conservative position,
but he is deeply concerned about
the new ideology of pacifism and
neutralism.
Other liberals would do well to
ponder his statement. Organizations
such as the various church "peace
fellowships" have gone a long way
towards em bracing a copycat
version of Soviet propaganda. They
have adopted a "liberation theolo­
g y " that Is indistinguishable from
C a s tro itc co m m u n ism . T h e y
portray the United States as a
terrorist state because it opposes a
revolutionary transformation of this
hemisphere. They see hunger in the
world, and conclude that the
starvation is the fault of the U.S.
government, though America does
more than any nation to feed the
starving in countries which are
incapable of feeding themselves or
where the regime — In Ethiopia, for
Instance — Is bent on starving a
rebellious section of the population.

Beware
Generic
Dog Food
By Bill Lohmunn
UPI Feature Writer
ATLANTA (UPI) — Generic and
bargain brand dog food Is not
always as nutritious as its label
might indicate and actually can lead
to serious health problems for dogs,
according to a new study.
The study, conducted at the
University of Georgia's College of
Veterinary Medicine, showed pup­
pies fed a steady diet of selected
low-priced dog foods suffered
numerous health problems, in­
cluding stunted growth.
"A dog can almost starve to death
by eating these." says Dr. Thomas
Huber, director of the study. “ Some
of these dog foods arc formulated
without any regard to palatabillty or
digestibility.”

JACK ANDERSON

AIDS Test Patent Fight
still under consideration, may Imply
By Jack Anderson
consequences which can be de­
And
leterious for the Pasteur Institute
Dale Van Atta
W A S H I N G T O N - W h 11 c and its licensees, and that we
thousands arc dying In agony from cannot accept." Dedonder said.
Dedonder said his doctors are
AIDS, the French and U.S. govern­
ments are engaged in an obscene committed to cooperation with the
battle over the patent and royalties A m erica n s for pu blic health
on an AIDS blood-testing kit. Tills reasons, but vowed that the French
not only Isolates the virus that will fight for their rightful credit.
'■fi is a well-established fact that
causes the deadly disease, but could
lead to a cure.
the virus responsible for AIDS has
As we reported last month, the been discovered by the group
French claim the U.S. National working at the Pasteur Institute,"
Cancer Institute pirated research Dedonder said. "W e think that we
done by the Pasteur Institute In arc entitled to a full recognition of
Paris and illegally secured a patent tills fact and consequently to a full
on the AIDS test kit. The French recognition of our right to a patent."
Among the evidence submitted to
want their share of credit and their
share of the royalties, which already support the French claim were
have reached about S2 million. So copies of newspaper articles, in­
far. the U.S. governm ent has cluding one In which the head of the
Centers for Disease Control in
brushed off the French claims.
Atlanta was quoted as saying that
In the last month, however, the
the AIDS virus was discovered by
French have delivered documents
French researcher Luc Montagnler.
outlining their case to Health and
" If a satisfactory agreement is not
Human Services Secretary Margaret
attained, the Pasteur Institute is
Heckler. Among other things, the
prepared, determined and even
French claim that they were the
compelled to utilize all available
first to file for a patent in the United
procedures to obtain complete rec­
States. Their application was put on
ognition of its rights," Dedonder
hold, they said, while patent
warned.
applications filed later by National
Dedonder added that an unseemly
Cancer Institute doctors were
publle brawl over the AIDS test
granted.
patent will tarnish the "good Image
French officials have warned that
of science and scientists."
a long court battle is inevitable if the
Bui Dr. Robert Gallo, the leading
United States continues to refuse
American AIDS researcher. Insisted
France the credit to which it is the feud Is wholly on the French
entitled. Already, the patent feud
side.
has hurt Franco-Amcrican coopera­
tion In seeking a cure for AIDS.
P LEA SE W RITE
"There is a situation which can
create a very difficult climate and
Letter* to the editor are
will certainly not contribute to the
welcome for publication. All
conditions of an effective coopera­
letter* must be signed end
tion.” said Pasteur Institute Director
Include a mulling address
Raymond Dedonder In a private
end, If possible, u telephone
statement to HHS officials. A
number. The Evening Herald
transcript has been seen by our
reserves the right to edit
associate Corky Johnson.
letters to avoid libel end to
accommodate space.
"The granting of the patent to the
NCI. while our earlier application is

Veterinarians say dozens of socalled price brand and generic pel
foods have shown up in grocery
stores nationwide In recent years.
Many are sold at half the price of
major national brands and claim to
be "100 percent nutritionally com­
plete" In laboratory testa.
While the contents might add up
on paper, the food might never have
been tested on animals and could
vary from day to day or bag to bag,
Huber said. Animal experts warn
the ingredients In many of these
low-priced foods arc so low-quality
they cannot be digested and provide
Inadequate nourishment for the
animals.
"Th e problem is widespread."
said Dr. Stephen Kritslck. a na­
tionally known pet care expert who
works for the American Society for
the P reven tion o f C ru elty to
Animals. "I know people buy these
to save money. But because or the
labeling problems, you have no way
of knowing what's deficient In these
foods.
Kritslck said dog owners should
not be fooled If their pels devour —
and seem to enjoy — a dog food that
might be nutritionally deficient.
"Just because the pet eats the
food doesn't mean it's good for
th em ,’ ’ Kritslck said. "O ften ,
animals will eat whatever is offered.
As pet owners, we have to provide a
good balanced diet for our pets."
The 10-weck test at Georgia was
conducted on 21 Blue Tick Hound
puppies, which were 10- to 12weeks old at the start of the test and
virtually the same size. The dogs
were divided Into four groups — one
group was fed a major national
brand dog food, while the other
three groups were fed one of three
price brands.
Huber said the tests revealed
several things:
—Puppies fed the national brand
gained an average of 21 pounds
during the 10-week test, while the
pups eating the price brands gained
16 pounds.
—Puppies fed the national brand
grew more than 7 inches in length,
while the pups eating the price
brands grew less than 6 Inches.

VIEWPOINT

H a w k in s P ra is e O f C h ile s Stuns S o m e
By Robert Doherty
UPI Southern Correspondent
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Florida is
the only one of the 12 Southeastern
and Mid-Atlantic stales to iiavc any
Hispanic elected officials in 1985.
says the National Association of
Latino Elected and Appointed Of­
ficials.
The report by the group shows
that Florida has 44 elected officials
of Hispanic descent — ranking it
seventh nationally behind Texas.
New Mexico. California. Arizona.
Colorado and New York.

"You may not baUava this, but thara waa a
tlma whan I waa aUUar than PEE WEE
HERMAN."

SCIENCE WORLD

Nationally, the group said, there
arc 3.202 Hispanic elected officials
In the 31 states this year, with
Texas accounting for 1.475 of them.
The majority, 27. of Florida's 44
elected Hispanlcs arc municipal
officials. Another seven are state
legislator*, five are Judicial or law
enforcement officials, four arc
school board members and one Is a

county official.
Association officials pointed out
that the numbers do not Include
appointed officials.
There were some stunned faces at
a recent Senate Judiciary* Commit­
tee hearing on legislation to combat
so-called designer drugs when Sen.
Paula Hawkins. R-Fla.. heaped ef­
fusive praise on her colleague Sen.
Lawton Chiles. D-Fla.
Although they are on the same
side of the. designer-drug issue, to
say the two have not been the
clo sest o f w ork m ates sin ce
Hawkins came to the Senate five
years ago ts a mild understatement.
To have heard Hawkins' state­
ment. however, you never -would
have known it. It went beyond even
the normal verbal bouquets mem­
bers of the House and Senate deal in
during hearings or floor debates.
Said Hawkins. "Sitting beside me
... is another individual who should

be praised for his leadership in the
area of synthetic drug abuse pre­
vention -my esteemed colleague
from Florida, Sen. Lawton Chiles.
"Sen. Chiles was one of the first
members of the United States Con­
gress to recognize this situation as a
growing, and intolerable problem,
and he has not wavered In his
dedication to eradicating synthetic
drug abuse in our nation.
"With the effective and concerted
effort of congressional leaders such
as you and Sen. Chiles. Mr.
Chairman. I feel we really can have
an Impact on synthetic drug
abuse."
Asked about the statement, one
Senate observer responded. "How
can you be surprised? Unpredicta­
ble Is unpredictable.”

than their share of hot races.
At this point, the best race would
seem likely to be the matchup
between Hawkins and Florida Gov.
Bob Graham, who has yet to
officially announce. Equally Inter­
esting, however, could be races in
North Carolina and Maryland.
The recent decision by Sen. John
East, R-N.C.. not to seek re-election for health reasons leaves the state, !
in the words of one Democratic !
campaign official, "wide open.”

The 1986 Senate elections are
more than a year away but the
Southeastern and Mid-Atlantic
states seem likely to boast more

!
;

East and The National Congresslonal Club, of course, have already
backed David Funderburk, former
ambassador to Romania, but veteran Rep. James Broyhlll’s recent
decision to make the run should
make it a very interesting GOP
primary.
Former Gov. Terry Sanford and
Rep. Charlie Rose are among those
discussed as serious Democratic
possibilities.

!
•
1
(
j
-J
I

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednetday, Sept. 23, W 5—SA

, Resist Rust

Aquatic Wheelchairs Roll O ver
NAPLES. Fla. (U PI) - A
h om em a d e r u s t - r c s 181a n I
wheelchair, which a Naples man
helped invent For his waterloving, disabled rather. Is being
built In volume so other handi­
capped people can roll to the
surf.
•Jim Klee Jr., a potter, and Bill
Klohn. a real estate salcsmnn
and former welder, handcrafted
an aquatic wheelchair for Rice's
father, whose wheelchairs were
rusting about every four months
from being ridden into the water.
The new chair had stainless
steel wheels and tires that could
tackle treks o v e r beaches
without becoming mired In the
soft sand. About a year, ago Rice
Jr. and Klohn began making the

chairs to order.
Naples Handicapped In Action,
a group of disabled people.
Ixnight a chair. Rice Jr. and
Klohn arranged a picnic to
demonstrate their product for
group members.
"There were people there who
hadn't been In the water for 10
years." Rice Jr. said. "Most of
their time they spent dragging
their bodies around, righting
gravity. In the water they’re not
lighting gravity."
The elder Rice moved to
Naples 15 years ago from Ohio
Just so he could swim In the Gulf
of Mexico. Seven years ago. a
spinal injury forced him Into a

wheelchair.
At first, he put bicycle tires on
his wheelchair so he could push
through the sand without sink­
ing. But the used chairs rusted,
and Rice had to buy replace­
ments. Then his son and Klohn
developed the new model.
"It does the Job for me." Rice
said. "It can be rolled over the
sand, right into the water. I go In
until the water comes up to Un­
seat, then I get out and swim.
It's great therapy."
Last year, Rice Jr. and Klohn
created Beach Wheels Inc. to
make The Beach master
wheelchairs, which arc built by
hand at home, sell for $899. and

Christmas
In September)
For Buyers
Of Liquor
United Preee International
For the first time In 34 years,
the federal tax on hard liquor
goes up Tuesday and stores
nationwide say consumers are
rushing to stockpile their favor­
ite spirits before the levy goes
up.
"People are buying threemonth su p p lies." said Ron
Beatty, manager of Corral Li­
quors in suburban St. Louis.
"It's Christmas In September."
The tax increase Is expected to
raise the price or n half-gallon of
80 proor liquor by up to several
dollars and Beatty predicted
shortages of some brands this
week.
Many store owners arc taking
advantage of the booze-rush
with huge "Beat the Tax" signs
in their windows and other
gimmicks to entice customers.
One s to re In d o w n to w n
Washington. D.C., which ran
newspaper advertisements urg­
ing consumers to buy their
Christmas gifts before the tax
kicks In. was swamped this
weekend, with one patron re­
porting waiting in line for about
25 minutes Just to buy a sixpack of beer.
In New H a m p s h ire , the
slate-ru n liq u o r m on opoly
kicked off a "pre-tax sale" last
week by dum ping 12 halfg a llo n s o f b ooze in to the
Piscataqua River In Portsmouth,
In a Boston Tea Party-llke event.
"It was our way of reminding
Mr. and Mrs. Consumer that the
tax is going up. "Buy now." said
the state liquor commissioner.
Lyle Hersom. "In other words,
fill the closet before the tax goes
up."
The new tax. passed as part of
the 1984 Deficit Reduction Act.
will boost the distilled spirits tax
by $2 per proof gallon from
S I0.50 to $12.50. It afTccts only
hard liquor and not beer and
wine.
It is estimated the tax can
raise $149 million In 1985 and
up to $535 million by 1989. The
last change in the tax was in
1951.
Consumers in Michigan are
getting a double shot on Tues­
day. In addition to the federal
tax hike, the stutc is raising
taxes by 4 percent on liquor sold
by the bottle In package stores
and by the glass in bars.
Retailers and wholesalers alike
say the price of liquor will
increase more than the tax hike,
because new taxes paid by the
distiller will compound through
higher distribution costs as bot­
tles reach store shelves.
Stores contacted around the
nation varied in their estimates
on how much liquor would
Increase under the new tax.
depending on distributors’ ac­
tions, but all ugreed the tab
would be noticeably higher.
In New York, the manager of
67 Wine and Spirits on Manhat­
tan's Columbus Avenue, said the
price of a liter of Glcnllvet scotch
will increase only 40 cents, while
a liter of Chfvas Regal scotch will
Jump nearly $3.70. to $26.64.
Sheldon Tatz. general manag­
er of United Liquor. Wine and
Beer Co. of Phoenix, Ariz.. said
September will probably be the
best month In his firm’s history
because of the tax Increase, but
predicts hard-llquor sales will
decline after It takes effect.
"This Is the age of (drinking!
moderation. When liquor prices
rise, people slide down to beer
and wine,” he said.
W HATEVER THE
TEM PERATURE

WMthwtron Central
Air CondHioMr/HMt Pump
Won't Lot You Down
mmmm ■ ■ PLUMftINO ft
W A U HBATINO INC.
b * M **•- te**r*
Ph 11M U I

are advertised by mall to cities,
counties and organizations
which serve the handicapped.
The city of Jacksonville and
the Veterans Administration of­
fice in Togus. Maine have bought
chairs. Tentative orders have
been placed by the city of Miami
and Los Angeles County. There
have been Inquiries from as far
away as Argentina.
Klohn said regular
wheelchairs rust, and sink in the
sand because of their narrow
wheels, Also, sand gets in the
wheel bearings, creating friction.
The Beachmastcr is built with
materials found on boats —
canvas seats, removable teak

armrests, and nylon bushings
Instead of metal bearings. The

wheels arc four-lnch-widc bands
of stainless steel.

C a r Insurance?
( )tU ' ll 111110 s;i\ s if ln s ( .

TTONY R U SSI IN SU RAN CE
it
Ph. 322-0285
2 5 7 5 S . F r e n c h A v e ., S a n f o r d
K ^ tu to -O w n e rs

in s u r a n c e

I ile. Heme. C ur. Hiioint-xs. One nam*-

it all.

W A L-M A R T
WE MAY
LOOK UKE OTHERS,
BUT WE ARE THE TRUE
____
•

W

■(,

W..*&lt; i*

&gt;1

-'At*,

A L - M A R T

v/m /.*.

-ft i / J /

■

i

/'

7 ///

iiA

W e DISCOUNT Every
item Every sin gle Day!
For Over 22 Years W al-Mart
Has Been Offering its Customers
A Better w ay to Save

Y rn
2J

M
JS S S U n

Low Prices Every Day—y o u w o n t h a v e
to wait for a sale to save at Wal-Mart.
In fact our everyday prices are often lower
than you'll find at our competitor’s
store during d ssle...on the
Identical item, when we do put an
item on sale, you'll save

EVEN MORE!

Don't M iss Our Spectacular storew ide
Crand Opening Celebration...Coming Soon!

�J

i

FI.

6A—Evening Herald^Sanford,

35, ms

Wednesday, Sept.

S a n f o r d M a n C h a r g e d W it h S e x u a l B a t t e r y

A 32-year-old Sanford man has Orlando, was arrested at 4:15
1 been ehrirged with burglary and p.m. Monday In the parking lot
A c t io n R e p o rts
sexual battery after allegedly o f C u m b e r l a n d F a r m s .
b r e a k i n g I nt o a S a n f o r d
Longwood. He was being held in
★ Fires
woman's room.
lieu of $10,000 bond.
The man fled on foot after the
★ Courts
NO PRESCRIPTION
* at Inek. which occurred at about
Sanford police who spotted a
★ Police
. 2:20 a.m. Tu esday In the
woman's bedroom. The woman prescription drug bottle without
■ went to a nearby restaurant and a label In the purse of a woman
Both men were charged with
* called police. An hour after the they were questioning charged
* attack a suspect was spotted and her with having controlled sub­ possession of marijuana and the
* arrested in the parking lot (if stances In an unmarked con­ man who allegedly offered to
Tenneco, 1800 S, French Avc.. a tainer after they found a mix of share a smoke was also charged
capsules and pills In the bottle, a with resisting without violence
* police report said.
after allegedly not cooperating
}
The man was taken to the police report said.
Police
were
questioning
the
when being handcuffed, the re­
1 restaurant where the woman
, reportedly identified the suspect, woman after she was almost port said.
involved in a traffic accident in
T ha t man. M a t t h e w M.
the report said.
Dennis Dale Spicer. 32. of 300 I lie parking lot of the Dollar Hendrick. 27. of Orange City,
t S. Oak St. "15. has been charged Store In Sanford, a police report and Timothy Lee Blodgett. 29. of
in the case and was being held in said. She was arrested at 7:34 Orlando, were arrested at 11:54
p.m. Monday on 12th Street at p.m. Tuesday and were being
lieu of S 10.000 bond.
held in lieu of $500 bond each. •
SECUIRTY GUARD CHARGED Park Ave.
Barbara Colleen Powers. 61. of
DAD IS VICTIM
. A security guard at a eonA 20-year-old Sanford man
structlon site has been charged Orlando, was being held In lieu
jailed on a burglary charge was
• with burglary, grand theft and of $500 bond.
charged with burglary, grand
. dealing in stolen property after
WILLING TO SHARE
■; allegedly stealing a radio and
A man Seminole County un­ theft and theft of a firearm in
charger from a construction site dercover drug task force agents connection with an August bur­
trailer he was guarding.
reportedly saw roll a marijuana glary of his father's Lake Monroe
The suspect allegedly sold the cigarette and smoke it with home.
The man who has been Jailed
radio and charger for $25 at another man at the westbound
about 4:15 p.m. on Monday. The rest area of Interstate 4. near since Sept. 19 In connection
• items had been stolen from 155 Longwood. told agents he didn't with the Sept. 13 theft or $200
handover Place. Longwood.
have pot to sell but allegedly from the home of Howard King.
- when the suspect was on duty offered to share a smoke with P.O. Box 324 . Ohio Street, faces
• there on Sept. 20 or 21. a them when they asked about a tlie additional burglary related
Longwood police report said.
possible drug buy. a sheriffs charges for allegedly stealing
cash and a .22-caiiber handgun
Robert William Conklin. 19. of report said.

from his father. Ralph John
Nixie Jr., of 152 Ohio St., Lake
Monroe. The arrest came at 3:20
p.m. Monday at the Jail after the
suspect was questioned by
sheriffs deputies, a sheriffs re­
port said.
Ralph John Nixie Jr., of 422
San Marcus St., was being held
In lieu of $8,000 bond on the
latest charges and $8,000 bond
In the other case.
TRIED TO TAKE DRYER
A 30-ycar-old Jacksonville
man who allegedly tried but
failed tu steal a clothes dryer
from Brentwood Apartments.
R ed B ug L a k e R o a d .
Casselberry, fled on foot and was
caught by sheriffs deputies
within minutes of the alleged
attempted theft, a sheriffs report
said.
Michael Wayne Turley was
arrested at the sheriffs de­
partment at about 3 p.m. Mon­
day. He was charged with bur­
glary and grand theft and was
being held In lieu of $5,000
bond.
BURGLARIES f t THEFTS
Dennis K. Baglcy, 29. of 2250
Church St.. Sanford, reported to
s h e r i f f s deput i es a $250
lnwnmower was stolen from his
home between Saturday and
Monday.

Marlon E. Davis, 41. of 314
Cherokee Court. Altamonte
Springs, gave deputies the name
of u man who she claims
rammed her ear with his while
driving on Interstate 4 at State
Road 434. The man reportedly
Site said all three positions pay forced her vehicle off the road,
$5 a meeting, "to cover the costs hit her in the Jaw with his fist,
of transportation to the meet­ knocked her to the ground and
ings. We are looking for civic took $150 from her car, a
sheriffs report said. The inci­
minded individuals."
The board o f adjustment dent occurred at about 2:30 p.m.
meets once a month and hears Monday. No arrest has been
variances from the terms of made.
zoning ordinances and decides
Lawncarc gear with a total
appeals from (lie decisions of
administrative officials. Mrs. value of $1,177 was stolen from
Rice explained. She said the the bed of the pickup truck of
planning and zoning com ­ Edward William Campbell. 35.
mission meets twice a month or Sorrento, while parked at the
and makes recommendations to 7-Elcvcri on Foxvalley Drive,
the city commission on changes Longwood, at about 2:10 p.m.
in zoning, site plan reviews, Monday, a sheriff s report said.
other requests for building
A pager worth $350 was stolen
changes and reviews changes in
the comprehensive land use from the home of Charles Ewing.
40. of 1022 Manchester Circle.
plan.
In other Lake Mary news the Winter Park, on Monday, depu­
city will hold a reception for ties reported.
retiring city commissioners Burt
Douglas G. Bills. 63. of 3611
Perinchlef and Harry Terry at
the Heathrow Country Club on
Oct. 7. It will last from 5 to 7
p.m.. tickets cost $10 per person
and they arc available at city
ball until Sept. 27. Perinchlef. a
Seminole Community College
Music professor, served the city
for 9 years and Terry, a retired
Army Corps ol Engineers con­
tract manager, served for ten
years in various capacities.
—Jim Searla

Lake Mary Seeks Volunteers
Lake Marv is looking lor a few
good public servants |three to lie
* exact) who seek little pay and
less recognition to serve their
Community but who will gain
valuable experience in city gov­
ernment while they participate.
. Lake Mary City Manager
Kathy Rice said Wednesday
when Kenneth King. Arthu r"B u zz"Pclsos and Charlie
Webster were elected to the city
commission they had to resign
.Iheir seats on the planning and
. zoning board and the board of
- Adjustment. They are replacing
.recently resigned city eomniis' sinner Colin Keogh and retiring
•commissioners Burl Perlnehief
3ind Harry Terry. The planning

Jl

and zoning board will require
two more members and the
board of adjustment will need
one.
Registered voters who reside
in Lake Mary are eligible to serve
and the city will make the
appointments after reviewing
"b rier’ resumes submitted by
citizens, according to Mrs. Rice.
She said the resumes may be
sent to the Lake Marv Citv Hall.
P.O. Box 725. 15H N. Country
Club lid.. Lake Mary. Florida
32746 in care of City Clerk Carol
Edwards or brought in to her
office. Mrs. Rice said appointees
will be selected in October and
will begin three year terms In
November.

IN O FFIC E OR HOSPITAL

J

• BUNIONS
• HAMMERTOES
L A S E R
S U R G E R Y
•H E E L PAIN
_____________
• DIABETIC FOOT CARE
. ARTHRITIC FEET A ANKLES
MARSHALL L. FRUMAN, D.P.M.
• WARTS'OROWTHS
PODIATRY and FOOT SURGERY
• FRACTURES'SPAAINS
1300 Edguwilw Of.
MS PKm Spring! Or.
• SPORTS MEDICINE
OriAOdO
Altim ont! Spring!
• CORNS A CALLOUSES
• CHILDREN IN-TOWING
422-0500
331-6600
A OUT-TOEING
• SECOND OPINION
Day • Evening • Sat. Hours By Appt.

^

:

S &amp; KATHY'S

m
* 2 .6 9

2690 S. ORLANDODR., SANFORD, FL
i« * .il l\ O u m t l f k O f H F d i i i l ill /Jrrrni* A

fJm i*ird

O PEN 7 DAYS 6 AM-10 PM
323-4950
A HELPFUL SMILE IN EVERY AISLE
WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS
Prices In This Ad Good From Sept. 26 To Oct. 2.

MEAT SPECIA LS FOR THE WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 2nd

Sirloin
Steaks
Lb.

• 2 .8 9

Boneless
Sirloin
Tip Steaks
* 2 .1 9

Lb

• 3 .9 9

Porterhouse
Steak
• 2 .9 9

Lb

s ta n d in g B e e t

Boneless
Delmonlco
Steak

T-Bone
Steak

Lb.

• 2 .8 9

*2.99
*2.89

h i IT

Roast Small End
Standing Beef Rib
Roast Large End

lb

3 Lbs. Or More
9 9 "

Beef Rib
Steak

Lb

4 9 *

6 9 *

Freezer Filler
W h ole B eef Loin
45-50 Lb. Average it.

• 1 .0 9

Lb.

Lb

Pork Spare
Ribs

Turkey
Wings

Beef
Liver

Lb

Pork
Country
Ribs

Fla. Premium
Chicken
Quarter Legs

Fresh Ground
Beef

Lb

• 1 .4 9

Lb.

Lb

Fo l d M il w a u k e e

P a p e r
T o w e ls
Jumbo Roll
2

1 * 1

T.G. Lee

D ie t

Light or Regular
6 Peck 12 O l. Cans
b

b

Gallon Jug

*

1

A

. 9

A

Blue Bonnelt

C

Fruit Punch

* 1 .9 9

9

w

I

2

*

Quarter Sheet
C akes .................. Each

F re s h

Lb. *

1

r Q

iw e * Orsee A
WITH 1
Fined
O Ol!
Cert.

/4 .0 0

1 PRICES ENWNO OCT. »

M ilk

0

99

5

u ,• • ,

5

4

9

*

Lb. *

1

*

P IU C U ENDING OCT. &gt;

Citrus Hill Fresh
O ra n g e

.

J u ic e

* 1

. 0

B

W h ite

I Lb Bag

39

WITH 1
Filled

0 Ol!

Cert
PRICES ENDINO OCT. I

\i

Gallon

. 4

9

Medium
Yellow
Onions
0

3

Lb. Baa

79*

DELI DEPARTMENT
Deli Sliced
Boiled Ham

. . Lb.

Colby Longhorn
C h e e s e .................. Lb.

Limit I With
MO m More
Feed Purches!
[.eluding
Beer end Clgs

P o ta to e s
Filled
0 IMS.
Can.

H 0*1

2

. 0

am mm

Golden
Ripe
Bananas

A A

Pel 1% Plastic Or
Vitim in 0 Paeer Cln

Finer

2 5 * „

it&gt; sncti

Hyde Park
Sugar

0 e * l« 7

4 / l.UU

i'v r f;v : 3

E g g s

$0

J /S I

.

1

1500 FRENCH AVE. IN SANFORD

*3

4 X 8 * TABLE

/•.'/I/Oi

3

tiiN n A Y &lt; ;$

r i r . i s . m l I ),i\ W i l li ( &gt;/r/ I 't i, n,

OPEN W ED. - FRI. - SAT. - SUN.
For

In to rm o tio n

PHONE

_ _

-

l.V I

possible, at

Lake

A copy o l the proposed Ordinance Is available In the C ity Clerk's office, 158 North Country Club Road.
Lake Mary, Florida, Monday through Friday, from 8:00 A.M. until 4:30 P M., tor persons desiring to ex­
amine the Ordinance.

*

Tennessee
Vine Ripen
Tomatoes

BAKERY DEPARTMENT

Fresh Donuts
Plain Or Cake

9

i

AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF LAKE MARY. FLORIDA. ADOPTING AND ENACTING A LAND
DEVELOPMENT CODE FOR THE CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA. AS A NEW AND ORIGINAL COM­
PREHENSIVE ORDINANCE TO BE KNOWN AS “THE LAKE MARY LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE", REVIS­
ING, AMENDING, SUPPLEMENTING, CODIFYING AND SUPERSEDING THE ZONING ORDINANCE, THE
ARBOR ORDINANCE AND THE SUBDIVISION REGULATIONS: ADOPTING REGULATIONS PERTAINING
TO THE DEVELOPMENT STANDARDS THAT ARE TO BE UTILIZED FOR THE APPROVAL OF THE SITE
PLAN FOR ANY DEVELOPMENT OR THE CONSTRUCTION OF ANY FACILITY OTHER THAN RURAL
RESIDENTIAL ONE • AND TWO • FAMILY RESIDENTIAL DWELLING UNITS OR ACCESSORY USES
THERETO: PROVIDING PENALTIES: SEVERABILITY: ANO EFFECTIVE OATE OF PASSAGE.

R ite

M a r g a r in e

U.S. No. 1
W hite
Potatos
5 Lb. Bag 6

9

i

A Public Hearing w ill be held on O ctober 3,1985, at 7:30 P.M., or as soon thereafter as
Mary C ity Hall, 158 North Country Club Road, Lake Mary, Florida.

2 Liter Bottle

9

v i i i U ri;

JO N ES'
i i v &gt;i \ h k i

THE CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA, PROPOSES TO REZONE (CHANGE THE PERMITTED USE OF) THE
LAND WITHIN THE AREA SHOWN IN THE MAP IN THIS ADVERTISEMENT.

R .C . C o la

B e e r

Electrical components worth
$200 were taken from n water
pump control box In a yard at
1830 L a k e S h o r e C i r c l e .
Longwood. between Sept. 10
and 21. according lo a sheriffs
report filed by an employee of
A thief look about "1.100 Eblldc Construction. Inc., 684
worth of Items including five Fort Rose Drive. Winter Springs.
rings and cash from the purse of
DUI ARREST
Leslie L. Martin. 19. of Orlando,
The following person hus been
while she was at the home of arrested In Seminole County on
Charles T. Irwin. 19. of 472 a charge of driving under the
Cl cmson D rive. Al tamonte Influence:
Springs. The theft reportedly —Daniel Alex Reynolds. 27, of
occurred Saturday or Sunday, Orlando, was arrested at 4:58
according to a report Irwin filed a.m. Sunday in n wooded nrcar
with shcrllf s deputies.
n e a r C a a s e 11o n D r i v e .
Casselberry, after he allegedly
Madan Peter Mchra. a manag­ tried to drive away in a pickup
er at Willett Toyota. U.S. truck which an Intoxicated
Highway 17-92. Longwood. re­ companion had already been
ported to sheriffs deputies that a warned by Casselberry police
1985 Toyota worth $12,345 wasi not to drive. He wns also charged
s t o l e n f rom a lot at the with fleeing and attempting to
dealership around 4 p.m. Wed­ elude police, a police report said.
nesday.
—John Virgil Roberts. 26. of 70
E. Third Court. Chuluota. was
Haru Baker, of 3155 Dwarf arrested at 9 a.in. Monday on
Pine Avc.. Winter Park, reported Fourth Avenue in Chuluota after
to sheriffs deputies that her ills motorcycle was in an acci­
wallet containing $300 was dent. He was also charged with
stolen from her purse while she dr i vi ng with a suspended
was at the Jal Alai fronton on license.
U.S. Highway 17-92. Fern Park.1 —Gerald Lee Corwin, 35. of
at about midnight Friday.
Orlando, arrested Monday after
driving carelessly on State Road
A thief who crawled through a 434. Ovi edo. He was also
kitchen window took a total of charged with careless driving.

PERSONS ARE AOVISED THAT IF THEY DECIDE TO APPEAL ANY DECISION MADE AT THIS MEETING
THEY WILL NEED A RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND FOR SUCH PURPOSE, THEY NEED TO EN­
SURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE WHICH INCLUDES THE
TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED, PER SECTION 266.0105
FLORIDA STATUTES.

3?
Hyde Park

A thief thief took about $80 In
change and about two dozen
bottles of liquor In a break-in at
VFW POst 8207. State Road 427.
L o n g w o o d . on Monday, a
sheriffs report filed by William
W. Webber, 53. of Casselberry,
said.

$110 from Daniel Norfcat's
wallet and his wife's purse at
their home at 178 Sedgcflcld
Circle. Winter Park, between
Saturday and Monday, a sheriffs
rcporl said,

C IT Y O F L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
N O T IC E O F Z O N IN G
(P E R M IT T E D U S E )
CHANGE

1

J

Osceola Rond. Geneva, reported
to deputies his $189 canoe
disappeared from near Ills home
between Sept. 18 and Monday.

Fresh

*1.99
‘2.49
89*

M a c a r o n i S a l a d -------Lb.

Coke Classic

Froth Ground

2 Liter
Bottle

R o u n d

WITH 1
Filled
0 Dll
C #ft
PRICE! ENDINO OCT. 3

99

2 1 .8 9

with i
Fated
D. DM.

Cert.

PRICES ENDINO OCT. 2

City Clark

�Evtnlng Hrreld, Sanford, FI. Wednttdey, S e p h lM W -T A

H o w D id M a r i l y n M o n r o e D i e ?
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Seeking to dispel
23 years of speculation that Marilyn Monroe
was murdered and authorities covered It up,
police have released their Investigative
report, but It docs not still the controversy
over the death of one of the world's best
known sex symbols.
Chief Daryl Gates said Monday the report
confirms the official version of Monroe’s
death In 1962 — that she committed suicide
by swallowing dozens of sleeping pills.
A department spokesman said the report
was released to dispel “ speculation. Innu­
endo and out-and-out lies" that Monroe was
murdered and that police and coroner's
officials covered It up to protect Attorney
General Robert Kennedy.
The half-inch-thick report counters
charges raised In an October 1975 article In
O ul magazine that suggested Monroe, 36.
was murdered with a lethal Injection of
barbiturates.

* " ’ * '* ' *

P.O. Box 6 0 6 3 -B
Orlando, FL 3 2 8 5 3
Call (3 0 5 ) 8 4 9 - 0 5 6 0

The magazine suggested the police and t dosage, but the police report stated that
coroner distorted evidence to protect Ken­ ' such Injections would have caused puncture
nedy. who. the article claimed, was present
wounds and needle marks, which were not
when Monroe received the fatal overdose.
found during the autopsv.
But ir the police were seeking to end the
Another section of the report was devoted
controversy over Monroe's death they did
to Coroner Theodore J. Curphey’s conten­
not succeed.
tion that Monroe was subject to abrupt
Anthony Summers, a former BBC reporter
mood changes and ha^l a history of taking
whose book on Monroe's life and death will
barbiturates.
be released this week.-said from New York
"On these occasions, she had called for
that he obtained the same material earlier
help and had been rescued," Curphey said
thi s y e a r and c h a r a c t e r i z e d It as
In the report. "From the Information
“ superficial."
"There Is no way the muterlul could be collected about the events of the evening of
Aug. 4. It Is our opinion that the same
regarded as substantial enough to quell
pattern was repeated — except for the
reasons for (further) inquiry Into why
rescue."
Marilyn died." he said. "I don't claim that
she was murdered, but the ease remains
Curphey said massive doses of Ncmbutol
open. I don’t think she committed suicide. It
and chloral hydrate “ gulped within a
was either accidental or she was murdered."
minute or two" killed the glamor queen.
Critics of the official suicide theory claim
Chief Gates said the report shows
Monroe was Injected with the fatal drug
Monroe's death was definitely a suicide.

Ask For Deane Wood
DEANE R. WOOD
ASSOCIATE

dered to pay 8557 In restitution
and complete 240 hours of
community service.
Disposition of a theft charge
against a 16-year-old Juvenile
Involved In the case was not
available because of his age.
The all-terrain vehicle was
stolen December 24 from the
home of Brad Dunn. 808 Snow
Queen Drive, Chuluota. accord­
ing to a sheriff's report. Riddle
and Hill were urr'-.»tcd Jan. 5
and and the Juvenile Jan. 7.

TIP TOP

B n a c o c li'4

is y H tfn i

W HOLE

MMftED
PICRIC*
u

ox

FRYERS

59 *

T A IL

99 '

78 '

.

POM
SPARE

1RIAIBS. SSW
99'n

Give You a Taste Of
Feasting Italian Style

u u tn t

831-1108

CHOPS

a

99(

F in

mm m R.C. COLA

SSS *1.69

rua C H U C K
STEAK

39*
S1 0 Q
i t * 1.45
*

POI
BACON
C H IC K E N

99*

APPLES

.

39'

CHUCK
ROAST n

P M O IT M tU

l.E O

TURKEY
W IN C S

4 — 70*

Conveniently Located
Just V* Ml. N. of 434
I I yo u Ilka Ita lia n , y o u 'll lova u t l .

All Finest Quality Bedding
Badcock's Famous Money-Back
Guarantee
Outstanding Values

199“ *50REGULAR SIZE •2
59“ •45—
%r*tv
QUEEN SIZE *2
99“ • 75KING SIZE
*3
99“
TWIN SIZE

I

•

xr.tr

c

W

s q O °°

i

eo-.acr

H O -

B rfc tc ^ o c k '*

Slum ber Pedic
Istra Firm

•

I h w i M o M h l ilM

7t" *ti.|

•UpqwlwHto

• fcleniiftenlly 4—1f *o4

igimli far— all— I lupperl

W IT H Y O U R P U R C H A S E O F S E L E C T E D S L E E P S E T S

WIOM4!
TWIN SIZE
N ' i M1

•259“

•4 5 -

REGULAR SIZE •279“
»!••»»*

•7 0 -

\

r

S A 0 0 °°

QUEEN SIZE
00*«00*

•339“

••5 -

KING SIZE
H’ i N*

•479“

• 100"

GUARANTEE

Bassett's

B c ic ic o c Ir a Rett M aker
• 1ST efftet tail unit (to tad
an I ) e 7 l" t ilt )
• 1)g e v g e high grad# »le«l
wire ctili
• Tempa.ed high carton

Ml

lit r a Firm

Httl tgrint unit
• M e iuppartt
• Teg gmtiedle V'gelyfeim
9 Rei-e-lef#*

08Mf

Fi.ie

TWIN SIZE
H iir

r

QUEEN SIZE
•OsBO
KING SIZE
fl’ilO

• 111. 1J .•***•. . lu ll •&gt;**"
• i m I m i n n H . (W m 4 m i

ii.zi- ,ji«)

299“ • 75•3
39” • 45—
•3
99“ * 100—
•5
29*’ * 105°°

j

*

s r . r t " t i.,i

lo u t , g a e fU e m o i

ii,^ f

iA VINOS
SONUS

•359“

•9 0 —

REGULAR SIZE •399“
» r# rr

\

Bassett's

/4 t S m d cecA

• 100-

QUEEN SIZE
•O'i 00*

•479“

‘ 120-

KING SIZE
fi'ifO*

*699“

•1 5 0 —

a Free Delivery
a Free Set-Up

A a c t c o c ld i Royal H eritage

Satin Classic

Our Finr»t

litr e Firm

h*rtt utn

* M l Mm
i* » » . m »

• 4*0. 11 •*«•« fM lm w v.

• r iM f t t r..i«twllMi
* Cam iw t r

tittl .it. nth |h—4n
11.71-

• C*MM&lt; lllllMf

• l . l l . M l tvp*M N
• 11 *&gt;•**! . &gt; ,4 . . I m I

m i;

• lff«pMt#4 W t . *

• V N .m It ,,.*

• rw.'.Ui*.

M l or MT
■•—m b*. »* »e

M l or M»

(•fJ a

TWIN SIZE
N iM *

•359“

HO-

REGULAR SIZE •399“

• 100-

i

• 120—

!

QUEEN SIZE
40-.RO*
KING SIZE
F0*»t0*

58*

»4.

TWIN SIZE
m ••r»“

i

• C trtiK n I " t . . M M .

C..I Unit

3W $F

•

f
M l Of MT
| 1. .*■&lt;II 9—Mt l»m|

lit r e Firm
• 1*4

IKltn«
• V

• Utlm -lwt. pvM 'u .ll.4

SAVINOl

Im p erial Elegance

D e le te

jBadcock bedding is manu­
factured in our own factory
by skilled craftsmen or to
our specifications. Every
piece of Badcock bedding
is GUARANTEED to give
satisfaction or your money
I back!

Excel Royale

lifro Firm

•479“

TWIN SIZE
NiTI*

•399“

REGULAR SIZE •499“
ir .r r
•
QUEEN SIZE
AO’tRO'
KING SIZE
»o'*so'

•6 9 9 " *150—

*/4 tt Tsnsr 1fm IZ ifU '

-2 /8 9

V V

tSuttmm

*

*6.25 *

•599“

lAvmoft

M l Or MT
—4hM

OefnMr
*■■41

M 00-

TWIN SIZE
Weft*

•499“

•1 2 5 -

REGULAR SIZE •399“
srefl*

•150—

•1 2 5 —

to
7 0 0 ot

•1 5 0 -

•7 7 9 " • 1 0 0 "

QUEEN SIZE
00*.10*

•699“

•1 7 5 —

KING SIZE
F0-.60*

•199“

*2 0 0 —

2 1 *1

ta m
OQ* IfM
T P IK a .

—.— 2 1 *1

99*

u tL fw u m

— *1.29

..-•1.99
M M M M M

69*
S1 40
*

Ml

Exp. 10-2-85

other Mem or group ip the
atthe
. I

• Pelyfanm carn*rt
• Teg gurttad la *, &gt; a ly W w
• Cotton filling
H”

•9—m.*4 W. 1^1

m iM n

DEUCKHJ

99*

*

* 3 . 1 5

6 0 0 H w y. 17 0 2 N .
L o n g w o o d , F la .

V II OF MV
■■— —4 Ni m ■«

i* . m 4 m

U lT

PORK

i**"

5.99

Exp 10-3-85

FAIRMONT PLAZA

FeaturingImports fromItaly

M.dium Nun

II U tu M l
CMTTUUNCS

*

IP IC Il

S M A L L N E G O ZIO ’ S HERO
W ITH A B O W L O F
. .
H O M EM A D E S O U P
° n,y
FR ES H IM P O R TED
P R 0 V 0 L0 N E C H EES E
FR O M IT A L Y R»g. $7.25 IB.

Q uilted Queen

• S llC eiU ( b e M d e e t r i
J S 'N ia )
• 13 |«vye high gtato Heel

HOMF OF QI I AI I TY FOODS AND MF ATS
M TU*

PHONE _

BED D IN G p ^ S A L E

REGULAR SIZE
S) iFS*

nui

ADDRESS

to * 2 0 0 “

M o re W o m en Buying Condoms
NEW YORK (UPI) - Most
condoms sold In phartnuclrs and
grocery stores are bought by
women, and manufacturers of
the contraceptives are respond­
ing with advertising aimed at a
female audience, a magazine
reports.
" T h e $200 mllllon-a-ycur
condom Industry now realizes It
takes Iwo to tango. It recently
started marketing rubbers to
w o m e n ." W o r k i n g W o m a n
magazine said In Its October
Issue.
-"In the past, we felt that our
target audience was male. 18 to
34. But things have changed.
Women who have come off the
pill are looking for a method
they feel Is safe." said Brent
Gulick. condom manager of
Schmid Products Co.
T h e m a g a z i n e sai d the
number of women buying con­
doms has risen about 25 percent
from 15 percent in the mid-

NAME

IN S T O M

for Trade, has asked sponsors of
the bill to substitute u weaker
version that would roll back
t e x t i l e I m p o r t s for t hr ee
countries — Tulwan. South
Korea and Hong Kong — instead
of the 12 targeted by the original
legislation.
The House Ways and Means
Committee plans to consider the
original textile bill Thursday.
Senate sponsors hope to attach
their modified version later this
week to the Micronesia Compact.

ra'itt*

1970s to as high as 40 percent.
The reason?
"Condoms arc the only con­
traceptives that are also effective
venereal disease barriers." the
magazine said.
The condom Industry Is taking
notice of Its female customers.
"Condom packages arc col­
orful now and they're on display
so women can buy them without
e m b a r r a s s m e n t . ’ ' said
pharmacist Frederick Mayer of
Sausallto. Calif. "Women arc the
p r i m a r y p u r c h a s e r s In
pharmacies and grocery stores."
In a break with tradition.
Schmid put u man and a woman
on the carton of a spcrmidlcally
lubricated condom. Gulclk said.
Two of the major condom
companies ulso are pushing the
Yuppie favorite — lambskins at a
price of $1.50 to 81.75 each.
Working Woman said.
The latex price tag Is 25 cents
to 50 cents, the magazine said.

CALL OR RETURN THIS FORM
TO THE ABOVE ADDRESS

WEEKLY SPECIALS

C huluota Teen G ets 'Present'
For Christm as Eve A T C Theft ■SAVE $50 to $200 on the
store with
**“
A 17-year-old Chuluota youth 30 months probation and or­ H
who stole a three-wheel Honda
ull-tcrraln cycle on Christmas
Eve has gotten his 'present' — a
a 30-month prison sentence.
Edward Thomas Riddle, of 330
First St., was sentenced by
Seminole Circuit Judge
Dominick J. Salfl who gave
Riddle credit for 188 days al­
ready served In the Seminole
County Jail.
A 20-year-old accomplice,
William Owen Hill, of 115 S.
French Ave., Sanford, was sen­
tenced In July to 40 days In Jail,

(heir financial planning since 1843 and offers
many programs that are not available through
your local bank or brokerage firm . If you would
like to review your current plan in the areas of tax
savings, investments, retirement planning, cash
accumulations, or insurance protection.

“ I Grew Up
In Sanford,
Went To School
At Seminole,
And Now I Am
Back To Work
And Live In
My Hometown'*

S h o u ld R e d u c e T ra d e D e fic it
they comply with fair trade
practices, he said.
Of the congressional push for
protectionist legislation,
Baldridge said. "Once you Im­
pose quot as or tariffs by
legislative fiat, history shows It
Is very difficult to remove
them."
But on Capitol Hill. Senate
Republican leader Robert Dole of
K u n s a s s ai d he d o u b t e d
Reagan's trade policies would
deter congressional efforts to
protect the domestic textile and
clothing Industry.
A House subcommittee last
week approved additional Import
protection for American textile
manufacturers. Reagan has In­
dicated he would veto the bill
but members of both chambers
say they can almost guarantee
an override.
An Industry coalition, the
Fiber Fabric Apparel Coalition

N O N Y has specialized In helping people with

Now Serx'lng Sanford
A n d N eighboring
C om m unities

B a ld r id g e : N e w P o lic ie s
W ASH ING TO N (Ill'll Commerce Secretary Malcolm
Baldrlgc says the administra­
tion's new trade policy and an
International effort to devalue
the dollar should help reduce the
nation's record trade delicti by
next year.
In a breakfast meeting with
reporters Tuesday. Baldridge
hailed President Reagan's de­
cision to handle unfair trade
practices with cxceullve action
rather than through legislation.
“ I think the president went as
far as one could go without
getting into actual quotas und
t a r i f f s , " Bal d r l g c said of
Reagan's plan to step up efforts
to fight unfair trade practices
and enforce existing trade laws.
Executive action allows the
administration to impose restric­
tions against countries that huve
closed their markets to U.S.
products and lift them later If

F in a n c ia l
S e r v ic e s

NM TM S

HOME FURNISHING C E N T E R S
FMHITgW,

00*
4 i » *1

TI P-TOP
M A IN

»

7LQW OUW — I I W HMTHRT•MMMI

OVER 200 ST O R ES 8ERVINQ THE SO U T H E A ST
P e o p le Whey
C a re !

E d

PH. 322-8240
2306 S . FR EN C H A V E ., S A N FO R D
MCI

Ro.idm.ister

.1. t7» 1•• |*

t lA M I lM I N

H IA ( M

« . 4 -*••»

�t * ** ••»
%

\

H tr ild Photo by Tommy Vincont

Rachael Weightman splashes toward her goal of making the 1988 Olympic team. The sophomore from Longwood is an all-around performer for Trinity Prep.

C oals: W eightman Can't Wait For '88
Chuck B u r g e »
Special to the Herald
During 1984's Olympic year, baseball and other
major sports took a backseat as swimming
assumed center stage, monopolizing the TV
screen for. many American viewers. Americans
were thrilled by the feats of Rowdy Gaines. Rick
Carey. Tracy Caulklns. and other great American
swimmers.
After the Olympic hype was over and these
laces faded back into water, one person still kept
on working hard to achieve her goals and dreams.
She's not a commercial superstar or an athletic
endorser for a Calvin Klein line ol swim wear.
She's just a down-to-earth, hard-working athlete
trying to fulfill her potential at Trinity Prcparatorv School.
Her name is Rachael Weightman. and in
describing her. one word comes to mind:
Awesome.
Weightman. the daughter of Longwood's Ed
and Carol Weightman. began her swimming
career when she was only six years old. “ Mv
brothers really got me started in swimming." the
14-year-old Weightman said.
Welghtman's brothers, who were standouts at
Trinity Prep, are both attending college and

Swimming
swimming.
David, the older. Is attending
Shepherd College in Shcpherdslown, W.V., while
Brian, a prep All America. Is attending Mount
Union College In Alliance. Ohio.
After swimming for the Lyman Swim Club for
her first year, Weightman switched to the former
Blue Dolphins. She said the coaching was better
and more advanced. “ I felt that coach (Marry)
Meisel was a great coach and was highly
respected by everyone." Weightman. a sopho­
more at Trinity Prep. said.
The change was a good one Weightman. who
has been with the team ever since. "I stayed
because coach Meisel Inspired me to do belter."
Weightman said.
Meisel. who is known mostly for his career as a
swimming mentor, started the Blue Dolfins in
1972. He has coached basketball, tenuis, football,
swimming, and a state championship gymnastics
team.
The Blue Dolfins merged with the Greater
Orlando team, headed by John Woods. In 1983.

forming the Orlando Area Dolfins. But a new
facility was built in Orlando, the Justus Aquatic
Center, and the team changed its name to the
Justus Dolfins of Orlando.
"I think the new center kept a lot of people
moti vated and made me work h a rd er."
Weightman said.
The Justus Dolfins. are under senior head
coach Woods, who is presently the head coach of
the West Orange High swim team.
"Coach Woods gives me the confidence I need
by helping me swim faster and do well in
swimming." Weightman said.
Woods confirmed the Olympic potential.
"Rachael has the talent." he said. "II she can
start to train as a champion she'll break into the
International scene in a lew years."
And t hen? " I honest l y feel Rachael
(Weightman) ran swim In the Olympics." Woods
said. " If she really goes after it the next couple of
years, she'll make the '88 team."
Although Weightman is considered a team
swimmer, she also litis many individual goals she
wishes to achieve. "1 want to make Senior
Nationals again." Weightman said, "and I want to
win state in the 200and 500 free."
Senior Nationals is the goal of all great

Lyman Capitalizes,
Spikes Lady Hawks
By Chris Fitter
Herald Sporta Writer
With the experience and talent
ft lias. Lyman High will win
enough matches on its own In
1985. And the Lady Greyhounds
will devour any opponent that
makes too many mistakes.
L y ma n ent ert ai ned Lake
Howell's Lady Silver Hawks
Tuesday night In the first of
three meetings, a non-Seminole
Athletic Conference match, be­
tween the Seminole County
rivals. A crowd of about 150
p a c k ed t he L y m a n HI g h
mul ti -purpose room which
seemed more like a stcambulh
with humid temperatures out­
side and little ventilation inside.
Lake Howell got off to a good
start Tuesday but got out of Its
game plan early In the opening
game and the Lady Greyhounds
took full advantage en route to a
15-5. 15-6 victory.
Lyman improved to 2-0 for the
season while Lake Howell fell to
0-1. Both teams return to action
Saturday morning In the Or­
lando Evans Invitational
"You can't open the door for
Lyman." Lake Howell coach Jo
Luciano said. "They will capital­
ize on your mistakes."
The Lady Greyhounds took
the early lead, when senior Dawn
Boyescn served an ace to open
the match but the Lady Hawks
got the serve af t er Ani t a
Cechowskl's lilt. After a couple
side outs, Ccchnwskt came on to
serve for Lake Howell and the
Lady Hawks reeled off four
straight points. A nice block by
Tami Foss gave the sene back to
L v m an a n d t h e La d y
Greyhounds pulled within 4-3 on
Sheila Mandy's serve.
The two teams traded serves a
couple times with some fine
defensive play by Lake Howell's
Mary Kay Scott and Monica
Schneider and Lyman's Boyescn
and Donna Ball leading the way.
Foss gave Lyman the serve
w|lh a fill and the senior stand­
out then went on to serve five
straight points for an 8-4 Lyman
lepd. Kristie Kaiser's block
highlighted the rally for Lyman
while Lake Howell had a couple
breakdowns in communication.
" ‘The girls did what 1 wanted
them to in the first part of the
game." Luciano said. "But then
there wus a breakdown In the
gime plan. They quit execut­
ing."
Lake Howell got within 8-5 on
Jolce Johnson's serve but could
git no closer. Boycsen came on
to sene four points to make It
12-5 and Kaiser served the last
three points o f the opening
game. None of the four points

swimmers. It is the last step before going In the
Olympics and the biggest meet of every year.
Weightman. who made the qualification times
to swim In the Senior National Championships
this year, has a long list of accomplishments that
only the great ones achieve.
Her list includes:
• Eighth grade-All American in the 200 free
and All American honorable mention In the 500
free.
• Ninth grade All American In the 200 and 500
free and the 200 medley relay. State Meet: Fifth in
the 200 free and 12th in the 5(H) free.
• Age group swimming: Junior Nationals in
eighth grade. 200 free. I9lh: 400 free. 20th: 800
free. 22nd: Ninth grade: 200 free (second). 400.
free (third), 1500 free (ninth), and 400 medley
relay (ninth).
In her first national swim meet In Fort
Lauderdale. Weightman placed in the middle of
the pack. But in Tuscaloosa. Ala.. Weightman
showed her dominance of age group swimming
by plaeiug second and third in two events.
By doing well at the Junior National Champi­
onships. Weightman was Invited to swim in the
See WEIGHTMAN. Page 10A

D r u g S o lu tio n ?
U e b e r r o t h C a lls
F o r V o lu n t e e r s

Volleyball

served by Boyescn were re­
NEW YORK (UPII - Commis­
turned and one was an ace while
sioner Peter Ueberroth, hoping
spikes by Kaiser and Foss
to rebuild tits sport's sullied
highlighted the rally on Kaiser's
image, lias asked all major
serve.
league players to approve a baseball is clean."
"Both Dawn (Boyescn) and
Reaction to the proposal was
voluntary drug testing plan and
Kristie (Kaiser) have serves that
help clear the "cloud hanging split along management-player
are hard to return." Lyman
lines, wilit baseball executives
over base hall."
coach Karren Newman said.
But the plan, announced at a supporting the commissioner
"Dawn’*- t-* .■ dr*\ i &gt;od Kristie's
Tuesday news conference, met and players disputing his strate­
is kind ol a lloaii :
resistance from players and the gy. If not his intentions. "W e are
Lake Howell served to open
head of their union. Both ques­ all in agreement that something
the second game but couldn't
tioned whether Ueberroth was has to be done.” said New York
score and Boysen then served
Mel outfielder George Foster.
overstepping his authority.
six straight points. Two of the
T h e c o m m i s s i o n e r , who "But do it through the Players
points were aces by Boyescn
withheld comment throughout Association. That's why we have
while Kim Forsyth had a pair of
the recently concluded cocaine it. It represents the players."
excellent blocks and Mandy
trafficking trial of Curtis Strong
Donald Fehr, acting executive
drilled a devastating spike.
in Pittsburgh, finally responded director of the Major League
After losing the serve, the
to the current spate of drug Players Association, said he
Lady Greyhounds got it right
stories In baseball by sending viewed Ueberroth's proposal
back on a well-disguised dink by
personal letters to all players, with "distress and sadness.” He
Boyescn Kaiser then served four
asking that they agree to un­ said the action was " v e r y
points for a 10-0 lead. Mandy
dergo three drug tests per possibly, if not probably, a
had a block and Forsyth a spike
season.
violation of law " because It
in the rally.
The only alternative to this bypassed the union.
Lake Howell had the serve
voluntary testing, he said, would
"If they have a proposal to
three more times but couldn't
be Inestimable harm to everyone make, make the proposal." Fehr
score and Lyman then took a
associated with the game and said. " I f there are specifics
120 lead on Foss' serve.
Inevitable action by Congress.
involved, tell us what they are.
The Lady Hawks made It 12-2
Some clubs voted on the plan We are not refusing anything in
on Johnson s serve with a block
before Tuesday's games. Others a collective bargaining sense,
bv Christy Tibbitts providing the
postponed the vole until later but don't go directly to the
second point. The Lady Hawks
this week. The commissioner players."
came back to make it 12-5 on
has asked that he receive each
Most players contacted Tues­
three fine serves by Cechowskl.
club's response no later than day responded similarly.
Kaiser served one point for a
Friday morning.
13- 5 Lyman lead but Jo Coop's
"There's a cloud hanging over JURY WEIGHS TESTIMONY
spike gave It back to Lake
baseball, and it's a cloud called
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The
H *r*ld Photo by Bonnie Wieboldt
Howell. J o h n s o n ' s spike
drugs." Ueberroth said. "What I Jury in baseball's second cocaine
trimmed Lyman's lead to 13-6 Lym an's Kim Forsyth, left, defends above the net as Lake am asking each major league trial begun weighing the testi­
on Tibbitts' serve but Forsyth's Howell's Kelly Dean goes for the set. Tam i Foss, rear,
player to do is voluntarily mony today ol Dale Berra and
hit gave it back to the Lady aw aits the next move.
participate In our testing pro­ John Milner who testified they
Greyhounds.
gram. It Is the only way to show bought the drug from accused
Lyman then closed out the
the public — our fans — that pusher Robert "R av" MeCuc.
match on Mandy's serve. The
14th point was a Lake Howell
net foul and Forsyth pul the
—
finishing touches on as she
hammered a spike into the right
By Sam Cook
hand corner of the court.
I am one of a kind. I am unusual. And
Herald Sporta Editor
"The ball &gt;vas a little off the
therefore
I can exist In Joy. When you find
Football Loaders On 10A
Professional wrestling stretches the
net. but you could sec it In her
out that, you don't have to compare yourself
eyes that she was going to nail boundaries of the dclluition of sport. The
to anybody,"
It." Newman said of Forysth's American Heritage dictionary says sport Is: They brought wrestling to prime time with
"My top hat? You won’t believe this. This
1. an active pastime or diversion; 2. a the Rock-Wrestling Connection — videos
spike.
is truly an article in Itself. I don't know how
specific diversion, as athletics or hunting: 3. and "Wrestlemanla." In New York, at
to explain the whole situation. I got It at a
OVIEDO CRUSHES 8T. CLOUD Light mockery.
Madison Square'Garden, the shows sell out.
hat store."
With Kim Verne's sets right on
People like to make sport of pro wrestlers. It has become the "In Thing" to go to pro
the mark. Stephanie Nelson. They point to their physiques, some of
wrestling.
Kelly Price and Allison Smith which border on obese. Others, though, are
Sanford gets the "In Thing" tonight.
w * ii u tl
hammered away at St. Cloud's well muscled. Wrestlers never deny they arc Unpredictable (that's his own definition)
Howell's
Murk Schnitker have quit
Lady Bulldogs Tuesday night as In the entertainment business.
Bugsy McCraw highlights the 7 p.m. show
going for tiie rushing lead an
Oviedo's Lady Lions rolled to a
And. for the past year, professional at the Sanford Civic Center. He'll take on
15-0. 15-10 victory In Orange wrestling has been a very entertaining Crazy Luke Graham in one of the feature county's prep football players. S
Bell Conference action at St. business. Television ratings, buoyed by
269 yards ,n lwo Kutnt‘s while Schr
bouts.
Cloud High.
outlandish interviews, are booming. The
Bugsy considered himself somewhat of on
Schnitker, a hard-running (
The Lady Lions improved to Miami area has 11 wrestling shows on
Intellectual, above the run-of-the-mill, soda should get a stern lest Friday
3-1 overall and 3-0 In the OBC Sunday alone.
cracker-chewing gruppler. Here's a few ugainst Seminole. Oviedo has the
with the win. Oviedo returns to
Much of tiie credit should go to NWA
McGrawisms:
Lake Brantley travels to Lyman in
Seminole Athletic Conference champion Hulk Hogan, manager Captain
"I love frogs: they’re so green. On the other Seminole Athletic Conferem
See OVIEDO. Page 11A
Lou Albario and rock star Cyndl Lauper. other hand, you have warts."
Lake Mary is also idle.

Baseball

Bugsy McGrawisms

Smith Leads Schnitker

�Mets Head For Wrigley,
Hurlers Raise White Flag
United Pres* Internstionsl
The New York Mets are pursuing a
pennant in a ballpark where pitchers arc
raising the white flag.
Three games removed from the National
League East lead with II games to play.
New York today visits Wrigley Field, where
the most recent ballgamc produced 32 runs.
“ It was unbelievable, simply unbelieva­
ble.” Cubs' manager Jim Frey said Tuesday
after Montreal's 17-15 victory over Chicago.
"The wind wasn't blowing out that hard
and people were hitting it in the dark."
Andre Dawson led Montreal with three
homers and eight RBI. Dawson hit a pair of
three-run homers in a 12-run fifth to
become the first major-leaguer to hit two
homers in the same Inning twice. He did it
against Atlanta In 1978.
"I guess we needed every one of them."
said Dawson, who now has 21 homers on
the year. "You Just never know In this
ballpark."
Tim Raines didn't play for Montreal.
New York's Ron Darling, 16-5. will pitch
against Chicago's Reggie Patterson. Right
now, the the last thing the Mets need is the
uncertainty of Wrigley Field. They arc
basing a St. Louis Cardinal team that
cemingly can't lose.
On Tuesday. New York remained three
games behind the Cards with a 7-1 victory
over the Philadelphia Phillies.
First baseman Keith Hernandez got the
game-winning RBI for his first-inning sacri­
fice flv that gave the Mets a 1-0 lead. It was

Evening Hsrsld, Sanford, Fl. Wsdnswtoy, tspt, » , ittS -fA

Mariners Maintain Hex,
Handle KC For 10th Time

N.L. Baseball
his 23rd of the season, a new major-league
record, breaking the.mark or 22 set by
Harold Baines of the Chicago White Sox In
1963.
Hernandez, however, said he was not that
impressed with the statistic.
"For anything to be satisfying with the
game-winning RBI. I'd like to go back
through the records and sec who holds it for
the seventh inning on." he said. "That
means something. Tonight. I drove In the
first run. To me, that docs not qualify as a
game-winning RBI."
The sacrifice fly was also his 10th of the
season, a Mets' record. .
Sid Fernandez, 8-9. pitched a two-hlttcr
with the help of a good curvcball.
"It’s getting better," he said. "A couple or
games. It was ofT, but I worked on the side
and made a few minor corrections."
Elsewhere, St. Louis shaded Pittsburgh
5-4, Los Angeles beat Houston 7-2, Cincin­
nati topped Atlanta 7-5 and San Diego
nipped San Francisco 4*3.
Cardinals S. Meta 4
At St. Louis. Terry Pendleton collected his
third game-winning hit in his last five
games with a two-run single to help the
Cardinals notch their fifth straight victory

Andre Dawson
...3 home runa

Jim Frey
...unbelievable

and 12th In their last 13 games. Rick
Horton. 3-2. was the winner. Ken Daylcy
notched his 11th save. Lee Tunncll fell to
5-10.
Dodgers 7, Astros 2
At Houston. Bob Welch. 12-4, tossed a
six-hitter and drove in two runs and Mike
Marshall went 4-for-5 to help the Dodgers
surge closer to the NL West title. The
Dodgers can take the division with any
combination of their own victories or
Cincinnati losses totaling seven. Bob
Kncpperfcll to 15-11.
Reds 7, Braves B
At Cincinnati, rookie Tom Browning
notched his 19th victory and Eddie Milner
keyed a four-run second inning with a
two-run hotner to pace the Reds to their
eighth victory in their last nine games.
Browning. 19-9, won his 10th straight
decision. Pascual Perez. 1-12, was the loser.
Padres 4. Giants 3
At San Diego. Kur.t Bcvacqua capped a
four-run fourth with a two-run homer to
lead the Padres to a 4*3 victory over the San
Francisco Giants. Dave Dravecky. 13-10.
pitched five Innings for the victory. Dave
LaPoint. 7-15. took the loss.

United Press International
Despite losing last night to the
Mariners for the 10th straight
time, the Kansas City Royals
should look at the bright side.
They only have to play Seattle
once more and the California
Angela have only one home
game left.
The Royals will be glad to be
rid of the Mariners, who have
given them nothing but trouble
this season.
"W e've scored only 21 runs In
10 games (against Seattle)." said
Royals manager Dick Howser
after Kansas City fell to the
Mariners 5-2 at the Klngdome. "I
don't think there's any Jinx, but
10 in a row gets your attention.
They've gotten good pitching
and held us down."
The loss left the Royals onehalf game behind California In
the AL West. But the remaining
schedule still favors the Royals.
Kansas City leaves Seattle
Wednesday night, with ace Bret
Sabcrhagcn on the mound, and
travels to Minnesota for three
games. Then the Royals close
out the season with seven games
at home. Including four against
the Angels.
The Angels, who lost to
Chicago 8-1, finish their home
schedule tonight against the
White Sox and must play their

A.L. Baseball
final 10 games on the road.
Phil Bradley drove in four runs
with a pair of homers. Including
a three-run shot In the eighth off
Dan Quisenberry to beat the
Royals. Bradley fouled off a
suicide squeeze attempt In the
eighth before blasting his 23rd
homer on the next pitch.
"I wanted to make sure I
bunted It somewhere, even if I
bunted it foul." Bradley said.
“ He made a mistake. I knew it
and he knew It. Quisenberry Is
one of those pitchers you get
good swings against, and you hit
the ball hard, but It's tough to
get hits off him. Usually the guys
arc going tr. make the plays."
At Anaheim. Calif., John
Candelaria said the Angels may
have been caught looking ahead
to their scries against the Royals.
Tigers 0, Yankees 1
At New York. John Grubb hit a ,
three-run homer and two-run
double, shelling Phil Niekro In
his third attempt for his 300th
victory. The decision dropped
New York seven games behind
the Blue Jays in the AL East.
Any combination of Yankee
losses and Toronto victories to­
taling six will give Toronto the
litlc. It wa9 the second time
Detroit stalled Ntckro one victory
from 300.

BASEBALL R O U N D U P
S T A N D IN G S
N A T IO N A L
E a it

A M E R IC A N
E a fl

LEAGUE
W
*3
*3
7*
71
70
St

St. Loult
N*w York
Montreal
Philadelphia
Chicago
Plltiburgh

L
34
3*
73
71
10
f*

Pet.
*3*
*0*
.531
.477
.4*7
.143

OB
—
1
t*
31
34Vi
41

W eil
Lot Angelet
Cincinnati
Houiton
San Diego
Atlanta
San Frandaco

B*
S3
77
7*
*1
3*

*3
*7
74
73
B9
*3

34*
.330
.510
.301
407
.391

—
4
13
11
37&gt;V
X

T g t id iy 'i R tlu ltl
Montreal 17. Chicago IS
New York 7, Philadelphia I
Cincinnati 7, Atlanta S
St. Lou It 5. Plttiburgh4
Lot Angelas 7. Houiton I
San Diego a. San Francltco 3
Wednesday's Garnet
New York (Oarllng la 5) at Chicago
(Patterson 1 01.3 30p.m
Montreal (Laskey J 14) at Pittsburgh
(Reutchel 13 7). 7 3Sp m.
Atlanta
(P erei
I 111 at Cincinnati
(T ib b s * IS). 7:33pm
Philadelphia (Hudson 7-11) at St. Louis
(Coe IS t ) , 1:35p m
Los Angeles (Valentuela
17-10) at
Houston (R y a n * 13&gt;. l:DSp m.
San Francisco (Mason 0 1) at San
Diego (Hoyt 131). 10:33 p m .
Thursday’s Games
Atlanta at Cincinnati
New York at Chicago
Montreal at Pittsburgh, night
Philadelphia at St. Louis, night

Replay?
NFL Is
Serious
By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer
DALLAS (UPI) - They arc
getting serious about instant
replays in the National Football
League, and it's about time.
When a star running back
refuses to report to training
camp demanding a big. new
contract there Is a general
hubbub. And when a player
becomes Involved in something
that leads to the police blotter,
the headlines are large.
But neither can approach the
noise made when an NFL game
official makes a mistake.
There has already been one
major squawk this year revolv­
ing around a call made In the the
Houston Ollcrs-Washlngton Red­
skins contest, and it probably
won't be long befone there Is
another.
It will continue to be this way
until the league Implements the
plan that is currently In the
developmental stage.
Experiments involving the use
of replays as un officiating tool
began during the exhibition
season this year and arc conti­
nuing. In a modified form, each
Sunday.
* Next month In New York the
league will hold an owners
meeting and there will almost
certainly be u vote on whether to
implement the system In the
playofTs.
Who knows? They might vote
yes. But three-fourths of the
owners must agree before the
proposal Is put into force, and at
this stage the odds do not seem
favorable.
It would be a revolutionary
step, of course, and It Is unlikely
the owners would want to make
such a major change for the
playoffs without having seen U
in action for the regular season.

LEAOUE
W
*5
SB
7*
7*
75
*4
34

Toronto
New York
Baltimore
Detroit
Botton
Milwaukee
Cleveland

L
65
*3
70
73
7*
B4
**

Tr»,no Drirttt*. Jtckun II). Gotiegt
ill end xmnedr w -D rim H ID HI
L-lePoint It 111 HRt-Sen Frenciico
Drer Hi, Sen Drgo Btvtcgua 1)1

RESULTS
Pel.
*11
.317
.510
.571
4*7
.440
.131

GB

_

7
IJVl
l*'Y
30'Y
3*
43 ',1

W ed
California
13 66 .3*1
K a m a i City
B4 *4 5*0
Vj
Chicago
7* 73 .530 *Vi
Oakland
74 77 .490 11
Seattle
71 SO .470 14
Mlnnetota
A* S3 457 14
Texat
37 *1 ISO 77')
Tuesday’s Results
Toronto*. Boston 7
D etro it*. New York I
Milwaukee 10, B altim ore*
T eias 3, Minnesota 0
Chicago). California 1
Seattle 3, Kansas City 1
Oakland 10. Cleveland •
Wednesday’s Games
Cleveland (Creel OS) at Oakland (John
4 * ) , 3: IS p.m.
Boston (Hurst 10-13) at Toronto (Key
144). 7:33p.m.
Detroit (M orris 13-10) at New York (J.
NlekrqO I) . Ip .m .
Baltimore (Flanagan 441 at Milwaukee
(Cocanower 4-7), 1:33 p.m.
Minnesota (Blyleven 14-1*) at Tesas
(Russell 2 -3 ),l:3 5 p m.
Chicago (Bannister 7-14 or Bums I t * ) at
California (Romanlck 131). 10:30p.m.
Kansas City (Saberhagen
l i d ) at
Seattle (Young 13-1*). 10:33 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Cleveland at Oakland, night
Boston at Toronto, night
Detroit at New York, night
Baltlm oreat Milwaukee, night
Minnesota at Texas, night
Chicago at California, night
Kansas City at Seattle, night

TMIlsr't M4|*r l!4|M Btlul'l
Ir Usitt* Pmi lnttrsitwMl
tiiteiul U t|w
Mnrtrwt
lit H IM *3* —17171
OiKSfs
M hi M l- 1111}
B Smith. Dopion (71. St Cl*&gt;n (I).
OConnor It). Rtt'don It) ind Bu'tn.
Fenlmot Ptrlmin It). Btt'd 111.
Batt'ho III. EngH III. Mtrtdith it) »n* D in
Lent h -fl Smith lit II l - Fommct
14101 HRi-Mentvtil. D#«wn 3 (III.
Buttf# III. Wsllsch (hi. O n ; :
Ds&lt;i| 11)1, Mattfitr (I). Matthewt dll

Amentia Lilfw

Belli*
KIMONO-111
Tinati
IH lN D i- llt
Note' Cnatord III ind Gedmen.
Di m Limp III Caudill (II Ind WM1
W—Limp H ill L-U pper ft ID HRToronlo. Birlitld 17*1
Dtlrsrt

Ml|or Lf*|ut lild in
ly Usited Prm lataraallaaal
I • t t I e |
lined so 11 giite ipgeirmcei i at. el
le a n t ••&lt; * loam k it playaiI

IJ] th Ml —111

Us Beedn
IM Ml Ml —t IS 1
NMdM
MIMS III —I SI
WSkh snd Stowe XiWRRtr. Mittui
14). Meddei 111. Dnheet (t). Sstsns It) end
AU*r N-WHch 1114) L-Kxtpptr m ill
HB —Heesten. D u l l I I I ) .

Amentm League - Mettmg'y. NY 1)1.
Murrt,. Beit lit. Be nev Cn, IM Wmteid
NY IDS Ritt hot end Ripken. Ban it)
SMealetei
NDonel League - Coiemm. 3&gt;L 10).
Rl.nei Mil it. Sandberg Chi end
McGee S'LU. RtdulCmt)
Ameritm League - Mmdrrien, NYU.
PftlH. Cot U Butler. CN. u. W.Hon, KC
40. Smith. KC31
P I I &lt; k I ■g

Vktartn

Notional League - Gooden. NY D 4,
Andujlf, StL )l *. Tudor, S1L l it
Brooming. CmIS0. Scott. Hou I I 7
Ameritm league - Gu'fry. NY M4.
Saberhagen. KC HO: Burnt, Chi HO.
Aieimder.
Tor, Le'brand*. KC md
Moore See H I V«&lt;l Mmn H tl
Eeretd Bee Ayorogi
(Baled ee I teeing i number (4 p m tics
teamkiipta rod)
Nitionii Lee - Goodin. NY ID.
Henhiier, LA &gt;04 Tudor, StL 111,
Reuwhel. P.M) )l, Welch. LA} D
Amr.cm League - Stub. Tor lea.
Ltibrendt. KCID . Saberhagen. KCtll. Key.
Tor 10). Sliver. Chi 11)

I *» r A (K*
MrGw. StL
105U111204 23V
Gu*rr«ro IA
1)4U4 14US 334
Rainn. Mtl
141SO in m H7
Parktr. Cm
IK54) rt to 31}
httr, StL
tttwt 14174 311
Sandbtrg. Chi
11)544 101177 311
Gvrynn. 50
144HI 7117V 301
Otittr. Cm
IK14) UU7 304
Mart in* Chi
item 4IU7 303
Screuia. LA
IDTtl 4311V 101
Arntncaalaagw
1 •* r li *1
Boggv. Bat
1504*4100224 372
Brtfl. KC
IKSH100170 213 R A IN E S G A U G E
Htndwtan. NY
insot 134144 m RAIItttGAUQt(throughSept 14)
ik tat tsivs m
Mattmgir. NY
Itm cm
IK* n m no CaNgwf------------------ ------------ t l m
141 141
AutNr, On
14)554 101170 304
... 573 145
Cacptr. Mil
mm nui JO
S Al bdh
101 104
(Mnan. I«
IM444 43UI JB4
........ ... in in
IK4M NSIDJOB
andter, 3ta
..............p
u
MailNr. Mil
IDIR ■ 111 J00 RBI ......................

Mumeteti
I M N M M - lll
Tetii
IIIIM I I I - l i t
Butcher. Burn {)) and Se’et Willemi.
Surhott in md Siaughl W-Willlami |) 0)
L-Bytcher (10 tl) HR-Tiiii, 0 Brian
IN)

Ah*F
it*
III III IN - I t it
CwMUtl
IM Ml Ml - M l t
P Pttst Shields ID, Camp (I),
Getter (II end Chore. Broefiing. Mu’*# It).
Fronts III. Poeer III snd Del W-Browning
llltl l - P Ptrsi l l l l l HRl-Atlenle
H v w 1371: Cincinnati. M.inrr 1)1

tee Promts
111 H I M - t i l l
tee Dtefi
IM IM Mi - 1 t l
UPoml. Williams It). M Deris III end

LEADERS

Nee Yen
M M N III-tll
Tanana 0 Heel ID ind Pirriih.
Uel.iFl, P Nekto Atmitrtng (SI and
W,negir
h-Tanana USUI L-P
Nekr* ID ID MRi-Oelro t Grub* (I). P|r
rith 17*1. WMikir |)l). Nee York. Mattingly
(30)

Nt* Ytrt
IIIIM I t ) - I 111
Ptultdtlplui
SMMl I I I - I I t
Ftmindti *nd Cat**. Rucktr. Ship** ott
III. SttoiTl It) md Virg.l Mf- Ftrnandti
(It) L-Rucktr 1331 HR- Ph.lMr&gt;ph-4
A ) u S f o ( I I

PlthMuie
Ml }M lil —l St
St Leett
1st III Mi —I ID
Tu«etl. MtWitliemi (II. Cement (71 end
pme Honon. Koovfti It). Worrtil II). Dtvltr
ttl end Ptrtw. Nuts W- Horton 1)11
L-Tunreii 14 HI HB- Pittiburgh. B'tem
(II.

Cleeelied
442 414444- l i l t
Ookllad
th ill M l - I I I I I
Sthulie. Clerk (f|. Ruble ill. Reed 17).
Von Ohlen III md Willard Young
Linglord (41. Hoeell III md Tttiie&lt;on
W-Longlord l l l l L-RuWa D ili HRi
-Ciewund Certer (III. Jtcoby (lt|

Bettlmen
III H IM )- i I )
Mdeaukn
tit M 44t - It 14&gt;
McGregor, Snell III. T Menmei ID.
Steeen tl). Bell (l) end Perdo.
Wegmen. MtCliirt III end Meort w Wegmen 1)11 l-McGr*gor (D ill H it
-Beltimort. Lynn I))). Riflord till:
Mileeuket. Houwhotdrr III
Kernel City
M Ml NO—t t l
teime
m i M i s t i - it s
GtOoo. Ounenberry ID md Ourrk.
Moore end Voile * -Moore ( I II ) l Gubttrl (!&gt;•) HRt-Seettie. Brediey I ID)

Nltionel League - Murphy. Atf 37;
Guerrero, LA D. Sthmkfl, Phil. Car* NY N
Porker. Cki IS
Amerlom league - E»en». Oil V
FNL Chi M. Beeon. KC 14. G Thomei See
1). Murriy.BeMD
Reel letted la
NetFonel League - Porker, Cm II).
Hirr, S&gt;L 1*9; Murphy. All Ml. Brooks Mtl N.
Morelend. Chi •]

Quean
IN OS tM - 1 III
Cilthreii
Ml Ml M l - I t l
Silver. Geeton m. WthrmanNr (?)
end FfU. Skinner, Cendelerie. McCatkill (tl.
Smttui (|| md Boone W-Seewr m ill
L-Cmdeieru (1)1 HR-Chkego. Fill (Ml

CWRII - .................. ...............tj 1
OoJbkt...................... ..............37 24
.............J tl
TfjRltf
......
...... |
f
...... 71/77 45/74
..............1
2
Krtragt .
.....— — — ...... Il l JI7
Tim Remri took the day ott sgtm Tundey
oi the Eipoi hammered the Cube Ayear ego.
Ramn hod me ot It* bell doyt ot the MOkm
at herappedthroehill endINN lour beMi

SCO REBO ARD
TV/RADIO
fftdmdar'l TV/*4*4 Igam

BAttlALl
) U g *i - WTB5. AtH*)4 Brawl I*
Cincinnati PrdiiL)
BOXING
f pm - ESFN NAIF F»ath»r»ei*ht
Ck*Fng«nikip IL)
FOOTBALL
IR *i - CtbN A. Knighti an Kn.gMi Can*
Mt Dwell 5h*«
I l k - ESFN. KuiNalan RuHt F**tbail.
PrtlimtnaryFiflal
M0»it RACING
l a m - E1FN M r 14Juniof Ouarttr Hart*
CKampionib.pi

t*M

BASEBALL
M l pm - HUE) AM D4MI. Atiaa'a
6rama&lt; Cincinnati Radi
TALK
4 Hp m - WKIS AM l&gt;4». SportiTplk aim
Chrutophar Rutto

JAI ALA I
AlOHaafetaMMla

TwtaiTMgM

It! putt
lFauiloFarunp
l i l t DM 111
TPilaOMrl
a40 410
Wucaii Zarraaa
)I0
0IITIM.N; F l)7) llf.)*i'. It I DIMM
M4gtmt
IGa'ivIumaji
1)0 100 )N
TONaEiaxa
i n lao
) Bilbao Aguirvt
1X
0 (Ml 4UI. F 071 MM: T Ot D 040.
00110INM
Mgaau
TOHoForiKla
RN HH 4M
IGakuHlob
DM 4N
UugataCoiiKarti
)M
00)1 M Mi FIT-1)n.Ni T If&gt;111AM M
TFault*
MJ| ( &lt;
3(Jrnar
f » IR
IRant
IM
fl I*?) m m . f (H) mao. T (141) maa
Mkgoata

n

4 Fault* (vmaia
11aO 4M i 00
HuguaAguvr*
n o aoo
rlana Rival
»R
fl 04) RM. F O il N it, T 0 )4 ) t»44;
00 (4711)4) MM
) RantO)an
J(0
)Ia*aCaliacorla
&gt;40 4M
1 Garif Arana
4M
0 ID ) R Mi F 0 D HIM: T 0 ) I ) S I M
TTIgaMt
)EcKanoFiraK
1440 IM IM
140 tOO
lEOuartoArca
lAramavoTomai
400
Oil DMMiFO IIM40: T O IO IM H

Mk|i&gt;H

] RtnaOnanNia
DM IK l «
IZalaAngt)
140 1H
t Caitvo FaraK
&gt;H
0(1 DMM: F01HHM. TII I TIWM

OMgant

ICaitraMondi
IM tOO 4«
tAramar* Ovinia
3 40 14C
tAltai) Area
)M
0 (TO)77M: F(ID 1*3**; T ID I)TT4M
iMgaaw
I Gall* 04*144
HR * 40 IK
)Gorot&lt;o4 lubill
410 100
TArrallMandi
4R
0(71) 7* A*. FfOtUTt M. T (St-71 *71 M
Mtkgoat
lEcbanpA/ta
1440 IK IM
lAramartluMII
IK )M
I Caitro AngrI
IIK
0 o n M M i F(IT) HI M; T (114) M R .
Fk 0 01144]) lot ApaK ll«M . cifTTOVtf
IILAHM

lllkgaakt
)OF4in04
DM 1)00 OM
I Goroal*4
UR 1)K
lEOuarlo
IM
0 041 UM( F IH I MJOl T 0 4 0
IM) Mi DOIt DIMM
iMgaiM
1Eluardolamat
14« IM &gt;M
IGMMtoHForpK
0« )M
tArrall Angol
IM
0 (H I MMi F (H t TRMi T 041) UTMi
0004)04)04 M
A -l JHi H-tlDJW

Rams To H o ld
Soccer Barbecue
The Lake Mary High Soc­
cer Booster Club has planned
an " A ll T eam s" soccer
barbecue to Be held Saturday
(Sept. 28) from 1 to 4 p.m. at
Lake Golden Park.
Lake Maty soccer coach
Larry McCorkle said all
players and parents are In­
vited to attend to klckofT the
beginning of a new season.
Lake G o ld e n Park is
located on Airport Boulevard
in Sanford.

.

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
A m irio t CioUrrmr
b it
W L T Pet. FF FK
Miamr
) 1 9 tat 14 21
NY Jett
1 1 0 44) 44 D
Nt* England
) 1 9 447 59 5&lt;
1 ) 9 U) M • '
Ind-anapalit
Buttle
9 ) 9 909 24 n
Ctotrtl
Pitttbvrgh
1 1 9 44) 71 29
CNvtiand
1 1 9 U) 44 54
Houiton
1 1 1 ID
51
Cincrnnati
9 ) 9 000 t) tl]
Nnl
Otrtvtf
) 1 9 M) 41 41
Seattle
) t 9 44) 101 •4
Ktnui Citr
T 1 9 44) 1) ’I
tan Oego
) t 9 44) U It
IK Rlidtri
I ) t 111 41 ta
NtiMaiCamtitnct
Eail
« L T Pel FF PK
Daiiat
) 1 9 M) It 4)
NY Giant
1 t 9 44) M K
) 1 9 44) 1) 21
St Ln.'l
Philadelphia
1 ) 9 U) 21 tl
Wathingtgn
1 1 1 U) 24 )t
Cntrtl
Chicago
] 9 9 1900 tt It
Mmn*i*t*
) 1 9 44) 1) )0
Otttet
1 1 9 M l K tl
1 ) 9 m *4 n
Grttn b r
Tampa B«r
9 1 9 000 D it
Mill
L* Rami
1 1 9 1090 n 44
3a* Franc-ico
) 1 9 44) to 54
Nt* Orltant
1 I 9 U) )0 ft
A'lanta
• ) 0 on 41 10)
TKunAifi Rrtvfl

Due*** O Mmnttgd T4
lunttr'l ItiKti
PiltMurgKMlHou»i*n0

D*l4kRC4r*4nd&gt;
NnvEngixrK If. »u«*4 tl
PKi44i(pA4 It. Wntungtonl
Nr* OvHun M. Tompt Mr 1)

ln*4n*p*(F|U, D**rg(t|

A

A LL-STA R
W r-dncvduy.

S A N fO U D

C IVIC

SOFTBALL
tMMr* Mm ’i Fi Nblttoll L**gur
Turn
Mm Lull 01
Tim Rinn CorFucimn
4 1 Vniom Aft 11Drilling
J ) |
Yb*r**L0fl4C4*ri*f
1 1 1
Grrktr Srtttmi
t | )
Brourfl Btvtr i E4ctrrc
l i t
i^ni4nd
) 4 I
McKMOntHpmorH
I | )
C*r4ifl*Hfl4ultr*l
1 1 4
TtmgM'i gpmmit Fm bunl FaU
W u « Mill Drilling rl Thgrnt Land C4*r
mg 4 Rpm
Brown Bovtrl IHttnt rl Trm R«&lt;n*i Can
"*(ti0"
Carpmal ImKfltrin n MeKm DtvtHpmtnl
MmM y atari maNi
Gaywr 3rtumt ip, Ttama LandC4ar mgI
AUK#* DtvtHgmanll lrv*n Iav*ri4
Wuara MM Drilling l l Cardinal M

Oucaga (Nil - Aiwiamd pHcbar t o
lutciiHt « ii br aciivaNd K*m ltd Avala * i.u
and will I4rt Fridt)

NYG4flHD.il Loud It

I W

SinDugoM. ClncVinKtiil
M4ml]I.K4nutCit)e
NYJ«n)AGr**flbrl
Son FfincdcoK LA RpiNtriH
Mm Ai i 'I InMI
LAR*mi)J i*»mt)4
M i r . Soft n
3**nw it KmuiCity, l p m
T»mplbFltDilro*t. Ipm
WptKingtofl *1CKIcigo. Ipm
Dn4t iiHgvtign. Ipm
G«*flB*»»t3t L*uH.lpm.
LAU Mrl It Nt* Eng4nd. I p m
M ivuvc'i II Bufl*4.1 p m
NY G4flH 11PK)44»pK4 I p m
AI4flt**l LA Rom! Ipm
C4vt4n4l1 ilflDirge Ipm
lfl*4F)Ap*liiil NY J(H. 4p m
M-4mi*ID*nrtf.4pm
Nr* GMnt «t 3«* Fr*ncrl». 1pm
**--j—r..i u
^P w ii •*)•• H
C'ht’hftih |i PtWibuTp Ipm

DEALS

Otnmr 44. A)4*4 R

^

^
5^

NFL

.

PRESENTS
PRO

Septcm bc-r
C IN TE R

C# *
S, t

W R E S TLIN G
3 5 th.

• 40 1 I

19H 5

H p rn

SEM IN O LE

Blue Jays 6, Red Sox 2
At Toronto. Dennis Lamp
provided sparkling relief pit­
ching for the Blue Jays to gain
his 11th victory without a loss.
He entered In the fourth Inning
and shut down Boston until the
ninth, when Bill Caudill relieved.
Rangers 5, Twins O
At Texas. Pete O'Brien became
the first icftbanded-hittlng
Ranger to reach the 20-homc
run plateau and Matt Williams
combined with Rich SurhofT on a
thrcc-hlttcr. Williams, 2-0. was
acquired In the trade that sent
Cliff Johnson to Toronto.
Brewers lO, Orioles 6
At Milwaukee. Jim Gantncr
had three hits, Including a
two-run triple, and Paul House- :
holder homered to lead the
Brewers. Rookie Bill Wegman. ♦.
2-0. recorded his second major- '
league victory, both against
Baltimore. Bob McClure earned
hts second save. Scott McGregor
fell to 13-13.
A ’s lO, Indiana S
At Oakland, Calif., Mickey
Tettleton drove In three runs
and rookie Jose Canseco went
4-for-4 to power an 18-hlt A ’s
attack. Rick Langford, 3-5. pit­
ched 3 1-3 innings In relief for
the victory. Vern Ruble, 2-10.
was the loser.

m

&amp;

i i n

M U FFLE R • BR A K ES
F A S T F fffff IN STALLATIO N

C U S TO M PIPE B E N D I N G • D U ALS • G LA S S P fC K S
C H R O M E S T A C K S • TU R B O S • R E S O N A TO R S

TW O S T O R E S
12 MONTH
FINANCING
AVAILABLE

SANFORD

ORANOC CITY

13 2 2 - 0 6 5 1 1

l 7 7 6 -5 7 4 7 1

44)5 WEST 1ST ST.
2 ILKS CAST OT HWY IM 2

MO S. VOLUSIA AVC.
NWV 17-13

A S K A B O U T O U R 30 P O IN T S A F E T Y IN S P EC TIO N
PREM IUM
______
EN D U R A
P O LY
STEEL
• SEVEN MB TBCAD
R A D IA L
■ QUALITY AT A
MODERATE PRICE
• FOUR FLY
F0LYESTIR

SOI
PIBB/Mflll
F IIH N 1 I
FlTSMflll
j P1BS/TBW14
F1M/TBBI4
FNV7HM
FtIRTHIk
FXWTWI*
; PX1B7TMIB
FUKTHII
s F3WTH1I

H *
U .N
4T.M
44X4
B1.M
BABB
BUfl
IM fl
BAM
M.B4
BAM
4AM

Jta

STvBT
SAM
RAM
SIX*
Bixa
BAM
BAM
IT.Tfl
B4X7
BAXT
BAM

• aGGNEItlVE 0 E. TYFt
TBtaa m u c h |M» aaitBi
• I TELL H i n t
• FA YtlTta MAY
■ mil! act a«na ta
FNtMfUM C U »
• ECONOMY FNKta

SIS
F1BI4WI
F1BSMNI
FUBM U
FIMffNlB
P1BW7MS4
FMKTWB
FUVTBU4
I — fTMIX
PSSBFTMtl
FSWIWIB

1S T

BAM
AM
BAM
BAM
BAM
BAM
TAM
TAM
TBXX
TAX*

m i |i

BABB
STXB
BAM
BSXB
BABB
BBXS
4TXS
BAM
BTXA
BATA

ACCELERATE
Your Buying Power

• ••

ULVD

50
000
.0

notion'*

•S
Intlant CradIt To OvoUtM Applkanfa.
•SI
Un* ot Crodif To Quollhod Apalkont*
Whom Cord la liawod.

HO Doyt Somo-Ai-Coah On Your Firtl Purctieia
•Accoptod At All Porticipoting NTDRA Tiro
OootofBNatlonwido.

rSERVICE
ISV4S14

SPECIALS

IN S P E C T IO N

J

�10a —gvtwlm Hw r M, hwfwd, FI. W tdtm diy, l&gt;pt&lt; 35, I t t i

Tribe's 'Unbelievable' Line Shreds St. Cloud; Rams Triumph
By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports Writer
"It was one of those games where pretty much
everything we did worked."
That was the way Seminole High freshman
football coach Mike Ferrell described his team’s
42-0 trouncing of St. Cloud’s Bulldogs Tuesday
night at St. Cloud.
Seminole ran its record to 2-0 with the win nnd
returns to action Tuesday (Oct. 1) at Oviedo.
The Scminoles amassed 425 yards rushing.
Leading the awesome ground game was Jared
Jones who carried 10 times for a whopping 204
yards and three touchdowns. James Richardson
picked up 105 yards on 12 carries and scored
twice while Dwight Brinson rushed for 80 yards.
^ “ 1 have to give the offensive linemen an
unbelievable amount of credit," Ferrell said.
"They really did the Job. I Just can't say enough
about them."
Scminoles starting linemen included tackles
Clarence Troutman and Bobby Flowers: guards
Willie Grayson and Sean Boudreaux: center
Russell Kltner and tight end Reggie "Cheese"
Bellamy. Another guard who Ferrell said did well
that didn't start is Joe Leonard.
The Tribe frosh were impressive on defense as

30 yards for the TD.

Football
well as they held St. Cloud to minus yards of total
offense. Seminole's defense sacked the St. Cloud
quarterback 12 times, including two each by
Andy White. Anthony Lewis and Jack Mann.
Seminole also had lour fumble recoveries, one
each by Ronald Cox. Ralph Hardy. David Willis
and Mann. Ferrell also said Roger Livingston was
a standout on the defensive line.
Seminole scored a pair of touchdowns in the
opening quarter and held on to a 14-0 halftime
lead. Richardson scored on an eight yard run for
the first TD and Brinson threw to Bellamy for the
two point conversion. Jones scored the second
TD as he broke loose from 45 yards out. The
conversion failed.
The Tribe came back alter the Intermission and
put 22 points on the board in the third quarter.
Jones scored two of the touchdowns on runs of 60
nnd 25 yards and Richardson scored from 30
yards out. Jones also ran In a conversion and
Hardy ran one In.
Seminole completed the scoring In the fourth
quarter when Cox ptekedu up a fumble and ran

PREP FOO TBALL LEADERS:
S T A N D IN G S
Seminal* Athletic Conference
Taam
OB
All
W
L
—
t
1
1
0
Oviedo
0
Lake Howell
0
0
ty
3
Seminole
0
0
0
W
2
1
0
0
t
\i
Lak* M ary
Lyman
0
3
0
0
W
0
t
t
Laka Brantlay
0
2
Friday'* Oarrvti
Seminal* at Lak* Howell. ■ p m.
Laka Brantl«y at Lyman. • p m.
(only games scheduled I
Saturday’* m u l t i
T ltu ivlll* 20, Seminole I I
L ak* M ary 14, DeLend 10
Lak* Howell 14. W **t Orange*
Friday'* m u l t i
Mainland I I . Lyman 12
S«*bre*r* 14, Oviedo 6
Event 23, Lak* Brantley 0
D titrlct 4A-1
GB
W
L
Taam
—
0
Titusville
t
—
Seabreet*
1
0
1
0
1
Seminole
1
1
0
Oviedo
New Smyrna Beach
0
t
1
District SA-4
Teem
w L GB
—
Lak* M ery
1
0
—
Mainland
1
0
Spruce Creek
0
0
DeLand
1
0
1
Lyman
1
0
1
District 5A-J
Team
w L GB
—
Evens
1
0
—
Lake Howell
1
0
—
Apopka
t
0
Winter Perk
1
0
t
West Orange
t
I
0
t
L ek* Brantley
t
0

O FFENSE
RUSHING
Andrew Smith (O)
M ark Schnltkor (LH )
Robert Thomas (L )
Cornelius Friendly (LB )
Craig Oarlngten (L H )
Curfl* Rudolph (S)
Dwayne W lllii (SI
Benny Glenn (L)
Shan* Letterlo (L M )
W illi* Gainey (O)
John Curry IL M )
Brett M o lle (L M )
JohnGowan (LB)
C a m tlla Green (O V)
W illi* Event (S)
Terry Gammons (L H )
Jett Blake (S)

AT YDS AVG
44
374
40
40
349
4.7
37
27
too
IS
*9
6.4
87
17.4
1
19
72
3.8
14
4.4
41
14
*1
4.4
18
11
2.8
47
1
8.5
tl
40
3.1
IS
40
24
13
33
25
29
59
S
4
7.0
28
5
28
34
4
27
39

Dave Deifiacco (LB)
Andy Dunn (LB)
Dan Chisholm (LH)
Eddie Brown (L)
Steve Hofmann lOV)
Brooke Christian (LB)
Ray Hartitleld (LM )
Nate Hoskins (LH)

15
4
7
3
8
5
4
4

W EEK 2
27
25
20
18
14
13
M
10

1§
4.2
39
40
20
24
18
1.7

RAISING
CM AT YDS PCT
It
79
Sharia Lalterio (LM )
302
38
Jett Blake (S)
11 33
33
233
John Burton (L)
13 28
152
44
John Morrow (O)
150
45
13 27
M ark Walnwrlght (LH )
12 31
140
48
8 24
Dave Delliecco (LB)
54
33
Oerren Boyeven (L)
4
14
5)
43
Daryl Taylor (S)
50
3
4
20
)
4
4
Andy Dunn (LB)
75
Touchdown!
Shane L ttttrlo (L M ) 2. M ark W alnw nght
(LH ) 2; John Burton (L) I; Darren Boyeien
(L M ) 1; Jell Blake (SI t.
Interception!
John Morrow (01 4; Jett Blake IS) 2. Dave
Delflacco (LB) 2. John Burton (L) 2. Daryl
Taylor (S) I; Shane Letterlo (LM ) 1
R E C E IV IN G
David Rape (SI
Ralph Phllpott
Robert Thomas (L)
M ark Stewart (Ol
Byron Washington (LM )
BUI Watson (LH)
W illi* Gainey (OV)
Sam Soars (LB)
Ray Hartsfleld (LM )
Terry Gammons (LH)
Eddie Banks (S)
R.J N o ld (L )
Tony Williams (L)
John Curry (LM )
Benny Glenn (L)
Sonny Osborn (S)
Craig Derlnglon (LH )
Joel M iller (LB)
M ark Schnltker (LH)
Andrew Smith (O)
Herb HlUery (SI
Cam el)* Green (O)
Julio Cebellot (L)
Anthony Hartsfleld
Dwayne Willis (S)
Brooke Christian
Cornel Rigby (LH )
SCORINO
Andrew Smith (O)
M ark Schnltker (LH )
Bill Wasson (LH )
Tony Williams (L)
Robert Thomas (L)
John Morrow (O)
Cornelius Friendly

LAKE MARY HOLDS OFF HOWELL
Milch Sbatto threw for one touchdown and ran
for another and Art Bradford added n TD run ns
Lake Mary's Rams fought off Lake Howell's Silver
Hawks. 20*12, in freshman football action
Tuesday at Lake Howell High.
Lake Mary Improved to 2*0 while the Hawks fell
to 0*2. The Rams take on St. Cloud next Tuesday
at St. Cloud.
Lake Howell took the early lead Tuesday ns It
scored on Its second possession of the game but
Lake Mary tied It at 6*6 late in the opening
quarter when Shatto hooked up with Jack
Obcrdcnus on a 50*yard touchdown pass.
The Rams took a 14-6 lead in the second
quarter when Bradford scored from four yards out
and Carlos Hartsfleld ran in the two point
conversion.
Lake Mary upped its lead to 20*6 In the third
quarter when Shatto snuck In from the one. The
score was set up by an interception by Bradford.
Lake Howell scored again with seven minutes
left after blocking a Lake Mary punt.
Although the Rums survived, coach Jim
Hughes wasn't too pleased with his team's
showing.

Benny Glenn iL I
J e ll Philips (LH )
Curtis Rudolph (S)
Dave Rape (S)
Jo h n C u rry (L M )
Byron Washington 1L M )
M ark W ainw rlght (LH )
Gordon King (O)
K elly Greene (L)
Dave D elllacco (LB )
J.J. P a rllow IS)

1
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0

PUN TING
Scott R a d clitl (L )
Dave D elllacco (LB )
Sonny O sborn(SI
Ryan Lise (LM )
Gordon King (O)
B ill Wasson (LH )
Bobby Culpepper (LM )

NO
10
7

0
3
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
1
1

0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

7

4
3
6

5

DEFENSE

DEFEN S E
Bernell Simmons (O)
B rel) M olle (L M )
B rian Brinson (S)
Tony Coltie (O)
NO YOS AVG
David Lockwood (O)
4
133
M ike Bass (Ol
22 1
4
I) 7
J e ll Joyce (O)
70
Jim N ulter (LH )
4
44
73
5
61 14 2 J e ll H a rris (LH )
Earnest Lewis IS)
4
124
3) 5
M a rty Hopkins IL M )
4
52
13 0
Steve Slark 1LB)
4
34
85
4 27
4 B Byron Overstreet (LI
Dexter F ra n klin ( S)
3
94
31 2
3
18 3
Scott Ross 1LM I
55
40 13 3 Robb Redd-nglon (LM I
3
Ryan Lisle (LM )
3
33
11 0
Bobby Bod oh (LB )
77
3
23
54
Vince Campbell (L)
2V0
3
14 0
Jene H artm an (O)
34
2
7
17
85
Jason Lanham IL B )
75
Shannon Porter IL M )
15
2
40
M ike Luster IS)
7
17
10
50
2
Je rry Little s (S)
50
2
10
M a rk Bousquet (L B I
1 54 54 0 R ick K elly IS)
35 0
t
75
Jason Kotar (L H )
t
17
12 0
M ike Kelly IL B )
t
to too Ray M artslleld IL M )
6
■
0
Sheldon
R ich a rd! (L M )
t
1
J
SO Randy Nixon (L H I
1
7 2.0 Chuck Scheele (L )
Eddy G arrison (LB )
TD FG EP TP
C raig Wagner (LH )
3
18
0
0
Sieve Ryan IL H )
2 0 0 12 Horace K n lghl IS)
3
0
0
17
Pete L in g a rd IO)
t
0
0
6 B ill Wasson (LH )
t
0
0
6 M ike Slrmans (L)
1 0 0
4
M ickey Pere; (LB )
1 0 0
4
Scoll Frost (L M )

S p o rts W r ite r s Vs. D u n k e l In d e x
The Florida Sports Writers Association Poll Is compiled by
Tom Brew of the St. Pelersburg Times. The Dunkel index Is i
compiled by Dick Dunkel of Port Orange. Brew polls sports
writers nnd coaches while Dunkel has a ruling system based on
margin of victory and loss. Here's a look at both football polls:

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
3
1
1
1
AVG
44 1
33 7
33 0
31.3
29 3
23 7
71 0

YDS
441
234
732
175
88
147
105

TK AS TOT
74
44
20
17
1]
30
19
9
78
14
u
27
14
n
25
9
14
23
8
15
23
19
3
22
12
10
22
9
12
71
14
4
70
n
9
20
11
19
8
9
10
19
11
5
14
10
4
14
10
4
14
It
4
15
10
5
15
6
9
15
14
12
3
7
14
7
9
5
14
S
8
13
9
4
13
4
13
7
7
6
13
S
7
12
8
4
12
4
12
8
8
3
II
8
3
11
7
4
H
6
5
II
S
It
4
4
7
H
4
4
10
8
10
2
6
9
3
6
9
3
S
4
9

LYMAN RUNS PAST LAKE BRANTLEY
Former Sanford resident Ray Williams ran for
two touchdowns and Chris Rndcllff raced for
another as the Lyman freshman leant evened ts
• record at 1-1 with a 20-6 victory over Lake
Brantley Tuesday night at Lyman High.
Rndcllff. who led nil rushers with 78 yards,
opened the scoring In the first period with a
12-yard run. Williams, who ran for 55 yards,
scored later In the quarter from four yards out.
Brantley. 0*2, pulled within. 12*6. on a 12-yard
touchdown run by Clegg Ivey but Lyman pill the
game away on a six-yard run by Williams in Ilie
fourth quarter.
"Our defense was outstanding.” Lyman coach
Don Marasco said. "Brantley only got inside our
30 yard line once and that was on a pass
interference call."
Linebacker Greg Fulsang record five tackles.
Including four sacks. John Slierph had four
tackles nnd seven assists.
Lyman hosts Lake Howell Tuesday and
Brantley travelsj o Osceola.
In one other game Tuesday. Osceola ran all
over Oviedo. 46-0. at Kissimmee. Coach Keith
McAulcy's Lions fell to 0-2. They host Seminole
next Tuesday.

Letterlo

Rape

Ricky Sheets (L)
3
4
9
Ron Campbell (LH )
3
4
9
Thcron Llggons (S)
5
3
»
Fred H ill (O)
5
3
8
Scott King IL )
5
3
8
Scott R a d c llll (L)
3
5
8
Dennis Lawrence IS)
3
5
8
E d M Illle r (O)
4
3
7
Pat Gibson IL B )
5
2
7
Bobby D e c k e r|L )
4
7
3
M in Ho Soo (L B )
4
3
7
David C allgulr! IL I
3
4
7
Chris Walsh IL B )
4
3
7
Paul Owen IL M I
2
5
7
W ill Freeman IL B )
4
2
6
Kenny M o rris (SI
4
2
4
M tekey W illiam s IL I
3
3
4
Vahan Nouskhajian (L I
5
0
5
Byron Washington (L M )
4
1
5
4
LeeChojnackl (LH )
1
5
Tom Kothera IL M )
2
3
5
M ike W hittaker (L)
2
3
5
Danny Bridges (LM )
2
3
5
Interception!
Scott Radclitl (L) 2. Mike McCurdy (O) I.
Dennis Lawrence IS) 1, Steve Slark (LB ) I.
Bill Was*on (L H ) I.
Fumble Recover!*!
Pele Lingard (O l 2. Jason Kotar (L H ) 2,
Scott King (L) I. Ricky Sheets (L ) 1. Vince
Campbell (L ) I, M ike Levant (S) 1. Chrl!
W alih (LB ) 1. Bill Wasson (LH ) t, Ron
Campbell (L H ) 2. Kenny M o rrl! (S) 1, M ike
Bns! (O) t. David Lockwood (O l 1. Tony
Cofhe (O) 1. Ed M lllle r (O) 1. Lee Cho|nackl
(L H ) I. Steve Ryan (L H ) I
Sack!
Scott R o i! (LM ) 2. Earnelt Lew i! (SI I,
Ted Smith (L ) I, Vahan Nouikha|lan (L ) I,
Min Ho Soo (LB) I. Chrl! W alih (LB ) I,
Leroy Young (L M ) I. Bernell Simmon! (O) I.
Mike B a i! (O) t, Pele Lingard ( I ) , Jaion
Kotar (LH ) I. Alfred Valle (L H ) I, Steve
Ryan (L H ) t. Jim Nutter (L H ) 1. Mickey
W illiam ! (L ) t, M ike Slrm ani (L ) I.
Source: County coach#!
Compiled by Sam Cook

Florida Sport! W rite r! Atioclatlon Poll
C la tl AAAAA
1. Bradenton Manatee..........................2 0
2. Pensacola Woodham....................... M
3. M iam i Southrldge............................ 2 0
4. Claarwater......................................... 2 0
5. Varo Beach......................................... 2 0
«. Apopka................................................ 1-0
7. Sarasota Rlvervlew..........................2 0
1. West Palm Beach Foreit H ill.........10
9. Winter Haven.................................... 2 0
10. M iam i Beach..................................... 2 0
Class AAAA
t. Pensacola Escambia........................2 0
2. Tallahassee Leon..............................1-0
1. M ilton.................................................. 1-0
4. Jacksonville Raines......................... 3 0
5. Jacksonville Lee............................... 2 0
6 Hollywood H ill!..................................2 0
7. St. Pelersburg................................... 2 0
I . Melbourne Palm Bay.......................2-0
9. Gainesville..........................................2 0
10. Fort Lauderdale D illard ..................2 0
Ctasi AAA
1. Perry Taylor County........................2 0
2. Titusville Astronaut......................... 2-0
3 Bartow................................................. 2 0
4. Crestvlew.......... ................................... M
5 West Palm Beach Newman.............2 0
6. Rlverla Beach Suncoasl..................... 10
7. Pace................................................ ...,,1-t
a Naples Lely........................................ 2 0
9. Orlando Jonos.....................................1-1
to Macdenny Baker County.................2 0
Class AA
1. Wildwood..............................................2-0
2. Dunnellon..............................................2 0
3. Jacksonville Boltes............................3 0
4. Sarasota Mooney................................ I-)
5. Port St. Jo*........................................... 1 1
4. Mount Ooro.......................................... t o
7. DeFunlak Springs Wolton.................M
I . Daytona Beach Father Lopes.......... 1*t
9. M iam i Curley......................................t o
10. Keystone Height* . .................... .
1*1
Class A
1. Baker....................................................... 20
2. Tampa Berkeley Prep.......................... 20
3. Trenlon....................................................20
4. Century.................................................... 20
5. Tallahassee F A M U ...............................20
4. Frostproof...............................................20
7. H illiard................................................ 20
I . St. John Neumann................................. 20
9. Ernest W ard...........................................20
10. M iam i Northwest Christian............. .2 0

Dunkel Index Power Ranking*
C lis t AAAAA
1. Bradenton M a n a te e ....... ................ MO
2. Pensacola Woodham........................ 12 I
3. Sarasota Rlvervlew ........................79.9
4. M iam i Southrldge............................. 76 0
J. Winter P ark....................................... 73.7
6. Lakeland............................................ 72.1
7. Sarasota High....................................70.9
■. Vero Beach........................................70.3
9. Gainesville Buchholt.......................68.9
10. M iam i Beach......................................47.0
Class AAAA
1. Tallahassee L eo n ............................. 14 7
2. Pensacola E s c a m b ia...............
S3 l
3. Jacksonville Lee................................73 6
4. Fort Walton Beach............................71,1
5. SI. Petersburg High..... ....................48.3
6. Nicevllle............................................. 68.0
7. Jacksonville Raines
67 1
a. Tallahassee Lincoln
44 6
9. Mlddleburg........................................ 48.2
10. Satellite.............................................. 44 1
Class AAA
1. Titusville Astronaut..........................44.7
7. P erry....................................................43 4
3. Tallahassee Godby ...................... 41 2
4 Key West.............................................S9.9
4. Crestvlew........................................... S9.9
4. Naples Lely......................................... 59 $
7. Pompano Beach Ely .
...... 59 1
8. Orlando Jones....................................57.7
9. Riviera Beach......
.57 4
10 Bradenton Bayshore........................ 54 0
Class AA
1. Wildwood........................................... 72.4
2. Monllcello...................e .............
59 2
3. Jacksonville Bolles....................... 54 5
4. Daytona Beach Father Lopei........55.4
5. Port St. Joe.........................................55 0
6 M ulberry............................................ 54 I
7. Wauctiula............................................ S3.4
8. W akulla.............................................53 3
9. Sarasota Cardinal Mooney........... 52.3
10. DeFunlak Springs Walton..............48.5
Clast A

t. B a k e r................................................ 43 1
2. Snead!................................................ 48.7
3. Tallahassee F A M U ..........................47.0
4. Century..............................................44 9
5. Trenlon.............................................. 45 3
5. Tampa Berk lay Prep..................... 45.3
7. North Florida Chrlsllan..................45 2
8 Greensboro....................................... 40.1
9. Boca Raton Academy..................... 39 4
10 Frostproof......................................... 38 8

...Weightman
Continued from BA
National Sports Festival this past summer in
Indianapolis. "I felt It was an honor to represent
the Justus Dolflns In the Sports Festival."
Weightman said.
At the rale she’s going, Rachael Weightman
will bg.on the front of everyone's Wheatics box in
a couple of years. But until that time she's still a
modest participant.
"I never say that I'm going to do this or that."
Weightman said, “ I Just try and swim fast."
One thing is for sure. Where there’s waler.
there's Rachael.
In these days of young superstars, such as
Wimbledon champion Boris Becker, Weightman
fits tight the mold.
Although she spends a lot of time in the water,
she said she doeBn’t fear the "Burnout" disease.
"My parents have never made me go the
practice." Weightman said. "They say If I don't
want to go. then 1 don’t have to go. I swim
because it's fun."
Whatever the reason may be for her success.

Herald Photo by Tommy Vincent

Rachael W eightm an slaps aw ay the waves
and thinks about the '88 Olym pics.
her brothers, parents, couches or inner desire to
win. one thing is lor certain. In 1988. Americans
can bet that a Trinity Prep grad from Central
Florida will step up on a starting block and shock
(he world of swimming by fulfilling her Olympics
dreams.
Remember the name — Rachael Weightman.

WE
BUY
M
O
R
TG
A
G
ES
...
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.

7777^
OF SANFORD
2 6 5 0

S.

O r la n d o

M o n .-F rl.

B-to

Sat.

8-s

D r.

1 5 .0 0 0 M IL E W A R R A N T Y |

PREMIUM RETREADS

|H w y

1 7 -9 2 )

____ _

323-6684

B EST PRICES
r—
BEST SERVICE
T R Y US!
t . J
Y

^

M ILE W AR R AN TY

2 4 . 0 0 0 M IL E W A R R A N T Y

FVIMMJM BELTED R O lY im t

* LOOK
* WEARS
WARRANTER

doubu

mu

J 7 * !*.

H78 It
JULU .

ON 8.R. 4M, NEAR 17-92

Company

CALL
C A R L 08 M. SANTIAGO. JR.

A | A A

c,r831-3400

i Wilt

1)1212L

itffi

J w .

IMPOftT H U BTM fWAPIALS

•no hump
M M fll
*« « u n

• nr tic*

,gy« ratii

__urn__

o u t e e ic t

J 1 IL

SHDUII

■NUnllij

40.000 MIL! WARRANTY

___

LIKE
NEW!
*ii]U.ppicri

A D

mo b a o ia l s

tv-

m u

It a flr Grsdtt Smt Icmb,Inc.

bi

urn* i

Sttff

mjgfitj

P l f f l f Jar
iiM - a : i .

Ml Jt

111 n
u n r
-

HI.?!.

PHI 11*11

"HiTHlir
»»»»

-U L O -

12x15

S 7 5 .V 5

JMWIl

17170-13

ouam
27 t i
33 91

I9575R 14
20575R 14

REG
PRICE
9 #

SALE 1
PRICE |
* !.m
* t.n

70 575R 11

18170-13
1817014

71,91

7 I5 7 5 R I5

74.91

19170-14

72575RIS

79.91

S P E C IA L " !!
$QM c»

1 6 5 .9 5

tu t

SHE

--------- COUPON-----------

GRAND PRIX
RV TRACTION
11x15

ISS-W1I J

IM k im a t r

£i£*3989i

HEAVY DUTY
SHOCKS

|

�Bvtnlm HereM, lanford, FI. WKliwtday, Sapt. aj,

"

im j —nA

---—-----------

Back To The Basics: Not Just For Beginner
! suppose you could say that this
week’s column Is written Tor the
beginner. It’s basically Tor the player
who Is Just starling the game. It's
about rundamcnlals.
Unfortunately, we often get so
caught up In nil of the pickles and
sauces of the world of tennis that we
forget the basics.
True, It's aimed at someone Just
starting the game, but even the most
advanced players often go "back to the
basics." when tilings to wrong with
their games. You won't learn to play
tennis Just by reading this — you
simply can’t learn to play tennis by
reading about It.
You can learn to play, though. If you
take the basic skills and go out and
practice them. Tile more you practice

the better It will get. The more you put
Into it the more you get out of It.
Actually, even a technically Incorrect
stroke can become effective If a person
practices It enough over many years.
I know lots of players who have
awful-looking strokes but they have
been doing them so long that they
have learned to control the ball with
them. The point Is. though, that If they
had learned the proper skills in the
beginning and worked all these years
they would have Improved much faster.
Let's start with the two most Im­
portant fundamental skills Involved In
learning to play tennis. They are the
most Important and they are also two
skills that the plnyer must basically
learn on I heir own.
These two skills are Judgment and

M cEnroe
Begins
Defense

B F G O O D R IC H
ESS m / M
i /M

H IG H T E C H «

s

r a d ia l s

s

W E M A K E C A R S P ER FO R M

FRONT BRAKE JOB*44.95
REAR BRAKE JOB *44.95
* 14.95

ALIGNMENT

OIL CHANGE ft LUBE*9.95
HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS ^ M
INSTALLED (wch) * 12.95
FRT. C.V.
BOOT REPAIR
*44.95

M un

»!■

TIRE
» 1 1®

*“•

footwork. Learning to Judge where a
hall Is going to he and then moving
your body to gel Into proper position
arc by far the two most Important
skills In tennis. You can only learn to
Judge it hall by seeing millions of balls
coming at you.
In other words, practice. An In­

JA B
SCOTCH

80* VODKA

COUPON

OLD
MILWAUKEE

M IST

1 9 .6 9 SALE
. A A *Mffi.
4 .0 0 REBATE

7 .2 9 SALE
• 1 .5 0 REBATE

5.69 Cn
Oe
St
T

5.79y CNOETST

C A P TA IN
tfg g P M O R G A N

T

SPICEDRUM
1 2 .6 9 SALE

»

G IIB E Y ’ S

la g s ®

« «

■3.00 REBATE

12.19
1 .5 0

M IL L E R
24- 1 2 02. STL’S

f

E A R LY
TIM ES
BOURBON

5:99 Z,
-1 .0 0 REBATE

4.99* CNOETST
PARTY SUPPLIES
NEWor DIET
2LTR. 1 . 0 9
DAILY'S MIX
MARGARITA

90

half
gal

MAS. A MRS. T

BLOODY MARY i,Vf .5i 2 . 6 9

HOLLANDHOUSE

SWEET A SOUR LTR. 1 . 6 9

*
! «tt|i*i"|

V iifiw *

* * •

j g f g t w

u

IM

6PK
M MF6. REIATE AVAILABLE

*

■3.00

REBATE

HOLLAND

9.49 N
ET
B LA C K

Amiretto, TripleSec. Apricot

VELVET

Friu Roll ZELLER

A N A D IA N

»•**

™

-3 .0 0

- 1 .0 0 REBATE

5.99MC»O‘T
ST

jj!’ r-4

ROOM TEMP.

-----------

SEAG R AM ’S
G IN

l-I

REBATE

COST

V 1 1 . 1 9 SALE
«l A A
■2.00
REBATE

Ul*

H .99

SALE

0 .69 m

9 3 9 CRET
OST
Refundoffernpirtt Sipl. 30

Z

2.99 CO
ST

CIGARETTES CARTON 9 . 2 9

MARTINI ft ROSSI
VERMOUTH

750 ML

3 .9 9

CASEOFf

DISCOUNT LIQUOR
SIZE

SALE MICE

GOOD 1HURS SI PI. 2b

M iO.. SEPT. 25

W ALKER’S
VODKA

5.19

LITER

out n* custom* w coupon
U N T M U ..U P T . 21

ROYAL
D iL U X E RU M
4 * 6 9

LITER

TWPfRCMTOIMW/COWM

CN
AIU
SorN
N
M
E

4 . 1 9 1 . 6 LTR.
IWfUCEiniKIV/CMFM

3 2 2-7 3 8 0
. SANFORD

H«y 17-9? SOUTH CITY LIMITS

4 16.49^ H 4.99
750 ml 1
m

u

y

* LONGWOOO
Hwy 17-92 NEAR 434

4.99

3 LTR .

IW O n ltllS IO N K I W'UUPON

b

y

MIX ANY 4-25.50

99

t k

i c

a

m

a

b

a

v

i

CAGE OF •

JIM REAM BOURBON
ANCIENT AGE BOURBON
EVAN W ILIAMS BOURBON
EARLY TIMES BOURBON
KENTUCKY SENT. BOURBON
SCHENLEY 90° GIN
S U E T S SIN
BEEFEATER 6M
CALVERT S i
BURNETTS S i
GOUDOVS S i
TANQUERAVGi
SEAGRAM'S 7 BLENO
6UCXENNEMERILENO
SCHENLEY IIO D
PHILADELPHIA ILENO
KESSLER BLEND
CALVERT EXTRA BLEND

71.50
74.50
78.50
73.50
69.95
71.95
66.50
63.50
73.50
109.00
63.50
66.95
76.00
114.50
76.95
61.50
61.50
72.50
61.95
72.00
74.50

oat n » custom* w

2 . 3 9
LITER

12 O L CAN

coupon

HMUT.KPl.a

TAYLO R

M ISTE R COCO
CREAM

C A ttO M t

CANADIAN CLUB
SEAGRAM'S V.O. CANADIAN
CROWN ROYAL CANADIAN
TANQUEHAYGIN
BEEFEATER BM
SEAGRAM'S G i
WILD TURKEY 101° •
JACK PANELS BUCK
JIM BEAM BOURBON
SMIRNOFF S0° VODKA
SORDOK'S VODKA
J M SCOTCH
CMVAS REGAL SCOTCH
DEWAR'S SCOTCH
BACARDI RUM
EAJ SHANDY
SEAGRAM'S 7 1

1 0 2 .0 0

3 . 2 9 1.5 i t * .

5.89

LITER

on rtl CWIOIBI K/COUPON
00M M L O C T.*,

OF

. ALTAMONTE
Hwv 17-92 ONE BLOCK

itn w n ___________

H «y 17-92 AT 434

1 .4 9

94.50
139.95
105.50
99.95
64.95
118.00
114.00
65.95
69.95
59.95
119.00
175.00
127.50
74.95
72.00
70.95

0000 T O O .. OCT. 1

SCOTCH

COCONUT

TV! K I CHIMB V/CMOB

67.95
81.50

7 8 0 M L CASKS

BOOTH’S
90° GIN

6.29

,J5U »

DON Q RUM
RON RICO RUM
BACARDI RUM

GOODMUR.. SETT. 3U

B EER N U YS

1.5 LTR.

MX ANT I -21.80

C U N MACGREGOR

GUOUfHl.. SfcPl. 'll

2.99
SEBASTIANI

TAYLOR

Gt)UI) SAT.. StPI. 28

CRIBARI
BIANCO

&lt;* 11 N o o ..

SUN COUNTRY
W INE COOLER
4-12OZ. BUS.

3.99
750M
L

O LD CROW BOURBON
EA J BRANDY
B A IL E Y ’ S IRISH C R EA M

toooFM..Kn.n

VICTORI

12.95

ASTI
SPU M AN TE

“6^91

37795"
CANADIANLTD
104.95
SEAGRAM'S V.O. CANADIAN
111.50
CANADIANCLUB
118.50
JOHNNIE WALKER RED
76.50
HARVEY'S SCOTCH
68.95
INVERHOUSE SCOTCH
66.95
LAUDER'S SCOTCH
117.95
JftBSCOTCH
136.95
OEWAR'S SCOTCH
76.50
PASSPORTSCOTCH
67.50
CLANMACGREGOR SCOTCH
75.95
SCORESBYSCOTCH
78.95
OLDSMUGGLER SCOTCH
84.50
MARTINS WO SCOTCH
121.95
CUTTYSARK SCOTCH
69.95
QUEENANNE SCOTCH
67.50
HEAVENHILLBOURBON
TOMSIMS 6YR86° BOURBON 79.95
126.50
JACKDANIELS BUCK
68.50
OLDCROWBOURBON
66.95
TENHI6HBOURBON

FLEISCHMANNS VODKA '3 5 .9 5
58.50
RELSKA VODKA
59.95
POPOV VODKA
60.95
6ILBETS VODKA
62.50
SCHENLEY VODKA
61.50
WOLFSCHMIDT VODKA
74.95
SMIRNOFF VODKA
58.95
WALKER'S VODKA
61.50
TAAXA VODKA
65.95
GORDON'S VODKA
71.50
SEAGRAM'S VODKA
52.95
RYE FLA6S VODKA
54.50
SAXONY VODKA
6 8 .0 0
WALKER'S CANADIAN
67.50
HARWOOD CANADIAN
LORD CALVERT CANADIAM 77.50
BUCK VELVET CANADIAN 72.95
74.50
WINDSOR CANADIAN
72.95
CANADIAN NIST
81.50
SCHENLEY O.F.C.
68.95
RICH ft RARE CANADIAN

'KIJ.VttCHtMl !*•*»
'u cm v A u m

NET

Buy by theCASE ft SAVE!
H A R V E Y ’ S SCOTCH
C R O W N R O Y A L CANADIAN
S C H EN LEY V O D K A
G I N , V O D K A , R U M aic
G I N , V O D K A , R U M fugs
R O N R IC O R U M
P H IL A D E LP H IA B LEN D

1.75 LTR PARTY SIZE CASES
CASE OF I

S 9 .2 O Z .

P O U ILL Y IMPORTED FRENCH
R IIS S E
THML

750M
L

4.49
7.99

REBATE

ALL REG. 4 KINGS

M A R T

) 4 I J % f i t n th A * i

AFP

OCTOBER 1
FED ERA L TAX
IN C R E A S E
SAVE UP TO
$12 A C A S E

SUITCASE 24- 12 0Z.CAN8

Above Prices Good For
Most Cars &amp; Light Trucks
A O K

TENNIS.
ANYONE?

PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 30 » W HILE IN-STORE Q U ANTITIES LAST » MFO. REBATE LIN ■

Continued from 8A
(0-1) action tonight at 5 at Lake
Mary.
"Stephanie (Nelson) had her
best game hitting." Oviedo
coach Anita Carlson said. "She
had five good lilts in the first
game and eight in the second.
Kelly (Price) and Allison (Smith)
had some good hits loo."
Making it possible for those
good hits was Verne, the Lady
Lions' senior setter.
"She (Verne) did an excellent
Job." Carlson said. "I was really
proud of her. She put the sets up
nice and high and close to the
net where Stephani e likes
them."
Oviedo didn’ t relinquish a
point In the opening game.
Verne served the first four points
for the Lions. Trudy Ferguson
served the next two and Cindy
Wood served nine straight to
close out the game.
In the second game. Carlson
got a chance to give all of her
players some experience. The
iilttlng of Nelson. Smith and
Price along with the selling of
Verne a ini Wood led the way.
Carlson was also impressed with
the overall play of Wood and the
fine defensive play of Ferguson.
Barbara Malone kept her Im­
pressive serving streak going as
she got all eight serves in.
Malone has not missed a serve In
four games.

Larry
Castle

game. You must watch the ball closely.
You should develop "tunnel vision"
out there on the court. Do not let your .
eyes or thoughts flit around. Look only '
at the ball and think only of the ball.
These two Items arc vital If you want
to Improve.
On f o r e h a n d and b a c k h a n d
ground strokes, you must develop the
ability to keep your wrist firm. A
floppy and weak wrist will cause you
to lose control of the ball. You should
practice preparing your racket quickly
when hitting groundstrokes. The
racket should be back and in position
at least by the time the ball bounce^
As you start to hit you should try to
transfer your weight Into the line of the
shot and of course finish with a nice
high follow through.

UP TO 4 0 %

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Top-seeded .John McEnroe opens
defense of his title In a $277,000
tennis tournament today when
he takes on .Jim Arias lo com­
plete play in an already up­
set-marred opening round.
Matt Anger of nearby Pleas­
anton. Calif., who had to qualify
to make the starting field, scored
it major upset Tuesday night
when he beat No.2 seed Kevin
Curren 7*6, 6-3.
Anger broke Curren three
times In the lie-breaker lo lake
the first set and broke him twice
more In the second.
In the tie-breaker. Curren held
a 6-4 lead, but Anger won the
next four games lo close out the
set. In the second set. Anger
rolled to an easy victory.
LLOYD TRIUMPHS
NEW ORLEANS IUPI) - Top
seed Chris Evert Llovd defeated
Vlekl Nelson of Wooster. Ohio.
f»-4. 6-2 Tuesday night In her
first match ol the1 $150,000
Virginia Slims In New Orleans.
In other matches. No. 2 Pam
Shrivcr of Lutherville. Md..
routed Lisa Spain Short of
Moultrie, Ga., (5-1. fi-2 In the
second round. Shrivcr next
plays Laura Glldemetstcr.

...Oviedo

’
&lt;

structor can tell a student over and
over again where the ball should be hit
In relation to their body but unless the
student experiences It time and time
again It will not be meaningful. Along
with learning to Judge where the ball is
coming, the new player must be able
to move the feet quickly enough to get
to the ball. We each have a certain
amount of God-given ability to move
our reel, but with diligent work and
practice, even the footwork can be
greatly Improved. If a person can judge
a ball and move their feet quickly they
can learn to be good tennis players. No
one can learn to play very well If they
have poorjudgment or poor footwork.
After Judgment and footwork there
arc several basic skills that must be
developed to move forward In the

2 * 6 9

754 R L

6.39

u n i

\

.•5
.'&lt;1
■w

�H A —Evening Herald, Snnlord, FI. Wednesday, Sept. 25, 19*5

Eastern A irlines Flight A borted; N early Dum ped In Potomac
WASHINGTON (UPl) - An Eastern Airlines
shuttle carrying 175 passengers aborted takeoff
Tuesday at National Airport and nearly skidded
Into the Potomac River after a helicopter crossed
Its path, authorities said.
There were no reports of Injuries aboard the
Boeing 727. which suffered only minor damage,
nlrport and Federal Aviation Administration
officials said, but paramedics were seen taking
three passengers off the plane.
The rest of the passengers were escorted off the
aircraft and walked into waiting buses.
One unidentified woman who said "she was not
feeling well" was taken to a hospital as a
precaution, an Eastern Airlines spokesman said.
Flight 1500. Eastern's daily 5 p.m. shuttle
bound for New York's LaGuardia Airport, was
filled to capacity with 175 passengers and seven
crew, airline officials said.

An ABC News official In Washington said
"Good Morning America" host David Hartman
was aboard the aircraft and talked to the captain
after the Incident. He said Hartman told him
"they were at inkcoff speed and at the last split
second they aborted. They were about *10 yards
from the Potomac. He said he was scared, but
there was no panic."
A witness, Peter Massey of Elmira. N.Y.. said
that as the plane was rolling down the runway
about 5:20 p.m.. the helicopter took off and "look
a hard turn to the left" into its path.
The Eastern pilot apparently slammed on the
plane's brakes and its nose gear buckled as the
plane slid off the north end of the runway and
onto a lawn, stopping several hundred feet short
of the Potomac River. Massey said. The helicopter
Immediately returned to I he terminal. Massey
said.

Airport spokesman David Hess said the lawn
where the plane came to rest was a landfill that
extended the airport grounds by 550 feet when It
was completed in December 1984. He said the
additional ground may have prevented the
aircraft from plunging Into the Potomac.
"The nose of the airplane wasn't in the air. but
if the pilot had kept going and the chopper kept
going, it would have been real close — about 30
feel." said Andy Sawlckl of Bayonne. N.J.. who
saw the accident from n nearby park.
FAA spokesman Steven Hayes said the accident
appeared to be the result of a mlxiip in
communications with the pilot of the .Jet Ranger
helicopter.
"The helicopter was given Instructions by the
controller to depart and move In a northwesterly
direction." Hayes said. "Instead, the helicopter
moved east, which put him in front of the Eastern
Airlines flight path.

"W e need to find out more specifically what
happened and why" before any action can be
considered against the pilot of the helicopter, who
was not identified. Haves said.
5
Mike Smith, another FAA spokesman, said the
agency was Investigating the accident.
The plane appeared to have suffered only minor
damage, airport spokesman Hugh Riddle said.
Most of the passengers were escorted off rear*
ramp and walked calmly to waiting buses.
Witnesses at the nearby park said at least three
passengers were taken off the plane by
paramedics and put In ambulances.
A spokesman for Butler Aviation, which
services private aircraft at the airport, described
the helicopter as a four- or live-seat .Jet Ranger,
which he said was probably on a chartered (light.
Butler fueled the helicopter shortly before Its
inkcoff. lie said.
I'
♦,

CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 20
Af t er School Speci al on
skateboard safety, 4 p.m..
Casselberry Branch of the
Seminole County Public Library
System. Seminole Plaza. De­
monstration and discussion by
Victor Perez, former skateboard
champ from Santa Cniz. Calif.
Free to the public.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 26
Symphonata — a Tapestry in
Fashion luncheon and fashion
show sponsored by the Florida
Symphony League. 11 a.m..
Hyatt Regency Grand Cypress to
benefit Florida Symphony
Orchestra. For information and
reservations call 896-0331.
International Training In
Communication Greater
Semi nol e Club ( previ ousl y
Toastmistrcss). 7:30 p.m.. Alta­
monte Chapel Education Build­
ing on State Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.
Sweet Adelines ( women' s
barbershop chorus). 7:30 p.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N .

L a k e

T r ip le t

ll

WAL-MART

i
i

i

O u r P e o p le M a k e
T h e D if f e r e n c e ...
That'S "THE WAL-MART WAY”

t;

;I
ri
If

.1
.7
n
o

D r iv e ,

Casselberry.
Sanford Jaycees general meet­
ing. 7:30 p.m.. clubhouse. Fifth
Street and French Avenue.
Sanford A A. 1201 W. First St,.
5:30 p.m., closed discussion, and
8 p.m.. open, speaker.
Impotence Anonymous Florida
Hospttal-Altamonte Chapter.
7-8:30 p.m.. Florida HospltalAltamontc. 601 E. Altamonte
Ave. ISR 436). Drive. Jack
Baskin will speak on diabetes, a
major cause of Impotence. For
information call 767-2218.
National Action for Former
Military Wives special meeting,
6 : 3 0 p.m. Call 628-2801 for
place and details.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed.
First United Methodist Church.
Overcaters Anonymous, open,
7:30 p.m.. Community United
Methodist Church. Highway
17-92, Casselberry. Newcomers
meeting. 7 p.m. Call Jean ai
830-0995. Also, 7:30 p.m.. in the
annex conference room behind
Florida Huspltal-Aliamontc.
State Road 436. Altamonte
Springs.
FRIDAY. SEPT. 27
Book sale by Friends of the
Library of Seminole County, 9
a.m. to 9 p.m.. Altamonte Mall
center court.
Candlelight Dinner-Dance
Fund Raiser for Golden Age
Games. 6-9 p.m., Howell Place
Sanford. 200 W. Airport Blvd.
Limited reservations call 323*
7306.
Central Florida Klwunls Club,
7:30 a.m., Florida Federal
Savings and Loan. Slate Road
436 at 434. Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls
Club. 7 a.m.. Airport Restaurant.
Sanford.
Opt i mi s t Cl ub of South
Seminole. 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road. Altamonte
Springs.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Florida Hospi tal -Al tamonte
Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave..
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Central Florida Porcelain
Artists "Show &amp; Sell." north end
of Colonial Plaza Mall, during
Mall hours. Open to the public.
Gentle Exercise for seniors,
10:30 a.in.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
United Way of Semi nol e
County golf tournament. 12:30
p.m.. Sabal Point Country Club.
For information contact Bob
Walkoat 834-3131.
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8
p.m. We k i v a Pr esbyt eri an
Church. SR 434. at Wekiva
Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling
Hills Moravian Church, SR 434.
Longwood. Alanon. same time
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. First St.. Sanford.
SATURDAY, SEPT. 28
Central Florida Chapter Ole
Miss Alumni party for the
Tulane game, home of Peggy
and Earnest Hardin. Winter
Springs. For Information contact
Chapter President Larry Furlong
at 339-2324.

'

Local Wal-Mart Team
Dedicated to serving
you better every day

&gt;1

l.

i

O n e o f t h e m o s t Im p o r t a n t f o u n d a t io n s f o r
w a t -M a r t 's r e m a r k a b le c o n s u m e r a c c e p t a n c e Is
t h e q u a lit y o f o u r p e o p le a n d t h e ir d e d ic a t io n
w h e n it c o m e s t o s e r v in g o u r c u s t o m e r s .
W al-M art A s s o c ia t e s a r e y o u r f r ie n d s a n d
n e ig h b o r s , if t h e r e Is a n y w a y t h e y c a n s e r v e
y o u b e tte r th e y w a n t t o kn o w .

u
j
j

i

Here are th e nam es o f th e local W al-M art
"te a m " th a t w ill be sa v in g you tim e &amp; m oneyLeft to right — R a y M a rin e - A ssista n t
M a n a g e r, C lin to n E lle d g e - A ssista n t
M anager, Buddy C o le - M anager, Shirley
Gould - Assistant M anager, Rick W allace Assistant M anager.

WAL-MART—

M oving Forw ard in th e 80's
Wal-Mart Stores. Inc.,
headquartered In Bentonvllle,
Arkansas, is continuing Its rapid
growth Into 1985. With record
sales over the past few years, the
company anticipates reaching an
all time high in corporate volume
in excess of S8 billion this year.
At the close o f fiscal year,
January 31,1985, Wal-Mart had
sales in excess of S6.3 billion and
745 stores In operation. Over
90,000 associates w ere employed
throughout a 20-state territory
including Alabama, Arkansas,
Missouri, Georgia, Florida, Illinois,
Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Nebraska, Oklahoma,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas,
North Carolina, Indiana. Iowa, New
Mexico, and Virginia.
Wal-Mart Stores, inc., had its
beginning in the small town
variety store business. Sam
Walton, the company s founder
and Chairman o f the Board o f
Directors, opened his first Ben
Franklin Variety store in 1945.
After expanding into a group of
15 successful stores, Walton and
his brother, J.L. Walton (who
Joined him in 1946) opened the

first Wal-Mart Discount City in 1962
In Rogers, Arkansas.
in October, 1970, Wal-Mart
Stores, Inc., became a publicly-held
corporation, and was listed on the
Over-The-Counter Market. The
company's common stock began
trading on the New York Stock
Exchange, August 25,1972.
Since its founding, the regional
chain has maintained its basic
concepts—to provide consumers
with a varied selection o f quality
merchandise at low prices every
day, and to guarantee customer
satisfaction. These principles have
brought spectacular growth and
remarkable consumer acceptance.
Wal-Mart is recognized today as
a leader in the retail industry. The
key to Wal-Mart s success is
efficient management that is
dedicated to serving the
customers' best interests. Whether
it be a thriving metropolitan city
or in small town, u.S.A. the same
friendly atmosphere prevails,
where caring associates always are
striving to make shopping at WalMart a pleasant experience.

i
i

L o ca l M a n a g e m e n t

T e a m ...

"Our jo b is to save
YOU HUE &amp; MONEY!”
A t W al-M art, w e a re d e d ic a te d to m a k in g
th e p h rase "WE CARE" m o r e th a n just
a n o th e r slogan. W e re a lize th a t, as a
c o n s u m e r to d a y , vo u e x p e c t m o re ...a n d
th a t's e x a c tly w h a t w e re w o rk in g to o f fe r
y o u e v e ry day.
If y o u 'v e n e v e r b e e n In a W a l-M a rt sto re ,
y o u 're g o in g to b e a m a z e d w h e n yo u see
h o w lo w o u r prices a re o n fa m o u s n a m e
b ra n d m e rc h a n d is e e v e ry single day. w e
d is c o u n t th e p ric e o n e v e ry ite m in o u r
s to re e v e ry day. W e re a lize t h a t lo w e r prices
in its e lf is n o t e n o u g h .
That's w h y w e a re c o m m itt e d to o ffe rin g
yo u fast, frie n d ly services like o u r
c o n v e n ie n t layaw ay plan (w ith n o e x tra
serv ice charges). Also, o u r p o lic y g u a ra n te e s
t h a t yo u w ill b e c o m p le te ly satisfied w ith
e v e ry p u rch ase yo u m a k e a t W al-M art.
If th e r e is e v e r an y w a y w e can serve you
b e t t e r , TELL US. W h e n w e say "O ur Job is to
Save YOU TIME AND MONEY" w e m e a n it,
becau se th a t's "THE w a l -m a r t w a y ."

Buddy Colt
Mani|tr

WAL-MART
M akes C o m m u n ity co m m itm e n t
An Integral part of Wal-Mart s
program Is to become active
members of the community. By
becoming Involved In com m unity
projects and supportive of
organizations, business can play an
im p ortan t role In developing a
thriving environm ent.
An example o f Wal-Mart s
com m unity Involvem ent Is the
Scholarship Program. This annual

$1,000 Scholarship is available to a
high school senior during the
Spring. Applications are
distributed to the high schooi(s) in
the trade area and Judged by a
com m ittee of community leaders.
The scholarship recognizes those
students who have excelled in
academics, extracurricular and
com m unity activity, and who
show financial need.

Stan Dorrou|h Clinton Elltdf*
Assistant Manaycn

Rick Wallace
Shirlty Gould
Assistant Manayart

Marina
Bob Toons
Auutent Meneifn

�PEOPLE
Evening H»r«ld, Senford. FI. Wednesday, Sept,

as, i»S* —IB

Cook O f The Week
'Born H o m em ake r' Exchanges O n e Kitchen For A n o th er D aily
By Dorothy Greene
Herald Correspondent
Sporting a perpetual smile on
her face, Lou Jones Is the perfect
example of a born homemaker.
As the 'meat cook’ at' Sanford
Middle School, our Cook of the
Week exchanges one kitchen for
another each day and keeps
right on chuggln' along.
"I come home, kick ofr my
shoes, put on some cool clothes,
have a cup of colTcc, and relax
for at least a half hour before I do
anything at home,” she says.
Lou puts In a long day on her
feet and looks forward to a
ell-earned cofTec break when
te gets home.
Lou Is a Canadian transplant
whose family comes from St.
John, New Brunswick, "on a big
piece of property out in the
country. It was right on the Bay
of Fundy, and we had a garden
and chickens." says Lou. One of
five girls and five boys, Lou Is
the next to the oldest child and •
rcmembcrc having to help take
care of her younger siblings.
A special treat for Lou this
past August was a reunion at the
family home In St. John were
brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles
and cousins were all together for
the first time In 27 years. With
her family scattered all over the
U.S. and Canadu. Lou enjoyed
catching up on old times and
new times. To mark the special
occasion, Lou’s sister had ce­
ramic dinner hells made to order
for all the members of the
family. They were hand-painted
with a replica of the original
family home In St. John, and are
a treasured keepsake.

S

While attending school, Lou
took Home Economics courses
along with beauty culture
classes In hairdressing which
gave her n good foundation Tor
marriage, homemaking and
motherhood.
After about three years work­
ing at a pulp mill near her home
In St. John, Lou moved lo the
T a in p a a r e a w i t h h e r
grandmother and on aunt and
uncle. Recalling how she met
her husband. Don. Lou says, "It
was on a rainy day and I was
waiting for the bus to go to work,
and I had seen him before, but I
didn’t know him. He worked for
a tire dealer and was delivering
special racing tires that weren’t
supposed to gel wet, so he had
them In the cab or the truck with
him. When he saw me standing
In the rain, he pulled over, threw
the tires In the back of the truck,
and said. ’Get in. I’ll take you to
work, the bus Is 20 minutes
down the road,’ And that sturted
It all.” laughs Lou.
Married In 1959. Lou and Don
have three grown children.
Donna, Brian and JelT. A fourlegged colllc-lerrler mixture
named "S lap p y" shares the
spotlight and makes a full-time
Job of protecting Donna.
Don’s Job as locksmith for the
Seminole County school system,
and Lou’s busy day in the school
kitchen, do not leave too much
time for recreation, but camping
is high on the list of family
v a c a t i o n s u n d
gel -a wa y •fro m •11-ul I activities.
"W e have n slide-In camper."
says Lou, "and we enjoy the
outdoors. The kids always liked

as usual. I guess you would call
It a ’conserve’ rather than a Jam.
We all like it on bread, hot
biscuits, or on a scoop of Ice
cream."
When she can find some spare
ti me. Lou enj oys sewi ng,
crocheti ng and gardening.
"Gardening Is a pleasure when
everything comes up right."
says Lou. "W e’ve had tomatoes,
eggplant, broccoli, carrots and
lots and lots of lettuce."

to have friends along, so If we
didn’t have enough room In the
camper, they pitched a lent
outside. It was always fun."
A top priority these days for
the Jones' is visiting u piece of
property they arc buying In
north Florida. "It'sJust beautiful
up there." says Lou. "it has
pecan trees and pear trees and

grapevines. We brought some
pears back with us Iasi week and
I’ve Just put up some pear Jam.
My recipe Is so easy. I Just cook
the pears down till they're
tender, without adding water.
Then I mash them and add some
nuts, raisins and Just a dab of
sugar. I pul the mixture Into
sterilized Mason Jars and can It

CHOCOLATE FIDDLE
DIDDLES
'/i cup shortening
2 cups sugar
'A cup milk
6 tablespoons cocoa
Pinch of salt

3 cups oat meal
cup coconut
1 teaspoon vanilla

Bring shortening, sugar and
milk to a boll In a heavy 3 quart
saucepan. Remove from heat
"I enjoy myself at work." says and add cocoa, salt, oatmeal,
Lou. "and I really like my work, coconut and vanilla. Mix well
The kids at school are great and and let cool Just enough to
we get along fine." Lou not only handle. Using a leaspoon, roll
works to prepare the meals, hut into balls and place on waxed
also serves the students on the paper to cool. One cup of rice
"hot line." Lou admits. "The krlsples may be substituted for
only time it gets to me Is when one cup of oatmeal.
QUICK LUNCHBOX CAKE
it’s a real hectic day and the
2*/«
cups all-purpose flour
steamer Isn’t working, then It's
2 teaspoons baking soda
rush, rush, rush to get every­
1 teaspoon salt
thing done on time."
1
cup brown sugar, packed
Lou's basic cooking skills were
2 eggs
learned in her home cconmlcs
lA cup soh butter
classes at school. "I was learning
1 can (16 oz.l fruit cocktail,
to cook In school." says Lou.
"then when I came home Mom undrained
Vt cup semi-sweet chocolate
would say. ’Well, tonight you
bits
can fix supper' so I got my
l/ i cup chopped nuts
practice at home."
Grease and flour bottom of
"I love to cook, and I like to fix 13x9x2 In baking pan. Combine
something fancy now and then." all ingredients except chocolate
Lou says. “ When the kids were bits and nuts in a large mixer
growing up, I'd do my fancy bowl. Blend well at lowest speed
cooking on their birthdays. I'd of mixer, then blend 2 minutes
make their birthday cakes and at medium speed. Pour batter
decorate them, and at Christmas Into pan. Sprinkle with chocolate
time I do a lot of baking. bits and nuts. Bake at 350° for
Fruitcakes, cookies and a big 35-40 minutes.
dinner is the usual fare."
NANNIE'S SOUR
Lou knows what pleases her
CREAM CAKE
family and among their favorites
1cup butter
arc the following recltJcs:
See Cook, 3B

Double Ring Ceremony Unites
Myra Swaggerty, Clyde Hayes
Myra Swaggerly and Clyde Hayes were united
in marriage Aug. 3 at 10 u.m. In the First Baptist
Church of Chuluotn. Dr. Charles G. Swaggerty.
father of the bride, performed the double ring,
candlelight ceremony. Jamey Walker, organist,
presented nuptial selections and Candy Swag­
gerty slstcr-ln-law of the bride was soloist
accompanied by Velma Hall, pianist.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles G. Swaggerty. Sanford. The bridegroom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hayes, Sanford.
Given in marriage by her brother. Gordon
Swaggerty. Clcwlston. the bride chose for her
vows an antique silk organza gown lavishly
decorated with crochet lace, satin ribbon and
Chantilly lace rufiles. Fashioned In a Victorian
style with a high neckline, the sheer pleated yoke
topped a fitted bodice featuring a basque waist
and modified leg-o-mutton sleeves extending to a
lace ruffle at the hand. The full skirt flowed into a
sweeping chapel train edged with three tiers of
lace ruffles. Alace headpiece encrusted with seed
pearls secured her tiered linger tip veil. 1 he bride
carried a cascade bouquet of peace silk rocs and
honeysuckle with ivory Itgcr lilies and ivy.
Carol Snider. Gulf Hammock, sister of the
bride, was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were
Cheryl Snider. Gulf Hammock, niece of the bride.

Maude Swaggerty. Sanford, sister of the bride and
Tcllna Vezlna. Deltona. All the attendants wore
Identical peach gowns with high necklines and
long full skirts accented with a large sash and
bow. Their headpieces were wreaths of peach silk
flowers and ivy. Each carried a silk bouquet of
peach rosebuds, tiger lilies and honeysuckle with
ivory carnations.
The groom's best man was Lynn Vezlna.
Dcltonc. Ushers were Denny Hayes and Bobby
Hayes, both of Sanford and brothers of the groom
and Jer r y Lord. Sanf ord, the g r o o m ’ s
brolhcr-ln-law.
A reception was held In the fellowship hall of
the church following the ceremony. After the
newlyweds cut the traditional first slice of the
three- tiered wedding cake lopped by wedding
bells and doves. Irene Halstead cut and served the
wedding.
Others assisting were Beverly Williams and
Betty Williams, both aunts of the bride, who
poured and served at the punch tables. Dorothy
Williams, also an aunt of the bride, kept the
bride’s book.
Following a wedding trip to West Palm Beach
and a leisurely cruise. Mr. und Mrs. Hayes arc
making their home in Sanford.

F a n ta s tic
V a lu e s !
Quality Diamond*
from QuoiifitS

7 Diam ond
Cluster

7 Diam ond
Antique Style

B e a u t if u l C o lo r s f o r F a l l !

f f ij&amp; S S W f c

Rubies, Sapphires
o p Emeralds
with Diamonds

1/1 C arat*
21 Diam ond
W edding Set

Joyce Malone is Modeling A
Stunning Rayon/Silk
Rose/Coral Floral Print
On Black-Tulip Skirt
Dress By Warren Z

Sanford Plaza
Altamonte Mall
Winter Park Mall
H U f T U l H M I K N U S U M IT U M M W (M il All.
a u u u m u m d w m u i i t s Ana At-rnoiiM A Tfc

ISanford
i

•Tout Weight

^
W W K *

�2B—Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednttday, Sept. 2$, 1WS

About That

...

Cream Cheesy Ham wiches M a k e G re a t Take Along Fare
Whether tt‘s a family outing,
an impromptu picnic ... or a
trendy "spread'* served before a
concert in the park — Cream
Cheesy Hamwiches make great
"take along" fare. Served on
crusty bread, the sandwich is
layered with a cream cheese
spread, made with plmlento and
onion, — thin sliced ham. dark
green leafy lettuce and new
golden Velvccta extra thick
slices pasteurized process cheese
spread.
Now available locally, each 12

ounce package contains 10 Indi­
vidually wrapped extra thick
slices ready to enjoy as snacks or
In meals anytime of day. For a
quick, breakfast on-thc-run, lop
toast with a satisfying extra
thick slice ... or add a thick slice,
cut In Julienne strips, to a
luncheon salad.

1 tablespoon chopped onion
4 Italian bread slices
Lettuce
4 extra thick slices pasteurized
process cheese spread
4 boiled ham slices
C o m b i n e cr enm c he ese,
pimento and onions, mixing
until well blended. For each
sandw'lch. cover one bread slice
with 1 tablespoon cream cheese
mixture, lettuce, one slice pro­
cess cheese spread and one ham
slice; repeat layers. Top with
second bread slice.
2 sandwiches

CREAM CHEESY
HAMWICHES
1 3-oz. pkg. cream cheese,
softened
2 tablespoons chopped pimlcnto, drained

SUNNY SALAD OPEN PACE
lA cup sour cream
lA cup chopped cucumber
4 crisply cooked bacon slices,
crumbled
1 tablespoon chopped onion
4 whole-wheat bread slices,
toasted
8 thin tomato slices
4 extra thick slices pasteurized
process cheese spread, cut In
half
Combine sour cream, cucum­
bers. bacon and onions; mix
well. Spread toast slices with
sour cream mixture; top with

tomatoes and process cheese
spread. Broil until process

cheese spread begins to melt,

4 sandwiches

“Let The Professionals Do It"

ECHOLS TREE SERVICE
LICENSED — FULLY INSURED -

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

• COMPLETE TREE SERVICE
• FREE ESTIMATES
• STUMP GRINDING
• 24 HR. ANSWERING SERVICE
2405 Grandvitw Avenue
Sanford, FL 32771
Contact Peta of Terry Echols

PhO flG

323-2229

Evening Herald
SUBSCRIBER SERVICE

Problems? Complaints?
If you have a subscription problem that needs to be solved or
are unhappy with our service we w ant to know about it.
Please call the circulation departm ent between the hour of
8:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. at (305) 322-2611.
If the problem concerns your payment, please have your
canceled check in front of you so that we can solve the problem
over the telephone.

Cream Cheesy Hamwiches are served on crusty bread.

\V ,

-1

saus

.

Replacement Copies

S t******?
oloiPrlnU,

S tU tU * *

CHOJS*.

w

'S S T -

S s S S 5- * ” "

•198

•Ssr

1

i

429

J2

v a - t o J J S S ---------

.

W

°1

't f S e - s K S

r© n ?a

l

I'*"

.

If you do not receive you r paper or the paper you receive is
wet or dam aged, we will deliver a replacement copy to you the
sam e day.

w

j

K

I

i
2

Vacations, Address Changes
To arrange vacation delivery or report an address change the
following deadlines apply:
Day to begin
Contact us no later than
Monday . .................................................. Noon Friday
Tuesday-Friday ....................................... 6:30 p.m. previous day
S un day .................................................... Noon Friday

Mail Subscriptions

Kit

t« -

1 "
If you receive your paper by mail and are dissatisfied with the
delivery you should ask your local postmaster for a Consum er Ser­
vice Card and record your complaint on that form . If this does not
bring about im provem ent please contact us as well as the C o n ­
sum er Advocate, U.S. Postal Service Headquarters. W ashington,
D.C. 20260.

E g *
HM W nW

,

r

Yd.

(305) 322-2611
»

Wests*)* Square
2657 Hiaweuec fla

ORLANDO
949 N Semoran
Blvd

FERN PARK
96 Senioran Blvd

NE* SANFORD

STORE

3632-34 Orlando Dr
Hvry 17-92 at laka Mary Blvd

4

1l

Please call between 8:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.

�Ir

Evtnlng Htr«ld, Sanford, FI. Wtdnttday, S«pt.

aj, ins—3B

Mother's Apron Strings Are
Too Strong For Son To Snip

E.B . Stowe

Helen Hickey

Sanford Artists
Display Works At
Library-M useum
T h e H e n r y S. S a n f o r d
Library-Museum and the the
Henry S. Sanford Hlstroical
Preservation Society announce
the opening of their Tall exhibit
featuring the works of Edmund
H. Stowe, who paints Florida
‘ scenes, and Helen Hickey,
portrait painter, both of Sanford.

her own point — that a busy
homemaker and mother Is not
necessari l y a deterrent to
creativity. Her development as a
creative and versatile artist has
grown with this dual role.
In honoring these two fine
artists, the library-museum and
historical preservation solaty
extend a cordial Invitation to
Creativity Is the word.
, The exhibit, designed to Il­ members and friends to a* pre­
vi ew reception to be held
lustrate how the artistic drive
Jtas led E I). Stowe through Thursday. Sept. 26. from 7 to 9
p.m.. at the library-museum.
jdmosl a century of creativity
proving the truth of Andre 520 E. First St.
The exhibit, open to the public
Maurois’ statement that "grow­
at
no admission charge, will be
ing old Is no more than a bad
habit which a busy mind has no at the library-museum until
farther notice during the regular
jim e to form."
hours. Wednesday. Thursday.
r Stowe' s com panion artist Friday and Sunday, from 2 to 5
'Helen Hickey, has also proven p.m.
%

|..C o o k
Continued From I B
’ 3 cups sugar
' b eggs
e, 3 cups all purpose Hour
-- l teaspoon vanilla
*„ *4 teaspoon suit
*2 U teaspoon baking soda
*4 pint sour errant
Line bottom of 10 inch tube
pan with waxed paper. Du nut
grease. Cream butter and sugur
until IfalTy. Sift flour, sodu and
salt 3 times. Add eggs, one at a
time, lo creamed mixture beat­
ing well after each addition. Add
Ilnur mixture alternately with
sour cream, starting and ending
with sour cream. Add vantlln.
Hake at 325° for I Mi hours. Do
not open oven for 1V* hours.
TUNA SOUFFLE' RING
2 cans tuna, GMi or 7 oz.
1 can cream of mushroom
soup
3 egg yolks, slightly beaten
1cup fine cracker crumbs
*/« cup finely chopped ontons
2 tnblcspoons snipped parsley
( 1Mi teaspoon dried)
2 tablespoons diced plmlcnto
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
3 egg whites, stiffly beaten
Combine tuna, soup, egg
yolks, crumbs, onion, parsley,
pimiento. lemon juice and dash
of pepper. Mix well. Fold in egg
whites. Turn Into well greased
and lightly floured 5 cup ring
mold. Hake at 350° for 30
minutes. Loosen edges und In­
vert onto serving plate. Serve
with hot creamed peas. Serves6.
SWEET AND SOUR
HAMBURGERS
Mix
cup canned evaporated
milk. 1Mi pounds ground beef. Mi
cup chopped onion.
cup
cracker crumbs and 1 teaspoon
Seasoned salt. Form six 4 "
patties. Brown putties In skillet.
Pour off fat. add Sweet and Sour
Sauce, below, cover and simmer

over low heat for 15 minutes.
Sweet end Sour Sauce: Drain
one 12'A oz. can pineapple
chunks. Combine Juice with
enough water to make one cup.
Mix Juice with 2 tablespoons
cornstarch. W cup vinegar. V*
cup brown sugar and 2 tables­
poons soy sauce In sauce pan.
Heat until thickened and clear.
Add pineapple chunks and 1 cup
coarsely chopped green peppers.
Serves 6.
DEEP DISH PIZZA
1 Chef Boyardee Double Pizza
mix
1'A pounds ground beef
3 scallions, chopped
1 small can mushroom bits
and pieces
Mi cup black olives, cut In half
1 cu p c h c d d a r c h e e s e ,
shredded
1 cup mozzarella cheese,
shredded
■A teaspoon oregano
Salt and pepper to taste
Eleven Inch heavy cast Iron
skillet
Follow directions on package
for dough. While It rises, brown
ground beef in skillet. Spoon out
into bowl lined with paper towel
to drain. Pour grease out of
skillet and wipe lightly with
paper towel. When dough has
risen, place in skillet and. with
hands well greased, spread
dough evenly on bottom and up
sides. Mix browned beef with
scallions, mushrooms, oregano,
salt and pepper. Spread half of
mixture on dough, pour Mi can of
sauce (from Pizza mix package)
over mixture. Sprinkle Mi of each
cheese over mixture. Add rest of
browned beef and sprinkle with
remaining cheese. Pour rest of
sauce over mixture and then use
the can of grated cheese from
package. Sprinkle olives over
top. Bake at 400° for about 45
minutes or until set. Remove
from oven and allow to stand 15
to 20 minutes before cutting.

Displaced Homemaker
Program Workshop Set:
Bone Up On Your Bones

DEAR ABBY: 1 am an at­
tractive, single, career woman.
32 years old. For the last three
years I’ve been in love with a
kind, successful, gentle man
who Is 48. We share common
Interests, he treats me very well
and he says he loves me. We’ve
talked extensively about mar­
riage. (He brought the subject up
Initially.)
The problem: At 48 he still
lives with his 79-year-old ailing
mother. He never married. As
much as he cares for me. and I
do believe he loves me, he can’t
bring himself to leave his
mother. I’ ve tried patience,
persuasion, confrontation and
ultimatums, but he can’t deal
with the Idea of leaving his
mother. I’m frustrated, jealous
and angry. My friends tell me
I’m wasting my time. I’ve tried
to break olT with him. but I was
miserable!
We’ve been to two different
family counselors without suc­
cess. He won’t return to either
one because they both told him
his mother is the root of his
problem. Now he refuses to see
another counselor.
Have you any suggestions.
Abby? I don’t want lo be his
"girlfriend" until his mother
dies.
TIRED OF WAITING
DEAR TIRED: I suspect a
symbiotic relationship between
mother and son. (He needs her
as much as she needs him.
Possibly more.) Frankly. I think
he’s using his mother to avoid
marriage. Further, a man who
ducks counseling because he

D ear

June through November is
Florida' s hurricane season
warned Donna Frank at the
meeting of the XI Theta Epsilon
Chapter of Bela Sigma Phi.
During her program. Mrs. Frank
discussed the need to be pre­
pared in the event a hurricane
strikes. She explained the some­
times misunderstood differences
In weather words such as hurri­
cane watch, hurricane warning
and an actual hurricane. An
explanation and discussion of
procedures to follow, prepara­
tions to make, and where
emergency shelter can be found
were all covered during the
presentation.
President Ruth Gaines opened
the business meeting and com­
mittee and business reports were
heard.
Updates were given on re­
search findings on multiple scle­
rosis and autism by Service
Chairman Lois Smith. Mrs.
Smith explained the difficulty In
addressing cures to this disease
and disability, as due to the
Inability of researchers to find
causes.
Victoria Hughes was selected

G arden
Circles

first stages ol grief — anger.
Forgive her.

Al &amp; Pauline
Llndstrom

Abby

(305) 323-3408

V

LINOSTROMS
doesn’t want to know the truth
is Just putting his problems on
hold. Don’t fight too hard for this
prize. You might get him.

Was my husband remiss in
not sending a card? And what do
you think of his sister?
JUST ASKING
DEAR JUST: I think your
husband said it all when he

as XI Theta Epsilon's Queen
candidate for the upcoming an­
nual Beta Sigma Phi Valentine
Ball to be held in February.
At the conclusion of the meet­
ing hostess Gtnny Hagan served
refreshments lo Donna Frank.
Ruth Gaines. Victoria Hughes,
Bonnie Jones. Al Kurtz. Norma
Locp p . Kay Pruitt. Laurel
Rodgers, Lots Smith. Tracey
Wight and guesta Judy Jett.
Maureen Hatg and Adele Brown.

chanic

r r

Port of Sanford
Building 202

DEAR ABBY: My husband’s
father passed away recently after
a long illness. He couldn't go
home for the funeral because he
had Just been there the week
before to visit his father In the
hospital. His folks live nearly
3.000 miles from us.
My question: Do you think my
husband should have sent a
condolence card to his mother?
He called her up and sent
flowers, but no card. One of my
husband's sisters said he should
have also sent a card. I’ve asked
several friends and relatives, and
they all agreed that It wasn't
necessary for my husband to
send his mother a card. In
keeping with my sister-in-law's
line of thinking, shouldn't my
mothcr-In-law send her son a
condolence card? After all. he
lost his father.

S ervice, inc.

Certifie&amp;

-

P.O. Box 396
Lake Monroe, FL 32747

fcl3TE -iW 4 'U ]

%

t y u

u

t d

T h u rsd a y , S e p te m b e r 2 6 th

EAST
*OCEAN $
RESTAURANT
A LOUNGE

s

Featuring . . .Chinese Cuisine
And Specializing In Cantonese,
Szechuan, and Mandarin Styles
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL

Chapter Reviews
Hurricane Data

FREE PINA COLADA
WITH EVERY DINNER PURCHASED
DINE-IN ONLY LIMIT ONE PER
PERSON THURS. G FRI. ONLY

SERV IN G
LUNCH &amp; DINNER
MON. • THURS. 1M O . FRI.-SAT. 1M 1. SUN. 12-10

EAST OCEAN RESTAURANT
&amp; LOUNGE 2520 S o u th F rench A w . , S anford

EC O N O M Y D E N T U R E
C L IN IC
SEPTEMBER SPECIAL

ECONOMY DENTURES ...........* 1 4 1 9 ,

3 2 1-594Q

TA K E O U T A V A ILA BLE
l- ») u n r

■FAMINMOUAM

LOWER P U K E S !
TWO LITER
DRINKS

Ragularty Tc
1.40166 ounc
ouncal
&gt;owder or 32
ounce liquid.
Limit 2.

Quart bottle
HD30 or
10W40 oil.
Limit 6.

Choose from
new Coke,
Classic Coke,
diet Coke,
Cherry Coke or
Sprite.

CENTRAL CIRCLE
Eleven members and guest
Laverne Hollowed, sister of
member Gladys Zahand, at­
tended the September meeting
of the Central Circle at the
Sanford Garden Club.
Reading and discussion of the
by-laws was the first order of
business.
Several members plan to at­
tend the dower show at Leu
House and the lawn and garden
show at Leu Gardena Oct. 18-20.
Barbara Bradshaw,
horticulture chairman, led a
discussion on planting now for a
fall garden. Square foot garden­
ing was highly recommended by
Mrs. Bradshaw.
Selling pens Is the money
raising venture for the circle this
year.

T h e O r l a n d o D i s p l a c e d or 843-2388. If outside the
lomcmakcr Program Is having u dialing area, call collect.
vorkshop, •‘Challenges and
Choices — Bom* Up on Your
lonesl." on Oct. 7 at 6:15-8:30
j.m. ut the Seminole Public
ibrary In Sem inole Plaza.
L'assclbcrry.
Liz Ramey, R.N.. ‘community
-ducator for Upjohn Home
lealth Care Services, will dlsuss ways that women can
revent or slow down the proress of osteoporosis In women.
The workshop Is especially for
4I ••••• I•
u n
tsplaced homemakers; thos 35
nd over who are divorced,
parated. widowed or have a
lsablcd spouse. The workshop
Same D ay Repairs
R ellnet
s open to other participants on a
s ■ T iu m iu
pace available basis. There is
jio charge for this program.
fim U V .C m O J U .
327-1202
‘ To sign up. call the Displaced
|fomcmakcr Center at 422-7534

DELUXE DENTURES

called his mother and sent
flowers. His sister Is in one of the

dial
BLEACH

Regularly 87*.

3

One gallon.
Limit 3.

HEALTH ANI)
BEAUTY
_____ AIDS

FOR
3d - «
!
Regularly 39* Bar. Limit 6.

Ragularty To 1.79. Noxzema,
Tusay deodorants and more.

COMPARE AT
14 99

tw sfy

♦

PEASANT
TOPS OR
PULL-ON
PANTS

t*« * Up To 2#V
Assorted colorful
polyester blouses
wltn coordinated
polyester pull-on
panta.

«BM T"

Special group Including
som e brand nam es ana
special puchasa shoes.
S u e s for the entire family,

s o t s ...... 3 .9 0
■ IB

413 E. FIRST ST. wSNUN

t-

, c,it&gt;^

-

S T O tt
HOURS:

f AM - 1 PM MON.-SAT.
SUNOAV I PM - * PM

�4B—Evening Herald. Sanford, FI. Wedneaday, Sept, 25, 1W

Tuck A Juicy Apple Inside Some Juicy Caramel
When the night air adds a
crispness and the scents of fall
r e t u r n , f ar m s t a n d s and
supermarket produce sections
about with fresh. Juicy apples
peaking In flavor. For many, the
advent of the apple season trig­
gers fond memories of a tart.
Juicy apple tucked Inside some
chewy caramel.
Not too many years ago.
making caramel apples from
fruit picked In the family
orchard was an annual ritual
looked forward to by everyone —
grandparents, parents, aunts,
uncles and children of all ages.
After the fruit was hand-picked,
the bushels were culled for the
best apples while the kids un­
wrapped the caramels. Melting,
stirring, dipping and cooling
followed. Finally. It was time for
munching and crunching.
Although times have changed
— today, family orchards arc few
and far between — making
caramel apples Is still an activity
family, friends and especially the
kids will find fun. Whether you
begin In the orchard or at the
produce department In your
favorite supermarket, now Is a
good time to celebrate the cara­
mel apple season.
CINNAMON CARAMEL
APPLES
. Just as cinnamon enhances
the flavor of apples in pies,
cobblers and applesauce, cin­
namon candles add spark to
caramel apples
V* cup cinnamon candles
3 tablespoons water
1 14-oz. bag caramels
? 4-5 medium size apples
Wooden sticks
Melt cinnamon candles with 1
tablespoon water in heavy
I 14-quart saucepan over low
heat, stirring frequently until
melted. Add remaining water
and caramels, stirring frequently
until smooth. Stir in few drops
red food coloring. WAsh and dry
apples; insert stick Into stem end
of each apple. Dip Into hot
cinnamon caramel sauce; turn
until coaled. Scrape off excess
sauce from bottom of apples.
Place on greased wax paper.
Store In refrigerator. Let stand at
room temperature 15 minutes
before serving to allow caramel
mixture to soften.
To Microwave: Microwave
c i n n a m o n c a n d l e s and 1
tablespoon water In small, deep,
glass bowl on high 2 minutes;
stir. Add car ame l s and 2
tablespoons water. Microwave
„on high 214-314 minutes, or until
, sauce is smooth, stirring after
each mi nute. Cont i nue as
directed above. ( If caramel sauce
Is too thin, let stand about 2
minutes before dipping apples.)
SPIKED CARAMEL APPLES
Caramel apples, spiked with a
liqueur of almost any flavor, arc
a new way for adults to enjoy
this seasonal favorite. Experi­
ment with your favorite liqueur
or try these suggestions from the
Kraft Kitchens.
1 14-oz. bag caramels
2 t abl espoons orange or
almond flavor liqueur
4-5 medium size apples
Wooden sticks
Melt caramels with liqueur In
heavy lV4-quart saucepan over
low heat, stirring frequently un­
til smooth. Wash and dry apples;
Insert stick Into stem end of each
apple. Dip Into hot caramel
sauce; turn until coated. Scrape
off excess sauce from bottom of
apples. Place on greased wax
paper. Store In refrigerator. Let
stand at room temperature 15
minutes before serving to allow
caramel to soften.
To Microwave: Microwave
caramels and liqueur In small,
deep, glass bowl on high 2V4-3'/4
minutes, or until sauce is
• smooth, stirring after each
minute. Continue as directed
above. (If caramel sauce is too
thin, let stand about 2 minutes
before dipping apples.)
Delicious on a stick, these
adult treats are even easier to cat
when cut Into btte-slzc wedges.
Just remove the sticks and slice
Into eight pieces. Serve with icc
cream. If desired.

CHOCOLATE FUDOIE
paper.
AP PLES
4.1 Store tn refrigerator. Let
stand at room temperature 15
Just one taste of this rich and
minutes before serving to allow creamy coating will confirm why
caramel to soften.
chocolate sauce has long been
To Microwave:
renowned as a flavorful dipper
Place unwrapped caramels In for fruit.
a small, deep, glass bowl.
1 14-oz. bag chocolate fudglcs
Add water.
1 tablespoon milk
Microwave on high for 2*/4-3,4
4-5 medium size apples
minutes, or until sauce Is
Wooden sticks
smooth, stirring nftcr carl:
Chocolate shots
minute. Continue with Step 2 as
Melt fudglcs with milk In
directed.
heavy 114-quart saucepan over
If caramel sauce ts too thin, let low heat, stirring frequently un­
stand about 2 minutes before til smooth. Wash and dry apples;,
dipping apples.
insert stick into stem end of each

apple. Dip into hoi duge sauce;
turn until coated. Scrape off
excess sauce from bottom of
apples: dip In chocolate shots.
Place on greased wax paper.
Store tn refrigerator. Let stand at
room temperature 15 minutes
before serving to allow caramel
tosoftcti.
V a ria tio n : Mocha: Dissolve 2
teaspoons instant coffee
granules in 1 tablespoon hot
water. Substitute for milk. Con­
tinue as directed above.
To Microwave: Microwave
chocolate fudglcs nnd milk In
small, deep, glass howl on high

4-5 medium size apples
Wooden sticks
Chopped peanuts
Melt carnmrls. peanut butter
and water tn heavy 1'4-quart
saucepan over low heat, stirring
frequently until smooth. Wash
and dry npplcs: Insert stick Into
stem end of each apple. Dip into
hot caramel sauce: turn until
coated. Scrape off excess sauce
from bottom of apples. Dtp In
nuts. Place on greased wax
paper. Store in refrigerator. Let
stand at room temperature 15
minutes before serving to allow
caramel to soften.

2'/4-3V4 minutes, or until sauce Is
smooth, stirring after each
minute. Continue as directed
nbove. (If caramel sauce Is too
thin, let stand nbout 2 minutes
before dipping apples.)
PEANUT BUTTER
CARAMEL APPLES
Two of America's favorite
flavors — peanut butter and
caramel — unite to provide this
tempring apple wrap. Chopped
peanuts add extra crunch!
1 14-oz. bag caramels
2 tablespoons creamy peanut
butter
2 tablespoons water

D O U BLE C O U P O N S G O O D THURSDAY,
1. W e will accept but not double tree coupons Also we cannot accept rebate coupons.

REDEMPTION
RULES

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS., SEPT. 26 THRU WED„
OCT. 2.1965, NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL
ERRORS QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.

Z Rawsons Super Valu store coupons are not included In this offer,
a Sales tax must be paid according to state law.

WHERE OUR
NAME
IS YOUR
GUARANTEE!
f

PER POUND

TOP QUALITY
FRESH PORK SLICED

S |9 9

EXTRA LEAN
FRESH GROUND
BEEF ROUND

QUARTER LOIN.
SIRLOIN CHOPS
OR COUNTRY STYLE

PORK RIBS
TOP QUALITY FRESH

A

Pork Butts........ l b

1 • 1

CUMBERLAND GAP
SMOKED OR

A rfW

4

Polish Sausage LB1 # 5 9
U S D A. TOP CHOICE
TOP OR BOTTOM

4

A

Round Steak .. lb! * 7 7
K &gt;l‘ ( Jt JAI II Y

FRESH PORK
SPARE RIBS
Ml I &gt;i i Jr.1 ' ,i.M

i • l i l t ’,' ! f tf&lt; r t ii in i j :

$

f

l

9

U S I) A

BONELESS
ROUND STEAK

$139
DAIRY
AXELRODS
YOGURT

$ |5 9
f

A

$ 2 4 9

Arrid Powder

...2*29 B

2.5-02 LAND O'FROST
ASSORTED VARIETY

__ __
f ^ A

4

C

1 ^

Rump R oast... lb I • “

Chipped Meats3/ * * 9 9

OLOTOWNE

SLICED, MEAT. BEEF OR THICK

fV A

Roll Sausage........

l b

*

4

A

1 7 Lykes Bologna™™!. 4 9

SLICED
BACON
’ l HM* &lt;,

SEALTEST
POLAR
BARS

BIRDSEYE

6 COUNT

CHEESE
SAUCE

$ |9 9

ASST D VARIETIES

1.89
.99

..... 1.69

4 ? A

U.S.D.A. TOP CHOICE
BONELESS

4 AA

99 *

Mns * INSERS

Cole Slaw ..... i2ozpkq*0 « J

HOMEMADE CARAMEL
1 2 0 2 SLICED
a-OZ ASST 0 VARIETIES
im
APPLES
REGULAR OR COLBY
Kraft Cheese........
1 14-oz. bag caramels
M orton Pot Pies . 3
2 tablespoons water
1 LB FLEI8 H M A N N S CORN OIL
10.5-OZ WEIGHT WATCHERS
A
4-5 medium size apples
Margarine
Qtrs......
1
t
U
9
Spaghetti
w/MEAT SAUCE M •
Wooden sticks
4 CT t-O Z BUTTERMILK
to-oz GREEN OIANT
OR COUNTRY STYLE
1. ) Unwrap caramels
CREAM CORN OR
Place caramels and water In
1002
J H
Pillsbury Biscuits
Leaf S pinach..........
heavy 114-quart saucepan
Cook over low heat, stirring
frequently until caramels are
M I N I M I M A ID
melted and sauce ts smooth.
2.
) Place sheet of wax paper on
cookie sheet.
YOUR CHOICE
Lightly grease wax paper with
MAXI PADS
margarine.
ULTRA BRITE
30 CT THIN.
Wash and dry apples.
TOOTH­
R EG . OR 26 CT
Insert a wooden stick Into
1•W 4 i AJ&lt; 1 1H 1
r. * •
* 1
THIN SUPER
PASTE
stem end of each apple. During
*i-i
1
1,■
autumn, wooden BUcks are In­
4 0Z SPRAY. DOUBLE XX
cluded In bags of Kraft caramels
which are specially marked.
3.
) Holding stick, dip apples,
one at a lime. Into hot caramel
sauce, tilting sauce pan and
turning until well coated.
Scrape off extra sauce from
bottom o f apple with spatula.
SANFORQ 2944 ORLANDO ROAD. ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER OF 1 / « * OALANOO ROAD
Place apples on greased wax

HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS
KOTEX

A

Round Steak .. lbI * 7 7

FROZEN

99 c

$189

79 *

MEAT OR BEEF

$|39

KRAFT

LONGHORN
CHEESE

FLAVORITE
WIENERS

PI AN I A 1 ION

!( JP ( HOIC [

M il l C U I

DAIRY

A

12-OZ PKG

PER POUND

U.S.D.A. TOP CHOICE
CUBED BOTTOM

7

/
/s -D E L I

MEAT

MEAT

c

ORANGE
JUICE

$|59

ASSORTED VARIETIES
10-OZ FROZEN

§ A

/1 •
£

99

A

*99

-------------------------------- 1
1i MCI Mil H ,( I A I I M

A

LAYER
CAKE
11f [ f |

’

i i.' i

A* '

mi

\

1|

i.’ i rj

$179

�Sweet potatoes will soon be
available and plentiful, as they
are In greatest supply from
October through the winter
months. There urc two types.
The drier, tan skin, pale flesh
sweet pototo and the moist,
s w e e t , d e e p - o r a n g e fl esh
southern yam. In most recipes
t h e y c a n be u s e d I ntcrchangcably.
Choose chunky medium-sized
sweet potatoes or yams that arc
smooth and firm and free of
decay. Keep In a dry cool place,
but do not refrigerate.
Yams can also be purchased
frozen or canned. When a recipe
calls for a canned yam. you can
use fresh yams, microwave them
whole as you would white
potatoes, cool then, remove the
skin, and prepare as directed in

Microwave Magic

Glaze For Yams
Very Similar To
Praline Topping

Evening Hsrsld, Sanford,

Midge
M y c o ff
Home Economist
Seminole
Community College

recipe.

This sample recipe has a glaze
similar to u praline topping.
NEW ORLEANS YAMS
lA cup butler
Vb cup pecan halves
V i cup packed brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
12 ounces canned yams,
drained (reserve liquid)
In a shallow 2-quart casserole,
melt butter on 100% power
(about 1 minute). Add the

pecans, stir and microwave 2-3
minutes. Add brown sugar and
Vb cup of reserve liquid and
vanilla. Microwave on 100%
power 3 minutes. Stir. Add yams
and gently turn to coat In the
liquid. Microwave, uncovered. 2
minutes. Turn the yams and
microwave 2-3 minutes, or until
heated through.
Plan to serve these sweet
potatoes with roast pork, fresh
green beans, and Waldorf salad.
The cinnamon flavor for the
glaze comes from the red can­
dles.
CINNAMON GLAZED
SWEET POTATOES
V* cup margarine
V* cup honey

SEPT. 26 THRU WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2, 1985.
4 We will dtwbte coupon value on all manufacturer coupons lor Herns in stock except tobacco and cigarettes. No reinchscks or substitutions.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS., SEPT. 26 THRU WED..
OCT. 2, 1985. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL
ERRORS. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.

a We will double only the lire! coupon on the same. Hem. Any additional coupons ol like Items win be redeemed lor face value only.

COME SEE l IS N O W
CLO RO X
BLEACH

S
4 8 C | $ | 4 9 | $ Q 49
:\ SI \ i MUN&lt; H

S'
S' O
U Fr F
r L
LA
AB
BE
LL
L
ONE GGALLON
A l LON

DILLS

H

J L / 1 L L O

■

’

n

,

■in o :

H

3

|A 1)
JAM
,A H

5

M
k T

B

M

i

•

RAT HHOOM

TISSUE

JJ Cl loom I Ft 66 Cl

W H IT E

N t W B O U N 4« C l [)A Y T 1 M [
OR 40 C l ( X t R A A R S O R O F N !

o n

ASSOF1TEO

•l MOl 1 RA( K

1J Cl TODDt I Ft 66 Cl
Ml WBOflN 46 Cl OAYTIMt
OR 40 CM I JURA AUSOMHFNI

LE SUEUR
PEAS

DORITOS
CHIPS

59c«i

14 75 0 2

FRANCO AMERICAN.

g % #

A

A

Spaghetti...... Z / . 8 9
13-OZ BAG

Sanka Coffee
ELECTRIC PERK OR ADC

.

IW

a,

f% f%

9 .2 9
a-OZ INSTANT
Sanka Coffee ... 5 • 2 9
m

tsoz R ta on hot w ith

CAMPBELL’S
SOUP
10.75-OZ CAN
CHUNKY VEGETABLE

SALTED OR UNSALTED
16-OZ BOX

17-OZ CAN

11-OZ PKG

1C

NABISCO
SALTINES

gro cery

S\ *4

REGULAR OR NACHO

4

MUSHROOM OR MARINARA

ComeTBeef...

4 *4 %

Hormel Chili .89 Prego "SB® 11.....1.69
,2/1# ClOTOXII
™
Mahatma Rice 4/1 •
House sauce1*07
bean s

IM Z MUED

A

V e g -A ll

J *

W-OZ 20* OFF LABEL

VEGETABLES

s o z v S low

A

t

apple

11 S

NC)

. 2

9

M u n g r y ' i a c h " . " 1' ' .

. 9

9

f l A

|

X

50Zrcestershire

Q

sauce*

1

WHITE
POTATOES

&gt;&lt;5

1

There are delicious desserts
made with sweet potatoes. The
one we most often have of course
Is sweet potato pie. but have you
ever had the other old southern
favorite Grated Sweet Potato
Pudding? This microwave
version saves 1 hour/baklng
time.

2 LBS COMPLETE

B L E A C H ------

j

4

9

R.C. COLA,
R.C. 100

M i 100 SIJGAH f Ml 1 1*111 Mi l l
( ( H A rj| Ml UHANC .1 V! MN&lt; )M S
( ,IN(
M Al 1 Ml i &gt; OH SI JGAM ( M i l

1 0 1 H MAl.

1 W O I 1T E R

99c
IN STORE DELI / BAKERY

PRODUCE

IN THE DELI / BAKERY STORES ONLY

GEORGIA RED

SWEET
POTATOES
PER
POUND
,

25c

CALIFORNIA RED

Seedless Grapeslb
Ripe Tomatoes
Green Peanuts..
YellowCom.
EeUoCarrots.
LARGE FANCY

.L B * 7

. 5

2

( O U N 1 R Y ‘ .(JUIRi

1m

$

|

. 5

9

i m

#

4

CHOCOLATE FUDGE

IMPORTED
POLISH HAM

CHOCOLATE
CAKE

$ J4 9

A

9

’,

I h K I

( 1 1 »\ 1 i .m 1

* &lt;■
C l.’

»■

(

$299

,

WITH TWO VEGETABLES

HALF POUND

AMERICAN* 4 « g
CHEESE
I

m

i .h

s m a ffi a S''.IM'-T.-crr-TT1

FRESH BAKED

KAISER e / 7 9
ROLLS

ORATED SWEET
POTATO PUDDING
1large raw sweet potato
1cup sugar
IW cup milk
Vb cup butter, melted
2 eggs, well beaten
2 teaspoon lemon flavoring
V* teaspoon salt
Grate fresh sweet potato. Place
In 2 quart casserole and cover.
Microwave on 100% power 5
minutes, stirring once. Add
remaining Ingredients and
microwave on 100% power 5-8
minutes, stirring once. Place In a
buttered baking dish and
microwave on 50% power 20-25
minutes.

Sandwiches
American
Institution
Sandwiches have become an
American Institution. Imagina­
tion is the only barrier In
determining the Ingredients of
your favorite concoction.

FRENCH ONION-SAUCED

QA
Onton Rolls 6/. 99
Antipasto Salad *09
c H e k e n b i n n e r 1 * 7 9 PounjTcahe... 1.49
LAND 0 LAKES

i

EACH

#

Vb LB FRESH MADE

LO AVES

| *M /n
/

9

2 /$ A 19

NCI!

BRI A l)

\

3

EARS* 9

KRAKUS

HALF POUND

9

'&lt; ■

S I M ’

W H ITE
BREAD
20 O Z

C A
..lb* 9 9

1 tablespoon red cinnamon
cand’cs
2 teaspoons cornstarch
2 cans (16 ounce each) sweet
potatoes
Microwave margarine In 2
cups glass measure 30-60 sec­
onds or until melted. Stir in
honey, apple pieces, cornstarch,
and candles. Microwave on
100% power 2-3 minutes or until
sauce bolls and thickens and
candles are almost melted, stir­
ring once.
Cut potatoes Into 1 Inch slices.
Place In lVb quart glass casse­
role. Pour glaze over potatoes,
stir gently to coat. Cover with
casserole lid. Microwave on
100% 8-9 minutes or until
heated through.

This casserole Is a good one for
covered dish suppers
SWEET POTATO CASSEROLE
WITH CRUNCHY TOP
3-4 cups sweet potatoes
2 eggs
lA c u p h a l f &amp; h a l f o r
evaporated milk
Vi cup sugar
Vb teaspoon salt
Vb stick butter or margarine
Topping:
VS cup butter
Vi cup brawn sugar
Vb cup flour
1cup nuts (pecan or walnuts)
Cook 3 m e d i u m swee t
potatoes tn microwave for 10-12
minutes. Allow to stand 5
minutes. Remove skin. Place
potatoes, eggs. milk, vanilla,
sugar, salt, and butter In food
processor or mixer and blend
well. Pour In buttered baking
dish and microwave on 100%
power 10-12 minute*, stirring
once.
For topping cut butter into
sugar and flour, adding nuts
last. Sprinkle on top at sweet
potatoes. Microwave on 85%
pow er (m edium -high), 5*7
minutes.

BANNER

HUGGIES
DIAPERS

VLASIC

ms—SB

Fresh, frozen or canned yams
can be used in the preparation or
this recipe which makes a good
accompaniment for chicken or
pork.
ORANOE/SWEET
POTATO CASSEROLE
4 pounds yams
Vi cup brown sugar
Vb teaspoon salt
Vb cup fresh orange Juice
Vb cup butter
1 teaspoon cinnamon
3 eggs
2 tablespoons grated orange
Microwave potatoes for 12-18
minutes. Let stand 5 minutes.
Peel the potatoes. Microwave the
butter, and mash the potatoes
In. Mix in the remaining Ingre­
dients. Spoon into 2 quart casse­
role dish. Microwave for 5
minutes on 100% power. Reduce
power to 70% and microwave for
8-12 minutes more. Garnish
with orange slices and almonds.

SUPERV/ALU

5 I he coupon value cannot exced 99c and total redemption cannot exceed the coet ol the Item.

Wsdnstday, Sapt. u,

Vi cup apple Juice

MANUFACTURER’S RAWSONS
COUPONS
YOUR MANUFACTURER’S
COUPONS ARE WORTH TWICE AS MUCH
WHEN YOU REDEEM THEM AT
PANTRY PRIDE

FI.

«

2 targe onions, thinly sliced (3
cups)
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
2 tablespoons cornstarch
2 tablespoons cold water
1 lOVb-ounce can condensed
beefbroth
Vk teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
Sliced cooked beef
French bread slices
Dairy sour cream
In 1-quart casserole combine
onions and butter. Cover: place
In microwave oven.
Cook onions at high for 6
minutes till tender, stirring once.
Combine cornstarch and water;
add to onions with beef broth
and Worcestershire. Cook at
high for 3 minutes till bubbly,
stirring alter each minute. Serve
with sliced beef on French bread
slices. Top with sour cream.

�• 1

6 B — E v e n in g H e r a ld , S a n fo r d , F I.

BLONDIE
~T1T l JUST REAP HO

W e d n e s d a y , S cp l. 25, 1985

by Chic Yoijng

J U S T THINK O P TRAVELING
a l l t h a t O iS T A N C E
W HAT 0 R A V E R V '.'

MAGELLAN

and

w it h o u t o n e

C R E P fT C A R O

•31,

k v

%

l
•TV4v .

M f

v r*&gt;
by Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

IF YOU A 5 K M E T H E R E fe
T O O M U C H P LA Y IN T H IS
W HEEL

"N

(S I
CAMP''

Sl*JAMPY&lt;
A-Zb"

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

WAT'S NOJROflWlCNOF

ITS WOT WORTH THE FDWCe£
TD BLOW IT TD

MV WOPK OH TUB
^M O O TFELT P I9 0 0 E C T ?

/

VOU'RE TDD -5 E L F O K lT IC A L ,,.T E U .

6 M IT W B P E E W S

xrn ~

ARCHIE

by Bob Montana
WOULP YOU PLEASE BRING
HIM A KNIFE ANP FORK ANP
TAKE BACK THOSE CHOPSTICKST

W A IT E R T

\

/

&lt;f&lt;C

EEK A MEEK

by Howie Schneider

THE BUSIUKft UJOPLD HAS
GOX MAD.. MBC HAS (WED
TOTAKE OER CBS...

MACV5 HAS STARTEDA DRIVE
TDACQUIRE GlMttLS...COfc£
15MAKUOG A STR00S6RAB
RDR PERSI...

THERL5S0 MLCH BTODPOJTHE
BIG SOARD, BOB HOPE HAS
AGREED T) DOHtSCHWSTMA5
SM ououm sr

D&amp;C
May Be Necessary
To Remove Fibroid Tumor
DEAR DR. GOTT - I am a
38-ycar-oltl female. About three
years ago my periods got pro­
gressively heavier, lengthier and
more painful. They are now
eight to 12 days long, with flow
of onc-and-a-half to two pints.
My gynecologist found a small
fibroid tumor, but Isn't con­
cerned. Do you have any Insight
Into this problem?
DEAR READER - Fibroids arc
benign growths arising from the
Inner surface of the uterus. They
arc common In middle-aged
women. Except for contributing
to heavy menstrual flow, they do
no hnrm until they become quite
large. Their behavior Is quite
unpredictable; they may sud­
denly "degenerate” and disap­
pear.
I am sure your gynecologist
will wish to monitor the size of
your fibroid, using periodic ul­
trasound or ultrasonic examina­
tions. If your heavy periods
persist, you will have to consider
a uterine scraping (also called a
D&amp;C) and fibroid removal.
Meanwhile, supplement your
diet with hefty amounts of Iron
during your menses: In this way.
you may be able to avoid the
Iron-deficiency anemia that re­
sults from excessive menstrua­
tion.
D E A R DR. G O T T - Is
excessive Iron In drinking water
harmful to adults or young
children?
DEAR READER — We all
ingest Iron In food, drinking
water and (sometimes) our
vitamins. Too much Iron can be
unheal t hy. Your term
"excessive" requires, by defini­
tion. a "yes" answer. However,
the definition of "excessive"
varies, depending on how much
Iron Is being consumed from
olheT sources. Call your local
health department to find our
the safe limits for your commu­
nity. Also, you may wish to have
the Iron content of your water
analyzed by an Independent lab.
Ordinarily, by the time large
quantities of the mineral appear
In your water, the tap water will
be yellow or brown and will
harm your while laundry to a
greater extent that ll will upset
your body.
If there Is significant Iron In
your water, there will he addi­
tional compounds present, too.
You may wish to Investigate the

presence of hydrocarbons, lead
and other substances that arc
more hazardous than iron.
DEAR DR. GOTT - I have
been told 1 have an Irritable
colon. I usually feel very shaky
and Jittery before each bowel
movement. Afterwards, I feel
rcully weak and sore on the left
side of my stomach and I
become short of breath. What
can be done for tills?
DEAR READER — Yours must
he the granddnddy of Irritable
colons. The presence of shaki­
ness. weakness, pain and brenthA C R O SS

Answer to Previous Puizla

1v E
1A C
Ti T
_ ■ _A

DOWN
1 Motoring asso­
ciation (abbr.)
2 Glossy fabric
3 Trollsy
4 Arab country
5 Fates
6 Roadster

R B A L
O R N S
L 1 S T
E _T

7 Plunk

B Yearbook
9 Wordless actor
10 Palestinian
coint
1112, Roman
19 Singer Horne
21 Money (si.)
24 Cily in
Iowa
25 Madam (cont.)
26 Other
28 Loading man
30 Skirt feature
31 Bluofin
32 Safecracker

Terkenton
17 1051, Roman
18 Novelist Zola
20 Unclothed
persons
22 Former nuclear
agency (abbr.)
23 Accounting
agency (abbr.)
24 Soul (Fr.)
2 7 ____ degree
29 Robust
(•I)
33 Glucoseforming eniyme
35 Adhesive
12
substance
is
36 Comfort
37 Lace ornament
10
40 Separata metal
from ora
42 Volga tributary
26
43 Price label
44 Be situated
33
46 Arikara
48 Overturn
36
50 Wind (comb,
form)
40
53 2050. Roman
54 East Indian
cereal grass
56 Old English
”
com
58 Nigerian tribe
SB
59 Not closed

49 Snow removal
implement
51 “
Breckinridge
52 Acorn end
products
53 1004, Roman
55 Coagulate
57 Landing boat

34
38
39
41

Says
Soviet state
City in France
Car part
(2 wds)
45 Warehouse
47 Spooky
48 Shield boss
6

1

10

11

20

31

32

St

S2

■
r

14
1

is

r

17

n
10

it

21

33
27

■
*1

20
3S
27

3S It

44

■

SB

ss

14

B7

,

60 Displeases
61 Make a
promise

S e n d y o u r q u e s tio n .* to l ) r
H o lt n l n.O . B o x H 142H . C lo v e .
K in d. O h io . 4 4 1 0 1

63 Direction

1 New Testament
book
S Minutes of
court
9 2010, Roman
12 Wall-ventilated
13 Young deer
14 3, Roman
15 Sandarac tree
16 Football player

lessncss Indicate your bowel
problem Is far more Involved
than the simple, ordinary type of
irritable colon.
If your colon Is so spastic that
ft can cause such symptoms,
you should be under the care of
a gastroenterologist. Irritable
colon Is usually u handicap, not
a disability.

61

67

62 Strike out

25

(ClIVUS I,, M A

WIN AT BRIDGE
*» ar
by Hargreaves A Sellers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
&amp;&gt;*•* &gt;wr&gt;*&lt;*&lt; r a i» » i

f

-------/ TH E M A L E 1$ CALL.ED A \
STALLION 'THE FEMALE
^---------------------- L—^ IS CALLED A M A R £ J
V
A /U C L l l-rfc
J L lA V _____ _ .____
_________ _^
WHEN
ITSr rouhie,
A HORSE IS
CALLED A FOAL

and

w h e n rr£
it s c a l l e d

OLD,
A HACK •

pMlS&gt;S ! WHEN
A HORSE CALLED
A HORSE P

V

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

T h a t m o b w in s c a r r o t
JUICE CAN Rc A llV P l/T
A 5 PRiNe IN YOUR STEP

GLua

By Janies Jacoby
A takeout double In the
pass-out position can he made
on very moderate values, as little
as nine or 10 high-card points.
It’s different immediately after
an opening hid, when your
takeout double should clearly
tell your partner that you could
have o p e n e d the b i d d i n g
yourself. Because of that uncer­
tainty relating to North's double.
South was not sure he should
risk a three-heart hid. He felt OK
when he was raised to four, since
he did have u five-card suit, a
second sull in clubs and a quick
trick In spades.
When the spade king hit the
table, declarer evaluated his

G L l KS

chances. Can you do the same?
Surely If West held either red
king, he would have kept the
bidding open. So there was no
future in trying a finesse for
cither red king. Instead. South
won the spade ace and played a
club to the king. East won the
ace. cashed the queen of spades
and got out with a club. Declarer
had to be careful now. First he
played the heart ace. Then he
tried the third round or clubs.
East discarding. Only now did
declarer play a second heart.
East won the king and had the
unpleasant choice of cither
leading Into the A-Q of diamonds
or giving declarer a slufT and a
rufi and his contract.

Itlll
NORTH
48 4
a a y io 8
♦ AQB3
4 K0 4
WEST
EAST
♦ K2
4q.l 10 7 6 5 3
a 76
4K4
♦ J 9 54 2
♦ K6
49 8 6 5
4 A2
SOUTH
4 A9
a J 9 53 2
♦ 10 7
4J 107 3
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Weil
North East
South
14
Pass
Pau
Dbl
24
3a
Pass
4a
Pass
Pais
Pais
Opening lead: 4 K

HOROSCOPE
A

* * \\

FRANK A N D ERNEST

by Bob Thavee

BUREAU OF
MISSING

U H -O H ,

— Cc \ \

« RS 0 W

L o o fr L lfc £

M p . / V l c W h ip T L E

(SOT A W A Y A G A I N .

J '

T

hames

9 -^ 5

* »• r.M ♦ —

by Jim Davis

GARFIELD

STATIC ELECTRICITY*
IS A W O N D E R F U L
_
T H IN G

£ IMS uriiUrd tvalufr 5»r-3 *i* tr*

. ru-iKV ,,

P
HAMHOCKEK5 L IT n tR lN G l

h b V7s h e r i f f * H IL P E W

THE OLD HANK/

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Family problems should not
be discussed In the presence of
outsiders today. Open disputes
YOUR BIRTHDAY
will make everyone look bad and
SEPTEMBER 26. 1986
resolve nothing.
Unique or original Ideas you
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. 19)
get in the year ahead should al
least be given a chance to prove Hard feelings will result today If
themselves. Seeds of success can you take credit for things others
be sown from your fertile Imagi­ have done. Stay out of the
sputlight If you haven't earned
nation.
LIBR A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) it.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh. 19)
Establish a sensible schedule
1
f
regarding your workload today.
If you try to crowd loo much In. you shop Impulsively today,
there’s a strong chance you'll
you might end up accomplishing
nothing. Major changes are respond to sales pitches and buy
ahead for Libra ns In the coming things you really don't need.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
year. Send for your Aslro-Graph
Lack
of willpower today might
predictions today. Mall SI to
Astro-Graph, c/o tills newspaper. allow a setback to deter you from
Box 1846. Ci nci nnati , OH achieving an objective. Instead
of regrouping and trying again.
45201.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOV.22) Be
extra mindful of your behavior Today. If you can help people
In social situations today. Do who have been kind to you,
nothing that could give one who don't let the opportunity slip by.
You'll be remorseful later if vou
dislikes you a chance to gossip.

I'M G M rrM A M P Y i
IlMaiLWTLlKBVtWAF
oMsu- with vtxjn TOnfcue,

by Leonard Starr

PO YOU HEAR ME, TOHSER'.
COME HERE /MMEP/ATEL V I
OR J SHALL SEOULTE
CROSS WITH YOU/

1

A

*

- / TH/HM THE PO 0
OH, PEAR/
YOU'RE LOOHJHO FOR HOLPHW
FO R M £,
!€&gt; OVER H E R E /
PLEASE/

-HE- UM_KINP0J
STRUCH UP AN ^ OM ‘

:■

acquaintance

WITH MY P06-

2 3

R IP P E D O U t ,

.Jk

look the other way.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) It's
best not to take gambles today
on ventures that arc outside of
your field of expertise. Your lack
of knowledge could prove costly.
OEMINI (May 21-June 20) To
gratify your ego and prove
others wrong today, you might
be tempted to take an unpopular
p o s i t i o n t hat w i l l a n g e r
associates.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Decisions that have an effect
upon your work or career should
be based upon your logic today,
not your emotions. Keep feelings
In check.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be
extra careful In Joint ventures
today, especially If there arc
costs Involved. Make sure the;
expenses are distributed equally. '
VIROO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22):
Partnership arrangements could.
he more of a hindrance than a
help today. Instead of relying on
others, try to fend for yourself.

ANNIE

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEW EEDS

What The Day
Will Bring...

lli

lit.

F /r i

1 *•JftJKi

.! v»

• * - -r- r

- -

t ■

I !

*.*«£»

'* * . «•-•• -cr-f&gt;r *. V, *» 7V\
&lt;0 *

r

*

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednetday, Sept. 25,

Legal Notice

legal Notice

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A

THIS NOTICE: (11 alt claims
against Ihe estate And ( I I any
objections by an Interested
person lo whom notice was
mailed that challenges Ihe valid
Ity ol the will, Ihe qualifications
ol the personal representative,
or Ihe venue or lurlsdlcllon ol
the court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W IL L
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publlcetlon ol this Notice has
begun on September t l, 1**!.
Personal Representative
JANET C. PILKING TO N
ARTHUR H .P IL K IN G T O N
7310 SEMedlton Street
Stuart, Florida 334*7
Attorney for
Personal Representative:
MACK N. C LEVELAND . JR..
ESQUIRE
C L E V E L A N D S BRIDGES
Post Office Drawer Z.
Sanford. FL 37771
Telephone (MS) 377 1314
Publish: September 11,71,1*8!
OEJ 117

TONIGHT'S TV
w to fc s iw

—

EVENING

6:00

B

9 i 9 ) O ® O new s
I D (35) JEFFERSONS
f f i (10) MAC NEIL / LEHflER
NEW9HOUR

6:30
O G L ) NBC NEWS
9 1 0 CBS NEWS
® O ABC NEWS g
9 1 (39) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT When Muriel's reel mother
arrives at the Rush home, Muriel reluseslO lalk lo her
OX C A R O L B U R N E T T AND
FRIENDS
O M 8) LAVERNE A SHIRLEY

designed to blackmail make Carr­
ington Stars John Forsylhe and
Joan Collins q
&lt;U) (35) QUINCY
CD (10) MOVIE "Under Milk Wood"
(1971) Richard Burton. Paler
O'Toole Based on the play by
Dylan Thomas The inhabitants ol a
Welsh fishing village reveal their
dreams and reflect on Ihe dynamics
of life q
Cl) O GEORGE BURNS COMEDY
WEEK Transplanted New Yorker
Robert Galvin (Eugene Levy) en­
counters some strange new neigh­
bors in Florida

Locklear, an artlsl who paints por­
traits ol cars
(Z) O JEOPARDY
i l l ; (SS)BARNEY MILLER
8 ) (10) CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE:
WHAT YOUR CHILDREN SHOULD
KNOW Uncomfortable and some­
times dangerous situations for ado­
lescents acted out by the Minneap­
olis Illusion Theater Company are
discussed by teen-agers In the au­
dience q
9 1 MARY TYLER MOORE
CD ( I ) CARSON'S COMEDY CLAS­
SICS

B 9 ) 8T. ELSEWHERE Westphall
(Ed Flanders) returns trom Ethiopia
eager to erect some new policies at
Ihe hospital, Craig reluctantly
agrees lo visit his son's pregnant
wife
9 l O EQUALIZER McCall |ourneys
into Ihe seamy underworld ol New
York's Chinatown district to locate
a housekeeper s kidnapped son
Actress-singer Karen Akens makes
a guesl appearance
(7 ) O HOTEL iSeason Premiere)
Mrs Cabot aids Ihe hotel's oldest
employee, two professionals share
romance. Christine Is traumallied
by a schuophrentc man (Patrick
Duffy I Stars James Brolin and Con­
nie SeMecca q
9 1 (IS ) INDEPENDENT NEWS
QD (8) POLICE WOMAN

7:30
O d ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with Stephanie Zimballsl
0 ) 0 PRICE IS RIGHT
® O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(Ml (15) BENSON
91’ BASEBALL Atlanta Braves al
Cincinnati RedifLive)
C D d ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

8:00

B

9 J HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN Dur­
ing their assignment at Camp Good
Times. Mark and Jonathan attempt
to reconcile terminally in youngster
Jason Winner (Joshua Miller) with
his embittered rock-slar lather
(P a r tlo ljjq
(5 ) O 8TIR CRAZY Skip and Harry
(Joseph Guyaldo. Larry Riley) pose
as candy vendors when they travel
to Ihe nation's capital in search of
the Tattooed Man |M C Gainey)
(X) Q INSIDERS (Premiere) Free­
lance reporter Nick For (Nicholas
Campbell| learns up with a dashing,
ei-con named Mackey (Stoney
Jackson) to get the scoop on fast­
breaking stories Tonight, an arson­
ist plagues Ihe fashion industry q
9 1 (15) KART TO HART
S ) ( 10) ON STAGE AT WOLF TRAP
Mstislav Rostropovich conducts Ihe
National Symphony Orchestra's
performance ol Dmtln Shostako­
vich's Symphony No S
( D 0 ) MOVIE The Ballad Ol Cable
Hogue" (1970) Jason Robards.
Stella Stevens Abandoned by his
partners, a wtrened old prospector
sets up a prosperous way station
and plots revenge

9:00

B

'4 HELL TOWN A con man
charms Ihe folks at SI Dominic's
and claims to be Hardstep s natural
father
9 ) O CHARLIE A COMPANY The
Richmonds annual camping trip is
cancelled when Charlie (Flip Wilson)
is called in lo work q
® O DYNASTY (Season Prem­
iere) The revolutionaries who
slaged an attack during Ihe royal
wedding hold several of the guests
at gunpoint in a com pie &gt; scheme

10:15
9 1 MOVIE
"Rocky Mountain"
(19501 Errol Flynn. Patrice Wymore
Confederate and Union soldiers
toms together to tight off attacking
Indians

CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
CD (8) FAT ALBERT

8:35

2:00

9 :0 0
8 9J DIVORCE COURT
9 ) O DONAHUE
I ® O TIC TAG DOUGH
ill. (35) WALTONS
(10) SESAME STREET (R| Q
CD( 8) BRADY BUNCH

Byrnes. Chris Noel

CD Q CBS NEWS NIOMTWATCH
(JJ o MOVIE "Leave Her To Heav­

CD

en" (1945) Gene Tierney. Cornel
Wilde

0:05

3:00

1 1 HAZEL

0:30

3:30
3:50
9 1 WORLD AT LARGE

0:35

4:00

9 1 1 LOVE LUCY

01 (35) AHODA
91 LUCY SHOW

10:00
a 9 ) YOUR NUMBER'S UR
9 ) 0 HOUR MAGAZINE
(7) OTBARNABY JONES
(35) BIO VALLEY
(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (FT)
CD ( 8 ) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

4:30

01 (35) RHODA

1 1 HOGAN'S HEROES

a

MORNING

10:05
(H MOVIE

5:00

10:30

9 ) O THE SAINT (TUE-FRI)
0 1 (35| NEWS
9 1 GET SMART

B 9 ) s a l e OF THE CENTURY
CD (10) 3-2-1 CONTACT g
CD(8) ODO COUPLE

6:00

11:00

6:30

11:30
O 9 ) TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson Scheduled Michael Landon.
Glenn Close
9 ) O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
X ) O ABC NEWS NIOHTUNE
9 1 (3 5 ) HAWAII FIVE-0
CD(8)HOGAN'S HEROES

12:00

T.J. HOOKER (Season
Premiere) Hooker comes 10 the res­
cue when a killer threatens his e iwile Stars Willism Shitner snd
Heather Locklear.
( I ) O COMEDY BREAK WITH
MACK ANO JAMIE
1 1 MOVIE ' Banyon Walk Up And
Die" (1971) Robert Forster. Darren
McGavtn
CD(■) MOVIE "Meet Danny Wilson"
(1950| Frank Sinatra. Shetlay
Winters

12:30
B 9 ) LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Scheduled comedian
Steven Wright
® o MOVIE Abe Lincoln In Illi­
nois
|1940) Raymond Massay,
Ruth Gordon
9 1 (IS ) CHICO ANO THE MAN

B

Q D O M E R V GRIFFIN
91 (35) THUN0CRCAT8 g
89 (10) SESAME STREET [R )g
9 1 FLINTSTONES (TUE. WED)
CD(8) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE

1:30
9 ) O AS THE WORLD TURNS
(35) GOMER PYLE
(10) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

B

2:00

9 ) another w orld
® G O N E LIFE TO LIVE
91 (35) ANOY GRIFFITH
O ) (10) ALOHA CHINA (WED)
CD (10) WORLO CHESS CHAMPI­
ONSHIP (THU)
CD (10) PAINTING WITH ILONA
(FRI)

4:05
1 1 FLINTSTONES (MON. THU. FRI)

4:30
9 ) O THREE’S COMPANY
9 1 (35) TRANSFORMERS
&lt;11 BRADY BUNCH (TUE, WED)
CD (8) SHE-PA: PRINCESS OF
POWER

2:30
9 ) 0 CAPITOL
91 (35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
CD(10) INNOVATION (MON)
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
W ED )
CD &lt;101 MAGIC BRUSH OF GARY
JENKINS (THU)
CD (10) MAGIC OF WATERCOL-

OftS (FRI)

B

3:00

9 ) SANTA BARBARA
9 ) O GUIDING LIGHT
® O GENERAL HOSPITAL
91 (35) 8COOBY OOO
CD(10) FLORID ASTYLE
CD(8)CARE BEARS

3:05
1 1 BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS
(MON-WED, FRI)

3:15
1 1 BUGS BUNNY AND FRIENDS
(THU)

3.3O

B 9 ) MAIN STREET (TUE)
(5 ) O U FT R EN T STROKES

5:00

B 9 ) NEWLYWED GAME
( J J O M 'A ’ S 'H
® O HEADLINE CHASERS
ITT (35) WHAT'S HAPPENINQII
CD (10) OCEANUS (MON)
8 ) (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
8 ) (10) NEW LITERACY: INTRO0UCTWNLTQ COMPUTERS (WED)
f f i (10) MONEY P U Z Z L tftH U )
8) (10) ART OF BEINO HUMAN

IN RE: ESTATE OF
W IL B U R H .C E C IL , a /k /a
W ILBUR HALE CECIL
D e c e a s e d
NOTICE OF
ADM IN ISTR A TIO N
The adm inistration ol Ihe
estate of W ILBUR H CECIL,
a /k /a W ILBUR HALE CECIL,
d e c e a s e d , F ile N u m b e r
15-590 CP. Is pending In the
C irc u it Court for Seminole
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , P r o b a le
Division, the address of which Is
Post Office Drawer C, Sanford.
Florida, 37771.
The names and addressas of
the personal represanlatlve and
tha personal representative's
attorney are set forth below.
AH Interested persons are
required to file with this court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FROM THE DATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F

LEAVE IT TO BEAVER (TUE.
WED)
CD (8) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

5:05
1 1 LEAVE rr TO BEAVER (MON.
THU, FRI)

5:30

B 9 ) PEOPLE'S COURT

01
(1 8 ) JA YC E A N D TH E
WHEELED WARRIORS
CD(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

(D (8) MA.8.K.
4:00
B 9 ) AMERICA (MON. WED-FRI)

4:35
1 1 BRADY BUNCH (MON. THU.
FRI)

PROBATE DIVIS IO N
F ile N um ber U -lfO -C P

910 ®

O NEWS

9® (18) ALICE
8 1 (1 0 ) OCEANUS (MON)
8 9 (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
O (10) NEW LITERACY: M TROOUCTKJN TO COMPUTERS (WED)
S&gt;&lt; 10) MONEY P U ZZL I (THU)

12:00
B 9 )M O O A Y
9 ) 0 ® B new s
9 1 (38) BEWITCHED
CD (10) NATURE OF THINGS
(MON)
CD (10) MASTERPIECE T H E A T B
(TUE)
CD (10) MYSTERY! (WED)
8 ) (10) NOVA (THU)
8 9 (10) JACOB BRONOW8KL U f
ANO LEGACY (FRI)
1 1 THIS WEEK M BASEBALL
(THU)
(D (S )M A N N IX

6:45

S

MOVIE (MON-WED, FRI)

AFTERNOON

B 'D N E W S
15) O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
(7J O ABC'S WORLD NEWS THIS
MORNING q
91 (35) TOM AND JERRY
92 FUNTIME
CDdlSUPERFRIENOS

iO

11:30

9 ) SCRABBLE
(7 ) O ALL-STAR BLITZ
8 ) (10) FLORIOASTYLE

91 NEWS
CD (8) BATMAN

EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
) 110) A M . WEATHER

7:00
B 9 ) TODAY
( 5 ) O CBS MORNING NEWS
f&gt; I O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
?t) (15)0.1. JOE
CD&lt;101 FARM 0AY
CD (8) VOLTRON. DEFENDER OF
THE UNIVERSE

12:05
9 1 PERRY MASON (MO 11
FRI)

12:30
B 9 ) SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
9 ) O YOUNG ANO THE RBB&gt;
LESS
t l ) B L O V IN G
9 1 (38) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
9 1 BASEBALL (THU)

7:05
9 1 ALVIN SHOW

7:15
CD (10) A.M. WEATHER

7:30
I I (35)OOBOTS
CD(10) SESAME STREET (R )q
CD( 8 ) ROBOT ECH

7:35
9 1 FLINTSTONES

8:00
(11 (3S| JET SONS
CD(I) HEATHCLIFF

8:05

1:00
(LG (35) AFRICA: CRY OF A CONTT-

B 9 } WHEEL OF FORTUNE
9 ) 0 PRICE IS RIGHT
® O THREE'S A CROWD (R)
9 1 (35) DALLAS
S I (10) WE'RE COOKING NOW
CD (8) IRONSIDE

9 1 t h is WEEK IN COUNTRY
MUSIC (MON)
B " 2'S COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
9 1 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
B 9 ) NBC NEWS
9 J O CSS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
( 7) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
91 (35)O O O D DAY!

CD(81HOGAN'S HEROES

11:00

5:30

10:30

8 (4 ) ( J j Q ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
11 (35) ARCHIE BUNKER’S PLACE
CD1101 DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

B 9 J LOVE CONNECTION
( 7 ) Q JOKER'S WILO
CD (8) MY THREE SONS

(Ql (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

B

H

11 BEWITCHED

91(35) QUNSMOKE
9 1 MOVIE "Beach Bail' &lt;1965) Edd

91) (15) BOB NEWHART
CD (10) FORM COMES OUT OF
CHAOS Susan Stamberg narrates
this look at the tale Sian VanDerBeek at work on Ihe creation ol a
video an piece called "Alter Ihe
Leughler."

CD O

HI (35) FLINTSTONES

0 1 (1 5 ) I LOVE LUCY

10:00

O 9 ) 1100,000 PYRAMID
( I ) O P.M. MAGAZINE Heather

8:30

1:10
( L B MOVIE "A Small Killing"
(1981) Edward Asner, Jaan Sim­
mons

2:30

9:30

7:00

NENT

1:00
8 9 ) DAYS OF OUR LIVES
(7) B A L L MY CHILDREN
9 1 (38) O C K VAN DYKE
CD (10) M O V * (MON. TUE, THU)
S (HR THE EDGE OF SURVIVAL
(WED)
B (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRO
CD (8) MOVIE

1:05

9 1 1DREAM OF JEANNIE

LAKE MARY HIGH SCHOOL BAND
P r e ^ e n t e

Overlooking Laks Monro*
On Hwy. 17-92 Botwoon 14 and Sanford - PH. 322-3108
i

FUND RAISING DRIVE ’85

*

;

SEPTEMBER SPECIAL

CHAMPAGNE DINNER
SERVED 4 PM TIL 8 PM

1 FREE GLASS
OF CHAMPAGNE
WITH EACH DINNER
Choice Of:
CATFISH - PR IM E R IB - C U M ST R IP S
STUFFED DEVIL CRAB P U T E - FRIED SH RIM P P U T E
BR0ILED/FRIED FLOUNDER - FRIED CHICKEN
Dinners Include:
SALAD BAR • ROLLS &amp; BUTTER - HUSH PUPPIE
CHOICE OF FRIED OR BAKED POTATOES

loin Us For

SUN R ISE
BREAKFAST

LARGE

H APPY HOUR

DANCE
FLOOR

At 0or Boat Bor
Tact. • Sir . 4

2 Eggs-Grits
And Toast

p.M. • •

Pm Im Seer
McMaMMotkaa
Cackled* • INS
CadOrhkt
(bake 1 Tag DrtaU

p.

1.SS
9
1.25
.
i.oo
A
125
#
t.M X

SUPPORT LMHS BAND BY SUBSCRIBING
TO THE

*

LIV E
EN TER T A IN M EN T j
NIGHTLY

Evening Herald

Holiday Banquet Facilities
Available - Call 3 2 2 - 3 1 0 8

TAKE

A

FL O R ID A

B R E A K

N

□ Buy a 3 month subscription at our normal rate of $14.25 and we will
donate $3.00 toward the LMHS Fund Raising Drive.
□ Buy a 6 m onth subscription at our normal rata of $27.00 and we will
donate $4.00 toward the LMHS Fund Raising Drive.
C UP AND SAVE

I
I
I
I
I

NAME __
ADDRESS
PHONE __
CLIP AND MAIL □ CHECK FOR $14.25 OR □ CHECK FOR $27.00
EVENING HERALD, P.O. BOX 1657, SANFORD, FLORIDA 32771
OFFER EXPIRES 10-146

�t *

IB —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1985

legal Notice

Legal Notice

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 85 574CP
IN RE : ESTATE OF
LEILA K. FLY
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADM INISTRATION
The adm lnlslratlon ol the
estate ol LEILA K F LY. de
ceased. File Number 85 574 CP.
It pending In the Circuit Court
lor Seminole County, flo rid *.
Probate Dlwltlon. the addrest ol
which It Probate D lv ltlo n .
Seminole County Courthoute.
Sanford. Florida. 32/71
The namet and addrettet ol
the pertonal repreientallve and
the pertonal representative's
attorney are tet forth below
All Interetted pertont are
required to llle with Ihlt court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FROM THE DATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE (1) all clalm t
agalnit the ettale and (2) any
objection! by an Interetted
perton to whom notice wat
mailed that challenget the valid
ity of the will, the qualification!
of the pertonal repretentatlve.
or the venue or |urltdlcllon ol
Ihe courf.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of Ihlt Notice hat
begun on September 18, 1985
Co Pertonal Repretentatlve!
E D W IN W FLY
P O Bo» 57}
Plymouth, FL 32748
J WESLEY FLY
7050 Fawiett Road
Winter P a rt, FL 37789
Attorney for
Pertonal Repretentatlve
PO RTERL PEADEN.JR
SUITE 317. 101 N Magnolia
Avenue
Orlando, Florida37803
Telephone (305) 849 0500
Florida Bar Attorndy No 047011
Publlth: September II, 35, 1985
DEJ 115
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 85 578CP
IN R E ESTATEOF
E L E N A M G REENE
Deceated
NO TIC EO F
ADM INISTRATIO N
The a d m ln litra llo n of the
etlate ol ELENA M G REENE,
d e c e a te d . F ile N u m b e r
85 578 CP. it pending in Ihe
C irc u it Court lor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo r id a
P ro b a te
Division the addrett ol which it
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford Florida. 33771
The name! and add ren ei of
Ihe pertonal repretentatlve and
the pertonal repretentatlve'!
attorney are let forth below
All Interetted perton! are
required to tile with th ii court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FROM THE DATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE (1) all claims
agamtt Ihe ettate and 13) any
objections by an interested
perton to whom notice was
mailed that challenge! Ihe valid
Ity of the will, the qualllicatlont
of the pertonal repretentatlve.
or the venue or luriidictlon ol
the court
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of thii Notice hat
begun on September 18. 1985
Pertonal Repretentatlve
F R E D FONTAINE
2537 Mohawk Ave
Sanford. FL 33771
Attorney for
Pertonal Repretentatlve
DOUGLAS STEN STR O M ,
E S Q U IR E ol S TEN S TR O M
M d N T O S H . J U L IA N . COL
B E R TA W HIGHAM. P A
P O Boi 1330
Sanlord. FL 72773 1330
Telephone [3051 322 2171
Publlth September I I , 25 1985
DEJ l i t ______________________
FICTITIO US NAM E
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged in buiinetl at P O
Bo* 44 Caitelberry, FL 37707
Seminole County Florida under
the fictitioul name ol Quality
Bar Syttemt. Inc . and that I
Intend to regltter tald name
with the Clerk ot Ihe Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
in accordance with the pro
Vitlont ot the Fictitiout Name
Statute!. To Wit Section 845 09
Florida Slatutet 1957
Terri L Donnelly
Publlth September 25 October
7 9 14 1985
DEJ 170
FICTITIO US NAME
Notice it hereby given that I
am engaged in business at 7970
O r l a n d o D r i v e . S a n lo r d
Semmoie County. Florida under
the lictitioui name ot American
Weight Lott Center and that I
intend to regitter said name
with the Clerk ot the Circuit
Court Seminole County Florida
in accordance with the pro
vitlont ot me Fictitious Name
Statutes To Wit Section 845 09
Florida Statute! 1957
Jerry Gongwer
P u b llth September 25 October
3 9. 14 1985
OEJ 174

IN THE C IRCUIT COURT
O F T H E E IG H T E E N TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
C IV IL A C T IO N NO.:
85-1)87 CA Of G
F E D E R A L H O M E LOAN
BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO.
Plaintiff.

vt

DAVID GOLDSTEIN, el al ,
Defendant!
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE It hereby given that
purtuant lo the Flanl Judgment
ol Forecloture and Sale entered
In the caute pending In Ihe
Circuit Court of Ihe Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit. In and for
Seminole County, Florida Civil
Action Number 85 3317 CA 09 G
the undertlgned clerk will tell
the property tltuated In taid
County, deterIbed at
Unit 700 A, LAKE HOWELL
A R M S C O N D O M IN IU M , a
Condominium according lo the
Declaration of Condominium
and exhibits annexed thereto,
recorded February 10. 1987, In
O fficial Recordi Book 1377.
Page 1144. Public Record! ol
Seminole County, Florida at
amended; together with and
undivided Interett in the com
mon e le m e n ti and lim ite d
common element! declared In
t a ld D e c la r a t io n of Con
d o m in iu m lo be a n d ap
purfenance to Ihe above Con
dominium Unit.
at public tale, to Ihe hlgheit and
bet! bidder for cath al 11 00
o’clock A M . on the 14th day ol
October. 1985, al the welt front
door of Ihe Seminole Counly.
Courthoute. Sanford, Florida
(SEAL)
D A V ID N BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
By : Diane K Brummelt
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: September II. 35.1985
DEJ 114
U N IT E D STATES DISTRICT
COURT M ID D L E D ISTR IC T
O F F L O R ID A O R L A N D O
D IV IS IO N C O U R T N O ;
85-219-C lv O rl-1 8 U N IT E D
STATES OF AMERICA Plain
lilt, vt Jackton Metal Work!
Inc . e t a l D e l e n d a n l l t l
NOTICE OF SALE Notice it
hereby given that purtuant to a
Final Judgemenl entered on
Augutl 79. 1915 by fhe above
entitled Courf In the above
caute. the undertigned United
State! Marshal or one at hit
duly authoriied deputiet. will
tell the property situate In
Seminole County, Florida de
tcribed at LOT 7 m QUEEN'S
M IR R O R A D D I T I O N TO
CASSELBERRY, according to
the plat thereof at recorded in
Plat Book 8 Page 33. ot the
Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida at public outcry
to the hlgheit and belt bidder
tor caih at 12 o'clock noon on
October 17. 1985 al Ihe West door
ot the Seminole County Court
houie Sanlord Florida Dated
Augutl 30. 1985 RICHARD L
COX. JR U N IT E D STATES
MARSHAL M ID D L E DISTRICT
OF FLO R ID A
ROBERT W
M E R K L E U N IT E D STATES
A T T O R N E Y M ID D L E D IS
TRICT OF FLORIDA
Publlth September It. 18, 25 A
October 3. 1985
DEJ 34
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISIO N
File Number 85-418-CP
IN RE: ESTATEO F
ARCIE V COLLINS,
Decea ted
N O TIC EO F
A D M INISTRATIO N
The a d m in lilra tlo n of fhe
etlate ol ARCIE V COLLINS
d e c e a te d . F ile N u m b e r
85 410 CP, it pending In Ihe
C irc u it Court lor Seminole
C o u n ty , F lo r id a . P ro b a te
Dlvltlon. the addrett ol which it
Pott Olflce Drawer C. Sanlord.
Florida, 32771
The namet and addrettet ot
the pertonal repretentatlve and
the pertonal representative's
attorney are tel forth below
All interetted pertont are
required to tile with this court,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FROM THE DATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
THIS NOTICE It ) all clalm t
agalnit the estate and &lt;21 any
objections by an interetted
perton to whom notice wat
mailed that challenges the valid
ify ol the will, the qualifications
01 the pertonal repretentatlve.
venue or jurisdiction ol Ihe
court
a l l CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publlcetion ol thlt Notice hat
begun on September 35. 1985
Personal Representative
NANCY V W H ID D E N N O LL
Route 3. Bo* 548
Sanford, FL 32771
Attorney tor
Personal Representative
MACK N CLEVELAND. JR
ESQUIRE
Pott Oil ice Drawer Z
Sanford FI 32771
Telephone (3051322 1314
Publlth September 3$ October
2 1985
DEJ 177

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R

CelebrityCipher cryptogram* arecraaiadfromquotation* bytamou*
peope paal andpraaanl Eachwttarmthecipher ttandator
another Today* eke Naqua/aC
by CONNIE WIENER

RLF

A VNL

CTVPFA,
MFFHM

HXO

8ER
MT

VTR

YR
RT

A F CX R YT V M. "

CYQF

NFARXVVCO
RLFYA

UTTA

— XVTVOHTEM

XERLTA.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It feels uncommonly queer to
have enough cash to pay one's bills. I'd have sold my soul
for it a few years ago." — Wharton

Seminole

WHYNOT
AftNOUN?

A Dlvltlon ol AAA Employment

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 t im e ................67C a line
HOURS
3 consecutive times 61C a line

8:30 A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

7 consecutive times 52C a line
10 consecutive times 46C a lit
Contract Rates Available
3 Lines Minimum

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

21— Personals

e Waiting for tha right
Work PotltionT
e Need Extra Cathf
Call M e............................. No Faal
SUSAN............................. 327 0057
Acryllc^Appllcalort needed to
apply protective coating on
cart, boa It and planet 55 to
Sit per hour. We train For
work In Sanlord area call
Tampa 813 884 7151.
A D M IN ISTR A TIV E
SECRETARY
5250.00 wk. Great tpot lor a
tell tta r ttr l Nice bout Work
In Sanlord! Any thorthand
exp. It helpful I

23—Lost &amp; Found
FOUND
Exotic Bird In the
vicinity ot lit. Sanlord. Found
Sunday Call 323 7599_______
FOUND Near Plnecreit school,
grey and white kitten. Very
affectionate Call; 323 8903
114 Plnecretl Dr.

25—Special Notices

it it it it
* Thinking of getting a a
* Real Etlate LIcenieT a
Wa otter FreeTultlen
and continuoui Training!
Call Dicker Vicki lor detail!:
47M 447...313-3290...Eve. 774-1050
K aytto f Florida., Inc.
St Y a a n Experience!

61—Money to Lend

BECOME A ROTARY

★
★
★
★
SANFORD LIONS CLUB
In v lte t you lo their annual
Spaghetti Dinner and Bingo
Parly Saturday September
78. 1985, 4 P M to 8 P M at
the Sanlord Civic Center
Children under 5 Ireel
Benefit: Lions Sight Program

HELP US HELP OTHERS!

N O PR O B LEM I

F IC TITIO U S NAM E
Notice li hereby given that I
am engaged In butlneti at P.O.
Bo* 44 Catialberry, FL 32707
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitiout name of The Inc.
Club, and that I Inland fo
regltter tald name with the
Clerk ol the C ircuit Court,
Seminole County. Florida In
accordance with the provlilont
ot the Fictitiout Name Statute!,
To w it: Section 845 09 Florida
Statute!1957.
Quality Bar Syttemt. Inc
Terri L Donnelly
Publith September 25. October
2.9. 14. 1985
DEJ 171

FIC TITIO US NAME
Notice it hereby given that we
am engaged In b utlneti at 2444
H ia w a th a A ve
S a n lo r d
Semmoie County, Florida under
the fictitiout name ol Creative
Cutt Family Hair Care, and that
I Intend to regitter taid nai te
wllh the Cierk ot the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with the pro
vitlont ol the Fictitiout Name
Slatutet. To Wit Section 845 09
Florida Statute! 1957
Loit Sandner
Betty R Edward!
Publun September 25. October
2.9. 14. 1945
DEJ 172

FICTITIO US NAME
Notice it hereby given that I
am engaged in butlneti at 3447
Orlando Drive Sanlord FL. 32771
Seminole County. Florida under
the fictitiout name ot Bagt A
Shoet. and that I inland to
regitter tald nama with tha
Clark of tha C ircuit Court,
Samlnola County, Florida In
accordanca with tha provlilont
ol tha Fictitiout Nama Statutes.
T oW II Section 845 09 Florida
Statute!1957
B Four Inc
Grant W Bullork
Publith September 25. October
2. 9. 14. 1985
DEJ 173

321 1590
A PP O IN TM EN T SETTERS
Full time only. 17 or older
preferred 84 per hour plut
bonutet. Long wood location
Call - 499 5247

For well eitabllihed apartment
c o m p l e x
In L a k e
M ary/Sanlord area to work 7
day! a week. Inquiries 133
4923.
AVON EARNINGS W O W III
O PEN TE R R IT O R IE S N O W III
131-1555 or 133-0459

BABYSITTER

834-SfOO
F R EEO LA N O ER , INC.
The Mortgage People
710 E. Altamonte Drive

_J_UceniedMortg*£e^rok*r^
63—Mortgages
Bought &amp; Sold

needed. M y home Some
houtekeeplng Involved 373
57)3alter4pm ._____________
B abyiltter loving perton lo
care for Inlant In my home
Full lime R e f 574 4452

BICYCLE MECHANIC

Want Cath For Your Mortgage?
Good price and quick tattle
ment. Local Call
Barton. B Pilcher
Lie Mtq Broker..............327 7498
We buy l it and 2nd mortgage!
Nation wide Call: Ray Legg
Lie Mtg Broker. 940 Douglat
Ave., Altamonte. 774 7752

Wanted. 15 812 p/hr. Mutt
have: Own Car, Phone, Batlc
Tool! Experience a plut but
not necettary M utt be re
tpontlble &amp; Bondable Call
444 9494 A ik for Bob
BABY SITTE R 3 D a y i per
week to watch 7 Infant! In my
home. Reference! Atk lor
Janey 377 8133
C A B IN E TM A K ER S
Experienced topman. builders
Excellent wages and benelllt
Call 123 14*0

CARPENTERS and HELPERS

Mother of 2 year old would like
to watch one or two children in
my Lakt M ary home. 322 3173.

FIC TITIO U S NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged in business at ItQ
S .R . 419, W in te r S p rin g !,
Seminole County, Florida under
th e f i c t i t i o u s n a m e o f
A U T O M O T IV E E Q U IP M E N T
SERVICE COMPANY, and that
I Intend to regltter tald name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with the pro
viiiont of the Fictitioul Name
Statute!. To wit. Section 845 Of
Florida Statute! 1957
Roger E Owen
Publith September II, 18. 25 &amp;
October 2, 1985
DEJ 47

I NO
FEE I
Report readytor work at 4 AM
407 W. lit. St..................Sanford

NEEDM ONEYT

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care

legal Notice

U N IT E D STATES DISTRICT
COURT M ID D L E D IS T R IC T
O F F L O R ID A O R L A N D O
D IV IS IO N C O U R T N O :
S S -7 fS -C iv -O r M g U N IT E D
STATES OF AM ER IC A , Plain
t i l l , v t. A L E X A N D E R H
F O R T , at al O e fe n d a n t(t).
NOTICE OF SALE Notice It
hereby given tha purtuant to a
Final Decree of Forecloiure
entered on Sept. It . 1985 by Ihe
above entitled Court In the
above caute, the undertlgned
United State! M arthal, or one of
hit duly authoriied depullet,
will tell the property tltuate In
Seminole County, Florida, detcribed at: Lot 41 end the E d it 5
fret qf Lot 40. WASHINGTON
HEIG HTS SUBDIVISION, ac
cording to Plat thereof recorded
In Plat Book 3, page 37. ol the
public re c o rd ! of Sem inole
County, Florida et public outcry
to the hlgheit and belt bidder
lor cath at t2 o'clock noon on
October 31. I9t5 et the W att door
of Ihe Seminole County Courthoute. Sanford. Florida. Dated
September 12. )9t5 RICHARO L.
COX, JR. U N IT E D STATES
MARSHAL M ID D L E DISTRICT
OF F L O R ID A R O B E R T W.
M E R K L E U N IT E D STATES
A T T O R N E Y M ID D L E D IS ­
TRICT OF FLO RIDA
Publlth: September 25. October
1. f. 18. 1985
DEJ 129

IN T H E C IRCUITCO URT.
IN A N D F O R
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
G E N E R A L C IV IL D IVIS IO N
CASE NO. 85-3I40 CA-04-P
IN RE: THE M A RRIAG E OF
DUNCAN S SM ITH.
Hutband.
and
M ANUELA ROSA SM ITH ,
W ilt
N O TIC EO F SUIT —
DISSOLUTION OF M ARRIAG E
TO M ANUELA ROSA SMITH
P O Box 54429
Wathlngton, D C 20049
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that a Patlllon For
Dissolution ol M arrle g a hat
baen tiled ageintl you and you
are hereby required to terve e
copy ol you Antw er to the
Petition tiled herein on the
P la in tiff! Attorney. D A N IE L J
LeFEVRE. LAW YER, 1491 W
Falrbankt Avenue. P O. Box 70.
Winter Perk. Florida 37790. and
lilt the original In the ofllce ol
the Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Seminole County Courthoute.
Sanlord. Florida 32771. on or
before the 18th day of October,
1985, otherwlte. the allegation!
ol the Petition will be taken at
conletted
DATED thlt 13th day of Sep
tember. 1985
D A V ID N B E R R IE N .
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
By : Agnes E Sulek
Deputy Clerk
P u b lith : September 18, 25,
October 7, t. 1985
DEJ 114

Wanted Own tool and Ira n i
portatlon Longwood Area
Vacation and benelllt Bob
305 321 7549
•C A R P E N T E R S
• PAINTERS
•L A B O R E R S
CALL M E ...................... N O F E E I

TEM P

322-0057

Because
n o oo
c m *p
WISHYWASHY-

\

Real Estate Associates Needed
100N commlttlon concept.
GRANT PRO PERTIES,INC.
774 5805

RECREATION AIDE

323-5176

We have an excellent opportune
ty fo r to m e o n e In o u r
c la iilfle d department. The
requirem ent! are: A good
attitude, pleatant voice, neat
appearance and general oltlca
tk illt. which Include typing
and tiling.

For 44 bed retidenllal facility.
AdullM R 111 7711

2573 French Ave.
HAIRSTYLIST
Experienced Lake M ary Salon
313-4522.
HELP W ANTED
Delivery
Perton. M u ll Know Ihe area
Apply In perton 818 Sanlord
Ave._______________________

We otter lull time employment,
h o tp lta llia tlo n plan, paid
vacation and an excellent
work Ing atmoiphera.

SATELLITE
INSTALLER
1150 00 wk. Any mechanical or
electronic ability w lntt Very
reputable co oilers great |ob
security A benellti!

Employment

LANDSCAPE LABORERS Full
lime potltlcmt. 83.75 per hour.
Cell: 377 8113_______________
LPN or RN needed, 3-11 ihllt.
Good etmotphere 1 benelllt.
Full time position. Apply e t:

For further Information, call
Mai Adklnt at 132-3411, axt. 21
or apply a l T h t Sanlord
E v e n in g H e r a ld , 300 N.
French Ave., Sanlord. EOE

323-5176
_____________ 1511 French Ave.
SERVICE TR A IN E E
888 Any carpentry knowledge
will land thlt unique training
spot) Great opportunity for
career minded pertont

Debary Manor...40 N. Hwy. 17-92
Dabary................................... EOE

COOK

Employment

MEDICAL SECRETARY

Home ityle lood experience.
Apply 2 lo 4 pm Holiday
Houie Reitaurant. Hwy 17/02.
Near Lake M ary____________

For OB GYN Oltlca wllh In
tu ra n c e e x p e rie n c e C all
321 45409am to4pm .

DENTAL
RECEPTIONISTS
DENTAL ASSISTANT
Experienced w ith tpan ot
dutiet Energetic neat ap
pearance 32J 8115

DRIVER HELPER
For re tid e n lla l lantlaH on
ro u te
V a lid C h a u ffe u r's
L lc e n te n e c e tta ry
Good
w o r k in g c o n d it io n ! and
benefit! Apply In perton
IWS 555 Hope St Long woo l
DRIVERS W ANTED
Part time Salary pint com
m illio n ta t l per hr M u ll
have own car A imurnec*
Call Domino i P in a 111 .V\V&gt;
Excellent income tor part lime
home anem bly work For
Into call 504 441 8003 exl ?9»0
EX E C U TIV E SECRETARY
W llh or without shorthand!
P r e le r r a b ly W A N G word
processors Needed In Ihe
Lake Mary Area
Ablest Temporary Services
_______311 1940_______________
E X P E R IE N C E D SAW OPER
ATO RS
H o tp lta llia tlo n .
v a c atio n h olid a y s A pply
Form.lex Incorporated, Port
ot Sanlord. Lake Monroe
From 9 l| or 1 3 P M _______

323-5176
1811 French Ave.

NURSES AIDES

SUPER MARKET

All thills. Good atmosphere
and benelllt. Apply at:
DeBary Manor 40 N, Hwy 17/97
_______ DeBary, E O E._______
O FFIC E O PE N IN G In Local
Firm Experienced in credit,
Inventory, CRT date entry,
and Acctt recelveable Send
Resume' lo
Box *212
C O Sanlord Herald
PO BOX 1457
Sanlord, FI 32777 1457
O FFIC E BOOKKEEPING
ASSISTANT
85 00 hr Train for little workl
Help with billing and Invoices.
Smart move! Funplacel

E X P E R I E N C E D M e a tc u l
ler/C athler/ Produce Clerk
Apply In perton
PARK A SHOP
25th A Perk Avenue
Polygraph required
See M r. or M rt. Gai II
TRACTOR OPERATOR
Exp. with box blade A linlth
grading Salary commensu
rate wllh ability 149 5700.
WAREHOUSE
A TTE N TIO N M E N I Shipping.
Receiving. Able to lilt 50 Ibt .
own Irantporfallon. 84 an hr
Permanenl positions. Never a
feel

Employment

323-5176

TEMP PERM.........774-1348

2823 French Ave.

Pari time Babysitter Needed
For church groups 311 4371

PH ONE WORK
No experience necettary. A
pleasant voice &amp; willlngnett lo
w ork only re q u ire m e n ts
Starting pay 8* 50 per hr
For interview.........call M ary at:
814 8532

$25 Bonus with this ad!
Needed immediately
Nunlng
Assistants and Live in Com
panlont 1 year experience
required
M E D IC A L PERSONNEL
POOL
305 891 4911
EOE
............ M /F /H /V

73— Employment
Wanted

REAL ESTATE
SALES PEOPLE

Experienced Carpenter
Wanted with ability to manage
small crew It necettary Call
349 5010 leave message______
E X P E R IE N C E D
REAL ESTATE AO ENTto
farm Geneva area.

E xp erienced T ru ck D rlv o rStraight truck or vans desires
work with Sanford Area Firm
Fam iliar with South Florida
Steady, reliable worker with
local references Phone 574
2944 Speak to Gut Available

High
Earnings
Potential!
Modern olflce in excellent
location Complete training
program New dlvltlon ol old
established firm . Call now
lor
details
on pleatanl
working conditions and to
secure your future
Jim Ratlerty .................. 574 4454
Henable hairdresser needed
wllh clientele preferably Only
those Interetted In working
call 377 8991

OVIEDO R EA LTY.IN C .
345 440)
E X P E R IE N C E D O NLY! Cabi
net M a k e rs . A ssem blers,
Lamlnatort 3)9 5943________
Experlneced shingle layers
New work Call In eveningt
4 30 9 OOP M 311 4148

^mmedlelejj^^aM/fulMlm^^
91—Apartm ents/
House to Share
Roommate Wanted to sh„re
home In nice area on SI Johns
River Preler woman w /tm a ll
child 377 4)71 alter 4 pm

SALES PERSON

Eiperienced Window Wisher
New construction 321 1417
FASHION MODELS
lor lath
ion designer, TV. catelogs. all
ages 423 9839
____________

•
•
•
•
•

LABORERS
Rel labia workers needed
lor first th ill
Ablest Temporary Services
______
121-1948

FOTOMAT h at Imm edltale
opening tor 2 7 PM ih ltl at
Sanford Plata
Benelllt In
elude
Uniterm ! 1 Paid Training
Paid Holidays A Vacation
Insurance
Employee Discounts
Incentive Programs
Apply at Sanford P laia Store
or 114 L iv e O a k t B lvd ,
Casselberry.
,

93— Rooms for Rent
SHARE clo t* In house with
- working person or 17 senior
CltUent NO pets. 371 5050
THE FLO RIDA HOTEL
500 Oek Avenue...............3 li *304
Reasonable Weekly Rales

STOREFRONT &amp; WAREHOUSE
SPACE FOR RENT s4
’w , r

W 0V

; &gt;

*911Mel#3*.v kf

Located In The New SANFORD COMMERCE PARK
1601 Airport Blvd.
Sanford

by Bcrke Breathed
A A ttoa MS POMTO
SOAKm SKti : A BUTfALP
WASBOM TOROM ThefKAlKlf50 WHAT. FOA Otmess 5AK,
/5 m y m e aup rm m .
pvmse in u n r

Mitt h i

ASSISTANT MANAGER
WANTED

Everyone doet at tome time. It
you own a home and have a
job. It 'i eatier than you think

F U R N ITU R E R EFIN ISH E R
T R A IN I No experience needed I
Part time to start. Learn from
an expert bon!

Employment

Full and Pari lime Exper.
encehelplul 323 8185________

FORCL

la b o r
eanieoti

CREDIT?
For Details: 1 800 437 4754
Florida Notary Association
* MAR Y KAY COSMETICS a
Skin care and color Hair
C O N N IE ...........................333 7734
Rummage Sale Barnett Memo
Hal Church, Doyle Rd. En
terprlse Sept. 27 28th, 9 A M.

323-5176

2523 French Ave.
ALL TYPES JOBS
START WORK NOWI

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
ABORTION COUNSELING
F re e P r e g n a n c y T e t l t
C o n fid e n tia l
In d iv id u a l
a s s is t a n c e
C a ll fo r
appointment evening hours
available
............ 321 7495

Avon C hrlitm at Earning!
Two W a y il.B a i Rapreiantitlva.
127 5910................ ............. 113-1078

Employment

33—Real Estate
Courses

71— Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

e Need To Work 7
e Between Jobt?

ftlAl

BLOOM C O U N T Y
PO YOUf&amp;ALLY QUtCT
mc w acc&amp; t m n c r
-rm riH M T O s ft*’
n t f t ir o f M Y
preAStiFENWN

A M TEMP

C LA SSIFIED A D S

71—Help Wanted

71— Help Wanted

71—Help Wanted

weu i m
TUTALLY
CHAMlNiP.
O

1750

Sq. Ft. Up To

7000

Sq. Ft.

• Will Complete Interior
To Your Specifications
• Ideal Location With High
Traffic Count
• Easy Access To 1-4
• Ample Parking

J
F O H r U R I H 1 14 I N I O H M A I I O N
C O N T A C T

D O O

M cM CE

3 2 3 -1 1 5 0
• 8 » * *♦ ■

- L — &gt;

t

*v ft a a . v a

*. n

7—~ rr*

*" “ * -.*»

7*-**- f ,

�93—Rooms for Ron!
FURN. ROOM.........$55 • WEEK
&lt;100 Security....................121 5*»0
Large room w /p rlv a t* entrance
A both. NIc* a r t* 155 week.
Reference* required 121-SWO.
SANFORD Furnished room i by
the w**k. Reasonable r a in .
Maid M rvlc*. Call 173 4507.
57 PM. 41J Palm*1to Av*.

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
E X E C U T IV E COUNTRY
HOME lor tala or rant. 4
Bdrm., 1 bath, with pool, large
wooded lot, new carpet, near
school. Cell: t-772-2472.

FREE MONTHS RENT
ON ANY 1 YEAR LEASE,

A t Cl*an 1 bdrm. C om pltl*
privacy. MO p*r week plu*
MOO M curlly. Call: 333 234* or
H3W31.__________________

AVAILABLE NOW
Furnished Studio Apartment*
On* Dadroom Apia.

Two Bedroom Apts

FLEXIBLE LEASES
SENIOR CITIZENS OISCOUNT
RANCH STYLE L IV IN O III

SANFORD COURT APTS.
323-3301
Furn. Apt*, tor Sanlor C lllitm
111 Palm altoAv*.
J. Cowan. No Phono Cal It.
LAKE MARY- Small (um lthcd
apt. NIc* lor working parton
only. No Children or p«lt.
C a ll:.............................2222*10
Sanford 1 Bdrm, adult*, no p * li.
air, q u id re s id e n tia l *275
mo/up + depot it 131*01*.
S M A L L
O A R A O E
E F F IC IE N C Y - I w o rk in g
adult. *75 a week p lu i deposit.
U t lllt ln lum lthod. 177 3*1 7
W EKIVA RIVER- Efficiency,
air, carp*!. Cano* u t*. adult*,
no pds. MSS mo., u t lllt ln
Included. 332-4470.__________
1 bdrm., apt. MS par weak,
u t lllt ln Included, plus tecurlty C a ll: 123 401*.____________
2 Bdrm ./ u t lllt ln furn. Near
town. US wk. &lt;100 S p o ilt
121 *2*4 evenings

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
1 bad room
C all...................................31124**
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
M E . A irport Blvd.
1 Bdrm., I Bath.............. MM mo.
1 Bdrm.. 1 Bath.............. MIS me.
PHONE........................... M IA M I

• COUNTRY SETTING*
Large 1A 2 Bdrm. Apartment*
Adult Lak*vf*w Fam ily Poelild*

Anilibl* Now.Opcn Nnkinds

2 Bdrm., 2 Bath Patio Horn**
Nettled In quiet country setting.
Near shopping and school*.
Minute* tram
Downtown Orlando vie 1/4,
CHECKTHESE FEATURESI
• F re it Fro* Refrigerator
• Garage
• A ttic Storage
• Washer/Dryer Connection*
• Some Unit* with Family Roam
O NSITEMANAOEMENTI
Children A Pet* Welcome
Senior Cl11tent Discount I

CANTERBURY V IU A S
321-3827
HOUSE A APARTMENT- Good
lo c a tio n . Near school* A
Stores. Reasonable rent. Refaranca. 177-1110____________
a • * IN DELTONA * * a
a a HOMES FOR RENT a a
_______a a 174-1414 a a______
Longweod/Laka M ary Araa
Now 1 b d rm . s p lit plan ,
garage, blinds, appliance*,
carpet. M2S mo. 42* 44)0.

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
Casselberry- 1 bdrm., central
heat/alr, carpeting. M M mo.
plu* depoill. 14**000________
LAKE AAARY- l i t E. Lake Mary
Av*. Almost new 2 bdrm., 2
bath duple*, a ll amenities.
Wesher/dryer hook up. Very
private. *1*5 mo. 747 1*10
LAK E M ARY - 7 Bdrm.,
wesher/dryer connection, epp lle n c e t. qu ie t area,
UM /dlscounl. Investors Realty Services. 42t *014.________
SANFORD- 2 bdrm., carport,
la un dry room, control
a l r / h e a t , a l l a p p lla n c a t,
carpets, drapes. 2424 S. Lake
A ve.O IIW .25th St. *30 0541
t Bdrm. In Country. Utilities
Included. Newly remodeled.
322 2U0 anytime.___________
2 bdrm., t bath, appliances,
h o o k u p s . screened pa tle.
MM-MB4.12I-12SI___________

113—Storage Rentals

SECURITY DEPOSIT......... 11M
WITH THIS ADt

MASTERS COVE___ 323-7900
Efficiency' newly decorated. U 4
wk. U t lllt ln Included. I mo.
tecurlty. 13I-S**0.
'
M ARINER 'S VILLAGE- 1
bdrm. MI0. 2 bdrm. &lt;140 and
upl Adult*only. 121 B*70,

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
MOVE IN SPECIAL!
$299.00
a F A M ILY A ADULT a

2 BEDROOM.
Call...................................W -ltM
s p e c ie ** A p a rtm e n t*Lekefront, pool, tennl*. adult*,
no pat*, laundry Starting at
M M a mo. Call 111*747 la *ee.
t and 2 bdrm. A lia furnished
etllclency from VS week. MM
deposit. No pel*. Cell 111 4507
S-T PM. 41S Palmetto._______
I Bdrm.. pool, reference* and
tacurlty required. M7S month.
Cell: nt-seec.______________

$100 OFF!
li t . Month* Rent
1 Bdrm., 1bath.......... M l J Month
2 Bdrm., IV* Bath......SIM Month
Each apt. he* petto or balcony
over ooklng court yard. A ll
appllancn. laundry room, and
pool.

FRANKLIN ARMS APTS.
3234*50
2 bdrm., I bath, children wel­
come, yard. IM week, plu*
utllltla*. Security depotlt *200
Call J21-M !2 er 121-4*47.

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Winter Spring*- 1 Bdrm. 2 Bath
Excellent Condition. S4M per
mo I d . , Ia *l A ta c u rlty .
222-44*4, or 1212144_________
2 Bdrm.. t bath, itove. refrig er­
ator, ac. carpeted, no pet*.
*150 + tecurlty, A fter 4 P.M.
445 2114.__________________
2 Bdrm.. Living room, dining
room, kitchen, e/c. peddle
fan*, good location. (140 per
month discounted. Call: M l4441 or 111 7011._____________
SANFOR D 1 B drm ., I bath,
appliance M7S per month plus
U7S security. Call: 7** 7*00 or
•11079 2100

LAKE MARY-

115—Industrial
Rentals
WAREHOUSE SPACE- 5ultabla
tor sub contractors. Zonad In­
dustrial. Fully fenced A 14 hr.
tecurlty guard. l,2M sq. tl. or
more. Cell B ill Quell or B ill
Shopman. I l l - 1477
MOO, 4400, er *.444 tq. ft. with
dock height. Available Imme­
d ia te ly . G reat location In

117—Commarcial
Rentals
Ratall A Office Space- M0 up to
2,000 iq .tt. alto storaga avail
able. 177 4401

121—Condominium
Rentals
PINE RIDOE CLUB

LUXURY CONDOS
1.2.1 Bdrm., 2 bath, washer,
dryer, verflclet. refrlg., dish­
washer. Sterling e l U7S.
GOLD KEY MOMT., INC.
__________ 471-7122__________

SANFORD
2 bdrm . Townhouse, living
room, fa m ily room, eet-ln
k itc h e n , w a llp a p e r,
wesher/dryer hook up, pool.
*345 mo 774 4054____________

SINGLE STORY
L IV IN G
U m Twins to Fit
Your N bbBs!
Furnished or Unfurnished.
C erperft.............. Private Patio*
Lush Landscaping. Pet*.Children
WATER BEDS ACCEPTEDI

Call.

.3 2 M 9 1 1
1HEARD0RS-

2 bdrm. 1 bath, microwave,
wesher/dryer, blinds, pool.
W at model! Private fenced
petlo. S4*S mo. 774 4054

VoO H A W dU S T

127—Office Rentals

,

157-Moblle
Homes / Sale

Lie. Real Estate Broker
CASSELBERRY-1 bdrm. 2 bath
Mobile with let. 114,*00

Don't Rent I
RONLEE IS YOUR ANSWER

BATEMAN REALTY

TIT

COUNTRY- 1 bdrm. 2 bath,
eat-ln Kitchen, formal dining
room, fam ily room, fireplace,
central elr/heal, carpeted, 1
car garage, screened porch.
ZoM dAIO .S77,«00

2444 Sanford Ave.
DtBary- LARGE LOT- Spacious
2 bdrm . 2 bath, u tility A
f a m i l y room , appliances,
screened porch, air, double
garage. *44,900 44* 5*74
BY OWNER- 1 Bdrm.. l i t Bath
B r i c k R a n c h e r . 10X14
screened porch, u tilltty room,
carpel. *44.000 122-75**, after
5PM_____________________
By Owner- 1104 Cypress- Im
maculate 1 bdrm. w / garage,
c e n t r a l a l r / h e a t , new
c a rp e t/p e ln l. Low Downl
Owner w ill hold 2nd 1122-224*
LAKE AAARY AREA 1 bdrm. 2
bath on shady cul-de-sec.
Fam ily room. Good schools)
*47,500 assumable. 172 44*4

141—Homes For Sale
S A NF O RD- S enore. La r ge
lanced c o rn e r lo t, 2 ca r
garage, cathedral callings In
living room A m atter bdrm.
Beaut if ul stone fire p la c e !
*74.500

Will S t Comp*HY-..322-5005
Lounge Under the Shade Trees
end En|oy the Privacy. Fan­
tastic Assumable Mortgage.
Low Downl Upgraded carpel
and paddle tans, 2 bdrm. 1
b a t h , f a m i l y r o o m , and
workshop. Priced In the 40‘sl
STOP - CALL NOW III
H. D. R E A LTY .*10 *400

la

IMHr* MItM11!» MIMMllullST(11

OWNER FINANCING
SANFORD- renovated 4 bdrm.
1 bath, wood floors, flraplace,
d in in g ro o m , Fl a, room ,
c e n t r a l a l r / h a a t . t an s ,
washer/dryar. Large corner
lot In nice area. Ut.OOO. Owner
w ill hold mortgage with 54.000
down, 122 4407_____________
SANFORD/ LAKE MARY
Dream
Hemes
Available
Now! A ll Prices. Seminole
and Volusia Counties. Greet
Terms.
Call
lo r
Free
Computer Search Today 11

323-3200

KISH REAL ESTATE
1201 5. FRENCH AVE.

REALTOR

321-0041

N| i | TIMIS

ST e m p e r
PRIME LOCATION- Hem* to
live In PLUS 1 rental units
with tl,0 M per month Income.
Price reduced to 1111,00*.
Submit otters.
E X T R A LAROE HOMECentral heat/alr, eat-ln kitch­
en, de ub le-ce r ga rage,
assumable mortgage! Owner
w ill held 2nd w ith 111,***

dawn, lit,ooo.

Sanford By owner I 1*00 sq.ft. 1
bdrm. 2 bath, living room, 22 ■
20 fa m ily room, fireplace,
tc ra a n a d porch, inside
laundry room, lanced yard,
central heat/alr, paddle tans.
1 4 2 , 00 0 o r a s s u m e f %
mortgage. 122 else__________
SANFORD- 2*17 Laurel Ave.- 1
bdrm .I large bath, living
room, dining room, Fla. room.
klfchawequlppod. 3 2 2 -7 0 0 0 .

OTHER HOMES, LOTS,
ACREAGE, INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
C ALLAN YTIM E
REALTOR...................... 112-**tl

145—Resort
Property / Sale

1 bdrm., 1 bath situated on 1
acres. CB, alr/heat, on Lake
B utler In Osteen. Possible
ow ntr financing. 140,000 total
price.
COUNTRYWIDE REALTY
Reg. R.C. Broker...........&gt;22 4215
47t Hwy. 411, Osteen, Fla.

ii \ i i

k im

n

It I \ l I O K
BEST BUYI 1 bdrm., 2 bath,
e lr, kitchen-equipped, fenced.
LO VELY LANDSCAPINO- 1
bdrm., 2 bath, huge fam ily
roam, a ir, kitchen-equipped.
*74,iee.
SPARKLING POOL- 2 Story,
a ir, fenced. I bdrm., 3** belli.
(47,50*.
2-STORY TOWNHOUSE- Com
m u n ity peel, k itc h e n
equipped, elr. *13,000

323-5774
_______24*4 HWY. 17 *2_______
FOR S A L E BY O W N E R Magnolia Estates- 1 bdrm.,
fireplace, large lot w/smell
ap artm ent. Assumable, no
quellllylng. Payments ol M l*
par month. 144.500.121-1154

Beautifully wooded, 1-acre tracts, with exclusive access
to famous, 2Vfe mile long bass-fishing lake, Long Pond,
near Chiefland and U.S. 19.
A ll $ 2 90 down, $69lm o., 1 0 .9 % financing
C a sh Prloa - $9,970

149—Commercial
Property / Sale

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

CASSELBERRY- I acre, toned
PR-1. *45.000. W .M a licttw tkl,
REALTOR...... ............... M l-T tU
COMMERCIAL SPECIALIST
SALES AND APPRAISALS
BOBM. B A L L JR. P.A..C.S.M.
REALTOR...................... 121-4114

Assorted Household Furniture
In c lu d in g g ia n t L-sheped
couch. Call to saa thru Frl.,
Sapt. 37th. 121 7023. Ask lor
Law la between * 5
M a |e r Appliances Repaired,
bought, and sold. Fully guar­
anteed. Calhl22-42*4.
Reconditioned Appliance*
from MS-WARRANTY.
BARNETTS.....CASSELBERRY
MO-5111........................... MO-MU
a RENT TO OW N*
Color TV*., stereos, washers,
dryers, refrigerator, Ireeiert.
furniture, video, recorders,
Special :st week’s rent (5.00
A ltem t-tlv* TV a Appt. Rentals
Zeyret Shopping Center
____
22150*0
Used W ethen- Parts I Service
lo r Kenmeret................ t t i - * 4* 7.
MOONEY APPLIANCES

153—AcreageLots/Sale
CANAL LOT- for sal* by owner.
7.4 miles west of 1-4 oft Hwy a*
on Lake Sylvan (205) 574-1547.
LAKE JESSUP- Single fam ily
lot on canal. Large oaks.
B e a u t i f u l v i e w of L a k e
Jetsupl MOJCO.Cell: 411-1524.
Sanford Building Lot with largo
oaks. *7,too. C a ll: after 4
P.M., 121-15**.
11 plus acres. 450 Ft. on Doyle
Rd. Near Osteen. (Oak Grove
end wooded.) Zoned R-4 Resi­
dential. Can be split In IV*
acre tracts with no costs. *5500
per acre FIR M . W down.
BalancaSyeartal 10%.
COUNTRYWIDE REALTY
Rag. R.C. Broker............222 4215
474 Hwy. 4U, Poteen, Fla.
5 A c r e s C l e a r e d L a n d In
Go m v o . *25,*00- Assumable
mortgage. 14» 5*17.
5 acres M * r M ullet Lake Perk.
Terms. *27,100.

_______LIST W ITH USI_______

SANFORD REALTY
REALTO R........- ........... 1M-M14

»: I H ill h! I |l

/* .
V

1

ii) s h i m
IN k| Al I SI A I I

157—Mobil*
Homos / Sal*

tra c ts

Call toll-free fo r color brochure with fu ll details I

1 -8 0 0 -2 8 5 -LAND (5 2 6 3 )

or
0 -9 0 4 -3 7 8 - 4 8 1 4 (oolloct)

Mob Thompson, Owner/Broker
Read. Bulla E-7, Oainaatrllla, FL 32007

CARRIAGE COVE
MO. HOME PARK
\N ow a n d r a t a l * . C o n n e ct
Gregory Mobile Home*, 121
5200

CARPORT SALE • Saturday
8:10 • 5 P.M. Miscellaneous
Items, collectables, etc. 24*
Short St..(Near Lake Mary
Elementary.)______________
3 Family Salal 3007 Grandview
Ava. N. Sat./Sapt. 2*. ■ :» to T
Smell appllancet- A Little Bit

REALTY-REALTOR
Sanford's Salts Ludw
WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

Adult Park...................Lai Rant*
ito o -ttto
Include* Water.Garbage Pick up
Yard Maintenance
Immediate Occupancy
Ore gory M abll* Heme*.211-510*.

SMI PARK A V I ............. Sanford
* * l Lk. M ary Btvd....... U . M ary
WANTED: A LEASE/OPTION
1 Bdrm. Home Lake M a ry/
Long wood Area. Low Mao'*/
mo. Rotorenco*. 111151*

145—Resort
Property / Sale

Additions A
Rtmodallng
BCUOOIUNG SPECIALIST
W * Handle
The Whole Bell Of Wax

B. L UNK CONST.

Bon h H do Roalty, REALTORS
w w n - l l i * . ---------- o p o n fO o y ti

Crown Pawn Shop
1*44 French Av*.
_________Sanford, FI________
DP Ex c a r c l s a Bench w i t h
weights. Brand now! Paid
OOP- Sail tor *125.44* 520*

REBUILT KIRBY’ S. S995 A UP
Wehnwieaai;;i;;i^;CaMllM440

231—Cars
Bad Credit?

No Credit?

WE FINANCE
•10* Dawn Payment.....Any Carl
a To Qualified Buyer I a

NATIONAL AUTO SALES

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo

237—Tractors and
Trailers
71 Chevy Ttlen * * Tractor COESleeper, i l l Detroit. IQipoed
RAR. 71 Kentucky Trailer. 44'
drop I re me moving ven. AM
equipment lor moving butlnett. 1020 Rubber. A ll good
thap*. Gelling out ot butlnet*.
P o u l b l e t ra d e *. Price
negotiable. 32271*0

239—Motorcycles
and Bikes
'84 HONDA XR-W • Excellent
condition *500 or bet! oiler.
C e ll:........ ....................... 221-3745

Sanford Ava.a 11th »t... 121-4075

243—Junk Cars

1*00 PONTIAC tU N BIR D
Ex c el l e nt c o n d itio n , 51,000
mile*. See at corner of 20th
end 1*04 Holly Ave.

TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A
U ted cert, truck* 8&gt;heavy
equipment. 332 5f*0

★ INSTANT C A S H *
e eWE WI LL B U Y * e
a aYOURUSEOCARa a
• CALL P HIL B ETTIS*

COLOR TELEVISION
RCA 25 Inch walnut color Tele­
vision. O riginal price over
1800, balance due *144 cash or
take over payments of *35 per
month. SUM In warranty.
NO MONEY DOWN! Fra* home
tria l, no obligation. Call M253*4 Pay of nighl.

191—Building
Materials
BUILDtNOS- all tteel. SO * It*10,**0; 100 x 225- *4*,*00;
• th e re fro m *1.25 tq. ft.
IItl-8 2 0 ) (col le d I

1 9 9 -Pets A Supplies

COURTESY PONTIAC..225-1I11
1*77 CADILLAC ELDORADQ
Extra nice, loaded. *1*00 or
bett otter. Cell: 121-4821.
IW l T rent Am- White, Loaded!
Good Condition. 27,000 m l
Price (4,500 o r a itu m e 21
payment* ot *170.00 mo. Ph
1*5-1474, or M l *70*_________
‘71 Tron* Am- elr, power. V /*,
a m /lm ceieett*. Need* minor
body work. Have im t l port*.
*39*5. Carol. 331 1050 day*;
111-IIP* evening*,

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★
Hwy *1............... Doyfen* Beech
* * * * * H*ld*e * * * * *

PUBUC AUTO AUCTION

F *r m *r* detail*
________ H W - B H U I ________

CEE$E-$8.00
HCNS-52.00

OeBary A rt* A Marine Sale*
Acre** Ih * river, tap *4 Mil
17* Hwy 17-fl DeBery *4* 8548

323-4742

WE HAVE
MOVED TO
M i l S. O t U N M M L
iiT - ta

1 *7 * CHEVY *W KUP

*3998
1 9 *5 D O M E R A M

a s m .s M
1 *4 4 JEEP
*4

:J&gt;14 ,9 9 5

1 *43 CONCORD 0/1

.

*4998

Every Thurt. NNe at 7i 20 PM

★ Where Anybody *
★ Can Buy or S e lll*

203—Livestock end
Poultry

322-7029

Cleaning Service
H uiband/w ll* team w ill clean
your home or otflco dally,
weekly or monthly. Eatromely
reetonable. C e ll: 321-7514.
JUST GENIES
P rofeulon*l cleaning
C ell.................................. 1214441

Financing Avallabl*

Electrical

Appliance Repair

Automotive

Anything E t*ctrk*I...S ln c* 1*7*1
E(tlm a*M ....M Mr. i a n t a Call*
T o n 's E toctrk to rv k * ...222-172*
0 4 1 E k c trlc .................121-4050
N*w 4 rtm odallng, addition*,
fane, tecurlty light*, tim er*
plu* e ll elec, eervlce*. Quality
Service- Licensed 4 tended

RCRUILT TBANSMIISION*-

General Service*

24 hr. Service-.N« Extra ChargeI
17 Vr. Exp-.---44*-**4l,...J7*e*U

*tso
with exchange. Call
Steve, 321-481*._______

Carpentry
A ll type* ol carpentry A re­
modeling. 17 yr». exp. Call

Carpet/Floor
Coverings

ROBERT E .O R E IN E
C o n tro l* 4 M a in te n a n c e .
Spec le i K l In E le c tric a l 4
Pneumatic Control*, m - t m

Heme Improvement

CARPET INSTALLATION
A REPAIRS
_____
SSI-5117

He Jab Tea S n e ll
• I t barton U n a . Sarto rd
S2I-44Z2
THOMAS A THOMAS. H e n *
repair. claialaB. lawn care,
c r t iu i t s e t .

Catering

Home Repair*

W ill calm p riv e t* A fa m ily
dinner*, p e ril**. A etc. ac­
cording to your budget. For
detail*, call U P *705 (la m .) or

C A R P E N T E R R e p a ir* end
remodeling. No |eb tea email.
Call: 233 *445.
Maintenance el all typo*
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
andalactrlc. S21-40M
W IL L I* HOME REPAIR
RanedeUng.......Addltlena....... A
A ll Type* Repair* 1........ Insured.
Me IM tee sm all.............Jll-77**

Cleaning Service
NEW SMYRNA BEACH- Ownor
w ill pay *4.000 ctoeing coef on
n*w mortgage. Beech *Ido 4
bdrm., 2 bath pool homo with
dolachod garage. Step* to
ocoan and public handball
court*. 1*4.NO.

(*l 5 ft. glass showcases. 0 ) 1
ft. • In. X 5 ft. 25 In. tala, guns,
lewolry, guitars, tools, cam­
eras. etc. A l l I tems d i s ­
counted I Set* ends Sept. 211

72 Dod|* Van- $700 or
Bail oiler.................. 121-701*
'71 Chevrolet Window Van- *0%
cuttomlied. tl.MO or reason
able oiler. Sieve, 111 4174
■10 Ford F 150 SUPERCAB V /l.
auto. air. p/tleerlng brake*,
ttereo, CB. dual lank*, new
lire*, cutlom Interior. Run* A
Look* Greet. (5000.140 5401

SANFORD
MOTOR C
AMC
3GIH S

JEEP

O r lu n d o

Dr

(

333 4 3 8 7

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

RlrtjerdGroo^ljenj^^

322-2420

CLEARANCE SALE!

I tt - llS E. l i t ST.............. 222 5421

W AIT'EN TO BE BOUOHTI 1
bdrm. 1 bath kem * with large
Fla. ream, eat-ln Kttchan,
central alr/haat, lanced yard.
(414*0

I t y *u o r * leaking (e r a
tu c c e tilu l career in Real
E tta !*, Stemtram Realty l*
leaking tar ran. C all Lea
A lb rtg M taday a t 121-1*2*.
Evening* 133 1002.

CLEAN UP SALE!
Building 15. Sanford Airport.
1144 2*th St. Taakwood, a
M a r i n e A c c o s o r l e s end
Hardware: Mercedes B tnd i
Truck Parts; and M ltc. Items.
From f/31 thru * /» ,...* em to
s p m .iu w e o _______________

Dodge Tredetmen Maxi VanNew paint, 140 ftp. exc. thap*.
*2*00 121 *852 oiler 5 P.M.
tt*4 CHEVY-20 CUSTOM VAN
Loaded, eutomalic
C e ll:................................&gt;2130**

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

PEACE and Q UIET! ) bdrm. 1
bath 5 acre M ini Ranch w ith
paddla Ian *, c e n tra l/h a a t,
t p l l t b d r m . p l a n , PVC
furniture. I t a M tcreened
patle, dining area. &lt;54,0*0

• OENEVA-OSCEOLA RD.O
ZONED FOR MOBILESI
SAcre Country trect*.
Well treed on paved Bd.
l* % Down. ie v r * . a t t t % l
From (11,50*1

223—Miscellaneous

235—Trucks /
Buses / Vans

CONSULT OUR

BESIDE THE LAKEI 2 bdrm. 1
bath hem* on beaut Itut Bonita
Lake. G reat ream , dinin g
room, central air/haat, ea tIn
Kitchen, l l x l * patle. *51,5*0

W I L L B U I L D TO S U I T I
Y O U R L O T OR O U R S I
EXCLUSIVE AG ENT FOR
WIN5ON0 DEV. CORP., A
CENTRAL FLORIDA LEADE R I M O R E HO M E FOR
LESS MONEYI CALL TO­
DAY I

***: Aluminum Can*..Newspaper
Non- Ferrous Metals...........Glass
KOKOMO...................... 231-11*0
Baby: Bads, Strollers. Clothes,
Playpens, Etc. Paperback
Booh*. 121-0177-122 *504

WILSON MAIEN FURNITURE

USE YOUR IMMAOINATIONI
1 bdrm. IV* bath mobile on 1.1
acre*. Spill bdrm. plan, eet-ln
K itc h e n , l ar ge w orkshop.
*35,000

INVESTORS OC SI RE DI 1
bdrm. t bath remodeled heat*
with fireplace, mederw hath
with cuttem tub. dining area,
plu* a l bdrm. t bath garage
apt. *45.000

219—Wanted to Buy

Ootdea Relv lever Puppy
10 week* old. *250.
C e ll:................................ 1*5-«**1

STENSTROM

CALL ANY T IM E
Prime homesltea or getaways, with magnificent grand­
father oaks and magnolias. Paved roede, Ocala-type horse
fences and two private waterfront parks, with over 300 feet
of lake frontage, exclusively for use by property owners.

t*W Mercury Merqult Wagon
M 500. Loaded. Great Shape I
CAM alter 4:00:123 5*25
l*W PO N T IA C S U N B IR D
Automatic, pt, pb. e/c, new
lire *. Call :12l *450 attar 4.
'7* Ford Folrmont Future4 cyl., auto, p/ (leering brake*,
air, am /lm , brand new lire*,
tunroof. Good Condition I M u lt
te ll. Atklng (21*5 or bett
Offer. 123 4744 after 5
'M T-BIrd............... I I Etcert OL.
Leaded I ..... MSe Down.......Small
Monthly payment.
CHICO b THE M AN....... 4*M*00
•* TOYOTA COROLLA- Red.
black trim package. Stereo
c a tte lle . 1-door llll-b a c k .
*1.175 . » f 211-07*1. eve*. A
luaabavuti
WffRqxwiei
*

217—Garage Sales

159—Real Estate
Wanted

New Smyrna Beech- Luxury 2
bdrm. 2V* be lli Townhouse.
Across from ocean- *44.*00 or
equity share with low down
payment. GRANT PRO­
PERTIES, INC. 774 5*05

OVIEDO REALTY, INC.

1 Bdrm. 1 Bath Huga lot.
500 sq .ft. workshop.

Osteen- 4 bdrm., 2 bath on 5
acres with horse bam and
pasture. S74.fQ0.

BUDGES AND SON
WE BUY EVERYTHING!

2200 French Av*. Suit* A
Sanford, FI.
( days) 211-7122 o r (Evens)
31)-71*5, 2W-5004.7M *550

Behind In Your payments* Save
your Credit. We buy houses.
A ll areas. G R A N T PROPERTIES,INC. 774 5*05
Building Lot*. A Vacant Lend
Wentedl United Sales Assoc..
Inc.. REALTORS. 2211411

HANDYMAN SPECIAL

Wallaca Cress Realty
Realtor............................221-0*77

231—Cars

Hwy 4* .............................M l 2*01

Free Vacation - 3 days, m ights
with purchase of M obil* Home
Many Homes - Fam ily ■Adull

141—Homes For Sale

321-0759 Eve.-322-7643

213—Auctions
Auction every Saturday e l 7 PM.

NEW DBL. W IDE M O BILE
HOME on S acres. Complete
package 154 *00 Also, Two/
S acre tract* reedy for Mobile
Homes. 221-5200

Adult Perk - Lake Acett- 24x412
Bdrm., a/c. many extras. Cell
teoee.
Fam ily Park - Kid* O K . 1
Bdrm., 3 bath, ( 34* par month.
Adult Park- New carpet, screen
room, excellent location, only
U l* p * r month.

W E K I V A F A L L S - 2 b d r m.
Mobile with 1,2 acres. Owner
financing. (27,*M

W e d n a s d a y , Sap*. IS, W 5 - t B

N0NLEE OF SANFORD

Oreat Location e ll 414- Execu­
tive suites Include finished
Inferior, ell utilities, cleaning,
conference room, lounge, an
swerlng service, secretarial A
cotlee service. MO-t4*4.

PRIM E LAKE ACCESS
★ TRACTS ★

L e k e fro n t tra c ts e n d 5-acre la k e
a ls o a v a ila b le !

G o C J C a ARSW G R .'.

WON A MMtW0&gt; &lt;^T OF UKs&amp;Mff,
WWCH you MAY OAIM, WHEN &gt;W
VIMT COR B0i/T\FOi&gt; “ SWAMfiN-TH6"UtooD6" vacation
u
\ rtwve veveiorvmr,

Brand New 2 bdrm., wet bar,
blinds, pool, clubhouse, tsts
mo. 774-4054

Mini Warehouses
u a a up ...........................221-0020
STORAOE- T railer*. RV's A
Boats. 24 hr. tecu rlty guard A
fully fenced. Call B ill Quail or

E v e n in g H e r a ld , S a n lo rd , F t.

KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright
'T U t f *

On theta
A ll New Award Winning

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

121—Condominium
Rentals

111.91roam, Jroamminimum

Call t...............................-..at-dBM
i Cm * lac...

M as*

Landclearing
a i t i k v A LANDCLEARING
Lrt/Lnndcleering.......... F ill d irt
Tep**ll....Pond4...Drain ditctw*
SIM Proper*tten...Call...JOFieiO

Landscaping
HAUUNG....Fill Diri...Tsf Sail
Send.............Call U I-tH S after i.

Painting
Painting......... Any Wallcovering
Vinyl Flooring.Ret..A Retonabl*
Very Reliable.....U5-Q01? Ext. 2*

Lawn Service

Paper Hanging

L A M
LAWN CARE- Mow,
edge. trim . Junk removal,
c le a n -u p . Fr ee es t i ma t e .
444419*.

H A L Wallpapering Gale
Free E»t......... Work Guorontood
774-171*........................... B i - f i n

IAWN$ MOWEDATRIMMED

Plumbing

Spring Yard Clean-wot . m m i
At Attordeble Price*. 331-4*7]

W all Ptmablag A Heating
1007 South Sanford Avenue
Sanford. Florida 12771

Masonry

Secretarial Service

IANVTHINO IN CONCRCTEI
Free Etllmatee Gladly OIv m i
B IAU M O N O EC e m l.C *.
"W * Are The Beet"........ SH -MM
Oretwle* 4 ten* Memory
Quality at retonabl* price*
Spoclellilng In Flraplecet/Brlck
Call i .......................... w t-m -e n e

TYPING
L e t t e r s , Resumes, C ollege
Paper*. Theta*. D ltw rte llo n t,
Manuscript*. Cutlom Typing.
Big or email assignment*.
Call: D.J. Enterprlee*. (SHI
12174*1.

Quality UrarnCera

Music Lessons
A ll atee/all levels, Pro Back­
ground. Cell Julie........1214444

Nursing Cere
ALTERNATIVE
SENIOR CARE
14 Hour levlng ca r* lo r eonlor
cltlM n*. Fam ily environment
and homo cooked meal*.
C a ll:................................ *4*7)44
OUR RATES ABE LOWER
*19 C. Second SI., Sarterd
RNW

1 f — ib — 1— 1 MUa BiB
Available-------------------- 8S24B71

Painting

Tile
CUSTOM T ILE WORK
Ceramic t il* both*. Quarry T il*
Floor*. F re t E it. Lice need.
Insured. Call Frank attar 4
P.M. (*04)70*17*4__________

Tree Service
A lC k N 'l V r i e

s e r v ic e

You've Called the Rett
N *w C all the Beet I
PAY LBSSI....................JS1
..Cell i
■CM O iSTREE SERVICE

t e r .

Well Drilling
SuJiUHewWeit*

Inter/E xterior/P ro*tore Wash
C a ll:................................MI-7SI4

Llcanoed4 Ineurod
................ 3211417

�10B—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI. Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1915

The AIDS epidemic:
Fear Spreads Faster Than Virus
AIDS can be spread by casual contact,
By Gtno Del Guercio
by food or by Insects.
UPI Science Writer
"The probability, the likelihood, of
The headlines are everywhere, every
day. Anxiety, bordering on hysteria, casual transmission of AIDS Is like
being struck by lightning as you walk
bubbles up across America.
Gays and heterosexuals, drug ad­ out your front door in the morning or
dicts. parents of school kids, medical much less than the chances of the
researchers, hospitals. Insurance com­ boiler that heals the building blowing
panies, city and state officials — all fear up." said Dr. James Mason, acting
this silent killer about which so little Is assistant secretary of Health.
Yet the statistics arc staggering.
known.
—Parents picket schools in Queens to Approximately 13.000 people In the
protest the enrollment of a child with United States have been diagnosed as
having AIDS since the first case was
AIDS.
—Sheriff in Sacramento. Calif., warns reported in 1981. Half have died. The
deputies to consider the risk of AIDS other half have short life expectancies.
By the middle of next year, the
before giving mouth-to-moulh re­
number
of AIDS cases is expected to
suscitation to suspected homosexuals.
—American Red Cross issues urgent double, and to reach 35.000 by the end
plea for donors ir&gt; Pennsylvania and of 1986. The caseload doubled In six
New Jersey because of blood shortages months two years ago. Ihcn doubled In
10 months and now Is doubling In 12
caused in part by fear of AIDS.
—Teenager with AIDS forced to months.
"The doubling time is gradually
receive schooling via telephone In
getting longer and longer." said Dr.
Kokomo, hid.
—Woman with AIDS required to wear 1larold JalTe of the CDC.
Increase Expected
Surgical mask and gloves in New Jersey
But the experts at the CDC expect. In
courtroom.
—President Reagan savs lie's glad the absence of a vaccine or a new
he's not fnced with the problem of treatment, that AIDS will to continue to
deciding whether to send a child to Increase in the United States In the
next few years, primarily among
school with an AIDS victim.
—Poll finds 81 percent questioned homosexuals and bisexuals, drug
believe AIDS likely to become a :hreat abusers and those who received con­
to the general public in the next few taminated blood products before last
years. Another shows 51 percent think spring's Introduction of a new blood
AIDS is more serious than heart lest.
Those suffering from AIDS are but
disease. America's No. 1 killer.
the tip of the iceberg. For every victim.
Hysteria Unjustified
Hysteria about the deadly acquired 5 or lO more suffer from less severe,
immune deficiency syndrome appears nou-fatal forms of the disease called
to be spreading more rapidly than the ARC. for AIDS-related conditions.
And for every AIDS victim, the CDC
AIDS virus itself.
Health authorities say the fears are estimates 50 to 100 more — 500,000 to
1 million in this country — have been
not Justified.
infected with the AIDS virus but show"It's a very difficult disease to get."
no symptoms. Up to 2 percent of these
Dr. Walter Dowdle of the federal
Centers for Disease Control (old a people are expected to come down with
AIDS yearly for the next few years.
seminar In Washington Thursday.
The eventual loll Isa mystery.
AIDS is a venereal disease. The CDC
The central question is whether the
in Atlanta savs there is no evidence

disease will cross the border from high
risk groups — homosexuals. In­
travenous drug abusers, hemophiliacs
and children of mothers with the virus
— to the general public.
Several hundred people who are not
members of high-risk groups have
contracted the dlsensc. Most are
thought to have been exposed to the
virus during heterosexual contact.
In some Third World countries. 50
percent o f those with AIDS are
heterosexual. JalTe said the disease
may be spread by Improperly disin­
fected needles used for routine Im­
munizations, or the people may be
more likely to get the disease because
conditions of poverty have weakened
their immune systems.
The latest CDC report, published In
Science, says the Incidence rate of AIDS
outside of the high-risk groups is
"extremely low" — about one in a
million.
There Is concern, however, that the
disease will be transferred by pro­
stitutes to the heterosexual population.
Prostitutes often have the disease
because they arc cither intravenous
drug abusers or have sex with people
who arc.
The CDC reported Thursday that five
of 92 prostitutes tested in Seattle and
10 of 25 In Miami had evidence of
Infection by the AIDS virus.
Experts feur heterosexual men who
frequent prostitutes could catch the
virus and spread it lo other women,
who In turn could spread It to other
men. Health authorities say heterosex­
uals with numerous partners arc prob­
ably at much greater risk.
Controllable
Mason said the spread of AIDS Is
controllable now — If people avoid sex
with AIDS patients or those who have
tested positively for the virus, and if
they avoid illicit Intravenous drugs.
If AIDS establishes itself In the much
larger heterosexual population, officials
fear the AIDS could quickly take Its

Sem inole N eeds M o re
FHP Troopers, Polk
To Tell Tallahassee
Seminole County needs more
Florida Highway ffatrol troopers
patrolling in ft and Sheriff John
Polk plans to travel to Talla­
hassee to lobby with other
sheriffs for an Increase in FHI*
manpower.
Polk said Seminole Countv
needs more troopers because the
present 13-man force cannot
li,indie all the accidents it is
suppposed to cover. When that
happens, his deputies have to
work the accident, he said FHP
has 14 troopers allocated to
patrol Seminole County but only
13 on duly, said FHP spokesman
Major Charles Hall
The troopers usually handle
t raf f i c ac c i de nt s in un i n ­
corporated areas and oilier
moving violations, he said.
"I'm sure we don't gel all the
calls." he said. "The area is
growing and we didn't get any
additional manpower." he said
referring to a decision by the
legislature noi to increase tinsize of the FHP. Hall did not
know why the county was one
trooper short and does not know
how they assigned to counties.
He also did not know what other
counties are experiencing the
s a me c o v e r a g e p r o b l e m s
Seminole Is.
Hall said a second major
problem with coverage is turn­
over within FHP. It is loosing
about seven experienced officers
a month. Hall said.
"These are officers trained bv

the FHP who usually go to
municipalities." he said.
He said most of the officers
who leave cite low pay as the
reason.
Hall said he could not com­
ment on a recent charge made
by sheriffs spokesman John
S p o 1s k i . A d d r e s s i n g the
Chamber of Commerce. Spolskl
said the FHP Is kowtowing to the
will of larger counties, such as
Dade and ignoring the needs of
s ma l l e r c o u n t i e s such as
Seminole.
Polk agreed with Hall that it is
a swelling population not FHP's
efficiency that is part of the
problem.
The number of permanent
residents in Seminole has In­
creased about 43.000 In the last
two years. Polk said, pointing
out that more people mean more
accidents.
Polk said he has been dis­
cussing the problem with other
sheriffs in similar situations and
with FHP director Col. Bobby
Burkelt.
He said the sheriffs hope to
present legislative leaders with
some facts and figures soon to
persuade them lo increase FHP's
manpower.
Polk said Burkett's request for
more troopers was turned down
by the legislature during Its last
session.
There are 1.250 troopers in
the state.

place at the forefront of venereal
disease in America.
A worst-case sccnerlo — one that
seems unlikely given w’hat is known
about the disease — holds that Infection
with the AIDS virus would reach levels
of the vcneral disease Chlamydia,
which approaches 50 percent among
college students and some other
groups.
But medical experts say people are at
no more risk of catching AIDS from
classmates, waiters or dental hygienists
then they are of getting gonorrhea or
syphilis. That is not to say the only way
lo catch a vcneral disease Is through
sex. Many venereal diseases can also be
spread through blood transfusions, by
sharing contaminated needles, or from
mother to child during birth.
These are all opinions doctors and
researchers have been stating since
AIDS was found to ben viral Infection.
As an example of the difficulty in
transmitting the AIDS virus, specialists
note there have been thousands of
documented cases of lieallh workers
pricking themselves with contaminated
needles and splashing coniaminnted
fluids in their eyes and mouths.
Yet only one health care worker, a
nurse in England, is believed to have
developed the disease because of
on-the-jnb contact with infected body
fluids.
Strategy Undeveloped
"Is the public's response hysterical?"
asks Dr. Harvey Finebcrg. dean of the
Harvard School of Public Health. "Yes.
it Is when you consider the public's
reaction to the threat personally or to
their family.
"On the other hand, the response has
also been understated. Wc do not seem
to have a strategy sufficiently devel­
oped at the national level dealing with
the possibility of a very large number of
patients with AIDS." Finebcrg said,
If current estimates are correct that
between 500.000 and 1 million people
In the United Slates today are contami­
nated with the AIDS virus, and 5 to 10
percent of them will develop the
disease, then health authorities must
prepare to treat between 25,000 and
100.000 people with AIDS.
At an average cost of $120,000 to
treat an AIDS patient, the disease at its
current levels will cost between $3
billion and $12 billion to treat. These
figures do not take Into account the
cost of treating people with ARC. the
less-serious AIDS-like ailment. They

also do not account for the people who
will be exposed to the disease In the
future.
Urgent Need
In other words, there is growing
concern that AIDS will put a tremen­
dous drain on America’s health care
system. Yet Congress bickers whether
to approve $196.2 million for AIDS
research, less than what it approved for
research and vaccine to combat a
predicted 1973 Asian flu epidemic that
never occurred.
"There is an urgent need to mobilize
the magnificent science and medical
community of this country to this
problem." said Dr. William Hazcltlnc. a
senior cancer researcher at the DanaFarbcr Cancer Institute in Boston.
"There arc simply not the funds
available adequate for that mobilization
at the present time.
"F or example, the Institutes of
Allergy and Infectious Disease was only
able to make a total of $1 million
available to the ouisidc research com­
munity for the entire AIDS problem."
he said.
The problem Is more than simple
economics.
W i d e - r a n g i n g pl ans must be
approved — and quickly — to de­
termine how and where these people
will be treated. And who will pay for it?
Some Insurance companies nrc sug­
gesting they be permitted to deny
health and life Insurance coverage to
those with the virus. Without Insurance
victims quickly would be wiped out by
the medical expenses and become
welfare cases. Their medical care would
be likely to suffer and the federal
government would be left to pay the
bill.
The question of whether Insurance
companies should be allowed to deny
Insurance to people with evidence of
the disease raises a whole host of civil
rights questions.
The Quarantine Question
Some people, such as Dr. Richard
Restak, a Washington neurologist and
author, suggest quarantining AIDS
victims.
"Quarantines have been effective in
beating outbreaks of scarlet fever,
smallpox and typhoid In this century.
Indeed, by protecting the well from the
ill we follow a long-established, sensible
and ultimately compassionate course."
Restak wrote in a commentary in the
W ashington Post.

Evening H e ra ld ’s
5th Annual

Will Appear
y

N o v e m b e r 1 3 th ’

**

In The Evening Herald

November 14th
In The Herald Advertiser

/

CONTEST RULES
Limit two (2) recipes per category each containing
Name, Address and Phone Number.
TYPE or PRINT your recipe giving full instructions
for preparation, cooking time and temperature. (Ap­
proximate number of servings also helpful).

Anyone can enter except Evening Herald employees
and their immediate family.
You may enter as many of the weekly categories as
you like.
All recipes received will be published in November
for the Evening Herald's fifth annual cookbook
contest.

BUILDING PERMITS
Lake Mary has issued building
permits for the following:
—Single family structure tor John and
Carol Nolan, Lot «36 Cardinal Oaks II. 607
Mourning Dove Coil *723 63
—Sign lor Regina Veomga Photo Lab. Suite
170 E Lake M ary Blvd Coil 17} SO
—Enclose carport tor Robert Lombardi. 77}
S 4thSI C o il* } ? }
—Pool lor Larry W illlam t. 774 Broadmoor
Aye Colt *36 0}
—C o m m e rc ia l o ltlc e w arehouse tor
Seminole Interstate Park. Lake Em m a Road
CoittlSOI.30
—Screen enclosure for James Brown. 719
Evanidale Rd. Cost *1}. 75.

- R e root tor Charles Kram er, 369 Cler
moni Rd Cost *13 73
—Gifl shop sign tor Kent Kelly. Suite 177.
170 E Lake M ary Blvd Cost * } 73
-V id e o Fever sign for Larry Beckerf. Suita
113 170 E Lake M ary Blvd Cost *37.30
—P m a sign tor Fred Sorrentlno. Suite 176.
170 E Lake M ary Blvd C011*31 SO
— Yogurt Shop * '9" lor Victor Eusepl. Suite
l?S. 170 E Lake M ary Blvd CosttS7.S0
—Enclosed porch for Leonard Merkle. 107
E Plantation Blvd Cost *10 SO
—Dress shop Interior lor J. Elitebeth
Canterbury. Suite 177. 170 E Lake M ary
Blvd Cost *76 73
—Single lam ily structure lor Jack and
Carolyn Cate, 509 Oakland Terrace. Cost
*469 SO

CATEGORIES A N D DEADLINES

WEEK 1
Ui

• Appetizers
• Salads
• Vegetables

WEEK 2
Poultry
Seafood

• Meat
• Casseroles

October 1 3 - 1 9

October 6 - 1 2

WEEK 3
October 20 • 26

WEEK 4
• Breads
• Rolls
• Desserts
October 27 • Nov. 2

T T FESTIVE FOODS FOR

Appointed

H

Long wood Police Lt. M a rk
Smock has been appointed to
be the city's representative
on the Transportation Com ­
m ittee of the East C entral
F lo rid a Planning Council. He
was recom m ended (or the
a p p o in tm e n t by C ity A d ­
m in is tra to r G reg M anning.
Smock has been w ith the
police dep artm en t for seven
years and as head of the
tra ffic division.

a p p y h o lid a y s
Mail Recipes To: Cookbook

Evening Herald
P.O. Box 1657
Sanford, Fla. 32771

» % * .• * i

r—

I , . |M

.

•'* • * « ■r- ,

�A Taste Of Country

Evsnlng Hirsld — Wtdnatday, Sapt. U, I H i

Herald Advtrtlasr — Thurtdiy, Sept. at, 1ft5

2 Music Stars Can't Go
Back On Their Raisin'
When It Comes To Foot
Country music stars Merle
Haggard and Ricky Skaggs enjoy
tastes as unique as the music
they perform. Recently, while on
tour for Marlboro Country Music
(they will be at the Orange
County Civic Center with Hank
Williams. Jr. and John An­
derson on Nov. 2). the two were
asked to share (heir favorite
recipes.
Ricky Skaggs, the 1984 and
1985 Grammy award winner for
"Best Country Instrumental"
and nominated for five of this
year's CMA awards, is music's
reigning “ country boy."
Raised on a farm in the
Appalachian Mountains of Ken­
tucky. Skaggs has stayed close
to his roots — both in his music
and his menus. High on his list
of favorite foods is fried cornbread — which he prefers
accompanied by fried catfish
with pinto beans and onions on
the side — and Sweet Potato
Surprise.
Merle Haggard, better known
to his legion of fans as "The
Hag" has recipes with titles as
colorful as those of his scores of
country hits.
PRIED CORNBREAD

(Skaggs)
Served warm from the griddle,
fried cornbrcad replaces bread or
rolls at any meal.
1 cup cornmcal
Vi cup (lour
114 teaspoons baking powder
14 cup margarine, melted
1 cup (4 oz.) shredded sharp
natural chcddar cheese
V i teaspoon salt
V* cup milk
1 egg, beaten
Combine cornmcal, flour,
baking powder and salt. Add
combined milk, margarine and
egg. inlxlngjust until moistened.
Stir In cheese. For each serving,
spoon approximately V* cup
mixture onto hot. lightly greased
griddle or skillet; flatten slightly.
Cook until lightly browned on
both sides. Serve warm with
additional margarine. If batter
becomes too thick, add small
amount ofmllk.
Variations: Omit cheese, or
substitute 14 pound bulk pork
sausage, browned and drained,
for cheese.
SWEET POTATO SURPRISE
(Skaggs)
1 1-pound can sweet potatoes,
cut lengthwise
1V* cups brown sugar
1V t tablespoons cornstarch
1 teaspoon shredded urange
peel
2 tablespoons butter
14 teaspoon salt
14teaspoon cinnamon
1 1-pound can apricot halves
14cup pccai. halves
Place sweet potatoes In
greased 10"x6"xlV4" baking
dish. Combine sugar, cor­
nstarch. salt, cinnamon, and
orange peel In saucepan.
Drain apricots, reserving
syrup. Stir 1 cup syrup Into
cornstarch mixture. Cook and
stir over medium heat until
boiling. Boll 2 minutes, then add
apricots, butler and pecans.
Pour over sweet potatoes. Bake
u n c o v e r e d at 375 for 24
minutes.
' Yield: 6 servings.
MERLE'S CATCH OP THE DAY
(Haggard)
• 1catfish — skinned and boned
3 tablespoons honey
3 tablespoons corn syrup
4 eggs, slightly beaten
1cup cornmcal
214 cups vegetable oil
Mix together with a fork,
honey, syrup and eggs in a pie
pan. Place commeal in another
pie pan. Coat fish with egg batter
and roll In commeal. Place fish
in deep, very hot oil and cook
until It rises back to the top.
SHADE TREE FIX-IT
MAN'S LEMONADE
(Haggard)
Juice of 3 lemons
1cup sugar
Nutmeg
Combine lemon Juice and
sugar with water to fill beverage
pitcher. Stir well. Pour over ice
into chilled glasses. Garnish
with half slice of lemon and
pinch of nutmeg.
Optional: A Jigger of bourbon
may be added to each glass. If
desired (especially if there hap­
pens to be a few parts missing
from the carburetor).
BRANDED MAN’S
(Haggard)
2 pounds ground beef
8 or. brick chill
1 medium chopped onion
1 cup catsup
2 tablespoona sugar
1 tablespoon mustard

Brown the onion in oil. Add
the beef. Cook and break up
until done. Drain. Mix and cook
in the chill. Mix well. Add the
catsup, sugar, and mustard and
mix well. Simmer together for a
few minutes.
THE RUNNING KIND'S
1-2-3-4 CAKE
(Haggard)
1cup Crlsco
2 cups sugar
3 cups (lour

Sanford, FI,—1C

Ricky Skaggs, raised
on a farm in the
Appalachian
Mountains o f
Kentucky, has stayed

4 eggs
1 cup milk
2 teaspoons vanilla
3 teaspoons baking powder
Cream shortening and sugar
together. Add eggs, one at a
time, beating after each. Add
remaining ingredients and beat
well for 2-3 minutes. Bake In a
350° oven. Will make 2 layers or
a large sheet cake. This Is a
quick and delicious cake for
people who are "on the run."

close to his roots both
in his music and his
menus. High on his list
o f favorite foods Is
fried cornbreod.

New Zealand
Whole Square Cut

Arm our T asty

It's the little things that
m ake the difference
at Publix.

makes sense
th at the best
superm arket
has the best
\ beef, v

Publix Beat,
Im pacted B&lt;

Shoul

Whether you have a yen for
an exotic entree, or prefer
a traditional meat-andpotatoes dish, make sure .
your meal includes
Publix Beef. From
family packs to tiK re M l
single portions,
we have just
I
what you need. E
What is more, t C S ffig
our beef is
V
expertly trim med
so you get the
leanest cuts
possible. So go
/
(l
ahead. Beef up
dinner tonight with
Publix’ best.
____

______.

THIS AD EFFECTIVE
THURS., SEPT. 26
THRU WED.,
OCT. 2, 1985 . . m m

Plain or Seeded,
Sliced or Unsliced

Seafood
F
r
e
a
h
Cod Fillets....
Great Tatting!

Large Shrimp

Louis Rich

T u rkey
Ham
per lb

Perfect For Dunking
In Your Coffee...

Hickory Hill: Beef Thuringer,
Beef Summer Sausage or ai&gt;

Freneh
C ru e lle r*.......... 6 io.

Salami For &gt; M r

A Chocolate Cake With
Chocolate Filling 4 Frosting
With A Hint Of Rum...

Sunnyland Reg. or Thick J^ljcad

Chocolate
Slices....................VS!
Tender Danish Topped
With Cherry Filling...

Danish
a&gt;eh,
Cherry S trip........ *£"'
Baked In It's Own Pen....

Choeolat# Pecan
Pudge Caka.........

“ '

Delicious Plain

Mini Donuta......... ...
tu n a Above Available at all FubUa
floras • Oenteh Baharlaa.

V:

Armour Flame Brown

BaksdHam .......... V
Delicious Taatingl

Swiaa Chaaaa..... ¥

Y e llo w
Cake

Louie Rich (Low Cholesterol),
Turkey Hem, Turkey Salami o

�IC-Evsnlnfl Harald - Wadnaiday, Sapt. 25, 1955

Harald Adv.rtU.r - Thurtday, S«pt. M, m s

Low-Cal EntreesRich In Calcium

Everyday
P a lr iiim

I*
^ J __ i
r.
—
•
Calcium Is
needed for
good
health thorughout life. Yet re­
cent government surveys show
t hat m a n y A m e r i c a n s —
especially adults — are not
consuming recommended
amounts of calcium each day.
The lack of calcium may result
In the bone-crippling disease,
osteoporosis, as well as high
blood pressure and bone loss
affecting teeth.
The best sources of calcium in
the diet are dairy products, such
as milk, cheese and yogurt.
Other foods that are considered
good calcium sources arc canned
salmon and sardines (both with
bones), shrimp, oysters, dried
beans and green, leafy vegeta­
bles such as kale, broccoli and
turnip greens.
The following recipes are cal­
cium rich, yet limited in calorics.
Each serving contains from 15 to
40 percent of the 800 mllllgrans
calcium recommended each day
for adults. Calorics counts range
from 200 to 350 calories per
serving.
SPINACH LOAF
(8 servings)
Loaf:
1 tablespoon butter
V* cup chopped onion
4 eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup skim milk
1 tablespoon Dijon-style pre­
pared mustard
W teaspoon each: salt. Italian
seasoning
W teaspoon each: garlic
powder, pepper
2 packages (10 ounces each)
frozen chopped spinach, thawed
and well drained
1 cup (4 ounces) shredded
Cheddar cheese
Vi cup seasoned dry bread
crumbs
1 hard-cooked egg. peeled and
sliced
Sauce: (Yield: 1Vi cups)
2 tablespoons each: butter,
flour
Vi teaspoon salt

.

Sanlord, FI.

.

bine tomatoes with liquid,
tomato paste, celery, garlic,
fennel, basil and oregano; sim­
mer. uncovered. 20 minutes. For
fresh fish, arrange fillets in
shallow buttered 2-quart baking
dish. Sprinkle with lemon Juice:
season with salt and pepper.
Pour sauce over fish. Bake un­
covered. 20-25 minutes, or until
fish flakes easily. Remove from
oven: sprinkle with cheese. Re­
turn to oven for 2 minutes.
Sprinkle with chopped parsley.
NOTE: When using frozen fish,
thaw completely; drain on paper
towels. Place in baking dish:
cover with foil, bake at 350°F.
for 10 minutes. Drain off any
liquid. Cover with sauce; bake,
uncovered 10 minutes. Add
cheese: bake 2 minutes.

Per serving: 172 mg calcium.
220 calorics
CHEDDAR OMELET
(2 servings)
3 eggs
3 tablespoons water
Vi cup (2 ounces) shredded
Cheddar or Monterey Jack
cheese
Dash of pcppcr
1 tablespoon butter
Mix eggs, water. W cup of the
cheese and pepper thoroughly
with a fork. Heat butter in 8-Inch
omelet pan or skillet until hot
enough to sizzle a drop of water.
Pour in egg mixture. It should
begin to cook at edges immedi­
ately. Draw the cooked portions
with a spatula or fork toward the
center so that the uncooked
portions flow to the bottom and

outer edges. Keep mixture as
level as possible. Shake skillet
frequently to keep omelet from
sticking. When eggs no longer
flow and surface Is still moist,
increase heat to brown bottom
quickly. If necessary, loosen
edge. Shake skillet again to be
certain omelet is not sticking at
any point. Sprinkle with re­
maining Vi cup of cheese. Fold in
half. Total cooking time Is about
1Vi minutes.
Per serving: 249 mg. calcium.
280 calories
CHEE8E STUFFED
CHICKEN ROLLS
(6 servings)
Chicken Rolls:
1 teaspoon butter
Vi cup sliced green onions
1 pound part-skim Ricotta

CHEESY TOPPED
SPAGHETTI SQUASH
(6 servings)
Squaah:
1 spaghetti squash, approxi­
mately 3 pounds
Sauce: (Yield: approximately
2'/i cups)
3 tablespoons butter
Vi cup each: chopped onion,
chopped green pepper, chopped
carrot, sliced fresh mushrooms
1 can (15 ounces) tomato
sauce
1cup water
1 teaspoon Italian seasoning
Vi t easpoon each: garlic
powder, pepper
1 cup (4 o u n c e s ) each:
shredded Provolone cheese,
shredded Cheddar cheese
Preheat oven to 350°F. Cut
squash in half using a sharp
knife: remove seeds. Place cut
side down in a shallow baking
pan with approximately 1 Inch
water. Bake, uncovered, about
45 minutes or until tender.
Meanwhile, for sauce, saute on­
ion. green pepper, carrot and
mushrooms In butter until
tender, about 10 minutes. Add
t o ma t o sauce, w a t e r and
seasonings. Simmer, uncovered.
15 minutes. Stir in cheeses until
melted. Scoop pulp from squash,
using a fork. Serve topped with
sauce.
riBH. PEASANT STYLE
(6 servings)
1can ( 16 ounces) tomatoes
V« cup each: tomato pasta,
chopped celery
1clove garlic, crushed
1 t e as poon f ennel seed,
crushed
Vi teaspoon each: basil,
crushed and oregano, crushed
1Vi pounds fresh or frozen fish
fillets (Perch. Halibut. Sole or
Orange Roughy)
Mablespoon fresh lemon Juice
Pepper
1 cup (4 ounces) shredded
Cheddar cheese
Preheat oven to 350°F. Com­
t

H .r .ld A f t m t lw r -

T h „ r ,d » .

Come late and stay long. Not
necessarily late by the clock, but
later than when a full meal
would be served.
The dessert party is a new
trend not only with young upwardly-mobllc groups but with
more mature socializes who
have had It with the cocktail
party routine. It's also a festive
solution to those hosts who don't
want to be cooks and dishwash­

ers at their own party.
A dessert party can celebrate
the success of a new play, a
birthday surprise, the christen­
ing or a new patio, or sltnplv an
array of desserts extraordinaire.
Having fantasized about de­
ssert ever since eating lunch or
dinner at home, offer your
guests a dazzling smorgasbord
of sweets, fruits and libations.
Taking center stage arc the

....---.

r $fsm# Fr»&lt;# $»o&lt;i*l C*f ltf»csl«l I

Ft k # M o n C«&lt;t.r*c s u i l

Fresh Homogenized

Meat or Beef

Publix Milk

Breakfast Club
Florida Grade A White

gallon size

Large Eggs

$&lt;|94

Maxwell House

Lykes
Wieners

per dozen

r..

Instant
Coffee

12-oz. pkg.

•"’* , K

* ,m* *

MM

* - 1*—* * ' « » SMCl.l C .r ti ti c .l .)

100% Corn Oil

Musselman’s Natural
or Regular

Mazola Oil

(40c O ff Label)
Reg. or Unscented

Assorted Frozen
Totino Crisp Crust

Apple
Sauce

48-oz. bottle

8-oz.Jar

10.3 to 11.4-oz. pkg.

89 59-

|2*« Low Fal. I S Low f » t or Slum. Gallon
Sijo Anailiblo with On* S1H Stamp Pnca
Satar Carlilicata)

$429

0

Salad Perfect (Medium Size)

B a v a r Ia n

yKTl
/

Seedless Grapes.......
59°
Tropicana 100% Pure (Premium Pack)
Orange Ju ice............. ft,' 918®
Crisp, Juicv, Slightly Tart
Jonathan Apples.... 3 &amp; 99*
For Snacks or Salads, Ripe, Juicy (1 50 Size)
B artlett Pears....... 10 ... »1«
Bonus Pak, Squeeze

Muellers Regular or Thin

•J* beautifully Pri&lt; ed A&lt;« t-ssom-s «$•

Polk, Highlands, Orange,
Leke, Sem inole, Osceola Co.
Mt. Dew or Reg. or Diet: Slice,
Dr. Pepper, Pepsi Free or

Pepsi Coja
2-liter
bottle

La Dfion Mustard

$ J“ 0~ 5

W orcestershire
tO-o*.
Sauco.......................
boll l* 0 0 *

Discover HalleykComet
with the sandwich stars
Skippy Creamy
or Chunky

French’s Assorted (5.'5 to 6-Oz.)

Potatoes........... •ff,h 73*

Peanut
Butter
18*oz. jar

Instant
Potatoas.......... 1 *•

Grape
Jelly
32-oz. jar

Chill 0 Sauce, Aujus Gravy,
Sloppy Joe or Spaghetti Sauce

Franch’i

In addition to quality
Publix brands, we offer
the largest selection of national
brands in Florida. Aisle after aisle, section
after section, you'll easily find your favorites and get the best
value for your dollar.

For Scalloped Potatoes, Au Gratin
Potatoes or Sour Crbam &amp;
Chive Potatoes, French's

Sauce Mix
.
lor Potatoas......’* ? ' 89*
French’s

Fantastic Tasco' telescope offer

Wisconsin Cheese
Bar S h a r p or
New York Sharp

Mayon­
naise

$-|39

B u tte r
Q u arters

$459

W ith O th e i

P u n h r i v r v o f % 1 b O o&lt; Mn««*
E i t lo ttin g A ll T o b r iu o Ite m s )

1

1

9

brim

g im im n ____________

brim

tit!

Splash Dance
Radio.....................V0V*17®®
Levolor

Mini Blind
Cleaner..................7orh *3®®

T I.iked
V.ic mi ni P a c K

Folgers
Coffee

A p p le
Juice

1-lb. flat c t n
8-oz. pkg.

!
89*

1 :i 0 / h.i&lt;)

79

64-oz. bottle

THIS AO
EFFECTIVE:
THURS.,
SEFT. 26
THAU
WED.,
0CT.2.

$449

(limit

1965...

| BUY 1 , GET 1
| With This Coupon ONLY
rfRtgularly $2.35) Regular or Ditt

I A A W Root B««r

z 12*oz. cam, 6-pk.

S (Limit t P*r Family Plata*, With
. Olhar Purchatai of S7.60 or Mora.
• Excluding All Tobacco Items)
S (Effactlx* Sept. 26-OcI. 2. 1085) T

Freeze-Dried Decaffeinated Coffee

Instant Brim ...... ft,1- 151*
Decaffeinated Auto-Drip,
Elec-Perk or ADC

Brim C o ffa a ...... ’ft*- *3 $*
Kellogg’s Cereal
S

Xmmmii»»iiiiiiiiottiiioBii«»i»i»irt^
y rrn irm

Bran F la k ss..... •• boi •1 **
Frito-Lay Toastad Corn
or Nacho Chaaaa

Doritoa............. sb?‘91 ,a
m

Muonator Cheese

par pkg.

(Effective Sapt. 26-Oct. 2 . 1965)

'M w w m m m m m m m m ti

Nabisco Pramlum Saltad
or Unsaltad

C racke rs.......... 'f t 99 *
Kaablar Assorted

Soft Batch
C oo kie s............f t $ i ##
B W } 1. Cana, Lager or Light

Old Tap B aar..... S : * 1 "

........................... m

s

1 Pleas.

Margarine............. iJf. 55*

Motts Aseptic Pack Appla-Grapa or
BAM

Philadelphia Brand

Baked Beans..... f t iio *

Biscuits.................’ft*- 55*
Cream Cheese..... ft;

99*

Oliva Oil A Vinagar Drassing

Shredded Swiss.... ft; 89*
Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sliced
Natural Cheese: Swiss. Provolone or

Tea B a g s ................ M * *

Mozzarella............ ft;

$105

Dairi-lmage IndividuallyWrapped Slices

Imitation Chaaaa... ’ft* 89*

Luzianna Family Sizs

•.

nisux

Kraft Mellow Cheddar Cheese

U ta Syrup......... iiat‘ 2 ^-

Aunt JwiUm* Regular

.
.-

Paneaka M ia ..... J* &lt; i«

Natural Light
|or Busch Beer

9 oz p k g .

1.5-oz. p k g .

59

PfctSweet French Cut or Regular Cut

Green Beene... ... 2 phf*. 89*

f

(A

$&lt;|59

■Health &amp;BeautyI 8S
’oM-ur~a8!e,-s
Tablets

Excedrin............... tSSi *3®»

.

v

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

01,

lube

(40c Off Label) Mouthwash

Signal.................... iSS

Thta Ad EflactJv* At Thoaa Location* Only:

V i
*

Color
Roprbits
‘
i 5 for

\

9 5 4

\\
j j

AMHftonal
r •p rin ts
1So •so h
UalJaN
’■
’!■**V»* ***

Pubiix

Ore-ldaLites......... tZ #149

U n sce n ted , Fresh
S c e n t or Reg.
Anti-Perspirant

079

THIS AO EFFECTIVE: THURS., SEPT. 26
THRU WED., OCT. 2, 1965 . . .

.

Apple Pie...............S T *1**

ft,h: *13®

Ban
Roll-O n

Downvflake Reg. or Buttermilk

French Fries or Crinkle Cut Fries

|

(Limit 4 Pleat*, With Other
Purcha*** of S7.50 or Mor*.
Excluding all Tobacco Itamt)

Chicken

Orange Juice........ 'ft? *1*®
Waffles................. S r 79*

$483

Baked
Ravioli

Citrus Hill Select Concentrate

Morton Regular Chicken, Turkey,
Salisbury Steak or Veal Parmigiana

e-pk.

12-oz. cans

W eavei s Frozen
C h ic k e n Thigh Fillets.
C h i c k e n B r e a s t Fillet
S t r ip s or F ille ts of

pkc)

k ir n

•M MM

on Color Prints
.
Prom Color Nogetlvee.

Im

chocolate desserts, what else? ...
Individual cups of creamv pol d&lt;*
creme and. for zealous chocolate
lovers, a lusciously warm choco­
late fondue for dipping any fruits
or cake of your fancy.
Chocolate fondue, one of the
most po pul a r desser t s In
Switzerland. Is made for fun and
friends. Taking a traditional
secret from the Swiss, this
fondue Is made with Lindt Surfln
bittersweet chocolate. First
created In 1879 by famed ehoco
late maker. Rudolf Lindt, the
Surfiri Is the world s first ehocol a t e bar m a d e wi t h t he
mclt-ln-your mouth quality
associated with all fine choco­
late.
PARTIES WITH PANACHE
These suggestions will make
even the simplest dessert party
sublime:
• Send oul handsome Invita­
tions neatly Inked or done In
calligraphy.
• Drape tables with colorful
fabric anu scatter with loose
lemon leaves from the florist for
an Inviting effect.
• Elevate desserts at different
levels with gaily paper-wrapped
boxes or elegant footed plates.
• Enlist a local teenager to
help set up and clear throughout
the evening.
• Of no small consequence,
eliminate bugs If the party is to
be held outdoors. Fog the arc
earlier In the day.
• Select music befitting de­
sserts: classical guitar. Frank
Sinatra or any soft music or your
choice.
• Have small boxes on hand:
should desserts be left, guests
may enjoy taking a sample
home.

GLISTENING
BLUBERRY TART
1 pie shell
1 pint of fresh or frozen
blueberries
3-4 tablespoons quince or
blackberry Jelly
Line a quiche pan with floured
. dough, and prick it all over; Line
dough with aluminum foil.and
weigh It down with rice or beans.
Place In hot oven (400°) for
10-15 minutes. Remove from
oven and let cool. Instead of the
ready made dough, you could
also use a ready made sponge
cake layer.

1 cup plus 2 tablespoons or

W eight W .itc h e rs
F ro z e n It.iluin C h e e s e
Lascign.). S p a g h e t t i
w i t h M ea t S a u c e or

Buffet Supper....... R: *27®

Aunt Jemima

Cracker Barrel..... M M

Mint Creams......... $12®

IFrozenFoodH

Banquet Sliced Beef or
Chicken A Dumplings

Breakstone’s Lowfat. California
Style or Smooth &amp; Creamy

Cottage Chaaaa.... *ft? * 1™

Fazer

Weight Watchers
Treats...............

Almond Joy.......... ’ft,1 »*pe

TNI MONT
TOUtNT
OUANTITWa

Dinners..................89*

m m im i
Tie MONT
TO LIMIT
otMHTtrea

s . nl0fd, F , _ l c

Vanilla Custard
Cream Filling

IceCream

SOU)

.

Newman’s Own
D ressin g............ &amp; &amp; *1”

Sargento Cheese

puaux

Msaavct
.

Apple Juice....... ft? 09*

*1 1 9
Assorted

W i t h O lh . i

fn\9eP-s

.

Pillsbury Hungry Jack Buttermilk
or Buttertastin’

h al f g a l l o n

Peter Paul Bite Size Mounds or

8 b to 12 0 /

I

Apple-Cranbsrry

Mrs. Filberts Golden Quarters

S h e rb e t

69

P u r t t u s i ’ S «»I S T SO in M m is b M l u i l i m j A I I Tutjai i u ll i- m s l

Motts Apple-Grape Juice or
.........._

io n ii' $ 3 7 7

A.M. and F.M. Shower Radio

M o tts Regular
or N a t u r a l

Swift B rookfield

C h ed d ar

3 2 - o z jar

*•

Sw aat 6
Sour Sauco .......... ...

It's the little things that m ake the difference at f\iblix.

H e l l m a n n ’ s Real

:

........

Assor ted
Dam-Fresh

o « i c h for

59-

French's M ix .....’ft/ 55*

$*|1 9

$ ^ 6 9

Jum bo
C a n ta lo u p e

large head

Brown Gravy or Taco Seasoning
(.7 5 to 1.25*Oz.)

Polo Brindisi
Wine

Hipt- S w i'i'l
7 .tsty W f . l i M n

Iceberg
L e ttu c e

French’s

Smuckers
Concord

Rosso, Blanco or Bianco Secco

For S a l a d s or
S a n d w i c l i es
Crisp W estern

French's

With This Coupon ONLY
Wisconsin Chssss Bar

BEVERAGE
TUMBLER

French’s Vive

Spaghetti

30* OFF

12*02.

U n l, ,1 4 * » i l h r . » h t i l l l a i , i u r , hew

French’*
Mustard

Wheat Bread.

Fr o m
H i,

Sepl. 2h-Otl. 2

49c
Cooking Onions...... 3 &amp; 59*
Flavorful Fresh
Mushrooms...................... $169
Salad Perfect, Crisp Green
Cucumbers or
Ball Peppers............ 4 ... 89«
Fw»h Cut Flow er. Arranged In A Large
Mixed Bouquet........... * 4 "

C aysT A l

Publix

29- u

For Your Cooking Needs! Zesty Yellow

Th« Natural Snack Thompson White

1 F le .m -

Paper
Napkins
100-ct. pkg.

Tasty Tom atoes........

IProduce^B

(L im it

Royal

Vanity Fair All Occasion

_ Tide
Detergent
42-oz. box

Party Pizza

50-oz. jar

Publix Special Recipe Buttercrust White or

» . I...

C o m e O v e r For D e s s e rt
A n d A Long, C ool D rin k

W hatever the celebration, throw a dessert party.

Publix

•

» . .m

Chic And Trendy

cheese
Huffy, about 3 minutes. Stir ip •
1 cup chopped broccoli, un­ br occol i . R o ma n o cheese. ,
cooked
seasonings and sauteed onion!
Vi cup grated Romano cheese
Pound chicken breasts between
1 teaspoon Italian seasoning
sheets of waxed paper until •
Vi teaspoon each: salt, pepper
Vi-inch thick. Place Vi cutK
3 whole chicken breasts, split, cheese filling on each breast-.'
skinned, boned
Roll up. Place seam side down 16*"
Sauce: (Yield: 1Vi cups)
2-quart rectangular baking dlsh,::
1 teaspoon butter
Preheat oven to 350°F.
Vi cup sliced green onions
For sauce, melt butter in*.*
1 can (16 ounces) tomatoes, 1Vi-quart saucepan. Saute onlo«':»
drained and chopped
until tender, about 3 mlnut&lt;*-S
Vi cup tomato paste
Stir In remaining sauce lngn£-’
Vi teaspoon Italian seasoning
dients. Simmer, uncovered.
Vi teaspoon each: salt, powder
minutes stirring frequently.:'.*
Vi teaspoon garlic powder
Spoon sauce over chicken rolls':*
For chicken rolls, melt butter Bake 20-25 minutes, or untie*’
In small skillet. Saute onion In chicken Is tender when plcrcea:: ’
butter until lender, about 3 with a fork.
F
■
minutes: set aside. Beat Ricotta
Per serving: 316
:
cheese In small mixer bowl until 341 calories
.•

Vfc teaspoon pepper
1 cup skim milk
Vi teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce

1 cup (4 ounces) shredded
Cheddar cheese
Preheat oven to 350°F. For
loaf, saute onion in butter until
tender, about 3 minutes: set
aside. Combine eggs, milk and
seasonings in large mixing bowl.
Stir In spinach, cheese, bread
crumbs and onion. Spoon mix­
ture into well-buttered 9x5-lnch
loaf pan. Place loaf pan in
shallow baking pan ove oven
rack. Pour 2 inches hot water
into shallow pan. Bake about 1
hour or until knife inserted near
center comes out clean. Remove
from larger pan and let stand 15
minutes. Unmold onto serving
plate. Meanwhile, for sauce, melt
butter in small saucepan. Stir In
flour and seasonings until
smooth. Remove from heat.
Gradually stir In milk and
Worcestershire sauce. Bring to
boiling, stirring constantly. Boll
and stir 1 minute. Remove from
heat and stir In cheese until
melted. To serve, garnish top of
loaf with sliced egg. Spoon sauce
over loaf.

H . r . la -

S A N F O R D PLA ZA ,
SAN FO RD
LO NQ W O O O
V ILL A G E CTR.,
LO NQ W O O O

P u b lix

milk
1 teaspoon of vanilla
2 tablespoons of cornstarch
2 egg yolks
7 tablespoons unsalted butter,
softened
cup confectioner’s sugar..
sifted
1. Reserve 3 tablespoons of
milk. Bring rest of milk with
vanilla to a boll. Remove from
heat, let cool for 10 minutes.
2. Whisk cornstarch and egg
yolks with reserved milk.
3. Stir hot milk into egg
mixture.
4. Pour whole mixture into
pan and reheat custard until
thickened. Set aside to cool.
5. Beat butter and sugar until
light and fluffy, then whip in the
cold custard a tablespoon at a
time.
6. Pour Into cooled pre-baked
pie shell and refrigerate.
When the custard has set.
cover the pic with the blueber­
ries. Heat up the Bonne Maman
Jelly and using a brush, glaze the
fruits.
LINDT POT DE CREME
1 cup of milk
2 eggs
2 bars (6 ounces) chocolate
bars broken Into small pieces
1 teaspoon of vanilla
Dash of salt
1. Pour milk Into saucepan
and bring to boll
2. Combine other Ingredients
in blender Jar, add hot milk, turn
blender on a low speed for one
minute.
3. Pour into demitassc or pot
de creme cups. Chill for several
hours.
Scree with a dollop of whipped
cream. For variety, substitute
Grand Marnier for vanilla to give
a unique flavor.
'
8URFIN-DIPITY FONDUE
4 (3 ounces) chocolate bare
*4 cup half and half
2 tablespoons cofTe liqueur
1. Break up the chocolate or
chop It coarsely.
2. Place chocolate and half and
half in double boiler and heat
until melted and smooth.
3. Stir In liqueur and transfer
melted chocolate Into a fondue
pot.
4. Serve warm with fresh fruit
or pound cake. Fruit pieces and
pound cake are particularly en­
joyable when served chilled.

�Htrald AdvartUar — Thursday, Stpt. U, 1915

4C—Evtnlng Harald — Wtdntsday, Sapt. 35, 1»U

Sanford, FI.

QUANTITY MOOTS

w /

W IN N

VP

A m erica’s Superm arket
UJ v D

TM

W »D B R A N D U S D A C H O IC I B I I F R O U N D B O N IL IS S
( 3 ROASTS 3 LBS. O R M O R I)

SIRLOIN TIP
ROAST •••**•«• la

mm

W-0 SRANO USOA CHOtCC WKF POUND DONKUSS

.

.

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST.............. ...... „ *1”
PRICES

FUDBA C N n u 0 1 "

2 6 -2 8 .

PREMIUM GRADE FRESH

FRYER
DRUMSTICKS

PINKY PIQ FN€»H

ECONOMY
PORK CHOPS

10 L B S
OR MORE

rmmurn q* a m freim fftyir

Drumsticks . . - 59

HICKORY SWEET

SLICED
BACON
116
PKG.

fijjjjjB

issr:....***

III
■

n m

l

SUPSKSAAND AU PUWOM
D ill QUALITY USDA CHOICI

ROAST
BEEF • •

ICE CREAM or $ 1 3 9
SHERBET . Sir

$ 029
.Vi

mm

la

iStUIPEUS IBdJRHIS
StPBffllAtLSS
H E B E ’S H O W IT W O R K S

&lt;Th—

'f&amp; ZZL _
W

mMi. &lt;•«•.«.

I
L

|

, s !!pE ?“"* i!0

*

SLUE

LARGE EGGS

riir

—•

mtnomfuo urn aoauj annua
coonwman am im&lt;

■va- w w
a

l

r m

s c o i REGULAR or BUTTER

DOG FOOD . ^ j ^ J CRISCO
JS'.-OI.

c ICSm k

CAN
,* rih o« ruio uni m m annua
cooo«m«ia»fi iw

$499

ASTOR

FRUIT COCKTAIL

t ill

_
w nti m puiBsum m m annua
MoogmuixauB

iw nm MfuiD ura m m cannua
_____ coocsmiwana m

lAXWELl HOUSE
ALL GRINDS

COFFEE

TOOTHPASTE

$1 79
i^ ^ o o ttrru s H »iu g ^ ^

WHITE or EARTHTONE

TOWELS

c

BOU
[ig an o« nun w o m m cornua

_____o p

sw im m h o m o

1^1 ■«»■«!

I

annua

tooe untw i » 2i ms

MUELLER S ELBOW

MACARONI
iit .

W

smioamowam m cornua

WD BRAND SUCED

SPREAD

Mi a.

aim oat fine uni iqm ctnrua

"7J

$439

nti om ruu summ m

JttJBSBttflL

c

j-i *.

M

M n M n u a s v a iO R s a ir r a a

—

3M £ iP ~ v '^ 5#ilpH
ALL VARIETIES ALPO

TIDE

QQc

3 X jy ■

Hx CAaci Dw* pm w m M ||

^
••"** Co*A«sao MAN ksa.
OWN** I fm a* r**v eetpr*

REGULAR or UNSCENTED

SALMON

psaESNf Ac
^

tu HNS

■n m nun aru m m curnua

■a oanuo turnm m cornua
tfi

B O LO G N A

_c

id

“

tamo wo

sI -*if rJ i •*
...

t’l*

:»v%

M
*l * *
•

I

i

•

'

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218112">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, September 25, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218113">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218114">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on September 25, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218115">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218116">
                <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;, September 25, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218117">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218118">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218119">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218120">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21846" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21450">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/07686a3c427a74f7d320853e92338995.pdf</src>
        <authentication>c01a571185391d9272f6b4f8d6261602</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218130">
                    <text>J

■» —*,*r .

I

Evening

78th Year, No. 47, Wednesday, October 16, 1985—Sanford, Florida

Herald

—

(USPS

481 280)

—

Price

25 Cents

P a rk W ill H o n o r M o th e r R uby W ilson
By Fred Cooper
* Herald S taff W riter
The park at Academy Manor
will be named In honor of
Mother Ruby Wilson following
a unanimous vote by the San­
ford City Commission.
Commission action followed
the recommendation of the
Academ y Manor Residents
Association presented to the
board Monday by Dorothy
Thomas. A survey had been
conducted and the results
favored n am in g the area
Academy Manor Park and to

Local Boy
Not In
Downed
Copter
From staff and wire reports
Military officials arc trying to
determine what caused a Marine
helicopter to crash and sink In
Onslow Bay 1.500 yurds offshore
of Camp Lcjcunc. N.C. during an
amphibious assault exercise
Tuesday, killing 14 Marines and
a Navy officer. Four men aboard
the chopper survived.
The dead Included 14 Marines
and "me Navy officer who was
attached to the 26th Marine
Amphibious Unit.
Pfc. Kyle Rclchlc of Chuluota
was In line to get on the
helicopter that crashed, but the
craft filled up before his turn, his
parents said today.
Rclchle’s mother and father.
Brenda and Ted. said their son
called home from Comp LcJune.
N.C. about 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.
He said there were at least two
helicopters being used for the
exercise, but he wasn’t on the
first one.
” Hc said they filled the first
one and when it went down they
scrub b ed that part of the
exercise." Mrs. Relchlc said In a
telephone Interview from the
family's home In Chuluota.
Reichle earlier was believed to
have been one of four marines
who survived the crash.
"W e knew K^Ie was part of
that mission and when we heard
it had gone down we started to
panic." said Mrs. Rclchlc. "M y
h u sb an d asked him If he
planned to get on a helicopter
any time soon, he said. 'No. dad.
Not for a long time.’"
MaJ. Don Kappcl. a Marine
spokesman In Washington, said
the wreckage of the CH-46D Sea
Knight chopper was found In the
bay Tuesday afternoon about
1.500 yards offshore of the
sprawling Marine base at Camp
Lcjcunc. N.C.

honor the revered benefactress
of Sanford’s poor, elderly and
homeless.
C om m issioner M ilton E.
Sm ith created a composite
name from the recommenda­
tion and moved the name
Academy Manor Park In Honor
of Mother Ruby Wilson.
Mayor Bettyc Smith had re­
quested citizen suggestions for
the naming of the park and the
recommendations by the resi­
dent's association was In re­
sponse to that request.
An native of Snnford. Mother

Wilson founded The Good Sa­
maritan Home In 1946 to
shelter aged, helpless and
homeless people. She was also
pastor to the congregation of
the Free Will Holiness Church.
She* also founded the Rest
Haven child care center.
Mother Wilson died on Jan.
31. 1979 of Injuries suffered In
an automobile accident. More
than 1,000 mourners attended
her funeral services which were
held In the Sanford C ivic
Center.

jp

•

Dr. Oswald Bronson, presi­
dent of Bcthunc-Cookm an
College, voiced the view of
most when he stated In that
service: "She always had a
word from the Lord. She put
action to her testimony and
legs to her prayers.”
Community response to the
action by the commission was
immediately favorable to the
action by the city fathers.
T im o t h y W ils o n , h er
widower who continues her
work nt the Home, voiced

enthusiasm for the action and
gratitude to the commissioners
and to the citizens of Sanford.
The couple hnd celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary less
than two months prior to the
accident which took her life.
"A bronze plaque will be
Installed at the entrance to the
park." City Manager Frank
Faison said. “ It will contain the
Inscription ‘Academy Manor
Park In Honor Of Mother Ruby
Wilson*.”

M o th er W ilso n

Slip-Ups Bring M onths Anguish

[V

The Price Of Freedom
Wilson Elem entary students and their principal stand at
their chosen spot to present an $867.74 check to help pay for
the refurbishing of the Statue of Liberty In New York. The
donation by the northwest Seminole County school students
was made recently at the site of a Miss Liberty replica in
Orlando. On hand were, from left, Carey Helm adollar,
Michele Stevens, G. Terry Rabun, and Kortney Kuhn. Also
present but not pictured was Student Council President
Adrian Assent. The students raised the money by getting
pledges for distances covered during a marathon.

By S atan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
A distraught Deltona family
buried Its 15-year-old son Sun­
day. It was the second burial for
William Bryant who died at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal In Sanford Sept. 9. following
a traffic accident In Deltona.
Unidentified, he was first burled
by Seminole County on Sept. 29
In a pauper's grave near San­
ford.
" I feel no one should have to
go through this." said Carol Sue
Bryant, who described how It
w as th ro u g h her and her
husband John's own Initiative,
pursuing rumors, that they dis­
covered a fatally injured bicyclist
burled as "Jo h n Doe" was their
son. The bicyclist was struck
from behind while riding In the
center of U.S. Highway 17-92 in
DcBary at 8:10 p.m. Sept. 8. The
Bryants reported their son miss­
ing to the V o lu sia C ounty
Sheriff's Department at about 10
a.m. Sept. 10.
His body was exhumed and
released to his parents on Oct.
11.
The tragedy turned to horror.
Mrs. Bryant said, because:
• T h e V o lu s ia C o u n t y
Sheriff's Department misplaced
the missing person's report she
filed. They failed to notify other
police agencies he was missing
and failed to link media coverage
and Florida Highway Patrol In­
formation on "Jo h n Doc" to
William.
• In a Sem inole County
autopsy, physical characteristics
w ere not noted and v ita l
statistics were Inaccurately re­
ported. William's clothing was
burned, leaving only "distorted ‘
autopsy photos for Identification
purposes after his first burial.
And the body was not embalmed

Builders Rush To Beat M oratorium
-. .

.

. .t

r .

Al

Perry Faulkner did not arrive until after the
By Ja n e Casselberry
vote was taken) on a motion by Commis­
Herald Staff W riter
sioner Larry Goldberg to declare the the
Four developers rushed to get In their
applications for rezonlng. site plans, and a moratorium.
The moratorium was explained as neces­
final subdivision plat Monday, beating a
sary
to give City Planner Chris Nagle a
45-day moratorium on accepting new
applications and Issuing permits for devel­ chance to process a backlog of 31 appllcalions and to allow more time to devote to
opment passed Monday night by the
updating the comprehensive land use plan.
Longwood City Commission.
Nagle said It normally takes 30-45 days
No one spoke up at the public hearing
for applications to make the rounds of the
prior to the vote cither In support or
staff and the consulting engineer and get as
opposition to the ban. which Includes land
use changes such as rezonlng. annexation, far as the Land Planning Agency and
site plan reviews, variances, preliminary approximately two or three more weeks to
get on the City Commission agenda If the
subdivision plat plans, conditional use and
applicant supplies all the necessary plans
special exception requests, and Historical
and Information, otherwise It takes longer.
District applications. •
Included In the 31 projects arc 22 site
The commission voted 4-0 (Commissioner

n u r rrczonlngs
n in n im la A
flfi P
fim D rC h C flS !’
plans, ffour
and
comprehensive
plan amendments, two conditional use
requests, and three annexations.
Nagle said although the state legislature
extended the deadline for the cities to
complete revision of their comprehensive
plans from Jan . 1. 1986 until 1989. he still
wants to get going on the Job.
Nagle said he hopes to spend the majority
of his time during the moratorium period In
updating the plan as his personal goal Is to
finish It by Ju ly 1986.
He said he has been so bogged down with
dally planning demands because he does
not have help In his department.that he has
been unable to devote time to long-range
planning — the principal task for which he
was hired.

K lin g h o ffer Body To Romo For A utopsy

/

1’

M issing Boy Buried
Before Fam ily Found

hr ft

WASHINGTON (UPI) — A body with bullet
wounds In the head and the back — found on
the shore near Tartus. Syria - was positively
Identified as that of Leon Klinghoffer. an
American killed by the hijackers of the cruise
ship Achille Lauro. a State Department
spokesman said today.
The spokesman said Identification was made
through fingerprints and dental records. Kllnghoffer's body, in a wooden coffin draped
with an American flag, waa to be flown to
Rome for an autopsy and then sent to the
United States for burial, the spokesman said.
The body washed ashore Sunday — four
days after the four Palestinian hijackers of the
Achille Lauro surrendered to Egyptian
authorities.
. .. , ..
"There were two bullet wounds. In the

a

body, the State Department spokesman said.
"One was In the head. The other one was In
the back."
^
U.S. experts had been sent to Damascus.
Syria, to examine the body. An ABC News
reports from Damascus said several Syrian
pathologists, a U.S. consular official, an FBI
agent and another pathologist retained by the
American Embassy made the Identification.
The Achille Laura's chief bartender told
other Americans that the hijackers shot
Klinghoffer. 69. an invalid. In the head Oct. 8.
then dumped him - still in his wheelchair Into the Mediterranean off the Syrian coast. A
high PLO official sought by the United States
for his role In the hijacking had claimed that
Klinghoffer died of a heart attack.
•as AUTOPSY. Page BA

\

Chrysler
O n Strike
DETROIT (UPI) — More than
8 0 ,0 0 0 Chrysler Corp. union
workers seeking higher pay went
on strike Wednesday at 51 U.S.
and Canadian plants as com­
pany o fficials w arned the
autom aker could "bleed to
death" If the walkout is a long
^ T h e 7 0 .0 0 0 United Auto
Workers In the United States
and the 10.400 members or
UAW-Canada are demanding
wages and benefits comparable
to those given to Ford Motor
Corp. and General Motors Corp.
workers.

-

The purpose of embalming,
Pantcr said. Is not to preserve a
body after burial, but to preserve
It prior to burial If a funeral Is
planned.
The condition of an embalmed
body, he said, would depend on
bow long a body had been dead
and how long It had been burled.
Euch case varies, but he said
pre-embalming before storing a
body awaiting Identification
might make a marked difference
In preservation. However, he has
never been asked to embalm a
body under such circumstances,
he said, and family permission
. would still be required.
Mrs. Bryant said lack of em­
balming made It more difficult
for her and her family after
W illia m B r y a n t
William 's body was exhumed
prior to burial.
and identified. It waa finally
Of locating and Identifying her Identified through a match with
son. Mrs. Bryant. 32. said. "W e X-rays made ubout a year ago
d id It a l l o u r s e l v e s , b y after he broke his knee, and
word-of-mouth. We checked this X-rays made of the same knee at
out. I'm very upset over the way CFRH after exhumation on Oct.
this was handled. There he was 11. The exhumation Is to be paid
down the street all the time. For for by the county, according to
three weeks. Someone should Garay's office.
have known."
Garay said that knee was not
The people who should have X-rayed when William was being
known. Mrs. Bryant said, are the treated for his critical Injuries
Volusia County Sheriff’s De­ and the healed break was not
partment. and Seminole County noted during the autopsy.
Medical Ex a m in e r Dr. G .V.
Mrs. Bryant said she Is upset
G a r a y an d h is s t a f f w ho that her son's pierced ear and
performed an autopsy on the distinctive scars were also not
body after W illia m died at noted In the autopsy report and
Central Florida Regional Hospi­ that the clothing he was wearing
tal at 1:35 a.m. Sept. 9.
when he was admitted to the
"He died In Seminole County, hospital was burned.
but was hit in Volusia County.
" I could have Identified his
They Just never made the con­ shirt on sight." she said.
nection." she said. She waited
Garay said the boy was very
until Sept. 10 to report William young and the body had no
missing because he had run distinctive characteristics that
away once.
could be used to make u positive
Routine
Identification. The teeth were In
"Jo h n Doc's" body was kept good condition and William had
In the Seminole County morgue a common blood type.
at the hospital for 20 days, the
Garay determined he had a
legal limit. Garay said, before fr a c t u r e d s k u ll, m u lt ip le
being burled unembalmed and fractures of the left leg and arm.
unidentified In a Sem inole His liver, spleen and kidneys had
County pauper's grave, with the been cut and he suffered
County paying for the burial.
hemorrhaging In the stomach
The non-embalming Is routine and head.
Ip the case of an unidentified
"They took multiple X-rays at
body, said M ark P an tcr of first of the head only." Garay
B a ld w in F a ir c h ild F u n e ra l said. "He died In a few hours."
Homes, which was In charge of
During the autopsy a Seminole
William's first burial.
County sheriffs deputy took
Garay said It Is legal In Florida photographs of the body, which
to bury a body without em­ F l o r i d a H i g h w a y P a t r o l
balming as long as there is no Hom icide Investigator G ary
funeral or If a body Is burled Schluter showed the Bryants on
within 24 hours of death. With Oct. 9 after they first inquired at
or without embalming, funeral the hospital about the "Jo h n
homes, Pan tcr said, charge Doc" which a friend of their
a b o u t $4 00 fo r a c o u n ty 16-year-old daughter told them
• 'p a u p e r '' c a s e . H e s a id might be their son.
authorization from a family
Mrs. Bryant said she and her
member Is required before a
See MISSING, page 6A
body can be embalmed.

M u z a k M a t t M y s te ry
S A L T L A K E C ITY (U PI) - The
solemnity of a noon mass was Jarred
when music from a radio station
mysteriously began playing over the
sound system In the Cathedral of the
Madeleine.
"No. we haven't installed Muzak." the
Rev. Francis Mannlon hastily explained
from the pulpit.
Engineer Clay Anderson said the
station's signal apparently was being
"picked up by some fluke through ^the
microphone cable near the altar rail."
The station's light contemporary
format was some relief to bedeviled
church officials. "Thankfully, no hard
rock." said Fr. Mannlon.

TO D A Y
Action Reports......5A
Classifieds. ...10B.11B
Comics......
Dear Abby. ........... 9B
Deaths.................. 6A
Dr.Gott....
Editorial... ........... 4A
Florida...... .......... * A
Horoscope.
Hospital....
Nation.......
People....... . 1B2B.9B
Sports....... .....7A-10A
Television.
Weather....
World........

�2A—Evtntng H tn ld , S»nlord, FI.

St. Lawrence Seaway Blocked A fter Mishap

Wednesday, Oct. U , IMS

MONTREAL (UPI) — Thousands of tons of
freight were stranded today on Great Lakes
docks by a collapsed lock on the St.
Lawrence Seaway that port officials said
could take two months to repair and cause
huge losses for shippers.
A freighter trapped in the lock when a
massive wall collapsed was freed Tuesday
as thousands of tons of Canadian and U.S.
grain awaited shipment to the Eastern
seaboard and authorities scrambled to find
alternative means of transport.
"There Is between 10,000 and 15.000
tons of goods sitting on our docks already
soltl In overseas markets." said Jerry Cook,

NATION
IN BRIEF
West G erm an Scientist
Wins N obel Prize In Physics
STOCKHOLM. Sweden (UI’I) — West German Klaus von
Klitzlng today won the 1985 Nobel Prize In Physics for
discovering a new phenomenon used to measure electrical
resistance, Nobel olllclnlsannounced.
Von Klitzlng, 42. of the Max Planck Institute for Solid
State Research. Stuttgart, was cited bv Nobel Judges "for
the discovery of the quantized Hall effect.*’
Von Kilt zing Is the 15th German to win the physics
honor, awarded since 1901. and the choice continued a
new European dominance in the field of physics.
Europeans won the physics prize last year, ending a
10-vear dominance by American scientists.
Quantum physics describes and predicts the properties
and behavior of matter. It covers the world of particles,
electromagnetic radiation and the interaction between
matter and radiation.
1he Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said. "Because
oi tht‘ extremely high precision in the quantized Hall effect,
it may be used as a standard of electrical resistance," the
opposition a material presents to an electric current.

C o u r t T o W e ig h F r e e P re s s , F a ir T r ia l D is p u t e

PHILAD ELPHIA (UPll — Mayor Wilson Goode says Police
Commissioner Gregore Satnbor apparently ignored his
order to douse the massive fire that killed 11 MOVE
members and destroyed 61 homes during a police battle
last May.
In testimony Tuesday before a commission he appointed
to Investigate the May 13 conflict. Goode said Satnbor also
failed to carry out his order that certain police officers be
barred from taking part in the operation.
The fire, which broke out after police in a helicopter
dropped a bomb on the heavily fortified MOVE house,
killed 11 MOVE members, including four children, and
destroyed 61 homes in West Philadelphia. The city is
replacing the homes for 250 people at an estimated cost of
more than S 12 million.
Goode said he was not told of the bombing until 20
minutes before the device was dropped, but said he
approved the plan after being assured that children inside
the two-story, brick row house would not be harmed.
Goode said he ordered former city Managing Director Leo
Brooks to have the blaze put out 30 minutes after it
started. Witnesses have said firelighters stood by for as
longns an hour before trying to extinguish the fire.

Vandiver G ranted Wish To Die

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
i Supreme Court agreed today to
consider whether Judges may
! close courtrooms during pretrial
hearings in a case that presents
major clnsh between the con­
stitutional guarantees of free
press and fair trial.
The Justices will hear argu| ments this term in a case
brought by a California newspa­
per publisher against a Judge
who closed preliminary proceed­
ings in a murder trial.
The case evolved out of
murder charges against Robert
Rubane Diaz, who was arrested
in 1981 and charged with killing
i 12 hospital patients by ad­
ministrating massive doses of
the heart drug lidocaine. He
eventually was convicted.
Diaz asked that pretrial pro­
ceeding be closed to the public
| and the Judge and news organi­
zations consented.
The Press-Enterprise Co., a
newspaper publisher in River­
side. Calif., later tried to obtain
transcripts of the proceeding but
Diaz objected. The Judge kept
the documents sealed, citing a
"reasonable likelihood that
making all or any part of the
transcript public might pre­
judice the defendant's right to a
fair and impartial trial."
The case made its way to the
California Supreme Court, which
ruled In December 1984 that the
Constitution does not provide a
right of access to pretrial
hearings. California law allows
the closing of p relim in a ry
hearings If necessary to protect
the defendant's right to a fair
trial.
On appeal to the high court,
the newspaper argued that pre­
vious Supreme Court decisions
have established that closures of
court proceedings must "be rare
and only for cause shown that
outweighs the value of open­
ness."
The high court has ruled on a
number of cases involving open
trials in recent years. Including
one brought by the PressEnterprise. In that case, the
court decided In 1984 that
Judges may close Jury selection
proceedings only in rare in­
stances.
In 1979. the court ruled in a
case s im ila r to the PrcssEnterprisc’s current appeal that
there is no constitutional right to
attend pretrial proceedings.
The Press-Enterprise was
joined In Its appeal by a number
of news agencies. The organiza­
tions argued that slnre the Diaz
case, "California trial Judges
have been closing these criminal
proceedings with increasing
frequency."
Opposing the appeal, the Su­
perior Court of Riverside County
told the Justices this case was
not a good one for determining
constitutional rights of the
media because the defendant
ultimately waived his right to a

I

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Four Youths, M a rin e
Killed In S. A frica Ambush
JO HANN ESBURG . South Africa (UPI) - Police killed four
youths and wounded 20. most ot them In an ambush near
Cape Town, and a white marine died when a truck
overturned during a patrol in a black township today.
The incidents reflected rising tension following the
announcement that a member of the outlawed African
National Congress will In- hanged for the murder of a
policeman.
Authorities in Pretoria said police opened fire Tuesday on
150 mixed-race youths who were stoning a truck in the
Alhlone township near Cape Town. Three youths aged 12.
15 and 20 were killed and at least 11were wounded.

Preservation Society To M eet
The Henry Shelton Sanford
Historical Preservation Society's
annual meeting to elect officers
will be held Oct. 30. according to
Barbara Moore, president
The meeting was postponed
from an earlier scheduled dan-

through the passageway, the shipping route
around Niagara Falls.
Jo hn Hnnlcskl. chairman of the Dctrolt-Wayne County. Mich.. Port Authority,
said the delays would be expensive. "It costs
S30.000 an hour to have a ship Inactive." he
said. “ That really motivates you to do
things."
Gay Hcmslcy. a spokeswoman for the
authority on the Canadian side, said the
Furla was hacked out ul the 26-mlle long
waterway Tuesday. She said the ship was
not damaged.
Another 14 ships were backed up in the
canal, and Seaway Authority olllclnls said

Social Security , Other Issues To Be Decided

Goode: Police ignored Orders

MICHIGAN CITY. hid. (UPll - William Vandiver, who
wished to "rile in peace" for the murder of Ills
father-in-law, was executed early today by five Jolts of
electricity in what a witness said was "a gruesome" scene.
Doctors certified Vandiver dead at 120 a.m. EDT. after
five alternating 2.300- and 500-volt surges passed through
his body in three applications
"It did not go according to plan." said Dr. Rodgers
Saylors, who also was the attending physician at Indiana's
last execution in 1981. "The usual tiling Is they go with
the first application."
Saylors said only one application was needed for the
March 9. I9H1. execution of Steven Judy. But Saylors said
he believed Vandiver was brain dead after the first 2.300
volts.

port director nt the Thunder Bay. Ontario,
shipping terminal. "It boggles the mind. It’s
absolutely devastating, extremely critical."
Clearing the collapsed lock wall at the
Welland Canal, a key shipping link between
Lake Erie and Lake Ontario near Thcrold.
Ontario, could take several weeks. St.
Lawrence Seaway Authority officials said.
The hick was closed Monday when
authorities tried to fill it with water to free
the Panamanian vessel Furla. A 150-foot
concrete block fell from the lock, but the
ship was not damaged.
A seaway spokesman said at least 12
ships were backed up and waiting to get

due to renovations al the Henry
S h e lto n S a n fo rd L ib ra ry Museum, where preservation so­
ciety meetings are held.
Following election of officers
there will be a special program
and social hour. Mrs. Moure said.

Jury trial and the transcript was
made available to the public.

Union Dues
In another case, the Supreme
Court agreed to decide if union
members laid off because of a
strike at other plants can be
denied unemployment benefits
simply because they paid dues
Into a strike fund.
The Justices will hear arguements this term in the ease
brought by three auto workers
laid off from their Jobs with
General Motors Corp. because
strikes at other GM plants cut
down on work at their plant.
At issue is the fallout from a
1968 s t r ik e at th re e GM
foundries in Saginaw. Mich..
Tnnawanda. N.Y.. and Defiance.
Ohio, where workers walked off
the Job over local Issues, despite
a national contract agreement
reached between GM and the
United Auto Workers.
B e c a u s e th e f o u n d r ie s
supplied material to other GM
plants, layoffs resulted at ap­
proximately 24 Michigan GM
plants. Three auto workers. A.G.
I faker Jr.. Kenneth Collier and
Robert J. Seidell, were laid off
and applied lor unemployemenl
benefits.
They were denied Jobless pay
by the state employment securi­
ty commission because the
Michigan Employment Security
Act says those participating in a
strike are not allowed to collect
unemployment benefits. The
commission ruled that because
the workers had contributed to
the UAW strike fund, they were
participating In the strike.
Following a scries of legal
c h a lle n g e s , the M ic h ig a n
Supreme Court upheld the rul­
ing In December 1984, con­
c lu d in g th e s t r ik e fu n d ,
bolstered through an increase in
union dues, financed a labor
dispute.
In appealing to the Supreme
Court, the workers claim the
rulings conflict with the National
Labor Relations Act because it
penalized the workers for being
union members. They said they
were not on strike and were only
paying their dues as required.

Under an amendment of the
Social Security Act effective In
1979, s u r v iv in g w id o w ed
spouses who remarry after age
60 arc entitled to survivor
benefits. Another amendment,
effective in Ja n u a r y 1984.
expanded the rule to cover
divorced spouses as well.
As a result of the suit by the
Owenses, filed In California, a
federal court held the distinction
between widowed and divorced
spouses in effect from 1979
through 1983 was irrational and
ordered payments made to all
people who had been denied
benefits on the same basis as the
Owenses.
The government, in seeking
high court review, said the
d istrict court exceeded its
authority In overruling the In­
tent of Congress to make a
distinction between those whose
spouse died and those who
spouse died after a divorce. The
government also questioned the
award of benefits to all those
who were treated like the
Owenses.

Anti-Trust

* If a group of dentists
violated antitrust laws when
they refused to turn over patient
X-rays to insurance companies.
The justices will hear argu­
ments this term from the Federal
Trade Commission, which is
challenging a lower court ruling
that the agency failed to prove
the dentists' behavior had an
"anti-competitive effect."
The commission said the re­
fusal of the Indiana Federation of
Dentists to comply with Insur­
ance company requests for Xrays has thwarted efforts to
reduce rising medical costs,
especially In group Insurance
policies.
In their appeal to the high
court, commission lawyers said
the lo w e r c o u rt d e c is io n
"th re a te n s h arm ful co n se­
quences for antitrust law en­
forcement far beyond Its condo­
nation of an unlawful conspiracy
by the dentists of one stale."
Many Insurance companies
require the submission of X-rays
with claim forms so they can
Social Security
check to make sure the patient
The court also agreed to de­ received "good dental care" at
cide:
the least cost. If the patient's bill
• II a provision of the Social Is deemed excessive, the com­
Security Act In effect for live pany will only reimburse for
years discriminated against what it considers the right
older people who were divorced amount.
and remarried.
In 1975. more than 85 percent
The court will hear arguments of Ind iana's 3.100 dentists
in the challenge brought by the banned together to oppose such
government from a lower court policies on the grounds that only
ruling that found in lavor ol a licensed dentist who has a
Buenta Owens and Kenneth complete patient history before
Owens, both ol whom had been him can determine whether a
divorced bclore they married certain treatment Is proper.
each other
• If murderers fighting a
They married one another death sentence have a right to
after reaching age 60 and when present evidence showing they
their form er spouses died, would be non-violent prisoners.
applied tor Social Security sur­
The Justices will hear argu­
vivor benefits, but were turned ments this term in the case ol
down.
R o n a ld S k ip p e r , a S o u th

Carolina man who was sen­
tenced to death lot tin* Nov­
e m b e r lit H 2 m u r d e r o I
Miirvanne Wray n a beach in
Garden &lt;It v S i *
Skipper's appeal argues that
the judge improperly limited the
scope of "mitigating evidence"
presented during the sentencing
phase ot bis trial bv Inthidding
testimony about .Skipper's likely
behavior as an inmate
The Supreme Court, in Its
1976 ruling that lilted a ban on
capital punishment, said Judges
and ju r ie s m ust c o n s id e r
mitigating circumstances belorc
sentencing a murderer to die.
Three olhci death row imalcs
lost Ihcti appeals Tuesday, in
eluding Ja c k Alderman and
Garnett Cape ol Georgia and
David E. Wilson ol Louisiana.
Anothei South Carolina man.
Dale Robert Yates, won a tempo­
rary reprieve trout the justices,
who sent ills i u s e bark to lower
courts lot furthei proceedings
• II Indians have the right on
reservation lands to shoot bald
eagles, the lederallv protected
symbol ol the t tinted Stales
The [ i i s t i r r s will hear argil
ments this term m the ease
brought In the government
against Dwight Dion S r . a
member ol the Yankton Sioux
reservation in southeastern
South Dakota whir it is din-r ib
across the Missouri River from
the Karl Muudt Nailonal Wildlife
Relugc established to protect
bald eagles
• It constitutional proteelinus
against unreasonable searches
extend to the absentee owners ot
boats used in drug smuggling
I he Justices will hear argu
ments this term in a case
brought bv the government
against Michael Qiiimi, who was
arrested while living aboard the
boat in Sail I ilegri
Won’t Decide
The Dotal ietused to agree to
settle a dtsput- l» tween federal
workers ,md tin government
ovei wbeth'i unions that en­
dorse i undiduies tor oll'lre can
conduct \uti r re g istra tio n
drives
The pistti cs rejected all apjrcal
from the National Treasury
Employees Union and the Attii't
lean Federation ol Government
Employees, will' h argued til-0
registering volets d o e s not vio­
late the Hatch Act as long as the
aelfvitv is non paitlsaii
The Hutch A« t prohibits teller
al emplovecs horn taking "an
active part m political manage
men! or political &lt;.unpaigns
Workers found gtuliv ol cam­
paigning can In suspended or
tired
The ease helon the court
began bclore the 1984 primaries,
when the g u v iutiicnt s special
counsel advised tin unions not
to conduct legist i at ton drives.

WEATHER
AREA FORECAST: Today
mostly sunny. High near 90.
Light wind becoming northeast
5 to 10 mph. Tonight mostly fair
with low in the lower 70s. Light

wind. Thursday partly sunny
with the high near 90. Northeast
wind 10 to 15 mph.
NATIONAL REPORT: Rain
doused parts of the Southeast
early today after strong thun­
derstorms swept across I he
middle Atlantic states, downing
tree limbs and knocking out
power. In southern California,
winds were calm after half a
dozen wild (ires fanned by Santa
Ana winds gusting to 40 mph
leveled at least 30 homes and
burned 65.000 acres. Several
(Ires were still burning out of
control, and the winds were
expected to kick up again today.
Strong thunderstorms swept
across the middle Atlantic stales
T u e s d a y e v e n in g , h ittin g
southeast Virginia particularly
hard. A tornado uprooted large
trees and downed tree limbs in

Chesapeake. Va., and thun­
derstorm winds downed tree
limbs in Isle of Wight County.
Va. Power outages were reported
a lo n g the Is le of W ig h tSouthampton county line. Heavy
ra in drenched portions of
southern Mississippi Tuesday.
Crandall, Miss., was deluged
with an Inch and three quarters
of rain, while Port Gibson, Miss.,
got an inch and a half.

AREA READINGS (9 a.m.):
temperature: 75: overnight low:
7 1: T u e s d a y 's h ig h : 92:
barometric pressure: 30.14: rela­
tive h um id ity: 97 percent:
winds: East Northeast at 6 mph:
rain: .06 Inch; sunrise: 7:27
a.m.. sunset 6:56 p.m.

EXTENDED FORCAST:
Florida except northwest —
Generally fair and warm through

BOATING

FORECAST:

Jupiter Inlet to Key Largo out to
the Bahama Hank — Wind east
n e a r 1*) k n o ts b e c o m in g
tioriheasl to east 10 in 15 knots
by Lit•- today then around 15
knots Thursday. Sr.i 2 to 4 Icel
increasing I huisd.iv Widely
scattered showers and thun­
derstorms

SATURDAY TIDES: Daytona
Beach: highs. IL IH a .m .. 11:42
p in.: lows. 4 31 it m.,5 2'1 p.m.

F i v n i n ^ Herald
I U S P S 4b I 780)

W e d n e sd a y. O cto ber 16. 1985
Vol. 78, No. 47
P u b lish e d D a ily and Su n d a y , e n c rp t
S a tu rd a y by The Sa n lo rd H e ra ld .
Inc. 100 N F re n c h Awn . S a n lo rd ,
F la 37771

HOSPITAL NOTES
Cantral F lo rid * Region*! Hospital
Tuesday
A D M IS S IO N S
Sanlord
Dorothy F o o le r
W illie F Nelson
Sheryl A Sauer. D r B u ry
Guile G Guenther. Cake Helen
D IS C H A R G E S
H attie B Angle. D ebar y

the period except Ini i h:Mice "I
sh o w ers iii t h 11itdi-rs 111n ils
extreme south Kuiurdav and
Sundav Lows (ids north to mid
and upper 70s south Highs mid
80s lo around 9(t

Denise N Simmons and bahv girl, A lt*
monte Spring I
B IR T H S
and Renee Burke d baby girl,

Ja m e s R
Sanlord
Tony D and Dorothrin L it lle i a baby boy,
Sanford
Doris A Hauser a baby boy. Altam onte
Springe

Second C lass P o staq c P a id a l Sa n fo rd ,
F lo rid a 37771
H om e D e liv e ry
W e e k . S I.IO i M onth,
»4.7I; 1 TAonths. 114 3i; 6 M onths,
*27 00. Y e a r, l i t 00 b y M a il W eek
S I SO; M o n th , S4 00: 3 M o n th s.
11* 00, a M o n th s, 111 SO; Y e a r ,

MO.00.

Ph on e DO S) 377 241 1.

�Wedntsday, Oct. U , i? tj—3a

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Grand Opening
Continues

W A L-M A R T

Save 1 96
Mens
Insulated Vest

aX

Shop &amp;
C o m p a re

Choose from poplin 0'
nylon A variety ol colors
Sires S M L XL Peg 9 96

•••i •

Sav e Now
Thru Sunday!

Fall
Fashions

5

5

Sale Date:
Location:
Store Hours:

pH

Save 1 63

Newborn and Infant
Boy or Girl 2 Piece
Fleece Set
Colton/polyester Assorted
semen print fronts Long
sleeve Sizes 0-24 months
Reg 6 63

Tops and jeans
just right
for fall!
Now at these
Sale Prices

?

Prices Qood Thru Sun., Oci. 20
3653 Orlando Dr., Sanford
9 A.M.-9 P.M. • Mon.-Sat.
10 A.M.-6 P.M. Sunday

W AL-MARTS AOVERTISEO MERCHANDISE POLICY —If 1* ou» tnH-n
tion to hjvt* P vtfy Advertised item in stock However it due to any un
tore wren reason an advertisird item t\ ckjI a&gt;a&lt;LiO&lt;i&gt; h&gt;* purchase W.*i
Mart will isv&gt;t« a Main Chech on request for the* mercharu1.se to he pm
c.ti&lt;is**d at tr»* sale price eehefWeer available or *41 v - t you a %&lt;m*Uf -tern
»t .1 comp.ir.thlc reduc to n m price VVe reserve the right to kmtf quart
litres lim itations vend «n New MeiiCo

Save 2.00 To 3.00

Misses Woven Blouses

Polyesterfcotton V« or long
sleeves Assorted styles and
colors Su es B-18
Reg 12 96-13 96

Save 2.94

Jr. &amp; Misses
Proportion Fit Jeans

100% Cotton demm 5
Pocket leans in short and
average length S iz e s 3 - '5 Jr
&amp; 8-tB Misses Reg 13 94

10.96

Save 2 4 °0

Ladles Cuffed
Sportsock
•Cotton/nylon •Assorted
colors ‘ Sizes 9-11
•Reg 1 33

Save 1 96

Elmer's
Ankle Weights

S p e c ia l
P u rc h a s e

•5 Pound pair •Cmdura* with
adjustable Velcro1 brand
closure on strap »No 400
•Reg B 96

Ladies Long
Sleeve Sweater
U )0 % Acrylic many
styles and colors lo
choose from
Sizes S M l

GE Space Maker
Kitchen Companion Radio
AM/FM clock radio.
Electronic controlled timer
appliance outlet ti 7-4220
Reg. 54.86

Your Choice

Love My Lips or
Love My Nalls

4 8 .8 6

•Assorted colors
•Limit 2

Jergen’a Mild
Bath Soap
• 4.5 oz. bars
• Limit 5

Presto Kltchan
Kattl# ™6 Quart
Multi-Cookar

IC ^nRonV

8 8 *
9 ^ % S a v e 1 97
^ 0 Red 6 97

Red Heart
Wlntuk Yarn

Air Pot

• 100“It DuPont
Orion’ Acrylic
tibe. »4 Ply
• Various colors

• t 9 L.ler •Metal
body, plastic
liner

4 .9 6

“ Plymouth" Solid
Blankets

•Polyester nylon binding
• 72»90 •Bone, light blue or
cocoa

8-97 su 17 .9 4
__ _

__

__

Your
Choice

Wood Wall Mirror or
Beveled Wall Mirror
• 18*22 Beveled or 18*32
•Solid wood frame
•Nos 043AM-500/51 7

•Cooks a wide variety of
toods automatically
•No 06000

___________ Each
9 Inch Rainbow Brlte
Doll or Friends

17.96

•Soil sculpture tabnc body
and vinyl tace
•Nos 7233 A7239

P R E S TO

/ 1/ ’ *

Pops-Rlte
Popcorn
•2 Pounds
•Tender
•Limit 2

Carefree
CAN’ » SMil ll&gt;*.

57*

I J 8 l&gt; J

o '0
"•I,'Hu
.....

' n

3 .3 6 11.67 12 5 3

Selsun Blue
Shampoo

•7 Ounces
•Assoded formulas
•Limit 2

Downy Fabric
Softener
•64 Ounces
•Limit 2

Soft Scrub

•26 Ounces
•Cleans without
scratching
•Limit 2

Carefree
Panty Shields
•26 Count
• Regular or deodorant
•Limit 2

3-46
Save 1.51

10 Inch Clamp Light
•Sturdy meta' rel ector
•No 0162 »Reg 4 97

w

if

1 2 !1

Almond Crunch
•5 Ounces »Popcom clusters
with almonds and a buttery
lottee glaze ‘ Lima 2

,t , t t 4 - U - A /J
1.1,u - m

BFteW i
R iT e )

&lt;2&gt;
lack* Decker.
Black A Decker Car Vac

• 12 Volt ‘ Convenient to use in your cat. van camper or boat
•Includes upholstery brush and crevice tool »No 9510

• Reg. 19.94
• Save 2.94

*1 7

2

s o
P ack W

Special Purchase
Brew Rite
Coffee Filters

•Package ot 500
•Fits most basket style
cotteemakers »No 45-501

Almond Joys, Mounds^
or Powerhouse
6 pack candy bars
Reg. 1.57

1 .3 6

Save 23%
Tall Kitchen, Trash
or Trash &amp; Grass
Bag
•Merten 13 gal 40 cl
No RL102 ‘ Trash 30 gal
25 Ct No RL104 »Trash &amp;
grass 26 g a l. 30 c l .
No RL103 ‘ Reg 1 97

2 ,.f3

�DICK WEST

E v e n in g H e r a ld

Scrutinizing Some 20th Century Verbosity

(U SPS 481 280)

UIO N FRENCH A V E

SANFORD. FLA 32771

All .1 C o d e 3 0 5 -3 2 2 -2 6 1 I o r 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Wednesday, October 16, 1985—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins. Advertising Director
Ilium D rliwis W .r k SI If). Mn.ith. 84 75 .1 M.mills
S|-i 2 "* •&gt; Mmith*. $27 0 0 Vrnr. $51 OO Its M.ill Week.
&gt;1
Mmiili So ihi t Munilis 81$ no ti Months. $32 50
1i .lt Slid (HI

■

■

^

&gt;

Soviet Leader
Meets The Press
Mikhail S. Gorbachev in Paris showed the
personal qualities that made his trip to
Britain a trium ph lor him last year.
W hen he and his wife turned to wave
goodbye to the airport crowd as they entered
their im m aculate private airliner, tiic Image
was ih.u of the practiced couple. Richard and
Pal Nixon, w aving from the top of the ramp
before entering Air Force One.
Style is related to substance. There was
nothing substantially new in G orbachev’s
four-day visit to Paris. But stylistically it was
worlds ahead of anything ever attempted by
i Ills three predecessors in the K rem lin's top
lob — the stolid and silen t B re z h n e v.
\ndropov and Chernenko.
The unstated message is that Moscow is
prepared to negotiate with the W est on the
W est's own terms. It was a risk for Gorbachev
to consent to hold a news conference and take
the shouted questions of W estern newsmen —
something no Krem lin leader had been bold
enough to do since Khrushchev. G orbachev’s
animated answers deviated not at all from the
Krem lin line, but the fact that he delivered
'hem in person m ade a difference and
appeared somewhat to hum anize the policy.
Relative youth (54). self confidence (he
ippears to be fully in charge, only six months
•Met Chernenko’s death) and personal pride
maki him a risk taker. He is a in a position to
change the course of history. But how far
does he want to go and how far will the
svsii m allow him lo g o ?
I lus , xiraordinarv man is an adversary
'•'"M il' " I respect. He w ill test Ronald
R' •':- hi - mettle .it the sum m it. He says he
w.inis iIn Soviet Union and the United States
to m a t
back toward detente. That will
lept nd not upon Ins personal style but upon
he decisions o| ins government.

Why G rant Grants?
W in should the federal government give a
grant to study the diving habits of seals? A
ongiessm.in jum ped all over the National
Instil ute on this a few years ago.
Ilis complaint sounded good on the surface.
Bui the seal researchers found valuable
knowledge I licit could be applied to certain
types of heart disease.
A study ol the mating habits of insects also
was ( ondemned by a mem ber of Congress.
I'lii research helped in finding w ays to
oni ml insect species that destroyed crops.
I lie W ork Project A d m in istratio n 's art
program in the UJ30s received constant
ritu ism but it enabled some of Am erica's
lines! ai lists to keep going during the
Depression. It also provided m any other art in
oublie buildings.
Re« ' ill I v there lias been criticism of the
National Endow m ent for the Arts. It is
i&lt;&lt;used of binding some wavout modern art.
\niong its projects is funding of photographs
ol an amusement park.
Th is and other N'EA projects m ay not
revolutionize the art world. They m ay not
create am great masterpieces. But that is not
tin point
Governm ent support for scientific research
and ihi arts does not gain guaranteed results.
Ev. n tin Vatican took a chance when it
com m issioned M ichelangelo to paint the
ceiling ol the Sistene Chapel.
W hat is important is that our government is
w illing to encourage people who want to try
something new. m ake an unusual study or
work out an obscure idea. It is from m any
such experim ents that one great achievem ent
lor soeiciN m ay come. And that is justification
enough

BERRYS

WORLD

WASHINGTON (UIM) - The recent death of
E.B. White, who may have been America’s
foremost essayist, staried me to thinking about
rumored changes in The New Yorker.
White got Ills start on that magazine, you
know. Nevertheless. I don't share the dread
expressed by some readers that Steve Florin.
The New Yorker's new president, might try to
drag it. kicking and screaming. Into the video
era.
Having seen what I regard as sea changes in
Us editorial content before. I am not much
disturbed by the prospect of yet another
alteration.
As tlie unsigned author of "Talk of the Town"
items from 1927 to 1938. White was In­
strumental in formulating a sort of thumb-nose
approach that became a New Yorker trademark.
It was an editorial policy I considered
refreshing and worthy of emulation. White's
sense of detachment may have been ills chief
contribution. But that was long gone even before
lie was.
The first lilt of advocacy journalism I

remember seeing In The New Yorker was
occasioned by a move to Install Muzak-like
speakers In tlie city's subway system.
The magazine resisted tlint step on behalf of
"captive audiences" everywhere, and it lias
never been the same since.
In those days. I read nearly every word In
every issue. The New Yorker came closer than
any other publication to meeting a criterion I
hail established, which was to take a subject in
which I basically had no interest and write
about it In such a way as to grab and hold my
attention.
Hut that was during the period when Harold
Ross, the magazine's founding editor, was still
alive.
After Ills death. It seemed to me the weekly
sorely missed Ins kcep-it-short pencil. White's
"omit needless words” admonition likewise has
been observed In the breach.
Now prolix reporters arc permitted to run on
and on. Even when my interest Is Initially
piqued by their subjects. I tend to become
exasperated and lose patience. I realize, howev­

DON GRAFF

er. that It was not primarily the drift Into
wordiness, which may have begun with the
devotion of un entire Issue to one subject, dial
disenchanted me.
Rather. It was the departure from the practice
of Jeering at practically everything.
Or maybe I'm just romanticizing here. Maybe
The New Yorker was never that admirably
standoffish and It is I who have changed.
I first became acquainted with the magazine
during World War II. It was one of the American
periodicals supplied, sans advertising, to troops
overseas. That was my Introduction to the
wonderful world of White and Robert Bcnchlcy.
Jam es Thurber. Dorothy Parker. S .J. Perlman
and all the rest
The theater criticism of Wooleott Gibbs was.
to me. better than most of the Broadway shows
he reviewed.
Today. I am no longer a steady reader but. as
other members of my household are fond of
pointing nut. am more likely to lie found
"catching up" on back issues.

SlfciN

There are otIters. We arc in the
Doug Hu (West Lake) Hotel, an
international-class facility designed
for it tourist trade the local
authorities hope will develop rapidly
now that Fujian Province, of which
Fuzhou is the principal city and
capital, lias been opened to foreign
visitors.
The 10-story hotel Is a good start.
The comfortable, fully equipped
rooms arc in i lit- impersonal modern
style one encounters these days
everywhere from Wiesbaden to
Walla Walla. The restaurant offers
an acceptable Western menu, al­
though it is questionable that what
is presented as steak ever hud any
connection with a steer. Water
buffalo is probablv more like it.
Fuzhou — Foochow in the prePlnvln transliteration — also lias its
points. A city of more than a million
with broad, tree-lined boulevards,
heavy traffic and in the midst of a
construction boom, it appears
superficially almost Western.
Hut tiic traffic is a dead giveaway
tlicit tills is really the Third World.
The broad boulevards are tilled
mostly with bicycles, waves of them
that produce two-wheeler traffic
Jam s during tin- evening rush
hours.
Still tiic city lias a decidedly
prosperous feel.

SCIENCE WORLD

Artist
Captures
Surgery j

Almost
M aterial
W orld ...
FUZHOU. China (N'EAI - "Mate­
rial G irl" pounds out of the sound
system behind the bar.
Does the young bartender know
what he lias tuned us into?
He smiles, shrugs and in more
than adequate English savs that the
b r o a d c a s t is c o m in g fro m
Guangzhou and lie doesn't un­
derstand the words. Guangzhou is
the big city some 400 miles down
the coast, better known In the West
as Canton. They literally speak
another language there than they do
here, where a dialect of Mandarin
predominates.
Hut Madonna is not delivering iter
message from the material world in
fluent Cantonese. It is doubtful that
could be lost on tiic bartender,
whatever his language limitations,
and it certainly could not escape
whatever authorities in Canton or
elsewhere approved this particular
number for an officially communist
China’s public airways.
W hatever the explanation, it
would seem to be a small but
significant indication of how rapidly
and radically China is changing less
than u decade after the violently
anti-material Cultural Revolution
was brought to an end.

,
,
.
•
,

ROBERT WAGMAN

GOP's Jesse Jackson?
WASHINGTON (NEA| - There
are striking parallels between the
Republican race for tile 19H8 presi­
dential nomination and the Demo­
crats’ contest In 1984.
In 1984. the Democratic favorite
was Walter Mondnle. a former vice
president looking to move up. That
role is played by George Bush In the
1988 GOP contest. Mondale's main
challenger was Sen. Gary Hart, a
younger man from Capitol Hill who
campaigned on a theme of new
id e a s : B u s h face s a s im ila r
challenge from Rep. Jack Kemp.
The Democrats' 1984 race featured
two main fringe candidates — Sen.
John Glenn and former Sen. George
McGovern: In 1988. Sen. Hob Holl­
and former Majority Leader Howard
Baker will fill those roles for the
GOP.
Until now. the GOP lacked only
one final parallel: a Rev. Jesse
Jackson — a maverick clergyman
who wanted to make himself No. 1
spokesman for Ills flock and to ask
the embarrassing questions that
politicians tend to duck.
Now. however, it looks like televi­
sion evangelist Pal Robertson is
ready and willing to become 1988’s
Republican Jesse Jackson.
The 56-year-old evangelist could
become a much more formidable
candidate than Jackson, since Rob­
ertson already lias an organization,
money and power base that any
national political candidate would
envy.
Robertson, a graduate of Ynlc Law
School. Is the son of former Virginia
Sen. A Willis Robertson. In 1959 he
recognized TV's potential for ills
ministry and began to appear on a
local UHF station In Portsmouth.

Va. He wanted 700 viewers to give
him $10 a month to support Ills
efforts — and thus ills 700 Club was
born.
Over the years, the 700 Club has
supported a financial and business
empire that includes the Christian
Broadcasting Network, a "fourth
television network” that appears on
more than 5.000 cable systems
nationwide. Its program mix is
about one-third religious and twothirds entertainment. CBN officials
say it reaches 7.2 million house­
holds each week. Robertson's em­
pire also includes a $22 million
broadcast complex: CBN University,
with its new $13 million library: a
24-seat Jet aircraft, and various
other commercial Interests in the
Virginia Beacli area.
The financial base of this empire
Is still the 700 Club, which re­
portedly receives donations from
more than 1 million people each
year — In which ease the 7CX) Club
ranks behind only the Republican
National Committee in number of
direct-mail contributions. The orga­
nization doesn't give out financial
Information, but its total annual
Income is said to be about $2(X)
million.
Jackson changed the nature ot
the 1984 Democratic contest by
m aking the other cand id ates
address Issues that they would have
preferred to avoid, in the same way.
Robertson could force Republican
candidates to address the Christian
Right's social-agenda, which most
politicians would rather Ignore.
However, most political pros
believe that Robertson will be more
of a spoiler than a serious candidate.

i
By Bill Lohmann
UPI Feature W riter
ATHENS. Git. (UPI) - Everything
from the Georgia countryside th
America’s space program has cov­
ered his canvas, but artist Lamar
Dodd discovered one ol his most
memorable themes in a hospital
operating room.
Dodd. 76. has tran sfo rm ed
p e rso n a l o rd e a l and a r t is t ic
challenge into a series of highly
respected paintings on open-heart
surgery — a subject rarely honored
bv brush and easel.
But Dodd's creations, the result ol
nearly seven years of work, repre­
sent more than photograph-like
reproductions. The 50-pieee collec­
tion — titled "The Heart" — Is
extremely interpretive, with in­
verted crucifixes, borders tilled with
angiograms and EK G readings,
strong strokes and splashes of
vibrant colors.
" I am expressing the anxiety and
the miraculous advancement of
medicine.
Dodd said during an
interview in his studio at Ills At henhome. "1 have a deep concern lor
the people who are In medicine, and
l wanted to capture the human
aspect ol it."
Dr. Robert Copeland, director of
the Georgia Heart Clinic In LaGrange. which acquired the Dodd
heart collection, calls the series
"this century's greatest artistic rep­
resentation of humanity and of
Western medicine's finest hours."
Dodd is a renowned Georgia-born
artist who enjoys a reputation us a
leading figure in American art and
an Innovative art educator at the
University of Georgia.
Dodd is perhaps best-known lor
his work with America's space
program. He was one ol seven
artists commissioned by NASA in
the 1960s lo observe and chronicle
on canvas the early exploits of the
nation in space.
Dodd says he always maintained
more than a passing interest in
medicine, but never really consid­
ered it as a subject for Ills work until
Ills wife. Mary, underwent openheart surgery in 1977.
Dr. Joseph ( ’raver, who operated
on Mrs. Dodd, approached the artist
with an Idea. According to Graver's
plan. Dodd could actually be pres­
ent in the operating room to witness
open-heart surgery and would have
access to Graver's medical books
and lite ra tu re to develop an
expertise In the field. Dodd then
could translate his experiences —
Irom his layman's perspective —
into artistic terms.

JACK ANDERSON

U .S . W a tc h in g N . K o re a n Ship
do

s o m e T h in q

C O U N T E R P R O D U C T IV E
to d a y !

By Ja ck Anderson
And
Dale Van Atta
WASHINGTON - While the world
was watching the strange saga ot
the Italian cruise ship pirated by
Palestinian terrorists last week. U.S.
intelligence was keeping close
watch on another ship that has been
linked to terrorism.
The ship is the Tong Gon Ac Guk
Ho. a sometime merchant ship
owned by North Korea, which uses
it to support terrorist operations In
the Fur East. According to our
intelligence sources, it is the only
merchant ship in the world that has
been Identified us an engine ol
state-sponsored terrorism. The fact
that It masquerades as a freighter
only adds to the ship's sinister
reputation.
Early this past summer, the Tong
Gon Ae Guk Ho visited Japan,
much to the alarm of Defense
Intelligence Agency personnel In
Tokyo. It dropped anchor In Japan a
second time on Aug. 14. remaining
there three days.

These two visits led military
officials in Hawaii to provide us with
details ol the terrorist ship's known
activities In the lust couple of years.
Here’s what they told us:
The Tong Gon Ae Guk Ho made
its first blips on In tellig ence
monitors in 1983, when North
Korean commandos planted a bomb
at the "Martyrs' Mausoleum" in
Rangoon. Burma. The bomb was
detonated by radio too early to kill
visiting South Korean President
Chun Doo IIwan. but 17 members
ol tlx- South Korean delegation and
four Burmese were killed in the
blast.
One North Korean commando was
killed and two others were captured.
At least one of them gave the
Burmese a detailed confession.
The assassination squad had been
brought to Burma on the Tong Gon
Ac Guk Ho. A secret U.S. military
intelligence report said the ship
"wus tusked lo ... put the terrorists
and the equipment ashore und to
exflltrutc the terrorists to North

K o re a on c o m p le tio n of the
mission."
The report added that "the cap­
ture of the North Korean terrorists
aborted the m erch an t s h ip 's
cxfiltrntlon mission and the ship
returned to North Korea in Nov­
ember 1983."
It "basically remained Inactive"
in or near its home port of Narnpo
on the west coast of the peninsula
"for long periods of time." During
that Interlude, the ship was In­
volved In “ limited People's Republicof China trade" across the Yellow
Sea. the report stuted.
The Tong Gon Ae G uk Ho
extended Its travels this year with
the two trips to Ja p a n . What
p a r tic u la r ly w o rried U .S . In ­
tellig en ce was that the crew
manifest, obtained by U.S. agents,
made It clear that "much ol the
crew of approximately 31 persons —
including most of the key officers —
is identical to the crew which
participated In the terrorist support
voyage In late 1983." the secret
report stated.

Summing up the evidence on the
Tong Gon Ae Guk Ho. the reporl
made these points:
— The ship has a "previous
history of involvement In covert
tran sp o rt of te rro rist- re la te d
personnel and arms."
— It has a "history of Involvement
In North Korean agent and smug­
gling a ctivitie s in Ja p a n and
possibly other Asian countries.”
— It has been "equipped with
sophisticated communications de­
vices. heavy machine guns, small
firearms, grenades, u larger thaii
normal crew and spcciul 'training'
facilities."
— The ship has undergone "peri­
odic subordination" to the Koreuo
Communist Party for special opera­
tions "while disguised as a trade
ship.”
— The ship has most likely
become "part of the North Korean
merchant marine (which) was re­
cently organized into ‘suicide
squuds' in order lo become the
fourth defensive force of North
Korea."

�*f M*fw«* 'V 9• - *

Evening H«r«td, Sanford, FI.

O n e C h a rg e d , O n e Escaped
Sanford police reportctl seeing
two men standing outside a
Sanford business where a door
had been forced open. One man
flcdi the other was caught at the
scene and charged with burglary
and resisting arrest.
The man charged was arrested
outside a sign shop at 218
Magnolia Avc.. a police report
satd. After he was taken Into
custody at about 10:40 p.m.
M onday, police found two
bicycles parked behind Cum­
berland Farms on Third Street at
Park ‘ AVenuc and the suspect
allegedly said they belong In him
and the man who ran from
police, the report said.
Ricky Ricardo Knight. 20, of
808 Bay Avc.. Sanford, was
being held in lien of $5,000
bond.

DU1 ARREST
The following person hits been
arrested In Seminole County on
a charge of driving under the
Influence:
—Kenneth Knox Bell. 08. ol
Orlando, was arrested at 12:50
a.m. Tuesday after Ills car ran

Action Reports
★ Fires
* Courts
★ Police
over a median barricade, ran it
rcdllght and then passed it
Florida Highway Patrol trooper's
ear who made the arrest on U.S.
Highway 17-5)2, Casselberry.

BURGLARIES &amp; THEFTS

A thief look it $400 gold ring, a
.45-ealther revolver worth $200,
a .OH-raUber revolver worth
$500 and an automatic pistol
worth $5100 from the home of
Charley E. Reese, 47. of 5)11
Lake Lane. Lnngwood. Reese
told Seminole Comity sheriffs
deputies the Items were stolen
Monday.
Barbara Rothberg. 45). of 578
Green Meadow Court. Malt kind,
reported to deputies two rings,
w ith it com bined valu e of

$ 1.800. disappeared from her
home between Oct. 10 and
Monday.
A briefcase, a stereo and other
Items with a total value of about
$800 were stolen from the home
of Steve L. Kerns, 36, of 28 ID
Nicholas Lane. Apopka, on
Sunday or Monday, a sheriffs
report said.
•Joseph Kevin Bell. 19. of 2400
Howell Branch Rond *155,
Winter Park, reported to depu­
ties his boat worth $2,000 was
stolen from outside his home on
Monday or Tuesday.
An infant's ear scat worth $75
and a $ 150 equalizer were stolen
from the car of Charles W.
Stanley. 26, of Tangerine, while
the vehicle was parked at the
Interstate 4 Industrial Park,
Stale Road .46 at Interstate 4.
Sanford, on Monday, a sheriffs
report said.
Four rings, a gold coin and a
gold chain with a combined

W edneidiy, Oct. I t , 19»S—3A

Watt To Address Republicans

value of $1,000 were stolen from
th e h o m e o f D o n n a L.
Mollcnkopf, 52, of 212 Penbrook
Place, Longwood. after Sept. 20.
The loss was reported to sheriff s
deputies on Monday.

Jim Watt. «i 4lh term Re­
publican In the Florida House
of Representatives who Is
running for Attorney General,
will address the Thursday
m eeting of the Sem inole
County Republican Executive
Committee.
Open to the public, the
meeting starts at H p.m. at the
Altamonte Springs Recreation
a n d C t v I c C e n t e r . 830
Magnolia Drive.
A native Floridian. Watt
holds degrees from the Uni­
versity of Miami and the
University of Florida. He has
served as ehalrman of the
Palm Beach County legislative
delegation and Is chairman of
th e R e p u b lic a n P a r t y ’s

A $175 outboard motor was
stolen from a shed at the home
of Ward Davis, 71. of 2936 Pine
Avc., Apopka, on Sunday or
Monday, a sheriffs report said.
Tom Douglas, 37. owner of
Douglas Plumbing, reported to
deputies tools and a box with a
total value of $2,000 were stolen
from his business at 104 Manor
Drive, Altamonte Springs, be­
tween Oct. 11 and Monday.
A burglar entered through a
door and disarmed an alarm
before stealing a key making
machine and tools with it com­
bined value of $3,000 from
A-Aaron Locksmith. 1188 E.
State Road 436, Altamonte
Springs. The burglary occurred
between Oct. 11 and Monday
when a worker discovered the
burglary, according to a report
Rosalyn Wtss of Longwood, filed
with sheriffs deputies.

J im W a tt
Legislative Campaign

R E D JO N ES'

VILLAGE FLEA MARKET
1500 FRENCH AVE. IN SANFORD

4 x 8 ’ T A BLE

3

Q IIN H A Y ^ $

F n j n v A F l c n s n n t I ) n y W i t h ( ) l d F r i e n d ,s

OPEN W ED . - FRI. - SAT. - SUN.
For Inlormotion
PHONE

_
•&gt; •£•&gt; -5-151

WEEKLY SPECIALS
Buy A Med. Sub &amp; Get
Another Med. Sub For

1 / 2 Price

Expires IO/23 'H5

Give You a Taste Of
Feasting Italian Style

Friendship Force
F rie n d s h ip F o rce V ice P resid en t Joy
M c F a rla n d , center, and 1985 Exchange
Director Jean M ille r, left, explain the goals
of the International organization to Ken
Cone, President of the Longwood Winter
Springs Chamber of Commerce, at a past
meeting of chamber members. Friendship
F o rce m em b ers exchange visits w ith

ALL RONZONI MACARONI
ON SALE
Buy 2 G e t O ne FREE!

FAIRMONT PLAZA

Featuring Imports from Italy
members In other countries to help promote
International understanding. The G reater
Orlando chapter w ill welcome back its
members who just returned from Piacenza,
Italy, and discuss the group's future travel
plans at a meeting 6 p.m. Saturday at M arks
Street Senior Center, 99 East M arks Street,
Orlando.

Exp*. 10/23/85

Conveniently Located
Just V* ML N. of 434

800 H w y. 17-02 N .
Longw ood, Fla.

8 3 1 -1 1 0 8

It you Ilk* Itatlun, you'll

lo v a u a f

N O T IC E O F R E G U L A T IO N
O F L A N D U S E C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
THE CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA, PROPOSES TO REGULATE THE USE OF THE
LAND WITHIN THE INCORPORATED AREA OF LAKE MARY AS SHOWN IN THE
MAP IN THIS ADVERTISEMENT.
A Public Hearing will be held on October 24,1985, at 7:30 P.M., or as soon thereafter
as possible, at Lake Mary City Hall, 158 North Country Club Road, Lake Mary, Florida.
A copy of the Comprehensive Land Use Plan is available in the City Manager's Of­
fice, 158 North Country Club Road, Lake Mary, Florida, Monday through Friday, from
8:00 A.M. until 4:30 P.M., for persons desiring to examine.
PERSONS ARE ADVISED THAT IF THEY DECIDE TO APPEAL ANY DECISION MADE
AT THIS MEETING THEY WILL NEED A RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND FOR
SUCH PURPOSE, THEY NEED TO ENSURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS IS MADE WHICH INCLUDES THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE
UPON WHICH THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED, PER SECTION 286.0105 FLORIDA
STATUTES.

•7

Of
W s V -W

---- I

,»*«.***•! -

r. I . -

S W EET
D R EA M S

p W A B l you won t know it s
r i c u m
happening, but a United
■| m m m
Telephone computer
W l w l I E l i may be testing your
w w i telephone line while you sleep
I C L Each night, special computerized
equipment checks United Tel lines to
make sure they re working properly
Then, if anything is less than perfect,
employees are able to test and repair
the problem, usually before you notice
it This is just one of the ways that united
Tel is making sure your telephone
service remains one of the best values
in your monthly budget

w e C on n ect you
t o Y o u r w o r ld

j. System
United Telephone of Florida

*

"i .

1

ufct HitV,

:
’P l / l t A

d

mm
mm

1

-V--—

L Sf/- :~%
m

.

7

4

L.vit

•■;

- i

v:a

&gt; ,|

j

*’ ? /

V

. . .

. •&gt;?

\

► k / T - T .'
,?«-!.• Y W &gt;
1*
1*
!; : .v—U *•
f c r W ; * * * t

1 ■■
r ,

;

:&gt; • £ ,. . V i S f
' •.

i:”. f '-

•[. i

;

g.

i..„ r t i

v.— ■
-r r

The entire incorporated land area of the City of Lake Mary, Florida, will be affected
by the provisions of the Comprehensive Land Use Plan.
City of Lake Mary, Florida
Isl Carol A. Edwards
City Clerk
Publish October 16, 1985

Al 1* JV*

*-

�aA—Evening

Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednetday, Oct. 16, 1913

...M issing
Continued from page 1A
h usb and c o u ld n 't Id e n tify
W illia m from the photos.
because "th e y were so dlslortcd." So they had to look at
his body after It was exhumed. A
traumatic experience, she said,
which was compounded because
l he body hadn't been embalmed.
The lack of embalming, she said,
also forced quick reburial.
W illiam Is now hurled In
Orange City and his four sisters
and brothers, ages 4. 6, 11 and
16. who had asked to sec his
body, were not permitted to
hccabse of Its condition, she
said.
Ol Seminole County officials.
Mrs. Urvant said. "They Just
look the body to bury without
looking to sec anything about It.
My husband and I had to view
the body six days after it had
been in the grave to Identify it.
It 's not easy to do."

Blame
Although she praised trooper
S e lllu te r's "co m p assio n ate"
handling of the accident case
and criticized the Seminole med­
ical examiner, she places the
greatest blame for the delay in
indcntifving her son on the

Volusia County Sheriffs De­
partment.
Mrs. Bryant said six days after
she reported her son missing she
was called by a deputy who
asked if she knew where he was.
"You're asking m e?" she said
she replied.
Schluter said he had asked
Volusia and Seminole county
sheriffs departments and city
police in both counties through
personal telephone calls If they
iiad any reports of missing
persons who might match the
description of his "Jo h n Doc."
Although, lie said, a lot of lawenforcement people did a lot of
paperwork and provided him
with leads that proved false.
Volusia County, which had a
m issing person's report on
William, failed to find it.
Volusia County Sheriffs Capt.
Ed Carroll said at the time
Schluter called his department
he spoke with a clerk who didn’t
find the report in the files
because It had been shuffled to
the bottom of a stack on a
supervisor’s desk.
Even if the clerk had found the
report. Carroll said he doubled If
the connection would have been
made because of differences in
the descriptions of the "two"
victims the lawmen were dealing
with.

N e w K iller Plagues
Florida Citrus Crops
MIAMI (UPI) — A liny black Insect that deforms fruit and
dries out citrus branches has been discovered In South
Florida, .it a time when the state's citrus Industry is reeling
from several other setbacks, officials said today.
Florida's S I billion citrus Industry has been battered In
recent years by citrus canker, medllles and freezes. Now.
the black parlatoria scale insect has been found several
times this week on citrus trees in Miami's Little Haiti
neighborhood.
"It is certainly not as serious as citrus canker because it
is an insect and you can sec it. so we can survey very
cllectively for it." said Ed Burns, chief inspector for the
Florida Department ol Agriculture and Consumer Services
in Miami.
The insect sucks the nutrients and water from citrus
Iruits and leal cells, causing the leaves to yellow and the
Iruit to drop from trees before it is ripe.
Agriculture officials suspect that it got to Dade County in
Iresh Iruit. possibly from the Caribbean, that was
contaminated by the insect.

A ttra c tio n A im e d A t Education
ORLANDO (UPI) — Enveloping students In laser disc
projections, helping teachers visually convey concepts of
language and mathematics, and marketing the technology
will be the soul of Central Florida's newest tourist
attraction.
Introduced Tuesday by publisher Harcoun Brace
Jov anovich. Places of Learning is sandwiched between the
corporate headquarters and Sea World, which H B J also
owns.
For now. Places of Learning offers two components, the
Children's Plaza — featuring a one-acre concrete map of
the United States. 15 live-fool tall books and tlie Hags of all
50 stales — and a store buasting the nation's largest
collection ol children's books.
Boland Goddu. director ol education for H B J. said the
laser disc product and its showcase were expected to be
ready by Places of Learning's opening, but the final
package will not be completed until at least next year.
"The imagination immediately starts taking you to so
many things For example, you're teaching nouns, verbs
and adjectives You cun actually show verbs as motion,
nouns a s things and adjectives and adverbs as changing
them — you can physically show that."

‘S e s t e ft t y e u tt&amp; o s ie e
FOR THE WIL-WIN WORKSHOPS

C e n te r

Friday, October 25, 1985
8 p.m. to 1 a.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
DANCE

8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
10 p.m. to 1 a.m.

BOB POWELL * COUNTRY WAV
M tiuv U id jjf *7 m &gt; ( »f LimJu S h r iiir r t O rLin

tin |»WI* U R L ttl

CARL VICTOR
* i LeiudricLtlr Sin n* * *i

JAY STACY
F t LjudrrddJr lk*ts
Lh t* tmiution
guium** plus t* nir% mm h of hiii n material
C ountry Muvii ( abarrt

frutn l.m r t i

TiiIjIj to LHl&gt; Fn/srll Kj Wilhr NrImiTi
ROY McCALL

llcnmiowft Youth A ttilrv rtn riit A w j i i J in
IHhi Hcfxtrd hi CuunirA Mu*n AwHiAUun
Ilull nl 1.niit i.nirT1«iinrc] at (&gt;
fari^t lIlmMHii
Jaiiilioitr In LukfLili'i

JU m o re r Loungr

Lovr Boat Bat k thuur l.Gurttfr

PAULA COLLIER
UiUndo h n io u s ly with Saw grata KainbU r%
of I t LaudrrtiaJr I t U* ur]r rrialr M uov Fl
LaucJrriial*- fcllk*. Margwtr
Llk* Ft
LautirnJjSr fi uf

ARRANGED BY:

Bandy and Paula Collier. Editor
Publisher Country Musie
Newsletter

A D M IS SIO N : 6 6 .0 0 A T DOOR
6 6 .0 0 IN A D VA N C E
PH O N E 3 2 1 -7 0 6 6

W IN T R IP F O R T W O
The w inners of a trip for 2 to
N ash ville (includes a ir fa re , accom odations &amp;
♦ours) w ill be d raw n of the Jam b oree.

” 1 thonght ft was unusual that
we got no BOLO (be on the look
out), no physical description."
he said.
The lack of a Volusia BOLO on
the case. Carroll said, was the
result of the delay in assignment
of the case to an investigator.
Schluter said the ease drew a
lot of local media attention and
although lie doesn'l want to
seem critical of other agencies he
is puzzled that Volusia officials
didn't link the two cases. Carroll
said the varied descriptions and
the fact the boy died in Seminole
County perhaps caused his men
lo overlook ihe connection.

Carroll said after deputies took
the Bryants' report, information
was entered Inlo ihe state and
national missing person's com­
puter system, which might or
might mil have turned up a
Since William has been Iden­
match if trooper Schluter had tified. Schluter said. Volusia
checked ihat system. However, lawmen have criticized him for
he said, the major problem noi entering his "Jo h n Doe" into
within the sheriffs department a stale computer system that is a
was the fact that the missing national link to missing persons
person's report was misplaced where it might have been mat­
and an investigator was not ched with the Volusia entry.
assigned to (he case until Oct.
"The program doesn't replace
10. when Mrs. Bryant was al­
what
i did." Schluter said. "That
ready making the match be­
would
have been the easy way,
tween "John Doc" and her son.
and ihe program may or may
A Seminole County sheriffs noi have worked. The problem
deputy who said his depart­ was Volusia County was unable
ment's only involvement in the to find their missing person's
case was to take photos at the report.
autopsy, expressed surprise that
He explained the two-year-old
Volusia County did not issue a computer program offered by
missing person's bulletin on the the Florida Crime Information
Center In Tallahassee is rarely
boy.

Continued from page 1A

IN BRIEF

C iv ic

Computer System

...Autopsy

FLORIDA

S a n fo rd

Schluter said his phone calls
were made in lieu of issuing a
police bulletin lo all police
agencies describing his "Jo h n
Doc." lie said the personal calls
were more efficient because
bulletin information might be
overlooked whereas a phone call
is more likely to gel a response.
His call lo Volusia County gol no
results, lie said.

Hodes, who with his wife, was
a friend of the Klinghoffers said
ihe body's identification will "by
all means" give Klinghoffcr's
widow. Marilyn, some relief.
"Tin- facl that there was no body
was pretty traumatic for her."
Italian aulhorltlcs pressed the
investigation Into the AchIHc
Lauro hijacking and said they
believed about 15 icrrorisls were
probably involved in planning
and carrying out tlie attack.
Four Palestinians Jailed in
S p o lc to . It a ly , have been
charged with hijacking the
Italian luxury liner Oct. 7 off the
coast of Port Said. Egypt, and
killing Klinghoffcr.
In Genoa, where the hijackers
first boarded the ship, warrants
were issued Tuesday lor three
additional suspects including the
man who bought tickets for the
lour hijackers.
Investigating magistrates from
Genoa. Italy, and Syracuse.
Sicily, worked to assemble evi­
dence for the trial of the four.
Italian investigators said they
were working on the theory that
about 15 terrorists planned and
carried out the attack.
In ve stig a tin g m ag istrates
boarded the luxury liner Tues­
day. riding out In naval launches
to meet the ship In the Straits of

M essina near S ic ily . Once
aboard, they interviewed Capt.
Gerardo De Rosa and other crew
members. Including a barman
who reportedly saw the hijackers
kill KilnghofTer.
Secretary of State George
Shultz, during a NATO meeting
in Brussels. Belgium. Tuesday,
chided Italian Foreign Minister
Giulio Andrcotti for Italy's re­
lease of Mohammed Abbas, a
Palestine Liberation Organiza­
tion official the United States has
said was the mastermind of the
Achilic Lauro attack.
White House deputy press
secretary Larry Spcakes, travel­
ing aboard Air Force One with
President Reagan Tuesday, said
all governments in the Middle
East have been advised that the
United States will pursue Abbas.
Stale Department spokesman
Charles Redman, asked if U.S.
steps to get Abbas might include,
"extra legal measures" or covert
military operations, repeated an
earlier statement: "W c w|Jl take
all steps possible."
Italian Prime Minister Bctttno
Craxt — under fire for the
decision to free Abbas — fought
to prevent the uproar from
toppling ht» five-party coalition
government. Defense Minister
G iovanni Spadollni has de­
nounced Craxl for allowing Ab­
bas to leave.
Spadollni Ignored repeated
telephone ca lls from Craxl
Tuesday.

Schluter said charges are not
pending against Ja m e s M.
Bartlett 21, of DeBnry, Hu*
driver of the 1974 that struck
William's blcycic from Ihe rear
as they both traveled north.
The bicycle William was riding
had been borrowed from a friend
and had been bought al a flea
market, so the serial number
had never been recorded. Mrs.
Bryant said.
At first Schluter said, the
accident was believed lo have
been a hit-and-run. hut Bnrtleti
had left Ihe scene lo go lo his
home about a mile away lo
telephone for help. Schluter said
William was riding in (lie pass­
ing lane of the roadway and he
was at fault lu the accident.

checked on by lawmen. Most arc
unaware of Us existence, he said,
and currently there arc only 17
names In the system. He said the
system Is difficult to use. Carroll
said Volusia routinely lists all of
its missing persons in that
system and that county alone
has more than 17 cases In those
files.

Description* Erred

Mrs. Bryant said even if In­
formation had been rciensed on
tier son It would have been
wrong. She said Garay described
William as weighing 150 pounds
when he weighed 135. They
listed him as being 6-fect tali,
w h e n he w a s a c t u a l l y
5-fcel- 10-inchcs tall. His head
was shaved after the accident
and his sandy-brown hair was
mislabeled as blond. Schluter
said. And the medical examiner
estimated the age of the body al
about 20. he said.
"1 did my Job." Schluter said.
"Police agencies need lo work
together." But. apparently, in
ibis case tit ere was a breakdown
in the Volusia County system
that caused William's case to be
lost in the shuffle.
This incident has caused
Garay to change policy within
his department. He said he will
now order photographs of
clothing before it is destroyed
and more careful notation of the
charateristics of (he victim will
be made.
Volusia County sheriff's clerks
have. Carroll said, been ordered
to take greater care In docu­
menting missing person reports
and in passing them along to
supervisors.

Mrs. Bryant said iter son was
riding to his grandmother's
home In Orange City when the
accident occurred.
She said she has consulted an
attorney and lias been told that
there Is apparently nothing tl
legal about how iter son's case
was handled and. tlie- emotional
trauma her family lias suffered,
apparently, she said, counts lot
nothing under the law.
"He was about four tulles from
home when he was hit." Mrs,
Bryant said. "T o have him
missing for n month ... to
wonder was lie kidnapped, did
he run away?
"It's bad enough that he died,
hut to think (hut he was there
three weeks and buried un­
claimed. It’s unbelievable. This
could happen to any one.
" I wonder how many oilier
kids arc burled like this?"

(3 0 5 ) 3 2 3 -3 4 0 8

Al A Paulina Llndalrom
Ownora

LINDSTROM'S

S

e r v ic e , in c .

chanic

C e r t if i e s

A uthorized
M erC ru lser
Dealer

Port o f Sanford
B uilding 202
P .0 . Box 396
Laka M onroe, FL
32747

Over 25 Yrs. Experience

B u s i ness

1n s u r a n e t* ?

( ) n r i i ii n i t ' s;i\ s it In s t .

T TONY RtJSSI INSURANCE
i t

P h . S 3 M S IS
J- 2 5 7 5 S. F re n c h A v e ., S a n fo rd
% s iu to - O w n e r s I n s u r a n c e
I ilc. Marne. ( ar. Hiisimw line name u " a all

TREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N

STOCKS
These quotations provided by m em bers ol
the National Association ol S e c u n ile s D ealer*
a re representative inter dealer p rices as ol
m id m orning today
In ter d ealer m arkets
change throughout the day P rice s do not
include re ta il m arkup markdown
Bid A ik
A tlantic B a n k ...................................... 39».
40
A m erican Pioneer S A L
d 'l
9
Barnett Bank
38*■ 31 &gt;,
F lo rid a Pow er

A Lig h t...........................................24H
F fB P ro g re **.................................... 26%
Freedom S a vin g s.............................. l it *
H C A ....................................................3I*»
Hughe* S u p p ly ..................................22k*
M o r r lto n 't ......................................... I I U
N C R C orp.......................................... 14U
P le » * * y ..........................................,,..191*
Sc o tty '*.............................................. 12H
Soulhea*! Bank
.....
301*
Su nT ru*t...........................................H U

24'*
2 ? '*
1U*
Ills
221*
III*
341*
20'S
t it *
30'i
33*.

AREA DEATHS
ALWINA AMLING
A lw ina Am llng. 94. 2080
Woodpecker Lane. Oviedo, died
Tuesday al Lutheran Haven
Nursing Home. Born in Addison.
ML. on Aug. 11. 1891. she moved
lo Oviedo from Des Plaines, 111.,
in 1976. She was a homemaker
and a member of St. Luke's
Lutheran Church. Survivors:
sons, Victor P., Mount Prospect.
I l l .. Rob ert W .. A rlin g to n
Heights. III.. Arthur A.. Des
Plaines; daughter, Mrs. Arnett C.
Relncke. Fort Wayne, hid.; 10
g r a n d c h ild r e n ; 14 g r e a t ­
g r a n d c h ild r e n . B a ld w in Fairchild Funeral Home, Goldenrod.
COL. STEWARD JOHN
CHISHOLM
Col. Steward John Chisholm.
66. 1013 Antelope Trail. Winter
Springs, died Monday al South
Seminole Community Hospital.
Born in Del Norte. Colo., on Nov.
2. 1918, he moved to Winter
Springs from Merritt Island in
1977. He was retired from the
Air Force and was a member of
Si. Stephen's Catholic Church.
W in te r Sp ring s. He was a
member of ihe Retired Officers
Association. Survivors: wife,
Mary Jo : sons. John Charles.
Cocoa Beach. Tom. W inter
Springs: daughter. Barb ara
Barnes, Heston. Va.: brother.
Arch, Monte Vista. Colo.: sisters,
Mrs. Burrell Gcrhardl. San An­
tonio, Texas, Mrs. Paul Slang.
Alamosa. Colo.: two grand­
ch ild ren . Bald w in-Fairchild
Funeral Home. Goldenrod.
MRS. MINNIE SCIPIO COLSON
Mrs. Minnie Sciplo Colson. 95.
of 1106 Pecan Ave., Sanford,
died Sunday at tlie Sanford
Nursing A Convalescent Center.
Born Aug. 6, 1891 in Klngsferry.
Fla., she became a resident of
Sanford In 1909. She was a

WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES
1. Frequent Headaches
2. Low Back or Hip Pain
3. Dizziness or Loss of Sleep
4. Numbness of Hands or Feet
5. Nervousness
6. Neck Pain or Stiffness
7. Arm and Shoulder Pain
Acctm e*
'Swk)»ct Te Petit j lim it**

Eriluitwn Includes: Pottuit Anjlpn. Finlwn Ini. Shcnt
le| Tnl, Short Aim Tnl And Till With Doctor

•Tm£PATIENTANDANTOThEF»PEBiONPESPONSlBlE FOP PAYMENT HASk HIGhTTO«l FuSt »&lt;:
PAT CANCEL PAtMEN' 0» BE FIEtMauBSEDFOB PAYMENT F0« ANTOThEHMHVICE EYAMINA
TION on TREATMENTwhich is PERFORMEDas ARESULT OF ANDWITHIN I) hours o* re spun
DINGto the ADVERTISEMENT for the free service Examination on treatment

8AM G A N F O R D P A I N C O N T R O L C L I N I C
10
o r C H I R O P R A C T I C , I N C . lo.n.e.a
homemaker, member of New Mt.
C a lv a ry M issionary Baptist
Church and the Pallbearers So­
ciety »5.
Survivors: sister. Mrs. Annie
Dickey. Sanford: brother. John
Sciplo Jr.. Winter Park: four
grandchildren. Felix McClairen.
Gaithersburg, Md.. Carl W. MeClaircn. Miami, Samuel MeClalrcn. Sanford, and Angela M.
M cC laire n . O rlando: seven
great-grandchildren. WilsonElehelbergcr Mortuary in charge
of funeral arrangements.

Funeral Notice
C O LSO N , M IN N IE
— Fun eral Service* for M r* M innie Sciplo
Coi*on. 9S, of I I M Pecan Ave., Sanford, who
died Sunday, w ill be held noon Saturday at
New M l C a lvary M lu lo n a r y B a p tltl Church,
" I S W I2lh St . Sanford, with Pa *to r George
W W arren, officiating. Calling hour* lor
tn e n d i will be held from 3 p m . until I p m at
the Chapel F r id a y . W ilto n - E lc h e lb e rg e r
M o rtuary In charge

OAKLAWN
• FUNERAL NOME • CUK1UV • FlMtST
« YOUR KEY c m a
Om Laul O m r Take* Can N Im ytM —

8 PM
?471 s A I R P O F H B I V D - S A N F O R D
ih d " ' ‘ ,h '
S A N F O R D 3 2 3 S763
* A t Utu Al Thu S t o i c . I t FREE O R L A N D O 649 0 3 6 9

WHAT ABOUT
PRE-ARRANGING
A FUNERAL?
T h is is s o m e tim e s p ru d e n t.
However, if you are thinking about
pre-arranging a specific funeral
you are urged to contact an exper­
ienced Funeral D ire cto r. Careful
counseling w ith him can avoid un­
wise planning w ith a salesm an.
We offer a m ethod of F R E E Z IN G
T O D A Y S F U N E R A L C O S T S through
our new Pre-need Funeral Plan; brief­
ly, here are som e of the plans m ajor
features;
■ You M ake The Decisions Today A bout
Your Funeral A rrangem ents And Costs
• Convenient In stallm en ts If Needed
W ith o u t Finance Charges
• The Plan Is N ot Insurance
IF YOU W ISH TO CANCEL. 100% OF THE
MONEY PA ID W ILL BE R EFU N D E D

GRAMKOW

444 At R M n rt M.
U n im t AM C am tnt fb h d t

iw fo rd /U A e Mary

122-4263
P n fln N w

FU NERAL HOME
U 0 W EST AIRPORT BOULEVARD
SANFORD. FLORIDA

TELEPHONE (305) 3 2 2 -3 2 i 3

Locally Owned And Operated Since 1956

! GRAMKOW FUNERAL HOME
:

!

ISO W. AIRPORT BLVD.
SANFORD, FL 32771
I *ouW Uko lo kern movo About your funtrol AirAne.in.nl plon

**n* kookkl.

! NAME ____________________________________
ADDRESS

I C IT Y _____
Z IP ______

_ STATE
PHONE

�United Lyman Plays On, Wins No. 12 For Karren
By Chris Fister
"W e ’re going lo miss Coach
Herald Sports W riter
Newman a lot,” senior Dawn
In 12 matches this season, live Boyescn said. "But we’re de­
Lyman High volleyball team has termined to do our best and
proved to be one of lhe most show her that we have learned
talented around.
everything she taught us."
The past few days, the learn
Tu esd ay night, the em o­
lias showed that it is much more t i o n a l l y c h a r g e d 1. a d y
than a group of talented athletes.
Greyhounds put on another
Alter the news of coach Karren awesome display as they up­
Newm an’s tragic automobile ended a scrappy Lake Brantley
accident which left her para­ team. 15-4, 15-10 in Seminole
lyzed from the waist down.
Athletic Conference play at
Lyman decided it would be best
Lyman High.
lo play on. And, In the process, \ Lyman, which now stands at
the young athletes have dis­
12-0 overall and 6-0 in the SAC.
played unity and maturity that
returns to action tonight at 5:30
Newman no doubt will be proud at home in a non-conference
of.
match against Spruce Creek.

Lake Brantley came back
within 4-3 as Toni Arnlcon
served three points but Lyman
regained the serve and took
"W e lelt that we were together command as Sheila Mandy
as a team and ready to play." served eight straight for a 12-3
senior Kim Forsyth said. "W e lead.
Highlighting the rally were a
could have postponed the match
but we knew Miss Newman pair of spikes by Forsyth and
would never want that. She one each by Tarnl Foss and Lori
Helms.
would want us lo continue on."
After Brantley scored one
Forsyth was devastating at the
net In the opening game as she more point to make it 12-4.
converted on six of seven kill Forsyth’s spike returned the
opportunities. Forsyth opened serve to Lym an and Diana
the match with a spike and Boyescn served the last three
Lyman went on lo take a 4-0 points. The 14th point came on
lead on Boyescn's serve, the Dawn Boyescn’s dink and the
final point on a spike by Helms
fourth an ace.

V o lle y b a ll

'W a ’re going to miss Coach N ew m an a lo t. But
w e ’re d e te rm in e d to do ou r best and show her
th a t w e have le a rn e d everythin g she taugh t us.’

—Down Boyesen
who had an excellent night at
the net.
Lake Brantley came on strong
In the early part of the second
game as it took an 8-3 lead. Gigi
G riffin, playing her second
match after bcingd out for three
weeks due to an appendectomy,
served four of the eight points.
None of the eight was returned
and one was an ace.

Lyman regained the serve and
Diana Boyescn. u Junior, then
put on one of the best serving
strings of the year. Brantley
couldn't handle Boyescn's hard
serve and Lyman reeled off nine
straight points for a 12-3 lead.
Four of the nine points came on
h i t s by H e l m s , a few

See LYMAN. Page 9A

W ill
Be N o 'B re e ze '
F o r S e m in o le s
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
The Seabreeze Sandcrabs,
whose football program was
blowln' in the wind before Rocky
Yocam took over, will definitely working quickly this shortened
not be a "breeze" for the Fight­ week. "W e ’ve had to put a lot in
ing Seminoles Thursday night. on Seabreeze In a short time,"
The District 4A-5 encounter will C o a ch D ave M o su rc said .
kick off at 8 p.m. at Welch "T h ey’ve got a really tough club.
Memorial Stadium in Daytona They beat Astronaut (12-0). so
they have lobe good."
Beach.
Titusville Astronaut hung a
W h ile Sem ino le was Just
24-0
licking on the ’Noles in the
happy to secure its first win last
season
opener. Mosurc said his
Friday against Lake Brantley.
club
has
improved tremendously
Seabreeze had the week off.
since
then.
"It should be a real
sitting back and enjoying Its 4-0
record and state ranking. The interesting game," he said. "W e
have to get the same perfor­
Sandcrabs. though idle, im ­
mance from our offensive and
proved one notch to No. 8 in the
defensive lines that we did
Florida Sports Writers Associa­
against Lake Brantley.”
tion prep poll.
O n e o f th o s e o f f e n s iv e
Seabreeze hud a program
linemen. Alan Kendall, was
w h ich resem bled southern named the Optimist Club Of­
neighbor New Smyrna Beach fensive Player of the Week. The
until the Yocam era began four
guard graded out at 86
years ago. Yocam took over a senior
percent, the top performance of
team which hadn't won in two a ttneman this year, Mosurc said.
years and has since carved out a
D aryl Taylo r, who swiped
23-10 mark. The 'Crabs have three
passes, was an easy choice
been 7-4. 8-3 and 8-3 in suc­ for Optimist Club Defensive
cession. N SB lost 22 in suc­ Player of the Week.
cession before upsetting OviedO
two weeks ago.
000
How did he tum it around? " I
J
.
J
.
Partlow.
the strong-footed
always get asked that question
sophomore
kicker,
did erase a
and it is really hard to answer."
mark from the Seminole record
Yocam said Tuesday night via
books last Friday with Is pro­
telep h o n e . ’ ’W e ’ve a lw a y s
digious 45-yard field goal but It
treated our kids with respect.
They know what to expect from wasn't the record that was
reported.
us and we know what to expect
Partlow’s 45-yarder eclipsed
from them. We have been very
the 43-yard mark of Pat Reno,
consistent."
not the 42-yard mark of Jim
And he quickly admits having
Voltoline. Reno, a standout
better players has helped.
kicker and soccer goalie during
"W e have been lucky enough
his senior year in 1977, booted a
to have a lot of great players
43-yarder that year.
come through here," he said
Coincidentally, the kick came
"W hich Is a big part of it. Our.
a g a in s t L a k e B r a n t le y at
assistant coaches arc good too.
Seminole's homecoming.
They do a really great Job and
000
don’t get the credit they de­
Oviedo assistant coach Ken
serve."
Seabreeze has more Incentive Kroog said he’s very happy with
than a ranking and an unbeaten one Sanford product which
record. It is tied with Titusville moved to Ovlpdo. Ed "Double I"
for first place In the 4A-5. Both Milllcr, who wrestled for the
have 1-0 records. Seminole is T rib e and was one of the
0-1. NSB is 1-1 and Oviedo is school's outstanding students, is
suited up the Lions this fall.
0-1. Titusville plays NSB Friday.
Friday. Mllller turned In the
"This Is key game for us in the
district." Yocam said. "Titusville play of the game when he turned
Is 1-0 and New Smyrna had a big away a ball carrier at the Oviedo
win over Oviedo. Both are tough goal line for a two-yard loss.
and we still have to play both of "That touchdown would have
tied the game," Kroog said.
them."
S e m in o le , m e a n w h ile , is "Mllller made a great play."

Football

Herald Photo by Tommy Vincent

»■

Sem inole's Earnie Lewis celeb rates his county-leading fourth sack. Q u a rte rb a c k D avid D elfiacco was th e victim .

Super Sophs: Lew is, Lingard Lead D efense
By Sam Cook
Herald Sporta Editor
It was a super week for sophomores
statistics-wise.
Seminole’s Earnie Lewis took over the
suck lead with two aguinst Lake Brantley to
give him four. Oviedo's Pete "Right Place.
Right Tim e" Llngard recovered tils fourth
fumble lo take sole possession in that
category.
On one particular sack. Lewis, a 6-1, 180
pounder who was moved to L B from
defensive end. fell down on his Initial rush
hut bounced up and chased down
quarterback David Dclflacco.
"Thai's where our agility drills helped."
Lewis said. "1 stunted but I fell down. 1
Jumped up as fast us I could, lie (Dclflacco)
made a mistake by pumping again and 1
was able to get to him."
Lewis said the Seminole defense played
well In spots and the brightest spot was
Daryl Taylor, who hauled In three intercep-

... Football Leaders on JOA
lions in the 17-10 win. "Daryl's intercep­
tions won this game." Lewis said. "They
Just picked up the whole team. Atid lie's a
quarterback playing defensive back."
Taylor's big three tied Scott Radellff for
the county lead. Brian Brinson leads with 78
tackles. Lewis and Oviedo's Beruell Sim ­
mons have 66 apiece. Simmons has played
one less game.
The race was punting leader has
tightened. Radlclff still leads with 37.5 but
Oviedo's Gordon King has pulled iqi to 37.2.
Lake Brantley's David Delftaeeo is third at
36.9.
Offensively. Lake Brantley’s Sam Sears
has 14 catches while Seminole's Dave Rape.
Lake Mary's Byron Washington and Lake
Howell's Bill Wasson have 11. Lyman's

Ralph Philpott has 10.
Seminole’s Je ff Blake continues to lead
the passers in yardage with 573. Blake and
Lake Howell's Mark Walnwright have each
thrown four TD passes. Walnwright is
completing 50 percent of his tosses. Blake
has hurled seven interceptions.
Andrew Smith continues Ills exceptional
surge toward the county rushing title.
Smith has 776 yards on 102 carries in Just
four games. That's an average of 194 yards
per game. He also has nine TDs to lead the
county with 54 points.
000

All of the county teams return to action
Thursday and Friday. Seminole treks to
Daytona Beach lo play Seabreeze Thursday
while Lake Mary hosts Spruce Creek.
Lyman entertains Oviedo in a big Seminole
Athletic Conference game. Lake Howell
Journeys to Winter Park and Lake Brantley
looks for its first win at homecoming against
West Orange.

Geography Favors Jays
After Brett Evens Series

Clark Gets Tough,
Rose Moves Swiftly
By Chuck Burgess
Special to the Herald
IJ o n C l a r k ’ s . L y m a n
Greyhound swimming teams are
probably feeling refreshed after
yesterday’s workout ... or rather
swim meet.
Lyman was paced not only by
J u n i o r s e n s a t io n C h a r lie
"Chazz" Hose, but everyone and
their brother who knew how to
swim. Lyman recorded one of Its
most Impressive wins of the
season by defeating Donalyn
K n i g h t ' s s m a ll tr ib e of
Seminoles, 107-37. In the boys
and. 131-29, In the girls.
"Seminole came In here and
swam well. Ihut’s all there is to
It." second-year coach Clark
said. "They Just don't have the
number of people they need to
produce uny depth."
Rose, happy his teammates
did so well in spite of the fuel
this week hus been one of
s t r e n u o u s w o r k o u ts , wus
ecstatic with his performance.
"The workouts this week have
been unbellevcnbly tough.” Rose

i

A.L. Playoffs

Swimming
said. "W e ’ve been hitting some
high yardage practices and
everyone Is still swimming close
to their best times."
All Rose did for the ‘Hounds
was win his usual number of
e v e n t s , t h r e e . R o se w a s
victorious In the 100 fly. 56.4.
the 100 breast. 1:07.2 and
teamed with John Novotny. Nick
Radkewlch and Rich Otl to win
the 200 medley relay with a
finishing time of 1:58.
"1 think I’m swimming really
well. Right now I’m swimming
faster unshaved then any other
season." Rose said. " I give coach
(Clark) a lot of credit. I really
respect him because he knows
when to be lough with vis and
when to be a friend. 1 can
definitely swim well for someone
like that."
The Greyhounds, who won
every event and only allowed the
Seminoles to score five second-

TORONTO IUPI) - No matter
who wins tonight, the Kansas
City Royals or Toronto Blue
Jays, they’ll make history. But
geography is on the side of the
"There's a definite advantage
Blue Jays.
to being at home." Cox said.
If Toronto wins the deciding "B u t you have to wake up
contest of the American League feeling you’re going to win. They
playoffs, it means the first World know what they have to do."
Series game outside the United
George Brett's solo home run
States Is scheduled to be played in the fifth-inning Tuesday night
Saturday In Exhibition Stadium.
broke a 2-2 tie and gave Kansas
Should Kansas City slip past City the lead for good In a 5-3
faltering Toronto, it Joins the victory.
1925 Pittsburgh. 1958 New York
H o w s c r's p itc h in g p la n s
Yankees. 1968 Detroit and 1979 worked perfectly as he got 5 1-3
Pittsburgh teams as the only Innings of four-hit ball out of
clubs to come back from 3-1 right-hander Mark Gublcza,
deficits to win a best-of-seven charged with all three Toronto
scries.
runs, and nearly air-tight relief
"This is the perfect matchup." for 3 1-3 Innings from left­
Kansas C ity m anager Dick hander Bud Black.
Howscr said of tonight’s pairing
After Toronto’s left-handed
of aces — Bret Sabcrhagen of hitters were out of the way. Dan
Kansas City and Dave Stelb of Qulsenbcrry came in to strike
Toronto — for the one-shot final. out Garth lorg to end the game.
"This is the way it should be."
"They ran out of things to do."
"W e ’ve each got our best two H o w s c r sa id . ’ ’B u t t h a t ’s
guys going." Toronto manager because of the way the game
Bob Cox said. " It ’s pretty much
B s s J A T S . Fags 8 A
a toss-up.

i w m n m sy * r « m m ftnunirw

Charlie "Chazz" Rose takes off to the first of three victories.
places, were swimming with a
team that showed a lot of class,
acco rd in g to C la rk . “ T h at
Seminole team Is tough. They

came in here knowing they were
going to gel beat, but they kept

See CLARK. Page 8A

�•A —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1985

Copeland M ixes G ood Recruits With R ollins' Vets
School has started, fall is In the air
and the tennis programs are well
underway for state and local collcgs
and universities.
Florida Is loaded with top-notch
college and university teams. Most
tennis experts agree that our state
along with the Texas and California
arc the three strongest states In college
teams.
Other states may have one or two
top teams but these three states have
many top teams and many, many
quality players. Of course any really
good college tennis program has a year
round program. There really Is no
"spring tennis season" anymore: It
simply starts when school starts and
ends with the national tournaments in
late May or early June.
Of course, our showcase college
tennis program In the Central Florida
area Is Rollins College In Winter Park.

Rollins has been a powerhouse In
college tennis for many, many years.
Last year’s team was fourth In the
nation In NCAA Division II. had the
NCAA Division champion In Brian
Talgo and finished with an overall
record of 36-12.
That’s a good year folks, but Is really
ra th e r ty p ic a l for coach Norm
Copeland and his teams.
I
talked with coach Copeland a few
days ago and he was his usual
optimistic self. He’s excited about this
year’s team and has good reason to be.
Back from last year’s powerhouse are
Pal Emmett. Kevin Copeland, ex*
Lyman High standout Brian Morrissey.
Pete Allport. Mark Gaberial and Pat
Johnson.
All of these seasoned veterans are
outstanding players and could make
most anyone's standing lineup. Many
of them will not make the Tars starting

L arry
Castle
TENNIS
ANYONE?
line up though because Copeland has
recruited some of the best freshmen
that Rollins has ever had on campus.
The new faces Include Andy Platt
from Ft. Worth. Texas (Andy Is ranked
No. 18 In this tennis-rich state) and
Scott Splelsberger (who Is from
Birmingham. Alabama, and is the No.
1 ranked 18 and under player In
Alabama). Also from "u p north"

Roundtng out this quintet of fine
frosh Is Kyle Summcrall from Lake
City. Kyle Is the son of football and
tennis commentator Pat Summcrall.
Add these new players to the solid
group of returning players and It's
easy to see that Rollins will once again
be one of the top Division II teams in
the nation.

_la y s

...Clark

record-breaking freshman Slasl
Bojauowskl on her tail the entire
race. Metzdorf finally pulled
ahead at the riglu moment to
capture first place in 2:15.3.
Bojauowskl finished in 2:15.8.
O t h e r w i n n e r s for the
Greyhounds Included Webber
(200 l.M. 2:25.9). Shannon
Parker (100 free 1:00.0) and
S h a ri Slgrlst (diving 90.15
points).
On the other side of the
lancltnes. Seminole did have a
bright spot In the midst of their
dreary day after the Greyhounds
were finished. That bright spot
appeared in Jaim e Bojanowski.
Bojanowski, after swimming
the same events for the past four
meets, decided to try his hand at
something new. He swam the
500 free and the 1O0 breast

While most athletes are busyputting hours upon hours of
sweat into their workouts, sonic
athletes have found the secret to
working hard and staying cool.

Chuck
Burgess

No. they're not cross country .
runners romping through the
forests with Ice packs on their
heads. Nor are they football
players with personal trainers
running along side of them with
water bottles and Gatorade.
No. this breed of athlete which
has found the secret to re­
freshing workout environments
is known as the swimmer.
Swimmers, known for their
g r u e lin g and s t r e n u o u s
workouts, do have some con­
solation even if they’re not
looked upon as highly as their
football counterparts.

SWIMMING
WRITER
p.m. at the Sheraton Hotel in
Orlando, the- Florida Coaches
Association will have its annual
meeting. Among the topics ol
discussion are the election of
new officers.
The following day. Sunday,
the Board of Directors will meet
at 7 a.m. Between the hours ol
10 a m and noon, the Florida
Swimming House of Delegates
will convene to elect new officers
and discuss topics of concern.

But. swimmers have lound an
advantage to their hard practices
and little respect. The secret,
At noon, a special luncheon
simply. Is that swimming in will take place to honor several
revitalizing cool water Is pre­
outstanding Individuals who
ferred over the heat and sweat of contributed heavily to Florida
the football gridiron.
swimming throughout the year.
Donalyn Knight, head swim Among those to be awarded are
coach at Seminole High, feels the the media person of the year,
need to swim In cool water Is one coach of the year, and swimmers
shared by many people and of the year In both girls’ and
a th le te s. " J u s t the whole boys’ age groups.
thought of water In a pool makes
After the awards, the new
people want to sw im ." said Board of Directors will engage in
Knight. "People relate swim­ their first meeting to organize for
ming In the pool as relaxing and the upcoming swim season.
fun instead of running around
ana
getting hot and tired.
Trinity Prep swimming stand­
out Austin Lindsey, who will be
"W ho wants to be burning up in an upcoming Issue of Sports
and sweating when they're Illustrated, could have broken a
working out when they can be
b u rn in g the c a lo rie s in a
leisurely w ay?"
Not only does Knight attribute
the cool water as a recruiter, but
she also feels that swimming
takes a lot of stress off the joints
and ligaments. "Running puts a
lot of pounding on the ankles
and knees where swimming puts
you in a horlzonal position and
alleviates the pounding," she
said.
» mm
This Saturday from 4 p.m. to 6

. - . 1.

WHATEVER THE
TEMPERATURE

TRAMS

state record in the National Spa
and Pool Institute meet at the
Justus Aquatic Center in Or­
lando.
Lindsey, who is only 12. broke
the stale record In the 11-12
boys category for his 200
freestyle time of 1:50.15 as he
placed ninth in the event. How­
ever. the record doesn't officially
go into the books because
Lindsey didn't break the record
In an AAU sanctioned meet.
High school times don’t count
toward records because of the
split seasons
ana
WATER FOLLIES - "Even
swimming at Seminole High
School has come a long way."
Donald Knight said. "When I
first started coaching swimming,
a girl came up to me and asked
’Coach, when I put my cap on.
do I put my ears In or out?’"

Florida Is a tennls-rlch state and this
year’s crop of college teams proves it.

C h a m p a g n e
C a n

C a rd s

O n

P o p

1984 OUS CUTLASS CKRAS

AV j

IN STOCK AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERYI

4 DOOR LUXURY SEDANS. LOADED WITH
AUTOMATIC. AIR. POWER STEERING AND
BRAKES, STEREO AND MUCH MOREI

WILLETT

O L D S M O B IL E
C A D IL L A C

HEATHROW

/

3700 S H W Y 17-92
SANPORD

322-3391

^

LAKE MARY BLVD.

/

WILLETT

HW Y436

OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC

ORLANDO

w m t«l« p rltt, »«♦ tm h down plui F U u l n Hu, l» B 4 M l*. H .II/ A P B d tl m i i w b I p r l f H1.V1I. « mo. tin. with approv'd ertdit

24.[3 3

M IC H ELIN

'1 3 “
471-11

• filfi
n n r m n c n lacapMft
fUM._ tiUi- iidtMit
-KH1h-ii;M
■tatnrllls l
Mu 11 JU»iL
iin « | jjn j

AJJLU-

itre /TTTMl

40.000 MILE WARRANTY

M IL E W A R R A N TY

M IM IU M MLT1D P O lY im a

LIK E
NEW!

SANFORD

HW Y434

BEST PRICES
BEST SERVICE
TRY US!
* LOOK
* WEARS
* WARRANTED

C o rk ?

LOS AN G ELES (UPI) - The
St. Louis Cardinals have the
champagne on ice. but It may
not be quite so easy to pop the
corks.
lost a game this season at
The Cardinals, coming off a Dodger Stadium.
three-game sweep of the Los
Hcrshlscr’s record, especially
Angeles Dodgers at Busch at home. Is a big reason why
Stadium, are one victory away Herzog Isn't thinking World
from w inning the National Series Just yet. The 27-year-old
League pennant and going to the right-hander has won his last 12
World Series That victory, how­ decisions, and has not lost at
ever. must be won at Dodger home In 12 decisions this year.
Stadium, a feat that will not In- Included in that record was an
easy.
8-2 victory over the Cardinals In
Over the last several years, the second game of the playoffs
visiting teams have not done la st T h u r s d a y at D o d g er
well in the NL playoffs. Home Stadium.
le a r n s have won 13 straight NL
" I ’m undefeated at home, and
plavoft games. Including five this I don't think the way our
season So. although the Cardi­ pitching rotation has been set up
nals. who swept three games at Is pure happenstance." said
St. Louis after losing the first Hcrshlscr, a 19-game winner
two at Los Angeles, hold it 3-2 during the regular season. "As a
edge in t)ie besl-of-seven series, siukcrball pitcher. I ’m much
the Dodgers are far from dead.
more effective on natural turf
"All I can sav is our club has than I probably would be on the
reacted well to adversity in the surface In St. Louis. 1 throw
past, and I'm sure you'll see us many more sinkers at Dodger
pull together again on Wednes­ Stadium."
day." said Dodgers manager
The Cardinals may have Vince
Tom Lasorda.
Coleman,
Injured Sunday In a
Cardinals manager W hitey
freak
accident,
ready for the
Herzog knows the Dodgers will
sixth game. Coleman, the major
not surrender.
"They are going to be tough." league’s leading base stealer this
Herzog said. "They have been year, hurt his foot after It was
tough on us all year. We blew run over by an autom atic
them out tine game here, and tarpaulin mechanism In St.
they blew us out one game Louis' Busch Stadium, and has
missed the last two games.
there."
Joaquin Andujar. a 2 1-game
St. Louis has not stolen a base
w in n er during tin- regular In its last two victories, but some
season with a history of erratic unexpected power has made up
behavior both on and off the for it. The Cardinals have had 11
field, hits been tabbed by Herzog extra base hits In the scries, only
to pitch the sixth game. The two fewer than the Dodgers, who
Dodgers will counter with their are supposed to have much
ace. Orel Hcrshlscr. who has not more power.

&gt;1

2 3 M ILE W ARR ANTY

Ic e ,

N.L. Playoffs

instead of Ills usual 50 and 100
free.
"Jaim e was so caught up on
chasing the school records that
he wasn’t relaxing and swim­
ming his races the way he was
capable." Donalyn Knight said.
"T o d a y he swam different
events and came close to his best
times."
Bojanowski placed second In
both the 500, 5:08.6 and 100
breast. 1:10.6. " Ja im e (Bo ­
janowski) lost it good race In the
500. He’s a real tough competi­
tor." Clark said respectfully.
Seminole will try to get things
going at 4 p.m. this Thursday at
the Sanora pool in Sanford
against Deland. Lyman is off the
rest of the week to prepare for
next week's crucial Conference
Championships in Longwood.

S w im m ers W ork H ard, Stay Cool

One of the best college teams In the
nation Is not even In the NCAA. Flagler
College. In St. Augustine. Is year In
and year out one of the top teams In
the nation. This year will be no
exception. Coach Peter Scott has
another powerhouse and will be In the
top three In the NAIA.

In checking around the state with
some of the other tennis coaches, it
appears that the "big three." Miami.
Florida and Florida State are all once
again loaded. These teams play In the
NCAA Division I category and all three
will rank in the lop 30 or 35 In lh£
nation.
The University of South Florida also

out six In Ills last start, but
Toronto has beaten Kansas City
In both of his appearances even
though Stleb was the winner In
only the series opener.
The Royals have only five hits
Continued from 7A
went. When you make changes, off the right-hander In 14 2-3
you’ve got to have the people to innings.
Saberhagen. 20-game regular
do it.
" W e ’ll have 2 12 lefties season winner and one of the Cv
read y." Bowser said of his Young Award favorites, was
final-game plans. "W e ’ll have cuffed around by Toronto for
D a n n v J a c k s o n . C h a r 11e nine hits and five runs in 4 1-3
Lclbrandt and maybe Black for innings in his only start against
the Blue Jays.
one batter."
"It's going to be one of the
"If we lose, we go home. If
biggest games of my career." they lose, they go home." Brett
Toronto center fielder Lloyd said. "If we get opportunities, we
Moseby said. "But I'm going to can’t squander them."
do what I always do: have fun.
Willie Wilson and Brett walked
play the game. No matter what back-to-back in the first, and the
■ vs -v i '-w i M '
happens, we've got nothing to be Royals didn't squander that
ashamed of. Be yoursell and chance when Hal McRae rifled a
may the best man win.”
single to left.
Stleb is pitching on three days
Gublcza gave the run right
rest for the second straight time, back on Damaso Garcia's dou­
something he did only twice all ble, Moseby's single and a run- Bob Welch hopes the Dodgers are still around so he can pitch
season.
scoring double play by Ranee in Thursday's playoff final Thursday. L.A. trails St. Louis,
He walked seven and struck Mullinlks.
3-2, entering today's game.
Karen Long. Chrissy Metzdorf
and Jane Hall were all triple
winners. Long won tin- I Of) llv.
1:05.7, 100 back. 1:08.5 and led
oil
the winning 400 free relay
Continued from 7A
team of Tiffany Knulla. Kim
their chins up and fought us the Kwlatkowskl and Metzdorf in a
time of 4:19.3,
entire meet. They really showed
Hal) m anaged first place
a lo t of c l a s s and good
finishes In the 100 breast. 1:18.
sportsmanship."
50 free. 28.0 and helped the 200
Winning for the Greyhound
boys were Chuck Reinighaus medley relay team of Kelly
Strayer. Dannica Jaffin and
(200 free 2:01.6). Ken Barnett
(200 l.M. 2:18.6), Tom Mooney Milette Webber win with a time
(50 free 24.2 and 500 free of 2:11.0.
Metzdorf destroyed her oppo­
5:04.8). Radkcwich (100 back
1.06.9) and Jarrctt Gornto (div­ nents in the 500 free with a time
of 6.06.7. over 40 seconds faster
ing 54 points).
than the second place swimmer.
In the girls meet things looked
pretty much the same for the Although Metzdorf had an eastgo of it In the 500, she had a
’Hounds. Lym an completely
dominated the meet from start to somewhat more difficult time In
the 200 free. With Seminole’s
finish.

has a fine team and will be a prime
contender to win the Sun Belt Confer­
ence. The University of Central Florida
has a new coach. His name Is Pat
Cucci and he has a monumental task
on his hands. UCF has been very weak
In recent years and things are getting
even tougher now that the Knights are
NCAA Division 1. THc Knights also lost
some key players so It may take coach
Cucci a year or two to get the program
off the ground.

comes Donnie Martin and Barry Pcltz.
These two young men are from
Tennessee and are ranked one and two
In the state.

DO UBLI m i l M IT ID PA D IA IS

IMPORT SIZE STEEL RADIALS

tv A z ^

•A r-J •B U U I 91MAT7 ’

N a m iw

—

/ (wniu

V
t!»,

LU-tl

V

M
mo

-*
W

3 * 2 9 "

*2 0 "

»iRuahhiwrt
tKMxUAKl

PtM*T»
_ IHUIM

J

. iV IIO I

S
pw mm
IX&gt;M
111H
’ liiaa '
w r
unt
11m

■
mC
oO

tilt

tm &gt;miL
wu ami
-BIUlMlI
ph i

Phitl
M !tl

I I6570 I 3
| Yaszoid

ww

-nut

I VS /CM*

sa le

P K IC E

6V.V6

2 0 5 7SRIJ

71.VS

JIS 7 S R |$

rTTm

H S 7 JR I S

76.VS
' jB . 1

7V.V1

' C O U P O N ----------- I----------- C O U P O N ------------1

Waathartron Central
Air Conditlonar/Haat Pump
Won't Lot You Down
H

f A

I I

PLUM BING 1
H E A TIN G INC.

1197 Stnford

A vt,

p»i

Sanford

ns mi

J W i.

GRAND PRIX
r v t r a c t io n

- j ^ P J ’OxIS
11x15
12x15

$59.95
965.95
$75.95

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT
C an

Warranty

• BRAKE SPECIAL j 11
1 1

l Install Pad*
I ar Urn
fraat ar Roar

II

11 : i i ^

I

*

3

9

"

1

u *
11 *.
11
*
. * u,

1

61.VS U

70S7SR 14

[ 175 7013

-Ml*

T T g
PH ICE

1VSZ5R14

O U M IC I

f- w ,_
, i6ssmj_

HI ft

mu

■rm/uu

SIZ E

18541II

0U»
l O
V i fhiCI
h ilt!

Ht WM

h. ~

HEAVY DUTY
SHOCKS

1

|

�E v n ln g H artld , Sanford, FI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
H all: G ators Win O ver Vols
Was A '60-M inute Team E ffort '
G A IN ES V ILLE (UPI) — Florida coach Galen Hall, the only
major college coach in the nation who has never been
beaten, said I uesday ft took a total team effort to secure a
Gator victory Saturday over previously unbeaten
Southeastern Conference rival Tennessee.
Hall told his weekly news conference that the Gators
were as well prepared for the Tennessee game as they had
been for any game since he took over the coaching
responsibilities early last season.
"W e had a 60-minute, team effort against Tennessee,
and that Is what it took to beat them.” Hall said. "Our
defensive team has gained confidence and Is playing with
the intensity on every down that great defensive teams
have. Wc played our best defensive game of the season
against Tennessee."
Hut Hall also said their were still a few "glitches" the
Gators need to work on.
"A few busted assignments caused our quarterback to be
sacked more than we would like." Hall said. "W e have to
work to eliminate these mental breakdowns when the
other defensive teams gives us different looks. Other than
that. the offense played a good game."
Hall said one of the shining moments in the Tennessee
game was the play of the Gator special teams.

M cM anus Problem Is In n e r Ear
I A L L A H A S S E E (UPI) — Florida State quarterback
Danny McManus, who underwent neurological tests after
being knocked unconscious in two games this season, has
an inner ear problem its a result or the blows and will be
tail ol action a minimum of one month, it wits announced
Tuesday.
McManus, who was taken from the Auburn game last
week because of recurring dizzy spells, underwent the tests
Tuesday under the direction of 'nuerolnglst Dr. Fred Vroom.
Danny s symptoms indicate a problem with the left
inner ear.
Vroom's report said. "His symptoms and
changes in tests are typical of what can occur with a blow
to ;t head. I would expect gradual improvement and
complete recovery. How quickly this occurs is un­
determined. It could take several weeks, but It mav take
longer."
McManus was knocked out against Nebraska Sept. 7 nnd
Memphis State Sept. '21. He will visit another specialist
Wednesday. Erie Thomas replaced McManus against
Auburn.

N ixon Picked To A rb itra te Feud
TORONTO (UPI) — Major League Baseball has turned to
lortner President Richard Nixon to arbitrate Its latest
family feud.
Richie Phillips, head of the umpires' union, said owners
and umpires agreed on Nixon last Saturday, after umpires
itgreed last Tuesday not to strike, and Instead take their
dispute over post-season pay to arbitration.
Phillips called Nixon "a long-time friend of baseball, and
a man who both sides can trust und have confidence in."
Richard Levin, a spokesman for baseball Commlstoner
Peter Ueberroth, said Nixon was the choice of both sides.

Flag: Rams Blank Bulldogs, 12-0
Alter a scoreless first half. Johncll Brewing!on tossed a
20-yard TD pass to Jeffrey Ingram and Ingram later scored
on a 20-yard run as the Bulldogs blunkcd the Rams. 12-0.
in
S a n fo rd
Recreation Ju n io r League Flag Football
Tuesday.
Ingram, who scored two touchdowns last week, was held
in check bn the Rams in the first half but broke loose In the
final half for his third TD of the season.

W td n ttd iy , Ocl. 14, m s —»A

Tribe Trips Lyman; Rams Stay Unbeaten
By Chris F ister
Herald Sports W riter
A fte r being burned by a 97-yard
touchdown pass In the third quarter, the
Seminole High freshman's defense decided
enough was enough and went on to totally
shut down Lyman's Greyhounds the rest of
the way.
Fortunately for Seminole. It had built up a
19-7 lead before the bomb and went on to
claim a 25-13 victory Tuesday night ui
Seminole High. Seminole ran its record to
4-1 with the win and returns to action next
Tuesday at home against Kissimmee Os­
ceola.
Seminole scored 19 of Its points in the
opening quarter. After taking the opening
kickoff, the Tribe frosh drove 80 yards for
the games first score with a Dwight Brinson
pass to Jarod Jones covering the final 30
yards for the TD, The two point conversion
failed.
Lyman returned the ensuing klekoff to ils
own 48-yard line and drove 52 yards for the
tying TD. Former Sanfordlte Ray Williams
scored from five yards out and the con­
version kick was good as Lyman took a 7-6
lead.
On Its next possession. Seminole took
over at its own 20 and. on the first play.
Jo n e s b ro ke loose for an 80-yard
touchdown. Ronald Cox added the kick for
13-7 lead.
Seminole's defense stopped Lyman on
three plays on Its next possession. The Tribe

F o o tb a ll
then took over and ran Its lead to 19-7 when
Ralph Hardy rambled 5H yards for the
touchdown.
Seminole had Its chances In the second
quarter but made over 70 yards in penalties.
Meanwhile. Lym an couldn't move on
Seminole's defense and the score remained
19-7 at the half.
In the third quarter. Seminole had the hall
first but was slopped al midfield. Willie
Grayson's punt rolled dead at the Lyman
three. On Hrsl down. Lyman surprised the
‘Noles by throwing one deep and It was
complete for a 97-yard TD. The conversion
failed by the Greyhounds had trimmed
Scminolcs lead to 19* 13.
Seminole Iced the victory in the fourth
quarter when Hardy scored from three
yards out to make it 25*13.
Again it was a strong running game that
paved the way Tor the Tribe on offense.
Jones picked up 152 yards on 13 carries
while Kevin Richardson had his best game
with 141 yards on 21 totes. Hardy ran for 78
yards.
Ferrell said the defensive leaders Included
Cox. Grayson. Kyle Reynolds and Jack
Mann.

HARTSFIELD SCORES 4 TOUCHDOWNS
Lake Mary's best offense was Its defense

Tuesday night. The defense accounted for
three touchdowns as the Rams trounced
Oviedo's Lions, 42-12. in freshman football
action al Oviedo High.
Lake Mary ran lls unbeaten record to 5-0.
The Rams were also unbeaten last season.
The Rams scored all 42 of Ihclr points in
the lirst half. On Oviedo's first offensive
possession, the Lions fumbled al the Lake
Mary five. Carlos Harlsfield scooped up the
loose ball for Lake Mary and ran 95 yards
for a touchdown.
Harlsfield scored four TDs Tuesday In four
different ways. After the fumble recovery,
he ran a punt back 50 yards for a
touchdown, returned an Interception 45
yards for another score and ran the ball on
offense for a 45-yard TD.
"Carlos was in the right place at the right
time all night." Lake Mary coach Jim
Hughes said.
Joey Calderelll also scored for the defense
as he picked off a pass and raced 45 yards
lor a TD. The other touchdown scored by
the offense was a 15-yard run by Dorsev
Williams.
Alex Blrle was a perfect 6 for 6 kicking
extra points.
"W c didn't run but three plays In the first
quarter from scrimmage and only two more
In the second." Hughes said. "W c weren't
trying to run up the score because four of
those touchdowns were scored by the
defense. We played the second and third
stringers in the second half."

SCOREBOARD
TV/RADIO
K M m A ty S tfM 'i T v /ta d *
Ti M

m

M IH A IL
I 11 pm - WESM t Am**ican I t * ? *
Chpmpiomhip irt+ i Gamt ? Ktnvn Ciy
Raya'iai Toronto Bin* Jayi H I
(OX INC
I i n - ESPN. SuptrteuS ot tr* NN
Mpttt*»S*»PML*jmmrto M*r,ir&gt;Jptwwn
HOCKEY
n o p m - ESPN. NHL. N*m York
lllmdHialEdmontonONn 111

(**■*

M S IIA L L
I I S pm - WKISAM HaOi t n p u n
Oumperanip Safin. kantn (?',
Roytlt at Terentp Riut Jir t
TALK
I N pm - WKISAV itxi. Spcrh la'k
■imCtriitapriarRuiia

0114) It M. P I ) a) IIS 19. t i l 4 SI Itl 19
ntifimt
1Ed-a-do Lara
IK IK
) Cai-'O Mand'
Mfi ( K
)G* a B j C
IK
o n d u n . p m sine jo T i m n n o c
JW kf! Oytri
'0 20 AK I K
iBent Aftl
IX IC
2W illf ferRA'i
0(11) 14X. P 111)14 X T (J 141141 44
nil: |im»
•Gai’a Mand
tic SK I K
) Ar*mj,5 I jli II
II JO 3AC
IM k*1 T y ,i!
300
0 IS 41S IX F 141)1*4 SO; Tit S II m *c
laikftmt
SEcha-oFa'it
la x U K 'IX
FEcF*taLaca
SX an

itW&gt;fo«4Zueui

lac

o is iiM M .P is iin s i.T iiiiiic iM
IHKfimt
E cm a M*"d,
tx IK IX
IGa'iala-aoCaC-pAngti
Q ( I I I 01N, P (I II HIM, T IS 141 Itl N
AtOrt*am**iiMta
Pk 4 (1 1la s SI S I I 4 and in at carry!,rr
TaaiAiTPffW
u i.n s M
III |am«
(FlAiama
itupaiaArana
S B I B lac
I E 0-4-30
10® a ® 4H
IB M o Frvg ,.*
n NO 1 *0
SArrall
IB IX
I Jtaui Aide
1N
lAramaro
4K
0 II II MM. P I I I ) D U ; T II SO) 1)104.
Q U O MM; P tM ) SIAM; T d i l l M M
t R if im
DO (1 11U It
lltkgama
llvpaia
MB
aocrao
llicprda
] N STM
IlftjwO"*-&gt;d a
n ® &lt;o« I X
I E c-4.4 Anpai
4 X SH
I Fa**
lA n au B c*
IK
Q 114] K M ; P (141 IM Jt; T (1411IktM;
0 (I I I 11« ; P It 41144 « ; T 114II 101 04
00 ( I I ) M U
00(1 11(141114 M
A—1,441; H-|l«.tM
INtcartaAlMkl
NM
IIM KM
IGKrela Fcn/ia
ltX SB
SZiftaiaArta
IX
0 I H I SI Mi P [ t II W J 8 ; T II 111 H I 44
Ca*mty Prllil P»«
Al LoAo irantWy H«ft
■ayt
»*nl4y
(tarn timtt - Lata Mem*N
aMua
* X 1M
II SSL Llta Mary SI M l L,man 11 a*J
1 Ethane
110
Saminoit SI IS 0. Lata fi-a-'Or 11 SI 0
Q IA FIB M; P (141 Ft JO; T (14II 111 M
0 . 4 * SO U 4
Top 14mdraXwOll
lima
(P itaFpuna
laoc I X o x
I (illy Ptn&lt;k. Sammo'4
1 141
1 ScardoArea
OX I X
1 Kan KiPir. Lata Mary
t o ll
oCArar Arana
&lt;«
) Anthony Nona L.ir Me.,
HR]
0 II S) M M; P (I I I I B M; T (I M l
0 E n t l r V w i LataMa-r
H MS
00 (411(1 S lllM I
S Bobm Nsgrt. Lyman
l( I J I
OK pamo
1 Nick Radko*«n Lyman
H &lt;11
I Gara* Zarrapa
IM a « a JO
1 Jean Namiem 0, ado
&gt;9 i| 4
lia n a Arana
5® a x
I
JoNVanBjta.rt.
LaatHwaH
H IM
S H.tal Andta
IX

I

t)M OK

J A I ALAI

X-COUNTRY

DMIN l«

f* paw

V J o^ D af i U**M 3*r'
'0 p&gt; 1 C
Ho*vU
It V. Vok'ff lyn-jn
'3
la*f B'i-.Lf,
’3 JtttNj'-f L i H V j 'f
Vaq F j i ,*i U tfV a 'y
H &lt;*iv a
no e
'1
Ljwiq
IT J5 « C a p no U *c6 '» '* fr
1 S*»ef D 'l‘ t Ll«I
Ar.**so^» Suites L*«t Y * 'r
JO K■
#* He*t11 t t n s

'0 **«
13 ISO
to y i
10 34 %
'0 )«!
’0 C t
10 43 0
: 4si
10 5
’0 4T 0
CIff
10 K l

Giftl virwTf t#im fimti - La*t
60 ST 2 Li«»
M J f i L?*r«n
Sam no » H IS S Lai* V-a-t ij
NTT
Tea 70individual!
&lt; 11* San-oci l a i , non*
J SnonndaWa-' n Sarrnoa
1 Va-t-a Fo-t«a Lata Henll
a 2i&gt;:*G'fffb*rg L,man
S Am, £-&gt;' lat* Hdmt'l
.
t Jenny Boll LakaHemt'i
’ Co ra" L *&lt;*-ti La*t B-ai’ e,
I Va-, Fonwta LaieHsn*
i Bonn.*O '.a* Lai* Hen*
H V c”*ii«H*-tv l*i*B - *T *y
II Km ! n Long*" ,* L4l* B-*nl'*»
C * - ne L*1« 6-a-*,
!l v*nd,0 np*. Lai* Bran!*,
&gt;4 k mPacat,! , LaicB-an- t ,
IS J*nn,l*r H.’ijra Lyn-an
14 Ta-a B-a-any Lyman
it 0*«aCoaman. Sfmmoa
I h *4--*.m ^w 'CiiI LataBianMi
H H*t ■•&gt;*.«*.. , L|i*Wa-,
19 Cam, Cnamp 0,-ado

V ill
0. a *
lima
it u 1
II aa s
II si 4
UCI O
1] l l i
i j ;*y
il a; &gt;
il i) |
i j c* s
IJ sc'
IjSII
I] x I
1)01)
ij M S
i j 011
i)K)
i] i) i
H ala
IS 14 I
la 011

kaya luma* aartety l*aai tima, - Lata Honan
SI SI t Lata Mary St H 1 Lata l-aniia,
t : i 4 » L y - t " (101* Oi'eSd (4 114
SamneiaNT
T4pl4nd»idMli
lima
' fl-t-i Sp» npnan. lata hoatu
H J! 4
1 Atniay Mo-awn Lata Mary
is si 1
I B-,an0-ora LaUHo**n
il d ll
a Dy'anBoot la tin o * *'
Il pt«
I LvtCaban Laic , 10**'.
II Ha
4 BrianHor.am LaifHooa'i
Mj j a
1 CragVftttar Lyman
11 J7 1
I P*'*rSonoama-m LaKMa-r
11 M l
4 B-ftC-OClt" Lata Homan
II 4} 1
H Hirfttim* Lata Homan
II 4S4
Girli |afiar un ity Itim linyi Iona ml*I Lata Homan x U 1 1* 1* B 'tm «, j i 010
Lyman IS 1)7 Stm.no:* Laif Ma-y Lyman
0, adoNTT

Toe II indnrdvan
1
Ba-'as LaitHsmt:;
I K"nl*t*u* LaiaHsmt'l,
) ki-nV'iano ;a i* 5-a—a,
i D**AimO*ti*- LaitB rar'e ,
S L 44 Fr yjaii, l *i « B-a-rfa,
t Ta-f, G- nga- LaiaHo**::
7 C nd, G .*- la i* noma
4 jaw •** jaMpriy La** fl-ai'i*.
• Ba-ta-a Pi- '.w Lai* B-aw *,
3 Kim Ha-rnor'r** 1*1*M**,

flint
S &amp;3l
I O' 2
• 36 3
4 CM
l UJ
1 '3 '
• 1« 1
1 117
• If 1
* »3

Winston Cup
Chase Comes
Down To Wire

DAYTONA BEACH (Ul*l) The chase between Darrell
Wall rip and Bill Elliott for the
NASCAR Winston Cup slock car
driving championship is the sec­
ond-closest in the sport's histo­
ry. N A S C A R o ffic ia ls said
Tuesday.
Tuacday 1 B*»«H|
Walt rip. a two-time Winston
9 u*6*C4 H*-1‘o-dl
p —LBc-gn ) y -"aw-a I
Cup champion from Franklin.
Term., holds a 20-polnt lead —
3.791 to 3.771 — over Elliott, of
Dawsonville. Ga.. with just three
Totyday 1 American L*a|w*
races remaining.
Cna monmynip s*rni (aiw an
Only In 1979. when Waltrip
KANSAS CITY
TORONTO
led eventual champion Richard
alrhti
akrkki
Petty by 17 points with three
Sm;*n 11
S O M Ga-ca It
n ig
jo -* i il
0 0 0 0 M onty tl
4111 races left, has the chase been
i&gt; ion cl a l i o Mull'mit )t&gt; 10 9 0
closer.
B-a'i St
S i l l Glo-g 16
19 9 0
McRa* es e n upman ip 19 0 0
The Winston Cup action re­
SMridan ,1 4 0 0 0 O ' i ,* ' dn
19 0 9
sumes Sunday with the North
Ba koni 16 a 0 0 0 Jonnun dn 1911
Sunoet-g c 1 1 0 0 ( i l l II
19 90
Carolina Motor Speedway's Na­
Anna i t
1 0 0 0 Wtiill c
19 9 9
tionwide 500. Pole qualifying on
6 i- c i a- t l 4 I 1 1 Fit'dar pn 10 9 9
the 1.017 m ile h ig h b a n k
Hao-ron c 9 9 0 9
Bart-old rl 4 1 9 9
speedw ay Is scheduled for
Famandi t t a l i o
Thursday afternoon.
Talalt
11 1 • I I t ia n
M &gt;k s
Kamai City
HI 111 IN - S
following the Rocktngham.
111 Ml I X — 1
N.C.. race, the season winds up
Ga-na **nn ng RBI - B-*lt 111
With the Nov. 3 Atlanta Journal
E-Fa-nandar (arfaid. (ra « DPKaniai C''y I LO B-taniai City I
500 at Atlanta International
Toronto I IB-Ga-ca VcRar Faman dor.
R a c e w a y and the Nov. 17
B^nta'ana Sm tn H R - B 'fH |li ) -wn.*
Winston Western 500 at River­
IP H R I B I I SO
side. Calif.
Kamai City
G .t u i IA I I I
111 1 1 ) 1
By using average finishes Jn
Back
!&gt;] 9 0 1 1
O. ltnoa-r, IS I)
11 9 0 0 1 the final three races over the
Tartu*
past three seasons. W altrip
Atianda' IL Oil
SD I
1 a
would
finish the season with a
Lamp
US I
1 s
65-point edge over Elliott for the
AP-A'tiand*- Gj 6 CIO Blact T1 u A-st.is;
title.

NHL

BASEBALL

*&gt;

...Lym an
Continued from 7A
fright handed and a couple lef­
thanded.
Brantley came back as close as
'four points. 1-1-10. but Lyman
closed out the match with Diana
Boyesen serving the I bill point
which came on a spike by Foss.
"Diana's serve looks terrific."
Lyman coach Annelle Griffin
said. "She has Just (he right
amnund of power and spin on
II."
" T h e g ir ls w e re p r e 11 y
psyched." added Griffin. "W e
talked before the match about
doing a good job and keeping up
what coach Newman started.
And we also talked about trying
too hard."
"W e figured Lyman would be
up." Lake Brantley coach Sandy
Denmark said. "They played
really well. Our girls played
pretty well, loo. They hustled
Jhc entire match."
Denmark said that along with
G r i f f i n ' s

s e r v i n g .

V i o l a

Rodriguez and Dawn Gebhart
also turned In fine matches for
the Lady Patriots.
; Griffin, who coached the Lady
Greyhounds Tor two seasons
while Newman was working on
her doctorate, will be the coach
again along with Jerri Kelly.
{ "It will help us a lot to have
to uch G riffin b a c k ." Dawn
ltoyesen said. "She's been a real
good sport about it. We're Just
'going to work everything the
same and pray a lot for Miss
JJewinan."

RAMS GET FIRST SAC WIN
. Lak e M a ry 's L a d y Ram s
played consistent volleyball for
an entire match for the first lime
ibis season and the result was a
4 5-13. 15*6 victory over Lake
Howell's Lady Sliver Hawks in
JpAC action at Lake Howell High.
5 Lake Mary. 2-8 overall and 1-4
in the conference, goes up
agutnst league-leading Lyman
•Thursday night at Lake Mary
High. Lake Howell, which fell to
£-5 overall and 2-2 in the SAC.
hosts Seminole Thursday.
"This was the first lime that

N e w m a n W a tc h : K a rre n Is A le r t

we didn't have that big letdown
where we gave up seven or eight
points at u time." Lake Mary
coach Cindy Henry said. "W e
had some bad moments, but
Hldn't let It bather us. And Lake
Howell made a lol of unforced
errors."
Lake llowcll had the lead most
of the first game until Misty
Duncan served eight points for
the Lad y Ram s. The Lady
Hawks had trouble with Lake
Mary's serve throughout the
match.
"W c did not execute." Lake
Howell coach Jo Luciano said.
"Our serve receiving was the
weakest It has been all year.
About 85 percent of our problem
tonight was returning serves."
Along with Duncan's serving,
'flenry said Angie Capps' allaround play and Marcic Dalziel's
play at the net were keys for the
Lady Rums.
"It sure feels good to win one,"
Henry said. “ We really needed to
have some kind of good feeling
ubout ourselves."

OSCEOLA SURPRISES LIONS
Oviedo's Lady Lions lost a
close first game and couldn't
recover for the second as they
dropped a 15-13. 15-3 decision
to Kissimmee Osceola In Orange
B e lt C o n fere n ce a c tio n at
Kissimmee.
The Lions now stand at 12-3
overall and 8-1 in the OBC. Since
Osceola has two conference
losses (one each to Oviedo and
Jones). Oviedo can clinch the
title with a victory over Leesburg
Thursday. The Lady Lions re­
turn to Seminole Athletic Con­
ference action tonight at 6 when
they host Seminole High.
" I don't know what It was. but
wc couldn't get going for any­
th in g ." Oviedo coach Anita
Carlson said. "Osceola served
really well and wc couldn't
return.

STANDINGS
Seminole Athletic Cent*re**c* (tending*
All
TMtn
W
L
OB
Lyman
0
0
—
12
*
J
4
2 12
Oviedo
2
s
Lake Hoa*II
2
2
J
J
I
J
1
Seminole
2h
s
LekeMery
1
4
4h
2
•
1
Lake Brantley
s
l
10
}

Karrcn Newman. Lyman
High's volleyball coach who
was seriously Injured in an
automobile crash Saturday
night, was In critical but
stable condition Tuesday in
the Intensive card unit nt
Orlando's Humana Lucerne
Hospital, according to her
uncle. Ron "Le fty" Renaud.
"Karren's alert and aware
of everything that was going
on." Renaud said.

Sonny Sm ith. K arren's
stepfather, said the next few
days are critical. He said the
doctors arc looking for a sign
of movement that would in­
dicate that the paralysis is
dot permanent.
Karren received injuries to
her spine, forehead and little
linger of her left hand In a
two-car crash Saturday night
on State Road 46. east of
Mount Plymouth.

MUFFLER • BRAKES
FAST FUSS INSTALLATION
C U S T O M P IP E B E N D IN G • D U A L S • G L A S S P A C K S
C H H O M E S T A C K S • T U R B O 'S • R E S O N A T O R S

TW O S TO R E S
12 MONTH

O R AN GE C IT Y

SANFORD

FINANCING
AVAILABLE

7 7 5 ,4 7 4 7 j

322-00511

6*0 5 VOLUSIA AYE

405 WtST 1ST ST.
Z BLR5 EAST OF KWY 17 92

HWY 17*2

ASK ABOUT OUR 30 POINT SAFETY INSPECTION
WIDE
i C S A EXTRA-WIDE
70 SERIES I 9 H I A 60 SERIES

im

•m

%

u m

m m u m it

• m 0 FM iM LA M M l t J
a t i l RAttAL PCAYUTta
•m i n * v
• OVTUtK WMTt

•mo m a u A i i

h

■ in
P M Y IIT K (M Y I U I

f &lt;Why settle for

empty promises
when 1guarantee
my car repairs
iiin writing, lor life?
Olhkt d kM kfftilp i may ottai you pro
m iM t ol good M ivlca. but our (kpairk * a
backtd by our tr*« ilfa lim a S trv ic a
Ouaranlaa Hara a bow It ttorka It tea
rapalr your Ford. Marcury. Lincoln, or
Ford llgbl truck, you pay ua onca And

Tio ro

JMFT OIL &amp; OIL FILTER SPECIAL \

—
|

tncSuXa* up to I qtt ol Motomralt
•II, Hotorcrall oil llllar and
InaiaUallon lot your Ford tables*,
Di***I aqulppad *«Met*a tUghtly

I
|
j
j

hiahm#

1

TOTAL P R IC E
PA R T S » L A B O R
(U a M i n ti
(taa

«9«»
w

W ith
lia ID I I IS j

a a guarani*# mat it mat covtrad pad
a«ar lu ia o&gt; aaara out. a a II t n it or
rtplaca It tr** Fr#* part* Fra * labor II
covara tnouaandt of rapaira and latla aa
long kk you o a n your car— no m alltr
ahara you bought It or hoa old il ia So
don I aatlla tor amply promiata ahan
you can coma to ua and g*l our rr*«
Liladm a S trv ic a Ouarantaa You a on l
Imd abattar repair g u*rant**anyatiera
Promra*

SIS
PI7S77M13
FIW 7M IS
PIM/7M13
F20S/7SEI3

«-ue
tl.fS
94.90
99.99
99.99

4441
49J9
91.79
S2.M

nnnm u
F2tC/7M14
F21S778E14
P22V7M14

99.99
91.99
99.99
99.99

9M7
99.71
57.34

F2SS/7M14

97.91
191.99
100.90

P22S7M19
F2JS/7CR1S

|

l i l t TIME
SERVICE

I1J4
44.91
iiju
49.39

amtM
wet

SAU

P2IS/S0RI3

•1.95

55.03

P225/C0R14

M .M

59.90

P235/MKI4

103.95

02.27

P245/S0R14

109.90

05

P235HM1S

103.05

02.59

P24SM0M5

I0 0 .M

0021

P255/90RI5

110.00

70.43

P275/SM1S

120.05

70.30

SUE

ACCELERATE
Y o u r B u y in g

thn kmitad »*rr*nry covert veh«l»» m normal
uva And f i k x v i touima rruuniananta ivirrv
teky h o tn m arl marA *nd uphohrary

I

uran

P o w e r .,.

•1400 In a t p n t C r o d il T o Q u o l i li d d A p p l i c a n t ! .
• S I .000 L i n * o l C r * d i t T o O u a l i l i * d A p p l ic a n t *
W h e n C a rd I I l« tu * d .

•No M*mb*rthip F**(.

GUARAMTEI

• 9 0 D o y t S a m * - A i- C o k h O n Y o u r F i r i l P u t c k o t * .
• A c c e p t e d A l A l l P a r l k i p a l i n g N T O R A T im

WE fix CARS FOR KEEPS.

r-SEMINOLE FORD

7 S A N F O R D .F L.

D * o l* t ( N o lio n w id * .

[ s e r v ic e "
j S P EC IA LS

BRAKE
INSPECTION
No PurclMM NKUHty
With TM« Coupon

�10A— Ev.nlng H erild, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Oct, 14, Ills

D unkel Has
Lions By 1
O v e r Lyman
By Sam Cook
Herald Sporta Editor
The Dunkel Index went 2
for 3 last week In Its predic­
tion of Seminole County
teams. That's 67 percent
which Is pretty good but it's
no Fearless Fisler Forecast,
which, by the way. was an
incredible 90 percent last
week with 9 of 10 winners.
, The Fearless One. who
started slowly by is now
redhot. Is still seething over
Dan Marino's sorry showing
which cost him a perfect
week and the Miami Dolphins
first place in the AFC Fast.
Dunkel. meanwhile, cor­
rectly picked Seminole over
Lake Brantley and Oviedo
over Cocoa. It missed on
Lake Mary and Lake Howell
where It had Howell as the
winner but the Rams won.
This week, the Dunkel In­
dex has Seabreeze (61.8) over
S em in o le {*47.8) but 14
points. Lake Mary (52.3) over
Spruce Creek (35.3) by 17
points. Oviedo (43.3) over
Lyman (42.21 by 1 point.
W inter Park (63.2) over Lake
Howell (49.5) by 13 '/i points
and HVsf Orange (49.7) over
Lake Brantley (39.0) by 10 “a
points.
Apopka. 5-0. continued to
rlimb in the ratings. It moved
to No. 3 In the Dunkel and
stayed at No. 3 In the Florida
Sports Writers Association
poll.
Former Oviedo coach Joe
M o n lg o m c r y has his
Pensacola Pine Forest squad
at Ihe No. 10 position in the
AAAA Dunkel Index.
Here's a look at both loothall polls:

PREP FO O TBA LL LEA D ERS:
OFFENSE

P A S S IN G
CM
Je ft B lak e (S )
33
Shane Letterio (L M ,
23
Dave Delfiacco IL B )
77
M a rk W ainw righf (L H )
U
Joh n M orrow (0 )
19
John Burton (L )
72
John Gowan ( L B )
S
David Dee* ( L H )
7
Darren Boye*en (L&gt;
4
D aryl Taylor IS )
3
Andy Dunn ( L B )
3

74

AT
80
50
70
69
56
47
12
4
15
6
9

Y D S PC T
57J
47
459
46
39
330
324
49
34
301
241
47
66
42
54
50
27
51
70
50
13
33

AVG
7.7
56
46
55
43
43
49
42
38
36
42
32
88
46
73
36
27
71
40
44
24
16
19
24
26

S C O R IN G
Andrew Smith 10)
Robert Thoma* (L&gt;

TD
9
4

12-12 OZ. CANS

4.9®

P U N T IN G
Scolt R ad clifl ( L )
Gordon King (0 )
D ave D elllacco ( L B )
Sonny O lborn (S )
B ill W atson (L H )
Ryan L 1tie (L M )
Bobby Culpepper (L M )

NO
17
10
16
14
11
7
5

RED, WHITE
A BLUE
6 -1 2 OZ. CANS

24-12 OZ. CANS

9.99

IMPORTED MEXICAN

ROOM T EM P

DOS

ABC
BEER
•r A l l
*

E Q U IS
6 -1 2 OZ. BTLS.

^

-

3.99

ICE COLD

V\ ™ i

GINGER ALE hnudadry 21.n1. 1 .0 9
SEVEN-UP
2LTD.
GALLO VERMOUTH tsoml .8 9
TEQUILA SUNRISE * 1 I U 3 .4 9
DAILT’S PEACHDAIQUIRI m
ml 3 . 2 9
CIGARETTES skiws
cm. 9 . 2 9
MILK GUSTAFSONLOFAT SUL 1 .9 9
BEER NUTS
12oz. 1 .9 9
BLOODY MARY She1 im. 1 .2 9
CR. OFCOCONUT M
R.CO
CO15OZ. 1 .2 9
'

1

3

V.O. CANADIAN

17.99 SALE
A
M
* " FL
-2.00
rebatE

W .r a n i

MET
COST

W 3$
^ 3

COMFORT BO*
6 .4 9
B

FU 8

sale

*"*«•

•1.00 REBATE

5.49

NET
COST

* SA N FO R D
Hwy 17-92 SOUTH CITY LIMITS

AS TOT
78
31
66
26
66
32
64
23
57
77

21
30
26
15
74
30
71
11
18
18
13
24
74
24
24
19
16
13
14
14
9
IS
19
7
12
14
9
9
15
17
10
11
11
?6
12
17
7
8
9
14
16
8
7
7
3
3
10

*

73
21
72
31
21
9
11
70
18
18
22
10
10
9
9
13
14
16
IS
13
11
10
6
II
12
9
14
14
8
11
17
11
10
5
9
4
12
19
9
4
7
9
10
10
13
13
6

51
51
48
46
45
39
39
38
36
36
35
34
34
33
33
32
30
29
29
27
27
25
25
25
74
73
73
73
73
73
72
22
21
21
21
21
19
19
11
18
18
17
17
17
16
16
16

BLUE NUN
LIEBFRAUMILCH

. 7

9

^

7
9
16
E d M Illle r (0 )
9
7
16
Tom Kolhera ( L M )
10
5
15
Tony C arullo IL )
B
7
15
Scott F ro it (L M )
9
14
5
Vahan Nou»kha|lan ( L )
Interception*
Scolt R a d clllt ( L ) 3. D aryl Taylo r (S ) 3,
B ill W ai»o n ( L H ) 2, Sieve Sla rk ( L B ) 2,
Dennl* Law rence (S ) 2, M ike M cC urd y (O ) I.
W illie Gainey (0 ) I, Fred H ill (O ) 1, Bubba
W right (O ) I. C raig W agner ( L H ) t. M a lt
Allberll (L H ) 1, B ria n Brtn*on IS ) I, B re tt
Mode ( L M ) 1. R a y H a r title ld ( L M ) 1,
Sheldon Richard * ( L M ) I, Byro n Wa*hlngton
(L M ) 1, Dexter Fra n k lin (S ) I. Theron
Llggon* (S ) 1. Scoll King ( L I I
Fum ble R e co verlet
P e le Llngard (O ) 4. M a rk Sepe ( L B ) 3. Ron
Campbell (L H ) 3. Ja*o n Kotar ( L H ) 2. Vince
Campbell ( L ) 2. Kenny M o rrl* (S ) 2, Theron
Llggon* (S ) 2. Byro n Washington ( L M ) 2,
Scott King ( L ) I. R ick y Sheet* ( L ) 1. M ike
Levant (S ) I. Chrl* W a lth ( L B ) I. B ill
W atto n ( L H ) 1. Bobby Decker ( L ) 1, E d
M l I Iter 10) 1. M ike B a n (O ) I, David
Lockwood (O ) 1, Tony Collie (O ) 1. Bernell
Simmon* (O ) 1, Le e Chojnackl ( L H ) I, Steve
Ryan (L H ) I, M a lt A llb ertl ( L H ) 1. M ike
S lr m a n t ( L ) I, R a y H a rtitle ld ( L M ) 1
Sack*
E a rn e lt Lew i* (S ) 4. Bobby Bodoh ( L B ) 3.
Scott R o *t ( L M ) 2, A llred V a lle ( L H ) 2. Scot!
King ( L ) 2. Bern ell Sim m on* (O ) 2. Robb
Reddlngton ( L M ) 2. M ike S lrm a n i ( L I 2. Ted
Smith ( L ) I. Vahan Nou*kha|lan ( L ) I, M in
Ho Soo ( L B ) 1. Chrl* W a lth ( L B ) 1. Tom
Kothera ( L M ) I, Lero y Young ( L M ) I, M ike
B a it (O ) I. P e le Lln gard ( I ) . Ja so n Kotar
(L H ) I, Sieve R yan IL H ) 1. J i m Nutter (L H )
t. M ickey W illia m * ( L I 1. C raig W a g n er (L H )
I, B yron O verstreet ( L ) I, M a rk Sepe ( L B ) ),
M ike W h ittaker ( L ) I. M a rk Z im m erm an ( L )
I, M ike Nelson ( L ) 1. Ja y Godwin (O ) 1, R ick
K elly (S ) 1. Ed d ie Banks (S ) I
Source: County coaches
Compiled by Sam Cook

K E G

. 7

9

750
750 M L

4 .4 9 |
5 .9 9 j

OLD CROW BRB
6 .5 0

3 .9 9

8.49j
8 .9 9 !
9 .9 9

1 4 .9 5 1
1 0 .9 5 ,

5.29

ABC RUM LIGHT

5 .4 9 1

5 . 2 9
UTER
TWOKR CUSTOMERW/COUPON
5 . 9 9 j H5£600D THUHS-. OCT. IT

1 0 .9 5 1

M ATEUS RO SE

8 .9 9 1
8 .9 9 |

2 .9 9

3 9 .9 S j

7 9 Henkel Trockan Sakt - Extra Dry
Konigstain Trockan Sakt - Extra Dry
m

§ *4 9 j
6 .4 9 !

^^^NLY^^ARTIA^EIECTION^HOWN, SOME NOT IN Alt STOKES.

I

CARLO ROSSI
Chiblis. Rhine
Burgundy. Chianti
PinkChiblis. Ron

p r ic e

6.19
6.19
POPOV VODKA
UTER
9.79
GIN or VODKA FIVE FU G S 1.75 LTR.
6.99
SCHBNLIT 90* GIN
LITER
7.79
RICH A RARE CANADIAN
LITER
14.29
CHIVAS REGAL SCOTCH
750 ML
11.99
INVERHOUSE SCOTCH
1.75 LTR.
5.59
VODKA, OIN or RUM DELUXE UTER
TIN HIGH BOURBON
UTER 6.99
12.99
IVAN WILLIAMS to
1.75 LTR.
7.49
UTER
7.99
SUNRISITIQ UILA
UTER
Hwy 17-02 ONE BLOCK

*• C A S M L O C M Y

Hwy 17-92 A T 4M

U U U U 5 X 1 .. O C I.

i

UTER !
I

I*

BURNETT’S G IN
6 .7 9

UTER

OWEPERCUSTOMERW/COUPON
hf,v&gt;v
GOOD BUT.. OCT. 10

ASnSPUMANTI

99

SCOTCH
7 .7 9 s m e

o z e

5 .6 9

V I C T O R ! !

4 ? uter
11.79 SALE

750 ML

. * ALTAMONTE

TAAKA VO D KA
I

Rhine. Chiblis,
Rote. Burgundy.
CheninBlanc

750 ML
3 lor $11

10.29

D IS C O U N T L IQ U O R

GOODFBI.. OCT.18

ONEMR CUSTOMERW/COUPON

GOLD PEAK
CAUFORNIA
Chiblis, VinRose.
Rhine, Burgundy
RON RICO

•1.50 REBATE

75 0 M L .

TWOPCSCUSTOMERW/COUPON

4 . 29 .
4 .9 9 ,

B E E R

A va ila b le at m o s t A B C ’ s

GERMAN SPARKLING WGME

•2.00 REBATE

Ex$&gt; O* n

3

83 Piesporter Michelsberg Q.b.s.-S. Konigin
’63 Wiltinger Scharzberg Spatlese • Heh
’82 Ayler Kupp Q.b.a. * Gorgen
’83 Scharzhofberger Spatlese• Hohe Dkmkirche
*83 Schweicher Annaberg Spatlese • Gorgen
’83 Piesporter Treppchen Auslese • Gorgen
’83 Piesporter Domherr Auslese - Kesselstatt
*83 Wehlener Sonnenuhr Spatlese - J .J . Prum
’82 Erdener Treppchen Kabinett * Gorgen
’84 Zeller Schwarze Katz Q.b.a. • Valckenberg
7 6 Wlnkeler Hasensprung Auslese • Johannishot
’83 Lelwener Klostergarten Spatlese • Reh
*83 Piesporter Goldtroptchen Kabinett • Gorgen
*83 Niersteiner Oelberg Spatlese * Heyl
’83 Erbacher Steinmorgen Eiswein * Knyphausen

1 2 .9 9

• LONOWOOO
Hwy 17-02 NEAR 434

1

G E R M A N W iN E

1

SEAGRAM’S

AVG
37 5
37 2
369
34 7
31 4
30 8
21 0

M a rk Boutquel ( L B )
Dexter Frank lin (S )
Steve Stark ( L B )
B y ro n O v e ritre e t ( L )
R ick K e lly (S ’)
Jim Nutter (L H )
Theron L lg g o n *(S )
Je tt Jo y c e (O )
M ike K elly ( L B )
Tony C ollie ( 0 )
M ike Luster (S )
Ryan Ll*ie ( L M )
Robb Reddlngton ( L M )
Scott R o t* ( L M )
M a rty Hopkln* (L M )
Bobby Bodoh ( L B )
D aryl Taylor (S )
David Lockwood (O )
Vince Campbell (L )
Ja io n Kotar (L H )
Scott R a d clllt ( L )
Je n e H artm an (01
Ja io n Lanham ( L B )
M a rk Sepe ( L B )
Shannon Porter (L M )
Steve R yan (L H )
Kenny M o rrl* (S )
M ike B a t* ( 0 )
Craig W agner (L H )
Ron Campbell (L H )
Chuck Scheele (L )
Chri* W a lth ( L B )
Je r r y Little* (S )
Randy Nixon IL H )
Ed d y G arrison ( L B )
Sheldon R ich ard * ( L M )
M ike 5 lrm ant (L )
M in Ho Soo ( L B )
Pete Llngard (0 )
B ill W a lto n (L H )
LeeCho|nackl (L H )
Horace Knight (S )
Bobby D e c k e r (L )
Scolt King IL )
M ik e W hittaker (L )
R ick y Sheet* ( L )
Dennl* Law ren ce (S )

BU C K TOWER
LIEBFRAUMILCH

SM IRN O FF
VO DKA

10.79
-2.00 REBATE

y

YDS
638
372
590
486
566
216
105

11
tl
18
14
12
12
12
10
10
9
8
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
5
3

•Manufacturer Robato llm lf apply to coupon Itamo.
rw.
IMPORTED GERMAN
IMPORTED GERMAN

4

8 J9

TK
47
40
34
41
35

D EFEN SE
B ria n Brinson (S )
Bernell Simmon* (0 )
E a rn e it Le w i* (S )
B rett M olle (L M )
J e l l H a r m (L H )

DOMAIN! CORDIALS FLO R ID A W IN E
Peppermint Schnapps, Banana
C O O L IR - T O
Anisette
m
m
750 ML
4 P K -12 01. BUS. A e J f V
OLD THOMPSON

0
0
0
2
0
0
0
4
7
9
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
3

DEFENSE

TP
54
24

COOK’S

W E M A K E CARS PERFORM

A b o v e P r ic e s G o o d F o r
M o s t C a rs &amp; L ig h t T r u c k s

EP
0
0

3.99

RO O M T EM P

H IG H T E C H
R A D IA L S
mm

REAR BRAKE JOB *44.95
ALIGNMENT
*14.95
OIL CHANGE 6 LUBE*9.95
HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS
INSTALLED (each) *1
12.95
FRT. C.V.
BOOT REPAIR
* 44.951

FO
0
0

AVG
14 0
230
III
It .6
11.2
19,3
10 2
21 3
16 S
22.1
11.1
12.0
10 8
11 4
92
II
67
13 0
11 0
51
II 3
77
290
14.0
90
90
IS
5.0
12 0
too
100

0
0
0
2
0
0
0
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0

6 • 12 OZ. BTLS

6

3 c

T/Jm.

FRONT BRAKE JOB*44.95

YOS
197
753
207
178
117
174
97
171
132
155
71
72
54
92
46
44
31
52
44
73
55
73
58
2*
11
11
17
10
17
10
10

3
3
3
I
2
7
2
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
t
1
t
1
1
1
1
t
1
1
1
1
0
0

6 -1 2 0Z. BTLS.

F f G O O D R IC H
'm / M

NO
14
11
11
1)
10
9
9
8
8
7
7
6
6
5
5
5
5
4
4
4
3
3
2
2
2
7
7
7
1
t
1

R E C E I V IN G
Sam Sear* ( L B )
David Rape (S )
Byron Washington (L M )
B ill W a tio n (L H )
_
Ralph Phllpott (L )
W illie G ain ey (O V )
Jo e l M ille r ( L B )
R a y H arlslieid (L M )
M a rk Stew art (O )
Herb H llle ry (S)
Sonny O lborn (S )
Craig Deringlon (L H )
Roberl Thoma* (L )
Andy Dunn ( L B )
Todd Bate* (L H I
R J N o ld (L )
M ark Schnllker (L H )
Eddie Bank* (S)
Brooke C h riitlan
Tony W illiam * (L )
Terry G am m on* (L H )
Ju lio C e b a tlo i (L )
John Curry (L M )
Benny G lenn (L )
Dw ayne W illis (S)
Greg Hill (L H )
Cornel Rigby (L H )
Andrew Smith (0 )
Nate H otkin* (L H )
M a ttG a b ro vle ( L B )
Anthony H artitle ld ( L M )

GERMANY’S FINEST

1

The Flo rid a Sport* W riters Association
Po ll is compiled by Tom Brew ot the St
Petersburg Times The Dunkel Index Is
compiled br Dicx Dunkel ot P o rt Or
ange
Brew polls sports writers and
coaches w hile Dunkel has a rating
system based on m argin ot victory and
loss

YDS
776
515
364
284
271
250
148
123
123
123
114
101
88
85
77
57
45
43
36
35
3)
23
71
19
13

M a rk Schntlker (L H )
Joh n C urry ( L M )
B ill W a tio n (L H )
Dave D elllacco ( L B )
Cornelius Frien dly ( L B )
Dave R ape (S)
Herb H lllery (S )
K elly Greene I L )
Je tt P h ilip * (L H )
Gordon King ( 0 )
Andy Dunn ( L B )
Tony W illia m * (L )
John M orrow (O )
Benny Glenn IL )
Curti* Rudolph (S )
Byro n W athlnglon (L M )
M a rk W alnw rlgh t IL H )
W illie E v a n * (S I
Bernell Sim m on* (0)
Dexter F ra n k lin (S)
Je tt B lak e (S)
Sam Sears ( L B )
John Gowan ( L B )
Brooke C h riitla n ( L B )
R a y H artitle ld (L M )
Brett M olle (L M )
J J P a rllo w (S )
M ike Renaud ( L M )

BECKS
GERMAN BEER KONIGSBACHER f* |

Dunkel Index Power Ranking*
C la it A A A A A
1 M iam i Southndge
76 0
2 Pensacola Woodham
7j e
3 A p o p k a ..................
.72.1
u Bradenton M anatee
72 3
5 G am esville Buchholj
69 9
a M iam i Beach
*
7 Vero Beach
67 6
e BrandOh
67 0
9 M iam i A m erican
66 9
10 M erritt (stand
6S 7
Class A AA A
1 Tallahassee Leon
83 3
2 Pensacola Escam b ia
82 3
3 Ja c k io n v llie Lee
78 9
4 Milton
75 8
5 J a c k io n v llie R a in e s

AT
102
92
80
52
63
58
30
79
32
34
77
37
10
21
32
16
17
6
9
8
13
14
11
8
5

PRICES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 22

Florida Sport* W riter* Association Poll
Class A A A A A
1 M iam i Southridae
SO
50
3. Apopka......................
.......... so
41
4 Bradentun M anatee
5 West P a lm Forest Mill
40
6 Pensacola Woodham
32
7 Brandon
50
8 M iam i Beach
50
9 Lantana Santaiuce*
40
10 Orlando E v a n s ...................... .......... JO
Class A AA A
i Pensacoia Escam bia
50
2 Tallahassee Leon
40
3 Wilton
50
4 Jackso n ville Raines
50
S ia c k io n villo L e e ..... ...........
* Fort Lauderdale D illard.... ......... SO
7 Bradenton Southeast
31
1. Daytona Seabreete........... ............ 4 0
9 North Fo rt M yers
4 1
10 S&gt; Pete Lakewood
40
Class A AA
41
1 Crestview
7 Tallahassee Godby
50
3 Starke Bradford Co
50
a W P a lm Cardinal Newman
31
5 P e rry Taylor County
41
6 Barlow
41
7. Orlando Jo n e s....................... ...........a t
8 Clewiston
41
9 Naples Lely
41
to Hallandale
31

6 Bradenton Southeast
739
7 P a n a m a City B a y
67 0
8 Melbourne P » lm B a »
66 9
9 Satellite
66 t
10 Pensacola Pm e Forest
64 3
C la tt A AA
1 Tallahassee Godby
67 9
2. Starke
.............
62 S
3 P e rr y Taylor County
67 B
4 Crestylew
60 2
5 Bradenton Bayshore
58 4
4 Orlando Jo n es............................... 58.1
7 W auchuia
........... S I t
8 Naples Lely
57 9
9 Tallahassee Rick ard s
57 1
10 Titusville Astronaut
57 3

Touchdowni
J e l l B la k e (S ) 4, M ark W alnw rlght (L M ) 4.
Shane Letferlo I LM I 3, John Burton ( L ) i.
D ave D elllacco ( L B ) 2, Darren Boyeien
I L M ) 1. David Dee* (L H ) 1.
Interception*
J e l l B lak e IS ) 7, Joh n M orrow (O) a. Dave
D elllacco ( L B ) 6. M ark W alnw rlght (L H ) J.
John Burlon ( L ) 2. Andy Dunn ( L B ) 2, Shane
L e t t e r lo IL M ) 2, D aryl Tayloi (S ) I.

(E d ito r's note P rep football ita tu lic s are
bated on five garnet lor Seminole. Lake
Howe/t and L a k e B ra n tley and four garnet tor
La k e M a ry . Lym an and Oviedo I
R U S H IN G
Andrew Sm llh (0 )
M ark Schnltker (L H )
Robert Thomas (L )
Jo h n C u iry (L M )
Dw ayne W illi* (S)
Cornells* Frien dly ( L B )
Je H Blake IS )
Shane Lelterio IL M )
Curtis Rudolph (S )
B re tl M olle IL M )
W illie E v a n * IS )
Andy Dunn ( L B )
Craig Deringlon IL H )
Benny Glenn (L )
Dave D elllacco ( L B )
Cornel Rigby (L H )
John Gowan ( L B )
W illie Gainey (O )
Eddie Brown IL )
T e rry G am m on* IL H )
Steve Hofmann (O V )
R a y H a rtjlle ld IL M )
Nate H otkin* (L H )
D an C h lih o lm (L H )
Brooke Chrl*tlan ( L B )

WEEK 5

CARLO ROSSI RHINE
2 .7 9

1.5 LTR.

TWOPERCUSTOMERW/COUPON
,t—

i

a o tr o iC B r w —

!

OVER 8 1

•1.SO DEBATE

6.29

NET
COST

FLEISCHMANN’Sjl USHER’S SCOTCH
6 .7 9

1149 ®*L£ i m i r u cuitmci w/cwniF®
„ • « « . r — boot moir.ocT.zr....
■3.00 REBATE!
GALLO RED ROSE

8.49

COST j

CAPTAIN
SPICED RUM

3 . 1 9 1 . 5 LTR.
TWO PER CUSTOMER W/COUPON

GOOD TUES., OCT. 22

*

r WINDSOR CANADIAN

j

I
7,79 SALE L.
•1.50 REBATEj I

6 .9 9

uter

ONE PER CUSTOMER W rCOtfftti

!|
■ 6 . 2 9CNOESTT^
J| ^ ^ H

I

(I

ll

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

C ook

O f The

Wednesday, Oct. 16, 198S—IB

W eek

She W ill Be R em em bered For H er C hicken A n d D um plings
By Dorothy Greene
Herald Correspondent
Imagine waking up to a picturesque view of the
St. Johns River at your back door, sipping a cup
of freshly brewed coffee, and savoring the sounds
of nature at its best. Alpha Klcklitcr. our Cook of
the Week, has this and a whole lot more to enjoy
each day as she busies herself with homemaking
and pleasant pastimes.
Alpha says that she and her husband. Doug,
often liuvc breakfast or lunch In their glassenclosed family room overlooking the river. On a
clear day. or even on a cloudy one for that matter,
they .have a panoramic view or Volusia County
and can sometimes see the rain come down hard
on that side of the river while the sun Is shining
In Seminole! It Is a scene so beautiful that Alpha's
grandson, Jeff, and his new bride, Joanie. chose
this setting for their recent wedding.
For the happy occasion. Alpha prepared a
lovely reception for their garden wedding com­
plete with a traditional cake which she decorated
herself.
Alpha can almost be considered a "newlywed"
herself since her marriage to Doug Klcklitcr Is still
so young. Besides two children and seven
grandchildren of her own. Alpha's seven stepsons
and 15 step-grandchildren make for a wide family
circle. "W e don't get to see them too often." say’s
Alpha. "M y son nnd one stepson live in Florida,
and all the rest are In Indiana and Arkansas."
It's a long way from Liberty, Ky., where she and
her brother were raised on a farm, but Alpha still
recalls the good lessons she learned at her
mother's side. "1 used to help in the kitchen by
peeling potatoes and Mother taught me how to
bake breads, cakes and pies." says Alpha. "M v
brother and I had our chores to do around the
farm. It was a general farm with vegetables,
chickens, some cattle, and tobacco, and we'd
have to milk the cows, feed the chickens and help
with the tobacco crop, and every evening we had
to bring In the firewood for the wood heater." sinsays, "Whenever there were things to do. mv
brother and I pitched In to help."
Alpha says she didn't know a whole lot about
cooking when she first got married, "so I guess I
Just picked It up on my own. Mother did
farm-style cooking and that meant three big
meals a day. We always bad a lot of compay.
Relatives would visit us from the 'city' all during
the summer months anti sometimes stay for a
week at a time." Alpha Is looking forward to a
visit this week from her mother whom she fondly
calls "M am m y."
Alpha says she docs "a little bit of everything. I

and I help him," A chair In need of reupholstcrlng
played a big part In helping Alpha and Doug get
acquainted. Knowing each other from church.
Doug asked Alpha If she would rcupholster a
chair for him. and. she says. " I agreed to do It in
my spare time. I think It took me about two or
three months to get it done." A dinner date
turned Into a continual thing, and about six
months later they were married.
All good cooks like to be remembered for
something special, and Alpha's chicken and
dumplings are a must at many church functions.
Friends at the First Baptist Church of Sanford
look forward to this treat at their senior citizen's
meeting of the 'Glowing Embers.' " If I don’t lake
a big pot of my chicken and dumplings, they are
disappointed." says Alpha. "Once a month we
have a railroad retirees' dinner, and 1 bring my
chicken and dumplings there, too. They’ve come
to expect it."
Although some families have their favorite
dishes. Alpha says her children and grand­
children like Just about everything she makes,
and that makes it easy on the cook!
Willi fall in the air. now is the time to round up
some nearby recipes that say 'more, please.'
Below Is a selection of Alpha's favorites:

CHICKEN AND DUMPLINGS

1 2*/i-3 pound broiler-fryer chicken
2 quarts water
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon pepper
Place In crock pot and cook until tender.
Remove chicken from broth and let cool. Bone
chicken and scl aside.
Combine:
2 ,/$ cups self-rising flour
l/3 cup Crlsco
1
cup milk (add 2 or 3 drops yellow food
coloring to milk, if desired)
Mix until all ingredients are moist. Turn out on
a floured surface and knead until smooth. Roll
dough out to about Vk” thickness and cut into 1
or 2 inch squares. Put broth In heavy pan and
bring to a boll. Add a few drops of yellow food
coloring and drop dumplings in. a handful at a

H»r«Id Photo by Tommy Vincent

.

A lp h a K ic k lite r p re p a re s Chicken A n d D um plings, biscuits, d essert.
like to sew and work with ceramics. I have a kiln
and several molds and enjoy making decorative
pieces as a hobby." Some of Alpha's finest
handiwork is in the form of soft sculptured' baby
dolls and rag dolls. She also makes a replica of the
Ifyc-Lo Baby doll which was a popular feature
irom lf)22 to 1930. For this, she hits a mold from
which the face and hands are made and the resl
ol the doll's body Is sewn together and stuffed.
Alpha then creates a lovely gown and bonnet set
with all the lacy trimmings to complete here
"baby doll." "An original Bye-Lo baby doll Is
valued at about live to six hundred dollars now."
she says, "but 1 enjoy making them as gifts for
my grandchildren and nieces." In keeping with
her creative talents. Alpha has several beautiful
landscape paintings which she did as a student of
E.B. Stowe, a prominent area artist, whom Alpha
Is fortunate to have ns a neighbor.
Alpha and Doug, a retired railroad engineer, ure

avid (-ampersand like to go lishing. Crystal River
is a favorite camping spot for "Just the iwo of us."
says Alpha. "W e have a boat and a motor home
and like to go lishing on the St. Johns or Indian
River and we go camping whenever we can."
Doing things together is always a good formula
for a happy marriage, and. Alpha says, "W e help
each other a lot. lie likes to do woodworking in
his shop, and we just finished reupholstering a
couch together, lb- helps me. and we Just finished
reupholstcrlng a couch together, lie helps me.

See COOK, 2B
. i

Triedm an's
■ 1

iM p

®H

MW® HRMfr i l H l

R e c re a tio n D e p a r tm e n t O ffe r s
C la s s e s , S p e c ia l E ven ts, T ou rs
A full program of recreational
classes, special events and l rips
will be offered by the City ol
Casselberry Parks and Recre­
ation Department beginning the
week of Oct .21.
Adult classes will Include
Aerobics and Relaxation. Ar­
chery Instructions. Beginning
Calligraphy. Cook and Share
Tim e. Christm as Workshop.
Crochet Classes. Dog Obedience.
Floral Arrangements with a Hol­
iday Theme. Dried nnd Live
Floral Design. Mixed Media
Painting Instructions. Needle
Punch Art. Senior Citizen Swim
and Gentle Watcroblcs. Tennis
and Watcrcolor Greeting Cards.
Youth classes will include
After School Sports Program.

Bato n T w irlin g . B eg in n in g
C a llig ra p h y . C ra fty C rafts.
Dance Instruction for Tiny Tots
and Youth. Drop-In Center at
Wlrz Park. Golf Instructions.
Pom -Pom fit D an ce Team.
Tennis and Drawing In Black &amp;
White Color.
Special events Include Hallow­
een Costume Parade. Costume
Judging. Entertainm ent and
Teen Dance with radio station
WD1Z on Oct. 26; Fallfest (an
outdoor crafl fair and holiday
bazaar — which is currently sold
out) on Nov. 2: Turkey Trot 5K
Race on Thanksgiving Day. Nov.
28. and a Wlntercraft Festival
(outdoor crafl fair and holiday
bazaar) on Dec. 7.
Trips for adults and families

ryWL&gt;
v

are also being ottered to Burt
Reynolds Jupiter Dinner Theatre
on Dc.c. 7. trip to the Ft.
Lauderdale Wlntcrfest and to
Lantana to see the World's
Largest/Tallcst Christmas Tree
on Dec. 21-22. trip to the Sea
Escape on Jan. 12 and during
I he month of February (date to
be announced) a trip for a Palm
Beach Holiday (2-day event to
the B u rt R e y n o ld s D in n er
Theatre, Musicana Theatre and
shopping on Worth Avenue).
All classes and trips require
advanced registration at the
Parks and Recreation Office
located at Secret Lake Park
Recreation Center. 200 Ivey
Road. For additional informa­
tion. call 831-3551 E X 260.

t

*

*** ^

Bridget Deere it wearing a stunning
white tllk drett by Argenti -fashionable
for any occasion. Shoes are by Algner.

liqvic
C T * » i im C W T T ~

F R IE D M A N 'S IN V IT E S Y O l

PH. 323-4132
116 West First St.
Historic Downtown Sanford

1 'H !&gt;■ *

l O O l ’I-.N VOl M O W N I'E K S O N A I &lt; IIA K t »1 \t t &lt;&gt;» M

Sanford Plaza
Altamonte Mall
Winter Park Mall

•Total Weight

it i t s i a A i i o s k i Mi Jiiuit.n to s h o w u k t a i i
A ll I II A M O S O W M O H I S A a r: A P P S O U M A T l :
I j t A N W U * I IM IIM M IC A S m t K U iH IS I U U V U I

�7B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Oct. 16, IMS

M useum Open House Reflects
A steady stream of enthusiastic viewers walked
thoughtfully through the display rooms of the
Seminole County Historical Museum during the
riveni open house. They looked for themselves In
old pictures and reminisced about the "good old
days." Hostesses were on hand In the rooms to
guide visitors and to tel! the histories of the
artifacts on display.

Young and old alike were fascinated with the
stories Belle Rumbley told about her exhibit of
native Florida wildlife, mounted for her by her
son. Robert Rumblev. a Tallahassee taxidermist.
Deer One. the fawn. Freddy Fox, Carlyle Bobcat,
and Otto Otter nestled cozily In the beautiful
natural forest setting arranged for the occasion by
Jean Norris. Ducks, quail and other birds hid in

Old Days'

the palmettos, while' Tom Turkey watched
proudly.
Startling to most viewers were the two bonrs'
beads brought for display by Cecil Tucker and
Beth Hattaway. Streaky Pete was taken ns n baby
and raised by the Tuckers as n pet. Old lime
residents remembered seeing him often at the
Tucker store. Dumbo, so called because of Ills
huge cars weighed 280 pounds when he was
shot by I, dawny on a Mormon ranch. Dumbo
was n descendant of domesticated pigs that
became wild. They are a nuisance now. Hnttnwny
said, because of the damage they do to pasture
land.
Suspended above the display of animals were
three snake skins, loaned by Dick Dove. Sanford
taxidermist, showing the distinctive markings of
the rattlesnake, moccasin, and coral snake.
Florida's only three deadly serpents.
Outside, under the camphor tree, a large, live
Eastern Indigo snake from the Central Florida
Zoo made friends with anyone brave enough to

touch him. This snake's name is "Literary'
visitors were told, because when he gets free he
knocks over all Hie books In the area. The Eastern
Indigo Is one of nature's benefactors and should
be protected not killed. Ironically, this snake Is a
threatened species due to loss of habitat and over
collection. They are docile creatures and very
popular as pels.
Also with the Outreach display from the Zoo
were Amos, a blue and gold Macaw. Ophelia, a
baby possom, and an as vet unnamed baby
rabbit.
Visitors came early and stayed late for
refreshments and the opportunity to meet old
friends.
Dr. Alex Dickinson, chairman of the Seminole
County Historical Commission, expressed a
feeling of satisfaction at (itis gratifying display of
public support. The museum is open Monday
through Friday from 9 a.m.-l p.m. and every
Sunday 2-4 p.m. Other special museum days are
scheduled for the future.
_Kate Nash

N i c k M o n t e ’s

G a s l ig h t S u p p e r C l u b
&amp; R esta uran t
1 1 9 S. MAGNOLIA A V E.

DOWNTOWN SANFORD

3 2 1 -3 6 0 0

E A R L Y BIRD SPECIALS
Served 4:00-6:30 p.m. Tues.-Fri.
The history of Seminole County was vividly
relived when the Seminole County Historical
Commission held open house. Caught up in
local history are, from left, Dr. Robert J.

Smith, his wife, Sanford M ayor Bettye
Smith, Belle Rumbley and D r. and M rs.
A le x D ickin so n and sons, Steve and
Jonathan.

...Cook

with 2 tablespoons melted butler or margarine.
Sprinkle 3 tablespoons of the nuts over bottom of
pan. Place remaining nuts, brown sugar, water,
and remaining margarine in small sauce pan and
heat to boiling. Remove from heat. Separate
dough into 20 biscuits. Cut each biscuit in half
and form into a ball Place 20 balls in bottom of
pan. Drizzle hall the caramel sauce over balls.
Repeat layer. Bake at 375° for 20 lo 25 minutes
or until golden brown. Invert immediately onto
waxed paper and remove pan. Serves 10

Continued From IB

time Salt and pepper to taste. Return chicken to
broth .uul serve with a nice salad. Serves 6.

LAYERED DESSERT

11j &lt;ups Hour

1 cu p nuts, i hoppcd
I st ic k m a r g a r i n e

Mix above ingredients until crumbly and press
bottom ol ‘K id baking pan. Bake 20 minutes
at 450- Remove lrum oven and cool.
Combine:
I 8-oz. package cream cheese
1 cup powdered sugar
1 cup Cool Whip
Mix until well blended and spread on erust in
pan.
Mix 2 packages (3 oz. each) butterscotch
instant pudding witli 3 cups milk until thick and
spread over cream cheese layer. Top with Cool
Whip and chill. Any flavor Instant pudding may
be substituted tor the butterscotch.

PEANUT BUTTER BALLS

h i

FRIED APPLES
1cups apples, pared and sliced
1cup sugar (more ll tart apples are u^ed)
4 tablespoons rooking oil
Place in skillet and cook on medium heat until
apples are tender and Juice is syrupy. Makes a
nice side dish. Serves 4*6.

QUICK COFFEE RING
1j ( up margarine, melted
1 2 cup chopped nuts
1cup firmly parked brown sugar
2 tablespoons water
2 10-oz cans Hungry Ja ck refrigerated flaky
biscuits

( 'oat bottom and sides of 12 cup fluted tube pan

4 cups powdered sugar
2 cups peanut butter
2 sticks butter or margarine, melted
Mix well, knead. Roll into one inch balls and
place in refrigerator for about 30 minutes.
Meanwhile, melt 1 package 112 oz.) chocolate
chips and
bar parafin in lop of double boiler.
Place toothpick in each ball and dip Into melted
chocolate to coat. Place on waxed paper to dry.

r c n

CENTER

B B M
COKE

(U N IT 2
C A S ES K R
C U S TO M ER)

Above served with Bread and Butter
and Sherbet for Dessert.
Coffee or Tea 2 5 C extra
Entertainment
Tues. • Sat.
8-12 p.m.

Most Credit
Cards Accepted

NOW TAKING R E SE R V A T IO N S FO R YOUR HOLIDAY P A R T IE S

FREEZER COLE SLAW

One 2-pound head of cabbage
1 teaspoon salt
1 green pepper, chopped
1 carrot, grated
Shred cabbage, add salt. Allow to stand .it room
temperature one hour. Squeeze the liquid front
cabbage. Add green pepper and cart cits
Combine:
x/ 2 cup vinegar
Mi cup water
1 teaspoon celery seed
1 teaspoon mustard seed
2 cups sugar
Place in saucepan and boil lor 2 minutes. Allow
syrup to cool, then pour over shredded mixture.
Pack in containers and freeze. Will keep in
refrigerator for weeks.

G HEm

iPHICES
SAVE FROM
•2 TO *4

B U D W E IS E R
B EER

Q h e S io n
r c M

C hoice O f Sou p Or Salad
Chopped S te a k - P o tato and V e g e t a b l e ..................
R o ast Sirloin of B e e f - P o tato and V eg etable . .
Hawaiian Ham S te a k - P o tato and V eg etable . .
B re a st o f T u rk ey -Stu ffin g -P o tato and V eg etable
Broiled or Fried-G rouper - P o tato and V eg etable
Fried C lam s - P o ta to and V eg etable ........................
Crab del Ray - P o tato and V eg etable .....................
Shrim p Parm igiana and S p a g h etti ............... • • • •

18"

/

O

Men’s And Ladies' Jackets
Regularly 19.99........... 15.99
Ladles' Extra Size Jackets
Regularly 22.99........... 18.99
Boys' And Qlrls' Jackets
Regularly To 15.99......12.99
Infante' And Toddlers'
Regularly To 12.99........9.99

(W ARM O N LY)

w

K R A FT
ORANGE &amp;
G R A P E F R U IT
J U IC E

M A R TIN I &amp; ROSSI
ASTI
SPUM ANATE

99

ATHLETIC
SHOE SA LE

HAVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

Values To 14.99.
M en’s &amp; ladies'
hi-tops, joggers
&amp; court shoes.

Reg. To 1.09.
Texaco HD30 or
10W40 motor oil.
Limit 5 quarts.

* p ?o « o«

QUART BOTTLE
Z COMMM ^

THE BULL

M IL W A U K E E 'S B A R T L E S &amp; JA Y M E S
B ES T B EER
WINE

49

•W

i

—

SCHLITZ MALT LIQUOR

COOLER

099

69

14 - 12 O L

CANS
(WARM ONLY)

6 PACK
16 OZ. CANS

SALE ITE M S G O O D TH R U OCT. 22nd

LAKE MARY blvd.
1 1-4 .*4 S.R. 46 11 soi CELERY
NEAR 1-4
jji
Sanford
j\
Sanford
lake Mary

.

.

&gt;

&lt;

ave.

|
|

Sanford

ARM A HAM M ER

LIFEB U O Y SOAP

PAPER TOW ELS

Regularly 1.49.65 oz.
owder detergent,
Cimit 2 boxes.

Regularly 39*. 4.75 oz.
deodorant bar soap.
Limit 6 bars.

Reg. 2 For *1. Page
75 count paper towels
Limit 4.

fICSS Good At All Family DOTIKT5H
rhrough This Weekend Quantities Limited
Dn Some Items. No Sales To Dealers.

[

413 E. FIRST ST.

(S t ill*

Him Diiitl

A N T I-FR E EZE
One gallon Texaco
anti-freeze engine
coolant.

STORE 9 AM 9 PM MON SAT.
HOURS SUNDAY 1 PM 6 PM

I

�Energy

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

the^Worl,

Packed
Snacks

A

Get them up. gel them to eat
breakfast. get them to take their
lunch or snack and yet them to
cal some nutritional snacks
when they gel home ... it isn't
easy!
Hut nutritions dates can be a
firgat partner. For starters, mix
chopped dates with unsugared
dry or cooked cereal, add to
pancake or waffle baiter or make
a datc-orunge-cgg blender drink.
For l he brown baggers, date
nut bread with cream cheese
filling or date-peanut butter
spread are favorites. .Just plain
dates, pitted or chopped, make a
good nibble for dessert.
* Nutritionally, these energy
packed little fruits provide a
good source of Iron, potassium
and niacin, low In sodium and
only 22 calories per date.

MAGIC DATE COOKIES
1 can sweetened condensed
milk (not evaporated)
3
cu p s g ra h a m c r a c k e r
crumbs
1 cup chopped dates
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Quartered dales for tops of
' cookies
In a large bowl, gradually mix
cracker crumbs and cinnamon
into condensed milk. Add dates
and blend well. Mixture will be
very thick. Willi lightly oiled
hands, shape by tahlespoonfuls
Into round balls. Place on
greased cookie sheets and lightly
flatten each hall. Press a quarter
pitted date into each cookie.
Hake at 350° for 15 minutes.
Remove from pan and cool on
racks. Makes about 3 dozen.
CHOCO-DATE SQUARES
cup butter or margarine,
softened
1 cup brown sugar, packed
2 eggs
I teaspoon vanilla
l l4 cup all-purpose flour
'/j

TreasureH unt

RAWSONS
SUPER UALU

P R IC E S EFFEC TIV E THURS. OCT. 17, THRU W ED S. OCT. 23, 1985.
NOT R E S P O N S IB L E FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRO RS.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED .

D ates pack a lot of n utrition .
I U teaspoon baking powder
■4 teaspoon salt
1 cup chopped dates
% cup semi-sweet ehoeolale
hils
Cream butter and sugar, add
eggs one at a time and beat well.
Arid vanilla. Combine Hour with
baking powder and sail, stir into
beaten mixture. Add dates and
chocolate. Spread mixture in
greased 9 inch square pan. Hake
at 350° for about 30 minutes, or
until toothpick inserted in center
comes out dry. Cool on wire rack
and cut into squares.

SUN GIANT DATE BREAD
2 Vi cups silled all-purpose
flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
I teaspoon soda
I teaspoon salt
1 j cup sugar, white or brown
2 cups pitted dales, finely cut
I cup whole wheal Hour,
unsifted

1egg. well beaten

MARTHA WHITE

2 cups buttermilk

3 tablespoons salad oil
Mix and sift together the all
purpose Hour, baking powder,
soda, salt and sugar. Coal dales
with small amount of flour
mixture and blend with re­
maining Hour mixture. Add the
unsifted whole wheat Hour and
mix. Combine buttermilk with
beaten egg and oil. Combine
liquid ingredients with the dry
•mi's all at once, stirring only
unt il dry in g re d ie n t s are
m olstehcd. Pour into well
greased 9x5x3" loaf pan and
bake one hour at 350° or until
toothpick inserted in center
conies out clean. Cool 10
minutes in pan. Remove from
pan to cooling rack. Allow to cool
thoroughly before slicing. To
store, wrap In foil or wax paper
to retain moisture.

since they can tie used la cakes,
cookies and breads to salads:
soups and slews.
There’s no hidden mystery
when it comes to selecting yams
in the product section of your
supermarket.

AUTUMN YAM SALAD

% cup vegetable oil
&gt;4 cup freshly squeezed orange
Juice
2 tablespoons white wine
vinegar
2 tablespoons prepared brown
mustard
2 teaspoons grated fresh
ginger
1 j teaspoon salt
1 k teaspoon pepper
3 large North Carolina yams,
pared, sliced 'a-ineh thick 1-1-5
cups)
2 cups fresh broccoli florets
2 cups conked, diced chicken
1 small red onion, thinly sliced

orange Juice, vinegar, mustard,
ginger, salt no •pepper: mix well.
In large saucepan steam yams
and broccoli 5-7 minutes, until
vegetables arc crisp-tender.
Drain. Turn vegetables Into large
liowl: add chicken, onion and
dressing: mix well. Serve salud
warm.
Makes: 4 servings.

CORN MUFFIN
MIX

REGULAR OR SELF RISING

79

7.5-0Z
BOX

LIMIT - 1 PLEASE

5/ $ l
SWISS MISS

MARTHA WHITE

HOT COCOA

7-0Z PKG.

REGULAR OR WITH
MARSHMALLOW

MUFFIN MIX
ASSORTED VARIETIES

WESSON
OIL

12 ct

$ f3 9
m
HUNT’S

B.B.Q . SAUCE

35* OFF LABEL

O R IG INA L, HICKORY SMOKED
ONION or COUNTRY STYLE

*$129

, $t 79
LIMIT-1 PLEASE

HUNT’S

ORVILLE REDENBACHER'S

PO PCORN

TOMATO

KETCHUP

30*02 JAR

$ f9 9

YAM SUNSHINE SALAD

3
large North Carolina yams,
pared shredded (about 4 cups)
1 3 cup mayonnaise
14cup chopped scallions
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed
lemon juice
•■a teaspoon dried rosemary,
crumbled
In large sauccpot steam
shredded yams 2-3 minutes,
until Just erisp-temler. Cover.
Chill 15-20 minutes. Add may­
onnaise. scallions, lemon Juice
and rosemary: mix well. Makes:

MARTHA WHITE

FLOUR

^Versatile Sw eet Potatoes
Considered Cook's Delight
Any way you slice them, sweet
potatoes are one of your best
sources of vitamins and minerals
this season. Now In peak supply,
sweet potatoes have m any
healthful benefits that shouldn't
• be overlooked. For Instance,
they’re cholesterol-free, low In
sodium and a natural source ot
fiber. Additionally, one medium
sweet potato provides over twice
the recommended dally allow
;* mice of vitamin A. which, ae•l cording to both the National
Cancer Institute and the Amerlcan Cancer Society, has been
• shown to reduce the risk of
certain forms of cancer. Sweet
potatoes are also a good source
- of vitamin C. iron and thiamine.
• • As one of the most nuirl*
• tionally complete vegetables.
- sweet potatoes are deliciously
moist and remarkably versatile.
Often referretl to as vams. sweet

Wednesday, Oct. It, IMS—3B

99c
TROPICANA
ORANGE JUICE

HUNT’S

WHOLE PEELED
TOMATOES

100% PURE FROM CONCENTRATE

14.5-OZ CAN

$149

64-OZ
CARTON
2

M

3-0Z PKG

LA CH0Y

RAMEN
NOODLES

HUNTS

TOMATO
SAUCE

BEEF. CHICKEN, ORIENTAL

15-02 CAN

LA CHOY
DINNERS

30-OZ EGG FU YOUNG
29-OZ PEPPER STEAK

PETER PAN
PEANUT
BUTTER

HUNTS
TOMATO
PASTE

4/si
$169
SO UP
STARTER

6-OZ CAN

26-02 CRUNCHY or CREAMY

7*0Z VEGETABLE
6-OZ CHICKEN NOODLE

$049

$119

MARTHA WHITE SELF RISING

e

-g

Corn M eal...........................5 lbI » I * 7
MARTHA WHITE

^

Boil N’ Bag G rits................iooz»© *7
ORVILLE REDENBACHER S ASST0 VARIETIES

M

^

Microwave P op corn . . . io .s-o z I# l“
HUNT S

g "

Stewed Tom atoes.............. i4.5-oz«©D
________ , . SLOPPY JO E SAUCE
M
anwicn
. . is s-oz .89
Meatloaf Fixins ............ isoz^Uw
StewStarter................ 74-oz1 *0*7
Butter Popcorn Oil......... 1.49
HUNT'S

s e a s o n in g m ix

HUNT'S

•EEF ON CHTCAEN

1,02 ORVILLE REOENSACMERS

Fresh sweet potatoes ore featured In Autumn Yam Salad,

/ Z

*

f f

JIM DANDY

QUICK
GRITS
D44U

99*

�4B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Oct. U , m i

RAW SONS

FROZEN
fo o d s

O A Ll !

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. OCT. 17 THRU WEDS. OCT. 23. 1985. NOT
RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.
MINUTE MAID
a

GREEN GIANT

6-OZ

ORANGE
JUICE

t Tfc-:

CORN ON
THE COB

MINUTE MAID

12-OZ

APPLE
JUICE

4 EARS

99*
VAN DE KAMPS CRISPY

FISH
STICKS
VAN DE KAMPS CRISPY

CELESTE

PIZZA FOR ONE
ASSTD. VARIETIES
13.5-OZ

$|79
14-OZ

EGGO
WAFFLES

8Mc»m.%tvie&gt;

HOMESTYLE OR
BUTTERMILK

$ (8 9

FISH
FILLETS
AUNT JEMIMA

11-OZ

15-OZ

PKG

WAFFLES
REG OR BLUEBERRY
AUNT JEMIMA

9-OZ

CHEF SALUTO

FRENCH
TOAST

SUPER
PIZZA

REG OR CINNAMON

OELUXEOR
PEPPERONI

BUDGET GOURMET

Pork loin, red ca b b a g e and desserts a re country inn fa v o rite s .

C o u n t r y In n s O f f e r
B e s t O f A m e r ic a
Eaeh autumn, the hillsides
beckon local and visiting nature
watchers with warm, vibrant
colors. It is a time when a
leisurely drive, a walk in the
Helds and some crisp, country
air can refresh one’s spirit The
perfect partner to such an out­
ing. whatever the season, is a
hearty meal and a cozy bed at a
country inn.
Country Inns are often best
known for their loud, which
explains tin- pride each innkeep­
er takes in serving unique and
delicious tare. Classic quality
and a rich heritage are a matter
ol pride — from the quilts that
cover the beds — to the plates
that bear the "house" favorites.
It Is this tradition of quality that
prompted the Smut ker s Com­
pany to search for the best
examples of country inn cooking
through a nationwide recipe
contest
This search resulted in 22
outstanding recipes that offer a
Iri sh and interesting flavor with
each dish, four of the winners
shown here.
Not only are they delicious,
but they are also te r r ific
examples of the way fruit pre­
serves can add flavor and variety
to everyday Inod. Frult-Stulfed
Loin ol Pork, for Instance. Is a
succulent main dish that mixes
natural Juiciness with a richly
textured. Iruit stuffing and
flavorlul apricot glaze. And
Sin in ker s grape Jelly adds a
special twist that complements
the crisp cabbage leaves, to
make Sweet and Sour Wed
Cabbage. Two very special de­
sserts. Apricot Rice Pudding and
Cherry Almond Dessert, com­
plete the meal and provide a
tasty choice lor everyone at the
table. The pudding is a smooth,
yet firm blend of rice, coconut
and a p r ic o ts . T h e C h e rry
Almond Dessert offers ice cream
lovers a fancy twist and takes
little time to prepare.
Serving and cooking food
should be as easy as the pre­
paration. lite classic lines ol
Com ing’s cookware go from
oven to table, saving steps but
never costing appearance. The
photograph features French
White cookware by Corning,
which blends perfectly with ant.que country interiors and odd
serving pieces that although
mismatched, are too dear to part
with. CiRtks are also quick to
praise the smooth surface tha
makes cleaning easy and also
prevents food flavor carryover,
which can sometimes happen
with other cooking materials.
There arc. of course, as many
varieties of country recipes as
there are country cooks. Altove

t

*

all. the country Inn represents a
cozy charm that warms the
heart and nurtures the spirit.
Although we may not have the
opportunity to visit these inns,
we can certainly enjoy their
culinary specialities by trying
each of the 22 recipes in
"Sm ucker’s Best In American
Country Inn Cooking Booklet."
To obtain a copy of this recipe
sampler, send 50 cents (for
postage and h an d lin g ) to:
Sm u ck er’s Best In America
Country Inn Cooking. P.O. Box158. Medina. OH 44258.

and freeze. Remove pan trom
freezer 20 minutes before serv­
ing. Cut into 9 squares.

SWEET AND SOUR
REDCABBAGE
(Serves 6 -8)
1 medium-size head of red
cabbage, shredded
I apple, sliced thin without
peeling
1 3 cdp water
2 tablespoons cider vinegar
2 tablespoons butter
I teaspoon salt
13 cup grape jelly
Combine all Ingredients in a
4-quart covered pot. Steam over
medium heat about 5-7 minutes
or until cabbage is Just barely
wilted. Toss before serving.

FRUIT-STUFFED PORK
LOIN WITH APRICOT GLAZE
(Serves 8 -10)
1 a cup dried apricots
2 .i cup apricot nectar
4 pounds rolled loin ot pork,
boned
12 pitted prunes
I teaspoon salt
'* teaspoon ground ginger
I I cup apricot preserves
1 teaspoon soy sauce
Cook apricots in apricit nectar
lor 3 minutes in a covered
saucepan. Let stand covered at
least 1 hour. Unroll pork loin;
place lat-side down. Make a deep
lengthwise cut on an angle Into
meaty part to make a pocket lor
Iruits Drain apricots, reserving
liquid Alternate apricots with
prunes in meat pocket. Roll pork
around Iruits. Tie pork with
cotton string at 2 -inch Intervals.
Rub pork with salt and ginger
Place in roasting pan and roast
at 3 2 5 °F .. a llo w in g 30-35
minutes per pound (approxi­
mately 2'^ hours). Pork is done
when meal thermometer in­
serted Into center of roast regis­
ters 170°F. Brush pork oc­
casionally during roasting with
mixture of reserved apricot liq­
uid. apricot preserves and soy
sauce. Place roast on a warm
serving platter: remove strings
before serving.

APRICOT RICE PUDDING
(Serves 8 )
113 rups cooked rice
1 2 i up shredded coconut
1 12 cups apricot nectar
V2 cup water
23 cup sugar
Mi teaspoon salt
3 eggs, separated
1 teaspoon grated lemon peel
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 2 cup apricot preserves
Preheat oven to 3 5 0°F. Com­
bine rice and coconut. Place
along bottom of a 10 x6 x2 -lnch
baking dish or divide Into three
16-ounce individual French
White casseroles (illustrated).
Heat apricot, nectar, water. Mi
cup sugar and salt to boiling:
cool slightly. Combine egg yolks,
lemon peel and vanilla; beat
slightly. Stir in hot apricot
nectar mixture gradually. Pour
mixture over rice and coconut.
Place baking dish(es) In pan of
hot w'ater. Bake for 45 minutes
or until set. Remove from oven;
cool slightly. Spread top of
pudding with apricot preserves.
For meringue topping, beat egg
whites, gradually adding re­
maining sugar until stiff, but not
dry. Spread meringue over
pudding. Return to oven: bake
15 minutes or until meringue Is
lightly browned. Cut Into
squares or spoon into Individual
dessert dishes. Serve warm or
cold.

CHERRY-ALMOND DESSERT
(Makes 9 squares)
l ‘/ 3
cups crushed van illa
wafers
VS cup melted butter
2/3

c u p

to a s te d

s liv e r e d

almonds
I teaspoon almond extract
‘.*3 gallon vanilla Ice cream
12-ounce Jar cherry preserves
Combine vanilla wafers, but­
ter. al m o nd s and almond
extract. Spread half ol mixture
into a 9-inch square pan; pal
firmly. Reserve remaining half
for topping. Soften Ice cream and
spoon over crumb mixture in
pan. Place pan in freezer to firm
(approximately 20 minutes).
Remove pan from freezer and
quickly spread cherry preserves
over ice cream. Sprinkle with
remaining crumbs. Cover pan

.

DINNERS

$369

ASSTD VARIETIES

100% PURE FROM CONCENTRATE

DONALD DUCK
ORANGE
JUICE
12-OZ

BANOUET FAMILY

99c

LIGHT BREAD

en trees

LASAGNA. B E E F GRAVY.
CHICKEN PARMESIAN PATTIES

PEPPERIDGE FARM

12-OZ

MRS. PAUL
FLOUNDER

$ 2 6 9

LIGHT BREAD

16-0Z

MRS. PAUL
FISH FILLETS

49c

MILD, MED OR HOT
ASSTD VAR. &amp; SIZES

Tyson Entrees
2^ .54 9
16-OZ VALLEY OR COMBINATION
Green G iant...........1 •1 9
11.S-0Z ASSTD. VAR. PILLSBURY

^

Toaster Stru d els.. 1 . 2 9
ASSTD SIZ ES - PILLSBURY
^
4 A
Microwave Pizza... 1 •9 9
12-OZ ASSTD VARIETIES
/+
Lender’s Bagels......... 0 9
NAT. GOOD PEACHES. MIXED F R U IT ^

Fruit Stop s . . . .
WEIGHT WATCHERS
SOUTHERN FRIED

CHICKEN OR
CACCIATORI
WEIGHT WATCHERS

CAKE

BLACKBERRY. CHEESE.

CHOCOLATE

PET RITZ MULTIPAK

PIE
SHELLS
PET RITZ

. . 14-OZ

^

10-OZ

$|99
ASSTD. SIZES

$|39
25-OZ

$ j9 9

17-OZ

$ |5 9

SWANSON

i j

- ‘"
iAUiSUftr
STEAK
*v*WI
’Rl

SALISBURY
STEAK
DINNER

*

11.S-0Z
PKG

SWANSON WHITE MEAT

11.5-OZ
II.3 - U Z .

$ j5 9

CHICKEN
DINNER
SWANSON DARK MEAT

11.5-OZ

$|29

CHICKEN
DINNER
SWANSON

ASSTD. SIZES

BREAKFAST
a
SANDWICHES 5 1 1 9
ASSORTED VARIETIES

M

_ 10-OZ
COLE’S
12-OZ

GRAPE
JUICE

BENIHANA
ROAST PORK
LOIN MEIN, CHICKEN A SNO PEAS
OR CHICKEN t MUSHROOMS

11-OZ

—

a

1*19

PIE
SHELLS
WELCH'S

|S .

ASSTD VARIETIES

5-0Z

BURRITOS

$ g &amp; 9

LAYER
CAKE

$ 2 ^ 9

OLD EL PASO

99*

KRAFT
LA CREME

$ ]9 9

GARLIC BREAD
MINI-LOAF

8-OZ

79c

JF 0 / APPLE OB PEACH IN NATURAL JUICE

Mrs. Smith Pies . 2 .9 9

ASSORTED SIZES ANO VAR.

Light &amp; Elegant

-

DINNERS l

^

• 4

9

12-OZ PATTIES OR NUGGETS

2 .4 9
Apple Ju ic e .............. .8 9
Banquet Chicken
12-OZ TREE TOP

t

i .

i

•

•■•

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednetday, Oct. U , i98i—

RAWSOMSI
CHECK ° U T THESE
w w s a w EXCITING VALUES!
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. OCT. 17. THRU
WEDS. OCT. 23. 1985. NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS. QUANTITY
___________ RIGHTS RESERVED

NYQUIL
COLD
MEDICINE

PRESTONE
ANTI-FREEZE
4 QUARTS

$499

10-OZ
BTL

PAAS HALLOWEEN

EACH

MAKE-UP
KIT

$399

HALLOWEEN ADULT

$|99

SHOWTIME
MAKE-UP

CUREL

BAKING FOIL DISPENSER,
LOAF PANS, SQUARE CAKE PANS,
DEEP PIE PAN, PIE PAN

C u re l

6-02 BTL

VltHxl'iyrtzitHM bit km

$| 99

Ends
UrvSkin

89*
BIC

ENERGIZER
BATTERIES

BUTANE
LIGHTER

9 VOLT, D 2-PK OR C 2-PK

EACH

$499

2 /$ l

1.69

AA 2-PK

AGREE

RIGHT GUARD
SPRAY
3-OZ REGULAR OR

SHAMPOO or
CONDITIONER
15-OZ ASSTO VARIETIES

2-5-OZ ANTI-PERSPIRANT

S tart With A Frozen Entree
For Elegant Com pany Fare
Take Stenk Diane, serve with
creamy stuffed potatoes and
follow with a dessert of luscious
fudge-topped cherry pie. Ele­
gant, yes. hut not quite the
company dinner one would
Imagine putting together at the
end of a busy day.
Busy or not. you really can
race the fine china with this
Inner with a minimum of effort
and surprisingly III tie prepara­
tion time. Add a salad of fresh
greens. Julienne cut vegetables
and some red wine to make It
truly company-special.
Dinner Is special, and easy,
with the help of a few handy
frozen footls that keep kitchen
time down anti company lime
up. Start with Salisbury Steak
Diane ... onion, chives and a
splash each of brandy and
sherry add the "Diane" to the
family-size pack of frozen pre­
pared gravy and Salisbury steak
main dish. One package serves
six amply.
While It heats, fill baked potato
shells with a creamy mixture of
thawed frozen spinach, cheese,
bacon, seasonings and potato.
Pop your Potatoes "Rockefeller"
in the oven to heat lor a few
minutes before serving.
After the plates are cleared
and your guests are convinced
that you couldn’t possibly have
had lime to fix anything else ...

5

prove them wrong. The fruity
beginning of Hot Fudge Cherry
Pic Sundae Is a rcady-to-bake
frozen cherry pie baked early in
the day and cooled. Top each
slice with vanilla ice cream and a
smooth hot fudge sauce home­
made with sweetened condensed
milk, chocolate pieces, butter
and a few drops of almond
extract.

SALISBURY STEAK DIANE
1 package (32 oz.) frozen
prepared gravy and Salisbury
steak main dish, thawed
1 small onion, sliced (about
cup)
2 tablespoons freeze-dried
chives
2 tablespoons brandy
2 tablespoons sherry
Separate Salisbury steak pat­
ties front gravy. In P/Vquart
oblong baking dish, place patties
and onion. In small bowl, com­
bine gravy, chives, brandy and
sherry. Pour over patties. Heal in
375°l', oven 35 minutes or until
hot. Slir before serving. Makes t»
servings.
POTATOES"ROCKEFELLER"
6 medium baking potatoes,
baked
3 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
2-3 tablespoons milk
1 package (10 oz.) frozen
chopped spinach, thawed and
well-drained
•1 slices bacon, crisp-cooked

and crumbled
Vi cup (2 oz.) sh red d ed
Cheddar cheese
Vfr-Vi teaspoon hot pepper
s;i uce
Cut tops oil potatoes. Scoop
out centers leaving '4-lnch
sh e lls. Sol aside shells. In large
howl, •combine potatoes, butter
and milk. Stir in spinach, bacon,
cheese and hot pepper sauce.
Spoon potato m ixture into
shells. Heal, on cookie sheet, in
375°K. oven 10 minutes or until
liot. Makes 6 servings.

HOT FUDGE
CHERRY PIE SUNDAE
I package 120 oz.) ready-tohake frozen cherry pie
1 cup (G oz.) semi-sweet choco­
late pieces
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
1 can (14 oz.) sweetened con­
densed milk
Vi teaspoon almond extract
Vanilla Ice cream
Bake pie according to package
instructions. Let cool. In small
saucepan, melt chocolate and
butter. Stir in sweetened con­
densed milk and almond extract.
Cook over low heat, stirring
constantly, until mixture is hot
and bubbly. Cool slightly. To
serve, cut pie Into 6 pieces. Top
each with one scoop ice cream.
Pour '« cup chocolate mixture
over ice c r e a m . Ma kes 0
servings

SO 29

3-O Z
EDGE

7-OZ

SHAVE
CREAM

28-OZ
CAPRI FOAMING

Gloria Dove of Bethclehem.
PA, won 55.000 for her first
place entry, "Cheesy Beef 'n
Spinach Cassata." at the 12th
annual National Beef Cook-Off.
This year’s contest was held in
Wichita. KA, from Sept. 24-26.
The American National CowBelles sponsor the event In
cooperation with the Beef In­
dustry Council of the Meat
Board.

CHEESY BEEF 'N SPINACH
CASSATA
2 pounds ground beef
Vi cup each chopped green
pepper and chopped onion
2 clo v e s g a rlic , m inced,
divided
2 tablespoons olive oil. if
desired

V* teaspoon salt
’ 1can |H ounces) tomato sauce
1can (6 ounces) tomato paste
l/a cup white wine
2 teaspoons dried oregano,
crushed
V* teaspoons ground pepper

lA cup seasoned dry bread
crumbs
Vi cup plus 2 tablespoons
grated Parmesan cheese, divided
'/a cup butter or margarine,
melted, divided
1 package (It) ounces) frozen
chopped spinach, thawed, well
drained
2 eggs, beaten
1 cup each rlccotta cheese and
shredded mozzarella cheese
8 frozen 14x 18-Inch pltyllo
pastry leaves, thawed
Parsley
Ripe olives
Cherry tomatoes
Brown ground beef with onion,
green pepper and one clove
garlic in oil. if desired, over
medium heat; pour off drippings.
Sprinkle salt over beef mixture.
Add tomato sauce, tomato paste,
wine, oregano and pepper, stir­
ring to combine; simmer five
minutes. Stir in bread crumbs
and V* cup of Parmesan cheese;
reserve. Lightly brown remain­
ing clove garlic in 1 tablespoon

of the hotter. Add spinach: cover
and simmer 3 minutes. Remove
from heal. Stir in eggs, rlcotta
and mozzarella cheese and l«
cup of the Parmesan cheese: mix
well. Line a 9-Inch sprlngform
pan with 6 p ltyllo leaves,
overlapping edges. Brush top
with butter. Spoon beef mixture
into pan. pressing lightly Top
with spinach mixture. Fold
pltyllo edges over top. Cut four
9-Inch circles from the remain­
ing pltyllo leaves. Place one
circle over filling: brush with
butter. Repeat 3 times. Cut
through leaves to form 8 wedges.
Brush with remaining butter.
Place pan In shallow baking pan
(to catch drippings). Bake in
moderate oven (3 5 0 °F.) 35
minutes. Sprinkle remaining 2
tablespoons Parmesan cheese
over top: continue baking 10
minutes or until golden brown.
Let stand 10 minutes. Remove
sides of pan: cut into wedges.
Garnish with parsley, olives and
tomatoes. 8 servings.

BATH
OIL

$ | 4 9 j

REGULAR, GEL, SPECIAL
OR CONDITIONER

BAYER

24 CT

3-OZ

SOLID

TABLETS 9

9

TYLENOL

4-OZ

c ® *

DEODORANT
REG OR UNSCENT

DELSYM

a

SUAVE
SHAMPOO o r
CONDITIONER

12-h o u r

COUGH
RELIEF

BALSAM NORMAL OR
GOLD WHEAT

28-OZ

3-OZ

$489

ARRID

$3 3 ?

HAVOLINE

MOTOR
O IL

DEODORANT
REGULAR OR XX
1.5-OZ

10W40 OR 30 WT

$|79

QUART

88

10W40 OR 30W CASE . . ................

{

$ 2 "

DAISY

CHILD

•

$ J6 9

SECRET

ROLL-ON

Cassata W inner In Contest

$ 3 9 9

E-Z FO IL

SKIN
LOTION

Salisbury S taak D ia n a and P otatoes 'R o ck efe lle r' m a k e an easy d in n e r.

EACH

AQUA FRESH
PU M P
REGULAR

$
4
2
9
4.6-OZ
M

10.55
V -0 5

n
Li
Iwifl
ggg
vMHi

HAIR SPRAY
70Z SUPER OR SOZ
NON AEROSOL UNSCENTED

$488

l

�*B — Evtning Htrald, Sanford, FI.

Wtdnaiday, Oct. U , IMS

Brunch Combines Good Food With Good Company
Webster defines brunch ns n
"late first meal of the day that
takes the place of both breakfast
and lunch." To most of us. it's a
delightful late-morning meal
that combines good food with
good company.
The brunch came into its own
in the fifties as an easy and
relatively economical form of
entertaining. Today, brunch
ranges from a festive restaurant
fete to a relaxing at-home affair.
And. It's no wonder brunch is so
popular! This v ersatile,
two-in-one meal, usually served
between about 10 a.m. and 1
p.m., can be simple or elaborate,
a spur-of-the-m om ent,
nny-time-of-year weekend event
or a pre-planned holiday or
special-occasion bash.
While the brunch menu lends
Itself to a variety of foods, tt
traditionally includes eggs In
some form. Readily available,
economical eggs arc as versatile
as the meat Itself. Eggs can be
the basis for dozens of delicious
brunch entrees — from classics
such as Eggs Benedict or Quiche
Lorraine to more innovative
specialties of the house.
The unique recipes here range
from casual to classy, lastminute to make-ahead. And.
they're only a small sampling of
the endless variety of egg dishes
that can turn breakfast and
lunch into an Incredibly enter­
taining brunch!

until thoroughly blended. Pour
■4 teaspoon salt
into small saucepan. Cook over
4 hard-cooked eggs, chopped
low heat, stirring constantly.
Mi cu p ch op p e d cook e d
Just until thickened, about 4 chicken
minute. Remove from heat.
Mi cup chopped walnuts
Cover and chill to blend flavors.
lii cup finely chopped celery
Refrigerate anv extra dressing.
2 tablespoons snipped fresh
CHICKEN AND AVOCADO parsley
Place avocados, cream cheese
FILLINGS
2 medium avocados, peeled and lemon Juice in blender
container or small mixing bowl.
and chunked
1 package (3 oz.) cream Cover and blend or beat at high
speed until smooth. Set aside. In
cheese, softened
medium bowl, blend together
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
mayonnaise, lemon pepper and
V* cup mayonnaise
salt.
Stir In remaining ingre­
Mi teaspoon lemon pepper
dients. Set aside.
seasoning

g re e n

with tops
12 eggs
Mi cup milk
44 teaspoon dill weed
Dash pepper
1 can (tiMi oz.) chopped or
minced clams, drained
In 10-inch omelet pan or
skillet over medium heat, cook
bacon until crisp. Remove from
pan. drain and set aside. Lour off
all but 2 tablespoons of bacon
drippings. Cook potatoes and
onions in reserved drippings,
covered over medium heat, stir­
ring occasionally, until potatoes
arc lender and lightly browned,

about 15 minutes. Mix eggs,
milk, dill weed and pepper until
blended. Stir In clams. Pour over
potato mixture. As egg mixture
begins lo set. gently draw an
Inverted pancake turner com­
pletely across the bottom and
sides of pan. forming Inrge soft
curds. Continue until eggs are
thickened but still moist*. Do
not stir constantly. Sprinkle with
reserved bacon.
•It is better to rem ove
scrambled eggs from pan when
they are slightly underdone.
Heat retained In eggs completes
the cooking.

RAW SO NS
SUPER 17ALU

DOUBLE COUPONS GOOD THURSDAY,
WHERE OUR NAME IS YOUR GUARANTEE!

1. We will accept but not double free coupons. Also we cannot accept rebate coupons.

REDEMPTION
RULES

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. OCT. 17 THRU WED.
OCT. 23, 1985. NOT R ESPO N SIBLE FOR TYPO G RAPHICAL
ERRORS. Q U A N TITY RIGHTS RESERVED.

POACHED EGOS ORIENTAL
4 servings
East meets West deliciously in
this novel change of taste. Dou­
ble the recipe and cook in two
pans for a larger group. Be sure
to keep this recipe dish in mind
for dieters.
1 package (3 oz.) mushroomflavored ramen-stylc Oriental
noodle mix
1 can |B oz.) sliced water
chestnuts, undralned
cup diagonally thin-sliced
carrot
Mi cup diced celery1
U cup chopped green onions
with tops
2 tablespoons soy sauce
8 eggs
4 fresh mushrooms, sliced,
optional
2 teaspoons toasted sesame
seeds, optional
In 10-inch omelet pan or
skillet over high heat, bring 2
cups water to boiling. Break
noodles from mix into quarters.
Add to water. Reduce heat to
medium. Cover and cook 1
minute. Stir to separate noodles.
Stir tn water chestnuts, carrot,
celery, onions, soy sauce and
contents of mix flavor packet.
Break eggs, one at a time. Into
saucer, then slip each egg into
vegetable mixture, holding dish
close to mixture’s surface. Re­
cover and cook an additional 8 to
10 minutes, depending on de­
sired doneness. For each serv­
ing. with ladle, lift 2 eggs,
noodles and vegetables into each
of 4 (12-ounce) soup bowls.
Garnish with mushroom slices
and sesame seeds, if desired.
COBB-STYLE SALAD
8 servings
T h is w o nd er fu lly fillin g ,
main-dish salad owes Its origin
to Robert Cobb, former owner of
the Brown Derby restaurants in
Los Angeles. It's easy to assem­
ble the attractive layers of In­
gredients ahead of time to re­
frigerate until serving. And. the
salad Is portable, so keep it in
mi nd for away-from-home
potluck meals, loo.
2 quarts (about 1 pound)
bite-sized pieces mixed salad
greens such as slnach and/or red
leaf. Romalne. Iceberg. Boston or
Bibb lettuce
6 hard-cooked eggs, chopped
2 medium tomatoes, sliced
1 avocado, peeled and sliced ••
1 package |6 oz.) sliced Swiss
cheese, cut In Julienne strips
3 o u n c e s blue cheese,
crumbled
6 slices bacon, crisp cooked,
drained and crumbled
M» c u p c h o p p e d
w i t h to p s

NEW ENGLAND-STYLE
EGGS *N' CLAMS
6 servings
Sauteed potatoes, onions and
clams make ever-popular bacon
and eggs an exciting new taste
treat. This recipe is especially
good when guests drop In unex­
pectedly. Keep a can of clams on
hand and you can scramble up a
sensational meat at the ring of a
doorbell!
2 slices bacon, diced
3 cups diced peeled potatoes
(about 1 pound)
14 cup chopped green onions

2. Rawsons Super Valu store coupons are not included in this offer.
1 Sales tax must be paid according to state law.

3rd Big Week!

FAl l F

FESTI VAL

SPECTACULAR

-■ j

VI

r

,
/

MEAT

5

USDA CHOICE

MEAT

PER POUND

.

CUBE
STEAK

USOA CHOICE

PER POUND

____ e u A i i r n c n

S I 98

FARM F R E S H

A

4

DELI

A

P O « T

FLAVORITE

ie pk o .

_______ LUNCHEON

1 28

$

A

$10 8

S 3
MEAT OR B E E F

4

*28
chtirb 1 48 Lybes Franbs 1»VJ8
Stewing B e e f .... I .98 ^hes Bacon . . 1.28 Beef B o lo g n a ........ ‘“.9 8
Pork S te a k s ............. l b I
P O IJ S H ^ I E E F ^SMOKED OR

G ro u n d

M

Q

Q

LIT L B U FFE T

Sm oked Sausage^ 1 • © ©

t

RESH

GRADE

f

A

FRYER

C O M BIN ATIO N PKG

A N Y

$8 08

n

FARM

FRESH

REGULAR OR
UNSALTED

1
I3*7*

/ /

^

DONALD DUCK

89«

ORANGE

Cottage Cheese
9 S OZ PILLSBU RY

$479

FROZEN

LB QUARTERS

I6-0Z LIGHT N LIVELY

Cinnamon Rolls
8 -OZ PH ILA D ELPH IA LIGHT

Cream C heese...

16-OZ

89c

24-0Z C R O W L EY S

Cottage Cheese

1 .3 9

4 F

1I OZ BIROS EYE

SWEETMILK OR
BUTTERMILK

• OZ SH R ED D ED CHEOOAR
OR M O ZZA RELLA

89c
,g

A

Sargento Cheese 1 • O * 7

Cool W hip.................l . W r
P E P P E R ID G E FARM A SST D VAR

M

C

A

Layer C a k e s ...... noz 1 • 0 ^ 7
H O M ESTYLE OR B U T T E R M IL K

M

Eggo W affles...........n oz# I “

SW ISS S T V l t

ASS I () VAMIt t il S

789

A

99 °

LIGHT N’LIVELY

H ( )/

3

FROZEN 4-EARS
^

YOGURTS

4 PACK

COB
CORN

A Q C

100M&gt; PURE FROM
CONCENTRATED

AXELROD’S
MERICO
BISCUITS

GREEN GIANT

12-OZ

ju ic e

1.09
1.09
1.09

DAIRY
AXELROD

ICE MILK
A S S O R I [ U V A H II I I I s
M

Al

f

I i A|

|i

)fJ

C $ J7 9

SANFORD: 2B44 ORLANDO ROAD, ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER OF 17«2 A ORLANDO ROAD

t
*

* •

' r *

O

L

c

MAZOLA
MARGARINE

12 PACK I2-0Z CANS

SOUR
CREAM

Q

Sliced Ham .......... p*g» ^ ©

WHOLE
PORK BUTTS

DAIRY

BEER

THICK PRENCH DRESSING
about 2 cups
2 eggs
I cup cooked oil
'/« cup red wine vinegar
1 tablespoon sugar
2 teaspoons paprika
1 teaspoon salt
1 clove garlic, minced
Place all Ingredients in 5-cup
blender container or small mix­
ing bowl. Cover and blend or
beat with electric mixer or rotary
beater at medium to high speed

4&lt;QI

LB

M ILLER
LITE

Thick French Dressing (recipe
follows)
Toss greens and arrange In an
even layer in 13x9x2" baking
dish. Spoon eggs in a row down
center of greens. Place alternate
slices of tomato and avocado on
both sides of eggs. Place Swiss
cheese strips beside tomato and
avocado slices. Sprinkle evenly
with blue cheese, bacon and
onions.
To serve, use a fork and spoon
to lift out each serving, including
some of each ingredient. Pass
Thick French Dressing.
••To prevent discoloration,
dip avocado slices in lemon
Juice.

FLAVORITE IM PO RT ED

j

P K G

o

BEER

o n io n s

REG U LA R

S IZ E

Q

Kahn’s H am ...... lbZ « 0 0

GROUND
BEEF

PICK O THE CHICK

M

RESH

/ •

»

�Autumn means apples and the
availability of America's favorite
fruit. If you are from New
England the McIntosh is your
favorite apple. If you hall from
Home Economist
the northwest the golden and
red delicious are best.
Seminole
There are many more varieties
J-jomrmtnlt^Xolle^
of (his frull that can he baked,
broiled, boiled sauteed and of
l teaspoon lemonjulce
course, microwaved. Dieters can
also include an apple In their
'/* teaspoon cinnamon
dally food plan. A medium apple
Mi cup whipping cream
contains GO calories.
l teaspoon lemonjulce
Jonathan. Wlncsap, and Runic
Mi teaspoon vanilla
Beauty arc apples that hold their
Quarter and core apples. Cut
shape and will do well when each quarter Into 3 slices. Place
cooked.
in 8 or 9 Inch round shallow
HONEY-OLAZED APPLE glass dish. Add margarine.
SLICED
Microwave on 100% power 5-6
6 med. apples, peeled
minutes or until steaming. Stir
■/«cup margarine
once. Combine honey, co r­
V* cup honey
nstarch, lemon Juice, and cin­
2 teaspoons cornstarch
namon. Pour over apples. Stir

M idge

M ycoff

M icrow av e M ogic

Autumn Brings
On Favorite
Apple Dishes

M ANUFACTU R E R S

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

lightly to mix. Microwave on
100% power, uncovered 5-6
minutes or until apples are
glazed and tender, stirring 2 or 3
times. Cool. Combine cream,
lemon juice and vanilla. Chill
until served. Serve apples topped
with cream. G a rn ish with
nutmeg or cinnamon or both.

RAWSONS

C O U P O N S ^^H

YOUR MANUFACTURER'S
COUPONS ARE WORTH TWICE AS MUCH
WHEN YOU REDEEM THEM AT
RAWSONS SUPER VALU

round baking dish.
Microwave on 100% power
m arg ari ne in 2 cup glass
measure until softened (45 sec­
onds). mix In brown sugar, flour,
rolled oats, coconut and cin­
namon until crumbly. Sprinkle
onto apples. Microwave 100%
power 10-11 minutes or until
apples are tender. Serve warm
with whipped cream, cool whip,
or Ice cream.

CRANAPPLE CRUNCH

5 rned. cooking apples, peeled
and sliced
1 can 116 oz.) whole cranberry
sauce
3 tablespoons margarine
‘/ i cup packed brown sugar
Vs cup flour
Mi cup rolled oats
!4 cup flaked coconut
Mi teaspoon cinnamon
Combine apple slices and
cranberry sauce In 8 or 9 inch

MICROWAVED APPLESAUCE
8 medium cooking apples,
cored, peeled, and sliced
x/z cup water
Mi cup sugar
•4 teaspoon cinnamon
Combine apples and water In a
2-3 quart casserole cover.
M icrowave on 100% power
10-12 minutes or until apples
are tender, stirring once. Stir In
sugar. Sprinkle with cinnamon.
If apples arc extra tart you
may wish to increase the sugar.
If they arc very Juicy you may
decrease the amount of water.
Combine apples with pork
rhops for this autumn entree.

PORK CHOPS AND APPLES
4 pork chops, cut Mi Inch thick
1 tablespoon margarine
2 apples, peeled and sliced
1 tablespoon brown sugar
Mi teaspoon salt
!4 teaspoon poultry seasoning
Mi cup water
2 tablespoons flour
Brown chops and arrange In a
shallow microwave safe baking
dish. Top with apple slices.
Sprinkle with brown sugar, salt
and poultry seasoning. Combine
water and flour. Pour over
chops. Cover with container lid.
Microwave on 100% power 3-3Mi
minutes, or until steaming hot.
reduce power to 30% power and
microwave for 45-60 minutes, or
until meat is tender. Serve with
buttered noddles, and brusscl
sprouts.

SUPER VALU

OCT. 17. THRU WEDNESDAY. OCT. 23, 1985.
4 We will double coupon value on all manufacturer ccupons lor Items in stock except tobacco and cigarettes. No rainchocfcs or substitutions

WHERE OUR NAME IS YOUR GUARANTEE!

5. the cousin value cannot uxcec 9 * and total redemption cannot exceed the cost of the item
6 We will double only the first coupon on the same item Any additional coupons towards the purchase ol identical Items during

PRICES EFFEC TIVE THURS. OCT. 17 THRU WED.
OCT. 23. 1985. NOT RESPO N SIBLE FOR T YP O G R A PH C IA L
ERRORS. Q U A N TITY RIGHTS RESERVED.

the same visit will be redeemed for face value only.

COME SEE US NOW!
SOFT

N PRETTY

SHENANDOAH

BATHROOM
TISSUE
WHITE

APPLE
JUICE

A S S T D OR P R IN T

KELLOGG’S

ONE ROLl

18-O Z B O X

D E S I G N E R OR D E C O R A T O R

c

C

A small amount of leftover
applesauce can be used in this
moist spice bar type cookie.

CORN
FLAKES

PAPER

64 OZ JAR

4 ROLL PKG

SCOTT
TOWELS

C

APPLESAUCE BARS

cup margarine
34 cup packed grown sugar
44 cup sweetened applesauce
1cup all purpose flour
l/3 teaspoon soda
Mi teaspoon cinnamon
Mi teaspoon nutmeg
Mi teaspoon cloves
V\ cup chopped nuts
14 cup raisins
2 tablespoons powered sugar
Microwave on 100% power
margarine in mixing bowl 15-30
seconds or until softened. Blend
tn b r o w n s u g a r , b e a t In
applesauce. Stir tn flour, soda,
cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves.
Mix in nuts and raisins.
Spread in 8 inch square bak­
ing dish. Microwave 100% 6-7
m inutes or until no longer
doughy. Try it for snacking or to
take along on the next tailgate
party.

C

LIMIT - 2

GROCERY

NABISCO

m a ster blen d

NILLA

C O FFE E

*[

WAFERS

REG.. A .D C . OR ELEC PERK

W

APPLE, BLUEBERRY OR CHERRY

12-OZ BOX

REG. HEARTY OR AUGRATIN

r

7-OZ PKG •

Maxwell
fJ^HOuse

$§99

O G R A D Y 'S

POTATO
CH IPS

3£l

12-OZ BOX

13-OZ BAG

NABISCO
n o NEWTONS
w c w iu iN D
FIG

$ |6 9

Wednetdey, Oct, 16, » l l - 7 B

$§09

APPLE CHEESE BALL

12-02 JA R (C O C K T A IL) REG .
U N SA LT E D O R R O A S T E D

P lan ters

PEAN UTS

.

1

440 2 JA R K O SH ER O R PO LISH

V lasic D il ls ......

1

14-02 CAN A S S T D

Kal Kan

DOQ FO O D

59
39
39

6-02 BO X B E T T Y C R O C K E R
C H IC K EN . C O R N B R E A D O R H E R B

46-02 M O TTS
R E G U L A R O R N A TU RA L

Stuffings

Apple S a u ce .

1 .3 9

18-02 S M U C K E R S S T R A W B E R R Y ^

1402- QUICK OR OLD FASHION

SM

P r e s e r v e s ........... 1 • w #7

Q u ak er O ats
3302

10-02 B T L

Joy Liquid

Heinz 57 S a u c e . 1 • W

.g

16-02 B O X E L B O W M A CARO N I

.5 9
T om ato Ju ice ...
.8 9
Tea Bags ............. 1 .5 9
C re a m e tte s ........

46-02 S A C R E M E N T O

too CT E IG H T O 'C LO C K

FRESH

JUMBO
LETTUCE

PEPSI COLA.
[ )|| 1 l&gt;| I'M I ’l PSI M i l l
nil 1 PI P M 1M U i &gt;H

H EAD

58c
IN STO R E D ELI / BAKERY

PRODUCE
WHITE

SEEDLESS
GRAPES

58 $
RA W SO N S NEW
KING SIZE

WHITE
BREAD
2 0 -O Z

K

IN THE DELI / BAKERY STORES ONLY

D ELIC IO U S
REO OR OO LD EN

A pples......... 3
RUSSETT BA K IN G

^

Q

Q

L B BAG • O

U

A

^

Potatoes . 1 U
FRESH

. . .

C

O

baol e 5 B
m

Sw eet POTATOES

lb

q

FRESH BAKED

CORNED BEEF o r
PASTRAMI

KAISER
ROLLS

X BAG* * 7 0

FRESH

m

$ |9 9

Q

Bartlett Pears . . . . lb# D O
H ALF POUND A LL
W H IT E MEAT

RAW SONS
H A M h lllA &gt;1 P
o f l i t 11 IK H i

ROM S

39c

H ALF POUND
F R ESH LY SL IC E D

Cooked Salami.

m at

I •\

f\ II

t

f 1A t

K

m a i n

\KI

. .r f 11 &gt;\ l P i I M

R O ! I&gt;

69c

WITH 2 VEGETABLES
AND A ROLL

n M U M M C B M I

i «m N o tftio

c
6/79
F R E S H B A K ED
S E E D E D OR PLA IN

.79

Rye Bread ...
F R E S H BAK ED

A

A

Pound C a k e ......... 1 # 4 “
FRUITED APPLE.
CHERRY OR PEACH

SMOKED

SAUSAGE
DINNER
t.

1.59
.9 9

Turkey R o ll......

H **A( K

LARGE

HALF POUND

q

L O A F

c
39

STORE SLICED

Green P e p p e r s 4 / * 9 8

n a

12 oz. cream cheese
1 apple, un pee led
Mi cup green onion, finely
sliced
Mi teaspoon salt
V* teaspoon white pepper
2 tablespoons applejulcc
1-1Mi cups cheddar cheese
Mi cup chopped walnuts
3 tablespoons fresh parsley,
finely chopped
Microwave cream cheese In
glass mixing bowl for P/4-2
minutes or 70% jiowcr. Core
apple and chop into small pieces.
| Add chopped apple, onion, salt,
; pepper, and apple Juice to cream
cheese. Microwave for 2-4
minutes on 50% power, (this will
blend flavors). Add cheddar
cheese and chill for easier shap­
ing. Form into ball and roll In
chopped parsley, (during football
season I shape it like a football
and roll in finely chopped nuts
and use strips of cheese to form
laces.)

im t

$ J9 9

ouMrmvk

TORT
CAKE

$ ]3 9

In Midge MycolTs Microwave
Magic column on Oct. 9. the
amount of butter in a pound
cake glaze was incorrect. The
Herald regrets the error. The
corrected recipe is as follows:

FRESH APPLE POUND CAKE
1V* cups cooking oil
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
3 cups (lour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
3 large apples, peeled and
grated
1cup finely chopped pecans
Combine oil, sugar, and eggs.
Beat at medium speed for 3
minutes. Add combined flour,
salt, soda and vanilla. Fold In
apples and pecans. Bake in
prepared 12 cup ring cake dish.
Microwave on 50% 12 minutes
and 100% 1-8 minutes. Let
stand, covered with wax paper,
on counte-top 10 minutes. Invert
and glaze.
G lu e : Combine 14 cup butter
and I Vi cups light brown sugar
In a deep bowl. Microwave on
70% power until mixture begins
to boll. Add Vi cup evaporated
milk and continue to microwave
on 70% power until mixture
b olls a g a in . Cook u n til
thickened. Add two teaspoons
vanilla. Cool and spread on cake.

�BLONDIE

SB—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

A /E Y A N P E R 'S 1
T T
N EW H IS T O R Y N t ■"} :
- eacmer chew s •
TO B ACC O R IG H T IN I S , &amp;
T m e Ct-ASSROCW, i /.V . i
-

.

_

Vi

■

‘

Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1985

T

THAT'S TERRI01.E ' 1

i

7 *—V * * t •

D.'Vyri

Al PEADV

^

by Chic Yogng
Vo q H E 'L L
El BE HER

'CJ

V

DEAR DR. GOTT — Can yon
I i’ll me anything about shindies?
1 have hail them on my thigh for
five months. I have been to lour
different doctors).

■’I

by Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

HE TOLD ME T O
R E S T MY EYES
EVERY PAY

DOCTOR'S
ORDERS

VS/HV ARE YOU
p u t t in g y o u r

W IFE'S
PICTURE
IN THE
DRAWER,,
S IR !

THE BORN LOSER

LU ait

by Art Sanaom
COU'T ^

EVE
IT! YOU'VE EOT

RW UTHATM BNBM te.

A BANKROLL i
w a s t r e l ■?

O VER THERE A«0 THEY
&lt;EiV5 you* 5000!

YL'Pi C ercSiT A TRMOSfSIDR

ARCHIE

Q U A t/T Y T 4 /IO 0 S

IN V IS IB L E
M E N D IN G
£
n u = r= n
-g--A

EEK A MEEK______________

by Howie Schneider

T H k R E . H £ g C f c 5... J)~

W O T T D K M D W J H IM
(S 10 LO VE- H I M

T

literally be a medical miracle. I
am not aware that general
urologists are performing this
procedure. If you are interested
in specific details concerning the
prostheses — and to find out
whether you might be a can­
didate for one — ask your doctor
for a referral to a medical center
where implantable. Inflatable
penile proslhcscs are bring used

DEAR READ ER - Shingles,
known m edically as herpes
zoster. ts a virus infection in­
volving certain discrete sets of
nerves. These nerves carry
sensations to the spinal cord and
they exist in predictable body
patterns called dermatomes.
Rarely, shingles will skip from
one dcrnintonc to another: in
patients with an Immune defi­
cien cy . the infection may
become diffuse and affect large
areas of body covering.

ACROSS
1 Indian maid
5 Hebrew letter
9 Hawaiian
timber tree
12 City in Norway
13 Ravelar i cry
14 Vanquished
15 Poverty
17 Big monkey
18 Vetch
19 Intermediate
Ipref.)
20 Wrench
22 Environment
agency |abbr.)
23 Island (Fr.)
24 Egyptian eacred
bull
27 Treason
32 Butting enimals
34 Charged atom
35 Strive
36 Participle end­
ing
37 Sunflower State
(abbr.)
39 Lawn cover
41 Mllsigi
recorder
44 Singletons
45 Bantu language
46 Exclamation of
surprise
48 Prickly shrub
51 Combat
52 New Zealand
parrot
55 What suitors do
56 Keen
59 Ensign (abbr.|
60.
Lang
Syna
61 Female voice
62 Dissenting vote
63 Mother of
Castor and
Pollux
64 Visible

Ordinarily, herpes zoster Is an
uncomfortable but self-limited
disease that clears In a few
weeks. Some patients suffer
shooting pains — called neural­
gia — which may persist long
after the blisters of shingles have
disappeared.
If you have a rash on your
thigh that has lasted five
montits, 1 question the diagnois
of shingles. Yours is an unusual
case, and I recommend that you
sec a dermatologist. Other,
treatable skin diseases can re­
semble herpes zoster.

by Bob Montana

/

Shingles A ffects
N erve Endings

4

DEAR DR. GOTT - I would
like to find out more about ttie
operation where they implant a
pump that mimics a normal
erection.
DEAR REA D ER - As you
point out. im plantable prosthcscs are generally available
for men who are unable to
achieve normal erections. One
type of prosthesis is rigid. A
more highly developed device
has inflatable cylinders sur­
gically placed within the penis.
When a man wishes to have an
erection, be pumps fluid Into the
cylinder by squeezing a reservoir
that is usually placed in the
scrotum. At the conclusion of
sexual activity, the cylinders ran
be emptied at will.

DOWN
1 First-rate |2
w ds)
2 Rhone tributary
3 Beverages
4 Coal scuttle

P e n i l e s u r g e r y 1s not
appropriate for all Impotent
men. However, for some, it can

Answer to Previous Puiile

5 Trojan hero
6 Actor Montand
7 Island of the
Aegean
6 Young bird
9 Bridge on the
River ____
10 Fumbler s
exclamation
11 Dill seed
16 Mischievous
child
21 Sodden
22 Superlative suf­
fix
23 Universal
language
24 Exchange
premium
25 Small lake
26 Villain in
"Othello"
28 One (Gar.)
29 Tennis player
Lendl
30 French river
31 Loch in
Scotland
33 Of body frame
1

2

in selected eases.
Incidentally, there Is now
avai l abl e a noil-ill flat able,
semi-rigid prosthesis — a middle
ground between the other two
options — which shows promise
and Is less likely develop
technical difficulties than is the
hvdraulle model.

E
A
R
N

o
o
p
s

o
D
A
Y

E
P
E
E

E
L E
A R N
NA

T
0
s
s

E
K
E
S

nT
a|
n|
e|

N
50
51
52
53

Radduh
Fuse together
Hardy cabbage
Grafted, in
heraldry
54 Egyptian sun
disk
57 Repent

39 Negrito of
Philippines
40 Use boat oars
42 Wrong (pref.)
43 African land
47 Sea mammal
48 Dancer Verdon
49 Mrs. Charles
Chaplin

58 Owns
10

4

3

11

r
'

12
15
18

24

71

30

25

76

79

IB

33

”

30

37
36
41
45
4B

49

50

55

SB

59

60

57

6*

61

62
1

16

(cl 1965 l&gt;, SEA i„ t

W IN A T B R ID G E
By Jam es Jacoby

r vt*t**»t* x I

tO
MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Hergr

VR.LA.ZY/ YOU'RE, a l w a y s
PUTT/M G T H / M S S O F F
u n t i l T o m o r r o w //

ZY

&gt; 3 M Y TtPLJ K fvlO W ..

PR O C R A ST IN A T IO N
IS T H E T H IE F o f
v
TIAAE P/

A Sellers

^ o A p e A LOT
OF O T H E R .
B IO W ORPS 1

1

BUGS BUNNY
HPRSE STEA l i AJ W "- - S E P A R "5 S
- A \ 3 \ ' 0 P P = \5 E

5

by Warner Brothers
A\ C ARR T STEALl\ S A B A R B EC U E' OFFcMSE.
N -A f

Although North anti South
have a combined lotal of only 24
hlgh-card points, three no-trump
Is a good contract. Nevertheless,
if North-South were bidding the
way I do. South would have
passed three clubs, which was
merely invitational. South had a
minimal point count for his
opening hid. and more than half
his honor cards were queens and
Jacks, which arc overvalued in
the 4-3-2-1 count. On the other
hand, if South played the way I
do. he would have made the
contract. Let's see how he
foundered.
The opening lead was ducked
to East's king. Hack came a low
heart. West took the Jack, cashed
the ace and played a third heart

to the king In East's hand as
declarer discarded a diamond
from dummy. East now played
the fourth heart. Because de­
clarer was now relying entirely
on bringing in the club suit, he
discarded dummy's queen of
diamonds. Alas, when West
showed out on the club ace.
declarer was left with a losing
diamond. He would not get to
dummy enough times to pick up
the clubs and cash the fifth Huh
trick
It's a different story If declarer
sheds dummy's low spade on
the lourth heart. Now the had
news in clubs will leave him no
alternative hut to take the
diamond finesse. When H works,
the contract comes rolling in.

N ORTH

4 AIM
V 10 8

touts

♦A Q 9

♦ .1 7 ti 5 4
W EST

LAST

♦ 10 8
4

a

4K
4 K 7 52
♦ 10 5 4 2
4 Q y 32

8 52

.1 ;t

♦ K H 7 ti

4

■

so t TH

4 y .1 :t

V y iM
♦ .1 3

4 A K 1(1 H
Vulnerable North-South
Dealer South
WrU

Nurlh (Cast

Soi

Opening lead 4 fi

HOROSCOPE
—

GARFIELD

by Jim Davis
ARE VOU ASHAMED OF YOUR
-v NEW BED,GARFIELD?

V

WHAT GlVEe&gt;]
VOU THAT
IDEA?

T v

JW oavr^i

TUMBLEWEEDS
LITTLe SCALP SO ALL ALONE,
TEKCHEP tlR3l\) THYNATIVE POME,
IilFS HAS liVlIMTHEE RUPELVW LT,
you shoolp w m e from MYp a r.

FTETMOT TITILLATING "IMATCH,
ALLURINGHANK, ELUSIVE CAJCH,
WHEN YbU HEAR A COWWYSNOfTE,
THY LONGEPWjGE WILL EE 0*eff]

lO - ib

by T. K. Rvan
'UU£T MUSING.. 5AV,'
IS N T lT / W V O U ff
EE PT JM EP/

What The Day
Will Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 16, 1 0 8 5
There will be a considerable
improvement in your material
conditions lit the year ahead.
You are now in an accumulation
and growth cycle.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Posi­
tive measures can he taken
today to strengthen your finan­
cial position. Even though they
might he small, they will be
significant. Know where to look
for romance and you'll find It.
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
set instantly reveals which signs
are romantically perfect for you.
Mail $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper. Box 1846. Cincin­
nati. OH 45201.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22)
Things will work out to your
satisfaction today in arrange­
ments you have with familiar
people. Unknown quantities will
be a different matter.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.
21) An important objective can
he achieved today, provided you
put forth your very best effort.
Don't operate in a halfhearted
fashion.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Friends who requesl advice from
you today will not Ignore your
helpful suggestions. T h e y’ll
know your ideas are feasible and
that you have their best Interest
ai heart.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh. 19)
Something that'll please you Is
now developing in a situation
screened from your view. You
w ill gain t h r o u g h the
benevolence of another.
PISCE8 (Feb. 20-March 20) If
you arc negotiating a matter of
importance today, it’s to your
advantage to let the other party
suggest the terms. Inequities can
be corrected.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Today you will become more
aware of hidden advantages in a
venture In which you're pres­
e n t l y I n v o l v e d . T h i s will
motivate you toward greater

LET'S GO, SANDY/ IF YOU
CAN’T FIND TOW SER, I
P i su re wont b e a ble

V F \W AMITY*

J.

4

0

. •

r

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) A
situation you have thus far
viewed a trifle too negatively will
turn out lo he manageable to­
day. Trust your abilities.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug 22) This is
a good day to pul the finishing
touches on tilings you have left
hanging. Start with the most
difficult tasks and work your
way down.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) As
of today, you're going to he able
to establish a better rapport with
a person you've had trouble
getting through to previously.
Mutual benefits will result
by Leonard Starr

■■YA
#

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Through your social activities at
tills lime, contacts can he devel­
oped that could he of help to you
in other areas of your life. Be
friendly loeverybody.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20|
Something worthwhile can be
accomplished today provided
you're industrious Put work and
dul y above t lie pursuit of
pleasure

ANNIE
(W , THEY P R O B L Y J U S T
PA R T ED BACH TO TH' HOUSE
A S QUICK A S T H EY
COULD WHEN TH'/M/iY
STARTED COWIN' DOWN/

£rl
iu

efforts.

**

•*

\

-WAY AS WELL INTRODUCE
(_W YSELF_TO MRS. PODSON,
SINCE ANNIE AND HER
Zn U T T LE GIRL ARE
^
PLAYM ATES/-

HU
r -— i.l

�*
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Oct. M, 1 H S -9 B

Son M a k e s M o m L ite ra lly
DEAR ABBY: Here’s a pro­
blem Pm sure you have never
had before. I am allergic to my
son. Howard Is an Intelligent,
good-looking senior In college.
He and I have never had a very
good relationship because our
philosophies differ. I am an
optimist who Is willing to take
responsibility for my actions.
Howard Is a pessimist who
blames others for his problems.
When he Is around. Ills negative
gloom-and-doom attitude Ir­
ritates me and I break out In
hives. I know that he Is the
cause of my hives because they
disappear when be goes back lo
college. IThls has been happen­
ing for four years.)
He will graduate soon, and
plans to come back borne lo live.
The thought of It makes me
literally 111.
Don’t tell me lo see a counsel­
or. Pm a psychologist, and know
all the book answers. Howard
tried two counselors, but he
Insisted be didn’t have a pro­
blem even after both counselors
Identified the problem, so now
what do we do?
John Bislgnl, right, immediate past president of the Klwanls
leminole Sunrise Club of Sanford, passes the gavel to Jim
Hardy, the club's newly installed president. The club meets
fvery Friday at 7 a.m . at the Airport Restaurant, Sanford.

-H Announces New
Clubs And Workshop
For County's Youth
.New m em bers arc being
•Ought for a 4-H Club being
reorganized In the Lake Oricnta
(Wca or Altamonte Springs. The
4-H is an organization for voutli
8-1H years of age offering project
Work in over 50 different areas.
Special 4-H programs include
auminer camping, citizenship
•hurt courses, crafts workshops.
Exhibit and Pel Fairs, plus much
iniore.

I

sum m er camps, workshops,
fairs plus much much more.
II you are interested in Joining
the 4-H Poultry Club or would be
willing to help as a 4-H volunteer
leader, contact S h e l d a R.
Wllkens. 4-H Agent, at 323-2500
Ext. 180.
Seminole County Youth. 12-18
years of age. are invited to
participate in a special 4-H
Photography Workshop to be
held at the Seminole County
A gricultural Center at Five
Points.
Classes will be held for five
consecutive Saturday mornings
from 10-11:30 a.m. beginning
Oct. 26 and running through
Nov. 23.
The purpose of the workshop
will be to teach basic camera use
and picture taking. Class size Is
limited to 15 so you must
pre-register. Cost is $15. To
register contact Shelda Wllkens.

MOM
DEAR MOM: You may know
all the book answers, but the
doctor who treats himself has a
fool fora patient.
If you lei Howard conic home,
knowing he makes you sick, you

but In this case I say: Don’t get
the snowplow out until the
blizzard hits.

D ear
Abby

DEAR ABBY: I am 28 years
old and female. I am either
confused nr stupid, but there is
something I need explained in
me. I heard dial a man de­
termines whether the baby will
be it boy or a girl.

need to see a psychiatrist about
your m asochistic behavior.
Howard also needs help, but not
as much as you. He gives hives,
you gel them. So. I advise you to
scratch Howard, not hives.

For example, my dad had l he
mumps when be was In Ills
teens, and the mumps fell on the
left side of his private parts.

DEAR ABBY: My wedding
plans arc all set. The brides­
maids have already bought their
dresses and paid for them
themselves, but listen to this
one: One of my bridesmnfds
asked me who would reimburse
the bridesmaids for the cost of
the dresses If I fall to make it to
the altar!
Frankly. It never occurred to
me that such a thing could
happen. It would be a very tragic
and traumatic happening, but 1
suppose each bridesmaid would
have to handle the loss herself.
Abby. do you think I should
have lo pay $ 114 times five?
ST. PAUL NIGHTMARE
DEAR NIGHTMARE: I
usually advise people to be
prepared for every eventuality.

Alter Dad got married. Mom has
six girls — no boys. The doctor
told him that the mumps hnd
fallen on his “ boy side.” so he
could only have girls.
Is that true?

IN THE DARK
DEAR IN: No. Although the
male does determine the sex of
the child. H has nothing lo do
with either the left or right side
— or the mumps, for that
matter. Either your dad misun­
derstood the doctor, or the
doctor was Joking.

"Let The Professionals Do It"

ECHOLS TREE SERVICE
LICENSED - FULLY INSURED - SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

• C O M P LE T E T R E E S ER V IC E
• F R E E E S T IM A T E S
• S TU M P GRINDING
• 24 H R . A N S W ER IN G S ER V IC E
2405 Qrandvlaw Avenue
Sanford, FL 32771
Contaci Pete or Terry Echols

Phone

323-2229

ECONOMY DENTURE
CLINIC
O C TO B ER S P E C IA L

Social Security Disability

ECONOMY DENTURES .......* 1 4 9 %

Wc Specialize In:

DELUXE DENTURES.......... * 2 4 9 % UOt

• NEW CLAIM S • RECONSIDERATIONS
• BENEFITS C U T OFF • HEARINGS BEFORE THE JUDGE

WARD WHITE &amp; ASSOCIATES

Same Day Repairs And Relines

(Over 30 Yrs. ExperienceI
• Free Consultation
No Fee Unleu We Winl

545 H W Y , 4 3 4 , W IN T E R S P R IN G S
OOY lO AO
NO APPOINTMENT
O Z/’ IZ U Z
NECESSARY
GatalU W. Corum O.H.D.

(305) 321-1319

If you are interested In Joining
this 4-1i Club or assisting as a
Volunteer 4-H Leader please
contact Francis Huggins at
834-4471 or Shelda R. Wllkens.
4-H Extension Agent, at 3232500 Ext. 180.
Seminole County 4-H Is or­
ganizing a 4-H Poultry Club for
youth. 8-18 years of age. The
4-H offers youth the opportunity
to learn and participate in over
50 different 4-H project areas.
SpecialHIBISCUS
4-H activities
CIRCLEInclude the clubhouse. The program will
Hibiscus Circle of the Garden be on Miniature Roses.
Club of Sanford Inc. met at the
Mrs. Moreland gave a program
home of Mrs. Herbert Moreland
on P u e r t o Ri c o . Sh e had
for the October meeting.
numerous articles, pictures and
President Jean Taylor called ceramics of the area where she
the meeting to order.
spends two winter months an­
Mary McTavish, Horticulture
chairman, presented informa­ nually.
The hostess served refresh­
tion on roses.
T h e president rem ind ed ments in keeping with the Hal­
members of the covered dish loween theme to 12 members
luncheon to be held on Oct. 17 at and a guest. Mrs. Sue Stevenson.

G ARDEN CIRCLE

P atti Edgemon Earns Nursing Stripes
G eo rg ia Rapt 1st Hospital
School of Nursing presented
Patti Edgemon of Sanford with
two blue stripes to be worn on
her nursing cap. These stripes

signify her status as a Junior
student in the School of Nursing.
Patti is the daughter of Or. and
Mrs. L .J. Edgemon.

C heerleaders To H old P ap er D rive
The Lake Mary Cheerleaders
are having a paper drive to help
finance their trip to the International Cheerleading Nationals in

December In Nashville. Tcnn.
. . . .
.
The paper van will be In the
school parking lot Oct. 22-24.

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.

Type or print your recipe giving full instructions for
preparation, cooking time and temperature (approx­
imate number of servings also helpful.)
Limit two (2) recipes per catgegory, accompanied
by your Name, Address, and Phone N.

You may enter as many of the weekly categories as
you like.
All recipes received will be published in November
in the Evening Herald's fifth annual cookbook.

CATEGORIES AND DEADLINES

WEEK 1
• Appetizers
• Salads
• Vegetables

WEEK 2

WEEK 3

• Poultry
• Seafood

• Meat
• Casseroles

October 6 - 1 2

October 13

October 20 - 26

A Q 9 Company

P.O. Box 1657
Sanford, Fla. 32771
CALL

CARLOS M. SANTIAGO, JR.

ON S.R. 434, NEAR 17-02
In Tha Park Squara Shopping Clr.
Longwood, FL 327SO

t

831-3400

October 27 -

^ ■ H O L ID A Y
Evening Herald

&amp;

• Breads
• Rolls
• Desserts

FESTIVE FOODS FORI
Mall Recipes To: Cookbook

Fam ily Credit Services, Inc

WEEK 4

�10B— Evening Herald, Sanford, Pi. Wednesday, Oct. H , 19B5

le gal Notice

legal Notice

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at P 0
Bov 44 Casselberry. F'_ 35707
Sem inole County. Flo rid a under
the fictitious name ot Quality
B a r System *. Inc . and that I
intend to register said name
w llh the C lerk ot the Circuit
Court. Sem inole County. Florid a
In accord ance with the pro
visions ot the Fictitious Nam e
Statutes. T o W It Section M S 09
Flo rid a Statutes 1957
T erri L Donnelly
Publish September 25. October

IN T M E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC I A L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO. 85-2249 CA 09 P
SU N B A N K . N A T IO N A L
A S S O C IA T IO N , a national
banking association,
P laln tltl.
vs
W I L L I A M W S C H A E F L E IN
and E L E O N O R E
SCH A E F L E I N . his wife and
R IC H U N IT E D C O R P . a
Florida corporation.
Defendants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that pursuant to Fin a l Judgm ent
rendered on September 24 1985
in that certain cause pending in
the Circuit Court In and tor
S e m in o le C o u n ty
F lo r i d a
w herein Sun Bank. N A
is

2.9. I* 19#5
D E J 170

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at P O
Box 44 Casselberry, F I 32707
Seminole’ County. Florid a under
the fictitious name ol The Inc.
C lu b
and that I In ten d to
register said name with the
C le rk ot the C irc u it Court.
Sem inole County, F lo rid a In
accordance with the provisions
ol the Fictitious Nam e Statutes
T o W it
Section #45 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
Quality B a r Systems Inc
T erri L Donnelly
Publish September 25 October
2, 9 14. T9#5
D E J 171

Plaintiff and William W

S c h a e t le ln and E le o n o r e
Schaellein are Defendants Civil
Action Case No #5 2249 CA 09 P
t. O A V tD N B E R R I E N Clerk
ol the aforesaid Court will at
tt 00 A M on the 29th day ol
October 1985 otter tor sale and
sell to the highest bidder for
cash at the west front door ot the
Courthouse In Seminole County
Florida m Santord Fior-aa the
following described property
situate and being in Sem.nole
County, Florid a to wit
Condominium Unit No 204
K E N S IN G T O N
PARK
A
C O N D O M IN IU M according to
t h e D e c l a r a t i o n ot C o n
dominium recorded In Official
Records Book I 444 Page t«5 as
amended by that certain First
Amendment to Declaration ot
Condominium recorded in Ol
flclal Records Book 1455 page
1492 and re recorded In Official
Records Book 1454 Page 1712
a ll among the Public Records ol
S e m in o le C o u n ty
F io r ia a
together with the undivided in
terest In and to the common
elements appurtenant to said
unit as set forth In said De
ciaration ot Condominium
S a id s a le s h a ll be m ade
pursuant to and in order to
satisfy the terms ot said Final
Judgm ent
Dated October 4 1985
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R I E N

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged in business at 3447
O r la n d o D r iv e
S a n to rd
Seminole County. Florida 32771
under the fictitious name ol
Bags A Shoes and that I Intend
to register said name with the
C lerk ol the C irc u it Court
Sem inole County
Flo rid a in
accordance with the provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes,
T o W it
Section 865 P* Florid a
Statutes t "57
B Four Inc
G rant W Bullock
Publish September 25 October
7 9 16 1985
D E J 17J
IN T M E C IR C U IT C O U R T
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y,
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO : 85 2198 CA I I P
I N R E F O R F E IT U R E OF
S3 14# 44U S C U R R E N C Y
N O T IC E O F F O R F E IT U R E
P R O C E E D IN G S
TO: L E S T E R B A R A S H
280 S W ym ore Road
Apt 104
Altamonte Springs F L 32701
and all others who claim an
Interest In (he following pro
perty
S3 14# 44 U S Currency
W C A IR T h . J R
attorney lor
the City ol Altamonte Springs
Florid a will appear belore the
Honorable S J O S E P H D A V IS
Ju d g e ot the C ircu it Court
Eighteenth Ju d icia l Circuit on
November t, 1985 at 10 30 A M
lor the purpose Ol tiling a Rule
to Show Cause why the de
scribed property should not be
fo rfe ite d to the use ot the
Altamonte Springs Police Oe
partm ent. pursuant to Sections
932 701 932 704. Florida Statutes
(19801 The currency was seiied
by the Altamonte Springs Police
Departm ent and Is currently
being held by that Agency It no
claim ant comes forth to dispute
the pending lorteiture proceed
tngs at the above mentioned
date and time the undesigned
will request a Fin al Order ot
Forfeiture perfecting the r ,g i'
title and Interest in sard cur
rency to the Altamonte Springs
Police Department
I H E R E B Y C E R T IF Y that
this Notice and its accompa
h y in g p le a d in g s a re b ein g
served pursuant to the notice
p r o v is io n s o ' S e c t io n s
932 701 932 704 Florida Statutes
(1980). this 25th day ot Sep
lember 1985
W C A IR T H J R
Attorney tor the
City ot Altamonte S p r in g y
P O B o . 1215
Orlando Florida 32BOI
305 475 2484
Publish October 2 9 14 23, 1985
D E * 14_____________

c ler k of the

IR C U IT C O U R T
By Diane K Brum m ett
Deputh Clerk
Publish October 9 16 1985
D E K 48

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U RT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C A SE NO 15 1980 CA Of
D IV IS IO N E
H E R IT A G E F E D E R A L
S A V IN G S
A N D LO A N A SSO C IA T IO N
Plaintiff
v
E C C O F S E M IN O L E INC
JO S E P H L A BR A M S
F L O R ID A T R IM A
DOOR INC L A M IN A T E D
C A B IN E T S INC JA D E
F L E C T R lC INC N IC H O L A S
P U M P IN G * P L A C E M E N T
C O M P A N Y A M E R IC A N
T E L E V IS IO N AND
C O M M U N IC A T IO N S COR
P O R AT ION d b a
C A B L E V IS IO N O F C E N T R A L
F l o r id a a n d B r it is h
A M E R IC A N r e a l t y C O R P
Defendants
N O T IC E O F M O R T G A G E
FO R EC LO SU R E SA LE
N O T IC E
H E R E B Y G IV E N
pursuant to a Sum m ary Final
Judgm ent ot Foreclosure dated
September 2C 1985 and entered
in C iv .1 Action No 65 1980 CA 09
D v.sion £ ot tne Circuit Court
ol ine E g h te en th J u d i c i a l
Cmcuit
In and tor Seminole
C o u n ty
F lo r id a
w h e r e in
H E R IT A G E
f e d e r a l
S A V IN G S
AND LOAN
A SSO C IA T IO N is trie plaintiff
and E C C O F S E M I N O L E
IN C
JO S E P H u A BR A M S
F l o r id a T R IM &amp; DOOR
IN C
L A M IN A T E D C A B l
N E T S INC JA D E E L E C T R IC
INC
N IC H O L A S P U M P IN G A
P L A C E M E N T CO M PAN Y
A M E R IC A N
T E L E V IS IO N
A N D C O M M U N IC A T IO N S
C O R P O R A T IO N
d b a
C A B L E V IS IO N OF C E N T R A L
F LO R I O A
and B R I T I S H
A M E R IC A N R E A L T Y C O R P
are the defendants, I will sell to
the h.ghest and besf bidder Igr
cash a' the West Front door of
the C o urth o u se *n San to ro
Flo r.d a between the legal hours
ol sale (estim ated lim e ot sale
I I 00 a m I o t the 4th d a, ol
November 1985 me following
described property to wit
The South 45 4 feet ol Lot 5
and the North 76 8 teet ot Lot 4
B lo c k 2 S e c o n d S e c t io n
D 'eam w o ld according to the
plat 'hereof as recorded in Plat
Book 4 Page 30 Public Records
Ot Seminole County Florida
D a t e d t h i s i 4 th d a y ot
October 1965
■ SEAL!
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
Clerk C ircuitC ourt
B y Diane K Brum m ett
Publish October 16 23 '965
D E K 92

is

TALK TO
THOUSANDS
IN AN HOUR

Tor quick results
place your oa inthe
For Sale column of
the Classifieds'

JUSTCMl
3222*11

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Crpr*r cryptograms arecraaiedfromQuotation* byfamowa

peopt* pait and pre**ni

Each mttar in tha c-tphe* aland* for

another TcxJEf a ciu* F wquBit D
b&gt; C O N M E W iEN EP

"JKE

XLCF

CXBKVE

CV

UKBYWH
CV

TL

LRRLUEYSL

RNK B *

RNKB

AK JW

UCW

C

C

XYWKEIOL

RYNLCNB."

—

K ’J C N C .

P R E V IO U S SO LU T IO N ‘Sixty minutes ot thinking of any
Kind Is bound to lead to contusion and unhappiness " —
James Thurber

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
Notice Is hereby given that we
F L O R ID A
am engaged In business at 2444
C IR C U IT C IV IL
H ia w a t h a A v e
S a n to rd
C A S E NO 151101 LA Of C
Seminole County. Flo rid a under
RYLAN D M ORTGAGE
the fictitious nam e ot C reative
CO M PANY
Cuts F a m ily H air Care, and that
a corporation organ. [r « a "»1
1 Intend lo register said n tm r
e s iilin g under the law »’
with the Clerk ot the Circuit
ot the state ol Ohio
Court. Seminole County, Flo rid a
P ia n M f
In accord ance w llh the pro
VS
visions ol the Fictitious Nam e
J A M E S P H IU
Statutes T o W it Section #45 IN
1Y 9 -,»a *•
Florid a Statutes 1957
N O T IC E OF ACT Is 'S
Lois Sandner
j TO Ja m e s P H ill
Betty R Ed w ard s
'|4 V.N , t lH iS ’ •
Publish September 25 CMober
j Cassritse'ts *’«'■»*a
2 9 14 ,19(5
S O U AKt S O t i * t O "sx* »•
D E J 177
I action V V- r . y'*e a 's v V V v

,V» IVy V

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC I A L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E CO UN TS
F L O R ID A
C A S E N U M B E R S3 J2M CA 2* P
IN R E
The M a r r ia g e at
RO N A LD V ER N O N B A IL f *
Petitioner M, shar'd
and
H A Z EL V E L V IE N B A IL f '
Respondent VS tr
N O T IC E O F A C TIO N
TO
H A ; E L M E L V 1F N
B A IL E Y
Pos* Office Bos 318
Fanhope Alabam a
Y O U a r e N O T I F I E D that an
a c tio n

tpr

d 1s o lu tio n

l if e ...w hy
M E W H ER E f

l ^

m (M X * * ;
e e o fre

,

/

how many ts

THATHOW*
THREE *

n&gt;,«-

F IC T i f lO U S N A M E
Notice 1* hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 2970
O r la n d o D r iv e
S a n to rd
Sem inole County, Flo rid a under
the fictitious name ol A m erican
Weight Loss Center and that I
intend to register said name
with ihe Clerk ot the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Flo rid a
in acco rd ance with the pro
visions ot the Fictitio u s Nam e
Statutes. To W it Section 845 09
F lo rid a Statutes 1957
Je r r y Gongwer
Publish Septem ber 25 October
2 9 14 1985
D E J 176
C IR C U IT C O U R T
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y.
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO : 15 1J00 LA-04-G
IN R E M A R R IA G E O F
DEBO RAH PA R R Y
W ife.
JO H N H P A R R Y .
Husband
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO JO H N H P A R R Y
Residence Unknown
YO U
A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that a Petition lor
Dissolution ot M a rria g e has
been filed against you In the
above Court In which among
Other things
the W ile
DE
B O R A H P A R R Y sp e c ific a lly
claim s an interest in the tollow
ing described real estate by way
ot lump sum alimony and or
equitable distribution
704 B lu e Lake. Longwood,
F lo rid a
Lot 4 . B lo ck
D
Sweetwater Oaks Section 2A as
recorded in P lat Book tB page
41 ot the Public Records ot
Seminole County. Flo rid a and
Two acres ol unimproved land
on M a rly Blvd in Forest City
Flo rid a Lots 12 A 13 P A L M
P A R K S U B D IV IS IO N
accord
mg to the plat thereol as re
corded in P la t Book 11. page 4 ot
the Public Records ot Seminole
County. Florida, and you are
required to serve a copy of your
Answer or other Pleadings to
the Petition, on W ile s attorney
H O W A R D R E IS S
PO
Bo.
230# Orlando. Flo rid a 32802. and
tile the original ot same in the
office ot the Clerk of the Circuit
Court Seminole County Court
house Santord Florida, on or
betorc the 31st day ot October.
1965 It you ta il lo do so
lodgment by default will be
taken against you tor the relief
demanded in the Petition
W IT N E S S my hand and the
seal ot this Court this 26th day
ot September 1985
(S E A L !
D A V ID B E R R I E N
Clerk ot Court
By Agnes E Sulek
Deputy P e r k
Publish October 2, 9 16 23.1985
D E K 13
N O T IC E
U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
Notice is hereby given lhal the
undersigned pursuant to the
F ic tit io u s N a m e S ta tu te
Chapter 845 09 Florid a Statutes
will register with Ihe Clerk ot
the C irc u it Court. Sem in o le
County upon receipt ol proof of
publication ot this Notice the
fictitious name to wit
S P R IN G S C O L O N Y V E N T U R E
u n d e r w h ic h the fo llo w in g
parties a re engaged In business
at 600 North Lake Boulevard.
Suite 140, Altam onte Springs
F lor.da 32701
L IN C O L N NA
TIONAL
R E A L T Y COR
P O R A T lO N
a rv&lt;J C R O W
S P R I N G S
C O L O N Y
A S S O C IA T E S LT D
D A T E O at W inter P a rk . Or
ange County. Florid a this ?7!h
day ot September, 1985
J Lindsay Builder. J r
Publish October 2, 9, 16. 23 1985
D EK 7

i

SI I'lWV 'V *

he-*' v e v . s " * • v ,u
v o' &gt;* O l I &lt; R U N * \ ’ "
4vvv*i' V V '•-* o a ' " v w ,r av
'W O iY v ' • ** a ' i '. v v h ‘-ao*
! ! a s ' .*t
" y ''. a ,
o ' sr ■- s ' * » ,s*'*v
• u- v»a
" j » N * ’ 1 ts‘ *ga ’ v’ w s a s '
vvs a ’ * w s w v ***** a n v
v*' w s *** '•**• . V Y ' y i * a '*
'»* ' .*' *’,' *gpr 1 a
u ass
P a* nr rt * a " o t ■•*«
w h o **
a«s'-*s* * ***** -eba. ■« ( V
a
M e D v'na j
Av*"s*
5* ’ *

4vV

O ’ an g e
O r land**

F lor .'a .«:#*"
on or before
Vo&gt;f’" t y . '/
»'#' ansi t * *1 *
O ' i J n ji ,s:*h •■»* e r r * o* th.s
w s * * r ’s t i bet.vre se rvice on
Pia m tift s a t V ' ■&gt;*&gt; err unmeet)
a'ei* 'h e 'e a t '* '
v'therwise .1
default ' V 1 be ante rest against
vuV tor the r* iie l dem anded in
the com plaint or pennon
W IT N E S S h i * h artd and seal
dt this C o u 't on Oct 1 4 w#5
,S E A L i
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
A* C le 'k ot the Court
B* Je a n B 'llte n t
As Deputy Clerk
Publish October te 23 30 and
Nocember a logs
D E K 93
N O T IC E O F A G E N C Y A C T IO N
T h e D e p a r t m e n t ol
Environm ental Regulation gives
n o tice ot Agency A ctio n ot
entering into a Consent Order
w it h th e C it y o l S a n t o r d
p u r s u a n t to F l o r i d a A d
m in lstratlve Code Rule 17 1 58
The Consent Order addresses a
schedule tor rem oval ot com
bined sewer overflow Irom Lake
Monroe
Persons whose substantial in
terests a re atlecled by Ihe above
proposed aqency action have a
right pursuant to Section 120 57
Flo rid a Statutes (F S I to pe'i
lion tor an a d m in istrative de
term ination (h earin g ) on the
proposed action
The Petition
must conform to the require
ments ot Chapters 17 103 and
20 5 F lo r id a A d m in is t r a t iv e
Code IF S C I and must be tiled
(r e c e iv e d ) w llh Ihe D e p art
m e n t 's O t t i c e ot G e n e r a l
Counsel 2600 B la ir Stone Road
T a lla n a s s e e
F lo r id a 32301
within fourteen 114) days ot
publication ot this notice F a ll
ure to M e a petition within the
fourteen 114) days constitutes a
w a ive r ol any right such person
has to an ad m inistrative deter
mlnahon (h earing) pursuant to
Section 120 57 F S
It a petitio n is tiled
the
a d m in istrative hearing process
Is designed to form ulate agency
a ctio n
A cc o rd in g ly
the De
p artm en t's final action m ay be
d iffe re n t fro m the proposed
agency action Persons whose
substantial interests w ill be at
(ected by any decision ot the
D epartm ent have the right to
Intervene In Ihe proceeding A
petition lor intervention must be
tiled pursuant to M odel Rule
28 5 70 F A C . at least live (51
days before the final hearing
and be tiled with the H earing
O lllc e r it one has been assigned
at th e D iv is io n c l Ad
m in is * r a 1 lv e H e a r in q s
De
p a rtm e n t ol A d m in is tra tio n
2009 A p a l a c h e e P a r k w a y
Tallahassee. Flo rid a 32301 II no
H e a r i n g O t t l c e r h a s b ee n
assigned the petition is to be
tiled with the D epartm ent's Ol
lice ot G eneral Council. 2500
B la ir Stone Road Tallahassee
F lo rid a 32301 F a ilu re to petition
to intervene within the allowed
tim e fram e constitutes a w aiver
ot any right such person has to
be an adm inistrative determ m a
tion (h e a rin g ! under Section
170 57 F S
Tne Consent O rder is a va il
able ter public inspection during
n o rm a l business hours
6 00
am
lo 5 00 p m
7/onday
through F rid a y
e .c e p l legal
holidays at the Departm ent ot
Environm ental Regulation 3319
7Aaguire Boulevard Suite 232
Orlando, Flo rid a 32803
Publish October ia '985
D E K W __ _______
U N I T E D S T A T E S D IS T R IC T
C O U R T M ID D L E D IS T R IC T
OF FLO R ID A ORLANOO
D IV ISIO N
COURT
NO
85 791 C i v Or I 16 U N I T E D
S T A T E S O F A M E R IC A Pia.n
tiff
vs
ALEXANDER
H
FO RT
e l at D e f e n d a n t 's )
N O T IC E O F S A L E Notice .s
hereby given the pursuant to a
F in a l D ecree of Fo reclosu re
entered on Sept II 1985 by the
ab ove en titled Court in Ihe
above cause, the undersigned
United States M.arshal. or one ot
his duly authorued deputies,
will sell Ihe property situate m
Seminole County Florid a de
scr.bed as Lot 41 and the East 5
I teet ol Lot 40 W A SH IN G T074
H E IG H T S S U B D IV IS IO N , ac
cording to P la t thereof recorded
in P la t Book 3 page 37, ot the
p u b lic re co rd s ol S e m in o le
County. Flo rid a a l public outcry
to the highest and best b-dder
lor cash at 12 o'clock noon on
October 31. 1985 at the Wes* door
Ot the Ssminole County Court
house Santord. Flo rid a Dated
September 12. 1985 R IC H A R D L
CO X
JR
U N IT E D S T A T E S
M A R S H A L 7 /IO D L E D IS T R IC T
OF F L O R ID A R O B E R T W
M E R K L E U N IT E D S T A T E S
A T T O R N E Y 7 A IO D L E D IS
t r ic t o f F l o r id a
Publish September 75. October
7 9 16. 1985
D E J 179

AHP HOW MANY
FOR PAP T

HIRE PTVORCES WITHN
MY IMMEPLATE FAMILY
COHORATMTlOfiS,
MOM HAVE M Y OH STEVE.
COMMENT F
WHEN ARE
1 4^.
YOJOOHHA
SET HARM P 7

UK

HU

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC I A L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C IV I L A C T IO N NO.:
(5 0)55 CA 09 E
Y O U T H E AST M O R T G A G E
CO M PANY
P la ln tltl

vs

O TN N 1S A H O L L A R e ta l
Petendanls
AMF NOE D
N s M IC l OF S A L E
S&gt;&gt;* a
1 hereby given that i*n
**** v'h day ,it Ni'veml&lt;ei 1*8'
at ” a v at the W est Front
of the C o u rth o u se ot
i '. v
*e •&gt; *,'■* s'emit*
Flo rid a
at
* a H e rd
f I s*11 d 4
th e u 11
.v - » 0 h s i s’ le'k wilt otter lor
• a y V the high*** blddw- lot
.a s h ihy following described
ea i*. eo e r's
S o' 1.1 Block L O A K L A N D
1 M A l l * 2ND S E C T IO N ac
cor si ng to the plat thereol as
•e . or sled in P la t Book 14 Pages
48 a nit «*' Public Records of
Sem inole County Florid a
together with all structures
and im p ro ve m e n ts now and
h r 'e a i t r ' on said land and
hktsirrs attached thereto and
an rents Issues proceeds and
profit* .securing and to accrue
from said prem ises and also all
gas steam electric, w ater, and
oth er h e a tin g
c o o k in g , re
trig e ralln g lighting plumbing
v e n t ila t in g
Ir r ig a t in g
and
power system s machines, ap
p li.m c e s
fix tu re s . a n d ap
purtenances which now are or
may hereafter pertain lo, or be
used with In or on said pre
m ises
even though they be
detached or detachable
This sale is made pursuant lo
Sum m ary F in a l Judgm ent In
F o re c lo su re entered In C iv il
Action No 85 0335 C A 0 9 E now
pendinq in the Circuit Court In
a n d l o r S e m in o le C o u n t y .
Flo rid a
D a t e d t h i s 14th d a y o l
October 1985
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
Clerk ot the C ircu it Court
B y V ic k i L B aird
Deputy Clerk
Publish October 16. 23. 1985
D E K 91

I N T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
F O R S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
C A S E NO . 85 455 C P
I N R E Esta te ot
M A T IL O E P E R E Z
Deceased
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The a d m in is tra tio n ot Ihe
estate ot M a lild e P e r e i. de
ceased F ile Number 85 655 C P
is pending in the Circuit Court
lor Sem inole County, Florida.
Probate Division, the address ot
w h ic h Is S e m in o le C o u n ty
Courthouse. Santord, F lo rid a
32771 The nam es and addresses
ot the personal representative
a n d Ih e p e r s o n a l r e p r e
sent a ll v e s a tto rn ey a re set
(orth below
A ll In tere sted persons are
required to file with this court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S OF
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E
(1) all claim s
against Ihe estate and (21 any
o b ie c t io n by an in te r e s te d
person to whom this notice was
m ailed lhal challenges the valid
ily ot the w ill, the qualifications
ol ihe personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of the
court
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C
T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D W IL L
BE FO R EV ER BARRED
Pu b licatio n of this Notice has
bequn on W ednesday. October
16 1985
Perso nal Representative
ARM ANDO LO PEZ
268 Dublin D rive
L a k e M a ry . Flo rid a 37746
Attorney lor Personal Repre
sentative
LA W R E N C E W C A RRO LL.
JR
P A
5700 S H igh w ay 17 92
C asselb erry. F L 32707
Telephone (3051 834 5700
Publish October 16 23. 1985
O E K 89

I N T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY.
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
C A S E NO.: 83 517 C P
I N R E E s ta te ol
M Y R T L E B C A R SO N
Deceased
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
Th e a d m in is tra tio n ot the
estate ol M y rtle B
Carson
deceased
File N um ber
85 587 C P
is pending In the
C ir c u it C o u rt lo r S e m in o le
Co u n t y , F lo r id a
P r o b a le
Division. Ihe address of which Is
Sem inole County Courthouse,
Santord. Flo rid a. 37771
The nam es and addresses ot
the personal representative and
Ihe personal re p re s e n ta tiv e s
attorney a re set lorth below
A ll in terested persons are
required to tile with this court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S O F
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E
H I all claim s
against the estate and (7) any
o b je c t io n b y an In te re s te d
person on whom this notice was
served that challenges the valid
tty ot the w ill, the qualifications
ol the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of the
court
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C
T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D W I L L
BE FO R EV ER BA R R ED
Pu blicatio n ol this Notice has
begu n o nO ct 16.1985
Perso nal Representative
G EN E R STEPH EN SO N
101 Norm andy Road
Post Office Boa 778
Casselberry, Flo rid a 37707
A ltorney lor Personal
Representative
G EN E R STEPH EN SO N ,

PA

Post O ttice Boa 771
Casselberry. F lo rid a 37707
Telephone (3051 339 7515
Publish October 16. 23. 1985
D E K 94

by Berke Breathed

TWT1 OREAT

MOTHER.

Ot

riage has been tiled aga-nst u ,
and sou are required *0 se-** a
cop* 0 * you' written defense* 1
any
to .1 on A B B O T T \5
H E R R IN G
P e t it io n e r s at
tomey at UOt West F .rst Street
Santord Flo rid a 32” 1 on O'
brtore the 6th day of November
1985 and tue the original with
the Clerk o* this Court either
before service on Petitioner *
attorney or im m ediately there
alter otherwise a default will
be entered against you tor the
rebel demanded m the Petition
Dated this 4th day ot October
1915
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
Clerk ot C ircuit Court
By Ja n e E Ja su v ic
As Deputy Clerk
P tb lis n October 9 16 23 30
1985
D E K 50

BLOOM C O U N T Y
cove o f m y

le g a l Notice

Legal Notice

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given lhal I
am engaged In business at 2650
M y rtle A ve , Sanford. Seminole
County, F lo rid a 32771 under the
f ic t it io u s n a m e o l M I C R O
F U R N A C E OF C E N T R A L
F L A , and that we Intend lo
register said nam e w llh Ihe
C le rk Ot the C irc u it C ourt,
Sem inole County. F lo rid a In
accordance with the provisions
ol the Fictitious Nam e Statutes.
Town
Section 845 09 Flo rid a
Statutes 1957
/ t ' A r l i t D M cA llister
Publish October 9, t#, 73 , JO,
19(5
D E K 44

le g a l Notice
N O T IC E O F S H E R I F F 'S S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue ot H u t certain
W rit ot Enecutlon Issued out ot
and under the seal of the County
C o u rt o l S e m in o le C o u n ty .
Flo rid a upon a final judgement
rendered In the aforesaid court
on the 19th day ol October. A D
1981 in that certain case en
tilled Atlantic National Bank ol
Santord P laintiff, — v s — M a rtin
M c L a u g h l in A D o r is J e a n
■McLaughlin Defendant, which
aforesaid W rit ol Enecutlon was
delivered to me as Sh erlll ol
Seminole County. Flo rid a, and I
h.sse levied upon Ihe following
stesenbed property owned by
Doris je a n M cLaugh lin , said
p r o p e r t y b e in g lo c a te d In
Seminole County Flo rid a more
p a r t i c u l a r ly d e s c rib e d as
follows
O n e 1 979 P o n t i a c 4 d oor
Automobile. M aroon In Color. ID
■ ZNC.9Y9P 179925. being stored
at T rl C o un ty Towing.
Longwood Florid a
and the undersigned as Sheritt
ol Sem inole County. Flo rid a,
w ill a l 11 00 A M on the I71h
day ol October A D 1985. otter
tor sale and sell lo the highest
bidder, for cash, subject to any
and all existing lelns at Ihe
Front IW e s tl Door at the steps
ot the Sem inole Counly Court
house In Sanford. Florida, Ihe
above described personal pro
perty
That said sale Is being made
lo satisfy the term s ot said W rit
ot E kecullon
John E Polk. Sh erlll
Seminole Counly, Flo rid a
To be published Septem ber 26.
October 2. 9 14. with Ihe sale on
October 17 1985
D E J 155

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando * W inter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 t im e ..................... 67C ■ line
HOURS
3 consecutive times 61C • line

8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

7 consecutive times S2C a line
10 consecutive times 46C a line
Contract Rates Available
3 Lines Minimum

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

5 5 — B u s in e s s

21 — P e r s o n a l s

O p p o r tu n itie s
CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
A B O R T IO N C O U N S E L IN G
F r ee P re g n a n cy Tests
C o n fid e n tia l
in d iv id u a l
assistance
C a ll lor
appointment evening hours
ava ila b le
3717495
I w ill not be responsible lor any
debts In c u r re d by a nyo n e
o th e r th a n m y s e lf a s ol
10 16 85 J.T . S W I N D L E

B E A U T Y SH O P 4 station* 3 a re
rented 517.000/TERMSI C all
a lter 4 30 323 9679

6 1 — M o n e y to L e n d
NEED MONEY?
Everyo n e does at some tim e. It
you own it home and have a
job, I f sc a s le r than you think

23— L o st &amp; F o u n d

CREDIT?
NO PROBLEM!

Lost- E a s l 20th St A rea Black
A white lem ale cat
R E W A R D ! Call 377 7330 after

834-8900
FREEDLANDER. INC.

6P_M_________ _______

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
FO R S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
F ile Number (4 343
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
L U C IL L E BR O W N
Deceased
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
A G A IN ST THE
ABO VE
E S T A T E AND A LL O T H ER
P E R S O N S I N T E R E S T E D IN
T H E E S TA T E
YO U
A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D t h a t the ad
m inistration ol Ihe estate ol
L U C I L L E B R O W N , deceased.
F ile Num ber 84 343. Is pendinq
in the Circuit Court for Seminole
C o u n ly . F lo r id a . P r o b a te
Division, the address ot which is
Sem in o le C ounly Courthouse.
Santo rd . F lo rid a
32771 The
personal representative ot the
estate Is M A U D E D A V IS whose
address Is 1113 C yp rrss Avenue.
S a n lo rd . F lo r id a 32771
The
n a m e a n d a d d r e s s o l Ih e
p erso nal re p re s e n ta tiv e 's al
torney a re set lorth below
A ll persons having claim s or
dem ands against the estate are
r e q u ir e d . W I T H I N T H R E E
M ONTHS FR O M T H E DATE
O F T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N
O F T H IS N O T IC E , to tile with
Ihe clerk ol Ihe above court a
w ritten statement ot any cla im
or dem and Ihey m ay have Ea c h
cla im must be In w riting and
must indicate the basis for Ihe
cla im , the nam e and address ot
the creditor or his agent or
a t t o r n e y , a n d th e a m o u n t
claim ed If the claim Is not yet
due. Ih e d a le when It w ill
become due shall be slated It
Ihe claim it contingent or unli
q u ld a le d
the n atu re ot the
uncertainly shall be staled II
the claim is secured, the securi
ly sh a ll be d e s c rib e d
The
Claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies of the claim to the clerk
to enable the clerk to m ail one
copy to each personal repre
sentative
A ll persons interested In the
estate to whom a copy ol this
Notice ot A dm inistration has
b een m a ile d a r e re q u ire d ,
M ONTHS
WITHIN THREE
FR O M TH E D A T E OF TH E
F I R S T P U B L I C A T I O N OF
T H IS N O T IC E , to hie any ob
lections Ihey m ay have that
challenge the valid ity of the
decedent’s w ill, the quatiflca
lions ol the personal repre
s e n t a tiv e . o r the v e n u e or
jurisdiction ot the court
A L L C L A IM S . D E M A N D S
A N D O B J E C T IO N S NOT SO
F IL E D W IL L B E F O R E V E R
BARRED
Date of Ihe flrsl publication ot
this Notice ot Adm inistration
O cto b er*. 1985
M A U D E D A V IS .
As Perso nal Representative
ot the E s ta te ol
L U C IL L E BRO W N .
Deceased
A T T O R N E Y FO R P E R SO N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E
TH O M AS C G R E E N E .
E S Q U IR E
Post O ttice Bo« 495
Santord. Flo rid a 37771
Telephone (3051 321 0751
Publish October V, 16 1985
D E K 49
N O T IC E O F S H E R IF F 'S ~ S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue ol that certain
W rit ol Execution issued out ot
and under the seal ol the County
C o u r t o l O r a n g e C o u n ly .
F lo rid a , upon a Im al judgement
rendered In Ihe aforesaid court
on the 281h day ot Ju n e. A D
1985. in that certain case en
titled. B a rn e tt Bank of Central
Flo rid a . N A a national banking
assn . P la in tlll, — v s — Carm en
Melone and W a lte r Melone. De
fendanl, w hich aforesaid W rit ol
Execution w as delivered lo me
as S h e rlll ot Sem inole Counly.
F lo rid a , and I have levied upon
Ihe following described property
owned by C arm en and W a lle r
M elone, said p ro p erty being
located In Sem in o le County,
Flo rid a , m ore p a rllcu ta rly de
scribed as follows
V ariou s and assorted house
hold furniture and appliances
Inventory m a y be viewed at the
C iv il D ivision ol the Seminole
County S h e r if fs D epartm ent
Hems lo be sold in a lot. being
stored at D ave Jo n es W recker
Service. F e rn P a rk , Florid a
and the undersigned as Sherilf
of Sem inole County, Flo rid a,
w ill at 11 00 A M on the 17th
day ol October. A D 1985, oiler
for sale and sell to the highest
bidder, for cash, subject lo any
and all existing lelns, a l the
F ro nt (W e st) Door al the steps
ol Ihe Sem inole County Court
house in Sanford. Flo rid a, the
above described prerional pro
p erty
That said sale Is being made
to satisfy the term s ol said W rit
ol Execution
Jo h n E Polk. Sh erlll
Sem inole Counly, Flo rid a
To be published Septem ber 24.
October 2, 9. 14. wills the sale on
October 17. 1985
D E J 154

The M ortgage People
710 E . A ltam onte D rive
•Licensed M ortgage Broker

LOST- Shep h erd 'C ollle m ale,
black A Ian. w earing w hile
r e fle c t o r c o llo r A ch o k e r
chain Needs his heart medl
clnef M e llo n v ille 'Je s s u p P a rk
A re a
N am e C h a r lie ! R E
W A R D 322 8099________________

25—Special Notices
BECOME ANOTARY

63— M o rtg a g e s
B o u g h t &amp; S o ld
W e buy 1st and 2nd mortgages
Nation wide C all R a y Legg
Lie M tg Broker. 940 Douglas
A ve . A llam o n le 774 7752

Fo r Defalls I 800 432 4254
F lo rid a N otary A ssoc iatio n
• M A R Y K A Y C O S M E T IC S *
Skin c are and color Hair
C O N N IE
372 7734

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B a b y s i t t i n g In m y h o m e
anytim e Call between 8 am A
6 pm only, 372 7941_____________

33—Real Estate
Courses
★
★
★
*
a Thinking of getting a •
• Real Esta te Lice n se? *
W e o ile r F re e Tuition
and continuous T raining!
Call Dick or V ick i for details
471 1447...373 3700 ..E v e . 774 1050
Keyes ol Flo rid a., Inc.
to Y ea rs E x p e ritn c e l

7 1 - H e lp W a n te d
A cry lic A pplicators needed lo
apply protective coaling on
c ars, boats and planes 55 to
111 per hour W e train For
work In Sanlord a rea call
_______ Tam p a 813 884 7151
A L L T Y P E S JO B S
ST A R T W O R K NOW I

LABOR
WWI

FORCE
Mini

I NO
FEE I
Report ready lor work at 6 A M
407 W 1st St
Sanlord

321-1590
A SSEM BLERS
A T T E N T IO N men 14 35 hr
for m od ern m a n u fa c tu rin g
plant 50 lbs . strong, reliable,
own tra n s p o rta tio n
Eq u al
Opportunity E m p lo y e r
Per
m anent positions
N ever a
Fee!

TEMP PERM.............774-1348

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given lhat we
are engaged in business at 1511
S e m ln o la D l v d . S u it e 18.
Casselberry. Sem inole County.
F lo r id a u nd er the lic tltio u s
n a m e ot S E M I N O L E C O M
M E R C E C E N T E R II. and that
wc intend to reqister said name
with the Clerk ol Ihe C ircu it
Court. Sem inole Counly Flo rid a
in acco rd ance with the pro
visions ot the Fictitiou s Nam e
Statutes. T o wi t
Section 145 09
F lorida Statutes 1957
S E M IN O L E C 0 7 A M E R C E
C E N T E R LTD
s Jo n W Zabel
s Sam uel H Bow m an. IV
Publish October 2 9 16 73 1*85
D EK I
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged in business at F le a
W o rld
Hwy
17 92, Santord
Sem inole County F lo rid a under
th e f i c t i t i o u s n a m e o t
A IR B R U S H O N E
and thal I
intend to register said name
with the Clerk ot the C ircuit
Court, Sem inole County. Flo rid a
in acco rd an ce w llh Ihe pro
visions of the Fictitious Nam e
Statutes. To wi t
Section 845 09
F lo rid a Statutes 1957
S W illia m Victor Clonlr
Publish October 2 9 14 23 1985
D E K 11
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby qiven that I
am enqaqed in business al 145
S e d g e lle ld
W in t e r P a r k
Sem inole County, Flo rid a 32792
under the fictitious name ol
S P O R T S A P R O M O T IO N A L
S P E C I A L T I E S and that I in
tend lo register said nam e ^ith
the Clerk ol the C ircuit Court
Sem inole County, F lo rid a In
accordance with the provisions
ot Ihe Fictitious Nam e Statutes
T o w it
Section 845 09 Florid a
Statutes 1957
i\ i Stanley Farb er
Publish October 2. 9. 16. 23 IV85
D E K 10

A S S IS T A N T
R E C E P T I O N IS T
5200 00 wk * Use your knack
lor handling phones and being
p r o f e s s io n a l
V a r i e t y ol
duties)

Employment
323-5176
2571 Fren ch A ve
Avon C hristm as Earn ings
Two W a y s ! . Be a Representative.
372 1910............................ 131’t07l
A V O N E A R N IN G S ’ W O W I! I
O P E N T E R R I T O R I E S N O W ! I!
321 3515 or 3)7 0639
Backltoe Operator needed Im
m ediately tor piping p roject in
Sa n to r d are a C all 323 2440
C O M B IN A T IO N
R E C E P T I O N IS T
SEC RETA RY
BO O KKEEPER
Com puter skills a plus. 373 8433
C O N S T R U C T IO N
BO O KKEEPER
5250 00 wk • Construction
ex p erience a plus but
needed1 Nol lull charge,
know basic accounting
te e d u re i1

j

O K

co
not
just
pro

Employment
323-5176
2513 Fren ch A ve

O R IV E R W A N T E O
Call C u rrtis H a ll
349 9794_______
Ex cellent Income lor p ari H ire
home assem b ly w ork
Po r
into cab 504 6 4 ^ ^ 3 £ » L
E X E C U T I V E S E C R E TA R Y
W ith or w ith o u t s h o rth a n d !
P r e t e r r a b l y W A N G w o rd
processors
N eeded In the
Lake M a ry Area
Ablest Tem porary Services
221 1940______ ______
Ex p In D ry Cleaning &amp; Press
Ing
Exp
C o un ter P e rs o n
needed a lio 322 0572. 322 1870
E X P E R IE N C E D
R E A L E S T A T E ASSO C
F ull 4 P a rt lim a
O V IE D O R E A L T Y .IN C .
345 4401

*80,000 P LU S
IN V ES TO R S /TEA C H ER S
A proven copyrighted method that helps
children and adults to MASTER learning
disabilities. Documented cases show over
80% success. Excellent (or absentee owner
or teachers. $18,000 covers training,
materials, association membership and pro­
tected area. Call 305/876-5165 9-5 Monday
thru Friday.

P R O D U C T IO N
HELP

EO E

• N o w H irin g For 1st, 2nd,
And 3rd S h ifts .
• Im m e d ia te O p en in g s
• N o E x p e rie n c e N e ce ss ary
U.$. FLOOR j
MW,
COVERINGS
SAMFOftD
I
1
.321-9112

*

�'

Evening H tra lfl, Sanford, Fl, Wednesday, Oct. 1«, 198S—11B

7 1 - H e l p W a n te d

93 — R o o m s fo r R e n t

E X P E R IE N C E D
SEA M STRESSW A N TED
_____________321-6517_____________

Furnished room with p rivate
hath and kitchenette 175 per
week Includes all utilities. Call
373 9633 or 331 6947

103— H o u s e s
U n f u r n is h e d / R e n t
3 B d rm .. n e a r schools
shopping Call 323 4991.

nnd

S A N F O R D Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rales
M aid service Call 321 4507
S 7 P M 41S P a lm e llo Ave

STEM PER A G EN C Y, INC.

E x p e rie n c e d p e n o n needed
tcrubblng A waxing floors
M a ru re , b o n d a b le , A own

T H E F L O R ID A H O T E L
SOOOak A ven u e........ .....321 6304
Reasonable W e ek ly Rales

105— D u p l e x -

97— A p a rtm e n ts

HOUSEPARENTS

F u r n is h e d / R e n t

Couple, m ature adult. Chris
Han Sh elte r tor a b u ied A
troubled teens. 149-1099

JANITORIAL
PERSONNEL

A V A IL A B L E

F o r S a n fo rd R e ta il Store
Cleaning m ornings R to 10 am.
Ideal lor re tlred /iem l retired
C l l l l W i l U tor Information

FLEXIBLE LEASES

LA BO RERS
R e lia b le w orkers needed
for first shift
Ablest T em porary Services
_____________ 32) 1940_____________

S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S D ISC O U N T
RAN CH S T Y L E L IV IN G II!

LANDSCAPE LABORERS

Furn. Apts, lor Senior C itliens
311 Palm etto Ave.
J Cowan No Phone Calls

SANFORD COURT APTS.
323 3301

Perm anent positions »4 hour
333 R133________________________

LIGHT INDUSTRIAL
No lee .................. W eekly P a y !
Sanlord A re a Assignments!
C all Im m ediately for Info:
Ph &lt;&gt;ne .............................678 1115

MANPOWER
TEMPORARY SERVICES
DELIVERY DRIVERS
F u ll or part time. 14 00 per hour
+ m ileage A tips A verage
85 SR per hour. M ust be 1R with
car A Insurance. C all P in a
K w lk, after x P M 337 8330
L P N or R N needed, 3-11 shift.
Good atm osphere A benefits
F u ll tim e position. A pply a l:
Debary M a n o r...40 N. H w y. 17 *2
D e b ary..................................E O E
M A C H I N IS T w it h la t h e
experlnece. M ust have own
tools. W ages com mensurate
w ith experience
C all: 371
1285.____________________________
M A N A G E R for 10 unit apt
b u ild in g .M a in t e n a n c e exp.
prelerred. 331 3WO e v e ________
M A T E R IA L C O N TRO L C L E R K
Involves working w ith schedules
and m a te r ia l o rd e rs
Calculator and C R T needed
Perm anent position N ever a
Feel

TEMP PERM..............774-1348
N U R S E 'S A ID E 'S and L iv e In's
needed Im m ediately S330 per
week plus room and board
E x p e r ie n c e re q u ire d
C a ll
W anda at:
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L
PO O L
_____________ 331 7099
_________

NURSES AIDES
O R D E R L IE S
A ll shifts Good alm osphere
and benefits A pply at:
D e B a ry M anor.. 60 N H w y 17/73
________ O e B a ry . E O E .________
O ffic e M a n a g e r lor Sanford
. D ally Labor O tllce Hours 1
to 6 M onday Thru Saturday
331 IM P ________________________
P a r t tim e, women or men work
Irom from home on new tel*
phone program . E a r n up to SS
t o t 10 per h o u r.C a ll: 3H-4a*&gt;

L o v e ly t B d rm .- C lo s e to
d o w n to w n
175 w e ek p lu s
u tlllt lt e s
S e c u r it y deposit
12SO, call 333 9632, or 331 6947

B d rm
C lo s e I n i N e w ly
paneled 165 w k .* only ISO
utilities/m o a 371 5990/eve

1 Bdrm.- S95 w eek, utilities
included, plus deposll. 323
4 8 3 8 ____________________ __
2 E lf Apts N ew ly decorated 6
re a d y ! 1/ 165 w k., 1/ 187
In clu d esu lll 371 S990eve

99— A p a rtm e n ts
U n fu r n is h e d / R e n t

Needed P re fe r I yr experl
once C all Mon thru F r l 9 to
5 377 0730______________________

LA K E M A RY/SA N FO RD
• 16 1 B d rm lux u ryapts
• Next lo M a y ta ir G oll Course
• Convenient to I 4
• Country living with city conve
nience
• Models open d ally, 11 5
D O R C H ESTER SQ UARE
_________
313 4933 ______ ___
M A R IN E R 'S V IL L A G E I
bdrm 1310, 2 bdrm 1360 and
u p lA d u lllo n ly 323 8670_______
S A N FO R D - 2 bdrm . 1 bath
M ove now. pay no rent ’111
N ovem ber
1350 discounted
B r i t i s h A m e r ic a n R e a lt y ,
6 7 9 - 1 1 7 1 . _________________
S A N F O R D D U P L E X 2 bdrm ,
l a u n d r y ro o m , p r i v a t e
b a ck y a rd , 1350 per month,
322 0717. 337 0345. or 373 5711,

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
MOVE IN SPECIAL!
$299.00
* F A M IL Y A A D U LT •

2 BEDROOM.
C a ll................................... 331 3930

G o o d v o le * . S4 00 h r
p lus
bonuses Longwood. 699 S363

SM A LL A PA R T M EN T
N ice
area 1780 Includes all C all
a lter a pm 371 7350 _________ _

R E C E P T IO N IS T - P a r t tim e tor
San lo rd c h iro p ra ctic otllce
M ust have basic c le ric a l skills
and excellent personality lor
dealing with people. E x p e ri­
ence helpful but w ill train
qualified person
To apply,
phene 222-5933, 10AM-NOON.
R E T A I L S E C U R IT Y F ull lim e
Exp erience p referred Inquire
b y calling: 373 5760____________
S H O P A P P R E N T IC E
S7S0 w k . t c o n s t r u c t io n
com pany experience a plus
but not n ee d e d ! N ol
full/charge, |ust know basic
accounting proceedures!

Employment
323-5176

S O U T H E R N R E N T A L S I and 3
B d rm
apartm ents lor rent
C a ll: 37? 1469a lter 3 P M
S p a c io u s A p a r tm e n ts *
Lakefront, pool, tennis, adults,
no pets, laundry Starling af
1303 a mo Call 333 0742 fo see.
t and 2 bdrm Also lurntshed
efficiency Irom 175 week 1750
deposll No pels Call 371 4507
5,7 P M 415 P a lm e llo
7 bdrm
I ’s bath new ly re
modeled
P riv a te backyard
1400 mo plus 1400 security
deposll 371 0715
7 bdrm
I bath Deluxe
Deposit 1750. 1370 mo
Month f r e e ! 371 6158

Apt
One

199 Fo r 1st months rent with
approved credit 1.2.1 B d rm
R IO G E W O O O A R M S
3510 Ridgewood Ave.
Santord Call373 6470

2S11 F ren ch Ave.
T A IL O R O R S E A M S T R E S S
experienced In all phases ol
w earing apparel alterations to
w ork In O range City Branch.
A p p ly in perso n: Coston's
Lau nd ry A D ry Cleaning, 224
S. F la . A ve , Deland_________
Telephone O perator W ill troln.
E x p e r ie n c e d e s ire d
A lto
monte SpringsR34 6100________
Trode M a n needed lor punch
o u t: d ry w a ll, carp e t, door
hang. M ust have tools 331
SRR2 lor appointment__________
TRf i
C L IM B E R W A N T ED
Only experienced apply Top
w a g e s , lu ll w e e k ’s w o rk
E c h o le T re e S e r v ic e
C a ll
323 2739________________________
W A REH O U SE/STO C K
H AN D LER
E n t r y (aval. O nly hard workars
need apply. M F . 9 A M 5 P M
t C A L IB R O N C O R P ., 6M L A K B
EM M A ROAD, L A K E M A R Y
W AREH O USE
A T T E N T IO N M E N I Shipping.
Racalvlng . A ble to lilt SO lbs .
own transportation *4.35 an
h r . P a r m a n a n t p o s itio n s
N a v a r a la e l

T E M f PERM..............774-1348
W A REH O U SE
T R A IN E E
14.SO to start with quick advan
&gt; cem ent and a great bossl
La a rn torkl I It . Lo cal co. t

Employment
323-5176
7133 F re n c h Ave.
. 'W H O L E S A L E N U R S E R Y
S A L E S P E R S O N Lo cal area
only. M u d h ave good driving
record and soma knowledge ol
landscaping plant m a la ria l.
*. 1200 w a a k ly d r a w a g a in st
commission. C a ll: 149 5570

f l —Apart m tnts/
House to Share
- .S H A R E a homa w ith I other
.* adults. StSO a month total.
V 373 6461

1 0 7 -M o b ile
Hom es / Rent

103— H o u ses
U n fu r n is h e d / R e n t
FREE MONTHS RENT
ON ANY 1 YEAR LEASE,
On these
A ll N ew A w a rd Winning

2 Bdrm., 2 Bath Patio Homas
Nestled In quiet country setting.
N ear shopping and schools
M inulos from
Downtown O rlando via 1/4.
CHECK T H ESE F E A T U R E S I
• Fro st F re e Refrigerato r
• G arag e
• A ttic Storage
• W a sh er/D rye r Connections
• Some Units w ith F a m ily Room
ON S IT E M A N A G E M E N T !
Children A Pots W elcom e
Senior C ltlions Discountl

I A l bdrm. Trailers- Highway
437 W eekly rales 1150 depos
It Lease required 788 9537

113— S to r a g e R e n t a ls

Mini Warehouses
150 A Up ........................ 313 0470

117— C o m m e r c i a l
R e n t a ls
Retail A Office Space 300 up lo
3.000 tq.ll. also storage avail
able 377 4*03

121— C o n d o m in iu m
R e n ta ls
S A N F O R D
2 B d r m .
m icro w a ve, w ash er, d ry e r,
pool, courtyard W as a model
1495 per month
M E G A T R E N D P R O P E R T IE S
___________774 4054_______________

P IN E R ID G E C LU B *

1.2.3 Bdrm . 2 balh, washer,
d ryer, vertlcles. re lrlg . dish
washer Starting a l 1175
G O L D K E Y M G M T „ INC.
_____________ 471 7331_____________
S A N F O R D 7 Odrm , living and
fa m ily room, eat In kitchen,
Inside laundry, new carpet,
p a in t and pool
1375 p e r
month
M E G A T R E N D P R O P E R T IE S
______ ______ 774 4014_____________
S A N F O R D Brand new, 3 bdrm .
3 'j bath 1365 mo 867 3629. or
433 3556___________________ ____

S IN G L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G

Lease Terms to Fit
Your Needs!
Furnished or Unfurnished.
Carports..............P riv a te Patios
Lush Landscaping.Pets.Children
W ATER BED SAC C EPTED I

C a lL » ...........321-1911
14 1 — H o m e s F o r S a le
—

LO N G W O O D
1 B d rm .. I'-j balh home In a
pleasant neighborhood Also
has F l room and eat In kllch
en
D A V ID B O G U E
Realtor/Associate
333 3700 alter hours 373 81f

eues
Reposscd Pro p erty In Dellona 3
b drm . lire p la c e . cath ed ral
ceilings, pool Asking 155.000
Fle et Finance Center 372 8965

SALE BY OWNER
R e d u c e d b e lo w a p p r a i s a l
Beautiful home with beautiful
v ie w of L a k e M o n ro e
3
B d rm . 1 bath, lireplace. new
appliances and root, enclosed
tro pical pool, fenced yard,
sprinkler system with welt
M an y extras Don't miss see
mg this lovely redecorated
home M usi sell im m ediately!
1139.000 C a ll
372 7616 or
323 1333________________________

SANFORD REALTY
R E A L T O R ...................... 323 1334
R E D B R IC K
3 B d rm . 11■
» bath home In
excellent condition on large
lot Ready to move ini Price d
lu ll reduced to 144,450 Belter
S e e l!

CALL BART
R EA L ESTATE
REALTO R
122-7498

II\ l.l. K l

im : \ i

Yi n

roit

W E HAVE REN TA LSI
IN V E S T O R S S P E C I A L I 7
Condos all roady rented! Good
location! All a m e n lfie tl Call
u* for term s! 139,958 A 141.100

CANTERBURY VILLAS
321-3827

W E N E E D L IS T IN O S I

323*5774
2484 H W Y . 17-91

SA N FO R D - R aven n a Pa rk .
V a ry nice 4 bdrm ., 3 bath,
cen tral alr/heat, fenced yard,
appliances N ew ly decorated
No pels. 1500 mo. plus tecurlly 333 2649 or 321 3126
S A N F O R D 1 B d r m . I bath,
w ell shaded. S345 per month
C a ll 131 4697 or 372 7767
SO U TH ERN R EN T A LS
two 3
B d rm . houses for rent. C all:
127 W a l t e r 3 P M .___________
S T O N E IS L A N D
E x c lu s iv e
a re a 3 bdrm
baths, split
plan, Lrg . F la room, + living,
screen porch, garage. Y a rd
service Includedl M50. 1st..
last, deposll. 32371*7__________
o • * IN D E L T O N A • e a
• • H O M ES FO R R E N T • e
e e 174-1434 • •_________
2 bdrm. H j balh, large lanced
back yard , appliances, air.
U tilities on.6400 mo. ■
*- depos
It. 441 l i s t between 10 A Z

1 8 7 — S p o r t in g G o o d s

149— C o m m e r c ia l

1 4 1 — H o m e s F o r S a le

P r o p e r t y / S a le

O U P L E X - E-Z p u rch ase for
llve-ln buyers, L e rg * bdrm.
w ith k itc h e n e q u ip p e d !
Central eir a carpet I Price d
below m arket! 174.M0

L A R G E 1 bdrm . 2 both 1375
month. Take as Is. M2 2679 or
423 3556________________________

2 3 1 -C a rs

JAMES LEE
M « ii I L s i t i l i

M « h J I t»i

I n i

11 1 / h J \

W ill trad* 17.000 equity In home
tor lim e share or Ilk * value 1
bdrm. t ' i balh 1 y r old home
Closed garage M in i condition
C all: 377 7269__________________
LA K E SYLVA N
Lik e new 2
b d r m ., f ir e p la c e , g a ra g e ,
large fenced lot 159,900 Anna
K elle y. 149 5420 R e al Estate
On*. R E A L T O R S 869 6100
Y O U C A N O W N lor 8295 month
w/13.000 down. Seller w ill f i­
nance. Charm ing (lik e new ), 7
b d r m ., w a l l/ w a l l c a r p e t ,
cen tral heal/alr, appliances.
D ays only 311 3190

—,

aI toh%

STEMPER
G E N E V A - Home on 5 acres,
toned A-t. Horses allowed.
P rice reduced. Now 143,900.

C A S S E L B E R R Y - I acre, toned
P R 1.585,000 W .M a llc io w s k l,
R E A L T O R ...................... 311 7982
C O M M E R C IA L S P E C I A L IS T
S A L E S A N D A P P R A IS A L S
B O B M . B A L L , J R . P .A ..C .S.M .
R E A L T O R ...................... 311-4111

2 bdrm ., 1 bath. U tility shed.
Only 127,100
19 A C R E S 190,000.

P u b lic

w a te r.

O T H E R H O M E S , LO T S,
A C R E A G E , IN V E S T M E N T
PRO PERTY
C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R ...................... 122-4991

I Browning 12 Gauge Pum p 3 in.
magnum. 1 Browning 44 Cal.
Lever/A ctlon Modal 92. Call:
322 3129

BATEMAN REALTYLie. R e el Estate Broker
H O R S E L O V E R 'S D O N 'T M IS S
T H IS l 5 4 ecres, 2 sides chain
link lanced. 20X20 screened
bldg. 32X80 stable shelter. 4 "
well, 150 deep A ll this- 844,900.

3 2 1 -0 7 5 9 E v e . -3 2 2 -7 6 4 3
1 lo ti tor sa l* 82,500 each
Volusia County. Orange city
area. Low down, ownor (Ian
d n g. C all: 774 1409

L IS T W IT H U SI

M a te r ia ls
B U IL D IN G S * all steel 10 x 81
810.990: 100 x 225 S49.V60:
o th e rs Ir o m 82.25 tq
It
1-291 828) I collect)

H o m e s / S a le
C A R R IA G E C O V E
M O B IL E H O M E P A R K
Now A rasa I*. Contact:
G regory M ob il* Homes
132 5200

G e r m a n Ih o r l h a l r Po in terM ale. 17 months. W ell m a n ­
nered and sm art. 875 Call:
311 6051 or 313 4055____________
M ANDAY CO N URES
t pair,
875. M a 'e bird talks. C a ll:
313-5059 anytim e.______________

E x tra N ice ! 3 bdrm 3 bath,
e a t In K i t c h e n , c e n t r a l
alr/heat, carpet, fans, fenced.
322 8415/ Don. E v e 333 7919
T U S C A W IL L A A R E A - 4 bdrm ,
2’ t balh. 3 story, 7.200 sq It.
Reduced to 195,000 Appraised
a! 1101.500 15.000 down to
qualified buyer Owner des
p erate
699 0099. P rin c ip a ls
o n ly ____________________________
Sanford- New Duplex 7 Bd rm ..
7 balh each unit Firep laces,
v a u lt e d c e ilin g s . F u lly
equipped kitchens, single car
garages, m any ex tras, one
y e a r builder w a rra n ty. G re at
in v e s tm e n t p ro p e rty . 1500
M agn olia A ve. * 1x0.000
C a ll................................... 172-1916

Al I rot! Nil I)
1(1 KNOW
IN HI Al I M A M

1979 S K Y L I N E M O B I L E H O M E
12x60 2 B d rm . split plan, gas
heat, cen tral ac, shed, patio
and awnings. F a m ily section
86.500. C a ll:321-7679 w ookdayt
alter 6 P .M ., a ll day w«ok
ends.

I l l — Appliances
/ Furniture
M a | e r A p p lia n c e s R e p a ire d ,
bought, end aeld. F u lly guor*
onteod. C all 1122-42*6.__________
Reconditioned Appliances
(ra m 181 W A R R A N T Y .
B A R N E T T S .....C A S S E L B E R R Y
828-5113.......................... 820-5422

STENSTROM

Used Washers- F a rts A S e rvle t
(or K e n m a ra t................313-8497.
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S

B id Credit?

2 B ritta n y Spaniels. A K C . Good
blood line! 8200 a , or best
otter. 831-3777

W E F IN A N C E

C A L L A N Y T IM E

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
REM0DCUNG SPECIALIST
W * Handle
The Whole B a ll Ot W ax

3227029

^^^^Inanelnj^AvaMabU^^^

Appliance Repair
Allens Appliance Senrice
24 hr. Service-. N * C a tra C h er*#!
17 Y r. E x p .....648-5441,....574-8433

Bookkeeping
B O O K K E E P I N G thru financial
itatam anf, payroll, and faxat.
W ill pick-up and deliver. Can

321001800*84172;^^^^^

Building Contractors
C o m m e r c ia l • R e s id e n t ia l
Seminole F orm a A Concrete
Remodeling. Repairing.
Licensed F lo rid a Bulldera
F re e E t t 1.......... 323 4917. ext. 3)

Carpentry
A ll type* ol carp entry A re
modeling. 77 yr*. axp. Call

RlchardGrott^2M97^^^^

322-2420
2581 P A R K A V E .............Santord
981 Lk. M a ry l l v d ........ Lk. M a ry

C A RPET SA LES
A IN S T A L L A T IO N S
C all 221 5557................ after 6 pm
Wholesale Price*- Installed by
D «el*r. Sam ple* to your door I

Cal^m^cCartj^^^^JWTTM?

Catering
N E W S M Y R N A B EA C H - Owner
w ill pay 14.000 closing cost on
now m ortgage Ba ach sld t 4
bdrm., 7 bath pool homo w ith
d etach ed g a ra g e . Steps to
ocean and public handball
courts. M4.9Q0.
Bee c h ild * R e a lty , R E A L T O R S
804-417-11)1.............Open 7 D ays!

241— R e c r e a tio n a l

★ 01663117 ______★

• AUCTION *

DOMESTIC PIGS $25

Hwy 93................ Daytona Beach
* • * • * Hold* ! • • • • •

323,191}

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

2 1 3 — A u c tio n s

E v e ry Thurs. N ile at 7:30 P M

★

W h e re A n yb o d y *

★

C a n B u y o r S e ll I *

Fo r m ore details
__________ I-904-355-81H__________
O e B a ry Auto A M arine Sales
Across the rive r, top ot hill
174 H w y 17-97 D e B a ry 641 856*

H w y 46.............................331 2801

2 1 5 — B o a ts a n d
A c c e s s o r ie s

• FU ESA U TO SA LES•
W e buy. sell or trade!
Financing A vailab le
550 W ad e St
W inter Spgs
___________ « 327-7492 a_________

Houseboat tor sal*. 36 It. F U N
T I M E , 50 hp motor, pontoons,
remodeled. 84500 331 8638
IS tt. fiberglass boat. 60 hp Scott
m o to r and t r la la r . C le a n .
Asking 8900. C a ll: 66* *034

★ INSTANT CASH ★
• • W E W IL L B U Y a •
• *YO U RU SED C A R *•
• C A L L P H IL B E T T IS *

217—Garage Sales

C O U R T E S Y PONTIAC..321 211)
R E P O S S E S S E D AUTO
76 Olds Cutlass
Best O tte r!......................jjj 1963

E S T A T E S A L E - E v e r y t h in g
M ust Go This W eekend! 727
M eadow St. (o il Lak o M a ry
B lv d . A A rt La n a ) F r l. A Sat. 9
to 4.

1972 M E R C U R Y M A R Q U IS
Lo w m iles, runs and looks
good. 5850 or best offer C all
331-1829.______________________ _

3 F A M IL Y
YARD SA LE!
H o u i a h o l d H o r n s , t o o ls ,
Clothing A mlse. Frl.- 18th,
Sat.* 19th * to J a t 1707
Pa lm etto Avo.

Go C a r t
L i k e n e w w ith
Kaw asaki engine with positive
traction
W as 1750 aiklng
1350 Call 349 5167 B elo re 10
A M or a lter J P M

243— J u n k C a rs
T O P Dollar P a id for Ju n k &amp;
Used cars.trucks A heavy
equipment 322 5990

W E HAVE
M O VED TO
3 4 1 1 S . O R LA N D O DR.
______ (17*92)

1979 DATSUN 280ZXI

*5995

lOADtO

1985 DODGE RAMI
CHARGER

1984 15’ B a ta Boat- w ith tra lla r
and t i l hp M e rcu ry motor.
A lto have trolling motor. C a ll:
323 8524 attar 9 P .M .___________

M O V IN O S A L E - F u r n it u r e ,
to o l*, m is c e lla n e o u s . C a ll
149 5844.________________________

Globe 20 tt. cam per
Asking 11.800
__________C all: 332 3129

1981 Trans Am- W hite. Loaded
Good condition. 77.000 m l
P r ic e 51.000 or assum e 71
paym ent* ol 8370 00 mo P h
365 2474 or 32 H 709.____________
75 Red 8 W hite O ld i Toronade
F u lly loaded. w /CB A F u «
B u tter. Ex e . cond.. tow mil#
•g*. 11,700 867 7847. a lter 4

,1 1 9 ,9 0 0

1982 OLDSMOBILE

oSS*_i. * 4 * 9 S 1
1984 RENAULT

*4 9 9 9 1

At

SANFORD
M OTOR C
AM C
3418

JEEP

S . O r la n d o

D r.

333-4381

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Carpet/Floor
Coverings

145—Resort
Properly / Sale

1980 Yam ah a X J 650 M axm um
Shat! D rive, wetter lairing, Kg
accessories, great bike. 11700
or oiler 869 7194

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

B .E .U N K CONST.

It you a r e lo o k in g lo r a
su c ce ssfu l c a r e e r in R e a l
Esta ta , Stanstrom Ra a lty Is
looking fo r yo u. C a ll L e a
A lb rig h t today a t 221-2428.
Evanlngs 311 )802.

Santord A va.A !2th St.....331-4075

203— L iv e s t o c k a n d

C O M M E R C IA L - 2 b drm ., I bath,
t p a c io u i livin g room w ith
lirep lace, large front porch,
dining room. G re at for rental
or sam ll business! 115,004

• G E N E V A O S C E O L A R D .A
Z O N E D F O R M O B IL E S I
5 A cre Country tracts.
W a ll treed on pavod Rd.
1 0 % Down, to Y rs. a t 11% I
F ro m 811.5881

a n d B ik e s

KS8IESSSERVICEItStllt

P R E S T IG I O U S A R E A - 2 bdrm .,
2 b a th , lir o p la c o , c e n tr a l
h e a l/ a lr , c e m m u n lty pool,
clubhouse A la c u itl. 811,800

W IL L B U IL D TO S U IT I
Y O U R LO T OR O U R S I
E X C L U S IV E A O E N T FO R
W IN S O N G D E V . C O R F ., A
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A LEA D E R I M O R E H O M E FO R
L E S S M O N E Y ! C A L L TO­
DAY)

2 3 9 — M o to r c y c le s

CONSULT OUR

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H O M ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y

S H A D Y LOT* ) bdrm ., 2 bath,
paddla Ians, split plan, control
haat/alr. groat room Good
assum abla mortgage- M1.900

No Credit?

N A TIO N A L AUTO SALES

Sanford's Sain Laadtt

A S S U M E 10% M O R T G A G E - J
bdrm .. t ' i bath, brick w a ll
and gorgeous fireplace In fa m ­
ily room. Ownor lloxlblo with
sailor financing. 819,800

l Sit Scotty trailer Good Cond,
tion Asking 1100 Call
371
1666____________________________

2 3 1 -C a rs

1 Pair Mmature Goats
C a ll : .......... ..................... 331-1666

REALTV*REALrOR

C O U N T R Y ROADS- 1 bdrm., 1
b ath house on 1.25 acros,
fireplace, great room, control
heat/air. Recently remodeled.
1S9.S00

T r a ile r s

V e h ic le s / C a m p e r s

WE BUY EVERYTHING!

1975 12 X 45 2 bdrm . 2 bath,
heat air. 3 calling Ians. P rlco d
to salt I 84500 D a ys 222 0409. or
ova. 249 5*49___________________

'77 D O D G E C U S T O M I Z E D
V A N Complete. 13*95.
C H IC O A T H E M A N .......499 0900

SPACE HEATERS

199.50 A U P ..............W e line nee!
Call • • • 131 5440

BRIDGES AND SON

14 Y e a r* In Santord
S E L L IN G O R B U Y IN G A
M O B IL E H O M E T
LETU SH ELPI
Now Or Used
O regory M ob il* Ho mas .222-1288.

1914 C h evy J/4 ton s e rv ic e
trucks Custom bed. built In
tool box. power lilt gate. a/c.
auto m atic. power steering
and brakes F iv e to sell 377
1434_____________ __________

237— T r a c to r s a n d

REBUILT KIRBY VACUUM'S

" M o r r is The Cat"- neutered,
da-clawed, friendly. 3 yrs. old
F re e to good homel Even in gs
323 2025________________________

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
B uses / V a n s

LAWSON GAS

R E A L I S T I C JO c h a n n e l C B
w/anlenna 2 d rill presses, key
m aking m achine w/blanks
Alter 5. 323 8:09_______________

Auction e v e ry Saturday at 7 P M

C O U N T R Y W ID E R E A L T Y
Reg R .E . B ro k e r...........173 1215
470 H w y. 415, Osteen, F la .

Rebuilt Autom atic Trans 1150
or can pull A rebuild yours
172S Steve 321 6924___________

O ffice desk, sxo
12xl3beige carpel. 160
F u ll m attress and box spring
1300 323 6780 a lter 6 P M

P o u ltr y

S A N F O R D - G r e a t B u s in e s s
location, toned GC 2. 3 bdrm.,
t b a t h , s e p a r a t e d o u b le
g a r a g e , h uge c o r n e r lot
154.500
W a lla c e C r e ti R ealty Inc.
R e a lto r........................... 121-0577

A D U L T B IK E S - Big selection
3 wheelers
Beach Cruisers,
a lso B M X
B est p rice s 8
service, too! Litetim e war
r a n ly
B ik e H ea d q u a rters.
2210 French Avenue 322 4*03
C a rp e t C leanin g Eq u ip m en t
C o m m e rc ia l or re sid e n tia l
use 33) 64*4____________

3 sites. 100 lo choose from
" B e s t buy in to w n !” M ake
o ile r
C a ll Jo h n A sh lo rd
123 1150___________
_____

1 5 7 -M o b ile
L A K E M A R Y 1795 down 1595
p er month m akes you an
owner ol a lovely 3 Bdrm ., 2
bathhom e C all: 863 4154

11 Plym outh Horlren 4 door, ac.
am Im radio, itandard, runs
good, reliable transportation
asking 13400 Call 373 1156

/ A c c e s s o r ie s

HOT W A T E R
HEATER*
Rheem Used 6 years New
elements. 155 323 *461 ________

191— B u ild in g

19 9 — P e t s &amp; S u p p lie s
L o ts /S a le

'80 M E R C U R Y C A P R I- Blue.
2 door. 4 speed 12.700 834
0971____________________________

2 2 3 — M is c e lla n e o u s

Complete W hite Bamboo Dbl
bdrm set. 3 mos old Paid
11200 Asking 1150 Sm all chesl
Ir e e ie r, almond brown lop
5150 E lec clock atop a x shell
stand 120 90* 789 6094 alter 5

15 3 — A c r e a g e -

SA N FO R D - 7 bdrm ., 1 bath,
concrete block home. 1 extra
room i, possible 3rd bdrm. a
den. Ex tra clean. Now 147,108.

79 Olds Cutlass Supreme- 7 dr .
loaded.sm all V/8 S450dwn
CH ICO A T H E M A N .......499 0900

23 3— A u to P a r ts

T e le v is io n
19 inch portable
color. Solid Stale. E x c e lle n t!
condition, t t l l C all: 842 5960.

Late Model a ir conditioned on
goll course, super clean A
ready
R e n t a d u l t s 55
o r / o l d e r ; o r / s c II 1500
d w n /lo w m onthly No pels
339 9611, or '73 9381

■

B a b y b e d s , c lo t h e s , t oy s ,
p la y p e n s , s h e e ts , to w e ls ,
perfumes. 331 4377 322 910*

OOOD U S E D T .V 'S S3J and U P
M illa r ’s
2«l9Qrlando Dr. C a ll: 311 0351

LUXURY CONDOS

PHO NE W O R K ER S

P re School Teachers part A lull
tim e . E x p e r ie n c e a p lu sl
Happy A cres. 373 TOPS_________

C O LO R T E L E V I S IO N
R C A 25" color T V In walnut
consol*. O rigin al cost over
5800. B a lan ce due 5196 cash or
p a y m e n ts 175 m o n th. NO
M O N E Y D O W N W ith w ar
ranty. F ra * home trial, no
obligation. C all 862 5194. day
or night.

3 bdrm., I bath, appliances,
hook-ups, s c re e n e d p a tio .
1380 1460. 331-3311______________

1120 Florida Ave,
323-6650

S ltiA lu m in u m Cant..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous M eta ls.......... Glass
K O K O M O ....................... 373 1180

T r ip le x / R e n t

FRANKLIN ARMS

PEST CONTROL
ROUTE PERSON

R a d io /S te r e o

BA M BO O C O VE APTS.
300 E . A irport Blvd.
LA KE M ARY
Schools, new 7
I B d rm ., I B a th .................... $300mo.
B d rm with den, wet bar, pool,
3 B d rm ., I B a th .................... 1321mo.
clubhouse. 1595 per month
P H O N E ....................................321648) M E G A T R E N D P R O P E R T I E S
774 4054_____________

1 bdrm . I bath
1315M o
7 bdrm . I 1* balh
1350Mo
E a c h apartm ent has patio or
balco m y overlooking court
yard A ll appliances, laundry
room, and pool________________

2 1 9 — W a n t e d to B u y

183— T e le v is io n /

Sanlord Studio. I adult, no pets,
a ir. quiet re sid e n tial 1775
month + deposit 373 6019.
t

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE

REALTO R

NOW

Furnished Studio Apartm ents
One Bedroom Apis.
Two Bedroom Apis

B IO P O R C H S A L E ! F ri , Sat
Sun Open I A M 2570 S E lm
Avenue____________________

311*1)5 E . 1st S T .............. 1131673

Sanlord 2436 S Lake Ave &lt;W
35lh St) 7 bdrm ., carpels
drapes, appl , hook ups. CHA.
carport, 1370mo 810 0585

SA N FO R D
I Bdrm ,. apt 1765
month, 1300 deposit
Reter
encesrequired C all -664 4801,

2 1 7 — G a r a g e S a le s

/ F u r n itu r e

Ex p e rie n c e d A uto M ech an ic.
M u »t h ave own to o li and
tra n s p o rta tio n . S a la r y d e ­
fe n d * on experience. C a ll'
331 3)90____________________

F A S H IO N M O D E L S
tor fash
Ion designer, T V , catalogs, all
aget. 421 9819.

18 1 — A p p l i a n c e s

J U N K S ' C A T K R IN Q
A L L O C C A S IO N S I
i l e i t t t y l l .................... Mi*:

Cleaning Service

Home Repairs

N u r s in g C a r e

Cunningham and Wile- Homa.
office, or ept. cleaning D ally,
w eekly or m onthly. Ex trem ely
raatonabla. 331-7514___________

W IL L IS H O M E R E P A IR
Rem odeling.......Addition*....... A
A ll T ype* R e p a ir* !........Insured

No|ot^oo*mal^^^^^2W74*

OUR RA TES A R E LO W ER
Lakeview N ursing Center
919 E . Second St.. Santord
322 4707

Head Carpet Cleaning. Living,
Dining Ream A H all 529.88.
la fa A Chair, 833.732-5588

Landclearing

Painting

G E N E V A L A N D C L E A R IN G
Lo t/Lan d clearin g ......... F ill dirt
Toptoll.. Pond*
D rain dilchet
S ilt Prep aration Call 1x9 5920

C U N N IN O H A M A N D W I F E
In te r/ E x le rlo r/P re ttu r# W ash.
830 A up....................... 321 7514
Painting ... Any W allcovering
V inyl Flooring R el A Resonable
V ery R eliab le.....333-4917 Ex t, 39

HOUSECLEANINGA ll around helper 1.......... 323 9069
JU S T G E N I E S
Pro fattlo n a i cleaning
C a ll...................................123-4663

Electrical
Anything E la c tric a l- .S In c t 19701
C ttlm atat....2* H r. Service C a ll!
T e m ’t E le c tric Service ...122-3729
□ A S E le c t r ic ..................131*050
New A remodeling, addition*,
(ant, aacurlty lights, tim er*
plus a ll t lt c . service* Q uality

SarvicrLlcantad^Bonda^^

General Services

T H O R N E L A N D C L E A R IN G
• F I L L D IR T ............... C L A Y •
• S H A L E A HAULINQ32I-3413U

Landscaping

Paper Hanging
^^j^Twalipaperln^a!^™

HAULING....Fill DirU.Top Soil

F re e E t t ........Work Guaranteed
774 1781
131 9173

Sand.............Call 3*5-8144 after 3.

Lawn Service
LAWNS MOWED A TRIMMED
Spring Y a rd Clean up*. .333 )953

Quality Lawn Cart
A t Affordable P rlc a * 321 4973

Handy Man

Masonry

C a rp e n try .... P a in tin g .. .. Repair*
La w n W ork..Total M aintenance)
C all J i m ...............657-7919 attar 4

Complete Concrete Company I
Best Q uality tor L e tt M o n ty I
C om m ercial B ......... Residential
2* Y r t .E x p ....................Free E t l.
R e tu rn a b le !.................221 7188

Carpentry... P a in tin g ...M atan ry
Plum bing Repair*. Sp *claliiln g
In mobile home A foundation

^egair^TTrtlTExM^^^

Homa Improvement
A d d ilto n t.. R e p a ir* .. Redecorate
Q uality W ork l ...........Reasonable
No Jafe Tea Sm all e r Larg e !
F r a * I* tl....U c e n « * d ....331-711*
Center'* Building A Remodeling
N * J « b T * * Sm all
I1 1 Burton Lan a, Santord

Homa Repairs

Cleaning Service

C A R F IN T IR
R a p a l n and
remodeling. No |ob too tm oll.
C a ll. 323 9645__________________

.699-4558
Callage C ara In c ...... .
Lie. Inturad, Bawd ad.
I l l par hour, a ll dam ettic le t*

Plum bing R e p a ir* A Ilia work,
a c t . W o rk g u a ra n te e d Llcontdd A bonded. 774 *151.

1

Greenlee A Son* Masonry
Q ualify at resonable price*
Sp eciallling in F ire p la c e t/B ric k
C a ll:..........................305 311 *724

Moving A Hauling
L O U 'S H A U L IN G - Appliance*,
junk, firewood, gargage. etc

CaiimM378amto^prn^_

Nursing Care
J A N I S ’S A L T E R N A T IV E
S E N IO R C A R E
14 Hour loving c a r* for senior
c lliit n t F a m ily environment
and home cooked m eal*
C a ll : ................................3*5 11*4
Lo vely p rive t* room tor elderly
lady. M u tt be am bulatory and
non smoker. 781 7905.

Secretarial Service
C U ST O M T Y P T H G ^ T iT o T tm a M
assignment*. C all: O .J. EnIxrprlse*. 1385)322-7492.

Tile
Cara mlc A Q u arry T ilt . M arb le
W o rk ....New Job*. Repairing, or
R tm o d elln g t...Licensed Builder
Free Estim a te*....... 14 Y r*. Exp.
_____________o o C a ll I31-71M* •

Tree Service
A ll Tree S#rv. + ...........Firewood
W oodsplller tor hirar
Call A lter 4 P .M ............. H I *08*
A L L E N S T R E E S E R V IC E
You’ve C alled the RetlNow Call the B e tti
PA Y LES5I
l i t 5388
EC H O LS T R E E S E R V IC E
Free E t lim a t e t l Low P rice s!
Lie... In*...Slum p Grinding,Too!
123 2219 day o r nit*
" L x l the P ro lx n ie n x ltd * lt” -

TV A Radio Repairs
Well Drilling
S A V E M O N E Y l I Shallow W e ll*
lor lawn, pool, garden, etc. I

BUIHSHALLOW WELLS

L i e .......Reasonable......

V

121 8857

�*

1?B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1985

What Is Quality Television?-Viewers Should Have Input
By Jo nn Hannucr
IJP I TV Reporter

The members tire being asked
to vote "v e s ." "n o " or “ maybe"
on whether 17 new and return­
ing shows should get the VQT
stamp ol quality. Shows that
garner a batch of maybes will be
proposed again In it later poll.
The new shows being consid­
ered are "Moonlighting" (AMC1.
" A m a z in g S t o r i e s " (N B C ).
“ Alfred H itchcock Presents'
(NBC). "Twilight /.one" (CMS).
"George Burns Comedy W eek"
(C B S ). "O u r F a m ily Honor*'
(A B C ). " S t i r Crazy" (C B S ).
"Charlie A Co." (CBS). "The
Equalizer" (CBSI. "H ell Town"
(N B C ). " L a d y B lu e " (A BC ).
"S p e n s e r: For H ire " (A BC ).
"Lim e Street" (ABC). "Golden
G irls" (NBC) and "M acG yver"
(ABC).
Krlurning series on the list
In c lu d e " N e w h a r t " (C B S I,
"Night Court" (NBC). "The Facts
of Life" (NBC) and "Highway to
Heaven" (NBC)

for it. especially since it precedes
‘St. Elsewhere.' which could use
a good lead-in."
She said she and Deen tried to
like Hometown.' but iust could
not gel Interested — and the
cancellation ot the show has not
elicited it groundswell of dismay
front their members.
"1 can't name a new drama
that I feel the same way about a s
'Cagney X La cey.'" she said
"The only one we have gotten a
lot of mail about is 'Spenser. Pot
Hire.' and It's all from Boston
(where the show is filmed) We
have to wall until we hear from
the people In Nebraska, who will
bo more objective.'
The VQ T poll takers have been
more than generous In placing
some shows on their list ol
possible quality offerings
"W e aren't just two women
from Michigan and Texas saying
what we think." Swanson said
"W ho are we to decide which
shows should be on the poll? We
thought the membership should
have the opportunity to s,i\ him
they feel aiiout all the shows
Weil, not all There were some
we did reluse to put on. I hope
we didn i leave oil any good
ones."
Die co-founders ol VQT ol

N EW V OHK ( U P I ) —
I. v it v ImkI v ts in favor of quality
u'lt visiou — It’s like being for
motherhood or against maneating sharks — but who decides
which shows are high quality?
rite viewers who care about
quality should have input into
decision-making, according to
Viewers for Quality Television,
which currently is [tolling its
members on what series to add
to the original eight — "T h e
Coshv S h o w ." "C a g n e y &amp;
l.aeey." "Kate
Allle." "St.
E ls e w h e re ." " F a m ily T ie s ."
"Cheers," "H ill Street Hines"
and "M iam i V ice" — nn its list of
shows worth lighting for.
VQT — started by Dorothy
Swanson in Hillsdale. Mich, and
Donna Dccu in Plano. Texas,
w h en i h e ir fa v o rite show s
became endangered species —
d o e s not try to force any shows
oil the air Instead, it exists to
"I would be very surprised it
defend series its member believe
'The Golden Girls' did not make
ha\ t real value.
VQT. which will he a year old
it." Swanson said in an in­
terview. “ 1would he stunned if it
in Decem ber, cu rre n tly has
almost 1.300 members, about
did not — it has my vote I was
hoping for more from Hell
hall ol them from Pennsylvania.
Town.' but it seems so contrived
Texas. California. Michigan and
New York
til times. I still have high hopes

The Other Side Of The Desk
By Vernon Scott
U PI Hollywood Reporter
HOLLYW OOD (LTD - Major
mnvii st.irs [lick and choose.
Every other actor must audition.
Wit li sweaty palms, heart on
sleevi and anxious eves the
supplicant sinks onto a chair in a
producer's or easting director s
otlii e and si IIs himself
11 is always a buyer s market.
The actor or actress is judged
on a p p e a ra n c e and talent
Wardrobe and hairdo count. So
does assurance and poise, a
veneer that veils a combination
ol desperation, anxiety and. not
infrequently sheer terror
1lie conlroniation is a pagan
rite that occurs with tin* regular­
ity ol .i metronome in the lives of
all but Ilu biggest stars Each
time tlit- "reading” ends with a
Thank you we ll Ire in touch.”
More than 90 percent ol the
time that Is the last the acini

2

■

tlP L A Z A

hear*of'the meeting.
For the most part these en­
counters are a demeaning ordeal
for the actor, as can be attested
by Ja m e s Keach. who has
participated in hundreds ol such
meetings
Now. however. Keach Ison tin
other side of the desk as a
producer whose two-hour I
movie. "A W inner Never QuitI'he Pete Gray Sto ry." will In
broadcast by ABC Get .30.
Keach. who recently starred
with Goldfe Hawn in "Firs! N
Goal." has become a producer as
a means ol reaching his ultimate
destination — directing. The
painful exert ise ol Interviewing
iellow actors look Us loll
"It's a terrible ordeal lor every
actor." Keach said. "Y o u r heart
is up lor auction over a few

ONLY I I I UT

i i .io tn t-44
HE MAN SHERA SAT. 10:30-12:30
SEOin Of IWOAO SUB. 12:30

T W lN lI

/ ? **&amp; ** 2

-

SPICUL SCHOOL
■ HOLIDAY MATINEE

1 ^ 1 ? ! SHOW ”

I

ZBJJ tu rn o u t • 0W1H SAHfOtO

■ F ill.-SA T.-SU N .2 :1 5 ONLY

m

I ft Floyd T h e a tre s |

■ The m o vie rhor
■ will m o ke the
■
w h o le fomtly
■
Core-o-Lor.
(

PIAZA rwiN

!? ? /b07

_____ WTUMI
•«
1D

___

M 0 * * IS

[MiCHneV ' f o x i p t t - W t t ' S

in o iH pkPVlVTl/P?
* vc «i

5h e

MOVIE

r

CHUCK NORRIS

-

too

INVASION U . S . A . ;
M i s s i n g its a c t i o n ?

words. Your sell-esteem is up lor
grabs You see so many come
through ihe door in need oi a (oh
and von only have a very lew
jo b s to give
"Most ol ihe time acting has
nothing to do with getting the
job. Agents send their clients lot
roles knowing they are absolute
Iv wrong lor the parts, especially
m television
"W h en yon sav no' it's not
■cause he oi she js a had actor
hut because that person is the
wrong actor And it's not |usi the
I duecr or direco
who is
t
\lng the choice. T* network
&lt;i siudin dem ands.
oval
" I hev want mojoi stats Fail­
ing ih.o ihev u &gt;
■ people u uh
high i V Qs. litgi vis tidily or
recognilion value even though
another actor m.iv In better
qualified or licit* t suited lor a
part
Keach was lott ed to turn aw.n
dozens of hopelui actors lot
every one he hired. He says tin
important thing I s how a pro
duecr says "n o ."
" 'N o ' can m ean a lot oi
tilings." he explained "Yon try
in imply that h means the
performer isn't going to work
this time or that he or she
simpiv isn't t ight lor the role
"And I think every producer
ought lu have the decency to call
and thank the atitst tor i outing
in for i he interview
"E v e r y court* sy should In
extended the actoi during lus
interview There's nothing wntse
than a tapping toot during an
audition Disgusting. ( &gt;r taking a
telephone call "

WEDNESDAY

6:00
t) M

o

’ ONEWS

u (351JEFFEH SO N S
IT
(101 U A CN EIL I LEHREFt
NEWSMOUA
CP |8l HAPPY DAYS AQAIN

6:05
U ANDY GRIFFITH

6:30

U
CAROL
FRIENDS

BURN ETT

J ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
ntpf. f'A Aith Robert Blake
S O P RICE IS RIGHT
i O W H EEL OF FORTUNE
u (35) BENSON
03(8) ALL IN THE FAMILY

7:35

8:00
111 (35)JETSONS
© (8) HEATHCLIFF

7:35

8:00

8:05
6:30
11 (35) FLINTSTONES
© (1 0 ) MISTER ROGERS (R)
© (B ) FAT ALBERT

8 ’35
9:00

9:05

13 BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS

9:30
4 LOVE CONNECTION
’ a JOKER S WILD
© (B ) MY THREE SONS

9:35
4 YOUR NUMBER SUP
1 O HOUR MAGAZINE
y a BARNABYJONES
II (35) BIG VALLEY
© (1 0 ) ELECTRIC COMPANY | R)
© (B) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

5 O W KR P IN CINCINNATI
T O ABC NEWS NIQHTLINE
•11 (35) HAWAII FIVE-0
© |8 ) TWILIGHT ZONE

12:00

0 &lt; 4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
© (10)3-3-1 CONTACT p
© (B ) ODD COUPLE
O
5
y
H
©
ffi

Ford William Holden

5:00
0
4 NEWLYWED GAME (TUE.
THU, FRI|
5 Q M 'A 'S 'H
&gt; 0 HEADLINE CHASERS
11 (35) WHAT’S HAPPENINQII
© (10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
© (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
© (B ) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

0

4 SCRABBLE
y O ALL-STAR BLITZ
© (10) FLORIDASTYLE
© (B) ALL ABOUT US (TUE-FRI)

5:05
1} LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

AFTERNOON

5:30
O
4 PEOPLE'S COURT (TUE.
THU. FRI)
1 O y O new s
n (35) ALICE
© 110) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
© (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
© IB) MORK AND MINDY

12:00

5:30

0

4 MIDDAY
V O (D O HEWS
11 (35) BEWrTCHED
© I 10) NOVA (THU)
© (10) WONDERWORKS (FRI)
© (8) INDAY SPECIAL: BUND
SUNDAY (MON)
© (B) IT'S A GREAT LIFE (TUE-

6:00

0 4 NBC NEWS
1 O CBS EARLY MORNING
news
r O EYEWITNESS OAYBAEAK
1J (35| GOOD DAYI

company

13 BRADY BUNCH

11:30

THURSDAY L

O 4 3 S COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
11 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

spends the

4:35

11:00

' 4 i WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O PRICE IS RIGHT
O THREE’S A CROWD (R)
(35) DALLAS
(10) WE’RE COOKING NOW
(8| INDAV NEWS (TUE-FRI)

d ' O THE SAINT
II (35) NEWS
t i BOB NEWHART (TUE, THU)

9:00

3 a THREE’S COMPANY
11 (35) TRANSFORMERS
© (f) SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF
POWER (MON. WED-FR1)

10:30

(JD o
COMEDY BREAK WITH
MACK AND JAMIE
© (B ) MOVIE Teias |194 1|Glenn

( I i HELL TOWN / PLA YO FFS A
m.Ttaii, impaired resident |Tony
| ;
it 51 Domin&lt; s is accused
• i*iac* . a woman Robert Blake
tai.
Mar be pre-empted (Or a
.e .fiih Ac P lafod game it neces-

4:30

13 MOVIE

T.J. HOOKER Hookey and

5:00

4:05
13 FLINTSTONES

10:05

Romano comb Ihe city in search ot
a killer who leaves a copy ol the
Bibleat each murder site |Rj

MORNING

0 4 AMERICA (TUE. THU. FRI)
S O Di FFRENT STROKES
y OM ERV GRIFFIN
II (35) THUNOERCATS Q
© (10) SESAME STREET |R )g
© |B| HE-MAN AND MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE (MON. WIO-FRI)

0

11:30

8:05

4:00

10:00

I TONK3HT Host Johnny Carson Scheduled David Brenner

13 MOVIE Destry (19551 Audie
M j f 'J i, Mari Blanchard Afier be•T i j ir.i* j,irget of ridicule for ref|.' -r '3 f ' arry a gun a new deputy
* rid[-he must pro#e himself

11 (35| JAYCE AND THE
WHEELED WARRIORS
© (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
© (B )M A S .K .

13 I LOVE LUCY

Q

'

3:30

0

O 4 i ) Q l O NEWS
It (35) ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE
© (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
© (B ) NIGHT GALLERY

CL 18) MONTREUX GOLDEN R O SE
PO P FESTIVAL In this 19B5 concert
m Montreua Srv-tjerland featured
perl -me*s .nclude Men At Work.
Pointer Sislers Billy Ocean Kenny
Loggms
Culture Club
R EO
^reedeaqun and others

3:05

13 HAZEL

11:00

O

3:00
0
4) BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
(MON. WED)
O
4 SANTA BARBARA (TUE,
THU. FRI)
) O GUIDING LIGHT
y O GENERAL HOSPITAL
II (35) SCOOBY DOO
© (1 0 ) FLORIDASTYLE
© (B) INSPECTOR QAOGET

0 4 DIVORCE COURT
i O DONAHUE
3 O TIC TAC DOUGH
It (35|WALTONS
© 110)SESAME STREET |R|Q
©(B)BRADY BUNCH

It (35) BOB NEWHART

(13

2:35
13 WOMANWATCH (FRI)

13 BEWITCHED

10:30

C l j HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN /
PLA YO FFS Mark and Jonathan try
* *i-mtjii,e a financially ailing mi­
nor -ague baseball learn iMay be
pre-empted tor a seyenlh AL
PLiyoM game it necessary I rj
5 O STIR CRAZY While in Penns.lyinia Hairy discovers that his
t**n brother Dciug owe* a lot ot
money !c some maior-ieague gamt *er’ O INSIDERS To&gt; declares war
r s ii.r i enme Ahen he s wounded
■n i gang ear shootout :g
11 (35| HART TO HART
03 (10) THE BRAIN The tirst in an
eight-part senes on the remark»
iM» three-pound machine uses
mefographs computer animation
r-d peep'e m action to demon•Jrare ho* the tram functions (R)

2:30
1 O CAPITOL
11 (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
© (10) STORMWATCH (THU)
© (10) MAGIC OF WATERCOL*
ORS(FRI)

13 I DREAM OF JEANNIE

13 MOVIE Dead Heat On A MerryGo-Round ( la t y i James Coburn.
Camilla Sparv Alter his prison
parole a con artist gets right back
to work planning an airport bank
robbery to occur simultaneously
with the arrival ol a Russian digni­
tary

13 SANFORDANO SON

2:00
0 4 ANOTHER WORLD
y a ONE LIFE TO LIVE
II (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
© (101 WORLD CHESS CHAMPI­
ONSHIP (THU)
© (10) PAINTING WITH ILONA
(FRI)

Hi FLINTSTONES

f0:05

O

8-Piece Chicken B ox
and 4 Biscuits

7:30
It (35) CHALLENGE OF THE
OOBOTS
© (10) SESAME STREET |R )g
f f i (8) ROBOTECH

03(B) ROCKFORD FILES

7:30

1:30
1 *1 O AS THE WORkO TURNS
M (351QOMER PYLE
© (10) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

© (1 0 ) A M WEATHER

01 senior Senate Appropriations
Commi'lee member Jake Garn |RUtah) aboard the space shuttle is
traced Irom pre-launch training
through Ihe actual mission

13 MARY TYLER MOORE

1:05
13 MOVIE

7:15

n (35) INDEPENDENT NEWS
© (10) SPACE SENATOR. ONE­
WAY JAKE The controversial flight

7:05

Charlie 4

(I (35)01 JOE
© (1 0 ) FARM DAY
© (8) VOLTRON, DEFENDER OF
THE UNIVERSE

thal his new Cape Cod home is
haunted Turner tries 10 save the
Me ol Craig s prematurely born
granddaughter (May be pre-empt­
ed lor a seventh AL PlayOtl game it
necessary I
5 O EQUALIZER When a police­
woman learns about her partner s
illegal activities she turns to Ihe
Equalirer lor help in bunging the ro­
gue cop to lustice
J [ ) O HOTEL A former convictturned-author unveils his prison
novel at the St Gregory. Dave
poses as a young woman s fiance
Anthony Geary and Kate Vernon
guest star

AND

1:00

7:00

0
4
ST. ELSEWHERE /
PLAYOFFS Caldwell is convinced

12:30
0 4i SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
5 O YOUNG AND THE REST­
LESS
y1Q LOVING
II (35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
© (9) WHAT'S HOT1 WHAPS
NOT? (TUE-FRI)
0 ( 4 1DAYS OF OUR LIVES
y a ALL MY CHILOREN
II |35) DICK VAN DYKE
© (1 0) MOVIE (THU)
© (10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN
(FRI)
© (B ) MOVIE

O ' * today
(3 0 CBS MORNING NEWS
y O GOOD MORNING AMERICA

10:00

7:00

O

6:45
y O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
© (101AM WEATHER

Korman Valerie Pernne) have their
minds set on impressing Iheir
daughlei s future in laws

Q 4 *100,000 PYRAMID
Y O P M MAGAZINE A Te.as
safety (Mining center *or pilots and
' ' gm attendants
bicycle-racing
Champ Greg Lernond
1 O JEO PARD Y
U (35) BARNEY M ILLER
CD( 10) W O ND ERW O RKS Oespde a
recall notice from the faclory. Kon•ad *s perfectly happy with the unsuitable environment created by
his fess-than-perfect mother and
hr* fr.ends *Parf 2 ot 2)
CD (81 CARSON S COMEDY C LA S­
SICS

5

0 4 NEWS
1 O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
i O ABC’S WORLD NEWS THIS
MORNING Q
II (35) TOM AND JERRY
I t FUNTIME
© (B ) SUPERFRIENDS

.5 O GEORGE BURNS COMEDY
WEEK A married couple (Harvey

6:35

12:05
13 PERRY MASON

6:30

9:30

0
- NBC NEW S
S a C B S N EW S
&gt; O ABC N EW S 3
P (35! TOO C LO SE FOR COMFORT Aftiv
disagreement »ith
K«*FVy j.Kfc «» and Sara
lo a
fpni*mn»rv('
CD(6) R O SE PETAL PLA C E II Real
*
AnrmaTPd Mof.ice Fi&gt; and
N.1Sl"U» y
.1 dark cloud Over the
QtVrten *hen th»»* try to rum Rose
P ela1and Sweet Violet s friendship,
vo,ce Mane Osmond

FRI)

13 NEWS
© (B ) BATMAN (TUE-FRI)

night on the Richmonds' sola alter
being kicked out ol hit own home
by his angry wile CJ
J . O DYNASTY Krystle and Sam ­
my Jo square oil in New York. Jelt
Colby embaiks on a |0umey to Cali­
fornia that will change his life. Jason
Colby eontronis Ale*iS ."3
U (35) QUINCY
CD (10) SKIN HORSE Nabil Shaban
narrates this look al ihe severely
disabled person s continuing need
lor normal human warmth. Body
flotim moderates a follow-up dis­
cussion y

_

EVENING

Cha-n- s t'iend Jim

5:35
12 BEVEFLY HILLBILLIES

T IP TOP...HOME OF Q UALITY FOODS AND M EA T S
SUNNYLAND
WHOLE

FRESH

W H O LE
FR Y E R S

LB

raRK
piIG
n EET

PORK
t
f
CHOPS
NEHI or R.C COLA

.99
$159
79
Xi.

DELICIOUS
APPLES

n
lb L

0
9 0

i SlILT
• RK
* £IAC N

L . 1 . 0 0

QQC
v% l

0

J

Si

ibs

0

1

M. BBANDING IRON

NECK
BONES

r
i*. U

$1

PORK

u .

CIHICKEN
EIACKS

tm o o

SMOKED

An,

FAIL

FIL0RIDA PREMIUM

UWR CHOtCC KEF

LB. (AG K 0

CHITTERLINGS I

99 *. * 5.99

99

CHUCK
%s STEAK

10 L t. PAIL PORK

5 U S . k UP

*

ASSORTED

3

SPARE
RIBS

OX
T A IL

S M O K ED
PICNICS

* „

BOTTLES

PORK

USOA CHOICE BEEF

59
&amp; -16 0 Z .

v

-192-12.

TO N IG H T S TV

let'.

$4-99

iheir Judgments because they
are human. A 'quality' show Is a
true depletion of life.”
For more informal ion at VQT.
write to Dorothv Swanson. 28
Westwood Dr.. Hillsdale. Mich.

show colors life In shades of
gray. They tell us there are no
simple answers to real problems.
We. or the charaelers. are asked
to make a choice. Judgment is
required. Sometimes our favorite
characters are proven wrong tn

lered their own definition of
qualify:
"It goes beyond 'good.' Unlike
merely 'good' shows, in which
problem s are formulated in
black and while, good and bad.
honest and dishonest, a quality

9

77

IAC N
* ‘ 2 0Z. PACKAGE

USOA CHOICE BEEF

QQt

f

URKEY
COe
NECK
O A ♦ CHUCK
9Q J
VINGS
lb D O
BONES
i*. Z j
ROAST u l . Z o '
W
Ru
ITN
A
C
EW
NM
UMMALOt
CNALIKECHATOKt
HI K
ITACL
0%|* - c
a
in
ru
A/te
MHC
AAC
TOMATOES...... jojc-Zr * CORN .................Z r
TUI RKEY......... u.f^hm
019 N
llwauKII
ee
SHORTENING . uh c- *
Ml IRGMINE .......... / * l
BEER........A
lIOi.C
m*
HtRiiau su.i*i
g\f
SUGAR WITH M
O FUBCIUlf «rw^C| fMHT PUNCH.........w M i l
c BRSS............... ,..w / *

s

Cit tot 1 at a ll p a r tic ip a tin g B n jang lcs re s ta u ra n ts

1
9

100

URIRIC

A

PAPER TOWELS

* -* ...*

WAVY MITT

DETERGENT.,

mW
a jo

l t

Z /

1 0
1.29
59
chic

l | TOILET TISSUE
I w a BBUH
« n lA M E E M S

4 m f ma7 9 C w l IITE POTATOES........
SI

W a

.i* . * 1 . 1

.

m

h

iu

q a

I i v

9

BANANAS..............

1
1

1 1 0 0 W « tt 1 3 th S t . l

O FFER E X P IR E S OCTOBER 23. 1985

«p l m v
*

F

Sanford

T I P - T O P
SUPERMARKf 1

YOU CAN TASTE REAL COOKING IN EVERY BITE

.4

*» ** y

V
-

O a f if ir l

.09
3
289
99
4 *1

Jofw ctl Savings!

FOOD STAMPS WELCOME
FVU U M OF WK PBOOUCIS

f
i

in

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO UNIT QUANimt
PRICES GOOD
FROM
THURS. 10-17 . WED. 10-23

\
.

c

9

l‘

I C

�October Seafest

Evening Herald — Wednesday, Oct. 14, I t u

ROCK SHRIMP IN
SOUR CREAM
1 pound cooked, peeled, dcvetned rock shrimp, fresh or
frozen
1 can (4Vb ounces) sliced
ia-t mushrooms, drained
2 tablespoons chopped green
onions
2 tablespoons margarine or
butter, melted
I tablespoon all-purpose flour
1 can (10% ounces) condensed
cream of shrimp soup
1 cup sour cream
•4 teaspoon white pepper
Patty shells or toast points
Thaw rock shrimp If frozen.
Saute mushrooms and onions in
margarine until tender but not
brown. Blend In flour. Add soup;
cook over medium heat until
thickened, stirring constantly.
Add shrimp, sour cream and
pepper. Heat thoroughly, stirring
occasionally. Serve In patty
shells or on toast points. Makes 6
servings.
EAST FLOUNDER FILLETS
2 pounds skinless flounder
fillets or other skinless fish
fillets, fresh or frozen
2 tablespoons grated onion
\Vt teaspoons salt
'4 teaspoon pepper
2 large tomatocH. cut into
small pieces
V* cup melted margarine or
butter
1 cup shredded Swiss cheese
Thaw fish If frozen. Place fish
In a single layer on a wellgreased bake-and serve platter,
16x10 Inches. Sprinkle fish with
onion, salt and pepper. Cover
fish with tomatoes. Pour marga­
rine over tomatoes. Broil about
four Inches from source of heal
10-12 minutes or until fish flakes
easily when tested with a fork.
Remove from heat; sprinkle with
cheese. Broil 2-3 minutes longer
or until cheese melts. Makes 6
servings.
STUFFED CLAMS
24 clams, in the shell
V4 cup bread crumbs
Vi c u p f i n e l y c h o p p e d
r
mushrooms
2 slices bacon, finely chopped
Vi teaspoon minced parsley
Vi teaspoon pepper
Margarine
Rinse unopened clams under
cold running water to remove
any foreign particles. Shuck
clams, reserving half of the
shells. Scrub shells. Place shells
In boiling water; boll 2 minutes.
Remove shells from boiling
water; drain. Chop the clams.
Combine chopped clams with
bread crum bs, mushrooms,
bacon and parsley. Season with
pepper. Fill reserved clam shells
with clam mixture; dot with
margarine. Bake at 350°F.. 15
minutes or until top Is browned.
Makes six servings.
BROILED BHEEPSHEAD
WITH TANDY OLAZE
2 pounds sheepshead fillets or
other fish fillets, fresh or frozen
Vi cup margarine or butter,
melted
Vi cup catsup
Vi cup frozen lemonade con­
centrate. thawed
1 tablespoon prepared
mustard
Vi teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon garlic salt
1 large bay leaf, crushed
Thaw fish If frozen. Cut fish
Into serving-size portions. Ar­
range fish in a shallow dish.
Combine remaining Ingredients
and pour over fish. Turn fish to
coat evenly. Marinate In refriger­
ator for 30 minutes. Remove fish
andplace on a well-greased broil­
er pan, approximately 13x10
inches, reserving marinade.
Broil approximately 4 Inches
from source of heat for 4-5
minutes. Turn fish carefully:
baste with marinade. Broil 4-5
minutes longer or until fish
flakes easily when tested with a
fork. Makes 6 servings.
SCALLOPS IN CHEESE
M U S H R O O M S A U C E ON
ALMOND RICE
1 pound calico or bay scallops,
fresh or frozen
Vi cup water
Vi cup dry white wine
Vi cup margarine or butter,
melted
Vi cup chopped green onions
Vi p o u n d s m a l l f r e s h
mushrooms
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1cup half-and-half
% cup shredded Swiss cheese
1 tablespoon catsup
Vi teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon liquid hot pepper
sauce
2' t a b l e s p o o n s c o a r s e l y
chopped pimento
Almond Rice (recipe follows)
Thaw scallops If frozen. Cut

m

large scallops In half. Combine
water, wine and scallops In
saucepan. Bring lo the boiling
point; reduce heat and simmer
3-4 minutes, depending on the
size of the scallops. Drain
senllnps, reserving liquid. Keep
scallops warm. Pour liquid Into
measuring cup and add enough
water to equal I cup. In saucepan, s au t e o n i o n s and
mushrooms In margarine until
tender but not brown, stirring
frequently. Blend in flour. Add
reserved liquid and half-and-

ms

Sanford, FI.—1C

K.

'• *&lt;

Florida Fish And Shellfish
Star During Seafood Month
October Is Seafood Month In
Florida. The following recipes
have been kitchen-tested by the
■B u r e a u of M a r k e t i n g and
Extension Services of the Florida
D epartm ent of N atural R e ­
sources, St. Petersburg.

Herald Advertiser — Thursday, Ocf. 17,

:h

t
.-i,

V v
* &lt;

half; cook over moderate heat
until thickened, stirring con­
stantly. Stir in cheese, catsup,
salt and liquid hot pepper sauce;
heat. Fold In scallops and pinilenlo; heat through. Serve over
Almond Rice. Makes 6 servings.

&amp;

GLORIFRIED FISH

#

4k

2 pounds rcdrish fillets or
other thick fish fillets, fresh or
frozen
1 pint ( 16 ounces) sour cream
6 tablespoons dehydrated
chopped chives

G lo rifie d F lih is coated w ith biscuit m ix and sour c re a m .

See SEAFOOD. 2C

October is
Pubiix

The season’s best awaits you at Pubiix. Celebrate
Oktoberfest all month long with a harvest of
festive, hearty foods.

THIS AD
EFFECTIVE:
THURS.,
OCT. 17
THRU
W ED.,
OCT. 2 3 ,
1 0 8 5 . ..

•'ft,
djii

IPs the little things that
m ake the d ifference at Pubiix.

I t o n ly makes sense that the best superm arket has the best beef.

P ubiix B e e f, G o v ' t . I n s p e c t e d B o n e le s s

/ P u b i i x B e e f, G o v ' t . I n s p e c t e d B o n e le s s

Chuck
Roast

rSeet

p er lb.

1 3 7
Pubiix Beef, Gov’t.*
Inspected Bondses

^ P u b i i x B e e t, G o v ’ t ^ N
I n s p e c t e d B o n e le s s

T o p S ir lo in

S h o u ld e r
Roast

"BeeT

p er lb.

p e r lb.

$1 4 7

. Beef for

'J
-;

I

tew
per lb.

a

,

m

’ -..

Picnic
.. , me

PUBLIX RESERVES THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES SOLO

per lb.

|w*|

3

_
Fresh

Grouper Fillets ... ft.' *5 49
Fresh

Pollock F ille ts ...... ft' *2 ”

O .n U ti B i h a r ,
R . M r v * . t h . Right lo
Limit O u . n t ili. t Sold

Virginia Capes

Bey S callops........ pi!?: *3 69

f

C ream y. S p i c y ^
G reat T a s tin g . . .

Pum pkin
Pie
Plain or Seeded,
Sliced or IJnsllced

Italian
Bread

e a c h fo r

$ ■ |4 9
y

each loaf

Great Tastingl

Sm all S h rim p ....... t" *3 ”

leatl
Lykes Mild or Old Fashion

Corned B e e f........ r

#179

Delicious Tasting!

Macaroni S alad.... ft' 89®
Pineapple or
Mince P ie ................ "V * 2 49
Sandwich Sliced Deli

Armour Star M aat or B e e f..

Smokey Sharp

Hot D o g .................

'1 «

Jimmy Dean Mild, Hot or Sage

Pork S au sag e......

p*'S;

*1 "

pp*a

79®

Cheddar C h eese.. V *1°®
Domestic Big Eye

Swiss C h eese...... V

Sunnyland Sliced

Ready-To-Eat!

Louis Rich

Fresh Made

99®

Cooked H a m ........ pi.?: s3 aB Beef Stroganoff .. ft.' 94 89
Hormel
Macaroni A
Frank’N S tu ff....... K: M 99 C h e e s e ................... ft' »2°9
Clam C how der .... ft. * 1 "

H o r m e l C u re 8 1
or C u r e m a s t e r

Boneless
Ham

Save 60s, A Delicious

NewBekeryttem...

Banana Bran
M uffins.............

Iced With Creamy Chocolate...

Golden Loaf

Plain or Egg

Hums Abovs Awhtotu at uUPuMx
•torus S Punish Sukurius.

Salam i.................... V: 69®

Pum pernickel
B re a d .....................

'

Choooo RaMn
Coffoo C a k ..........M "

Round C a k ..........T M "

Zesty Flavored Reg. or Beef

S llc d B acon........ Ji.'!: *1 “

Swift Premium or Lazy Maple

Af

Save 60$, Osttcious Tasting...

Pepper L o a f......... ft. 89®

Fresh Deli*Baked

Turkey F ra n ks .... pig.'79®

Sweet Dough Filled With
plump Retains ft Cheese

Tasty Honey Loaf or

per lb.

E cla irs ................... 2 «» *1
Bagels.................6 «« 9 0 °
Itsms Abovt Available at all PubUi Storas
with in-Stors Bakarlaa Only.

Pubiix

�Herald Advertiser — Thursday, Oct. 17, 1985

5C— Evening Herald — Wednesday, Oct. 14, 1985

...Seafood
Continued From 1C
1 teaspoon salt
1i teaspoon pepper
2 cups biscuit mix
Vegetable oil for frying
Paprika (garnish)
Thaw fish If frozen. Cut fish
Into scrving-sizc portions. Com­
bine sour cream, chives, salt and
pepper: mix until well-blended.
Refrigerate for approximately 30
minutes. Reserving 6 tables­
poons sour cream mixture for
garnish, dip fish Into sour cream
mixture then coal with biscuit
mlxt repeat. Place fish In a heavy
frypan which contains about
W inch oil. hot but not smoking.
Fry at moderate heat 5 to 7
minutes longer or until fish
flakes easily when tested with a
fork. Drain fish on absorbent
paper. Garnish each serving
with one tablespoon sour cream
mixture; sprinkle with paprika.
Makes 6 servings.
OYSTER MACARONI
CHEESE BAKE
I can (15*4 ounces) oysters,
fresh or frozen
4 slices bacon
*4 cup chopped green pepper
*4 cup sliced green onions
1 can 111 ounces) condensed
Cheddar cheese soup
l *4 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoons prepared mustard
3 cups uncooked seashell
macaroni
2 tablespoons diced piinicnto
1 cup grated Cheddar cheese,
divided
Thaw oysters if frozen. Drain
oysters. Remove any remaining
shell particles. In a 10-inch
saucepan, fry bacon until crisp.
Reserving baron drippings, re­
move bacon to absorbent paper:
cool. Crumble bacon; set aside.
Cook macaroni according (o
package directions: drain. Add
green pepper and onions to
reserved bacon drippings; cook
until vegetables are tender but
not brown. Stir in soup, salt and
mustard: mix well Remove from
heat. Add cooked macaroni,
crumbled bacon, oysters and
plmiento; mix well Spoon
ni
the mixture into a shallow.
2-quart baking dish. Sprinkle
with *4 of the cheese. Repeal,
using remaining ingredients.
Cover tightly. Bake at 350°F .
for 15 minutes. Uncover: con­
tinue baking until mixture is hot
and bubbly. 15-20 minutes.
Makes 4 servings.
STIR-FRY FISH HASH
2 pounds skinless mullet fillets
or other skinless fish fillets, fresh
or frozen
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 tablespoons dry sherry
14 teaspoon sugar
'4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
*4 teaspoon ground ginger
*4 cup vegetable oil
1 cup cashew nuts
4 cups sliced, unpeeled zuc­
chini
4 cups sliced fresh mushrooms
4 cups diagonally sliced
Chinese cabbage
2 cups green onions, cut into
3Inch pieces
'-j teaspoon salt
Thaw fish if frozen. Cut fish
into 2-inch cubes. Combine soy
sauce, sherry, sugar, cayenne
pepper and ground ginger in a
l 1a-quart mixing bowl; mix well.
Add fish: stir well. Marinate in
refrigerator lor 15 minutes, stir­
ring occasionally. In a 12-Inch
frypan or wok. heat oil over
medium-high heat. Add ca­
shews: cook about 3 minutes or
until lightly browned, stirring
constantly. Remove cashews
with slotted spoon: drain on
absorbent paper. Add zucchini,
mushrooms, cabbage, green
onions and salt to remaining oil:
cook until vegetables are crisptender. about 5 minutes. Re­
move vegetables from frypan
witli slotted spoon and place in a
IW quart bowl: set aside. Add
fish to frypan. reduce heat:
cover. Cook fish over low heat
8-10 minutes or until fish flakes
easily when tested with a fork.
Add cashews and cooked vege­
tables to fish in frypan. Stir
carefully. Heat 1 to 2 minutes,
before serving. Serve immediate­
ly. Makes 6 servings.
SHRIMP SALAD
1 pound cooked, peeled, devclncd shrimp, fresh or frozen
1Vi cups cooked seashell mac­
aroni
1 cup finely chopped celery
2 hard-cooked eggs, peeled
and chopped
Vi cup finely chopped green
pepper
'4 cup mayonnaise or salad
dressing
3 tablespoons chopped sweet
pickle or sweet pickle relish
1 tablespoon grated onion
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
1 teaspoon salt
Vfc teaspoon pepper
Salad greens
Thaw shrimp If frozen. Cut
large shrimp In half. Combine all
Ingredients, except salad greens;
chill. Serve on salad greens.
Makes 6 servings.
FLORIDA DILLY LOBSTER
pound cooked spiny lobster
meat, fresh of frozen
Vi cup margarine or butter,
melted
Vi cup all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon salt
1» teaspoon while pepper
2*4 cups milk
1 tablespoon dry white wine
2 teaspoons lemon Juice
r 4 teaspoon dill weed
l can (4*4 ounces) sliced
mushrooms, drained
1 package (10 ounces) frozen
mixed vegetables
G buttered, toasted English
muffins
Parsley sprigs (garnish)
Thaw lobster meat If frozen.
Cut Into slices *4 thick. Cook
frozen vegetables according to
package directions: drain. Melt
margarine in a medium-size
saucepan: blend In flour, salt
and pepper. Gradually add milk:
cook until thickened, stirring
constantly. Stir in wine, lemon
Ju ic e

a n d

dill

w e e d .

A d d

mushrooms, vegetables and
lobster: heat. Serve on English
muffins. Garnish each serving
with a parsley sprig. Makes 6
servings.

San lord, FI.

Take A Touch
Warm days si 111 abound and
that means there is plenty of
time left to enjoy the picnic
season. Whether you choose a
hike in the woods, a day at the
beach, or a football tailgating
party, your family and friends
will want to indulge in this
national pastime for as long as
the weather allows.
Here's a delicious picnic Idea.
Scandla Pasta Peppers, that
transforms ordinary green or red
peppers into a mouth-watering
treat at a moments notice. Sim ­
ply combine cold pasta with
assorted fresh produce, zesty
Norway sardines, condiments
and seasonings: stuff Into
hollowed-out peppers, and
you've got a portable — and
satisfying — meal-ln-nne that's
perfect picnic fare.
Your family and friends will

O f N o rw a y

love the gorgeous presentation
and great taste of Scandla Pasta
Peppers. Belter yet. because the
recipe combines plenty of fresh
vegetables including peppers,
carrots and green onions with
protein-packed Norway sardines,
they’ll enjoy good nutrition with
every bite.
It’s nice to know. loo. that a
3-ounce serving of Norway
sardines provides 25 to 30 percent of the U.S. RDA for calcium
and 100 percent of the RDA for
vitamin D — two nutrients vital
to the bodyh for the continued
strength of bones throughout
life. And with only 260 calories
per can. they're a good nutri­
tional bet.
Keep a supply of convenient
Norway sardines on your pantry
shelf for other picnic treats as
well. Pair sardines with thick

slices of French brad, cheese and
onion nnd you have a hearty,
Nordic sandwich tradition. Or,
tuck a tin of sardines in your
picnic basket for delicious eating
straight from the can or with
crackers or frseh fruit at the
park. Whichever way you serve
them, nothing's more conve­
nient — or nutritious than
Norway sardines.

SCANDIA PASTA PEPPERS
3 cups cooked, drained and
cooled small seashell pasta
1 cup shredded carrots
&gt;4 cup sliced green onions
*4 cup mayonnaise
1*4 tablespoons DIJon-slyle
mustard
1*4 lablesjioons lemon Juice
*4 teaspoon pepper
2 cans (344 ounces each)
Norway sardines in oil. drained

Salt, to taste
4 large green or red bell
peppers
In large bowl combine pasta,
carrots and onions. In small
bowl mix mayonnaise, mustard
lemon Juice and pepper: stir Intu
pasta mixture. Add sardines;
toss. Gently mix in salt. Slice
tops off peppers: reserve tops.
Remove seeds and membranes
from peppers. Fill each with
sardine m ixture, equally
divided, packing lightly. Replace
lops and wrap each pepper
snugly In plastic wrap. Chill.
Makes 4 servings.
For more delicious recipes
featuring Norway surdities, send
a business sized, self-addressed,
stumped envelope to: "Norway
Sardines Dept C " 55 Union
S t r e e t . San F r a n c i s c o . CA
S- illl.

is c o n s in
/ WW
l S

C h eese Bar
In
Indd ivid u ally- W rap p e d
C h eese Food

f

r»
Sliced
American
1-lb. pkg.

si 7 5
Potk, Highlands, O range,
Lake, Sem inole, O sceola Co.
Tab, Melio Yello, Cherry Coke,
Coke Classic or Reg. or Diet:
Caffeine Free Coke or

(O ctober is

Coca Cola
2-liter
bottle

Publix

$

4

I

09

Regular or Light
The season’s best awaits you at Publix. Celebrate
Oktoberfest all month long with a harvest of
festive, hearty foods.

THIS AD
EFFECTIVE:
THURS.,
O C T. 17
THRU

Budweiser Beer
12-pk. $ 4 6 9
12-oz. cans

(Limit 2 Pleat*. With Other
Purchase* of S7.50 or More.
Excluding all Tobacco Itama)

It's the little things that
make the difference at fhihlix.

W E D .,

O C T. 23,
1085...

Dairyl
Mrs. Filberts Golden Quarters

Large Breakfast Club White

B read . . . . 2

89*

Tatum’s Buttermilk

Biscuits................... pkg1'6 9 e
Frito Lay Reg., Hearty Seasoning
or Au Gratin Cheese

O’Grady’s
Potato C h ip s........7e\V * 1 19
Wise Puffed or Crunchy

Cheez D o o d le s ....

' I 09

Nabisco Reg. or Double Stuff

Oreo Crem e
S an d w ic h ............... T4' *1 ”
Keebler Reg. or Unsalted

Zesta S altines......'So/ M 19
Lager or Light, In 12-oz. Cans

Old Tap B e e r........ &amp; * 1 «

Margarine...............

PUBLIX

RESERVES
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES
SOLD

Parkay.................... E&amp; *155
Kraft Grated Parmesan

Cheese................... S t’ *2“
Velveeta.................

*349

Kraft Individually-Wrapped
Sliced Pimento or American

Granola D ipps..... 'C *1 79

Cheese Food......... M: $135

Wish-Bone Assorted

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Shredded
Cheese: Monterey Ja ck &amp; Cheddar,
Cheddar or

Salad D ressings..

8-o*.
bot.

79*

Heinz Fresh Cucumber

Sliced P ic k le s ....
W orcestershire
S auce.......... .........

99*
5 o i.
b o l.

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sharp
or New York Sharp

4

49*

V®

Publix Tangy

Apple
Sauce
50-oz. jar

3 $4

17-oz.
cans

1 19

$429

ICandyl
Richardson Pastel

Candy Mints........ ..

Starburst Sunshine or Fruit Chews

Early Peas................... 69 c

Cup

1.5-iit. $ 4 . 8 9
_______ bottle
■#

Corn

Green Beans........... 3 ss- *1 19

Green Giant Sliced or Whole

Sebastiani Wine

Light 'n Lively Lowfat or Small Curd

Green Giant

LeSueur Very Young Small

Chenln Blanc, Zinfandel,
White Zinfandel

G re e n G ian t W h o,le
le
K e rn e l or C re a m S ty le

Golden Corn............ 3 s i M 11
White Shoe
Peg C orn.................... ’S 63 *

Si-*359

A

Green Giant Niblets Whole Kernel or No Salt Niblets
Green Giant Kitchen Sliced, Cut or French Style

Cheddar Cheese... US: *1 25
Cottage Cheese . . . .

Sweet
is

Carlo Rossi
Wine

Mozzarella............. US: 61«

Heinz

$419

Burgundy, Rhine, Chablis,
Vin Rose, Light Chianti

Kraft Cheese Spread

Quaker Chocolate Chip,
Raisin/Almonds, Rocky Road
or Mint Chocolate

Green Giant
Very Young Tender

cans

59*

Kraft Light Spread

bag

79*

Candy..................... 89*

Green Giant

__________________,
IT

TT

I

M exicorn.................... sg«
Green Giant

It’S Halloween! Pea8* °n,ons.......- 163°
' °

1 1 C U 1 v

W

T

C

lIi

co la or Assorted Diet (In 12-oz. Cans)

Mushrooms................*■?;?'■99*
Green Giant Straw, Shiitake, Enoki or Abalone
Mushrooms.................*1 19

Shasta D rinks...........

Green Giant Cut

Reg. or Hot With Beans

Corned B e e f....................... &lt;&gt;,«gg«
Normal C hili...........
&lt;£»• 700
Chili
.......................................r . v 9 i «

Asparagus.................. T.;°'• 118
Green Giant 7-oz. Niblets Whole Kernel
or 8.5-oz. Cream Style

Golden C o rn .............. 3 r *1

upton Family Siza
Upton

Green Giant Buffet Size

Sweet Peas................ 3 v.z: * 1
Green Giant Kitchen Sliced
Green Beans...............3 * s M
• * * ' I » rlf-** .

9129

Libby

T'eal ,ouf ta*o*ite ghosts af.o
ijOD-ns 10 j n A niLjibacKx

H., io*v«jn CcVCI from Pubfi«1

,'Jt
V

Taa Bags....................
Strawberry

1

Publix Pure Selected

T .r

--.v-'S'-r * v

* 1 « 9

�Evtnlng Herald — Wednesday, Oct. U , 1985

Herald AdvarU»ar — Thursday, Oct. 17, 1»*5

Frugal Gourmet

Jeff Smith, popular
television cooking
show host known as

Share Oood Foods, Oood Cheer
For A Feast To Be Remembered

n

the Frugal Gourmet,
recommends
celebrating friendship

Even during ihe husllc and author and cooking consultant
bustle of autumn house-cleaning to Black &amp; Decker's line of small
and lcaf-raklng. people find time kitchen appliances. "Rather, a
to entertain their friends. Good good meal shared with loved
foods and good cheer, after all, ones Is an experience that will
help create an atmosphere In ensure memories for many years
which memories are made.
to come."
The hunger for frlcndshlpo.
R e c o g n i z i n g t hat timefor community, for feasting In consuming preparations detract
order to remember cannot be from the fun. Mr. Smith says
satisfied by a fast-food french that, with proper training, even
fry." says Je ff Smith, the Frugal the busiest people can hold a
Gourmet, popular television feast. For example, dishes
cooking show host, cookbook cooked during a slow time can

through feasting.

A D e licT aios teu s TTreroapt!ic a lX J S
Golden (wi
Bananas i

All Purpose

i But

White
Potatoes

I S h are A Sm ile
For The Holidays.

IProduce
Excellent Steamed, Low In Sodium, Western Fresh

Tfrt hcwdiy leavm
s rm you' ptw iorji tw tl

Cauliflow er.................. ir:ss 99°
Seedless Grapes.......
69 *
For Snacks or Salads, Crisp, Juicy
McIntosh A pples.... 3 &amp; 89 °
Minute Maid Country Style Chilled
Orange Ju ice............... ;s: »14®
Northwest R ipe,Juicy (1 5 0 Size)
Bartlett Pears........10
*148
Salad Perfect, (Medium Size), Tasty
Tom atoes.................... r 39 °

10

Good Source Of Vitamins C &amp; A, Tender

F r e s h B r o c c o l i ................ . . . bunch 0 0 ^
Excellent In Salads, High In Potassium

•ftcfc tiiNii t in

IS)

(Bur t with each fine* BAH
r iUm p Pitcs Special CtM.t.e***i I

Fresh Hom ogenized
Breakfast Club
Florida Grade A White

Publix Milk

Large
Eggs
per dozen

gallon size

( • . . t with &gt;K« m i.i l iM
r l l * m i F ttc i f b . c l .1 C r l l t K l t l )

$^95
( 2 % L o w F » t. 1* . LOW F i t o r S kim . G allon
S li» * » « n * b l» w ith O no S4 H s u m p P rlco
S i.o r C ir llf lc lU )
A

(Bur * with each foies f Ah
r tlS"ip Price •♦•Oil CarlificaU)|

Publix Reg. or Diet

Buddig Assorted

Soft
Drinks
2-liter bot.

Chipped
Meats

you C l'f

Houi Snmfyioto

The Natural Snack, Sw eet, Tasty Red

I

r»»8^#Fr*e 1»8C'*I Ct*ti«K8(8H

29 °

lb.
bag

per
lb.

CI'OS tram
P u t* i O m ow trom
■our colorful

devgo* To get •
your 3’ , - t CftS
n trr. tor If*)
• v*0jyi o t p o *
your tiy o rf.

2.5-oz. pkg.

COWneqi'v*

FREE

It P u W i by
December 9

vatu#from
PubUi
10 lot 13 59
25 tor 56 99
50 tor 512 99

|BonusPfintd

»each rated SAM

WNh ere«t red el
HR cakw p m i Sum
•* d ec
M H Ptecaeae* i « t gat l e i ecu at
aeaatp prteta aMI a P M I rah o* «4 c at K u n e tele*

Fresh Mushrooms.....
Colorful Fresh Cut
Carnations......... * 3 SB

Heinz Tomato

Ketchup
14-oz. bot.

FILM

Star-Kist Fancy Albacora
In Spring Water

Solid White
Tuna
6.5*oz. can

Assorted Flavors

Breyers[
Ice Cream] ■mjm^m
i' 111

half gallon ctn.

IFrozenFood
Green Giant LeSueur Peas,
White Shoepeg Corn or

Broccoli C u ts........ b.V 99*
Green Giant

Corn on the Cob.... P*g
Sealtest Assorted .

Polar B ars. &amp;

(

$199

_

Valley Combination lO -oi.
Vegetables............ pkg-

Assorted
Entrees

Colgate
Toothpaste

./.#

I when you buy one package
I of Pillsbury Plus Cake Mix
I and one can of Pillsbury
| Ready-to-Spread Frosting
| Supreme.

^OM I.

VO-5 Hair Spray.

Napkins

x V ( r l* /

('

ft

7

Royal

({t„ rn r,,,ls

P riM n tlh n coupon altlM
checkout yyilh your p u r c h im ot
PilllDuryPlut C lk i Mmrvd Rtltbury
R lid y to S p m tl FfOlbhfl Suprimo

VO-5 Hair Spray.... c«
I
g
■
|

oooo TMt w t t* or oct i m i . ■••» I
OWLT 0000 IT F U ill* »0Ff * M4 T9 . ^
Lynn cr. coupon pwr fame, ftedeemitM
Or , ,1 rr, lira. O' UO&gt;. (pouW avxiwo
.ha. 1 counoo m«, ndl* '.caoOuc.O
yi 1 ", term liouaonr, on proaucttkMmai

—
I
_
■

Neutral Henna or Extra Body

VO-5 Shampoo.......
VO-5 Extra Body Instant

Conditioner.........

b o ltlo

| 40 * OFF

B a v a r Ia n
C r ysta I

3 With Thle Coupon ONLY
3 Style 0634, 638, 644,
| 657, 665, 666

Fro m

P ublix
7$£* arW/u***

b o ltlo

s L’eggs Sheer Energy |
| Panty Hose
S per pelr
= (EMoctlvo Oct. 17-23, 1985) C

Your
Choice

$169

250-ct. pkg.

THIS AD B m C T IV It
THUftt.i OCT. 17
THRU WKD.i
OCT. 2 3 ,1 3 3 3 . . .

(*&amp; - t il

8-ot. K9 69

Assorted

( l a , I wMk . « « M M U H
.
F r X . I n c W C .rU M cim l

Woolite

■Health&amp;BeautyI
Non-Aerosol Reg. or
Unscented Pump

_

Northern
Assorted Paper

FU6 L II M w m i TMC PIOHT
TO U M T OUANTITU t SOLO

$429

1 79J
^

| K « l * . r MH

FiW . I r K U l C.rimt l l . l l

Cold Water
Wash Liquid

$*|0 9

4.5-oz. container

re g . pkg

at the c h e c k o u t!

[■«. '

32-oz. bot.
Reg. or Gel Pump

FREE

$1&lt;9

Green Giant Mexican, Italian,
Japanese or LeSueur Peas,
Pods &amp; Water Chestnuts

G reen G iant F ro ze n

$

Sanford, FI,—JC

i

3

each

19

IS - o i. | i i n
b o ltlo * 1

*J» l i t . t l l l l l l i l K

Normal or Extra Control

Pw bH xIM Ier

Onh|l 69HM
tfctmh$HI(Up
1*1 It 111

V

FO P 24 HOU* CONVENIENCE
TOU CAN BANK ON

Alberto Mousae.....‘ &amp; 1 *2 »

M M i Mw I . im
r pr&lt;&gt;k. cr.HM^
'h

This Ad Effacflva At Thaaa Locations Only:

be frozen until needed.
Here arc some feast-worthy
recipes from Je ff Smith's best­
selling cookbook. The Frugal
Gourmet. They can help make
your celebration of friendship
become a lasting memory.

COLD VEGETABLES
IN MUSTARD DRESSING
2 tablespoons wine vinegar
1 tablespoon Dljon-stylc
mustard
Salt and pepper, to taste
1egg. at room temperature
1 tablespoon lemonjuice
8 tablespoons olive oil
6 carrots, peeled and sliced
3 medium zucchini, sllecd
Place the vinegar, mustard.
salt, pepper, egg. and lemon
Juice In a bowl and mix at high
speed for 1 minute. Slowly add
the olive oil. Refrigerate.
Blanch the carrots for 10
minutes In boiling water: then
add the zucchini. Cook for
another 5 minutes, drain, and
refrigerate.
When the vegetables arc cold,
toss them with a bit of the
dressing, and serve as a vegeta­
ble side dlsli. Makes 4 to 6
servings.
GREEN BEAN
AND POTATO SOUP
5 stalks celery, sliced thin
1 bunch green onions,
chopped
l/ i stick butter (W cup)
2 tablespoons flour
2 quarts water
% cup powdered milk
3 medium potatoes
Salt and pepper to taste
Vi cup chopped fresh parsley
1 tablespoon dried dill weed
1\*i cups sour cream
1 10-ounce package frozen
French-style green beans
Saute the celery and green
onions In the butter.
When the vegetables arc not
quite tender, add the flour, and
stir in. Add the water, sttr until
blended, and then add the milk
and stir over medium heat until
thickened.
Dice the potatoes, leaving the
skins. Add to the pot along with
some salt and pepper, parsley,
and dill weed. Simmer, stirring
often, until the potatoes arc
tender, about Vi hour.
Twenty minutes before serv­
ing, stir In the sour cream and
green beans. Simmer for 20
minutes. Makes about 3 quarts,
10-12 servings.
STUFFED CHICKEN THIGHS
8 chicken thighs
1 teaspoon thyme
3 tablespoons parsley
V4 cup white wine
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
V* pound smoked ham. cut
Into long sticks
4 green onions, cut In two
Sait and pepper to taste
2 tablespoons white wine
Roux of 1 tablespoon (lour
browned In 1 tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon lemonjuice
Simmer the chicken thighs In
3 cups water, along with the
thyme, parsley, white wine, and
lemonjuice.
When chicken Is barely tender,
remove It and let it cool.
Gently push the bone from the
center of each thigh. Take care
not to tear up the thigh.
Insert one long slive r of
smoked ham and one piece of
green onion In each thigh. Place
in flat bowl with salt and pepper
and 2 tablespoons white wine,
and steam for 20 minutes.
Prepare a sauce for the
c h ic k e n . Make a roux by
browning 1 tablespoon flour In 1
tablespoon butter and stirring
until smooth. Then thicken the
Juices from the chicken dish
with the roux. You may wish to
add 1 tablespoon lemon Juice.
Serve the sauce over the chicken
thighs. Serves 4.
COEURALACREME
8 ounces cream cheese
Vi pint sour cream
2 tablespoons lemonjuice
2 tablespoons sugar
Blend together all the Ingre­
dients In one bowl at high speed
for about two minutes. Stir until
creamy, and then place In a
mold. Refrigerate for three hours
or more.
S e r v e w i t h a p p l e s or
strawberries for dipping. Serves
6.

t o»f#y*non(
W
&gt;
Meburv FO f c i W 1
U&gt;r*eW0k| MHIWM

ih» pm»bu*,

— — — — —

J

rentthehr

CARPET CLEANING
MACHINE FOR

$9.99 S .
Riiulir Price

*15.99

ieTsTTriiS* SS ^

24-H
».r'rRi«1lt

S A N FO R D P LA ZA ,
S A N FO R D
LO N Q W O O D
V IL L A G E C T R .,
LO N G W O O D

e

Publix

&gt;

UnfeadWhu

�4C—Evening Herald — Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1985

Herald Advertiser — Thursday, Oct. 17, 1985

Sanford, FI.

%
America’s Supermarket

TM

W-D BRAND USDA CHOICE BONELESS

NEW YORK
STRIP STEAKS

PRICES GOOD OCT. 17-19, 1985
01 v D
r u n m mo u u t woe ■ m iouonwc
uo tm cootth M r

•

9

LB.

O tlK I U M O U OKIOUJUNIMl MtIUD KLM LAU
CIT1US t i l OK N M I SM I 1 1! tVCN

lo t u i o iw i towns ru m h i tow i x u m w v in t

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
W IMMXIK (T O M t. MC
COtTMQHI - i n ,

G O LD EN

US

No I

W H IT E

P O T A T O ES
PINKY PIG PORK LOIN

^

COUNTRY STYLE
SPARERIBS

49

BIL MAR BROWNED

4

m

m

•V.

TURKEY
BREAST . .
m

s u rn a m e

HERE’S
HOW
IT WORKS
w&lt;e .c &gt;'N
Bo^.i Ce^&lt;&lt;a'»i

o

©

cKocton* r

I* rov

I

oni

S a -c

fy »,e&gt;,

►aw M SvP** B&lt;r,«

e*#8C*-r-'ia-B

Bor.l Ce*9-*&lt;«•• »o* •« *■
Spec » rot

ALL VARIETIES

SUPERBRAND GRADE ‘A’

BOUNTY A LL COLORS

LARGE EGGS
Ac

TOWELS

L-;1
,-1
1

"asfiissiifs'.sr

a

i GOOD
REGULAR or UNSALTED

ll

PEPSI-COLA

A

B

29 ol 7
CAN

S IZ8

m m

Q

l$.pt.

is-*,.

C

■ O il

9 IZ I
r„V
I

LAYER CAKES

74°
M

m iM

■

W

I7.«t.

$129
iff

S IZ 8

WIN OM THUD SUMS SONUS tISIN K A tl
COOO OCTOMS IMS. IMS

BTLS

lM i.
JA R

■

,&lt;(4| WIN M U U T W I S O N t n u t lt O .I

$199
if:

■

MIN OM IIU IO W M I SONUS U IIN K A II
COOO OCtOMI IM S IMS

D EEP SOUTH FRESF PAK

KOSHER DILLSI

69c

V

‘ PERIDGE FARM
A LL VARIETIES

COOL WHIP

PLUS
DEPOSIT

16oL

MAYONNAISI
c
m
ra

BIRDS EYE

PEANUT BUnER

BLUE P U T E

PRICE BREAKER

I-IB.

REYNOLDS ALUMINUM

19

JIF CRUNCHY

WIN OM FtXID UlPtl SONUS CIITUKATI
tOOOOCtOMI IM S ISIS

J

PEACHES

as39cn

WIN OM INUD SUPSI SONUS C IIIN K M I
COOO 0(1 OMS IMS IMS

DIET PEPSI. PEPSI FR EE,
SUGAR FR EE PEPSI FR EE ,
MT. DEW or

PACK

m
w in o m m u D t u r n soaus c is u m c a ii
C T ________ cooo ociosis it is IMS

CAKE MIXES/

f(iil

64oi.
BTL

m

DOZ.

■J

FRUIT
DRINKS e e

AVAILAB LE AT STORES W ITH D ELIC ATESSEN

m

V

Hl-C ORANGE, GRAPE or FRUIT PUNCH

WIN OM U U D SUMS SONUS CtlTNICill
(000 OCIOMI IT IS. IMS

ra

MIN OM TN.UD SUP}I SONUS C tltN K A II
COOO OCTOStS IT IS IMS

HORM EL FRANK N STUFF

DELI FRESH BAKED

CHILI DOGS
$169

APPLE PIE

16ti.
SIZI

‘lit!
C M TffKJTt

$179
1

@ “ " “ “ J S S S S J S l P i MS

I

k-A*

^ ' e ! • —j» «. •%
, • .

.-

. •

i

&gt;.

/

■* “

*

» «

_

AAn.

J ’*

•-T
*'

r

• •

-r »

• •

« -

t~

•

~ f- &lt; ~

P

I .*

-

'■
■~ *

^ ^ — — —*—
•y ’

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218101">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, October 16, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218102">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218103">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on October 16, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218104">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218105">
                <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;, October 16, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218106">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218107">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218108">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218109">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21845" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21449">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/1cd31971d9474a08a9cf75242e630476.pdf</src>
        <authentication>4ac71ebaec3ade31f85f6f3aafa3c93b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218110">
                    <text>Evening

78th Y e a r, No. 28, T u e sd ay, S e p te m b e r 24, 1985— S anfo rd . F lo rid a

Herald

(U S P S

481-280)

P r ic e

25

C ents

Outstanding Black Students Get Scholarship Chance
Three Seminole High School black
students, more than at any other Central
Florida school, have been named scmlflnallsts In a national scholarship com­
petition. One student was selected from
Lake Mary High School.
The National Merit Scholarship Cor­
poration has released the names of 1,500
semlflnallsts for the 22nd annual Na­
tional Achievement Scholarship Program
fo r O u ts ta n d in g N e g ro S tu d e n ts .
Seminole High and Lake Mary High were
the only Seminole County schools with
students placing on the list, Angela L.

Freeman, Marvin R. Johnson and Alvin
C. Jones from Seminole; Martin S.
Aubrorccc from Lake Mary.
In the state of Florida only the cities of
Fort Lauderdale. Jacksonville and Miami
have more black students represented
among the semlflnallsts. The city of
Tampa had one scmlflnallst. Altogether.
62 Florida high school seniors were
selected to be eligible for the scholar­
ships.
Seminole High Principal Wayne Epps
said the three semlflnallsts comprise "the
largest number o f students, to my

knowledge, that have ever received this
distinction at Seminole High."
"T h ey have all worked very hard to
prepare for the qualifying test and we arc
very proud of them.” Epps said. "This
accomplishment reflects the tremendous
effort they achieved In pursuit of overall
academic excellence. I think they did an
outstandlngjob."
The four Seminole County seniors arc
eligible to continue In the competition.
About 700 achievement scholarships
worth more than $2 million will be
awarded, according to Nancy Giles.

director of public Information for the
program. To become eligible for those
awards the students must fulfill addi­
tional requirements and the results will
be published next spring. The organiza­
tion has given out $30 million to more
than 10.300 black students since 1964.
More than 70.000 black students
nationwide entered the program last year
by requesting consideration at the time
they took the Preliminary Scholastic
Aptitude Tcst/Natlonal Merit Scholarship

This It 9th•
largest number
of tfudontt,
to my knowledge,
who ever
received thlt
distinction at
Seminole High/
-W o y n a Epps

See 8TUDENT8. page 3A

First Tax
H ike In
15 Y e a rs

Teachers
Picket;
Talks To
Resume
By Jim Searla
Herald Staff Writer

Teacher picketing of Seminole
school open houses continued
Monday as the Seminole County
School Board and the Seminole
Education Association teachers’
S a n f o r d P r o p e r t y
bargaining unit, agreed to end
their three-week standolT and go
A unanimous vote Monday b&gt;
back to the bargaining table this
the Sanford City Commission
week.
enacted the first tax hike In the
The b argain in g session Is
city since 1970— 27.5 percent.
tentatively set for 4:30 p.m.
The approved $13.5 million
Thursday at the Lake Mary High
d o lla r b u d ge t for 1985-86
School Media Center, located In
translates Into a 94 cent raise in
the library, said SEA Executive
the property tax rate from 83.33
Director Marshall Oglctree.
to 84.38 per $1,000 assessed
Chief negotiator for the school
valuation. The commission met
board. Ernest Cowley, declared
during a regularly scheduled
talks at Impasse Sept. 4 when
meeting at 7:30 p.m. In Sanford
members of the school board
M*r«M
kr TMMIMy VtMMfft City Hall.
negotiating team and the SEA’s
The approved budget Is a $3.5
"crisis team” failed to reach T e a c h e r s p i c k e t i n g M o n d a y o u t s id e a
E le m e n ta r y a n d H a r r i e t L a b a n , v ic e p re s l- million Increase over the $9.9
agreement over salary Increases S e m ln o le High School o p e n h o u se a r e , fr o m
d e n t o f th e S E A . S E A m e m b e rs a r e
m illion 1984-85 budget. Its
for the coming year. That was
$4.38 tax rate Is expected to
le ft, M a r g a r e t B e a r d , te a c h e r a t L y m a n
e m b r o ile d in a c o n tra c t d is p u te w ith th e
the first
negotiating session
generate $1,648,772 in revenue
H ig h ; N a o m i D u r h a m , A lta m o n te S p rin g s
school b o a rd o v e r p a y .
since the teachers union, repre­
based on the current tax base.
senting most of the county’s
Dick Barnett. 2070 Grandview
and
time
that
Is
convenient
for
2.000 teachers, voted down their ficer for the arbitration process. Sept. 19. Cowley said. "W e
Ave..
spoke against the proposed
both parties. Please suggest a
ti
-*ly approved contract In a Both groups received Identical recognize the fact when two
budget during a short public
date
and
time
for
this
m
eeting."
parties to negotiations arc at the
letters.
spe«. .1 vote Aug. 26.
Oglctree said the SEA Is ready
Oglelrcc said he received a state of Impasse, the parties are
After the Impasse was declared
to go work selecting a hearing
not
precluded
from
continuing
hand-delivered
letter
from
Cowthe Florida Public Employee
officer from the PERC list and he
R e la tio n s C o m m is s io n was Icy on Thursday accepting the to negotiate. Based upon your
expects, "that we will be ready
request
to
resume
negotiations,
notified and a list was sent out SEA’s desire to return to con­
By Jane Casselberry
to work Intensely on settling the
the
management
negotiating
tract
negotiations
as
soon
the
this week naming seven men. of
Herald Staff Writer
team Is willing to meet with the
whom one will be chosen, to be a SEA agreed to a place and time.
A $3.9 million budget for fiscal
See
TEACHERS,
page
3
A
In the' letter to Oglctree dated SEA negotiating team on a date
"special master" or hearing of­
year 1985-86 was adopted by
the Longwood City Commission
Monday night by a 4-1 vote.
The budget calls for a tax rate
of $2.90 per $1,000 assessed
Waymon Franklin, of 308 Longwood Ave..
p ro p e rty valu e and It was
deputies.
By Saaan Loden
told sheriffs deputies Ms. Sessions had
adopted unanimously. It Is a
After
questioning
several
witnesses
In
the
Herald Staff Writer
called him earlier In the evening and told
38-cent per $1,000 Increase over
case
over
the
past
2
Vi
weeks,
a
suspect,
who
A 33-ycar-old Altamonte Springs man was
him she was coming to his home to sec his
the 1984-85 tax rate of $2.52.
had
been
Implicated
by
witnesses,
was
being held without bond today charged with
daughter.
Last year's budget was $3.2
arrested
at
his
home
at
122
Dcsota
Ave..
at
murder In the Sept. 6 stabbing death of a
million.
about
7
a.m.
Monday.
At
about
the
time
Ms.
Sessions
was
Sanford woman.
The new tax rate Is a 26
Johnell
Warren
has
been
charged
In
the
Patricia Penn Sessions. 36. of 119 McKay
expected to arrive, around 10 p.m.. Franklin
percent
Increase over the state
case
and
was
being
held
In
the
Seminole
told deputies he heard gunshots behind Ills
Blvd., Sanford, bled to death from a single
certified rollback rate. That Is
County Jail.
home but did not Investigate because he
stab wound on the back of her left thigh,
the tax rate required to generate
Sheriffs spokesman John Spolskl said feared someone might be shooting at him.
which cut a major artery. She had been
the same amount of revenue as
there
had
apparently
been
a
dispute
be­
He told deputies he opened the door and
attacked In a field behind a home at 308
the previous fiscal year taking
tween
Ms.
Sessions,
an
unemployed
file
Longwood Ave.. In Altamonte Springs,
construction
added to the tax
See
STABBING,
page
2A
clerk, and Warren prior to the stabbing.
according to Seminole County sheriffs

L e v y

U p

2 7 .5 %

hearing on the Issue. Barnett
said he Is "concerned whether
an Increase (In taxes) such as the
one proposed by the commission
Is going to make Sanford de­
sirable" to people wunting to
move Into the area.
In a second major Item, the
commission formally approved a
consent order committing San­
ford to upgrading its sewer
piping by 1995 or fucc legal
action by the state Department
of Environmental Regulations.
Alex Alexander, head of DER.
expressed appreciation on behalf
of his department for the com ­
mission’s decision to approve
the consent order and his hopes
that DER and the commission
can "continue In the spirit of

B « i SAN FO R D , page 3A

Longwood Raises Taxes

Altam onte Springs Man Jailed In Fatal Stabbing

rolls for the first time and higher
assessments Into consideration.
T h e 1985-86 tax rate Is
expected to raise $800,239 from
property taxes. The fiscal year
begins Oct. 1.
C o m m is s io n e r s J u n e
Lormann. Larry Goldberg. Ed
M y e rs an d M a y o r H a r v e y
Smcrllson voted for the budget.
Commissioner Perry Faulkner
said he voted against the budget
because he didn't agree with
some of the Job positions and
salaries In the budget. Faulkner
said the people of his district
didn’t want him to support the
budget so he didn’t.
In other business, the com-

See LONGWOOD. page 3A

C ould Thw art E911 E fficie n cy
Sharyn Dickerson, chairman of (He lUjor

■

T

" '.......... vz

United Way of Semino
with a total of $9,375.
She said Slmpllmatlc
has raised $3,437 in pk
$3,000 in its first Unit d Way campaign and

o f tta
The United Way of t am (note
drive campaign today with a breakfast tor
division heada at $t»
Mary. Forty-five Sadtlp

tf f v ?
4a

p *r*
v/vn

—&lt;TV.

newer* CQwuV
\JKfW'w•'
,4
mnty '
WMn •CCPOPj rVPr OOv.

tri-county kickoff.
Expo Centra toit

D onald's A n Also-Ran
STOCKHOLM. Sweden (UPI) - Donald
Duck got 291 votes In Sweden's general
election, up 37 percent from 1982 but not
enough to elect him to parliament.
Final tallies for the Sept. 15 election were
released Monday.
They showed Donald Duck — the popular
Walt Disney cartoon character — with 291
votes, up from 184 votes In the election three
years ago.
And. while well behind the winners, the
duck did beat such rivals as Garfield (he Cat.

TODAY
A ction Reports ....... 2A
B rid g e................ ....... 6B
C a le n d a r.......... ....... 3B
C lassified s....... ...4 ,SB
C om ics.............. ....... 6B
C rossw ord.......
D e a r A b b y.......
D e a th s ..............
D r. G o tt............ ........ «B

E d ito r ia l...............1..4A
Horoscope................ 4B
H o s p ita l.................... 2A
N a tio n ........................ 2A
P eople........................ IB
Sports.............. ,....5 ,6 A
T e le vis io n .................IB
W e a th e r.................... 2A

Streets W ithout Signs
Dilem m a For Seminole
By Janie Gnat
Herald Staff Writer
County roads without street signs may pose a
legal problem for county commissioners If
emergency assistance, such as police, fire, or
ambulance service, called for through a coun­
tywide E911 system has trouble finding a street
address. And putting up the signs could cost
almost a million dollars.
,
County staff could not find any legal precedent
concerning whether a county would be liable for
not getting emergency assistance to someone on
a road within a county wide E911 system but
whose address could not be found. Steve Decker,
county traffic engineer told commissioners at a
workscsslon Monday. T hey also could not
determine If the county would be held liable for
maintenance of those roads or signs.
However, commissioners, fearful of a lawsuit
and uncertain of their legal liability, have asked
county administrator Ken Hooper to look into the
costs and time element of making and erecting
street signs on approximately 9,732 Intersections
not currently signed. That estimate Includes
county roads and privately owned roads that are
within county Jurisdiction but receive no county
funds for maintenance.
The ‘ E* In E 9 1 1 stands for "en h an ced "
meaning sophisticated equipment will allow
dispatchers to pinpoint the address o f any caller
that dialed the emergency number. The address
o f the caller will automatically appear on a

computer terminal screen in the public safety
office along with directions to the site.
"W ith E911 If we have an address on the street
we have a responsibility to respond to a call on
th at s t r e e t . " said R oan n e R u b in . E911
coordinator for Seminole County.
Approximately $997,530 and 1.824 days would
be needed to make the signs and 009 days to
Install them if the work Is contracted out. Decker
said.
•
Another alternative would be for the county to
manufacture and Install the signs itself, a move
Decker says could severly Impact his office’s
budget.
" I f I have to do them Internally it will devastate
my operations budget." Decker said. " I f I did It
with my manpower It would cost $365,000."
Part o f the reason for the high cost Is that the
signs are double sided, and Tour are required for
one Intersection. Also the federal and state
standard signs that the county uses, are reflective
which necessitates their being hand lettered.
Decker said.
A final alternative would be to require residents
or businesses on a street to buy street signs for
their street or Intersection. Decker said. The cost
could be divided between several people that way
and would save the county further costs for
maintenance If residents or businesses were
required to replace destroyed or missing signs.

8«e STREETS, pagt SA

�2A—Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

Tu w d ay, Sept. M , IMS

NATION
IN BRIEF
Dollar Plunges In Wake
Of Group Of Five Intervention
NEW YORK (UPI) — An agreement by major Western
powers to weaken the dollar by intervening tn exchange
markets sparked Its largest single-day drop in more than a
decade In frantic trading that pushed gold prices up
sharply.
The dollar plummeted 5 percent to its lowest level in
weeks in Europe and New York Monday during what one
London dealer called "a headlong rush to sell dollars," but
Its most spectacular drop was against the Japanese yen.
Following Monday’s events, Japan Intervened to boost
the yen against the dollar at the opening of trading on the
Tokyo exchange today, government officials and bankers
said.
The agreement Sunday by top monetary officials of the
United States, Japan, West Germany. France and Britain
— known as the Group o f Five — sparked the drop. Their
agreement to bring down the value of the dollar Included
active Intervention In foreign exchange markets.
The decision, a significant turnaround for the Reagan
administration. Is intended to improve American competi­
tiveness In foreign markets, cut the U.S. trade deficit and
head off protectionist moves in Congress directed mostly
against Japan.
Treasury Secretary James Baker said the agreement
may not translate into a lower trade deficit for another 10
to 18 months.

Consumer Prices Up Slightly
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Consumer prices, despite a leap
In housing costs, increased in August by only 0.2 percent
for the fourth straight month, holding the annual inflation
rate to what promises to be a 13-ycar low. the government
said today.
Without the month’s price acceleration blamed on rising
housing costs, the Labor Department’s Consumer Price
Index for the month would have shown no increase.
"Nearly 80 percent o f the increase Is due to shelter
costs." said Labor Department analyst Patrick Jackman,
who helped prepare the report. "There were declines In
food costs, energy costs and the cost of used cars."
With the slight price Index Increase — the same recorded
In May. June and July — the annual U.S. Inflation rate
through August stood at 3.3 percent, marking a 13-year
low.
H the year ends with the same low rate. 1985 will be the
best year for Inflation since 1972.

14 Killed In Plane Crash
WEYERS CAVE. Va. (UPI) - The pilot of a twin-engine
airliner, flying In "sou py" fog over the Blue Ridge
Mountains, reported his navigation system failed before the
plane crashed into a peak and burned, killing all 14 people
aboard.
A Civil Air Patrol helicopter spotted the smoldering
wreckage of Henson Airlines Flight 1517 In dense woods
Monday night, more than eight hours after It blipped ofT
radar screens on a flight from Baltimore to the Shenandoah
Valley A lr p o tJ ............................ ....................................
Tw o doctors were lowered from the helicopter to the
crash site atop the peak but found no survivors and
authorities began removing the bodies at daybreak.

Elderly Sanford Couple Robbed
A Sanford couple claim that a
man who has lived at their home
for several years forcibly took
$1.400 from their home.
Percy Oliver, 83. and his wife
Emily. 70. of 2371 Randcll S ttold Seminole County sheriffs
deputies the man came Into their
home around midnight Satur­
day. pushed past them and took
the cash. Oliver reportedly told
deputies he feared the suspect, a
sheriffs report said.
Mrs. Oliver later confronted
the man at the Club 2 Spot In
Sanford and he reportedly gave
her back $400 and said that was
all he took. The Olivers told
d ep u ties th ey w ant to flic
charges in the case, the report
said, but no arrest has been
made.

SLEDGEHAMMER TO
KLAMMER
An 18-ycar-old Forest City
man who allegedly swung a
sledgehammer al his stepfather
during an argument has been
charged with aggraxated bat­
tery.
The man told sheriffs deputies
he held the hammer but didn’t
swing it, while his stepfather,
Lee Webb. 42. of 540 Marty
Blvd.. Forest City, claims he did.
a sheriffs report said.
Webb told deputies the fight
was part of an on-going problem
and the latest incident began
when Webb walked into the
suspect’s bedroom al their home
at about 7 p.m. Saturday, the
report said.
Webb alleged the suspect said,
" I ’m going to put you In your
grave" as he swung the sledge­
hammer. the report said.
Barney Kamalani Lee was ar­
rested at his home and charged
with aggravated battery at about
8:45 p.m. He was being held in
lieu of $5,000 bond.

RAPIST RIDER
A 27-year-old Oviedo woman
reported to sh eriffs deputies
that she was raped by a man to
whom she gave a ride Sunday
after meeting him at the Deluxe
Bar In Sanford.
The woman told deputies that
as she drove with the suspect he
grabbed her and forced her to
have sex. The attack allegedly
occurred at about 2 a.m. along a
dirt section of Celery Avenue
cast of Sanford.
A fte r the attack the man
forced the woman to drive him
home, a sheriffs report said. No
arrest has been made.

KNEECAP KNIFED
A 62-year-old Oviedo man has
been Jailed on an aggravated

scene. Bass was being held In
lieu of $5,000 bond.

Action Reports

BATTERED WOMAN

★ Fires
* C o u rts
★ Po//ce
battery charge after lie allegedly
slashed a woman on the knee
with n 12-Inch butcher knife
when she refused to leave a
home they had been visiting
together. Oviedo police reported.
Mamie Sermon. 65. of P.O.
B ox 1635. K im b le S tr e e t.
Oviedo, was treated at Winter
Park Memorial Hospital after
p o lic e w e re c a lle d to 431
Franklin St.. Oviedo, nt about
8:50 p.m. Saturday and found
tier sitting on the front porch
bleeding, a police report said.
Simon Bass, of Kimble Street,
was chnrgcd with aggravated
battery. Police reported con­
fiscating a butcher knife at the

...S ta b b in g
Continued from page 1A
called Ms. Sessions’ name, but
got no response.
Spolski said that during tiie
Investigation three witnesses
told deputies they had seen n
man armed witii a handgun
choking a woman In a field
behind Franklin’s house. Tile
man reportedly threatened wit­
nesses with the gun. n sheriffs
report said.

Sheriffs deputies charged a
30-year-old Apopka man with
battery after they nrrlvcd at his
home at about midnight Sunday
nnd reporteldy heard n woman
crying. "Get off of m e!"
The woman, who was not
named in an arrest report, had a
bruised nose nnd said the sus­
pect tried to choke her. a
sheriffs report said.
Terry Rodwell Hunter, of 1632
Beam Lake Road, has been
released on bond.

BATTERED WIFE
Sem inole C ounty s h e r iffs
deputies responding to a dispute
call nt 312 4th St.. Apopka, at
a b ou t 12:30 a .m . S u n d a y
charged a man with battery after
his wife told them lie had hit her
in tile face with Ills fists.
The deputies reported the
woman had a swollen face nnd a
bloody lip.
John Whitney Files. 27. was
Ms. Sessions was not siiot or
strangled to death. Site died as
the result of a single stab wound
in tlie leg. which was inflicted by
a knife with a six-inch blade, an
autopsy performed at Central
Florida Regional Hospital in
Sanford showed. Deputies re­
ported finding a knife at the
scene of the attack which has
been identified as belonging to
Ms. Sessions.
Franklin said after lie heard
the shots he called Ms. Sessions’
b oy frien d . M ichael Lnreuza
Lark. 35. of Orlando, who was at
337 Longwood Avc.. and asked

arrested at his home. He has
been released on 8500 bond and
is scheduled to appear In court
Oct. 2.
____
b u r o l a r ie s a t h e f t s

Nadine Bnrnhlll. 31. of Bronx.
N.Y.. gave Sem inole County
sheriffs deputies the name of a
man who may have stolen 8500
from her purse after she fell
asleep al 240 Oxford Road.
*22-G. Fern Park, on Saturday.
When she nwoke her purse and
iiic man were gone, a sheriff’s
report said.
A $1,100 gold necklace was
s to le n fro m th e h o m e o f
Penelope Leek, 39. of 321 W.
Hornbeam Drive. Longwood. be­
tween Sept. 18 and 21. deputies
reported.
An $800 male cockatoo was
stolen from its cage on the patio
of Janis Murphy. 35. of 1811
Lake Shore Circle. Longwood. on
Friday or Saturday, a sheriffs
report said.
him lo come to his home to look
for Ms. Sessions, the report said.
Lark and oilier wltncssess
found Ms. Sessions In a field
behind Franklin’s home. Lark
look her to Florida HospitalAltamonte Springs, in her car.
She was "clinically dead" when
found, because of the blood loss.
Spolski said, nnd was p ro­
nounced dead at the hospital.
Before Warren was Implicated
in the case. Spolski said, in­
vestigators were given conflict­
ing stories and false leads In the
rase.

WEATHER
AREA FORECAST: Today purity cloudy with
a chance of afternoon thunderstorms. High
around 90. Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph. Rain
chance 30 percent. Tonight partly cloudy. Low In
the lower 70s. Light northeast wind. Wednesday
partly cloudy with n chance showers or thun­
derstorms. High In the mid to upper 80s.
Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph. Rain chance 30
percent.
NATIONAL REPORT: Chilly temperatures
gripped the northern Plains early today, breaking
records in at least three cities, while up to 6
inches of snow- was forecast for the northern
mountains of Wyoming as strong winds swept the
upper Great Lakes. On Monday, thunderstorms,
tornadoes, hall and high winds ripped through
Alabama, Mississippi and Iowa. Injuring nt least
four people, destroying homes and knocking out
power. Freeze warnings were posted early today

lor tiie Dakotas and western Nebraska, and frost
warnings were Issued for eastern Nebraska and
northwestern Kansas.
AREA READINGS (9 R.m.): temperature: 77;
overnight low: 72; Monday’s high: 91: barometric
pressure: 30.09: relative humidity: 87 percent;
winds: northwest al 4 mph: rain: none: sunrise:
7:15a.m.. sunset 7:20 p.m.
WEDNESDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs.
5:22 a.m.. 5:57 p.m.: lows. 11:14 a.m.. 12:00
p.m.; Port Canaveral: highs. 5:14 a.m.. 5:49
p.m.; lows. 11:05 a.m.. 11:51 p.m.: Bayport:
highs. 10:36 a.m.. - p.m.; lows. 4:23 a.m.. 5:56
p.m.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Thursday through
Saturday — Mostly fair with temperatures near
seasonal. Highs In the 80s. Lows upper 60s north
to upper 70s extreme south.

LAKE MARY HIGH SCHOOL BAND

STOCKS
T7t*a# quotation* provided by mem bar* of
) the National Association ol Securities Dealers
i a rt representative Inter-dealer prices as ot
( mid morning today. Inter dealer markets
• change throughout the day. Prices do not
! Include retell markup/markdown.

HOSPITAL
In o t e s

« _________________ ____ ____________
Central Florid* Regional Mot nit* I
Monday
ADMISSIONS
I Unlord
i Chariot E. Kirk
J Elmira Mawson
• Calvin Motley
J Thdrman Smith
• Nancy C. McLoan. DoBary
! Barbara A. Oondren. Dolton*
• Sloven T. Onutor, Deltona
J Jot* E . Reguero. Dolton*
DISCHARGES
, Sanford:
• Molvin G. Anglo
5 Evelyn Brown
• Chariot E. Kirk
; Chariot H Shletdt
• Annette Washington
5 Mildred A. Flanagan. Dolton*
Olivo M. Grant. Dolton*
•IRTHS
AnUonatto Williamt. a baby boy, Altamonte Spring*
Johnny M. and Oobra Ray, a baby girl.
Do Land
|

Bid Ask
Atlantic Bank..................... ........37*4 37&lt;4
American Plonetr SSL....... ..............•*.;i »
Barnett Bank...................... ........35’ 1 35T$
Florid* Power
A Light........................... ........J3*A 23'»
Fla. Progress..................... ........... 2S’ s 34
Freedom Savings................ ........ lt ’l
ta**
HCA...................................
42
Hughe* Supply.................... ........... 33 23».
19
Morrlion'ft..................... . ...........1IH
NCR Carp.......................... .............33 33’ •
Piestey..............................
21
Scotty’* .............................. ...........13 I3’ s
Southeast Bank................... ........11'* 29*.
SunTrust............................
31*. 31',

FUND RAISING DRIVE ’85

Evening Herald
IUSPS 4*1 2101

Tuesday, September 24, 1985
Vol. 78, No. 28
Publithed Daily and Sunday, aicopt
Saturday by The Sanford Herald,
Inc. 340 N. French A vt., Sanford,
Fla. 32771.
Second Clan Pottage Paid al Sanlord,
Florida 32771
Homo Delivery: Week, SI. 10; Month,
S4.7S; 3 Months, S14.2J; 4 Month*,
137.00, Year, SSI.00. By Mail: W art
SI.SO, Month, S4.00, 3 Months,
111.00, 4 Months, S3I.S0, Yaar,
140.40.
Phone (301) 331 3411.

Yellow
Paqes
Deadline
C a ll N ow 628-5000

SUPPORT LMHS BAND BY SUBSCRIBING
TO TH E
E v e n in g H e r a ld
□ Buy a 3 month subscription at
donate $3.00 toward the LMHS
□ Buy a • month subscription at
donate $4.00 toward the LMHS

our normal rate of $14.25 and we will
Fund Raising Drive.
our mormal rate of $27.00 and we will
Fund Raising Drive.

" i*&lt;’ ,i in &gt;

&lt;PHON€ L I
BOOK ^
I »i I - . I. MV

Sy‘.tn*■

C LIP A N D S A V E

'1

I
I
I
I
I

NAME __
ADDRESS
PHONE _
CLIP AND MAIL □ CHECK FOR $14.25 OR □ CHECK FOR $27.00
EVENING HERALD, P.O. BOX 1657, SANFORD, FLORIDA 32771
OFFER EXPIRES 10-145

J
.

l
i

I
I
I
I

�ing to support the school board
on tills Important Issue. It's too
bad the board can’t show the
sam e c o m m itm en t to th eir
Continued from page 1A
teachers at the bargaining ta­
contract problem when we re­ ble."
sume our talks with the school
Whitmire also said the SEA
board Thursday."
w ill con tin u e in fo rm atio n al
He also announced Friday that picketing at school open bouses.
the faculty representatives o f the Monday and a Tew teachers
SLA. who make up the legisla­ handed out flyers stating their
tive body of the group, have case for more pay at Spring Lake
voted unanimously to support Elementary. 695 Orange Avc.,
the school board's $100 million A lta m o n te S p rin g s and nt
bond Issue to be voted on Oct. Sem inole High School. 2701
22.
Georgia Avc., Sanford.
"W e (SEA) want to go on
During the picketing SEA
record as being In full support of members band out grievance
the bond Issue. We feel it Is in letters to parents describing
the best Interest of Seminole their side of the contract Issue
County to get behind tills Issue and urging them (parents) to call
and that voting against It would or write school board members
prove to be short sigh ted ," to express their feelings.
Ogletrcc said.
She said the letters will be
SEA President Debby Whit­ delivered by SEA members to
mire said. "In spite of the the school board at Its next
stalem ate surrounding their scheduled meeting Wednesday
contract, teachers are still will­ at 7:50 p.m.

••.Teachers

...S tre e ts
Continued from page 1A
Decker said. The cost would be
approximately $100 per loca­
tion. he added.
"W hatever It costs and howev­
er long it takes to do It I think It's
essential to have those street
s ig n s ." C om m ission er Fred
Strectman said.
Streetman and Commissioner

...S tu d e n ts
Continued from page 1A
Q ualifying Test. Participants
com pete within regions and
these semifinal Isis represent the
highest scoring students in each
region.
Euch student who qualifies as
a finalist will be eligible for one
of three types or scholarship. All
700 finalists will compete for one
o f 350 national achievement
9 2 .0 0 0 s c h o la rs h ip s to be
allocated on a regional basis. A
committee of high school and
college educators will evaluate
the abilities and accomplish­
ments of the students and will
•elect those students that appear
to be most academically pro­
mising. Winners will receive
•Ingle-payment awards that are
supported by about 50 business
and industrial sponsors along
with a large group of achieve­
ment program donors.
O f the rem ain ing 350 re­
newable four-year scholarships,
about 225 will be sponsored by
over 100 corporations, founda­
tio n s and p r o fe s s io n a l o r ­
ganizations. To encourage black
students with particular career

Legal Notica
NOTICE o r APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN. th«t Thomas K Kraut*
the holder ol the following certll
Icelet hot tiled sold cerllflcetet
tor a tee deed to be Issued
thereon The certificate num­
bers and years ol Issuance, the
description of Ih* property, and
the names In which It was
assessed are as follows:
CERTIFICATE NO 1470
YEAROF ISSUANCE: 1*1)
D ESC R IPTIO N OF PRO
PERTY
L EG LOT i n
COUNTRY CLUB VILLAGE
UNIT 2 PH 71 PGSTIIO
Nam * In which assessed
Country Club Village Builders
Inc.
All ot said property being in
the County ol Seminole. Slate of
Florida
Unless such certificate or cer
flflcales shall be redeemed ac
cording to law the property
described In such certificate or
certificates will be sold to the
highest bidder at the court house
door on the 4lh day of Nov
ember. 19*5*1 11:00 a m
Approximately 1125 00 cash
for fees Is required to be paid by
successful bidder at the sal*.
Deposit of 20% of the bid to be
paid within 24 hours after clos
Irvg of Ih* sal* Balance due
within 41 hours after closing of
Ih* sal*. All payments shall be
cash or guaranteed instrument,
mad* payable to the Clerk of
Circuit Court.
Dated this teth day of Sep
lember, 19*5
I SEAL)
David N. Berrien
Clerk of Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: Ginger Denton
Deputy Clerk
Publish: September 24. October
l.l. IS, IMS
DEJ 1*4

NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX OEEO
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Thomas K. Krause
the holder ol the following certif­
icates has llleo said certificates
for a tax dead to be Issued
thereon. The certificate num­
bers and years of Issuance, the
description of the property, and
the names in which It was
assessed are as follows:
CERTIFICATE NO 14*7.
YEAROF ISSUANCE: IW .
D ESC R IPTIO N OF PRO
P E R T Y ; L E G L O T 107
COUNTRY CLUB VILLAGE
UNIT 2 PB 21 PCS 70 M.
Nam* In which assessed
Country Club Village Builder*
Inc.
All of said property being In
the County ol Seminole. State of
Florida.
Unless such certificate or cer­
tificates shall bo redeemed ac­
cording to law the property
described In such certificate or
certificate* will be sold to the
highest bidder at the court house
door on the 4th day ol Nov­
ember, I W at lt:00a.m.
Approximately *125 00 cash
lor toes Is required to be paid by
successful bidder at the sal*.

l

Sundra Glenn both said they fell
the county should provide the
signs, but Mrs. Glenn said a
study would have to be done on
cost and time before the com­
mission decides which method
to Implement.
Part of that study would be a
driving assessment of county
Intersections to find out exactly
how many signs will be needed,
a "massive project" according to
Decker.

interests these grantors desig­
nate their scholarships for final­
ists planning to pursue related
college majors. Some sponsors
specify scholarships for resi­
dents of communities they serve
or for children o f com pany
employees. Winners of these
corporate-sponsored *four-year
scholarships will receive awards
ranging from $500 to $4,000 for
each c o lle g e u n dergraduate
year.
The remaining 125 scholar­
ships will be financed by more
than 40 colleges and universities
and will be awarded to finalists
who attend their Institutions.
The winners will receive be­
tween $250 and $2,000 for each
o f four years study at the
sponsor college.
Epps suld he was particularly
pleased with the efforts of Alvin
Jones. He said Jones is the
defending Florida slate champi­
on Division 5-A for the triple
Jump in track and field and a
member of the defending state
champion Seminole track and
field team. "W e are especially
proud of A lvin 's accomplish­
ments." said Epps. "H e repre­
sents the best of the scholara th le te stu d en t in C en tra l
Florida."
—Jim Searls

Legol Notice
Deposit of 20% of the bid to be
paid within 24 hours after clos
Ing of the sal*. Balance due
within 4* hours after closing ot
the sal*. All payments shall be
cash or guaranteed instrument,
mad* payable to the Clerk of
Circuit Court.
Dated this Ifth day ot Sep
tember, IMS.
(SEAL)
David N. Berrien
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
By: Ginger Denlon
Deputy Clerk
Publish September 24, October
1.0. 15. 19*5
DEJ 1*7

NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Thomas G A A
Mary L. Welsh the holder ot the
following certificates has filed
said certificates lor a tax deed
to be Issued thereon. The certlli
cal* number* and years ol
Issuance, the description of the
property, and the names In
which It was assessed are as
follows:
CERTIFICATE NO.900.
YEAROF ISSUANCE: 1910
D ESC R IPTIO N OF PRO
PERTY: SEC 14 TWP 20S RGE
12E N 102.51 FT OF S 410.12 FT
OF E M2.4 FT OF SWU OF
SWW.
Nam* In which assessed C.
Fuller
All Of said property being In
the County of Seminole. State of
Florida.
Unless such certll Icate or certllicales shall be redeemed ac­
cording to law the property
described In such certificate or
certificates will be sold to the
highest bidder at the court house
door on the 4th day ol Nov
ember, I9«5at 11:00a m.
Approximately 512500 cash
lor lee* Is required to be paid by
successful bidder at the sal*.
Deposit ol 20% of the bid to be
paid within 24 hour* after clos
Ing of the sal*. Balance due
within 4f hour* after closing of
the sale. All payments shall be
cash or guaranteed Instrument,
mad* payable to the Clerk of
Circuit Court.
Oated this I9lh day of Sep
tember. 19*5
(SEALI
David N. Berrien
Clerk ot Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
By: Ginger Denton
Deputy Clerk
Publish: September 24, October
I,«, II, 1M5
DEJ 15*
NOTICK OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Thomas G A A
Mary L. Welsh the holder of Ih*
following certificates has tiled
said certificates tor a tax deed
to be Issued thereon. The certifi­
cate numbers and years of
Issuance, the description of the
property, and the names In
which It was assessed are as
follows:
CERTIFICATE NO.90I.
YEAROF ISSUANCE: 19*0.

...S a n fo rd
Continued from page 1A
cooperation" to help Sanford
with Its sewer problems.
In the consent order, which
passed 5*0. the city agreed to
upgrade the city's sewerage so
during Hood conditions sewage
will not llow into Lake Monroe
along with storm drainage as ft
does now. In exchange, the DER
agrees to the 1995 date to allow
Sanford time to change its sew­
a g e tr e a t m e n t m e th o d to
landspreading and also generate
revenues by growth to pay for
the expensive piping changes.
The city Is planning a $30
million bond Issue to change
treatment methods. The replping. a separate action, will cost
$H- to $9 million.
In other action, the com ­
mission;

...Longwood
Continued from page 1A
mission voted down a proposal
for a sharp increase In applica­
tion fees for such administrative
functions as rczonlng, annexa­
tion. site plan review s and
variance requests. They opted to
send It back to the drawing
board after Sharon Wright, 216
W. W a rren A v c ., said she
wanted to m ove her design
business from her home to a
retail ou tlet but found the

• Postponed until Oct. 14 the
naming of an undcr-constructlon
park at Academy Manor. Evan
Barnes. 142 Bcthunc Circle,
spoke on behalf of the Academy
Manor Neighborhood Associa­
tion and suggested the names
Ruby Mother Wilson Memorial
Park, Bobby Thomas Communi­
ty Park and Academy Manor
Community Park.
• Renewed lease for one year
to the county for use of part of
the first floortof city hall by the
Public Defender s office.
• Agreed to dralt a lease of lot
1. Sanford Marina, so the 1.8
acre lot can be commercially
developed with business selling
marine Items or services. The
vote was 4-0 when Mayor Bcttyc
Smith abstained from voting
because her son. John Smith. Is
Involved In development of the
area.

application fee prohibitive.
Under the proposal, she said,
she would have to pay $655.
plus advertising costs, Just to go
before the historctal commission
to seek necessary approval for
the proposal and site plan.
Ms. Wright said the historical
commission wants to encourage
the small shops of artists and
craftsmen and small businesses
to locate in Longwood. but the
proposed high application fees
would keep them out.
The commission decided to
discuss the fee schedule at a
worksesslon Oct. 15.

Evonlng Herald. Sanford, FI.

Tuoidoy, Sopt, 14, 1915—3A

• Approved three bids for ing most governmental agencies'
work In the city. Sanford Irriga­ salary costs. The ruling stated
tion and Sprinkler Systems Inc. municipal, state and federal
was awarded the contract to agencies must pay overtim e
Install and mndifly the Irrigation wages to most employees rather
system at city hall, cost $2,250. than compensatory time off.
Agreed to purchase a wheel Cities nationwide have been
loader from Florida Contractors asked to donate funds to the
Equipment Co., of Orlando, cost. lobbyists. National Institute of
$69,164. Awarded a bid to Municipal Law Officers, based
Expert Roofing Co., to re-roof the upon c ity p o p u la tio n . T h e
Wcstsldc Recreation Center and Supreme Court ruling was Feb.
Restroom roof on the Tourist
J9 and takes effect Oct. 15.
Club, cost $17,000. A low bid on
• Approved the use of Ft.
th e r o o f o f $ 1 4 ,9 0 0 w as Mellon Park for an AKC sanc­
withdrawn by Allen Roofing Co.
tioned match March 23. The
• Donated $1,000 to lobbyists even t Is spon sored by the
pressuring Congress to pass leg­ Seminole Dog Fanciers Associa­
islation to n u llify a recent tion.
Supreme Court decision affect­
—Deane Jordan, Janie Gnat

6 Requests On County Agendo
County com m issioners are
scheduled to hear a short, sixitem agenda at today's 7 p.m.
public hearing in the county
services building. 1101 E. First
St.
The agenda Includes:
—An appeal against the Board
of Adjustment, which dented a
special exception that would
permit a private school and
extended day care program In­
volving pre-klndcrgartcn to sixth
grad e on the west side o f
Tuskawilla Road. 1/3 mile south
of Red Bug Lake Road.
—A request to rezone 3.5 acres
north of Lake Drive and cast of
Jamie Lane from single family
dwelling to country home dis­
trict.
— A s p e c ific a m e n d m e n t

changing multi-family residen­
tial property to retail commercial
property. That land is 1Vi acres
on the northeast corner of
county road 427 and Dog Track
Road near Longwood.
—Changing 84 acres south of
Chapman Road. 3/4 miles west
of Alafaya Trail from agriculture
to single family dwelling.
—A request to rezone from
agriculture and retail commer­
cial to travel trailer park and
campsites 10Vt» acres on the west
side of county road 15 southeast
of 1-4.
— A s p e c ific a m e n d m e n t
changing agriculture zoning for
five acres on the cast side of
Markham Woods Road to office
district zoning.

—Janie GnRt

AREA DEATHS
KENNETH 6 . PROKOSCH

ELINOR W. PLATZ

Mr. Kenneth George I’ rokosch.
73. of 107 W. 30th St.. Sanford,
died Monday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Born
Feb. 15, 1912 in Newburgh.
N.Y.. he moved to Sanford In
1971 from Beacon. N.Y. He was
a retired telegraph operator for
W estern U nion and was a
member of All Souls Catholic
Church. Knights of Colubus
Council 5357. Sanford: Elks
Lodge 1493, Beacon, and a life
member o f Thompklns Hose
V o lu n t e e r F ir e C o m p a n y .
Beacon.
He Is su rvived by a son.
M ic h a e l. S a n fo r d : tw o
grandsons; four brothers. John
W ., S a n fo r d . G e o r g e . S t.
P e te rs b u rg . W o od row .
Newburgh, and Francis. Utica,
N.Y.: two sisters. Margaret De­
nick. Vcro Beach, and Mary
Clmorelll. Zephyr Hills.
Burial will be In Beacon. N.Y.
Gramkow Funeral Home. San­
ford. Is in charge of local ar­
rangements.

Mrs. Elinor W. Platz. 86, of
950 Mcllonvllle Ave., Sanford,
died Monday at Florida Hospllal-A ltam on te Springs. Born
Nov. 22, 1898 in Indiana, she
m o v e d to S a n f o r d f r o m
California In 1954. She was a
retired administrative assistant.
S u rv iv o r s In clu d e a son.
James K. Winslow. Pompano
Beach: daughter. Nancy A. Bean.
Maitland; one grandchild.
A ll Faiths M em orial Park.
Casselberry, is in charge of
arrangements.
Flower&gt; Scent With Love

D E SC R IPTIO N OF PRO
PERTY: SEC 14 TWP 20S RGE
12E N 102 51 FT OF S M7.59 FT
OF E M2.4 FT OF SW'-* OF
SW%.
Name In which assessed John
L. Fuller
All ol said property being In
the County ot Seminole, State ol
Florida.
Unless such certificate or cer
tlllcates shall be redeemed ac­
cording to law Ihe property
described in such certificate or
certificate* will be sold to Ihe
highest bidder at Ihe court house
door on Ihe 4th day ol Nov
ember, 19*5at II 00a m.
Approximately 1125.00 cash
lor lees I* required to be paid by
successful bidder at the sale.
Deposit ot 20% of the bid to be
paid within 24 hours after clos
ing of Ihe sale.. Balance due
within 4* hours alter closing ol
the sate. All payments shall be
cash or guaranteed Instrument,
made payable to the Clerk ol
Circuit Court.
Dated this 19th day ol Sep
tember. 19*5.
(SEAL)
David N. Barrien
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: Ginger Denlon
Deputy Clerk
Publish: September 24, October
t.l, 15.19*5
DEJ 1*5
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notice is hereby given that tne
corporation designated below,
pursuant to the ''Fictitious
Name Statute". Section *65 09.
Florida Statutes, will register
with Ih* Clerk ot Circuit Court,
In and lor Seminole County,
Florid*, upon receipt of proof ot
the publication ol this nolle*, Ih*
fictitious name, to wit:
Shulteroll/Nu Sash
under which such corporation Is
engaged In business at 1000
S avage Court, Longw ood,
Florid*
The corporation Interested in
Mid business enterprise is as
follows:
Nu Sash of
Mid-Florida, Inc
D A T E D al L o n g w o o d .
Seminole County, Florida, Sep­
tember*. 19*5.
Publish Sapltmber 10. 17, 24 A
October 1,1915
DEJ *2

‘ NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Thomas G A A
Mary L. Walsh th# holder of the
tol lowing certificates has Iliad
said certificates for a tax deed
to ba Issued thereon. Th* certifi­
cate numbers end years ol
Issuance, th* description ol Ih*
property, and th* namet In
which It was assessed are as
follows:
CERTIFICATE NO. *01
YEAROF ISSUANCE: 19*0
D ESC R IPTIO N OF PRO
PERTY: SEC 14 TWP 20S RGE
12E S 102 51 FT OF E M2 4 FT
OFSWWOFSWW.
Nam * In which assessed

l h,)nhi 111

(Hollins

(PHONE L*

M323.1204
aw

book

—

I &gt;i &gt;11114 lit \ I &gt;111 » I i &gt;1 \

At

Legal Notice

C a ll N o w 628-5000

322-4303

Legal Notice
Alton so Fuller
All of said property being in
th* County of Seminole. Slat* of
Florida.
Unless such certificate or cer
tiflealee shall be redeemed ac­
cording to law the property
described In such certificate or
certificates will be sold to th#
highest bidder at the court house
door on the 4th day ol Nov­
ember. 19(5 at 11:00a.m.
Approximately SI25.00 cash
lor fees Is required to be paid by
successful bidder at the sal*.
Deposit ot 20% ol th* bid to be
paid within 24 hours atler clos­
ing of ihe sale Balance due
wilhln 4* hours after closing ot
ihe sale. All payments shall be
cash or guaranteed Instrument,
made payable to th* Clerk ol
Circuit Court.
Dated this I91h day ol Sap
tember, 1915.
(SEAL)
David N Berrien
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: Ginger Denton
Deputy Clerk
Publish: September 24. October
l.l. 15.1915
DEJ 1*3

W hen ^

N eed a L o a n ...

“Time Is Of
The Essence
— Ajvnymuus

NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Thomas G A A
Mary L. Welsh th* holder ot th*
following certlllcetes has filed
said certificate* for a tax deed
to be Issued thereon. Th* certllicel* number* end yeert of
Issuance, the description ot the
property, and the names In
which It was assessed are as
lot lows:
CERTIFICATE NO.I9*.
YEAROF ISSUANCE: 19*0.
D ESC RIPTIO N OF PR O ­
PERTY: SEC 14 TWP 20S RGE
ME N 102.51 FT OF S 415.11 FT
OF E M2 4 FT OF SWU OF
SW&gt;4.
Name In which assessed E.
Fuller AKA/Earl Fuller
All ol said property being In
th* County ol Sominol*. Slet* ol
Florida.
Uni*** such certificate or cer­
tificate* shall be redeemed ac­
cording to law th* property
described In such cert 11leal* or
certificates will be sold to the
highest bidder et the court house
door on th* 4th dey ol Nov­
ember. 19C5at 11:00a.m.
Approximately 5125.00 cash
for lees is requited to be paid by
successful bidder et the eel*.
Deposit ot 20% of th* bid to be
paid within 24 hour* after clos­
ing ol the sole. Balance due
within 45 hours attar closing ol
th* tale. All payments shall be
cash or guarantied Instrument,
mad* payable to the Clerk ot
Circuit Court.
Deled this '9th dey ot Sep­
tember. i its.
(SEAL)
David N. Berrien
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
By: Ginger Denlon
Deputy Clerk
Publish: September 24. October
1.5.15.1905
DEJ 1*2

When tim e is o f the
essence, w e ’ll give you
a quick answer to your
loan request. In most
cases, tne same day you
apply.
Whether you want a
new car, boat, needed
home improvements, or
for any worthwhile rea­
son, we can get you o ff
to a quick start w ith
convenient term s and
repayment plans.
Our simple interest

loans are designed so
that you only pay on the
amount o f money you
owe for the tim e it takes
to pay the loan back.
Unlike other banks
which charge most o f
the interest up front.
So hurry up and visit
or call any o f our con­
veniently located Sun
Bank offices today.
Remember, when tim e
is o f the essence...it’s
Sun Bank.

ifil?)

The bright way to bank.
Mmtor rtxc » IM* *un ItanM tar

�E v e n in g H e r a ld
(U S P S 481-110)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322 261 1 err 831-9993
Tuesday, September 24, 1985—4A
W a yn e D. D oyle, Pu blisher
Th om as G iordano, M a n a gin g E ditor
M e lv in A dkins, A d vertisin g D irector
Hnmt D elivery: W eek. S I. 10: Month. S-t 75: 3 M onths
S I I 25 ti M onths. S27 (K): Vear. S 5 I OO Itv Mall W eek.
S I 5ti M onth. S(i (K) 3 M onths. $18 (K) (i M onths. 832 50

\e.ll Slid (M)

IRS N e e d s M o re
W o rkers On Jo b
It’s becoming clear that Internal Revenue
Service woes this year were a result of too
many tax returns, too few workers and
unrealistic work goals.
T h e fact that a S 103-million com pu ter
system was put on line before it was properly
tested d id n 't help m uch, either.
In case you hadn 't heard, the IRS had its
w orst yea r ever.
T h e glitch es started in Jan u ary, when the
P h iladelphia IR S office — one o f 10 regional
cen ters — m istak en ly accused 27.000 c o r­
porate taxp ayers o f tax delinquencies.
A n oth er 150.000 individual taxpayers also
received d elin qu en cy notices by m istake.
S o m e liens w ere placed w ron gfu lly on
p r o p e r ty , an d b an k a c c o u n ts w e r e e r ­
roneously frozen.
Philadelphia also shredded thousands o f tax
returns by error — or possibly because som e
harassed em p loyees decided that w as the best
w a y to lighten the w orkload.

D O N A L D LA M B R O

Medical Misspending A National Scandal
WASHINGTON — A confidential audit says
the government is wasting S315 million a year
In medical research payments for unrelated
overhead costs at hundreds of universities and
Institutes across the nation.
When more money is being poured Into what
federally funded grantees call "Indirect costs"
(i.e.. overhead expenses), that means less money
is available for needed biomedical research.
A draft of the unreleased audit, a copy of
which 1 obtained, concludes that because of the
excessive growth in Indirect costs, the federally
funded National Institutes of Health "could not
fund over 9.000 (medical research) projects that
were deemed worthy of support.”
The Investigation, conducted by Department
of Health and Human Services’ Office of
Inspector General, examined indirect costs at 13
major research universities. Including Harvard.
Yale. Johns Hopkins. UCLA and the University
of Missouri.
The Internal audit’s shocking discovery: 55
percent of the 1984 indirect-cost payments by
the federal government "did not benefit gov­

ernment-sponsored research.” Instead, this
money paid for administrative, faculty and
clerical salaries, light and heating bills, new
buildings and equipment, and other expenses
not directly related to the actual research.
"W hen you put more money into research. It
doesn’t necessarily mean it goes into research,
but It might go Into campus guards." says HHS
Inspector Genera) Richard Kusscrow.
"L e t’s be honest about it," Dr. Bcrnadtnc
Healy. deputy director of the White House Office
of Science Policy, told my assistant. Tracy
Fletcher. Indirect costs, she said, are “ a block
grant" given to a university. "T h e question Is.
should one big university be getting a larger
block grant than another?"
There Is. in fact, little rhyme or reason to how
the costs are figured. Private institutions usually
get higher indirect-cost payments than public
institutions. Reimbursement rates range any­
where from 99 percent at Harvard Medical
School to 31 percent at Kansas State University.
Clearly, when the government pays for
research. It should be responsible for some of

the costs of equipment and oilier researchrelated expenses involved In carrying out the
grant. But Just how much of the universities
overhead tab should taxpayers be asked to loot ?
Increasingly, say worried HHS Investigators,
more and more of NIH’s nolle research dollars
are going to subsidize university overhead.
NIH’s spending on indirect costs has outpaced
spending on actual research by almost 3 to l
since 1972.
From 1972 to 1982. direct (i.e.. research) costs
rose from $642 million lo S I.6 billion, or 151
percent. Yet indirect costs leaped from S I66
million lo $690 million — a whopping 315
percent Increase — during this same period.
Over the past two years, indirect costs have
continued to rise dramatically, auditors say.
Sadly, members of Congress, facing political
pressures from local universities, have done
nothing to solve the problem. A General
Accounting Office audit Issued last year was
ignored on Capitol Hill, even though it un­
covered numerous examples of skyrocketing
Indirect costs.

ED W A R D J . W ALSH

D O N G RAFF

To Reader
In New
Mexico

Economic
Fallacy,
The Facts

In 1975. Business Week published
a scary article predicting a "capital
crunch" within 10 years that would
Other regional centers also had problems.
threaten the survival of the Ameri­
can economy. The economy did
Fresno, Calif., m istakenly destroyed 60.000
crash In 1980. but because capital
letters from people tryin g to resolve tax
was consciously withdrawn from
p r o b le m s : a n o th e r 2 0 .0 0 0 le tte r s w e re
the credit markets by the Federal
shredded in Austin. Texas, and a lesser
Reserve System in order to wring
nu m ber o f docum ents were destroyed by
out Inflation — an excess of capital
that many Americans actually en­
m istake In A n dover. Mass.
joyed. To untold thousands of busi­
An article In the Septem ber issue o f T h e
nessmen, tlic cure was worse than
W a sh ingto n M o n th ly points out that the
the disease.
glitches started long before the com puter
Business Week has now done It
breakdown.
again, with a story entitled "T h e
Casino Society" dealing with finan­
It quotes one National T reasu ry E m ployees
cial speculation. The gist of the
U n ion o ffic ia l as s a y in g o v e r w h e lm in g
piece is that high-paid Investment
workloads have led to large-scale foul-ups for
bankers, arbitragers, and takeover
the last four years — the trouble starting w ell
pirates are really running the
before the com puter was installed.
economy — and running It Into the
ground. Business Week predicted,
T h e num ber of IRS em p loyees — 87.500 —
as it did with the capita) crunch
has rem ained essentially the sam e for the last
story, that "the casino society has
five years.
tlte potential o f engineering a
serious financial collapse."
But in that span o f tim e, the num ber of
Now. many things have "th e
taxpayer returns has clim bed from 137.4
potential of engineering" a collapse
m illion to 173.7 m illion.
— that kind of sentence structure Is
called hedging one’s bets.
T h e IRS has attem pted to handle the risin g
A "casino society" story will very
workload by reducing by 20 percent the staff definitely sell copies. And there is
m em bers' w h o handle taxpayer Inquiries,
an element o f truth in the view that
process returns and get the refunds in the
speculation diverts assets from
mail.
productive Investment. But — as
with
the capital crunch story — this
T h e p erson nel rem ain in g in these Jobs have
one
deals
with symptoms, not the
had to pick up the slack and h ave faced
source.
unrealistic w o rk quotas.
The source Is U.S. economic
O v e rw h e lm in g w ork loads led to large-scale
policy, and has been for many
loul-ups.
years. A new study to be released by
the U.S. Business and Industrial
Clearly, massive tax reform is needed on
Council
reminds us that expen­
several fronts.
diture on compliance with pollution
T h e in co m e tax m ust be sim p lified and
control regulations drains some $55
m ade as fair as possible for all.
b i l l i o n a n n u a ll y fr o m U .S .
manufacturing. The tax system,
But on top oi that, the IR S m ust clean up its
despite the catcalls of the antiow n house so that It can do Its w o rk w ith
business lobby, remains deeply
accu racy and precision.
biased against capital formation.
Thanks to federal tolerance o f labor
Until the c o d e is sim p lified and until the
union m onopolies, the cost of
c o m p u ter w ork s, m ore help m ust be hired.
creating a new job in a General
C on gress and the R eagan ad m in istration
M o to rs a u to p la n t now runs
are to b lam e for fa llin g to ap p rop riate the
$50,000. Trade and antitrust laws
necessary funds.
are a maze of bureaucratic con­
tradictions.
For about 10 years, however,
many economists — mostly liberals,
have condemned business for pay­
P le a s e W r it e
ing more attention to quarterly
Letters to the editor are welcome for
earnings than long-term invest­
publication. All letters must be signed and
ments. They were, and are. content
include a mailing address and, if possible, a
with the theory that businessmen as
telephone number. The Evening Herald re­ a group are complacent, lazy, and
serves the right to edit letters to avoid libel
greedy. Today, the same critics are
and to accommodate space.
disturbed as the rash of arbitrage,
short selling, takeover battles, and
heavy borrowing in the corporate
world, and are hauling out the old
theory that business is either an
BERRY'S W O R LD
Insidious force, or plain dumb.

“ How many times do we have to
be outfoxed by the Soviets, and how
many countries have to be taken,
before our liberals come lo the
realization that Russia plays lor
keeps?”
A reader in Albuquerque asks
that In a letter taking except ion to
some of my recent comments on the
agony of South Africa.
She goes on to provide several
examples of liberal errors that have
benefited the Soviets: Zimbabwe, a
one-party Marxist state instead of
the multi-racial democracy that was
supposed to follow I he end o f white
rule: Vietnam, where premature
withdrawal brought a police stale
and Soviet-style econom y: and
Saiidinlsla Nicaragua, which is run
by a "little polltburo."

JEFFR EY H A R T

South Africa Madness
The South Africa fever that has
descended upon us has more than a
touch o f Insanity about it. Insanity
or. perhaps, demonic possession.
After all. and this has to be said
bluntly, the South African govern­
ment Is the best government on the
con tin en t o f A frica . Yes. yes.
apartheid is bad, but there arc some
30 much more poisonous regimes
on the African continent.
Do not those who arc now assail­
ing it and threatening sanctions and
so forth rea lize that? Several
hundred people have been killed in
recent disturbances, to be sure. But
thousands o f people have been
killed in. for example. Uganda.
Thousands more in Nyrerc’s Tanyanlsa. Hyrere likes to lecture the
U.N. The government of Angola
would disappear overnight if It were
not propped up by Cubans, and is
waging a savage campaign of re­
pression against guerilla forces that
have majority backing. The gov­
ernment of Ethiopia is thoroughly
barbaric, and is waging a gcnocldal
campaign of starvation against Its
own people. And the moralists
among us wish to overthrow the
government o f South Africa.
I am reminded of a famous story
Thomas Mann published in 1929
called "Mario and the magician," a
study In mass hysteria, perhaps
ubout fascism. A carnival magician
shows up In the fashionable Italian
seaside resort o f Torre dl Vencre
and turns out to have sinister
powers. Under his Influence the
people in the small town begin to do

- . ..Li, i ,r i jRa _1 ,* ..
alt sorts of absurd and unnatural
things, poisoning the whole at­
mosphere of the place. I wonder if
Senator Richard Lugar. for exam ­
ple. or Sen. Robert Dole, have been
spending a lot o f time lately in Torre
di Vencre.
Of course, we’ve seen the whole
process at work before. In an
endlessly repeated pattern, the lib­
eral mentality always makes mat­
ters worse.
The liberal mentality helped get
rid of Chlang Kal Shek. We got Mao
Tse Tung, and thank you very
much.
T h e lib e ra l m en tality hated
Cuban dictator Fulgcnclo Battista,
and campaigned relentlessly against
him. We got Castro Instead.
The liberal mentality hated the
Shah o f Iran, and we got the
Ayatollah.
The liberal mentality demanded
the overthrow of the Somoza regime
In Nicaragua, and now we have the
Sandinlstas.
The liberal mentality hated the
regime of Marshall Thlru in South
Vietnam. We got communism and a
couple of hundred thousand boat
people.
In Chile, the liberal mentality
much preferred the disastrous
Marxism of Salvador Allende to the
present military regime. The liberal
mentality supported the Salvadoran
communist guerillas, now fortu­
nately on the run. and It is eagerly
eyeing the Philippines, sensing a
chance to overthrow Marcos.

All of these examples arc well
taken and invite extended debate.
But I’ll pass in order to focus on a
point that is basic to the reader's
and my differences in lids matter.
That is the nature ol the American
relation sh ip with the problem
countries of the non-communist
world, and whether our policies
toward these nations are ultimately
In our own best interests,
We often go awry because we see
the Nlcamguas nnd South Afrieas as
"eilher-or" situations. Either tin*
status quo has to be maintained
against an internal challenge —
even at liie cost of siipporiing a
blatantly repressive regime — or the
prize must be allowed to tall to the
Soviets
We tend to overlook the other
options that may often exist These
may include Identifying and en­
couraging an existing democratic
opposition that is more computlhlc
wlth our principles and that will
seek — and perhaps eventually
achieve — power nnn-vlnlcntly.
That, of course, is the ideal situation
— and It e x is ts now. in the
Philippines.
Or, lucking any constructive in­
ternal leverage, our best policy in
the long run could he simply to
stand aside, letting an upheaval run
its course while publicly taking a
stand for Justice and against re­
pression. We would at least have
identified our interests with those ol
the good guys, should any emerge
when the revolutionary dust settles.
There arc many more examples ol
the consequences of the "eilher-or"
approach, and they are not en­
couraging. In Guatemala and Iran,
to take Just two. the cures have
proved more damaging to our Inter­
ests than the diseases we thought
we were treating.

JA C K ANDERSON

Scholarship Program Under Fire
By Jack Anderson

And
Joseph Spear

"Sorry, buddy, you've had enough! You're
cut off."

WASHINGTON — For the second
tim e in 18 m onths, a federal
program that grants scholarships to
A m erican Indians for m edical
stu d ies has com e under fire.
Oversight officials have questioned
practices that may have resulted in
preference given to relatives of
employees In ihe agency that ad­
ministers the program.
The earlier review concluded that
the program's-rules may have been
bent to allow award of a $33,264
scholarship at Harvard to the
daughter of Dr. Everett Rhoades,
d ire c to r o f the Indian H ealth
Sendee, which manages the pro­
gram.
Although no evidence of impro­
priety on Rhoades' part was found,
reforms were made in the applica­
tion-review process.
"W hile there is some evidence
that procedures were modified to
a llo w th e a w a rd to D o r o th y

Rhoades, indications arc that Dr.
Rhoades did not play a direct role In
bending any ru les," states the
March 1984 report.
The more recent review was
completed earlier this month by ihe
inspector general of the Health and
Human Sendees Department. The
unreleased draft report, obtained by
our associate Tony Capacclo. found
"weaknesses in many aspects" of
ihe scholarship award and review
process.
"Our review of 50 applicant files
during the period 1981-85 disclosed
numerous Instances where the IH5
(Indian Health Service) internal
controls were bypassed." the report
states. For example. U notes, seven
of the 50 applications were pro­
cessed an average of 12 days after
the filing deadlines had passed,
while 25 others showed no date of
receipt.
” IHS officials couldn't tell us why
the seven applications were pro­
cessed after the cutoff date," the

report states. "Compliance with due
date Is necessary to assure fairness
In considering all applicants. By
granting awards (o Individuals who
may not have met the IHS filing
deadlines, other qualified appllcunis
may have been denied awards."
In addition, the Inspector general
found 20 applicants who listed
Indian Health Service employees as
references. In Itself this is not
prohibited, but "examination dis­
c lo s e d m an y d e v ia tio n s from
established procedures" for the
employee-related applicants.
For example, the inspector gener­
al concluded that eight of Ihe
related applicants were given higher
academic ratings by agency review­
ers than their scholastic records
Justified, while 14 o f the applica­
tions showed no evidence that filing
deadlines had been enforced.
In the Rhoades case, the director's
attorney said the earlier report "w as
not grossly inaccurate, and w e’re
not saying that It misses the mark,
but It docs not tell the whole story."

The attorney said that a forthcom­
ing Inspector general report will
conclude that Dorothy Rhoades
"deserved the scholarship ami won
it fair and square."
A fter the director's daughter
missed the minimum score for a
scholarship by one point, acccording to the 1984 report, she was
re-evaluated outside established
procedures and received a higher
rating.
Although the director "maintains
that he did not receive negative
advice.” the 1984 report states,
"the evidence indicates that d e ­
ments of his staff did go to him and
contend that he could lie com ­
promised and possibly embarrassed
if the award was accepted by hit
daughter."
The report concluded lhal "the
system operative over the past
y ea rs " was io blame for such
situations and made the Indian
Health Service vulnerable to criti­
cism.

’

�SPORTS

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Sept. 24, m s —SA

SAC Volleyball Action Heats Up This Week
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports W riter
S e m in o le A th le tic C o n fe re n c e
volleyball action heats up this week ns
most of the teams open play In whnt
promises to be a competitive season.
Tonight. In a pivotal carly-scason
match. Lyman hosts Lake Howell
(varsity only at 7). Also on Tuesday.
Oviedo takes on St. Cloud In an Orange
Belt Conference match.
On Wednesday Lake Mary Is at
Oviedo (Junior varsity 4 p.m.. varsity
5). In a non-conference match Wed­
nesday. Seminole High opens the
season at New Smyrna Beach.
Lyman's Lady Greyhounds got off to
a flying start with a victory over
Oviedo this past Thursday In the SAC
opener. Leading the hard-hitting Lady
Greyhound attack arc seniors Klin
Forsyth and Sheila Mandy. Senior
setter Dawn Boycscn had an outstand­
ing match against Oviedo. Other
standouts for the Lady Greyhounds
include Donna Ball. Kristie Kaiser, Lori

Helms nnd Taml Foss, all seniors.
Lake Howell returns Just one of six
starters from last year's Five Star
Conference champions but the Lady
Hawks have some experience and a
pair of excellent Instructors In coach
Jo Luciano and assistant Linda
Morales.
The top returning players for Lake
Howell Include seniors Jolcc Johnson,
Mary Kuy Scott. Christy Tibbitts and
Anita Ccchowskl.
Tonight's match will also feature two
of the best coaches In Central Florida
In Lyman’s Karrcn Newman and Lake
Howell’s Luciano. Newman, who re­
turns afer a two-year absence, led
Lyman to a district title In 1982 while
Luclnno, who took a lcavc-of-abscnec
last volleyball season, coached a
number of successful seasons at Lake
Howell.
In Wednesday's action. Lake Mary.
0-1. Is looking for its first victory while
Oviedo. 2-1. goes for its first SAC win.

Calendar
The Lady Rams dropped a 15-6, 15-6
match to DeLand In their season
opener but coach Cindy Henry said the
good outweighed the bad. Leading the
way for Lake Mary arc Kathy llodak.
Betsy Perry. Anqucnctte Whack. Lora
Splatl and Angle Capps.
Oviedo, which Is 2-0 In the Orange
Belt, is led at the net by Stephanie
Nelson and Allison Smith while Kim
Verne does the settin g. Barbara
Malone has been impressive for Oviedo
In the early season as she has not
missed a serve In three matches.
Seminole High is unveiling what
coach Beth Corso said could be a
contender by mldseason. Experience Is
th e m ain c o n c e rn o f th e L ad y
Scmlnoles as many of the players on
the squad have not played the sport
before. The most experienced players

arc returning starters Sherri Peterson,
J a c k ie F a rr and C in d y H ogan .
• In cross country action this week.
Lyman High Is hosting a dual meet
with Lake Brantley tonight (girls 4
p.in.. boys 4:30) In what coach Joe
L a u g h lln s a id , “ s h o u ld be a
barnburner."
The girls teams are close after last
w eek 's E dgew ater Invitational In
which Brantley finished third and
Lyman fourth. Lyman Is expected to
have a healthy team for the first time.
Lyman and Lake Brantley are also
close in the boys race for the Seminole
Athletic Conference title.
T h is w eek en d , m ost S em in ole
County cross country teams will run In
the Seabreeze Beach Run Saturday at
Daytona Beach. Those expected to be
at the beach Include Lake Mary.
Lyman. Lake Brantley and Oviedo.
Seminole High will not run In a meet
while Lake Howell's girls will travel to
Jacksonville for the Sandalwood In­
vitational.

Rams Relish
Open Date;
Await Tribe
By Chris Plater
Herald Sport* W riter
The open date couldn't have
come at a better time for Lake
Mary's Rams.
Lake Mary, which upended
DeLand, 14-10. on Saturday, has
a number of nagging Injuries
that It would like to be healed
before getting Into Seminole
Athletic Conference and District
5A-4 play.
S o p h o m o re ru n n in g back
ohn Curry was not at 100
rcent Saturday after sitting
ut the first week (21-0 loss to
popka) with a slightly sprained
klc. Still. Curry was a factor
turday as he ran 12 times for
yards and caught two passes
r 56 yards. Including a 47-yard
o u c h d o w n r e c e p tio n from
hane Lcttcrlo.
"Curry made that run on one
g ." Lake Mary coach Harry
elson said of the TD jaunt, " ir
he had two good legs we would
ave scored down there on the
ree (DeLand held the Rams out
the end rone after a first down
the four)."
Tw o of the Rams' senior leadRay Hartsfleld and Byron
ashlngton, were playing with
ured fingers.
" I wasn't worried about It,"
ashlngton said. " A lot of our
y players were hurt but we're
Ing to play with pain."
W a s h in g to n tu rn ed w h at
ked to be a short pass into a
Ig play when he broke loose
from a defender, picked up a
block and ran 81 yards for Lake
Mary's first touchdown Satur­
day.
" I was just trying to get the
first down at first." Washington
said. "T h e DeLand guy tried his
best'to stick with me but I got
away from him and got a key
block from Dennis Barnes."
Letterlo had an outstanding
night as he completed 8 of 13
passes for 243 yards. Ills best
pass o f the day. however, did not
go for a touchdown.
Midway through the third
quarter. Lake Mary had the ball
at its own 46 yard line. Letterlo
then dropped back, stepped up
In the pocket and lofted a perfect
pass which Ray Hartsfleld ran
under, gathered In and headed
for the end zone. But Hartsfleld
was caught from behind at the
four-yard line after a 60-yard
pass play.
DcLand's defense then held
Lake Mary out of the end zone
after the Rams had a first and
goal at the four.
Against DeLand, Lake Mary
nearly tripled It* offensive out­
put of the opener. Against
Apopka, the Rams gained 112
yards total offense. Saturday.
Lake Mary had 331 yards total
offense. 243 passing and 88
rushing.
But. Lake M ary's loss to
Apopka didn’t seem as bad after
the Blue Darters whipped Winter
Park. 28-9. Saturday night.
" W e went to war against
Apopka without all our guns."
Nelson said. "W e played lousy
but still stood up fairly well.
Figuring how they (Apopka) beat
up on Winter Park. I'd say we re
a pretty good football team."
Lake Mary. 1-1 overall and 1-0
In the district, returns to 5A-4
play Oct. 18 at home against
Spruce Creek. But. first on the
Rams' minds is healing the
Injuries and then going after
Seminole.
"I guess we can heal our
Injuries now." Washington said.
"We're looking forward to play­
ing Seminole. Especially at
home. There should be a great
crowd."

• In swimming. Seminole High will
host a tri-meet with Oviedo and Lake
Mary Wednesday at 4 p.m. at the
Sanora Pool. Saturday. Seminole and
Lake Mary will compete In the Bishop
Moore Invitational at the Sharldan
Aquatic Club. Lyman High will travel
to Gainesville Tor the Gator Invita­
tional.
• In freshman football action to­
night. Seminole High travels to St.
Cloud. Lake Howell hosts Lake Mary.
Lym an hosts Lake Brantley and
Oviedo Is at Kissimmee Osceola. All
klckofTs are 7 p.m.
In a big Junior varsity matchup on
Thursday night. Lake Mary entertains
Seminole. Both teams are 1-0. In other
JV action Thursday. Lyman is at
Bishop Moore. Oviedo travels to St.
C loud and Lake B ran tley hosts
Kissimmee Osceola (ull klckofTs are 7
p.m.).
In a limited varsity slate on Friday.
Seminole High Is at Lake Howell and
Lyman hosts Lake Brantley,

Surprised Osborn
Reacts To
Makes First Down
By Bam Cook
Herald Sports Editor

HtraM Fhateby Eric Kilim saw US

S e m in o le p u n te r Sonny O s b o rn , le ft, ru n s
o v e r a p a ir o f T itu s v ille ta c k e r s e n ro u te to a

f ir s t d o w n . O s b o rn 's ru n fro m p u n t f o r m a ­
tio n ig n ite d th e T r ib e 's fir s t to u c h d o w n .

■fie

Football

It was fourth and six. Seminole
was on Its own 17 yard line.
Only 9:30 remained In the game. *
The Tribe trailed Titusville, all for a first down.
20-0. Things looked bleak for the
When they unpllcd the mass.
home team.
Osborn wasn't sure he'd lunged ..
Then, a silver of light kept Into
far enough. Then he peered at
Seminole's gloomy sltutation. the sideline and saw a familiar
Titusville was -flagged for an face. “ 1 looked up at coach and •
offsides violation. The ball was he was grinning." Osborn said. v.«
advanced five yards to the 22. "That was a great feeling."
*.
Still. Sonny Osborn returned to
M o s u r e h a d r e a s o n to
his punting position 10 yards s mi l e . “ Boy. tal k a b o u t a
behind the line of scrimmage. It heads-up play." he said. "That
would be quite a gamble even for Osborn Is really something. We
one yard.
snap It to the wrong guy and he
As Osborn was setting up. still gets the first down. That
however. Mike Levant came was quick thinking."
running onto the field. He said
There were a lot of great v '
som ething to Eddie Banks. feelings In the fourth quarter for •
"Sweep 8. Sweep 8." But he the Seminole*. After Osborn's
didn't say It very loud.'Not loud crucial first down, sophomore
enough for James Rowe to hear. quarterback Jeff Blake moved
That was crucial. Rowe Is the the Tribe 72 yards in lust ala ?rr:
center.
plays. Blake hit Herb Htilery for - •■}
" I was trying to point to 84 yards for the key play. Soph «n
B an k a," Osborn said about Curtis Rudolph scored his first
proposed fake punt on which varsity touchdown from two
rU
Rowe would snap to upback yards out with 6:04 to play.
Banks. "I knew Rowe didn't hear
Three plays later, the Tribe
the call, so I Just kept pointing to had the ball back. Mike Luster &gt;
Eddie, hoping that he knew unloaded on Wayne Straw and :
what I meant."
Kenny Morris covered the fum­
Rowe didn't. He snapped the ble. Dwayne Willis picked up 15 *
ball to the most surprised man on two carries before Blake went •
on the field — the punter. Sonny airborne again. He went long •
Osborn. "I didn't know what to and deep to Dave Rape who
do," Osborn said about his snagged the ball with a nice grab
momentary hesitation. "Should I and wheeled Into the end zone to
punt or should I run?"
complete a 41-yard scoring play. *'
The natural Instinct took over
That was the end of the •'*'•
next. He looked to his right and miracle comeback, though. Only .
saw a wall of blockers. He took a 2:01 remained and with the *
couple of steps, picked up speed Scmlnoles down to their Iasi
I
and then he recklessly threw his
Bee
OSBORN,
Page
BA
body Into a defender, giving his

Hawthorne Motors To State Stock Championship
NEW S M R Y N A BEACH — A fte r
dominating the slrcel slock action this
season with 19 feature wins, young
Casey Hawthorne drove the familyowned Mustang to victory In the 100-lap
Street Stock Championship of Florida.
Joey Warmack. who nlso won his share
of features this year, finished second. In
the same lap as the leader.
Casey’s arch rival "W ild " Bill Klnley.
who gave him a good run for the 8400
winner's share, dropped out on lap 85.
For the 26th time this season. David
Rogers turned fast time, won the fast
heat and drove the Wayne Densch
Budweiser Firebird to victory In the
feature event for te super late model
division. Second to fifth were LcRoy
Porter. Lee Faulk. Tim Nooner and Joe
Middleton.
Now doing Ills thing in the Sunshine
State, veteran Harry Brazec. who had a

divisions have been scheduled. The
super late models will fly low around the
high banked half-mine oval for 8800 to
win, plus lap money. In a 50-lapper.

Auto Racing

LATK MODELS

very successful racing career In the
Northeast a few years back, put the
Gec-B C on tractors C am aro In the
winner's Circle, besting the J.B.'s Fish
Camp/Phantom Racing Flrebord of John
Cochran. Jeff Blchr. Tiger Tom Pat­
terson nnd second heat winner Mike
Barfield.
Jerry Symons drove the Cycle Care
Pinto to victory In the four-cylinder
main, with young Jeff Rinehart, who
graduated from the monthly enduro
wars to the roadrunner division, ending
Allan Walker's winning streak by scor­
ing a close victory over the tough local
weekend warrior.
The coming Satruday. End of the
Month Championship events for all five

Dickerson: 3 TDs
Seattle's Curt Warner ran for
SEATTLE (UPI) — Despite
Impressive statistics. Doug Reed Just 32 yards and Seattle
figured Dave Krleg would have a managed only 44 yards rushing.
difficult time against the Los Meanwhile. LA's Eric Dickerson
Angeles Rams Monday night.
made his 1985 debut something
Krleg was the top-rated passer special by romping for 150 yards
In the NFL last week and the and three touchdowns In helping
Seattle Scahawks were 2-0. But the Rams Improve to 3-0.
Krleg declined to blast his
*last night. Krleg was sacked
seven times for 61 yards In line's blocking — or lack thereof.
“ We Just got beat." he said
losses and intercepted twice as
the Rams downed Seattle 35-24.
simply. "We've Just got to come
"It was not surprise to me." back and do better next week."
said Reed, the Rams defensive
Dickerson, who set an NFL
end who had a game-high three record last year of 2.105 yards
sacks for mlnus-24 yards. "If It rushing, missed the first two
happens In practice, it's going to games of this season because of
come In the game. We're a bad a contract dispute.
"I think I played very well." he
group of guys, so It's really hard
said. "I thought I was ready to
to keep us out.
til.1v V a il didn't think 1 was
“ We shut down the run. too."

Fatted Qualllter: OavM Hogan. Orlando. 11.71« tac.
Flrtl boat (10 laps)•I . Rogon.
Sacondhaat (10lap*) I. Draw Stotec. Hudaon.
Faatura (IS lap*) 1. David Rogan. Orlando; 1. LaRoy
Porter. Orlando; 3. Loo Faulk. Orlando; a. Tim Noenor,
Naw Smyrna Baach; S. Joa Mlddlaton. Sa. Daytona; «.
Oral Freommlng, Orlando; 7. Dal Maafct. Ocala; •.
Harold Johnaon, Sanlord; t. John Maaaoy. Naw Smyrna
Baach; 10. Bill Poaey. Rocktedga.

THUNDIRCARS
Fattest Qualllter: Jorry Fitch. Naw Smyrna Baach,
If.07 tac.
Flnt boat ( I lapaM. Filch.
Sacondhaat (Ilaptl-l.M ika Barftete. Ptenon.
Faatun (30 laptl-1. Harry Bran*. Winter Spring*; I.
John Cochran. Oak Hill; 3. Jatf Btehr, Deltona; 4.
Tommy Pattanon. Scotttmoor; S. Mika Sarflald.
P terton, «. John Klrkgard. Sanford; 7. Eddie Parry,
Titusville; I. Jerry Filch. Naw Imyran Baach; f. Hal
Parry. Mims; 10. Ronnie Roach. Orlando. Lap Leaden:
Jerry Filch: M3. Harry Brataa: U 30

STREETITOCK
Florida Slate Championship (WO lapel -

Os u m K C

N tw IH

S
17,

n,
»r&lt;

Second heat U lap») l. Jlmm Travarthan. Naw
Smyrna Baach.
Faatun (IS laptl-1. Jarry Simmon*. Naw Smyran
Baach; 3. Bobby Sean. Osteen; 3. Jimmy Travarthan.
Naw Smyrna Baach; 4. Curtl* Milter. Santord; S. Guy
Lingo. Oviedo; 0. Doug Thomas. Wlmauma; 7. Billy
Hoovan. Orlando; I. Tommy Knoa. DeLand; t. Jeff
Taval, Apopka; 10. Robert Ford. Palmetto. Lap
Leaden: Bobby Sean: 1-0. Jarry Symons: f-W.

ROADRUNNER!

Flnt heat (4 teptl-l. Alan Walker. Naw Smyran
Second heat (4 lap*) !. Lanard Dotteft. Naw Smyran
Faatun (10 laptl-1. Jeft Rhinahart. Daytona
3. Allan Walkar,

IW A, Shade Use Sanford
As Test Run For Matches

N FL: W — k 3
rliT|D U f|8

(thawing

car. lap* completed) — 1. Casey Hawthorne. Sanford.
100; 3. Joey Warmack. Sanford 100; 3. Tad Mitcham.
Sanford, ft, 4. Jim Pfeiffer. Apopka. fO; S. John Rage*.
Holly Hill. 03; «. Marc Klnley. Ottean, 03; 7. Cary Klein.
Orlando, ft ; 0. Bill Klnley. Ottean. OS; t. Mika Hill.
Orlando. St; 10. Doug Howard. Lake Helen. 4S; II. Billy
BailFlowar. Titusville. 43; II. Junior Simmon*. Sanford.
34; 13. Jama* Carter, bellevlew, 33; 14. Jim Voth.
Melbourne. 11; IS. Al Steven*. Orlando. II; te. Buddy
Whltforo, Daytona Baach. W. Lap Leaden: Jim Vofh: 1.
Junior Simmon*: 3-10. Caaay Hawthorn*; 10-100.
FOUR CYLINDER
Flnt hear (« laptl-1. Jarry Symons. Naw Smyran

4

13

W restling

Beverly Shade didn't come by
the nickname "The Hammer"
Danvar 44. Atlanta 33
w i t h o u t Just c a u s e . H e r Shade said.
NYOtente37.lt. Laute 17
tan Dtesa 4L ClncInnaN 41
Shade said Wednesday night's
excruiating headlocks have left
Miami 31. Kama* City I
wrestling card at the Sanford
many
opponents
feeling
like
a
NY JateM •raa* Say 3
Civic Center is a test rufl.
slightly used grapefruit.
tan Francteca 34. LA n W ars IS
Wednesday’s action, which
Shade, who is one half of the
"Arm and Hammer Connection" begins at 8 p.m.. features the
with Tracy Richards, would like unpredictable Bugsy McGraw
to extend her hammerlock to against Crazy Luke Graham in
ready to play but 1fooled y'all."
places other than the wrestling the semifinal along with AllDieter Brock, the former Ca- ring, however. As a matchmaker South tag team cham pions
n a d l a n F o o t b a l l L e a g u e for the International Wrestling Ravishing Randy Rose and Pre­
quarterback, also proved he can Alliance in Tampa. Shade said tty Boy Doug Summers against
play In the NFL. throwing for Monday the IWA would like to Golden Boy Chick Donavan and
BJu Mack, the Wrestling Cowboy
203 yar ds . He c o mp l e t e d control Florida.
in the main event.
"W
e're
doing
to
run
the
state."
12-of-24 attempts.

•*«
a
Jl
.

•s
(H

�AA—Evening Herald, Sentord, Fi.

Tueiday, Sept. 24, H IS

Whitson:
M y Version
Is Different

Baines, Salazar Stall Angels;
LA Pares Magic Num ber To 8
Rangers 11, Mariners 4

United Press International
Tw o men who have been to the
playoffs Monday night reminded the
California Angels how difficult It can be
to get there.
Harold Baines, who led Chicago to the
1983 American League West title, and
Luis Salazar, a member of San Diego’s
1984 National League champions, hit
home runs to give the While Sox a 6-5
victory over the Angels.
The decision prevented California from
gaining ground on Idle Kansas City, and
dropped the Angels* lead to a half-game
over the Royals in the AL West.
"I get paid for playing 162 games so I
go out and play every day like we have a
shot," said Baines. "W e feel we still have
an outside chance to win this. That’s the
funny tiling about baseball. We're still
playing like we have a shot at It.*’
"I guess I've got to walk Baines every
time lie comes to bat or get a pistol and
shoot him ." California manager Gene
Mauch said.
"W e had a chance to score a lot of
runs," Mauch said. "There Is no telling
how many we could have scored."
“ You've got to give the Angels credit,"
said Chicago manager Tony LaRussa.
“ They kept coming back. They never
give up."
Gene Nelson. 10-10. went six innings.

lei
pr
J ill

m
ni

N A T IO N A L

LEAGUE

W
9a
91
78
71
70
SI

L
56
59
77
77
79
97

Pet.
677
607
570
680
470
343

B8
•1
77
75
61
59

67
67
73
73
M
91

517
547
513
500
409
393

CB
—

3
16
77
?J'»
47

Wait
Lo* Angeles
Cincinnati
Houtton
San Diego
Atlanta
San Francisco

—

6
11
13
761y
79

Monday's Rebuilt
Montreal 10 Chicago 7
New York 4, Philadelphia 1
St LouitS, Pllftburghe
Lot Angeles 5. Houston 3
San Francisco 7. San Diego 7

mi
pn
mi
#

ha
ur
t
loi

Blue Jays 5, Brewers 1
At Toronto, Jesse Barfield hit his 25th
homer of the season, and Tom Henke
squelched a Milwaukee threat In the
seventh Inning to help the Blue Jays
reduce their magic number for clinching
the East title to eight. Toronto leads
second-place New York by six games.

Tigers 2, Red 80s 1
At Boston, Juan Bcrcnguer and Willie
Hernandez combined on a five-hitter,
and Lance Parrish drove In the gamew in n in g run in the third Inning.
Bcrcnguer. 5-5, allowed four hits and one
unearned run while walking two and
striking out six In 7 1-3 innings.

A M E R IC A N
E «ft

S T A N D IN G S

St Loull
New York
Montreal
Philadelphia
Chicago
Pittsburgh

IV'

allowing three runs, walking six and
striking out four. Bob James pitched the
(Inal Inning for his 29th save.
Baines' 21st homer of the season, with
two out in the first, gave the White Sox a
1-0 lead. California tied the score 1-1 In
the second on Doug DcCInccs' 17th
homer of the year.
Salazar followed one-out singles by
Joel Skinner and Rudy Law In the third
with his 10th homer of the year, off
starter Don Sutton, 15-9.

Tuesday’s Games
Montreal (Smith 16 51 at Chicago
( Fontenot 6 9), 3 10 p m
New York (Fernandei 7 91 at Phila­
delphia (Rucker 3 11.3pm
Atlanta (Perei I lit al Cincinnati
t Browning It-*), 7:35 p m
Pittsburgh (Tunnel! 4 9) at St Louis
(Horton 7 7). I 35p m
Los Angeles (Welch 114) at Houston
(Knepper 15 10), I 35 p m
San Francisco I LaPoint 7-14) at San
Diego (Dravecky 17 10). 10 05 p m

Toronto
New York
Baltimore
Detroit
Boston
Milwaukee
Cleveland

W
94
68
79
71
75
65
54

L
55
61
69
77
75
14
98

Pet.
.831
.591
534
.370
.500
436
.355

85
B4
77
73
70
69
56

85
65
77
77
80
Bl
93

.567
.364
.317
.417
.467
.460
.376

PI
In

te
se

ar

OB
—

6
Wy
T6,y
I91y
79
41*9

Wait
California
Kantat City
Chicago
Oakland
Seattle
Minnesota
Te«ai

—

'9
713
11
15
16
3819

M o nda y's R t t u lli

Toronto), Milwaukee 1
Detroll 7. Bolton I
Te*ai it, Seattle 4
Chicago A, California 3
Oakland B, Cleveland 7
Tuesday's G arnet

Bolton (Ojeda 7 10) at Toronto (Davit
7 1), 7 35p.m.
Detroit (Tanana 9 14) at New York (P.
Nlekro 15 11),8pm
Baltimore (McGregor 13-17) at Mil­
waukee (Wegman 1-0). 1:15p.m.
Mlnnetota (Butcher 10-11) at Texas
(Wllllami 1-0),(:15 p.m.
Chicago ISeaver 11-11) at California
(CandalarlaA-l), 10:30p.m.
Kantat City (Saberhagen 1(4) at
Seattle (Young It-16), 10:35p.m.
Cleveland (Waddell 8 6) al Oakland
( Rl j o 4 3), t0:35 p.m.

IN BRIEF

M CI

H arold B alnea

Lula Salazar

East. Each team has 12 games. Includ­
ing three with each other, left to play.

Mets 4, Phillies 1

A 's 8, Indians 7

At Philadelphia. Gary Carter hit his
30th homer of the season, a two-run shot
with two out In the third, his 16th
game-winning hit. Rick Aguilera im­
proved to 9-6, and Roger McDowell
pitched three Innings to earn Ids 16tli
save. Fred Toliver. 0-2. took the loss.

At Oakland. Tony Phillips snapped a
3-3 lie with a fifth-inning home run.
lending the A's. Jose Rljo. 5-3. pitched 6
1-3 innings gave up, nine hits, walked
six and struck out six. Jay Howell
notched his 27th save. Curt Wardle. 8-7.
took the loss.

Expos 10,Cubs 7

Dodgers 5, Astros 3

At Chicago, rookie Andre Galarraga
and Doug Frobel led a flve-homcr attack
with eighth-inning blasts, helping the
Expos snap a six-game losing streak.
The game was delayed 43 minutes
because of rain in the first Inning and
was played In shifting 25 mph winds and
occasional showers. Tim Raines did not
play.

With the return of Pedro Guerrero to
the lineup and Enos Cabell to Houston,
the Los Angeles Dodgers arc again flying
toward the National League West pen­
nant.
"It was good to get back In." said
Guerrero, who went 3-for-4, drove In one
run and scored the go-ahead run to help
the Dodgers to a 5-3 victory over the
Astros last night. “ I was ready to play."

Giants 7, Padres 2.
At San Diego, the Giants scored seven
unearned runs in support of Alice
Hammakcr. mathematically eliminating
the defending NL champions. The de­
cision. combined with Los Angeles’ 5-3
victory in Houston, ensured that the
Padres, who went to the World Scries
last year, can not repeat.

Cardinals B, Pirates 4
At St. Louis. Terry Pendleton hit a
two-out. two-run triple in the eighth,
rallying the Cardinals to their fourth
straight comeback victory. They have
won’ l 1 of their last 12. St. Louis remains
three games ahead of New York in the

RESULTS

LEAG UE

SPORTS
l
cot
C
arc

At Arlington. Texas. Gary Ward hit his
15th homer o f the year and drove In Tour
runs, and Ellis Valentine drilled a
two-run homer to lead a 15-hlt attack.
Dave Schmidt. 6-5. won In his second
start since Sept. 3. 1982.

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
t a il

Ui
wt
th
bt

Baseball

McKee Development Uses 6-Run
Second Inning For First Triumph
McKee Development used a six-run second Inning to win
its first game of the year. 8-4. over Brown Bovcrt Electric in
Sanford Men’s Softball League play Monday night at
Plnehurst Field.
In other games. Geyser Systems surprised Thorne Land
Clearing. 16-0. and Sessions Well Drilling handed Cardinal
Industries its sixth straight loss, 13-10.
Clancy Wallace had a two-run single in McKee’s big
inning while Tracy Walker. Jeff Kohl and Bob Ordazo each
supplied RBI singles. Ordazo and Ed Maslak led the attack
with two hits apiece.
Russell Holloman singled home two runs for Boveri and
Rob Klnnalrd had two hits.
Geyser scored In every Inning but one while trouncing
Thorne. Mark Timmons socked four hits and had two
rihbles. Tom Hlse and Rico Peterson had three singles
each. Jeff Blake. Cliff Reynolds and Jeff Prince had two hits
each.
In Sessions win. Doug Dowdy and Ray Bowling singled
three times apiece and drove In two runs. Ell Smith and
Pete Harrison singled in two runs each tr. the first when
Sessions pushed across six runs.
Albert Kev. Tom Gracey and Jim Rogers each had a pair
orbits.

UPi: Auburn No. J, FSU No. 5
NEW YORK (UPI) — While a chunk of the top 20 has
produced a new look, the voting by the UPI Board of
Coaches has been consistent for the top two teams.
Auburn, which roared past Oklahoma Into the lop spot
last week, received 609 points and 32 first-place votes. The
Sooners remained second with 560 points and eight No. 1
selections. Either the Tigers or Oklahoma, which will play
Its first game Saturday at Minnesota, have been No. 1 all
year.
Meanwhile, the familiar faces of Notre Dame. Illinois.
Georgia and Washington have come and gone from the top
20 replaced by such newcomers to the nation's elite as
Virginia. Air Force and Kansas. All three are making their
debut in the ratings this season.
However, (his is a total turnaround for Kansas. 3-0. The
Jayhawks last winning season was 1981. Their opposition
so far this season has not been great and a good deal more
will be known about them after No. 5 Florida State visits
Saturday.

NCAA Joins TCU Investigation
FORT WORTH. Texas (UPI) — The NCAA is planning to
Join the Southwest Conference and investigate allegations
o f illegal payments made to Texas Christian University
football players.
The NCAA team was to arrive at the Fort Worth campus
today. Southwest Conference officials began Monday to
look into the possibility that Horned Frog football players
were paid to play at TCU.

MMd4r‘l Meier L,,|.&lt; Rttetli
I t Uaited f r iii Inlernatwnal
Nl tWI4l U4tM
Msntrtil
m i l l 131 — It I] I
0w4fi
M in tm - m u
Pelitrer, RtOvrgv 17). O'Connor ()). 31
Cl*if* 17). Burke III *nd Butrl
0 8*rr, Trout. Frejier It), Boremo &lt;11.
Gumpert ill. Sorpnon (II n d Dim W -S i
Clalrtlil) L— Franer 17•! HRi— Mon!re»l
Dinon III). Willed (It), La* (111
Galarraga (J), Frobel II). Chicegg Dintren
14).
N o Tort
H T IIt H t -t l)
HuMetpu
M IO M N -m
Aguilera. McDmreli III and Carter
Toliver. Andxien (41 . SNpmotl II) «n0 Virgil
W— Aguilera (I I) L— Toliver (0 ))
H R i-h a o
York, C ir t t r
(301
PhitadaiRku ScMudt (JO)
lot Aagetn
M i n i s - I 111
Morrftoo
M M 3 0 M -I 41
Honeycutt. Dill UI. Nedfn'uvr III 1-0
Screen Scott Cainourt It) Smitti [|l. D'P no
III e«3 Mitrect M -D 41 DJI L-Canoun
1 7
4
|

bn 0 -ego
tat 000 '00 - 1 It a
Hammoker. Minion 111. Garreltk it) and
Trevino Thvrmoid. MtCutlen Itl and
Fanned,
W-Himnukvr (i 111 L TngrrrondUIII

W-Nfllfln 110111 L-Sutton (IS *1 mRi Chlrige. Balnet (III, SaUiar i n .
California. OoCncriltfl

America* Ua tw
battle
dOllltM l — « I I
Taut
Mt in III - I I 1 1 1
Langitgn. Tofe k IS) Long ||). Vanda Berg
III and Scott Schmidt. Rwama UUnd
SUugm Brummar W-Scnmidl US) l —
Langikn (J 141 mRi - T i i m . Ward 111).
Vi'entme 13). Still*. Thomai [331. Ooon

Malar Ltagoa laadaii
By Doited Preu loleroahooel
I Af I I ■ |
IBaiad ao LI plate appaaroocti a no al
garnet lack team net m y a ll
National league

l e a d e r s

Amoricaolaagoo
B *k
IHM4
Boggs, Bo»
Bren. *C
143301
Mathngiy. NY
14) 007
Handerion NY
111 5M
Ba-nev CM
HMD
Butler. Cltv
147111
Cooper M,l
144 Ilk
Gedman. Bci
133Ml
Molitor. M.I
171SX
Bradley, bo
14)394

Dairen
H I M W O -M l
Bolton
IN M M -III
Berengudf. Harnandat II) and Melvm
Ojeda Trujillo 11) and Gedman w BerenguerUJl L-Oiadalflll
Oaretaad
m iM in -M II
Oakland
M3 H I III - 1 f I
Ward* Thompsd |J|, Von Onion II) and
Willard. R&gt;jo. Oniirorn 17). hoortil III and
Tamakai W -R ijo 03! L— Ward* I II)
HRk-Clenland. CatiMU ( 111 . Oakland.
BocMtllll.PNmpkUI.

PittiAorgk
I I I H T t H -M T t
V. Loon
an M i l t - 1 1 1
Walk. Clamor* 17). Cuanka III,
McWHItemk 111 and Pom, Forvk. Pott, ID.
Cempboii (t|. LoMi III. Worrtll III and
Porter. Koto W -UM I (U ) L - Guonte
[all HR-Fittiburgn Mormon 111

1 k pel
IX 274 374
IX let Ua
91 19a 371
&lt;54 IU 373
DIM 317
111 1)1 »■
D IK 30a
43 IX 304
M 13* TOC
97 IT* X»

Nalpnal League - Murpny. All 3 ).
Guerrero. LA 37. Schmidt. Phil, Cottar. NY X
Porker, CmIf
American league - Event Del 3).
Frit. CM IS. BaWoni. AC 34 G Thomas Sea
D. Murray, Balt 31

Ckrcaga
III 111 IH — I I I )
CaManka
t l t l l t l H - 1 71
Mellon. AgotS UI. SplVor If).
G i l “on ur. Jamek III and 3kinner. Hill. I
Sutton Holland (f). Corbett ill and Boone

bo trarena

'

1 A r A pa
141S44 HO702 358
121UT n144 373
lallaS 10*'7J 31)
111SX 184W 21)
lalSAa 711C J11
IXSSS *1m 310
143577 7*m JK
max SSt* X)
ix sx HIM XT
IKXI Xiti XT

McGre. S'L
Guerrero LA
Remet. Mil
Sandbe-g On
Perker. Cm
Herr. SH
Girynn. SO
Oftret. Cut
Moreland. Ckl
Screen LA

Mitneokeo
M M it o -l 11
Toronto
lltM l Ha - 11] I
Leary. Ladd 17). Obion III and
Moore Huppert Clancy. Henke III mdWk.tr
W-Clancy II il l-le a ry ( l ] l H R Toronto Beheld 1)11

Run Ballad I*
Manorial Leagu* - Parker. Cm US
Harr. Stl U7. Murphy. All IK Brooke Mtl la
Mereiand. Chin
American league - Mattingly. n Y IX
Mutter Be 1 III. Ba-net. CM UI Wmf«id
NY 103 R.ca Bet and Ripken Ban 183
S4*t**katat
Nalcrvai League - C
oNmpn S'L TO)
Rainat. Mil PS ' Sandbe'g Chi and
McGea.StlH Redut Cine)
American league - Henderton NY la
Pet*. Cal SS. Bui&gt;av. Oav 44 Wiitd, AC
X Smith, AC X
P t I ( A 1A g

Yictanat
Natwnal league - Gooden NY 73 4
Andu(»r. S'L 31* Tudor. S'L It I See" Mou
111. Breaming CmIIf

R A IN E S G A U G E
RAINES GAUGE (through Sept 331
............. u
.......

111

II

141
w Sal
ft IM
H-ti
UA 113
RBI
34
V
ij
GW RBI
I
v 34
........... s II
Tneret .....
........ ......i
I
M l? 1U N
4
3
Average
-------------JOt 311
Tim Rrnctd'dn Iplay Motdar at It* Etpot
beat the Cubs A year ago Ri nei *at 1Nr 3
•IthtMtiolenbaMt

SCOREBOARD
T V /R A D IO
Toeaday Nigkri TV/lad* loom
Tatavtuoa
AUTO RACING
l o r n - ESPN Formula I Bel -m Grand
Pru
BASEBALL
) 33 p m - WT83 Atlanta B'e.tt it
Cincinnati Radi III
FOOTBALL
t! Xpm - £SPN Micn.gm Slat at Norte
Damp
H0R5E RACING
la m — ESPN B'tror' 1 Croon Crampon
vh pbt-at Rate 1
HYDROPLANE RACING
M On get - ESPN Grei'tr Okjncmo
Thundartoa' Cane
RARATE
I i « - ESPN Lao loucki rt Jetty
Tr.mble
MOTORCYCLING
II pm - ESPN IMS Stad um Supatcrotk
illci dan
s # m - ESPN Son Grand Pfil SOOcc

cau

lad*
BASEBALL
! TO0 m - WFI5 AM 17401 Bolton RedSoi
O'Toronto BiuiJoyt
) X pm - WUEZ AM IU X 1 Atlanta
B'evtie'Cncnne'iRtdt
TALA
I 'Opm -W R I) AMINO SpomTa'Inm
ChrVopr-ar Rutto

JA I A LA I
AlOriaadpWmanle
Monday w«M
It! gome
tZufaia Ewia
U K I K S.K

IB boa Arana
I IX 4K
I Fouik&gt; Caliaurti
1 40
0114)31 U j P (4-1IM 4I; T (At II1S43I
1*4gam*
(O ra Herat
U K SX 4K
3JetutArana
I X 3K
SZugaia Oyari
3X

0 (Mi 44m.

oocidsndpi n

I.W .A .

'

W c d n c s d o y
S A N F O R D

C IV IC

S T A R

NEW Y0RR IUPII - The Un.tedPrm
international Board of Coachet Top X conep
Mota'I titmgi with fell p ace vtnet end
records m peranthewt &gt;o'i' po nti iteted on
ISpomN for leii piact 14 tor second e'e I.
and latlnrek trank,ng
I Auburn [111 (18
act I
1 Oklahoma III 1601
SX 3
1 Iowa 1101
SU 4
4 0*4 IN'* 1)11
«) S
5 F or da 5NN 11(1
451 4
I Pam Sta-e (181
13) t
I Oklahoma Slat111 1111
X) a
I Lou*.ana litre &lt;7O'
XT •
I Michigan III 1101
IMIS
18 Alabama l)0i
ITT1]
II UCLA 116II
nsIT
11 Bngham YoimgI) II
It)10
I) Ananias ( 1( 1
(SI 14
u Nebraska (1 11
i i(U
IS Maryland (111
torn
&gt;4 Southern Ca' IIIJ
II 1
II Vegmx lid
if1
K A* Farce &lt;1 ( 1
&lt;1 1
H Tam lt d
H it
X Rentes 11(1
is1
I Unrgnkad

II X I K I K
(X )K

SH

0 (5-7) al H; F (M ) IM Hi T (151) tl) Xi
00 IS f) 111 H
lire pine
JCharoiaTomat
TJX I8 K U X
TArraiiCnamdia
18 M
SEchtvaZorre
O O I I I I H , P 11)1 977Id: 7 11 761 111 Hi
00(6)116)1 II) X
A -U f li H - 113)334

ire game

SO FTBALL
b*4erd Mea t Fall tetbll Laagw
7i»*
Wh Lett C l
TimRametCannecton
4 0 SettiontWtllOriiiM)
3 1
1
Thom* Land Clearing
a j
3
Geyter Systems
a ]
3
Bream Bdrari E itetr*
3 4 1
Sxniand
s a a

McFetOertlopmtnl

t )

Carg.nal lnduttr«t
8
Mender H|M'irrt«ltt

on our schedule." Mosure said
about Astronaut and Titusville.
"T h e kids Just have to believe In
themselves even though we got
beat. Saturday night was a good
experience for them. They grew
up a lot.
"Unfortunately, its (the grow­
ing up) coming at the expense of
the regular season."
Better early than never.

P R E S E N TS

P R O

S e p te m b e r
C EN TER

lirepma
lEOuardo

0U4i ua. p (t si ixa.- tuhi uia

time out, Titusville was able to
run out the remaining seconds
and come away with a hardearned 20-13 win.
T h e near reversa l was a
godsend to Mosure. “ These
might be the two toughest teams

A LL

Geyter Sytiamt i» Thome Land Clearing 8
Metre Development I Broom Beveri Etctr*
a
Sttfent Wen On'i-ng 11. Cardinal Indufrei
18
Wadnttdayl gametal Pmetwnl FaaM
Stttioni Weil Orin,ng rk Thome Land Clear
mg t Xpm
Brown Boveri Electric vt Tim Runet Con
nettion
CerdinaMndviNwtvt MeAre Development

7Mend.
SArtmayo

tthflM
IMkiiAngel
'SM I X 1 «
1Ga'Ia Tomat
IK IX
(Arameyb Fara*
IK
Q (l}| M X .P I)l)t 1 X iT III4 )M lM
M iam i
3Reno Bob
13K U K I X
TM'kai Raytt
lit IK
7lecube Zarra
3H
0 I I 1 ) II a . PII IM16.Ui T II 3)1 IM M
i n game
I ItcuM Tomat
U X U X ISM

Continued from 8A

a ,'*

tni uia. T ms)

•UtiurArca
UR IK IK
SDurango AX Fsruria
U X 3K
i M i k t l
O y a r l ' 3
10

... Osborn

.

p

1.N3.X: 00(64) HI M
Srdgem*
I Out Aguirre
41X U K IM
13X SX
(Pda Arena
IK
1 Faufo Zarrtga
0(S4)M Mj P lIS IlM llj T (6 IT I Ilf M
•regime
) Ricardo
U K SX IX
IF outto
H X IX
T Ran*
SX
01)6) U X j P I I I ) IM M; T 1363) TIS X
St*|ama
I Bilbao Oran
U X IX iK
3P.ttZuma,a
IX ix
1 0 * 4 Bob
)X
0 (I I) H.H j P II I) NMj T It ID 337 Od;

tArrgll Iriubgl
SX 4U
TEchdvaBcb
IX
0 (641 II.H j P (H I 714Mi T (Bull 413 X
INF feme
3CheroNZubill
U K 140 &lt;K
aGorottolo Tomat
I K aX
llacubt Area
IX
0 (MlM.H: P(M l 137.11,T I I 4 I I I 1 U
lltk p a t
IGaila Mendi
I X 3X « X
3M,kel Tomat
)H IX
3EcrwwZub.il
SX
0(31) X X . P IM ) ID 111 7 IS )II ISON.
Me I (6134)1) I X I p X IIIX . Carryover
titm a

(

s

a

UPI POLL

NEW YORK (UPI) - Having
Introduced the lie detector test to
the national pastime, the New
York Yankees return home to­
night without dignity or much
hope of contention.
Phil Nlekro will be aiming for
career victory No. 300 in New’
York's first home appearance
since m anager B illy Marlin
became involved in two separate
scuffles over the weekend.
The most serious of the inci­
dents in v o lv e d M artin and
r ig h t- h a n d e r Ed W h its o n .
Whitson's lawyer. Tom Reich,
said tiie pitcher's version of the
fight differed from Martin's, and
he added Ills client was willing to
take a lie detector test.
it was learned Marlin, who
suffered a broken right arm in
tiie fight with Whitson, will
continue as manager through
the remainder of the regular
season Oel. 6.
A c lu b s p o k e s m a n s a id
Whitson, a disappointment after
being signed to a $4.4 million
free-agent contract last winter,
was not listed In the club's
s t a r t in g r o t a t io n t It ro u g h
Thursday.
"Not until all the facts arc
ascertained will there be any
Judgments about any actions." a
team official said.
A lth ou gh p rin cip a l ow n er
George Stcinbrcnucr has not
lined anyone, he is disturbed
that s e v e r a l o th e r Y a n k e e
players. Ineluding Dave Rlghcttl,
Dale Berra. Hickey Henderson
and Rich Bordl. are known to
have been in the liar during at
least one of the Incidents.
"A s much as I'm concerned
about (lie fights. I'm even more
upset about tiie curfews and the
fact so many players were in the
bar that late al night before a
day gam e." Stcinbrcnucr said
from Tampa, Fla. "Otherwise I
don’t have anything else to say
until I get the reports."
Stcinbrcnu cr sent General
Manager Clyde King and Woody
Woodward, the vice president for
b aseb a ll a d m in is tra tio n , to
Baltim ore to Investigate the
circumstances o f the light be­
tween Martin and Whitson.
"I'm nut going to do anything
at all before I know all the facts."
Stctnbrcnncr said. "I'm not go­
ing to do anything until I have a
chance to talk to Billy. I intend
to do that sometime Inter tills
week."
The Yankees trail first-place
Toronto by six games in tiie AL
East.

BF GOODRICH
!H IG H TECH SSL
\RADIALS
SSm
WE MAKE CARS PERFORM

*44.95
REAR BRAKE JOB *44.95
ALIGNMENT
*14.95
OIL CHANGE A LUBE *9.95
FRONT BRAKE JOB

HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS
INSTALLED

(each) *12.95

FRT. C.V.
BOOT REPAIR

*44.95

Above Prices Good For
Most Cars &amp; Light Trucks

A O K TIRE M A R T
M on

III

I S 30

lo t

* 1 3 M oon

322*7480
1 4 » .1 S

9r e n th A « r

S u n 9o r d

Yellow
Paqes
Deadline
C a ll N o w 628-5000

C# *

W R E S T L IN G
IS th ,

1985,

8

p .m .

• 4 0 1 E. S E M IN O L E

D LV D .

l&gt;ONNI u| i

FIOMM’SOWN
“CNAZY"
BUCSYMcfiJUW
VS.
LUKEGKAHAM
"1
r
T
W
A
l
S
O
U
T
N
T
A
6
C
H
A
M
P
I
O
N
S
1
RAVISHING ..ore
GOLDENBOY
1 RANDYROSE V 5 . CHICDgGNAVAN
I
PRETTYI0Y
TMCMESTUNBCBWBGV
| DOUGSUMMERS
•ILLMACK

&lt;PHOME L J
BOOK —
United

I &gt;&lt;HI •It III \ I hI( t It )| \

•334414

\

a *•

S yM w n t

„■
rr--i

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

TONIGHT'S TV
■ TUESDAY L
EVENING

6:00
a ( £ 3 ) 0 ( C O NEWS
CLD(35) JEFFER80N8
O (TO) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEW8H0UR
® ANDY GRIFFITH
0 ( 1 ) HAPPY DAV8 AGAIN

6:30
B 9 3 NBC NEWS
(DO CSS NEWS
(C O ABC NEWS Q
CD) OS) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Henry's contract It up lor re­
newal and Monroe bring* home hit
security partner, a Doberman
named Kelly

&lt;U&gt; CAROL BURNETT AND
fHICIIDS
0 01 LAVERNE A SHIRLEY

7:00
a *1100,000 PYRAMID
(IJ O PM. MAGAZINE A reunion
01 long-lotl brother* and titter*;
Feu Parker.

(C O JEOPARDY
DJI (SS) BARNEY MILLER

0 (10) CHtLO SEXUAL ABUSE:
WHAT YOUR CHILDREN SHOULO
KNOW Children in the early elemenlary grade* ditcutt way* to
cope with louche* that make them
uncomfortable y

the misting Steela take* her lo Lon­
don where she discover* lhal Scot­
land Yard hat Remington pegged
at a prime suspect in a ter las ol
murders Sttrs Pierce Brotnan and
Stephanie Zimbalist IPart t ol 2)
33 O OUR FAMILY HONOR Augie
Denng (Michael Madsen) hires a
professional assassin lo kill Police
Commissioner Patrick McKay (Ken­
neth McMillan) y
aH (35) INDEPENDENT NEWS
S&gt; (10) A WALK THROUGH THE
»0TH CENTURY WITH BILL
MOYERS An eiploration ol public
relations tenure* pioneers Ivy Ledbailer Lee who created John O.
Rockefeller t public benefactor Im­
age and the man who invented the
term itself. Edward L Bernay* (R)
&amp; (I) POLICE WOMAN

10:15
® MOVIE "Hud " (1963) Paul New­
man. Melvyn Douglas On a Ta«et
ranch, a household it disrupted by
a bitter nit between a uncompro­
mising man and hn unprincipled,
free-living son

a (10) CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE:
WHAT YOUR CHILDREN SHOULD
KNOW A group ol 10-year-oldt
diicuttet problem* with baby­
sitter*. iet-rol* ttereolypet and
communication with parent* y
9X BASEBALL Atlanta Brave* at
Cincinnati Red* (Live)
a 0&gt;ALL IN THE FAMILY

12:00

12:30

8:00
a 3 ) A-TEAM (Seaton Premiere)
The A-Team (Mr T. George Peppard. Dwight Schulli. Dirk Bene­
dict) runt into hi|inkt on the high
teu when they attempt to rescue
an Imprisoned woman from her Dal­
ian captor* y
CDO HOMETOWN When Christo­
pher it leced with a paternity amt,
he seek* retuge with tut pelt m
Whitley
3 ) O WHO'S THE BOSST (Seaton
Premiere) Angela reminisce* about
her eipenencet at summer camp
and recall* an innocent date the
had with someone who looked very
much like Tony Slert Tony Dense
end Judith light (Pert 1ol 2&gt;y

B &lt;i i LATE MIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Scheduled Charles
Kurait
(f j O MOVIE ‘ Mysterious Mr
Moto' (1938) Peler Lorre. Harold
Huber
(U (35) CHICO AND THE MAN
®
MOVIE "The Geisha Boy”
(1958) Jerry Lewis. Suianna
Pleshette

iere) A psychiatrist combines MS
practice with homemaking whan hit
wde decides to return to her )ourneftsm career Star* Alan Thick#
and Joanna Kerns y

8:00

3 ) O MOVIE "The Other Lover'
(Premiere) linduy Wagner. Jack
Seeks An assignment turns Into an
assignation between the married
marketing director at a publishing
house and the author she repre­
sents y
CD O MOONLIGHTING (Season
Pramrerel David's happy-go-lucky
brother (Charles Rocket) arrives m
town and immediately lelts for Maddie Star* Bruce Wdkt and CyMI
Shepherd y
(U)(U)OUINCY
O (10) TEN WHO DARED Mary
Kingsley " A Victorian Englishwom­
an. Kingsley espfored the (test
coast ol Africa while trading with
the cannibal*

j

today

1:00

3) O

MOVIE "Choices" (1981)
Paul Caralotet. Victor French

1:30
®(3S)SCTV
Q1 (3B) OUNBMOKI
(Z) O MOVIE "ThwT (1971) Rich­
ard Crenna. Angie Dickinson

2:30

3) O CBS NEWS MGHTWATCH
2:40

® MOVIE "The Black Orchid ’
(1959) Sophia Loren, Anlhony
Quinn

CD (8) VOLTRON. DEFENDER OF
THE UNIVERSE

7:05
(It ALVIN SHOW

(11(35) OOBOTS
CD (10) BESAME STREET (R) y
CD (8) ROBOTECH

7:35
6:00
91(35) JETSONS
CB (8) HEATHCLIFF

8:05
9 1 1DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:30
91 (35) FLINTSTONES
O)|10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
CD |B) FAT ALBERT
835
91 BEWITCHED

0:00
0 ' 4 DIVORCE COURT
5 ) 0 DONAHUE
(U O TIC TAC DOUGH
91 (35) WALTONS
f f l (10) SESAME STREET (R )y
CD (5) BRADY BUNCH

9:05
I I HAZEL

9:30
8 9 'LOVE CONNECTION
(7 O JOKER'S WILO
CD (5) MY THREE SONS

9:35
I I I love lu cy ’

10:00
dBARNABY JONES

91(35) BIG VALLEY
CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
CD (I) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

3:00

3'30
01 (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

10:30

11:00
B 9 1WHEEL OF FORTUNE
9 3 0 PRICE IS RIOHT
CL O THREE'S A CROWD (R)
911(35) DALLAS
® ( 10) WE'RE COOKING NOW
CD (I) IRONSIDE
a 93 SCRABBLE
L L O ALL-STAR BUT!
CD 110) FLORIDASTYLE
AFTERNOON

W ED N ESD AY

12:00
MORMNO

5:00
33 O th e SAINT (TUE-fRfI
01 (3S) NEWS
OX GET SMART

2:00
B 9 ) ANOTHER WORLD
CLO ONE LIFE TO LIVE

91 (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
O) (10) ALOHA CHINA (WED)
CD (10) WORLD CHESS CHAMPI­
ONSHIP (THU)
CD (10) PAINTING WITH ILONA
(FRI)

2:30
Cl) O CAPITOL
91 (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
CD(10) INNOVATION (MON)
ffi (10) MAGIC Of OIL PAINTING
(WED)
CD (10) MAGIC BRUSH OF GARY
JENKINS (THU)
CD (10) MAGIC OF WATERCOLORS (FRI)

3:00
0 9 l SANTA BARBARA
( D O GUIDING LIGHT
CLO GENERAL HOSPITAL
9 tl (35) SCOOBT DOO
GD(10)FLORIDA8TYLE
CD(5)CARE BEARS

3:05
91 SUOS BUNNY AND FRIENDS
(MON-WED. FRI)

3:15
91 BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS
(THU)
3 .3 O

91 (3S| JAYCE AND THE
WHEELED WARRIORS
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
CD (5) MASK.

B

B (23 MIDDAY
ID O CL O NEWS
91(35) BEWITCHED
CD (101 NATURE OF THINGS
(MON)
S) (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
CD (10) MYSTERYI (WED)
CD (10) NOVA (THU)
CD(10)JACOBSRONOWSKI: LIFE
ANO LEGACY (FRI)
91 THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL
(THU)
CDdIMANNtX

4:00

9 ) AMERICA (MON, WEO-FRI)
0 f i l MAIN STREET (TUE)
' S O DIFFRENT STROKES
CL O MERV GRIFFIN
91 (15) THUN0CRCAT8 y
CD (10) SESAME STREET (R) y
91 FLINTSTONES (TUE. WED)
CD ID HE-MAN ANO MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE

4:05
91 FUNTSTONCS (MON. THU. FRI)

(X O

SALE OP TW* CENTURY
S)( 10) 3-2-1 CONTACT y
Q) (8) OOO COUPLf

1:30

AS THE WORLD TURNS
11 (35) GOMER PYLE
CD (10) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

10:05

11:30

01 (31) I LOVE LUCY

1:05
CXO

B (X

2:20

1:00
0 9 ) DAYS OF OUR LIVES
CLB all my children
91 (35) DICK VAN DYKE
CD &lt;10) MOVIE (MON. TUE, THU)
CD (10) THE EDGE OF SURVIVAL
(WED)
CD (10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN
(FRI)
CD (I) MOVIE

1(35)0.1. JOE
a
CD (10) FARM DAY

11 MOVIE

2:00

12:30
0 9 ) SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
® O YOUNG AND THE REST­
LESS
33 O LOVING
01 (35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
91 BASEBALL (THU)

91 MOVIE (MON-WED. FRI)

X

1:10

FRI)

(X O CBS MORNING NEWS
0
0oGOOD MORNING AMERICA

B '4 1YOUR NUMBER'S UP
(JIOHOURMAQAZINE

01(35) BIZARRE

8:30

33 O GROWING PAMS (Prem­

7:00
9

12:40

01 (35) HART TO HART
a (10) NOVA A look el modem
loanee t attempt lo solve the mys­
tery of the disease Acquired Im­
mune Deficiency Syndrome, known
MAIDS (HICJ
a IS) MOVIE "A Werm December"
(19731 Sidney Poitier. Esther Ander­
son A ghetto phytrcien talks « love
with a mytier tout African woman
who hat a aecrsl tha cannot share.

B

91 FLINTSTONES

11:30

3 ) Q SIMON B SIMON The
Simons investigate strange goingson al an amusement park involving
the park's owner, a lerronsl and a
gnome |R|
i jj O COMEDY BREAK WITH
MACK AND JAMIE
CD (I) MOVIE No Sad Songs For
Me" 11950) Margaret Suiiavan,
Wendell Corey

CJ) O PRICE IS RIGHT
(C O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
OS OS)BENSON

6:45
( L O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
83(10) AM. WEATHER

7:30

11:00

9 ) (X 0 3 3 0 NEWS
If I) (35) ARCHIE BUNKER S PLACE
S&gt; (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
CD (I) HOGAN'S HEROES

Interview with Olivia Newton-John

7:30
a 3 ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

6:30
B 9 1NEWS
•X O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
33 O
ABC'S WORLD NEWS THIS
MORNING y
(It (35)TOM AND JERRY
9* funtime
CD(8) SUPERFRIENDS

CD (10) AM. WEATHER

0 9 ) TONIGHT Host Johnny Car­
son Scheduled Aleiandra Paul.
Ted Danton. Lou Rawls
(X Q WKRP IN CINCINNATI
CD O ABC NEWS NIQHTUNE
(Hj(35) HAWAII FIVE-0
CD (5) HOGAN'S HEROES

® MANY TYLER MOORE
8 0 ) CARSON'S COMEDY CLAS­
SICS

EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
(ft (35) GOOD DAYI
91 NEWS
CD(8) BATMAN

7:15

10:30

01(35) BOB NEWHART

0

CLO

4:30

THREE S COMPANY
91 (W) TRANSFORMERS
91 BRAOY BUNCH (TUB. WED)
CD (•) SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF
POWER

4:35

91 BRAOY BUNCH (MON, THU.
FRI)

6:00

O fit NEWLYWED GAME
( X O M ’ A'S'H

33 O HEADLINE CHASERS
91 (35) WHArS HAPPO BHOH
®(10)OCEANU8(MON)
CD (10) UNOERSTANOINO HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
CD (10) NEW LITERACY: INTRO­
DUCTION TO COMPUTERS (WED)
8 ) (10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
CD (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRt)
91 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER (TUE.
WED)
CD (■) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

5:05

Tragic Tales Confirm
Hitchhiking Is Risky
DEAR A B BY : "T a c o m a
Reader" asked. "W hat measures
can a driver lake to reduce the
risk Ifhc picks up a hitchhiker?"
You replied. "F or 100 percent
protection, pick up nobody."
You answer was 100 percent
correct. In essence, the hit­
ch h iker Is sayin g w lih his
thumb: "You pay for the car. the
gas. the upkeep and mainte­
nance. the Insurance: drive me
where I want to go ns far as you
can. hut If you have an accident.
I may sue you!"
That's exactly what happened
to one of my clients who picked
up a hitchhiker. He swerved to
avoid being hit by another ear.
overcom pcn satcd and hit a
guardrail. The hitchhiker has
Just filed a $250,000 lawsuit
against him, even though wc arc
paying the present medical bills
and loss of any income as a
result of the accident.
1 received many rides as a
young man. and I would like to
repay those who were kind to me
by doing the same for others.
However, times have changed,
and unfortunately, so have the
attitudes and motivations of
many people in our society.
What a shame lhal in order to
protect ourselves, wc cannot be
us generous and kind as wc
would like to be.
C.R.T., ALBANY, N.Y.
DEAR ABBY: Tw o years ago.
my son. who was 21 at the time,
had Just re-enlisted for his sec­
ond term with the U.S. Navy. He
wanted to make it his career. He
picked up a hitchhiker, a de­
cent-looking young man about
his age who said he was going
home lo visit his mother.
Less than 48 hours later, my
son was lying In a hospital
fighting for his life. The hit­
chhiker had brutally attacked
him. beat him about the head,
stolen his car and belongings,
and left him on the roadside.
Thanks to the grace o f God
and a skilled surgeon, m y son
lived. He suffered the loss o f the
use o f his right hand, and
slightly impaired speech. This,
o f course, ended all hopes o f a
career In the Navy. He considers
himself lucky to be alive.
I want to add m y uncondi­
tional support of your advice:
Never pick up a hitchhiker.
Whenever 1 see a person with his
thumb out. I see my son lying In
the hospital, lighting for his life.
You may use my name.

EAST
OCEAN

$

DEAR ABBY: I think it was
lousy of you lo advise people to
never pick up a hitchhiker. I've
hitched rides all over the United
Slates and Canada, met some
wonderful people and seen u lot
of territory I never would have
see had I not been picked up.
Sure, there will always be a
few bad apples in the barrel, but

DEAR MAD: Sorry. For I Inone who happens lo pick up iInbad apple, the percentage Is Inn
high.

Problems? Write to Abby. For
personal, unpublished reply,
send a self-addressed, stamped
envelope to Abby. P.O. Hox
38923. Hollywood. Calif. 90038.
All eorrespondence Is confiden­
tial.
a

N o tic e to A ll O ur C u sto m ers
218-220 E. 1st St.

Downtown
Sanford

m

3 2 2 -3 5 2 4
Hours:

WSA*

Mon.-Thurs ft Sot. 9-8:30
F r l. 9 -8

Will Be Closed Wednesday,
September 25th, in Observance of
Yom Kippur.

jm

.

iM o n a

JWCYQUARTER-POUND
P-ocooea

91 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER (MON.
THU. FRI)

5:30

G ard e n
O C ircles

Thursday, September 26th

Dear
Abby

MRS. PAT DOUGLAS,
PITTSBURGH

DEAR ABBY: I was happy to
read your advice: "N ever pick up
B 91 PEOPLE'S COURT
a hitchhiker!" You should have
5'30
( 3 ) 0 ( 7 0 NEWS
stressed more emphatically (hat
B 93 th is WEEK IN COUNTRY
91 (35) ALICE
MUSIC (MON)
the person who Is "hitching" a
CD (10) OCEANUS (MON)
8 9 ) rs COUNTRY (TUE-FRt)
® (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
free ride also puts him/hcrself at
(It BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
CD MO) NEW LITERACY: INTRO­ risk.
6:00
10:00
F ou r y e a rs a g o I w as a
DUCTION TO COMPUTERS (WED)
8 9 3 NBC NEWS
12:05
• (2) REMINGTON STEELE (Sea­
CD(10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
3 ) B CBS EARLY MORNING 91 PERRY MASON (MON-WED.
20-ycar-old college student who
son Premiere) Laura's search lor
hitched a ride with a respect­
able-looking man driving a new.
expensive car. He drove off the
highway Into a wooded area, and
at gu n poin t, he raped me,
drugged me and left me for dead.
Fortunately. I was found by
some campers before dark. Later
I Identified the man from mug
shots. The car he was driving
HIBI8CUS CIRCLE
The Hibiscus Circle of the hud been stolen, and he had a
Garden Club of Sanford Inc. met long record of rape and rob­
Sept. 13 at (he home of Mrs. beries.
John Stanklcwicz for a covered
I am happy to say he is still
dish luncheon.
s ervin g tim e for his crim e
The meeting was called to against me.
order by the president. Mrs. TRUE STORY FROM ILLINOIS
Henry Taylor. After the pledge to
the flag and roll call, the minutes
were read and approved.
The treasurer's report was
given by Mrs. Richard Theobald.
A book on Herbs was given to
the Garden Club Library In
memory of Mrs. Nina Whelchel
who died last summer.
Mrs. Taylor read several Im­
p o r t a n t p a g e s fr o m th e
yearbook. She also mentioned
the General Garden Club Library
needs books on birds.
M rs. S ta n k lc w ic z g a v e ft
s e r v in g
number of plants to member*.
LUNCH &amp; DINNER
Mrs. McTavlsh also gave many
Amaryllis to those who wanted
M O M . -T H C IR S . 1 1 -1 0 , F R I.-S A T . 1 1 -1 1 . S U M . 1 2 -1 0
them.

tfated

lhere are mostly good ones. 1
think von did a terrible dis­
service lo a lot of good people. I'll
bet not one in 10.000 liltchhlkcrs turns out to lie a bad
apple.
Thanks for nothing.
MAD IN M INNESOTA

Buy 1
Bacon Choose Burger
GET 1 FREE
With This Coupon
Served 10 A M Til Closing Daily
Good Sanford Location Only
Not Good In Conjunction With Other Coupons
Expires Oct. 5, 1985

2506 S. French Avt.

Sanford

9restaurant!

3j

&amp;LOUNGE

|

Featuring . . .Chinese Cuisine jf
And Specializing In Cantonese, f
Szechuan, and Mandarin Styles

i

EAST OCEAN RESTAURANT
&amp; LOUNGE
2 9 2 0 South French A v e ., Sanford

TAKE OUT AVAILABLE

321-5940

7*

I

ns.
i

�t

2B— E vtn ln g H trs ld , Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, le pt. 3 4 .1WS

O ld e T y m e s
4;C o n n e c tio n
ff
tOt MAONOL1A MALL
(£*•&lt;. (Around TSa Corn*, horn lha Clack)

321-7157

SANFORD

A n tiq u e s • Collectibles

V ID E O C O N N E C T IO N RENTAL

P re p a re d by A d v e rtis in g D ept, of

WE’RE FLORIDA’S LARGEST &amp;
LOWEST PRICED MOVIE CHAIN

E v e n in g H e r a ld

OVER K, 000 MOVIES TO CHOOSE FROM

Mon. Thru Thuri. And Sol. 10 S

Movie World Has A N e w Name S Location

Friday 10-8

HWY. 17-M, Kmart Plata
IANFORD. FI

Whether Your’rt Loottlng For A Gift Or An Accetiory
For Your Home, Come In And Let Our Stall Htlp You
With A Selection That Will Be An Investment.

/

C M 322-2611 Mmu!
PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE •

H e r a ld A d v e r tis e r

321-2289

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

/ / ,

'C O U P O N

NOW OPEN

. tie- ,

.

F O R S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S

WATCH &amp; JEWELRY REPAIR
and nPAWN
SHOP
u n u u - tm
«

BusinessReview

( = ) MOVIE REVUE (VCR)

WITH PAR TIC IPA TIN G STYLIST

’ Complete Perm Includes

^

Haircut. Permanent W ire
^
And Shampoo 8 Sal
m m Wk
And receive A Written auerenl**. Only At
Headliner*. Call Now For An Appointment. ,

Ph. 323-1327
2109 S. FRENCH RVE.. SANTORO

SjxTt.il Design • Custom Work
Rt-More Antique Jew elry • H&lt;*le\ Repair
• Clock • Watch Repair
• Ring St/mu ■ Slone Scitlnn
• Amiralnais
• Fine Jewelrv Sales
wt n r colds stimt •ahthhkclocks t watcms •bum

^ e A c U iH e n ^
Sanlord

2303 French Avenue
Ph. 305-321-5851]

\v
» ttans

lremitnci * * 0

at*vici in Sanford

SUMMER SPECIALS

siminoce county

WASK-WAX-VACUUM ......... * 2 9 . 9 5

S. FRENCH AVC
SANFORD FLA. 32771
1-321-2360

D a n M y e rs
g las s t

AUTO GLASS TINTING .From * 3 9 . 0 0
UNDER COATING . . . .From * 4 9 . 0 0

re

QUAKER STATE RUST PROOFING

Has The Paint Products
For All Your Needs

P r o fe s s io n a l
C a r C are
Center e» Ith * 17-92

Paint
Products

323-7272

i nuferd, Fla.

m m m p n im n in i

- CLIP N SAVE.
let

*10 OFF

PAPER &amp; SUPPLIES SPOT
Discount
Paper, Office, &amp; Janitorial
Supplies
Rental Equipment
1215 N. HWY. 427
Longwood, FL
Honey A Vicki Pniiiipt
Onn*r»

767-8067

M F BJO S30
SAT 8 30-1

OR
TV SERVICE
r n
r n

MICROWAVE OVEN REPAIR
COLOR TV REPAIR (SOLID STATE 0NLY|
WITH COUPON

BUBALONI SATELLITE
r r
t t

911 Pina St.
Fam Park

7S7-5711

S T A R T C R E A TIN G
YO UR C H R IS T M A S
G IFTS N O W
ASK ABOUT OUR
CUSSES

1740 N O R TH H IG H W A Y 17 *2
SOUTH OF FLEA WORLD
FIRST TRAFFIC LIGHT —
NORTH OF HIGHWAY 434
ACROSS FROM HANOYWAY.

NEW-USED FURNITURE
ANTIQUES
: ■ VERY LITTLE MARKUP-LOW PRICES
—
LAYAWAY-WI DELIVER
■ J^TTj

CL

y

w
s4 £

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

CONSWHMENTS WELCOME

1016H S. FRENCH AVE.

323-4569

ALAN’S
FABRICS AND RUGS

S ^ .C A k \ _

Custom M od e

SHAMPOO-HAIRCUT
AND S TY LE
*10

-'S DRAPES
j •• Cornices

_ Bedspr
b .e Jd______
| •
i p '. a dI.i
Cuitom ihod.9
x ;
* c - ,c
Mini blmdi
^.IR
•►Mm

CALL 322-5742
BEAUTY

T 519
O1.W
E R S SALO N
1i1 St. (Dram Towars) Sanford

Lcw lor blinds
are the designer's
standard.
And we’re offer­
ing every single
color, every size
fo r a big blind
sale. Made to
your measure.
Right now At

U p h o lx li’ i y

• Waiipop**
a Coi i&gt;*'

Pork Drlv.
Vantord

SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22’s FILED
ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES

2*27 S. HWY. 17-92, SUITE H-8
IN THE CENTER MALL ACROSS FROM THE ZAYRE

Jim also says It Is advantageous to the
consumer to deal with someone who has been in
the electronics business for several years and Is
knowledgeable about electronics.
"Our combined 35 years electronics experience
gives us Just that." says Jim. "W e offer satellite
systems affordable for everyone."
Financing is available. To find out how you can
have a home satellite receiving system Installed
in your yard, call today. You will receive a free
gilt Just for the having an appointment. Cull (305)
767-5711.
4

W ill Bill Be The Pinch
That Stole Christm as?
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Foes of a hill that would
restrict textile im ports said today it is a
Scrooge-.Ike piece of legislation that could ruin
Christmas for children by driving up the cost of
toys.
"Here are some of the most populnr toys In
America and their prices will go up 100, 200 or
300 percent if the textile hill Is approved." said
Duncan Dwclle, president of the American Fair
Trade Council.
Dwclle and two council members appeared al a
news conference in a Senate office building. On
one side of them was a poster carrying the legend.
"Don't let the textile hill ruin Christmas" and on
the other was a pyramid of stuffed toy bears,
seals, dogs and cats and boxes of dolls, doll
clothes and Items like toy umbrellas and animals
masks.
The c o u n c il Is co m p o se d of retailers and

manufacturers and shippers who oppose the
textile hill.
The textile bill would initiate limits on textile
Imports, particularly from east Aslan countries.Supporters say the limits arc needed because of
the slumping U.S. textile industry. The council
says their businesses would be hurt If Imports are
limited and that consumers would have to pay
higher prices.
Roger Kase. president of the retail division of
Ksplrll. said it would be "v e ry difficult" for
parents lo buy popular toys and still buy
U.S.-made toys. The pile of toys Included a
"Dreamtime Barbie" and a Cabbage Patch doll.
A council spokesman said the estimate of
higher prices was based on quotas that would
limit the import of toys and would push up the
price of raw materials.

G.G. BLAIR

A &amp; R AUTO CARE

OPEN MON. TH R U FBI. 9-5

and

“ C A L L B LA IR A N D C O M P A R E ”

BODY SHOP

3 2 3 -7 7 1 0 or 323 -3866
2510A OAK AVE. SANFORD
Cornar of S. Park Ave. &amp; Oak

3214579

of.what you want to watch. Jim states satellite TV
has an exciting selection of more than 800 movies
and 300 sporls events from which to choose each
month. Also available urc several Christian
channels.

£

Serving Sanford for 27 Years

THORNHILL INTERIORS, ETC
HOURS: Mon Frt 10 ! »

322-5783

BLAIR A G EN C Y

l£ V O l£ ^ .nd ^

BE

• V .r 9 &gt; c (r ll

•

Jim Bubaloni. president uf Bubaloni TV Service
of Fern Park, today announced that In nddlllnn to
his successful television service business, lie will
be adding satellite receiving systems sales and
in Irowave service.
Bubaloni TV Service Is located at 911 Pine St.,
one block south o f tlit- State Road -130 and
Highway 17-92 Intersection across from Freedom
Bank.
Since lie Is able to give good TV service. Jim
feels lie will also be able to offer the same honest,
quality service hi satellite sales and microwave
oven service at a competitive price.
"Being In business here for lO'/i years." Jim
said, "w e arc very experienced and capable ol
serving our people’s wants and needs. We have
thousands of satisfied customers to prove It."
Satellite TV also gives better freedom of choice

SANFORD

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 321-2063

TOWERS BEAUTY SALON

Bubaloni TV Offers Satellite
Systems, Microwave Service

lea k a g e ch eck on

YOUR MICROWAVE OVEN.

Don't Get Caught Napping

FURNITURE HOUSE

r

SALES

-CLIP N SAVE------------------------------

THE

I7Z*V

Jim Bubaloni, president of Bubaloni T V , with satellite dish.

ITIV I BLAIR-

t il 10 700; Cloted Wednesday

rife*-. ✓ —*
Z ’L \ / _

E xperts In A u to
A nd M arin e P aint,
B ody W o rk S p e c ia lis ts .
Full Auto Detailing Available

W e 'll Bring The
Best In D ecorating
R ight To Your Hom e
C U S TO M D R APERIES • B ED SP R EA D S
W OVEN W OO DS • MINI BLIN DS - V E R TIC A LS
.^ C A R P E T - VIN YL - W ALL C O V ER IN Q S

FREE ESTIMATE
NO OBLIGATION

P h ilip s

3096 HW Y. 17-92 (Next To Barnett Bank)
Sanlord

3 2 2 -3 4 2 4

flnaldt Fair Auto Salaa

SANFORD GULF SERVICE, INC.

CarCare
M E D OUR
DEDICATED
GENERAL
MANAGER
CHRIS PETRIS

BUY
MORTGAGES

Jim
L a s h ’s
B lu e B o o k C a rs

W a a lto m a k e 1st and 2nd m o rtg a g e loans
on R esid en tial o r C o m m e rc ia l R eal E state
up to $100,000.

*

S A L E S : u n im o u

★

S E R V IC E : c u u n v a s

Personal loans a r e a v a ila b le including
R e vo lvin g C re d it L ine.

St.M A »«V

★ RENTALS: rJ?

321-0741
830-6655
HWY. 17-92
SANFORD

D A V E 'S U P H O L S T E R Y
• FURNITURE • BOATS • CARS

PiemBe Cell F o r A p p o in tm e n t
•HEATING 8 AIR CONOtTIONINO •TUNf-UF EMOINE REFAIR
•FRONT-EWNU ALIGNMENT
* TIRES 8 BATTERIES
•OIL CHANOC 8 LUBE
t WHEEL BALANCE
•BRAKE SERVICE
* ROAD SERVICE

Family Credit Services, Inc.
A Q

2818 8. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD

322-4924
Srhrtttor d a g , Oaaor

pgp «
■ ■ ■

"

"
B-B. 4M. near i t n
In The Perti Square Shopping Clr
Longwood. FL UTU
on

C o m iu m
CALL
CARLOS M. SA N TIAG O , JR-

831-3400

NOW IS THE TIME TO IRIGHTEN YOUR STILL GOOD FURNITURE
•LARGE SELECTION OF MATERIALS •QUALITY WORKMANSHIP
FREE ESTIMATES
FREE FICKUFt 8 DELIVERY

4 9 0 N . 1 7 -9 2
N ail To Sotoik'e Sub Shop

LONGWOOD, FLA.
(3 0 9 ) 9 9 2 -1 9 0 0
Mon

Fn 800 AM

600 PM

322-3315
322-7542
DECORATING
DIN

In llutlnr** Smir IU5t
l i t W. lJta IT . SAME0N9

JANE PHILIPS

304 E. COM M ERCIAL ST.
SANFORD, FL 32771
(305) 323-1137

HOURS
Mon.-Frt 0-5:30
Saturday 9-12 Noon

PAC N’ SEND

FOR LESS THAN 510 YOU CAN SNIP
25 POUNDS TO THE FOLLOWING CITIES
C U V EU N 0 - DALLAS - ST. LOWS - 9CTN0IT
NEW Y 0 M - PHILADELPHIA
(Ooar No! lorlvda Factaaine)
&gt; W W *
facracim

u m ik

* * * * * *

n u M M tn n a

*

tw ru t
______
_________
Canruleat Deaatewa Laotian Arena* Cantar fnm Post Offlc*

fackacmc

-rrr

For Hit Unit ADS
tkat MEASURE UF...
M Solti « 4 Frafiti,
UM tht

BUSINESS REVIEW!
Don't dtlay, atari
in Hi* n**t itwt...

Call: 322-2611

■&lt;
[ i l l I M | i|i*i
u - fc• - ........

�Evening H t n ld , Sanford, Ft.

-BusinessReview

E v e n in g H e r a ld

Call 322-2611 How!
A D V E R T IS IN G

Cheap Fur Imports
Boosting Business

P re p a re d by A d v e rtis in g D ept, of

Herald Advertiser

• PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

VOLKSHOP

Specializing In Servlet A Parts For
•W.'s, Toyota and Datiun
{Corner 2nd A Palmttto)

214 S. P alm etto A v t.
SANFORD
PHONE

321-0120
C o u n try S e rv ic e C e n te r
119 EUR AVE. SANFORD

323-3966
P recision S h arpen in g Center

H O M E M A D E C O U N TR Y CRAFTS
DECO R ATO R ITEMS
CRAFTS M A D E T O ORDER
Stop By &amp; Visit Our Showroom!!
Mechanical and Electrical Repolrs

G re e n 's H ou se O f B e a u ty is a p le a s a n t p la c e to h a v e y o u r h a ir d o n e .

r

G reen's House O f Beauty
Is A Full Service Salon
G r e e n ’ s M ouse o f B e a u ty . L o n g w o o d .
specializes in the latest hair trends for and the
problems and peculiarities or styling ethnic hair.
Located at 1015 Highway 17-92 across from
Longwood Lakes shopping center. Green’s House
or Beauty, specializes in hair conditioners and
reconstructing hair. They give all types of curls,
rclaxors. permanent waves, hair cutting and hair
styling for men and women.
They also do facials, hair coloring, eyebrow
arching and facial makeup.
The shop is owned by Ethel Green, who opened
It on July 9. 1984. Before coining here, she
operated her own beauty salon on Long Island.
N.Y.. for 29 years.
Her business continues to grow. Mrs. Green has
enjoyed meeting and serving her new clientele
during the past year.
New to the stalT tills year are Anna “ Penny"
Fonseca. Rokc Cantrell, and Angela Carter.
" W e ’re a fam ily." says Ethel, "there's a
cooperative spirit and we work together to ofh i
our clients the best and fastest service."
Green’s House Isopen Tuesday through Friday.
9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.t Saturday. 9 a.m. to 4 p .in.

U N IF O R M

CLEARANCE
UNIFORM DRESSES. . . . $ 2.50
UNIFORM TO P S ........... * 1.50

S econd I mage

and Thursday and Friday evenings hy appoint­
ment.
Call 695-6699 for an appointment.

2701 S. Orlando Dr., (Hwy. 17.92)

PH. 323-9421

Firm Acquires Uniroyal
NEW YORK ILi PI I An affiliate of Clayton
A D ublller Inc. has
acquired Uni royal Inc.
for a prleelag of about
S747 million.
U n lr o y u l’ s s t o c k ­
holders Mo n da y
approved a $22-a-sharc
cash m e rg e r un der
w h ich the tire om l
rubber company would
be sold.
Unlrnyul agreed to
merge with Clayton &amp;
Dublller Inc., u private
Invest m c n t firm
specializing In lever­

aged buyouts, on May
6.
In return. New York
financier Carl C. lcahn
said he would termi­
nate his $l8-a-sharc
hid to gain a majority
Interest In the com ­
pany and would not
buy additional shares
for six months.
Icnhn, who agreed to
vote the 3.19 million
U n iro y a l sh ares he
held In favor o f the
leveraged buyout with
Clayton &amp; Dublller. re­
ceived $5.9 million for
abandoning his hostile
takeover effort.

FLOW ERS
FOR A L L
O C C A S IO N S
e Silk Flowers
e Fresh Cut
e Plants

MADAME KATHERINE
FREE S P I N A L

EVALUATION
Frequnnl Headaches
Low Back oi Hip Pain
Du/mess or Loss ol Sleep
Numbness ol Hands or Foot
Nervousness
Neck Pain or Stillneas
Arm and Shoulder Pam

•p|Pi*"l

EnhutM Indit e : Putin Ajutyin. FitHim T « t Skirl L*f T « t Skirt Arm Tot
M Tift *nk Doctor.
i**0AN*0fHtm
P%iWHtt| VB.t *06
p»S*» * *0» * ’0

Pi* C i * K l l » A IM IN ' 0 * B I » C i V B U » t l D * 0 6 B R ' V l * 1 H * A M O ' M " MRCi.1 *******

TON Oil
IS
DA* * "I60tf 0* AND *»**'••
0*
»NQ *0 *"l SDvt«»*SlVIN» I0A **t » " ll M**&lt; I I «*»P'N4»iON 0* '■ t»,‘Mk'_______

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
OF CHIROPRACTIC, INC.
8AM

108PM

7 Da»s A Week JOS Dais A Year

J AM S AIMPOHI Hi VD
I . II|U| Tki,

(iM tt R h

SAN I ORD
I| m i l ORl AN 0 0 A49 01*9

THE OFFICE SOURCE 1
YOUR COMPUTER STORE
t”xU " Ckan Edge Cemputsr Pap
Polaroid Ditkoftftot

H ELPFU L A D V IC E O N A LL
A FFA IR S

PH. 322 5 066

HEN M BUSBESS FOR M YEARS
M PRIVACY Of HY ROHE
HOURS 8 AM •9 PM 7 Din A Week
s n eats Notmt or bobtmck rb.
LONGWOOD
m mmmm n m*u

695-7005
-T.lMl.pai.kl

Beauty

ALL CURLS

*40

STARTING A T.

CARE FREE CURLS ■ ELASTA CURLS

PERMS . . . . * 2 5 m
RELAXERS *25 w
..

f'H O N I

1015 H W V. 17 *2 L O N G W O O D

111 MAGNOLIA AVE. SANFORD
‘Href Cftfrkni In Town"

m

WESTERN HAY &amp; GRAIN
fe a tu r in g C a rn a tio n F eed s

New Introductory Offer

0
S outhern
FRIED C H IC K E N

10% Switt Fwd
CHICKEN
DINNER

12% Cowptott Pdtots
• 3 .0 0

Hour*:
9-6 M F
8 -6 Sat.

—i
i

2 PlBCB

•4.00
Good Thru Sept. 30

I 2

! for

*3.99
Wir/i Coupon

417 Mefnoils St.
Altamonte Spring*

630*8553

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

h

Stnford

rr h

-WEDNESMV SPECIAL3 pc. Chickin, cheoM toy

1 COll SIM

bakwl bsant. 0 9
A
miirwd potato t e ■

O
W

-BUDGET SPECIALEvlrydiy; • pc. chlckin,
&gt; pi. M ild

IS
3 2 2 -9 4 4 2

't

(A S lA Ifs ta !
^

"*•

711 FRENCH AVE.
323-0235

CALENDAR

SANFORD

OPEN MON.THRU FRI. 1-8
SAT. 8:80-3
ALL WORK
GUARANTEED
1 DAY SERVICE

%

NEW YORK {UPI) — The loft factory of Johnny
Karopoulos’ fur company offers n few reason’s
why mink coats have an $8,000 price tag and
why consumers should he careful when buying in
a market rejuvenated by cheap Imports.
Forty expensive fur pelts arc In various stages
or being treated, cleaned, stretched, filled, sewn
and cleaned again In a 60-hour, labor-intensive
process that will yield one full-length coat.
"Each coat Is a crab, really." said Karopoulos.
examining a luxuriously long bluck mink in an
air conditioned vault. "It takes years to train
skilled workers and then you have to pay them
very well."
Despite price tags that start In the hundreds of
dollars for rabbit Jackets and end upwards or
$100,000 for a single Russian sable coat, the
industry Is booming — tripling In the last decade
to $1.5 billion in sales Iasi year, says Sandy Blyc
of the American Fur Industry Inc,
The association represents hundreds of Ameri­
can fur makers, most located in a two-block area
of midtown Manhattan.
One reason for the boom is the recent Influx of
fur coats and Jackets from Hong Kong. China.
Greece and some Third World countries. Industry
officials report.
These furs are less expensive, allowing dis­
count fur houses to sell mink coats for $2,000
apiece that appeal to women on cloth cont wages.
But they arc often of poor quality, and some
American manufacturers, attempting to keep up
with the lower-priced competition, have begun to
cut corners themselves.
Such discount coats arc often made with
inferior pelts which can be overstretched or
fashioned by unskilled and lower-paid tailors,
officials say.
"The Industry is really changing." said Connie
Karopoulos. executive director of the Master
Furriers Guild of America. "It used to be that
most furs were of a high qualily, but now people
have lo be more careful of what they are buying."
A well-made fur coal can last 20 or more years,
making it cost-effective for people who save by
not buying a new coat every two years, A poorly
made fur garment may shed excessively or form
bald spots, stiffen and lose Its shape within a
matter of years. Industry experts say.
Furs arc made from pelts bought at auction
throughout the world. Most of the 40 varieties of
American furs, such as minks, chinchillas,
rabbits and foxes, arc raised on ranches much
like cattle arc raised for beef. Raccoons and
beavers arc purchased from trappers who capture
the animals in the wild.
Pelts arc then cleaned and often dyed, with
each manufacturer having its own secret recipes
of chemical agents to promote luster, softness
and colors. Pelts with similarly colored and
textured fur are separated Into bundles so each
coat will have a uniform look.
The pelts are lengthened and narrowed by
slicing a scries of horizontal cuts tn the back and
stretching the material. The gaps are then sewn
shut.
The strips, now four to flve^fcel long, arc sewn
together by tailors who arc th*e highest paid of all
American garment workers, Blyc explained.
By law. fur labels must list the type of fur, tls
country of origin, whether the fur Is sheared or
dyed and whether the garment Is made with
whole skins or leftover parts of skins — such ss
paws, tails and bellies, Blyc said.
According to fur manufacturrcrs, dying does
not change the quality of the fur. but some
consumers prefer undyed furs because they are
rarer.
By industry agreement, the lining o f a coat is
left unattached at the bottom so It can be pulled
up and the backside of the fur can be inspected.
Consumers should be suspicious If the lining of a
coat is sewn shut, furriers say.
The back of the fur should reveal long, straight
and even pelts sewn tightly together. Blyc said.
And the leather should be supple and smooth.
A coat made of paws and tails will be a
patchwork of fur parts. Such coats are cheaper,
but may not hold up for as many years, industry
officials warn.

TUESDAY. SEPT. 24
Rcbos Club AA, noon and 5:30 p.m., closed, 8
p.m., step, 130 Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos Club. noon, closed.
Sanford AA. 5:30. closed discussion, and 8
p.m.. open discussion. 1201 W. First St.
Wilson Elementary School PTA meeting. 7:30
p.m. Open house begins at 6:45 p.m.
Goldsboro Elementary School PTA, 7:30 p.m.,
school audi tori um. Assertive Discipline
Workshop.
24-Hour AA group beginners open discussion. 8
p.m.. Second and Bay Streets. Sanford.
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m.. closed, Messiah
Lutheran Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack Road.
Overeaters Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m.,
Florida Power &amp; Light. 301 S. Myrtle Ave.,
Sanford.

WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 25

6954699

321 514 0
(Formerly First Sanford Computer Store)

RADIATOR

• * M ta p IN MCI
VOTED BEST PSYCHIC FOR 1984 BY
CENTRAL FLORIDA SCENE MAGAZINE
1M Rm *I m« Fw U WITH TM* A*

GREEN’S MouSfc 4

III S. SANFORD AVE.
SANFORD
AND
0AKIAWN FUNERAL HOME
S.R. 44 • LAKE MARY

ACE AUTO

(305)

ACCENT COLORING

DS/DD

F A S T LO C A L D E L IV E R Y
2 Loctllont To S r n r You

PALM-CARD-CRYSTAL BALL READMQ

WARMNC SIGNALS OF PMCICO NUVEI

Tueiday, Sept. 24, H I 5 - J B

*6.62
io*r)
MTh 11B30|
F « Sal 1M0 3

Sun IIS pi

Full Gospel Business Men’s Fellowship In­
ternational breakfast meeting. 6:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. State Road 436 and Wymore Road. Alta­
monte Springs. For details call 656-4255.
Casselberry Rotary breakfast, 7:30 a.m..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive.
Central Florida Blood Bank Seminole County
Branch. 1302 E. Second St.. Sanford. 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. Florida Hospltal-Allamonte Branch. 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m.
Sanford Klwanls Club. noon. Sanford Civic
Center.
After School Special on skateboard safety. 4
p.m., Casselberry Branch of the Seminole County
Public Library System. Seminole Plaza. De­
monstration and discussion by Victor Perez,
former skateboard champ from Santa Cruz. Calif.
Free to the public.

THURSDAY, SEPT. 26
Symphonata — a Tapestry in Fashion luncheon
and fashion show sponsored by the Florida
Symphony League. 11 a.m.. Hyatt Regency
Grand Cypress to benefit Florida Symphony
Orchestra. For Information and reservations call
896-0331.
International Training In Communication
Greater Seminole Club (previously
Toastmlstress). 7:30 p.m., Altamonte Chapel
Education Building on State Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.

i

�I

4B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice

cc

B

Tuesday, Sept. 24, 198S

R E S O L U T IO N NO. 85 3
R E S O L U T IO N O R D E R IN G
AND P R O V ID IN G FOR T H E
H O L D IN G O F A S P E C IA L
B O N D E L E C T I O N IN T H E
S C H O O L D I S T R I C T OF
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A . ON T H E Q U E S T IO N
O F ISSUIN G N O T E X C E E D
IN G S10S.000.000 G E N E R A L
O B L IC A T IO N SCHO O L BONDS
O F T H E D IS T R IC T .
W H E R E A S , The School Board
ol Seminole County. Florida
( h e r e i n a f t e r c a l l e d t he
" B o a rd "), on August 36. 198$.
duly and legally adopted a
resolution entitled ’'R E S O L U
T I O N R E Q U E S T I N G AP
P R O V A L BY S T A T E DE
P A R T M E N T O F E D U C A T IO N
O F A G E N E R A L O B L IG A T IO N
BO N D ISSUE P R O P O SE D FOR
T H E SCHOOL D IS T R IC T OF
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A ," which resolution
was adopted pursuant lo the
requirement* of Seelon 336 3*.
F lortda Statutes 119831, and
W H E R E A S . In and by such
resolution the Board proposed
Ihe Issuance of bonds by the
School D istrict ot Seminole
County. Florida (hereinafter
called "D is tric t"). In the ag
gregate principal amount ot not
exceeding 110 $.000.000, lor the
purpose of financing Ihe cost ol
acquiring, building, enlarging,
furnishing or otherwise lm
pro ving buildings or school
g ro u n d s, or for any other
exclusive use of the public
schools within such District.
Including therein the projects
hereinafter set forth; provided,
if It be lound at the time ot the
construction ot the projects lhal
the amounts allocated below lo
certain ol the projects are Inad
equate for Ihe completion ol
such projects, the Board may. in
Its discretion, allocate addl
tlonal amounts to such projects
tram other protects herein
listed, and II It be lound at Ihe
time of the construction ol Ihe
porjects lh al less than the
amounts allocated below to
certain ol the protects are
needed for Ihe completion ol
such projects, the Board may. in
its d is c re tio n a llo ca te the
amounts so saved to other pro
jecls. or II through unusual
conditions or circumstances.
Including changes In population,
It is deemed necessary and
advisable to change any ol the
school sites or modify any of the
projects described below. Ihe
Board may. in Its discretion,
make such necessary changes In
sites or protects, subject lo
approval as required by law.
such projects being described as
follows:
PR O JEC TS*
I New construction of an ele
menlary school:
II New construction of a district
service center;
III Acquisition ol a new ($0
acre) high school site;
IV Additions I new construe
tion) to existing school sites
and or alteration, remodeling
and ren ovation ol existing
school facilities as follows
I Crooms High School
3 Casselberry Elem entary
School
3 Lake M ary Elem entary
School
4 Lake Brantley High School
S. Lake Howell High School
6 Sterling Park Elementary
School
7 Red Bug Elementary School
8 Geneva Elementary School
9 Midway Elementary School
10 Wilson Elementary School
II. Woodlands Elem entary
School
13- Goldsboro E lem entary
School
13 Seminole High School
la Eastbrook E le m e n ta ry |
School
15 English Estates Eiementa
ry School
la Bear Lake Elementary
School
17 Longwood E le m e n ta ry
School
II
Id yllw ild e E le m e n ta ry
School
19 Spring Lake Elementary
School
30 Winter Springs Eiementa
ry School
31 Sabal Point Elementary
School
33 Pine Crest Elementary
School
33 Forest City Elementary
School
34 Altam onte E lem entary
School
3$ Lake Orienta Elementary
School
36 Lawton Elementary School
37 Keeth Elementary School
7* Weklva Elementary School
39 Santord Middle School
10 Jackson Heights Middle
School
31 Teague Middle School
37 Tuskawilta Middle School
33 Lym an High School
14 Mllwee Middle School
3$ Rock Lake Middle School
la Lakevlew Middle School
17 South Seminole Middle
School
31 Rosenwald Exceptional
Student Center
39 Hopper Elementary School
40 Lake M ary High School
'To ta l Cost and Schedule ot

Priority —
SCH ED ULE A '
t. Construction of District
Service Center — 6.000 000
7 Crooms High School —
485.333
3 Casselberry Elem entray
School — 3.313.994
4 Lake M a ry Elem entary
School — 1.831.060
5 Lake Brantley High School
— 7.104.487
6 Lake Howell High School —
6.681.144
7 Sterling Park Elementary
School — 1.788.415
8 Red Bug Elementary School
— 1.653.948
9 Geneva Elementary School
— 4,483 831
10 M i d w a y E l e m e n t a r y
School - 3.550,139
11 Wilson Elementary School
— 4.343 567
13 Woodlands Elem entary
School — 1.330.603
13 Goldsboro E le m e n ta ry
School — 1.334.975
14 Seminole High School —
6.733.83!
15 Eastbrook Elem entary
School - 3,388 009
16 English Estates Eiementa
ry School — 1,531.871
17 Bear Lake Elementary
School - 1.997.416
16. Longwood E le m e n ta ry
School — 1,675.003
19 Id y llw ild e Elem entary
School — 1,348 645
30 Spring Lake Elementary
School — 1.633 661
31 Winter Springs Eiementa
ry School — 3.109.768
33 Sabal Point Elementary
School - 1.723.356
23 Pine Crest Elementary
School -7,318.074
24 Forest City Elementary
School — 7,075.149
75 Altam onte Elem entary
School - 1.949,517
26 Lake Orienta Elementary
School - 2.078.389
27 Lawton Elementary School
— 1,161 813
26 Keeth Elementary School
— 13,700
29 Weklva Elementary School
— 1.149,680
30 Santord Middle School —
5.840.138
31 Jackson Heights Middle
School -3.769.839
33 Teague Middle School —
2.490,143
33 Tuskawllla Middle School
-7.554.000
34 Lym an High School —
3.298 075
35 Mllwee Middle School —
1.727.644
36 Rock Lake Middle School
— 1.780.578
37 Lakeview Middle School —
1.104.698
36 South Seminole Middle
School - 1.107.438
39 Rosenwald Exceptional
Student Center — 1,238.098
40 Hopper Elementary School
-6 .7 7 0
41 Construction ol new ele
menlary school — 5 500 000
47 Lake M ary High School —
3.932.383
43 Acquisition ol new high
school site — 50 acres —
1.250,000
Total 5110 090.731
'P r i o r i t y ot protects and
estimated cost
W H E R E A S , a certified copy
Ol such resolution was trans
mltted to the Department ot
Education ol the State ot Florida
lor consideration, approval ot
the same was thereafter made
by Ihe Honorable Ralph D
Turlington. Commissioner of
E d u c a tio n of the State of
Florida, on behalf of Ihe De
partment of Educallon. and
notice ol such approval was
thereafter duly transmitted lo
Ihe Board, and
W H E R E A S , all things re
quired to be done prior to the
calling of a bond election within
the District on the issuance of
the proposed bonds have been
done and it is now desirable to
call the necessary bond elec
lion.
NOW T H E R E F O R E BE IT
R E S O L V E D BY T H E SCHOOL
B O A R D OF S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A , that
S E C TIO N 1 BONDS It is
hereby lound and determined
that General Obligation School
B o n d s of I h e D l s l r i c t
Ihereinalter called ‘ Bonds” ), in
an aggregate principal amount
ol not exceeding 6105.000.000
bearing interest, payable al
such rate or rates not exceeding
the maximum legal rate pro
vided by applicable law, as shall
be determined at the lime of the
sale thereof and maturing in
installments over a period not to
exceed 20 years from ihe date ol
issuance ol the Bonds, are
required lor the purposes set
forth in this resolution The
Bonds and the Interest thereon
will be general obllcations ol the
District for Ihe payment ol
which Ihe full lailh. credit and
la u n g power of Ihe District
shall be pledged
S E C TIO N 3 S P E C IA L BOND
E L E C T IO N
A special bond
election is hereby ordered lo be
held In the District on October
77. 1985. to determine whether or
not the Bonds shall be issued
S E C T IO N 3 N O T IC E O F
S P E C IA L BO N D E L E C T IO N

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Gawcvny Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, peal and preeent
Each letter m the cipher stands tor
another Today s ctue f equars 8

by CONNIE WIENER

•*YC

VRRT O

HKRRD
ARQF
EYTTQ.
QZKT
SRBDG

CZ
CZ

KLAZPP2LTS
FBMR

WBS
Y'N

VZD

RLZKJ F

Z L R ’G

FBMR
YC

BJZ."

B
—

QZTN

PS

VRI
I F BDCZL.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There are some men who. in a
fifty-fifty proposition, Insist on getting the hyphen too "
— Lawrence Peter.

BLOOM COUNTY
conshmwks/au. or w .'

TAKM APmr/toe or A

GONTVSEPAMNESA VICTIM/
son* a BfKP etir
HA/ IMSrPCHT
HJYTT.f

\

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

A HTTPIS SitlT? ANP
AtfWrMMie_ / am not /
a
can riv.. i can
NOT/ A M P CAN SiNG~
LISTEN TO THIS:

\

T h is r e s o l u t i o n s h a ll be
published In lull as a part of Ihe
notice ol the special bond elec
lion, together with a Notice ol
Special Bond Election In such
lorm as shall be determined by
the Secretary ot the Board. In
The Santord Herald, a newspa
per of general circulation In the
District, once each week tor at
least 4 consecutive weeks, Ihe
first publication to be not less
than 30 days prior to Ihe dale of
the bond election.
S E C T IO N 4 P L A C E S O F
VOTING. INSPECTORS,
C L E R K S The polls will be open
at the voting places on the date
ot such special bond election
from 7 00 A M until 7:00 P.M
All qualified electors residing
within the D istrict shall be
entitled and permitted to vote al
such special bond election on Ihe
proposition provided below. The
places of voting and Ihe In
speefors and clerks for fhe
special bond election shall be
the same as those places deslg
naled and those persons ap
pointed for Ihe Iasi general
election held within the bound
arles of the District on Nov
ember 6. 1964. or such other
polling places or persons as
shall be designated or appointed
by fhe Supervisor of Election
and duly noticed pursuant fo
Chapters IDO and lot. Florida
Statutes
S E C T I O N 5. O F F I C I A L
B A L L O T . The ballots fo be used
in the special bond eleclion shall
contain a statement ol Ihe de
s c r ip tio n of the p ro p o se d
Issuance of Bonds, and shall be
In substantially Ihe following
lorm
BALLO T
School Dlslrict ol
Seminole County, Florida
Special Bond Eleclion October
77.1985
Shall the School Olstrcit of
Seminole County, Florida. Issue
G e n e ra l O b lig a tio n School
Bondi In the aggregate principal
a m o u n t o l not e x c e e d in g
6)05,000.000. bearing Interest at
such rale or rales not exceeding
Ihe legal rale, as shall be
determined at the time ol the
sale thereof, and maturing In
Installments over a period not to
exceed 70 years from the date ol
issuance of such bonds, for the
purpose of financing the cost ol
acquiring, building, enlarging,
or otherwise Imporvlng build
ings or school grounds, or other
school purposes, more
specifically described In a reso
lution of The School Board ol
S em ino le C o u n ty . F lo r id a ,
adopted on September 4. 1985;
Ihe principal ol and interest on
such bonds to be paid from a
special ad valorem lax levied on
all taxable properly In such
District without limitation at to
rate or amount?
Instruction to Voters
Qualified electors desiring to
vote lor the issuance ol such
bonds are instructed to punch
Ihe ballot card in the hole next
to the words "F O R B O N D S ";
qualified electors desiring to
vote against Ihe issuance of such
bonds are instructed to punch
Ihe ballot card in the hole next
to th e w o r d s " A G A I N S T
B O N D S ."
SECTION 6 ABSENTEE
V O T IN G Paper ballots shall be
used at Ilie special bond election
lor absentee voting. The (orm ot
ballots to be used In such special
bond election for absentee
voters and the Instructions to
voters shall be in substantially
the form set out above.
S E C TIO N 7 P R IN T IN G O F
B A L L O T S The Secretary ot the
Board Is hereby authorlied and
directed lo have printed sample
ballots and lo deliver them to
the inspectors and clerks on or
before the dale and lime for
opening ol the polli for such
special bond election. The Sec
retary is further authorlied and
directed lo make appropriate
arrangements to have printed
on plain while cardboard or
paper and delivered in ac
cordance with law. the official
ballots tor use in such special
bond election
S E C TIO N 8 V O T E R R E G IS
TR A TIO N BOOKS
The
S u p e rv is o r ol E le c tio n s of
Seminole County. Florida. Is
h e re b y a u lh o r lie d and re
quested to furnish to Ihe in
spectors and clerks at each
place where the votes are to be
cast in such special bond elec
tion. applicable portions ol Ihe
registration books or certified
copies thereol showing the
names ol the qualified electors
residing in the District
SECTION 9 ELECTION
PROCEOURE
The special
bond election shall be held and
conducted m Ihe manner pre
scribed by law lor holding gen
erai elections in the area ol Ihe
District The inspectors al each
polling place shall, upon the
closing ol the polls, secure and
deliver the official ballots cast
to the Supervisor ot Elections
who shall cause same to be
counted as authorlied by law
The Supervisor of Elections
shall then tile returns ot such
special bond election Immedl
ately thereafter, and shall de
liver the same to the Board.
Such returns shall show the
number ol qualified electors
who voted at such special bond
election and Ihe number ot votes
cast respectively lor and against
approval ol the proposition. The
r e t u r n s s h a ll, as soon as
practicable, be canvassed by the
Board at a special meeting
called lor such purpose, and the
re s u l t s d e t e r m i n e d and
certified
S E C T I O N 10 E L E C T I O N
R E S U L T S II a m ajority ol the
voles casl al such special bond
election shall be "F o r Bonds."
the Issuance ol the Bonds shall
be approved, and ihen the
Bonds the issuance ot which
shall be thereby approved, shall
be issued as hereafter provided
by Ihe Board
S E C T I O N 1 I
S E V E R A B IL IT Y In the event
that any word, phrase, clause,
sentence or paragraph hereof

Legal Notice

shall be held Invalid by any
court ot competent jurisdiction,
such holding shall not affect any
other w ord, clause, phrase,
sentence or paragraph hereof
S E C T IO N 12 R E P E A L IN G
C L A U S E . All resolutions In con
fltct or Inconsistent herewith
hereby are repealed Insofar as
t h e r e Is c o n f l i c t or I n ­
consistency.
S E C T IO N 13. E F F E C T I V E
D A T E . Th is resolution shall
take elfect Immediately upon its
adoption this Septembers, 1985.
Voting for adoption ol the
fo re g o in g re s o lu tio n w e re
members:
Nancy Warren
Jean Dryanl
William J.K ro ll
PatTelson
Joseph Williams, J r .
Voting agalnsl adoption of the
fo re g o in g re s o lu tio n w e re
members:
None
Adopted this 4th day ol Sep
lember. A.D ., 1985.
B y: Nancy Warren, Chairman
The School Board of
Seminole County, Florida
Robert W. Hughes, Secretary
The School Board ot
Seminole County, Florida
C E R T IF IC A T E
I, R O B E R T W . H U G H E S ,
Secretary ol Ihe School Board ol
Seminole County, Florida, and
Superintendent ol Schools ol
Seminole County, do hereby
certify that the loregoing resolu
tion entitled, " R E S O L U T IO N
O R D E R IN G A N D P R O V ID IN G
F O R T H E H O L D IN G O F A
B O N D E L E C T I O N IN T H E
SC H O O L D I S T R I C T OF
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A . O N T H E Q U E S T IO N
O F ISSUING N O T E X C E E D
IN G 6105.000.000 G E N E R A L
O B L IC A T IO N SCHOOL BONDS
O F T H E D IS T R IC T ." was pres
ented, considered, passed and
adopted by a d u ly c a lle d ,
noticed and assembled Special
Meeting ol the School Board ol
Seminole Counly, held on Ihe 4th
day ol September. 1985, In San
ford. Seminole County. Florida,
and I further certify that a
foregoing resolution Is a true
and correct copy of Ihe original
resolution duly adopted and
spread upon the olllcial minutes
of the said Board.
In testimony whereof, I have
hereunto set rny hand and of
tidal seal this 4lh day ol Sep­
tember. 1985
Robert Hughes
Secretary, The School Board
ot Seminole County, Florida.
Publish: September 24. October
1.6. 15. 1985
Q E J ISO

4. Altam onte Springs City
Hall, 135 Newburyporl Avenue,
Allamote Springs
*
5. Oviedo Women's Club, King
Slreet (between High School and
Mathodist Church), Oviedo
S. Geneva Community House,
First Street, Geneva
7. Community House. Avenue
E A 7th Slreet, Chuluota
8. Westminister United P re­
sbyterian Church, Fellowship
H a ll, 2641 Red B ug R oad,
Casselberry
9. Foresl City Baptist Church
E d u ca tio n a l B u ild in g , West
Lake Brantley Road. Forest
City
10. Lake M a ry Presbyterian
Churck, 128 W. W ilbur Avenue.
Lake M ary
It. Seventh Day Adventist
Church. 455 Maitland Avenue.
Altamonte Springs
*12. Spring Lake Elementary
School Activity Center. Orange
Avenue, Altamonte Springs
13. Winter Springs Flra Sta­
tion, 107 North M ost Road.
Winter Springs
14. Longwood Health Care
Center, 1530 S. Grant Street,
Longwood
15. Santord C iv ic Center,
Santord Avenue at Seminole
Boulevard, Santord
It. Lakevlew Christian
Church, 1400 Bear Lake Roed,
Apopka
17. C o u n c i l C h a m b e r s .
Casselberry City Hall, 95 Lake
Triplet Drive, Casselberry
18. Sanora Clubhouse, East oil
S anto rd A ve n u e on Sanora
Boulevard, Sanford
19. Seminole High School,
Georgia Avenue. Sanford
70. Seminole County Agricul­
tural Center Auditorium. 4130 S.
Orlando Drive, Sanford
31. Sanford City Hall, 300 N.
Park Avenue, Santord
33. Santord C iv ic C ente r,
Sanford Avenue at Seminole
Boulevard, Santord
31. P r a ir ie La k e B a p tis t
Church, 415 Ridge Road. Fern
Park
34. Seventh D ay Adventist
Church. South ol SR 434 on Moss
Road. Winter Springs
35. Altamonte Springs Civic
Center. 803 Magnolia Avenue
(S W oft Longwood Avenue).
Altamonte 5prlngs
36. Lake M a ry Fire House, SE
Corner ol Wilbur Avenue and
First Slreet, Lake M ary
37 Seminole County School
Board Office, Intersection ot
Mellonvllle Avenue and Celery
Avenue. Santord
38. Church of Christ ol Latter
Day Saints. 3115 Park Avenue,
Santord
39. Salvation A rm y , 700 W.
34th Street, Sanlord
30 Holiday Inn. SE off SR 46 A
14. Service Road. Sanford
31. English Estates School.
Oxford Road. Fern Park
33. Melodee Skating Rink, 3700
W 25lh S tre e t (C o r n e r ol
A irp o rt B oulevard and 35th
Street). Sanlord
13. Longwood City Hall. C or­
ner ot W arren Street and W ilma
Slreet, Longwood
34. Altamonte Springs Ele
menlary School, 300 Plnevlew
Drive oil Palm Springs Drive,
Allamonte Springs
35. Springs Oaks Community
Clubhouse. 500 S pring Oaks
Boulevard. Altamonte Springs
IS. St. M ary Magdalen Church
S o c ia l H a l l . 861 M a itla n d
Avenue. Altamonte 5prlngi
37. Sanora Clubhouse, East off
S a n lo rd A v e n u e on Sanora
Boulevard, Sanlord
18. South Seminole Middle
School. East side of Queen's
M irro r Lake, turn South oil
Winter Park D rive, Casselberry
39. Ash wood Condominiums.
1000 L a k e o l th e W o o d s
Boulevard. Fern Park
40 Elks Club, Howell Branch
Road. Goldenrod
41. M llw ee M iddle School.
Highway 427. Longwood
47. P in e cre st E le m e n ta ry
School Auditorium. 400 W. 77th
Slreet, Sanlord
41 W i n t e r P a r k Y M C A
( f o r m e r l y E a s tb ro o k P ool
Association C lu b h o u se ), o il
Eastbrook Boulevard, Seminole
Counly
44. San Jose Apartments Rec­
reational Roam, oil SR 438 on
W in t e r W ood s B o u le v a r d .
Seminole County
45 Sauiellto Clubhouse, C o r­
ner of Sausalllo Boulevard and
Bocana Drive, Casselberry
46 Rolling Hills Goll Club.
1745 Jackson Street, Longwood
47. Rolling Hills M oravian
C h u r c h . S a n la n d o S p rin g s
Drive. Highway 434. Longwood
41 Ramada Inn (form e rly
Altamonte Springs Inn A Rac
quel C lu b ), 151 N . Douglas
Avenue, Altamonte Springs
49. St. Richards Episcopal
Church, 5151 Lake Howell Road.
Seminole Counly
50. Winter Springs Fire Sta­
tion (2. 851 N orthern W ay,
Winter Springs
51. St. Stephen L u th e ra n
C h u rc h , 1140 H ig h w a y 414,
Longwood
53. First Baptist Chapel of
Casselberry (form erly known as
Casselberry Baptist C h u rch ),
770 S e m ln o la B o u l e v a r d ,
Cassalberry
51. Longw ood C o m m u n ity
Building, Corner of W ilm a and
Church Street, Longwood
54. W e k lv a P re s b y te ria n
Church Fallowshlp Halt. 301
W aklva Springs Road,
Longwood
55. L u t h a r a n H a v a n
Fallowshlp Hall, Highway 438,
South o l O v la d o , Sem lnola
County
56. Sterling Park Homeowners
Association Pool Housa. Dew
Drop Lene (off Eagle Circle In
Sterling P a rk ), Semlnola Counly
*57. L a k t Kathryn Vlllaga
C lu b h o u ta , o il S a m l n o l t
Boulevard at tha and ot B Slreet.
Casselberry
58 South Seminole V F W Post
8307. SR 427 North ot Longwood
Hills Road. Seminole County
59 Village Green Apartments
Clubhouse, 111 Essex Avenue.
Altamonte Springs
SO. Christian Nalghborhood Al
lianca Church, M l Markham
Woods Road. Seminole County
8t. Forest Lake Elementary
School. 780) Sand Laka Road,
Forts! City
82. New Tribes Mission, 1000
E. First Street, Santord
61. Upsala Church Annas,
Corner ot Country Club Road
and Upsala Road, Semlnola
Counly
84. Altamonta Springs Elementary School, 300 Plnevlew
D rive oft Palm Springs Drive,
Allamonte Springs
85. Forest City Elementary
School, 980 Sand L a k t Road.
Seminole County
88. Forest Lake Elem entary
School. 1801 Sand Laka Road,
Forest City
67. Winter Springs Elem enta­
ry School, Highway 414. Winter
Springs
*88. Elks Club. Howell Branch
Road. Goldenrod
8*. Ramada Inn I tor m arly

N O T IC E O F
S P E C IA L B O N D E L E C T IO N
IN T H E SCHO O L D IS T R IC T O F
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
O N O C T O B E R 22, 1985
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
T H A T A SPECIAL BONO
E L E C T I O N will be held on
October 72. 1985, In the School
District ol Seminole County.
Florida (such District com prli
Ing all ol Seminole County,
F lo rid a ), for the purpose ot
determ ining whether or not
G e n e ra l O b lig a tio n School
Bonds ol Ihe District shall be
isiued in an aggregate principal
a m o u n t not e x c e e d i n g
8105,000,000, bearing interest,
payable at such rate or rates not
exceeding the m axim um legal
rate provided by applicable law,
as shall be determined at the
time ol the sale thereof, matur
Ing In Installments over a period
of not fo exceed 30 years from
fhe date of Issuance ot Ihe
bonds, being callable as re
quired by law, tor fhe purpose of
financing the cost ol acquiring,
building, enlarging, furnishing
or otherwise Improving build
ingi or school grounds.or for
any other exclusive use ol public
schools within the District, as
more specifically described and
provided in a resolution ol The
School B o a rd o l S e m in o le
County, Florida, adopted on
September 4.1985.
The places of voting in said
bond election shall be the same
places In Ihe County where the
last General Election was held,
or such olher places as shall be
designated by the Supervisor ol
E le ctio n s end d u ly noticed
pursuant to law.
The polls will be open at the
voting places on the date of the
special bond election from 7:00
A M . until 7:00 P .M ., all as
provide d In such resolution
adopted In September 4. 1915.
published herewith below
All quail Med electors residing
within Ihe D istrict shall be
entitled, qualified and permitted
to vole al such bond election

(S E A L )
T H E SCHO O L B O A R D
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
!M N A N C Y W A R R E N
C H A IR M A N
A TTES T:
l\i R O B E R T W. H U G H E S
SECR ETAR Y
Publish September 24. October
1.8. 15. 1915
D E J 151
N O T IC E O F
D E S IG N A T E D P O L L IN G
P L A C E S FO R T H E
SCHOOL B Q A R O O F
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
S P E C IA L B O N D E L E C T IO N
T O BE H E L D
O C T O B E R 11.1985
Notice is hereby given by
Sandra S. Goard that the follow­
ing Precinct Polling Places have
been established and designated
pursuant to Resolution 85 1, The
School B o a rd o l S e m in o le
C o u n ly, F lo rid a dated Sep­
tember 4, 1985 calling lor a
Special Bond Election to be held
b y T h e S c h o o l B o a r d ol
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r i d a
October 12. 1985
Precinct — Location
1 Church of God. 803 W. 32nd
Street, Sanford
*2. Wilson Elementary School
L ib r a r y , O ra n g e B o u le va rd
(Highw ay 431). Paola
3 M idway School Auditorium,
J l t w a y A v e n u e , S e m in o le
County

by Berke Breathed
A yssm m y... J1 j j
se m p so M M /A %

M u /m a x s a s &gt;
w m im r e n e te
t v s m .M l
w y e s im -,
XO M 'f MS/ .
'

M L

Legal Notice

^

**

h c m ts
A STKONb
CASE.

\

MO AM I
REALLY ?
■fivuwtme
THE MOOSE'/

1

i

71—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

7 consecutive times 52C a line
10 consecutive times 46C a line
Contract Nates Available
3 Linos Minimum

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

21— P erso nals

61— M o n e y to Lend

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER

NEEDM ONEYT

A B O R TIO N C O U N S E L IN O
Free P r e g n a n c y Tests.
C o n f i d e n t ia l- I n d iv id u a l
assistance. Call lor
appointment- evening hours
available........................... 111 7695

Everyone does at some time. It
you own a home and have a
|ob. It's aasler than you think.
C R E O IT ?
NO PR O BLEM I

23— Lost &amp; Found

834-8900

FOUND
Exotic Bird in Ihe
vicinity of 1st. Sanlord. Found
Sunday. Call: 113 7599________

F R E E D L A N D E R . INC.
Tha Mortgage People
710 E . Altamonte Drive
♦Licensed Mortaete Broker

F O U N D : Near Pinecrest school,
grey and white kitten. Very
affectionate. C a ll: 372 8901.
114 Pinecrest Dr.

25— S pecial N otices
BECOME A NOTARY
For Details: 1 600 432 4254
Florida Notary Association
e M A R Y K A Y C O S M E TIC S e
Skin care and color flair
C O N N IE ........................... 311 7734
★
★
★
★
S A N F O R O LIO N S C L U B
Invites you to their annual
Spaghetti Dinner and Bingo
P a rty. Saturday September
71. I9S5. 4 P M to 8 P .M . at
the S anlord C ivic Center.
Children under 5 tree.
Benefit Liens Sight Program

HELP US HELP OTHERS!
27— N u rs e ry A
C h ild C a re
Mother ol 1 yeer eld would like
to watch ona or two children In
m y Lake M ary home. 321-3171.

33— R e a l E s ta te
Courses
★

★

DENTAL
RECEPTIONISTS

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATJES
1 tirno...................S7C o lino
HOURS
3 consecutive times 61C o line

8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 •Noon

Experlncce d shingle layers
New work. Call In evenlngi
6:30 9:00P M 337 6368

w ★

• Thinking el getting a •
• Reel Estate License? •
We otter Free Tuition
and continuous Training I
Call Dick or Vicki ter datallsi
S 7 l.1 « 7 ...n j-l» 9 ...E v e . 774-1 ISO
Kaye* at Florida., Inc.
80 Years laoertancel

83— Mortgages
B ou ght A Sold
Went Cash F o r Your Mortgage?
Good price end quick settle­
ment. Local Call.
Barton. B. Pilcher
Lie. M tg. Broker..............113 7498

Legal Notice
Altamonte Springs Inn A Rac­
quet C tu b , IS I N . Douglas
Avenue. Allamonte Springs
*70. St. Stephen Lutheran
C h u rc h . 2140 H ig h w a y 414,
Longwood
71. First Baptist Church ol
S w e a t w a t a r , 1621 W a k l v a
Springs Road. Seminole County
72. First Baptist Church ol
Longwood. 830 E . Bey Avenue,
Longwood
* IN D IC A T E S C H A N G E F R O M
N O V E M B E R 6, 1984, LO C A
TIO N S
Dated: September IS, 1985
I I I Sandra S. Goard
Supervisor of E lections
Publish: September 24. October
1.8. IS. 1985
D E J 151

A3— Mortgages
Bought A Sold
We buy 1st and 2nd mortgages
Nation wide. Call: Ray Legg
Lie. M lg Broker. 940 Douglas
Ave., Allamonte. 774 7752

71— H e lp W a n te d
AAA TE M P
A dlvltcn ol A A A Employment
Work when you want. Apply
today. N O F E E I 113-0057
A C C O U N T IN G C L E R K S
Experience In accounts payable,
r e c e iv a b le s , o r p a y r o l l .
C om p u te r experience pre
lered. Permanent positions.
Never a Feel

TEMP PERM______774-1348
Acrylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coating on
ce rt, boats and planes. 85 to
t i t per hour. We train. For
work In Sanford area call
T a m p a S ll 888 7)51
A L L T Y P E S JO B S
S T A R T W O R K NOW I

umm

X A n m c K

■441 00M
6441 Mt
I NO
y ?
FEE I
Report ready lor work at S AM
407 W. 1st SI ................Santord

321 1590
ASSISTANT MANAGER
WANTED

Full and Part time Experl
ence helpful 323 6 1 8 5 _____

“

DENTAL ASSISTANT

Experienced w ith span ol
duties. Energetic, neat ap
pearance.333 8185
D E N T A L R E C E P T IO N IS T
SSS Any school or life medical
background wlnsl Needs now!
Busy olllce with lots ol polen
tlal tolearnl

Em ploym ent

323-5176
____________

1533 French Are.

DRIVER/HELPER
F o r residential sanitation
ro u te
V a lid C h a u f f e u r ’ s
Lice n se nec essar y . Good
w o r k i n g c o n d i t i o n s and
beneftls. Apply In person
IWS. 555 Hope St,, Longwood
D R IV E R S W A N T E O
Part time. Salary plus com
mission. 86 58 per hr. Musi
have own car &amp; Insurnace.
Call Domino's P in a 321 5000
E X E C U T IV E S E C R E TA R Y
W ith or without shorthand!
P r e le r r a b ly W A N G w ord
processors Needed in the
Lake M ary Area
Ablest Tem porary Services
331 3940
E X P E R IE N C E D SAW O P ER
ATORS
H o s p lta llia tlo n .
v ac at i on h o lid a y s
A p p ly
Formllex Incorporated, Port
ot Sanlord. Lake Monroe
From 9 II or 1 3 P M
G A L F R ID A Y T R A IN E E
54 50 hour lo start with and a
raise in 1 m onths! T ra in
c o m p l e t e l y . Bes t boss,
friendly olllce.

Em ploym ent

f l U l

323-5176

3533 Fre nch Ave.
GENERALOFFICE
55 00 hour Train lor data entry!
Extend and price Invoices
En|oy the variety and the
benelltsl

Em ploym ent

323-5176
7533 French Ave.
HAI RSTYLI ST

Experienced Lake Mary Salon
173 4523_______________
H A R N E S S A S S E M B LE R S

Must be lamlllar with simple
wiring Permanent position
Never a Fee!

TEMP PERM............ 774 1348
HELP WANT ED
D elivery
Person Musi Know the area
Apply In person 818 Sanlord
Ave

T aborers
Reliable workers needed
lor first shill
Ablest Tem porary Services
321 1940

N O T IC E

For well established apartment
c o m p l e x
In L a k e
Mary/Sanlord area to work 7
days a week. Inquiries: 111-

4tH.___________________

A V O N E A R N IN O S W O W tll
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S N O W III
711 5551 er 1110419

KNIGHTS
OF

B A B Y S I T T E R - 3 Days per
week to watch 1 infants In my
home. References. Ask for
Janey 323 1133______________

BABYSITTER
needed. M y h om e . Some
housekeeping Involved. 373
57)3 afters p m _______________
Babysitter loving person to
cere lor Intanl In m y home
F u lltim e Rel. 574 4457

BICYCLE MECHANIC
Wanted 85 S17 p/hr. Musi
have: O w n Car, Phone, Basic
Tools. Experlenca a plus but
not nacessary. Must be re
sponsible 4 Bondable Call
448 9498 Ask lor Bob_________
C A B IN E T M A K E R S
Experienced topman. builders
Excellent wages and benefits
Call: 333 1440.________________

CARPENTERS and HELPERS
Wanted Own fool and trans
portallon. Longwood Area
Vacation and benefits. Bob
305 311 7349___________________
Avan Christmas Earnings
Tw oW a yst.B e a Representative.
3111918.............................. 113-1818

COLUMBUS
JACKPOT *250
BIG N *250
BIG X *250
SAKS
835-$40-850
Thurs. 8 Sun. 7p.RL
2504 OAK AVI.,

TEMPLE SHALOM

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
We have an excellent opportune
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
ly lo r s o m e o n e In o u r
Notice Is hereby given that I
classified departm ent. The
am engaged In business at 3917
O r l a n d o D r l v a , S e m i n o l e | requirem ents are: A good
altitude, pleasant voice, neat
C o u n ty , F lo r id a unde r the
appearance and general office
fictitious name ol N E W W O R L D
skills, which Include typing
S A N D W IC H S H O P P E . IN C .,
end filing.
and that I Intend lo register said
nama with tha Clerk of the
We otter lull time employment,
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
h o s p lta llia tlo n p la n , paid
Florida In accordanca with tha
vacation and an excellent
p rovisions ot tha F lc tltlo u i
working atmosphere.
Nama Statutas. T o wit: Section
865 09 Florida Statutes 1957
F a r further Information, call
/%/ Linda L. Kline
Mai Adkins al 132-1611. ext. I I
Publish September 10, 17, 14 A
October 1 ,1995
e r a p p ly at T h a Sanford
E v e n in g H e r a ld , 168 N .
D E J 61
Franck Ave., Sanford. E O E
C I T Y O F S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A
N O T IC E O F
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
T O C O N S ID E R A
C O N D IT IO N A L U SE
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will ba held by
the Planning and Zoning Com ­
mission In tha City Commission
R o o m , C it y H a ll, S a n lo rd .
Florida at 7:00 P .M . on Thurs
day. October 3. 1985 to consider
e request lor a Conditional Usa
in a GC-2. C entral Commercial
District.
Lagal Description: All Blk 12
(less Lots 7 through 171; 4th Sec.
ol Dream wold, P B 4. P C f t
Address: 1880Orlando Drive
Conditional Usa Requested:
Sale of alcoholic beverages lor
consumption on Ihe premises.
A ll parlies In Interest and
ell liens shall have an opportuni­
ty loba heard at said hearing.
By order ol the Planning and
Zoning Commission ot tha City
ol Sanford, Florida this 17th day
ol September. 1985.
John M orris, Chairman
City ol Sanlord Planning
and Zoning Commission
A D V IC E T O T H E P U B L IC : II
a parson decides lo appaal a
decision made with respect to
any matter considered at the
above m atting or hearing, ha
m ay need a verbatim record ol
the proceedings Including the
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by Ihe
City of Santord. I F S 188 0105)
Publish: September 24.1985
D E J 18*

Saturday €.45 P.M.
Wednesday 6:45 P.M.

$25 - S35 •$50
Gamas
2 $250 Jackpots
17S5 EHtcem Rled.
(Center Praildence BHrd.)

Deltona, FL

COOK
Home-style food experience
Apply 1 lo 4 pm. Holiday
House Restaurant. Hw y 17/91.
Near Laka M ary._____________

DELIVERY DRIVER
Full A pari time. Good pay.
Apply al Carlo's Italian Res
taurant, 1008 S. French Ave.,
Santord.

KIWAHIS CLUB
OFCASSELBERRY

Delivery Work up Clerk needed

FRIDAY MM1 7 P.M.
S2S-S50-S10Q
111 SZSft IACKPOTS
Seale* Citliens Coaler
Secret Lake Perk,
Cetsetoerry
U S M 21

lor a 1 month (full time)
asslgnmment In our schedul
Ing department. Good phone
voice a must. Exparlancad
with calculator and typing.
Call: Lin d a 321 3883.

Eiptrianctd Carpantir
Wanted with ability lo manage
small crew It necessary. Call
349-5010- leave message.
E X P E R IE N C E D
R E A L E S T A T E A O E N T to
(a rm Geneva area.

DM you knew that
yeur c M s&lt; arganlzatie* caa appear In (Ms
Hating tack weak tar on­
ly $3.50 par week? TVs
Man Meal way lo Miami
the pufcUc al yaw cluk
activttMt.

O V IE D O R E A L T Y .IN C .
E X P E R I E N C E D O N L Y I Cabl
n a l M a k e rs , A s s e m b le r* .
Lamina tors 719-1947
F A S H IO N M O D E L S - tor tasn
Ion designer, T V , catalogs, all

FLATBED DRIVER
Local I Put your driving shoes on
end start today I

Employment
i\ \ |
323-5176
fO M U v

7511 Preach Ave.

II yaw ckik or erganiietMn
wewMHke to ko Included In
tkis Hating call:

Evening Herald
-

C LA SS IFIED
DEPARTM ENT
K2-34M

�71— H *lp W an te d

97— A p o rtm o n ts
F u rn is h e d / R ont

i t h in *. w e FboNb

LANDSCAPE HELP NEEDED
Good chance for advancement.
Muit furnlth own transport*tion A have valid Fla. Driver's
license. IIM IIt .
LANDSCAPE LABORERS Full
time positions. *3.7* per hour.
Call; 311H 33________________
LANDSCAPE LABORERS Full
time positions. U.7S per hour.
Call: 313 *133________________
LPN or RN needed. M l shltt.
Good atmosphere A benefits.
Full time position. Apply at:
Debary Me nor...40 N. Hwy. 17-91
Dobary............................. EOE
MANAOER TRAINEE
U00 week. Any type ol man­
agement background great!
No Sundays I People parson
needed I Learn all phases ol
store management.

S M A L L O A R A O I
E PF IC IE N C Y - 1 working
adult. &gt;71 a week plus deposit.
Utilities furnished. 131-1417
WEKIVA RIVER- Efficiency,
elr, carpet. Canoe use, adults,
no pets. &gt;155 mo., utilities
Included. I11-447*.___________
1 bdrm. with private bath,
screened In porch, utilities
Included. &gt;175 per month
+ security. Elderly person or
couple preferred. Cell: After 6
P.M. ask tor Jim, 311-5)91.
1 bdrm., apt. &gt;95 par week,
utilities Included, plus securlty Cell: 333-4)3)._____________
1 Bdrm./ utilities turn. Near
town. MS wk. &gt;100 deposit.
313 &gt;194evenings.

Employment
A U l 323-5176

99— A p o rtm o n ts
U n f urn (shod / R on t

M il French Ave.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT
1 Bedreem

MEDICAL SECRETARY
For OB-GYN Office with In­
surance experlance. Call
331-4560tarn to 4 pm._________
NEED ED IM M E D IA T E LY Dependable Phone Workers.
Good salary and bonuses. No
Selling. Call: 699 5161. 11 - I,
Monday through Friday In
Long wood.__________________

NURSES AIDES
All shifts. Good atmosphere
and benefits. Apply at:
DeBary Menor...40 N. Hwy 17/91
DeBary, E.O.E.
P.C.U. ASSEMBLERS
Several needed. Will train.
Souldering experience helpful.
,
Never a Feel

TEMP PERM............774-13*1
Part time Babysitter Needed
For church groups. 311-437I

PHONE WORK
No experience necessary. A
pleasant voice A willingness to
work only requirem ents.
Starting pay 14.50 per hr.
Far interview,...... call Mary at:
___________ &gt;34 1513___________

REAL ESTATE
SALESPEOPLE
High
Earnings
Potential I
Modern office In excellent
location- Complete training
program- New division of old
established firm. Call now
tor details on pleasant
working conditions and to
secure your future.
|Jim Rafferty................ 574 6656
Real Estate Associates Needed100% commission concept.
, GRANT PROPERTIES.INC.
I ___________774 5605___________

RECREATION AIDE
For 64bed residential facility.
Adult MR. I l l 7131___________
Reliable hairdresser needed
with clientele preferably. Only
those Interested In working
call; 311 &gt;991________________

SALESPERSON
FOTOMAT has Immedltate
opening for } - 7 PM Shift at
Sanford Pleia. Benefits Inelude:
e Uniforms A Paid Training
e Paid Holidays A Vacation
e Insurance
e E mployee Discounts
e Incentive Programs
Apply at Sanford Plaza Store
or Its L iv e Oaks Blvd.,
Casselberry.

SUPER MARKET
E X P E R I E N C E D M eatcutter/Cashier/ Produce Clerk
Apply In person:
PARK A SHOP
15th A Park Avenue
Polygraph required
See Mr. er Mrs. Oaitl
TRACTOR OPERATOR
Exp. with box blade A finish
grading. Salary commonturate with ability. m -m &gt; .
WAREHOUSE
ATTENTION M IN I Shipping,
Receiving. Able to lift 50 lbs.,
own transportation. &gt;4 an hr.
Permanent positions. Never a

TEMP PERM_____ 774-1341
YARDMAN
64.50 hour. Tralnl Any knowl­
edge of building materials Is
helpful, but not needed I Great
future!

Employment
323-5176
U ll French Ave.

S25l«MNwftlitMsa4!
Needed Immediately ■ Nursing
Assistants and Llve-ln Com­
panions. 1 year experience
required.
MEDICAL PERSONNEL
POOL
305 *9*4911.
E _ 0 £ _ ;;;^ ^ _ ;;;;;;M/F/HW

93— R oom s fo r R en t

FURN. ROOM__ .155 aWEEK
&gt;100 Security................. 111-1990
Large room w/prlvete entrance
A bath. Nice area. 655 week.
References required. 311-5990.
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week. Reesoneble rales.
Maid service. Call 323 4)07.
5 7 PM. 415 Palmetto Ave.
SHARE close In house with
working person or 1-1 sanlor
citizens. NO pets 31U050.
THE FLORIDA HOTEL
500Oak Avenue............ S I -6304

^JJeaionableWeakl^ates^

9 7 -A p a r tm o n ts
F u rn is h e d / Ront
A-l Clean l bdrm, Complete
privacy. 600 per week plus
6300 security. Cell: 3331169 or
3M06M.____________________

Cell:.... ........................Ill &gt;699
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
MO E. Airport Blvd.

I Bdrm., I Both........... moo mo.
1 Bdrm., t Bath........... in s mo.
PHONE......................111-64)1

• COUNTRY SETTING •
Large 1 A 1 Bdrm. Apartments
Adult LekevlewFamlly Poolside

Available Now.Opgn Wnttnds

FUMBLELEASES

SSNIOR CITIZENS DISCOUNT
BANCM STYLE LIVINOHI

SANFORD COURT APT!
m m i
Fern. Apts, ter Saetor CRtaees
ID Palmetto Avo.
J. Cowan. No Phono Cells.
LAKE MART- Smell furnished
apt. Nice tor working parson
only. No Children er goto.
Cell:......................... m n »
Seeterd 1 Bdrm, adults, no pets,
air, quiet redsldeni lei U99
mo/up + deposit. WEStV.

♦

1 Bdrm., fully furnished double
wide, &gt;550 per month, 1st end
loti. Includes electric. Call:
149-5743.

117— C o m m e rc ia l
R e n tals
Rattll A Ottlcs Space- 300 up to
1,000 sq.ft, alto storage available. I l l 4401_______________
Sanford- 3 unimproved lots.
Zoned C-3. W. Mallciowtkl,
REALTOR............... 311-79)5.

Efficiency- newly decorated. M6
wk. Utilities Included. I mo.
security. 311-5990,____________
M A R IN E R 'S V IL L A G E - I
bdrm. 1310, 1 bdrm. 6360 and
up I Adults only, 313-1670,

LUXURY CONDOS
1,1,3 Bdrm., 3 bath, washer,
dryer, vertldes, refrlg., dish­
washer. Starting af &gt;175.
GOLD KEY MGMT., INC.

471-Till

SHENANDOAH VIUA6E

LAKE MARYBrand New 1 bdrm., wet bar,
blinds, pool, clubhouse. &gt;595
mo. 774-4054

* FAMILY a A D U L T *

$100 OFF!
1st. Months Rent
l Bdrm., 1both....... .6315Month
1 Bdrm., ivy Bath... 6150Month
Each apt. has patio or balcony
over ooklrtg court yard. All
appliances, laundry room, and
pool.

FRANKUN ARMS APTS.
3334850
1 bdrm., I bath, children wel­
come, yard, MO week, plus
utilities. Security deposit NO)
Cell 123-9*22ar 3114947.

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
Elderly -"50 or up'', single
person or couple, no pots, no
children. *225 par month. 1100
damage deposit. Call: M i­
nt?, after 3:30 P.M.

A BRAND NEW HOME
3 Bdrm., 3 bath plus garage.
Move In Immediately upon
approval. Kids-o.k. No pots.

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR_____________333-76W
EXE C UT I V E COUNTRY
HOME for sola or rant. 4
Bdrm., 3 both, with pool, largo
wooded tot, now carpal, near
school. Call: 1-773 3673.

FREE MONTHS RENT
ON A N U YEAR LEASE,
On these
All New Award Winning

2 Bdrm., 2 Bath Patio Homts
Nestled in quiet cauntry setting.
Near shagging and schaals.
Minutes tram
De writewn Orlande via 1/4.
CHECKTHESEPEATURESI
a Pratt Proa Retrlgerater
aoaraga
a Attic Starage
a Washer/Dryer Cennecttani
a Same Units wtth Family Ream
ON SITE MANAOEMENTI
Children A Pets Wekama
Sexier Citizens P ii cauwtl

CANTERBURY VILLAS
321-3827
* * * IN OBLTONA e a n
a a HOMESFOR RENT a *
_______ e * 174-1454 e * _______
Lengweed/Leke Mery AreaNew 3 bdrm. spill plan,
garage, blinds, appliances.
carpet. 6515mo. 619-6410.
SANFORD -3 Bdrm., t bath,
appliance S37S par month plus
6171 security. Call: 19S-7900 er
&gt;13-179-3110._________________
1 Bdrm., I Bath, alr/heat.
carpet and lanced yard. U3S
par month plus deposit. Call:
311 STIC.____________________
I Bdrm., 1 bath, stove, refriger­
ator. ac. carpeted, no pots.
11)0 + security. After a P.M.
645-3114.____________________
I Bdrm., Living roam, dining
ream, kitchen, e/c, paddle
fans, good location. U40 par
month discounted. Call: 131640 or 133 7013.

105— D u p le XT r ip le x / R tn f
I bdrm., control
hoot/air,’ carpeting. SU0 mo.
plus deposit. 3499000_________

L A K E M AR Y • t Bdrm.,
wathor/dryar connection, app l l o n c es , quiet a rea ,
6330/discount. Investors Reelty Services, 039-0034._________

SANFORD 1 bdrmit., carport,
laundry room , central
alr/heat, all appliance)
carpets, drapes. MM S. ‘
Aua.-Ott W.MthSt.MMI
t Bdrm. in Country. Utilities
Included. Newly
33MB5) anytime.

beak-ups, screened petto.
n » i&gt;&gt;&gt;. wt-asi

1*6-6401

141— H om es F o r Sale

141—Homes For Sale

Lounge Under the Shade Tree*
and En|oy the Privacy. Fan
tastlc Assumable Mortgage
Low Down I Upgraded carpel
and paddle tans. 1 bdrm. I
b a t h , f a m i l y r o o m , and
workshop. Priced In the 40'*!
STO P C A L L N O W II!
H D R E A L T Y . &gt;30 M00________
L A K E M A R Y - Large home on
ca n a l to C r y s t a l L a k e .
Perfect for family needing
elbow room 11179,000

Very Large Heme In Town

Will St. Company.....322-5Q05
SANFORD REALTY
R E A L T O R ....................... 115)524

SANFORD/LAKE MARY
Dream
Horn**
Available
Nowl All Prices. Seminole
and Volusia Countlas. Great
Term*.
Call
for
Free
Computer Search Today I f

323*3200

3 bdrm. Townhouse, living
room,* family room, eal-ln
kitchen, wallpaper,
wether/dryer hook up, pool.
U U mo. 774 4054

S IN G L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G
U r n Ttrms to Fit
Your Needs!
Furnished or Unfurnished.
Carports............Private Patios
Lush Landscaping.Pets.Children
WATER BEDS ACCEPTED!

Call......... 3211911

Sanford By ownerl 1400 sq II 1
bdrm. 3 balh, living room, 11 x
30 fam ily room, fireplace,
s c r e e n e d p o r c h . I nsi de
laundry room, fenced yard,
central haal/air, paddle Ian*.
5 6 2 , 9 0 0 or a s s u m e 9 %
mortgage. 521 934)___________
SANFORD
3 Bdrm .. I balh.
huge corner lot, separate
double garage. Zoned com
m erclal. Owner motivated.
Priced right!

THE ARBORS*
3 bdrm. 1 bath, microwave,
wesher/dryer. blinds, pool.
Was model I Private fenced

jatjo^495mo77^05^^^^

141— H om es F o r Sale

BATEMAN R E A L T F
CASSELBERRY- 5 bdrm. ) bath
Mabllo with tot. 634,900
COUNTRY- 5 bdrm. 1 bath,
oat-in Kitchen, formal dining
room, family roam. Ilroplace,
central alr/heat, carpeted, 1
car garage, screened porch.
Zoned AIO.tn.9M

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
R E A L T O R ______________111-749)
1 Bdrm ., 1 balh on corner lot.
West 1st St. 1 Mile East of 14.
Potential commerical or busi­
ness toning 675.000 . Owner
Financing.
P IL O IA N R E A L T Y ,IN C .
&gt;31 1943 (Evening*))!* S ill,

145— R esort
P ro p e rty / Sale
NEW SMYRNA BEACH- Owner
will pay 64,000 closing cost on
new mortgage. Beachslde 4
bdrm., 1 bath pool home with
detached garage. Slept to
ocean and public handball
courts 666.900

Beachslde Realty, REALTORS
964-417-1111.............Open 7 Daysl
New Smyrna Beach- Luxury 3
bdrm. i ' i balh Townhouta.
Across from ocean- 666.900 or
equity share with low down
payment. G R A N T P R O ­
P E R T IE S . INC. 774 5605

149— C o m m e rc ia l
P ro p e rty / Sate

Wallace Cress Realty
Realtor..............................311-0577
SANFORD- 1617 Laurel Ave. 1
bdrm ,I large balh. living
room, dining room. Fla room,
kitchen equipped. 113 7M&gt;.

1 2 7 -O ffic e R e n ta ls
Greet Location otl 4)4- Execu­
tive suites Include finished
Interior, all utilities, cleaning,
conference room, lounge, an­
swering service, secretarial A

With In Law Quarters on large
corner lot. Finest
features
and construction.
Space
Space Spacell A Really Buy
at 5)7,000 Consider Irade Ini

« 1 A| TONS

STEm per

COMMERCIAL SPECIALIST
SALES AND APPRAISALS
BOB M. BALL. JR. P.A..C.S.M.
REALTOR................... 311-411)

151— In v e s tm e n t
P ro p e rty / S ale
SANFORD- C o m p le te ly

PRIME LOCATION- Home le
live In PLUS I rental units
with 11,050 per month Income.
Price reduced le SISS.ooo.
Submit offers.
E X T R A L A R O E H O ME Control heat/air, eat-in kitch­
en , d o u b le .c a r g a r a g e ,
assumable mertgoge! Owner
will held Ind with 115,006
down. 159,000.
OTHER HOMES. LOTS.
ACREAOE, INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
CALLANYTIME
REALTOR................... 311-4991
LIST WITH USI

re ­
novated Duplex. 1 bdrm . 1
balh and 1 bdrm . I bath.
P ositive cash llaw. ssooo
down. Owner carries. 149,900.

*41-417)_____________________

153— A c re a g e *
L o ts /S a le
CANAL LOT- lor sale by owner.
1.) miles west of I -4off Hwy 46
on Lake Sylvan IMS) 574-1547.
LAKE JESSUP Single family
lot on canal. Large oaks.
Beaut i f ul v i e w ol Laka
Jessup I 620 000 Call: &gt;31 1574.
5 A c r e s C l e a r e d L a n d In
Geneva. &gt;25.900 Assumable
mortgage. 149-5)27.

Golden Retriever Puppy
10 weeks old 6750
C a ll:...................................345 4993

N E W O B L . W ID E M O B IL E
H O M E on 5 acres. Complete
package 656.900
Also, Tw o/
5 acre tracls ready tor Mobile
Homes. 321 5200

203— L ivestock and
________P o u ltry _______
GEESE-M.00
HENS-S2.00
323-4762
213— Auctions

HOMES

BRIDGES AND SON

Lifetime
Adult Park................ Let Rants
• 6100-6110

Auction every Saturday al 7 PM

WE BUY EVERYTHING!

Includes Water.Garbage Pick up
Yard Maintenance
I mmediate Occupancy

Hwy 46.................. ............323 2601

219— W an te d to Buy

Gregory Mobile Homes.lll-SIQO.

RONLEEOF SANFORD
Free Vacation 3 days, 2 nights
wllh purchase ot Mobile Home
Many Homes Fam ily ■Adult

Adult Park • Lake Aces* 34x4) 7
Bdrm ., a/c. many extras Call
to see
Family Park • Kids O .K . 3
Bdrm .. 2balh, 6249 per month.
Adult Park New carpet, screen
room, excellent location, only
63l9per month.
Don't Rentl

RONLEE IS YOUR ANSWER

666:Alumlnum Can*..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Metals...........Glass
K O K O M O .........................323 1100
Baby: Beds, Strollers, Clothes,
Playpens, E tc. Paperback
Books. 311 )377 - 312 9504

223— M iscellan eo u s
Car Slops Sand Patio Blocks
Dlst Box......Rock....... D ry Wells
Lintels.....Window Sills..... Steps.
M IR A C L E C O N C R E T E CO.
369 Elm Ave..................... 132-575)

CLEAN UP SALE!

2200 French Ave. Suite A
Sanford, FI,
(days) 321-7613 or (Evens)
111 7255.149 5064, 761 9610

Building 35, Sanlord Airport,
1146 29th SI Teakwood. A
M a r i n e A c c e s o r l e s and
Hardware: Mercedes Bend!
Truck Parts; and Mlsc Hem*
From 9/23 thru 9/ 10. 1 am to
S pm. 323 89S0
____________

159— R e a l E s ta te
W an te d

CLEARANCE SALE!
Behind in Your payments? Save
your Credit. We buy houses.
A ll ar eas. G R A N T P R O
P E R T IE S .IN C 774 5605
Building Lois. A Vacant Land
Wantedl United Sales Assoc.,
Inc . R E A L T O R S . 321 3)13

(9) 5 tt. glass showcases. ( 1 ) 1
fl. t In. X 5 ft. 25 in. safe, guns,
jewelry, guitars, toots, cam
e ra s, etc A ll i tems dis
counted! Sale ends Sept 26!

166&gt; Sanford Avo.
BY OWNER-1 Bdrm.. Its Bath
B r i c k R a n c h e r . 10X14
screened porch, utllltty room,
carpet. 144.000 ill-? )*). otter
»PM________________________
FO R S A L E BY O WN E R Magnolia Estates- 3 bdrm..
fireplace, large lot w/small
apartment. Assumable, no
quellllylng. Payments ol S319
oer month. 144.500 511-15)0

II \ l l

H i: M

H IM
BEIT BUVI
air, I

l \

io n
1 bath,
6, fenced.

LOVELY LANDSCAPINO- 5
bdrm., 1 bath, huge family
ream, air, klichen-equipped.
174,109.
SPARKLINO POOL- 1-Story,
air, fenced. 5 bdrm., 15* both.
M7.5M.
1-STORY TOWNHOUSE- Com­
muni t y pool , ki t c he n
equipped, elr. S51JM

V

y

1904 French Ave.

181— A pp lian ces
/ F u rn itu re

Sanford. FI

REBUILT KIRBY'S... $ 9 95 /UP

Assorted Household Furniture
In c lu d in g gi ant L-sh a p e d
couch. Call to sea thru F rl.,
Sept. 27th. 123 7022. Ask tor
Laurie between 9-5.___________

Ma|or Appliances Repaired,
bought, and said. Fully guar­
anteed. Call: m -429*.
Reconditioned Appliances
from MS-WARRANTY.
BARNETTS.... CASSELBERRY
Ha-SII)........................ MO-6411
* RENT TO OWN#
Color TVs., stereos, washers,
dryers, refrigerator, freezers,
furniture, video, recorders.
Special 1st week's rent &gt;5.00
Alternative TV A Appl. Rentals
Zayres Shopping Canter
___________ 122-5000___________
Used Washers- Parts A Service
for Konmorei.............. 525-0697.
MOONEY APPLIANCES

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
111-116 E. tit ST............ 321-6622

J

5604 HWY. 17-91

iM w m w M u m \i n t\i&gt; urtl i m

KISH REAL ESTATE
35)1 S. FRENCH AVE.

321*0041

LAKE MARY AREA- 3 bdrm. 3
bath on shady cul-da-sac.
Family room. Good school*I
167,100- assumable. 331-6496
o stein 4 bdrm.. l bath on S
acres with horse bam and
pasture. 174.900.
5 bdrm., I bath situated on 1
acres. CB, alr/heat, on Lake
Butler In Osteen. .Possible
owner financing. 660,000 total

STENSTR0M

OWNER FINANCING
SANFORD- renovated 4 bdrm.
t bath, wood floors, fireplace,
dining roam, Fla. room,
c a n tr a l a lr/ h e a t, fan s,
washar/dryar. Large comer
lof In nice area. 559,000. Owner
will hold mortgage with 14.000
down. 52366«7

l

USED CAR S
THE BEST IN TOW N
E-Z TERM S

• We Ca a Finance
• Down Payments U00 and Up
• Trade In* Accepted

DISCOUNT AUTO BALES
I S O I French Ave.

We linancel........... Call 321 64*0
T R U C K T O P P E R - «*L. 70W.
3*H. F lit any American made
pick up truck, W or &gt;• ton.
6150 311 *47*_________________

231— C ars

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★
Hwy 91..............Daytona Beach
e * * * a Holds i t i s t s

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
Every Thur*. Nile at 7:50 PM

★ W h e re A n y b o d y *
★ C an B u y o r S ell I ★
Far mere details
________ 1904 135 )311_________
DeBary Auto A Marina Salts
Across the river, lap el hill
174 Hwy 17-92 DeBary 44) US*

323 1*08

★ INSTANT C A S H *
• • W E W IL L B U Y e e
* a Y O U R U S E D CAR a a
• C A L L P H IL B E T T I S *
C O U R T E S Y P O H TIA C ..M 1 -H H
1974 H O R N E T - One ow nerl
Mechanically sound. Looks
great! Call: 322 *366__________
1977 C A D IL L A C E L D O R A D O
Extra nice, loaded. 11100 or
best oiler Call: 111 q i )
19*0 P O N TIA C S U N B IR D
Automatic, ps, pb. a/c. new
tires Call.371 MSP alter 6
1910 P O N TIA C S U N B IR O
Exc el l ent co n d itio n , 52.000
miles See at corner ot 20th
and 1906 Holly Ave.___________
19*3 Trans A m While, Loaded.
Good Condition. 27,000 m l.
Price 66.500 or a66ume 23
payments ot 6170.00 mo. Ph
365 2474, or 311 1709___________
’74 Opel Sta. Wagon 1900- New
paint, excellent tires. 6475.
3391125 alterSpm ____________
"71 Trans Am air, power. V/&gt;.
am/fm casselte. Needs minor
body work. Have most parts.
62995 Carol: 121 1050 days;
321-3109 evening*._____________
'79 Ford Fairmont Future6 cyl . auto, p/ steering brakes,
air, am/fm, brand new tlret.
sunroof. Good Condltlonl M u lt
sell. Asking 62395- or best
oiler. 322 4744 alter 3__________
'10 T -B Ird ................ &gt;1 Escort O L.
Loaded!...... 6450 Dawn.......Small
Monthly payment.
C H IC O A T H E M A N ....... 699-0900
'60 T O Y O T A C O R O LL A - Rad.
black trim package. Stereo
cassette 3 door lift-b a ck .
63.175 M s -m -o m , ave*. a
weekends.
______________

235— T r u c k s /
Buses / V a n s
Dodge Tradesman Maxi VanNew paint, 160 hp, exc. shape,
67*00 121 1(53 after 5 P.M .

'7&gt; Chevrolet Window Van- *0%
customized. 67.M0 or reason­
able offer. Steve. 321 6626.
‘M Ford F-150 S U P E R C A B - V/&gt;.
auto. air. p/steerlng brakes,
stereo, C B . dual tanks, naw
tire*, custom Interior. Runs A
Looks Great. 65000.149 6401

239— M o to rc y c le s
a n d B ikes
W ON 4 « SUZUKI* Runs great.
&gt;200 or bast offer. Must sell.
Box 21, Brlston Ave., Sanford.
3J3S37I, before 5PM
■54 HONDA XRM - Excellent
condition. &gt;500 or best offer.
C a l l : 3 3 l - 3 7 6 5

243— Ju n k C ars
TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A
Usad cars.trucks A heavy
equipment 122 5990.

AND L E T AN EXPER T DO T H E JO B

REALTY-REALTOR
To List Your Business...
D id 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Sanford’s Sain Laadar
WE LIST ANDSELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CLEAN UP end ENJOYI 1
bdrm. 1 both Heme In need el
repair but has groat potantial!
R a me d a l and d e c o r a t e
yourself! 515.600
DOLL HOUSE I 1 bdrm. I bath
Home tn the Country with an
eat-in Kitchen, 1 porches, util­
ity room. 641,560
NO QUALIFICATION! 5 bdrm.
11* bath Hama with split
bdrm. plan, paddle tans. 5th
bdrm. can be usad as Family
Roam. Oreat Assumption.

CHILDREN WANTEDI 4 bdrm.
I bath Hama with built-in
broaklast bar, aal-in Kitchen,
large laundry ream. Dee with
Earl Spill bdrm. plan. 149,900
W I L L BUI L D TO SUI TI
Y O U R L OT OR OUR S I
EXCLUSIVE AOENT FOR
WINSONO DEV. COBP., A
CENTRAL FLORIDA LEADER1 MORE HOME FOR
LESS MONEYI CALL TODAYI
• OENEVA-OSCEOLA RD.O
ZONEO FOR MOBILES!
S Acre Country tracts.
Well treed en paved Rd.
J)% Down. I ) Yrs. at 11%I
From 111.5401

prtca.
COUNTRYWIDE REALTY
Rif. R .I. BrokerHllSSHSl.535-MU
47t Hwy. 615, Osteen, Fla.

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
Sanlord Ave A llfh SI..... 111-4675

CONSULT OUR

ML rOU NUD
10 know
IN HIM ISIMl

LOTS OF CHARMI 1 bdrm. 1
bath Hama In rapidly growing
value area. Dining room,
central air/haat. spilt bdrm.
plon. Area peat A tennis!
$61,006

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4

REALTOR

i •; E g r

WALK IN............. DRIVE OUT

Crown Pawn Shop

WE K I V A FALLS- 1 bdrm.
Mobile with 1.) acre*. Owner
financing. 617,900

321*0759 E v e .-322-7543

Bid Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE

191— B uildin g
M a te ria ls

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

C A R R IA G E COVE
M O. H O M E P AR K
New and r et al e. Connect
Gregory Mobile Homes, 111
5200._________________________ _

OiWfeiNU kx

RCA 25 Inch walnut color Tale
vision. Original price over
6)00. balance due 6244 cash or
fake over payments of 625 per
month Still In warranty
NO M O N E Y O OW NI Free home
trial, no obligation. Call M2
519* Day ol night

C R E D IT H A S S L E S ?

157— M o b ile
H om es / Sale
m

231— C ars

B U IL D IN O S - all sfeel 50 « 61
610.990, 100 x 225 649,960.
others from 62 25 sq ft
1 791 &gt;211 (collect)

OVIEDO REALTY, INC.

SANFORD

Uc. Real Estate Broker

103— Houses
U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t

470 Hw y. 415, Osteen. Fla.
5 acres near Mullet Lake Park.
Term*. 617.900,

1 1 5 -In d u s tr ia l
_______ R entals_______

PINE RIDGE CLUB

2 BEDROOM.

COUNTRYWIDE REALTY
Reg R E. Broker.......... I 12-I31S

^JB^^S^^njmon^^n-lST?

WAREHOUSE SPACE- Suitable
for tub contractors. Zoned In­
dustrial. Fully fenced A 34 hr.
security guard, t.150 sq. ft. or
more. Call Bill Quail or Bill
Sllngman. 511-1677___________
5,00), 6,606, or 9,000 tq. ft. with
dock height. Available Imme­
diately. Great location In
Lonqwood. 050-9696.

COLOR TELEVISION
11 plus acres. 450 Ft. on Doyle
Rd. Near Osteen. (Oak Grove
end wooded ) Zoned R 4 Retl
dentlal. Can be split In U s
acre tracts with no costs 65SOO
per acre F IR M
&lt;i down
Balance 5 years at 10%.

656 A Up....................... 315-0416
STORAGE- Trailers. RV's A
Boats. 14 hr. security guard A
fully fenced. Call Bill Quail or

MASTERS COVE___ ,323-7900

Cell.............................. M j W t
Specleus ApartmentsLekelront, pool, tennis, adults,
no pets, laundry. Starting at
6303a mo. Celt I33-&gt;761 to see.
1 end 1 bdrm. Also furnished
efficiency from 175 week. 6350
deposit. No pots. Coll 313-4507
5-7 PM. 415 Palmetto.________
t Bdrm., pool, reference* and
security required. 6375 month.
Cell; 331-5990.

PROBLEM. l*&gt;

Tuetday, Sept. 34, 1915— 5B

183— T e le vis io n /
R ad io / Stereo

153— A creag e*
L o ts /S a le

CATNIP Mouie Vfcoes*

Mini Warehouses

121— C on dom inium
R e n tals

MOVE IN SPECIAL!
1299.00

if e

113— S torage R en tals

SECURITY DEPOSIT.... ..1100
WITH THIS ADI

A V A IL A B L E N O W
Furnished Studio Apartments
One Bedroom Apts.
Two Bodroom Apts.

Evening Horald, Sanford, Ft.

KIT 'N* CARLYLE ^by Larry Wright

107— M o b il*
H o m ts / R tn f

II you ara looking far a
successful career in Real
Estate. Stonsfrom Realty Is
leaking Mr you. Call Lae
A (bright today at lll- io i).
Evenings 51MM2

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420
U4) PARK AVE........... Sanford
S91 U . Mary Blvd....... U . Mary

A dditions A
R em o d elin g
REMODELING SPECIALIST
We Handle

The Whole Bell Of Wax

B .L LINK CONST.
322*7029

C leaning S ervice
Husband/wlle team will clean
your home or office dally,
weekly or monthly. Extremely
reasonable. Call: 121 7514
JUST GENIES
Professional claaning

Financing Available

E le c tric a l
A p p lia n c e R e p a ir
Allans Appliance Ssnrici
24 hr. Service-. No Extra Charge I
17 Yr. Exp.... 64)1441,....574-MJ3

A u to m o tiv e

Anything Elactrlcet...Since 1*701
Estimates....24 Hr. Service Calls
Tom's Electric Service...122-2729
D A S Electric............... 323 *050
New A remodeling, eddillons.
lens, security lights, timers
plus all elec, services. Quality
Service Licensed A Bonded

REBUILT TRANSMISSION!1150
wllh exchange. Call
Stave. 121-6)2*.

C a rp e n try
All types ol carpentry A re­
modeling. 27 yrs. exp. Call
Richard Gross 321-5*72.

C a rp e t/F lo o r
C overings
CARPET INSTALLATION
A REPAIRS
521-tSJf___________

G e n e ra l S ervices
ROBERTE.GREENE
Controls A Maintenance.
Specialist In Elactrlcal A
Pneumatic Controls. 327129*

H om e Im p ro v e m e n t
Collier's Building A Remodeling
No Job Taa Small
SI) Burton Lane, Sanlord
111-6411
THOMAS A THOMAS. Ham*
repair, claaning. lawn care.
Call Bit 2549.

C a te rin g

H o m e R e p a irs

Will ealar private A family
dinners, parties, A ate. ac­
cording to your budget. For
details, call &gt;30 )705 (Sam.) or
S 7 4 ^ U 5 (V o U ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

CARPENTER Repairs and
remodeling. No |ob too small.
Call: 1319*4).
Maintenance ol all typos
Carpentry, pointing, plumbing
and electric. 323-6BM.
WILLIS HOME REPAIR
Remodeling...... Addition*...... A
All Types Repalrsl....... Insured.
No lob too small............ 331-7744

C le a n in g S e rvic e
CARPETCLEANINO
1)2.95 room. 1 room minimum
Call:.......................... 321-015
Cartage Care Inc......... .699-415*
Uc. Insured, landed.
I t ) per hour, alt domestic tab*
Hood Carpel Cleaning. Living,
Dining Ream A Hall 129 60.
Sofa A Chair. US. 122 IMS

L a n d c le a rin g
OENEVA LANDCLEARINO
Lot/Landclearing..... B Fill dirt
Topsoil....Pond*. .Drain ditches
Site Preparation...Call..14* 5*20

L an dscaping
HAUL! NG....Fill Dirt....Top Soil
Sand........... Call 3*5 6141 alter 1.

L a w n S ervice
All Seasons Commercial and
Residential Complete Lawn
Care *34-41»
L A M
LAWN CARE- Mow.
edge, trim Junk removal,
clean up. Free estim ate.
44MI9S.

LAWNS MOWED 8 TRIMMED
Spring Yard Cl4en-ups...)2J-IH3

Quality Lawn Care
At Affordable Prices. 121 *971

M a s o n ry
(ANYTHING IN CONCRETE!
Free Estimates Gladly Olveni
BEAU MONDE Const. Ca.
"We Are The East"....... 511-MM
Greenlee A Sons Masonry
Quality at resonabl* prices
Specializing In Flreplaces/Brlck
Call:.*.................... 505-lll-&gt;71*

M u s ic Lessons
Guitar Lessons
All eges/etl levels. Pro Bock
ground. Call Julia.......3714*44

N u rs in g C a re
JANII'S ALTERNATIVE
SENIOR CARE
34 Hour loving car* for sanlor
cillztn*. Family environment
and hom* cooked meals.
Call:............................ 5*5714*
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakavlew Nursing Canter
*1* E. Second St., Sanlord
337-47*7

1 Female-1 Male Bed

P a in tin g
Painting........Any Wallcovering
Vinyl Flooring Ref. A Resoneble

Ven^ellaWijj^J2M*I^rtJ*

Paper Hanging
N A L Wallpapering Gels
Free Est....... Work Guaranteed
774 I7 M ..............................131*123

Plumbing
Wall Plumbing A Heating
&gt;007 South Sanlord Avenue
Sanlord. Florida 33771

Secretarial Sarvict
TYPINO
Letters. Resumes, College
Paper*. Theses, Dissertations.
Manuscript* Custom Typing.
Big or small assignments.
Call: D.J. enterprises. (5*6)
311 7691.

Til*
CUSTOM TILE WORK
Ceramic ill* bath*. Quarry Tile
Floors. Free Est. Licensed.
Insured Call Frank after «
P M. (904)7*9 57)4.

T re t Sarvict
ALLENS VREE SERVICE
You've Colled the RestNow Call the Basil
PAY LESS!.................. 511-MO
All Tree Serv.-t-............Prualag
And Hauling.............. Call Altar
* P.M......................... .J ll am
ECHOLS TREE SERVICE
325-2239day eraHe

available...................... 373 **73

natt^ProlMiloMlsdofr.

P a in tin g

Wall Drilling

CUNNINOHAM ANOWIFE
Intor/Extof lor/Pressure Wash
Call:............................ 3217*14

Bush Shallow Walls
Licensed A Insured
Reasonable......... - ...... 223-0657

i

�* ».

AB— Evening H e ra ld , Sanford , F I.

BLONDIE

I AM ... TWG SCHOOL.1
S E N T ME THIS NOTICE

by Chic Yotjng

Tu esd ay, Sept. 24, IM S

THOEB

o p my

KIOS NEED

OENTAL CAI

WHY

Aae you

eo

W O P Q iB O

/

-

Post-Surgery Impotence
Makes Man, 73, Berserk

ABOUT

TH A T?

D E A R D R. G O T T My
husband ts 73 and I am 70. In
1981 he had prostate surgery.
Since then lie has been unable to
get an erection, but won’t admit
to being Impotent. He’s nlwuys
at me day and night, still trying.
He says If I stimulate him. he
knows he’ll snap out of It. If I
don’t do what he asks, he throws
and breaks everything In sight,
but he doesn’t try to harm me.

’3

/
I

by Mort Walker

7

CAN YOU TELL
M E WHERE
COBB'S C O RNER

1ST

TH E BORN LOSER
too LOOK LIKE A MAW
WHOCCESWT
IWEMEAWNfc
OF THE

re

WORD
'FEAR'

ARCHIE

SM lTH EBS, i *
m
G IVIN G y o u A
R AISE...

HE WASN'T
V ERY
FRIENDLY

nerves where they leave the
spinal cord and pass through the
discs. Once a patient has pain
and numbness In an extremity, cine may temporarily relieve
the nerves arc well on their way some discomfort, but I am afraid
to being pinched. If the nerve surgery may be necessary to
Irritation continues, permanent cure the ailment. I would not
dnmugc — In the form of pain recommend that you see a chiropraetor: *
and weakness — can develop.
Send your questions to Dr
Because tills is a mechanical
p r o b l e m . It r e q u i r e s a Gott st P.O. Box 91428. Cleve­
mechanical solution. Pain medi­ land. Ohio. 44101.

What should I do?
ACROSS

DEAR READER - I think It’s
time for you and your husband
1 Ponder
to have a down-to-earth chat
5 Spoken
with his urologist. Although
11 Febricetor
your husband has certainly not 12 Nuts
lost Ills urge. Ills sexual function 13 Seopott in
Is surely com prom ised. His
Algeria
frustration and anger is being 14 Winner
manifest In Inappropriate forms.
15 Seafood
Prostatlc surgery always alters 17 01 age (Let.,
abbr.)
sexual function In one way or
another. U n fortu n ately. Im ­ 18 Heraldic
bearing
by Art Sanaom potence Is an operative com­
plication In a small percentage of 19 European
blackbird
men. In addition, your husband
AHA1.THEM, MV FRIBJD*
SOU BETTER
may have been given medicine 21 French liland
S bU A R E A
B E LIE V E
which can Interfere with Ills 24 Compels point
25 Microphone
R
aospscr
forj
IT, F E L L A '
ability.
( w ? M*.
26 Contused
The
urologist
will
want
further
THIS WEW
7Information. For example, does 27 Long time
m m &amp; zoi
your husband ever have erec­ 28 Hindu deity
30 Purchaser
tions? Can he masturbate? Your
33 Chemical suffix
husband will want to know If
34 Vegetable
anything can be done: here Is
-5i
epread
where the doctor can give you a 35 Ruesian secret
concise prognosis. Perhaps a
police
C W H -* •« V M
penile implnnt would resolve the 37 Oefunct
issue.
football league
by Bob Montana
If your husband does not
(abbr.)
respond to this approach, he 40 Move, a t Fido’s
...I HAP TO W R ITE
W E L L , WHILE
may need help In the form of
tail
DOWN A L L OF
y o u WERE O U T
p sych o logical cou n selin g or 41 Eye infection
y E S T E R B A V ...
rZ u JT ? V E R O N IC A 'S
mood-altering drugs.
■'
PHONE
42 Variable iter in
M ESSAGES.
Cetue
DEAR DR. G O TT Four
months ago I got a severe pain In 43 Needle (comb,
form)
my lower-right back. Now my
45
Monastic
right knee feels as If something
V&lt;j
Is real tight around it and my leg 47 Nimblest
feels numb. 1 had lots of spurs oil 50 Safety agency
(abbr.)
my spine. I am taking Ascriptin
51 New York
for the pain. What else, short of
Indian
'
surgery,
can be done?
9 -3 4
52 Ore digger
DEAR READER — Calcium 53 Pale color
deposits may form with age on 54 City ot
by Howie Schneider the a rticu la tin g surfaces o f
Menasseh
tsp!nal bones. Put another way.
DOWN
O JL Y 110 A M C S K A ,
spurs may grow on the bones
SO R R Y... A LL I WAVE.
1
Taw
near the discs. This doesn't
r ig h t , f a l ?
6 L C C 5 £ C H A J0S £ ..
mean much to the body until the - 2 Russian edict
3 Dispatched
spurs begin to Irritate the.spinal
-------------- &gt; —

V i

EEK A MEEK
A N V T H IN 6 T O
SRARE.. S IR ?

4 Sound of
heeitation
5 Liberian native*
6 Outer
7 Actor's part
8 English
9 Years (Fr.)
10 Landing boat
11 English plains
14 Wagon journey
15 Spanish article
16 Famous
20 Enlivens
22 Bernstein, for
short
23 Water (Fr.)
25 One of the
Three Stooges
28 Peer Qynt s
mother
27 Tokyo's former
name
29 Hooaier State
(abbr.)
30 Promise
solemnly

Answer to Previous P u nl*
M M E s|
0 1 N K
M E D E
s N O W
H Y
1 1
E P
S E

D
11
A
L[

A
t
D
E

el
U
T

R
O
O
0

e

N
s

|

41
42
44
46
47
48
49
52

31 Guido’s high
note
32 Nullities
36 Burmese
currency
37 Witen
38 Franciscan
39 Resin

Nappy leather
Middle (law)
Slip of paper
Mint
Cut ehorl
Actress Claire
Salt (pharm.)
Mother
10

is

11

21

21

ie
10 31

U

]«
40
41

47

44

41

SI
SI
24

( C ) l e S S by N IA Inc

WIN AT BRIDGE
By James Jacoby

—
by Hargreavee i Sellars

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

NOW

fr

fo

I K K IC V / W H Y
T H E Y R E CALLED

CONTACT
LENSES/

VV
-i &lt;
ct

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY
I

LETS 6cT IN T h EGE a n d CATCH A WHATS THE
THAT WAB0T FAST AS Me CAN. ) OACNSARNgD
Rush ?

D O N T L IK E ”
W E L L 'P O N S

2&gt;g
FRANK AND ERNEST

0

I THINK TH£ A^TKONVKUTf
APE (S P E A T -THEY GIVE fcios /OMEgopy
Tb LPofc UP 7t&gt;.

c &gt; -

b

\\

323
by Bob Thavea

B

C

/

"7
•

&lt;:■

-

T w ^ v f c i,

GARFIELO

^ -2 4 -

by Jim Davis

WHAM! WHAM!

whahuW

:

fv

JTM PAVfS

bidding only Iwo would have
won tills month’s award tor
tim id ity. A fter w inning the
opening lend, declarer took what
seemed the easy safe play: He
played a low heart to Ills Jack. If
this lost to the queen, the hund
would lx* durk soup. A spade
continuation could be trumped
(witli the are If necessary) In
dummy, trumps would be drawn
and the diamond winners would
produce an overlrlck. But a
funny tiling happened. West
smoothly played a low heart on
the Jack. No matter. South did
his Imitation of a rank beginner
by Immediately leading the 10 of
hearts. When West followed low.
declarer let II ride. East naturally
showed out. but declarer was In
control. A heart to the are and a
dlum ond buck to Ills ki ng
enubled him to next plek up the
queen of hearts and score an
overlrlck.

N O R TH
♦ A
V A M
♦ a y j 9i

*-14-11

♦ y s 13

EAST

WEST

♦ K y J 10 8
V y 7 52

♦ 93

♦ 8

♦76532
♦ K J 10 7 5

♦ 6

♦ A92

SOUTH
♦76542

Y K J 10 9 3

♦ K 10
♦6

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

North
Ob!
4Y

West
1♦
Feu
Feu

E a il
Feu
Feu

Sooth
3*
Feu

Opening lead: ♦ K

HOROSCOPE

m m

ig iiw « «

That homespun philosophy
can lead to some unusual plays
Do you think on ly a rank
beginner finesses first one way
and then immediately the other
way? How alxiul a top expert?
And how about the pluy being
correct?
South was a shade light for his
Jump (o th ree hearts a fter
partner’s takeout double, hut

W 'A B B 'T .

.BUGS
BUNNV

tp i

My friends who play rubber
bridge claim they have more fun
than those o f us who travel the
tournament trail. They certainly
play more deals In an afternoon,
since they don’t have to wait for
slow players to catch up. If
they’re defending, they try to
beat the contract. If declaring,
they try to make the contract. In
either case, extra tricks can go
you know where (unless, o f
course, the contract Is doubled).

929

your time.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

21) You have an acquaintance
you tolerate, even though his or
her tactics annoy you. Avoid this
YOUR BIRTHDAY
person today, because you’re not
SEPTEMBER 25. IB85
In the year ahead you will set apt to be forgiving.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
aside old ventures that have
This
Is not a good day to get
neither produced a profit nor
advanced your status In life. The financially Involved with friends.
rewards for which you've been Chances are misunderstandings
are possible, leading to hurt
hoping will be found In the new.
LI BRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) feelings.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Usually you arc a fair and
sharing person, but toduy you You arc c a p a b l e of sol i d
might be too anxious to lake achievements today, provided
care of No. 1 and treat others your objectives arc realistic.
thoughtlessly. Trying to patch Don’t attempt things your
up a romance? The Matchmaker common sense tells you to avoid.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
set can help you understand
what It might take to make the There Is a chance you'll go to
relationship work. To get yours, extremes today where your gen­
mall $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o this erosity is concerned. You could
newspaper. Box 1846. Cincin­ cither be too stingy or unwisely
extravagant.
nati. OH 45201.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22)
Today you may not be able to Don’t do anything against your
operate as Independently as better Judgment today, even If a
you'd like. Don't make it too failure to comply could disap­
tough on people who Impose on point a person of whom you're

very fond.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
you ure too indecisive and
doubtful today, you are not
likely to fully develop the poten­
tial of an opportune career situa­
tion. Be positive.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A
poor attitude will make your
work distasteful today. In fact,
even assignments you usually
do well may have to be done
over later.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
It’s best not to borrow anything
from others today, but If you do.
treat what's loaned you with the
same respect you have for your
own possessions.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
and your mate may be poles
apart on a family Issue today.
Handle this matter tactfully or U
could get nasty.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Uncharacteristically, if thing*
arc not easy for you today you
might lack the resolve to see
them through. Get back on
course.

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS
l C B o Y l/W t iy n M M E T J lM B W lF F '
N
CAU.BP ME PI)MP!
&gt;

What The Day
Will Bring...

I'LLS H O tVMM!

I'M&amp;ONNAHVNBI
ID HIM THAT

by Laonard Starr

CM0N NOW, SANPY/ 6
G ’BYE T YOUfl NEW
FRIENP/ *C W P Y '6
Wfll T 1N&lt;3 ! c

Towscn ?„ mene

W , I’VE PEEN NEGLECTIN'
YOU, HAVEN’T if 1 GUMS
you've BEEN HINP

M £ 'i Q u 0 O Y ? m

rotrsor?]

0 ‘ L0H E6O M E~

IM .-IW .

I

M
iJL.

6-J
»? —•! » ■ » I , « ,

*r
• .?•

-0

»•* - •-

&gt;* 0 t M A .

•&gt;**■'— » • •• r* 00 •*-&gt; .*

n &lt;ff» r » .

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218091">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, September 24, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218092">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218093">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on September 24, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218094">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218095">
                <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;, September 24, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218096">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218097">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218098">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218099">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21844" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21448">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/6bd284083e43b437a4145a6b36096d21.pdf</src>
        <authentication>6c62501fe46d77ce02f2154cbfdf0763</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218140">
                    <text>-*• ^ • •a *•• • ••

Evening Herald —

7Wh Y**r, No. 64, Thursday, November 7, 1985—Sanford, Florida

With a chorus line salute,
members of Oviedo's dance
team backed by the Oviedo
"Marching Lions" perform
during a recent half-time
show in Oviedo. The band is
one of seven that will enter­
tain Saturday during an an­
nual band f e s t i v a l at
Seminole High In Sanford
starting at 8 p.m. The bands,
with a total of about 1,000
musicians, will perform Indi­
vidually and en masse. Tick­
ets are* available from band
members or at the Evening
Herald office, 300 N. French
Ave. in Sanford.

Price 25 Cents

Manning To Step Down
As Longwood Administrator

V

Give 'E m A Hand

(USPS 481 280) -

By J i m Casselberry
Herald Staff W riter

A

aL

«
*

'
*

N*r*MPftrtt Sy Tammy vtncMf

Longwood City Administrator
Greg Manning, anxious to get
back to being Just police chief,
will make It official Friday. Back
on the Job Wednesday after a
hunting trip to South Carolina,
he told the Evening Herald he
plans to submit letters to the
mayor and four other city com­
missioners asking them to re­
place him as city administrator.
” 1 would like to return to the
police department." Manning
said. "Some people have made
m y holding both positions a
political issue and I don’t want
to delay things the city needs to
get done."
Manning said there has been
no pressure from any of the
commissioners for him to step
down and he has had 100
percent backing from them In

County Pulls Rug On Sanford
Land Purchase Destroys City's Wastewater Disposal Plans
By Hsrcn Talley
Herald Staff W riter
Seminole County has entered into a
Yankee Lake purchase agreement that
will ultimately dismantle Heathrow's
planned unit development sewer plant
and. do the same — for now — to
Sanford's wastewater management
program.
The comprehensive effort that took

Golden Agers
Take To
Dance Floor

Sanford more than five years to get on
track was rerouted within a matter of
minutes early Wednesday morning
when county commissioners voted 4-1 to
ucqulre the 287-acre parcel owned by
Heathrow developer Jcno Paul tied.
Sanford had also bid on the land, hoping
to locate an effluent spray irrigation
system there.
According to City Manager Frank

Faison, during Sanford's efforts to obtain
the site, an arrangement to phase-out the
Heathrow plant "was one of Paulucci's
primary concerns." in addition lo a cash
settlement. Faison said the city had
offered " in the neighborhood'' of
S7.5-mlllion.
The county contract calls for 87.5
million from the county and an agree­
ment that once a wastewater treatment

P roa S ta ff mad Wire Reports

&gt;■—- —

i «»V

GOLDEN
AGE GAMES
,4-f

’&gt;•-•I

Mora Carnot storiot,
rosults, pago 5A.

’“ “ s k i

.•» X'fcW'u
**
--

7A.

A
}
A-. p. ------- -------~

TO !

MirtM Mata hy Stiun l O t n

Herb Vetter twirls wife Lll in Foxtrot competition. The
couple, from DeLeon Springs, visit Sanford every Wednes­
day to dance at the civic center.
said. "Th a t's important in danc­
ing."
Despite their compatibility
Rcpass said all he has taken
home from t lit* Golden Age
Games dance Is "the booby
prize." One year he took the
silver and another year the
bronze In the oldest dancer
competition.
But even ilils year there was at
least one dancer who could call
Repass "Junior." Former circus
performer Bob Ehright of Holly
Hill out ranks Rcpass in the age
c a te g o ry at 101. H o w e ve r
Ebrlght wasn't entered In this
year's competition, although he
took to the floor between the
competitive dances.
"I took a prize one year, but
they saw me take it and I had to

put it back." Ebrlght Joked.
And a Joke is what you have to
expect from a man who from
1909 to 1968 performed in the
circus will) seven trained pigs.
His circus career started. Ebrlght
said, in 1900 and he was u flying
trapeze and trampoline artists as
well as a performer with porkers.
Ebrlght said he guessed he
was the oldest person at the
dance contest, even though he
wasn’t in the contest. "1 seem to
Ik - the oldest where ever I go.”
he said, but dancing helps him
seem younger than his years.
It does the same for Repass
whose who year after year re­
turns to the Games If not to grab
tlie gold to at least have a good
time trying.

S e t LAND, page 6A

Mel W ym u. foreign secretary
for the New Tribes Mission
headquartered in Sanford.'said
today three of the organization's
missionaries kidnapped 33 days
ago have been released by leftist
guerrillas.
"We thunk the Lord for their
safety a n d we are looking
forward to seeing them and
hearing more about their expe­
riences when they get back
here." W ym a said.
He said the good news was
received here at 12:30 a.m. from
a high-ranking Colombian gen­
eral who said they are expected
to be flown this afternoon to the
capital city of Bogata.
” 1 felt like Jumping up and
down. I can't think of a better
reason to be awakened in the
middle of the night." Wyma
added.
The three Americans were
taken to a remote Jungle site in
eastern Colombia and turned
over to delegates of a govern­
ment-sponsored peace com­
mission Wednesday night, a U.S.

Embassy spokesman in Bogata
said.
The three were Identified as
Timothy Cain. 35. of Keokuk.
Iowa, his wife. Bonnie "B unny"
Cain. 33. of Alexandria. Va.. and
Steve Estelle. 34. of Douglas.
Arlz.
The embassy spokesman said
no ransom was paid and that the
missionaries were being trans­
ferred today, possibly to Bogotu.
for a flight to the United States.
The missionaries were kid­
napped Oct. 5 by members of
the Colombian Revolutionary
Armed Forties, or FARC.
New Tribes had sent a light
plane piloted by Estelle and Paul
Dye. 45. of Saginaw. Mich., to
eastern Colombia to retrieve the
Cains who became III while
doing mission work.
The leftist guerrillas captured
the Americans when the plane
landed In Morichal. 310 miles
southeast of Bogota, but Dye
escaped a few days later.
FARC offered Oct. 28 to re-

See FREED, page 2 A

Brain Death Prompts
Manslaughter Charge
By Susan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
A 26-year-old Sanford man has
been released on 88.000 bond
after being charged with man­
slaughter In the death of a
19-yeur-old Sanford man who
died of a brain injury after the
suspect allegedly knocked him
lo the ground.
Timothy D. Holt. 19. or 113
West Ridge Drive, was injured at
about 2:10 a.m. Saturday. He
refused medical treatment ut the
scene and ut ubout 10:30 a.m.
Sunday was found unconscious
at his home. He was transported
lo Central Florida Regional Hos­
pital In Sanford where he died
Monday, a Sanford police report
said.
Seminole County Medical Ex­
aminer G .V . Garay determined
In an autopsy Tuesday that Holt
suffered Irreversible brain dam­
age from bleeding inside the
skull w hich press upon the
brain. The injury was apparently

caused when Holt hit his head
on the pavement after beeing
knocked to the ground. Garay
said.
According to police. Holt on
Saturday morning was riding
from the Barn nightclub at 1200
French Ave. In Sanford with
William Lloyd drills. 26. of 1505
W. 25th St.. «303A. along with
another passenger. Mark Day.
Th e y stopped at the L ll'
Champ on French Avenue at
20th Street where Jcllls re­
portedly got mud at Holt and
told hlin to get out of the pickup
truck. He did and walked to the
driver's side of the car and Jellis
reportedly got out of the truck
and hit Holt once. Holt was
knocked to the ground and his
head hit the pavement, police
reported.
Jellis drove away with Day
and a Sanford emergency rescue
team and an ambulance were
culled to the scene, but police

See BRAIN, page 6A

G ref
M annin g

solving any problems that have
come up since he assumed his
dual role Ju ly 1.
Manning was first named act­
ing city adm inistrator after
former city administrator David
Chacey resigned under pressure
Jan. 7 and served until City
Clerk Don Terry was named city
administrator on April 8. During
that time Capt. Terry Baker
served as acting police chief.

B at MANNING, p a g t BA

Caller Says
American
Hostages
Executed
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) A n an o nym ou s telephone
caller claiming to represent
the Islamic Jihad terror orga­
nization said today five Am er­
icans held hostage by the
Moslem group would be killed
by a firing squad.
A second caller said the
Americans had already been
killed but a search did not
turn up any bodies.
"We decided to execute the
American hostages by a firing
squad.*' the first caller told a
Western news agency. "W alt
for another call from us at 1
p.m. (6 a.m. E S T) regarding

the status of the corpses of t)«e

American hostages and where
these corpses will be found."
More than an hour after the
deadline there had been no
second call and no bodies had
been found.
Another person called the
same Western news agency
th re e h o u r s before th e
deadline, also claiming to rep­
resent the Islamic Jihad, to
say the hostages had already
been killed.
"The man spoke very fast."
said a spokesman for the news
agency. "He did not read a
statement. He said the Am eri­
cans had been executed and
their bodies, including that of
( U . S . E m b a s s y o f f ic ia l)
W il l i a m B u c k l e y , w e re
dumped in the basement of
the Cola building."
The "Cola building" is a
devastated former beverage
factory In a low-income south
Beirut neighborhood. Police
who searched the factory
turned up nothing and of­
ficials were dubious about the
authenticity of that call.
The original telephone caller
said Islamic Jihad — a shad­
owy Moslem fundamentalist
organization — would send a
videotape to news agencies
showing the hostages before
their execution.
Officials at the U.S. E m ­
bassy said they were aware of
the threat but refused to
comment. "W e heard about it
but we have absolutely no
comment on it.” said an
official.
The anonymous caller said
the decision to kill the Ameri­
can hostages was ta k e n
"because Indirect negotiation"
with the United States "has
reached a dead end." He did
not elaborate.
"We wish to tell America
that this sad end of the
American hostages will not be
the last.” the caller said. "W e
shall shake the earth under
America's feet and the feet of
its agents."

Bee HOBTAOEB, page 2 A

Yurchenko G oes H om e; Suicide Link Denied

In s id e -

# A flooding Potomac
crested early today
closing all national
m o m u m e n l s in
Washington D.C., 2A.
B "Sanford Connec­
tion" may give DBCC
winning edge this year,

plant hus been built at the site, "the
existing flow at the Heathrow PUD sewer
facility will Ik * immediately diverted to
the (new) northwest facility and the
Heathrow facility will cease operation.”
On Friday, the county will formally
assume the Heathrow plant's lease and
"operate it until the new plant Is

Missionaries Freed

.

■jr Baaaa U 4 «a
IferaM M a f f Writer
The Joint was packed and
Jumping for the Golden Age
Games Dance Contest. It was an
encore performance for many
who waltzed, trotted, tapped and
showed other fancy foot work.
Eustls' Bert Repass. 9 8 '/a.
'don't forget the half.' was back
on the boards for the 11th year
with long-time dance partner
Frieda Glelow. 80. of Sanford.
And in friendly competition
against his dad. was Richard
Repass. 67 and his wife Ju d y.

66. from Ohio, back for a third
tiy on the games dance floor at
the Sanford Civic Center.
"He can beat any of us.”
Richard said of his dad. “ 1 didn't
start way back in the barn
dances like he did." And Mrs.
Repass said she has to give her
husband a bit of encouragement
to get him onto the dance floor,
but that's not the case with her
father-ln-law.
Every Wednesday the elder
Rcpass. a former home builder,
travels from Eustls to Sanford to
join other seniors In dance. Then
he goes home for dinner and is
back out the same night to
square dance in Eustls. He has
been a dancing fool since age 12.
R ic h a rd s a id he re c a lls
boyhood evenings spent wat­
ching over his baby sister In a
basket on the edge of a dance
four while his late mother.
Grace, danced the evening away
with his dad.
During their 69 years of m ar­
riage Repass said his wife would
always share him with other
women for a few dances, but
M is s G le lo w g u a r d s h e r
partnership with Rcpass. "W e
understand each other.” she

■0 * ++ ••9 f •^ •. J

Action Reports.......3A
Bridge..............
C alendar..........
Classifieds....... .4A-6A
Comics.............
Crossword....... .....2B
Dear Abby.......
D eaths............. .....6A
— Rf I88FM 1^/** -, „

E ditorial...... ........ 4A
........ 6A
........ 2A
Nation........... ........ 2A
........ IB
Sports...............7A-9A
W eather........ ........ 2A
...

V

W ASHINGTON (UPI) - Former KGB
defector Vitaly Yurchenko returns to the
Soviet Union toduy. leaving the ad­
ministration with a major embarrass­
ment but facing an uncertain future at
home.
Yurchenko, who had been prized by
the administration as a top-level defector
from the Soviet spy agency, declined
comment to reporters as he left Dulles
International Airport for Moscow late

Wednesday afternoon aboard a special
Aeroflot Jet.
But a statement issued later in his
name by the Soviet Embassy reaffirmed
his charges of being "kidnapped and
forcibly detained by the American secret
services.” and said denials from the
administration "do not correspond to
reality."
President Reagan, in his first public
comment on Yurchenko's charges, re­

ferred to the cases of three recent
would-be Soviet defectors. Including
Yurchenko, and said. "Yo u can't rule out
that this might have been a deliberate
ploy."
Meanwhile, in Ottawa. Canada. The
Soviet Embassy denied that the wife or a
Soviet official who plunged to her death
from the 27th floor of an apartment

Bee HOME, page 2A

if

�1A— Iw w lin HtfiM . totrtfd, FI.

Tkvrojsy, H«v, 1, I W

Monuments Closed

NATION
INBREF

Prosecutors Promise N ew Try
A fter Mistrial In FBI Spy Cose
LOS AN G ELES (UPI) — Federal prosecutors, stung by a
hung Jury In the trial of the only FBI agent ever charged
with espionage, say they will seek to try Richard Miller
again after Jurors deadlocked despite being overwhelming­
ly In favor of conviction.
U.S. District Judge David Kenyon declared a mistrial
Wednesday, the Jury's 14th day of deliberations following
an 11-week trial.
U.S. Attorney Robert Bonner, who had personally led the
prosecution, asked Kenyon to order a new trial for Miller,
and the Judge set Nov. 21 for a hearing on that and other
motions.
The Jury told the court it was deadlocked 11-1 for
conviction on four charges and 10-2 on the remaining
three. Miller was tried on four espionage-related counts
involving the passing of secret FBI documents to his
Russian Ipimlgrant lover. Svetlana Ogorodnikova, and
three bribery counts related to his offering to turn over
documents for 865.000 In gold and cash and for the sexual
favors of Ogorodnikova.

Three Receive Freedom M edal
W ASHIN GTO N (UIMI — President Reagan Is awarding the
Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, to
veteran arms negotiator Paul Nilzc and a husband-and-wlfe
team of national security experts.
The ceremony today In the East Room will recognize
Mize, a special adviser on arms control to Reagan and
Secretary of State George Shultz, and Albert and Roberta
Wohlstctler. who were among President Kennedy's
advisers during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis.
The medals are awarded for "contributions to the
national interest or security of the U.S.. to world peace, to
cultural or other significant private or public endeavors."
White House spokesman Larry Speakes said.

Herald Phete by Tammy Vincent

Home Court
Competing for the honor of being crowned homecoming
queen of Seminole High Nov. 15 during football game
half-time are, clockwise from top left, Linda Cushing, Suzi
Nye, Vera Ramassar, Kaylla Givens, Kristin Merrifield,
Sharon Gaines, Jodi Jones. Termlka Alexander, also in the
running. Is not pictured.

...H o m e
C ontinued from page 1A

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Fighting In Colombia Continues;
Leftist Guerrillas Hold Hostages
BOGOTA. Colombia (UPI) - Fighting intensified today
between troops and leliist guerrillas who took 10 Judges
hostage In the supreme court building and declared "war"
on the government. A fire sparked by explosions was
burning In the building, authorities said.
There were conflicting reports on Ihc number of
casualties. Security sources said 18 rebels and two police
officers were killed In the rebel assavdi Wednesday
morning while radio station RCN *n Bogota said 21 people
died. The reports could not be independently confirmed.
Hundreds of police and troops scaled off the area with
tanks and helicopters.

b u il d i n g w as the w o m a n
th o u g h t to h a ve s c o rn e d
Yurchenko, spurring his return
to the Soviet Union.
The Soviet Embassy and Ca­
nadian government said Wed­
nesday Svetlana Dedkova. 4H.
the wife of a Soviet trade repre­
sen tative . died in To ro n to
Tuesday.

custody to the Soviet Embassy
In Washington.
"Forget it." said embassy
s p o k e s m a n E it g e n c
Popozduyakov. "Th ey didn't
know each other. Yurchenko
never was In Canada."
Soviet Embassy officials pres­
ented Yurchenko with bouquets
of roses as he left Washington.
His statement said lie looked
forward 'with impatience to re­
turning to my country to seeing
my family, friends and com­
rades."

The government refused to
detail tiu* circumstances of I)cdkova's death, but police said
she fell to her death from the
27th floor of a luxury high-rise
apartment building in an appar­
ent suicide.

But his Itiiurc may be bleak.
Yelena Mitrokhina. who de­
lected from the Soviet Embassy
111 1977. said Ids fate may
depend un just how much secret
Information lie gave the CIA
during what he has called "three
A spokesman for the Soviet horrible months" as a defector.
"Eventually, it is possible he
Embassy late Wednesday dented
an ABC News report that De- will be court-martialed." she
dkova was believed to be the said "The KGB is not stupid.
woman who abruptly ended a They know he wasn't k id ­
love affair with Yurchenko, napped He had a lot of sensitive
prompting his flight from U.S. Information."
At a dramatic news conference

South African Government
Now Prepared To Negotiate
J O H A N N E S B U R G . S o u th
Africa (UPI1 - The South Afri­
can government is prepared to
negotiate with black men "ol
influence." such as Bishop De­
smond T u tu and Dr. Allan
Boesak, to devise apartheid re­
form. the stale-controlled South
African Broadcasting Corpora­
tion said today.
The broadcast quoted Deputy
Foreign Minister Ron Miller as
saying the government was
ready to confer with any black
leaders who "abhorred violence"
to dismantle apartheid, the gov­
ernment's official policy ot racial
segregation.
M ille r made his rem arks
W ednesday night du rin g a
speech at the Institute ol Ameri­
ca n S tu d ie s at the R and
A frik a a n s U n iv e r s ity near
Johannesburg.
"Th e government is prepared
to talk to men of influence like
Boesak and Tutu. They have a
constituency, although they are
not elected leaders." said Miller.
"W e will not speak to them on
a one-to-one basis but rather
around a negotiating table at
which various leaders from all
communities are represented."
Miller said.
Miller said such talks must not
he based on the Idea ol on­
e-man-one-vote in a unitary
South Africa. Anything but that
was open for discussion.
Tu tu said he wu:, warm to the
offer of ncgotatlons hut said lie

would prefer one-on-one talks
w ith g o v e r n m e n t le a d e rs
because large group discussion
rarely ended in anything cont r u c t I v e
"If the group Is not loo large
conditions might be favorable for
constructive talks. My mind is
certainly not closed to the idea,"
Tutu said.
President Pieter Botha has
consistently said his government
was ready to talk to "moderate"
black leaders but no specific
names of such people have been
mentioned.
Miller said ids remarks and the
mention of Tutu and Boesak by
name was intended to clear up
any doubt about whether the
South A frica n g o vernm en t
viewed religious leaders as hav­
ing any sav In the political
arena.
The government has ruled out
any talks with the outlawed
Alrlcan National Congress which
advocates the overthrow of the
white m in o rity governm ent
through force.
Miller said the government
would open talks with the ANC
as soon as it renounced violence
as a means to topple white rule
in South Africa.
Prominent opposition politican
Helen S u zm a n said S o u th
Alrica's white minority govern­
ment has no intention of ever
s h a r in g p o w e r w it h th e
country's black majority and
police are prepared to use even

more brutal measures to put
down racial unrest if it spreads
from black Into white areas.
Suzman warned that such
incidents of violence were likely
to intensity because of tin- con­
frontational stance the govern­
ment has adopted.
"Th e government has no in­
tention of sharing, let alone ol
transferring power.
"Indeed it is my opinion that it
has nowhere near unleashed its
potential power against the
townships and will not hesitate
to do so should unrest spill over
into while areas." Suzman told a
political rally in the Johan­
nesburg suburb of Houghton
Wednesday night.
Law and Order Minister Louis
Le Grange, on a tour of colored
areas near Cape Town warned
residents Wednesday that police
were testing new weapons to be
used against rioters in the
townships and would not hesi­
tate to use them to control the
unrest.
He did not specify what the
secret new weapons were but
last month police unveiled a
truck-m ounted machine gun
that fires rubber bullets and a
water cannon that shoots purple
dye so rioters can be identified
and arrested later on.
In the latest violence, police
said today a black prison guard
was burned to death bv a mob in
the blank township of Soweto.

at the Soviet Em bassy resid en ­
tial compound Monday night.
Yurchenko said he had been
abducted in Rome in August and

W A SH IN G TO N (U P I)' — The
Potomac River surged over Us
banks Into Georgetown today,
flooding a fashionable shopping
strip and prompting officials to
close all national monuments In
the capital city.
Georgetown merchants placed
sandbags around their stores to
prevent water damage and car­
ried expensive merchandise to
higher ground.
The Potomac, brimming from
days of rain and flooding up­
stream. was expected to crest at
14 feet by noon today, said a
spokesman for the U.S. Arm y
Corps of Engineers.
John MacGregor, supervisor of
the District of Columbia's Office
of Em ergency Preparedness,
said the river had reached 9.84
feet by 9 a.m. Seven feel is
considered flood level, he said.
A t le a s t tw o s t e c t s In
Georgetown were under water
and officials said, more Is headed
for the Intersection of M Street
and Wisconsin Avenue, the
heart of the Georgetown district.
Sw ift m u d d y waters also
lapped up toward the John F.
K e n n e d y C e n t e r fo r th e
Performing Arts.
U.S. Park Police closed the
Washington Monument and the
Lincoln and JcITcrson memorials
late Wednesday to keep curious
tourists out of the area.
T h e G e o rg e W a s h in g to n
Parkway, which winds along the
Potomac River from Mount
Vernon to the Capital Beltway.

The death toll stood at 37 — '
18 in West Virginia. 16 fn ,
Virginia, two In Pennsylvania
and one In Maryland — and
authorities in West Virginia said
they could not account for ■
another 43 people In flooded
areas.

Interrogated and drugged by the
C IA at a "safe house" near
Fredericksburg. Va. He said he
had slipped away from his cap­
tors Saturday.

depends on how much of his'
story they believe. How suc­
cessful he Is in convincing them
he did not give out any really ’
Ini port an i in form at ion."

"Right now . nothing w ill
It i i p p e n to h i m . 1’ s a l d
Mitrokhina, who said she knew
Yurchenko when he was sta­
tioned in Washington during the
1970s.
" H e got so m u c h w o rld
publicity they can't do anything
to him ," she said. "After all.
there are quite a few reporters in
Moscow who may request lo sec
him. They will keep him around.
He will go on television go lo
newspapers, things liked that.
"Th en, eventually, gradually,
he will he eased into retirement.
Maybe something else. It really

...F r e e d

FAA Aviation Safety Seminar
s p o n s o r e d b y th e S o u th
Seminole Flying Club, 7:30 p in..
Skyport Restaurant Banquet
Room. Free to the public.
Sweet Adelines. 7:30 pan..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N . La k e T r ip le t D riv e .
Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. Flrsl St..
5:30 pan., closed discussion, and
H p.m.. open, speaker.
Oviedo A A. 8 pan., closed.
Flrst Unlted Methodist Church.
Overealers Anonymous, open.

A street along the Smithsonian
Mall was closed and officials
expected to close the Teddy
Roosevelt Bridge and Island by
mid-morning.
Metro officials say train sched­
ules were not affected by high
waters and encouraged com­
muters to use the trains to ease
the traffle congestion on main
roadways.
In the historic Old Tow n sec­
tion of Alexandria, police re­
ported 12 feet of water and said.
numerous shops and restaurants1
In the tourist area were dam­
aged.
***i
Georgetown merchants placed
sandbags around their stores
and carried merchandise to
higher ground. Rental agent
Lydia Ewing said Thrifty Rental
Car of Georgetown would hold a
"high water special." taking $5 :
off the usual rate "so wc can get '■
the ears off our lot and out of our
basement."

»■
•i ■

Asked If he might be executed;
she said, "It is a capital offense."
The CIA again had no official
comment on the controversy.
But debate continued over Us
handling of what administration
officials were hrugglng only
weeks ago us one of their
largest-ever KGB catches.
George Carver, former deputy
to the CIA director and a 26-year'
veteran of the agency, said the
ease was "cle a rly not pro­
fessionally handled. Allowing
him to gel away indicates there
was sloppy noii-proressioiiulism.
It's very embarrassing."

FARC had demanded a ransom,^

C o n tim u ed fro m page 1A
lease the missionaries to dele­
gates of the peace commission,
which monitors a 1984 cease-fire
signed by FARC and three other
rebel groups.
New Tribes officials had said

"detained" them on suspicion of
being spies.
New Tribes Is an inter­
denominational mission with
13MX) missionaries worldwide.

w ea th er
NATIONAL REPORT
West Virginia otlicials a p ­
pealed lor Icdcru' aal lor tow ns
with dwuidliiiL. supplies of food
and no water. Fur tow ns in
Grant and iVtidlciun counties,
there could be no help because
they had b n ii swept aw ay,
otlicials soid
"The whole county is a m ess."
Reese Otis, spokesman lor the
OH ice o| Emergency Services,
s a id ol P e n d le to n C o u n ty .
"Clrcleville is in terrible shape
and Riverton lias disappeared."
Gov. Arch Moore s press secre­
tary. John 1‘rii e. said people in
th e c o u titv " a r e liv in g in

STOCKS
These quotations provided by members at
the National Association ot Securities Dealers
are representative inter dealer prices as ol
mid morning today Inter dealer markets
Change throughout the day Prices do not
include retail markup markdown
Bid Ask
Atlantic Bank
U '4
J J 'i
American Pioneer SAL
9*4 9’4
Barnett Bank
30'i
34’ 1
Florida Po*er
A Light
2S 35’ .
Fla Progress
19 3914
Freedom Sarings
I0&gt;4 11*4
11' 1 13‘4
HCA
JP .
Hughes Supply
Morrisons
IS &gt;4 19
NCR Corp
3S»e 3S'a
19'; 30
Plessey
I3&gt;4
Scotty's
13'.
Southeast Bank
J l ‘ » 33
SunTrust
IS' 4 3S'

extremely primitive conditions."

AREA READINGS (9 a.m.):
temperature: 60 overnight low:
46: W ed ne sd ay's high: 71:
barometric pressure: 30.1 I: rela­
tive h u m id ity : 80 percent:
winds: South at 6 tuple rain: OO
inch: sunrise: 6:32 a.m.. sunset
5:46 p.m.

..FRID A Y TIDES: D aytona
Beach: highs. 3:43 a.m.. 4:12
p.m.: lows. 9:43 a.m., 10:13
pan.; P o rt C an av eral: highs.
3:35 a.m.. 4:04 pan.: lows. 9:34
a.m .. 10:04 pan.: B a y p o r t:
highs. 9:30 a.m.. 10:15 pan.:
lows. 3:40 a.m.. 4:07 pan.

EX TEN D ED FO RECA ST:
P a rtly c lo u d y th ro u g h the
period. A warming trend. Highs
Saturday low 70s north to near
HO south rising lo mid 70s north
and mid HOs south by Monday.
Lows Saturday around 50 north

and 70 south rising on Monday
to near 60 north and mid 70s
smith.
AREA FO R EC A ST : T o ­
day, .mostly sunny and mild.
High In the upper 70s. Wind
lig h t a n d v a r ia b le . T o night...mostly fair except for
areas of dense log by morning.
Low In the m id to upp er
50s.light wind to calm. Fri­
day...partly cloudy. High In the
m id to u p p e r 7 0 s . W in d ,
northeast lOmph.
BOATING FORECAST: St.’;
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Wind northwest around
10 knots hacking to southwest
today then shifting to northwest
over the north pari again to­
night. Wind becoming northeast
10 to 15 knots Friday. Sea 2 to 3
feet. Inland waters a light chop.
Fair today then partly cloudy
tonight and Friday.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hospital
Wednesday
ADMISSIONS
Sanford
Margaret M Beard
Era DeBose
June R Schreiber
Jesse ft Coleqrowe. DeBary
Ed/rardO Golink. DeBary
Adam G. Killian. Dellona

Samuel B Parrish
1
Minnie M Suretle. DeBary
Are ia L Halsler. Deltona
'!•
M ary A Rooney. Deltona
CleoO Spence. Deltona
-I*
Nancy E Vamlle. Deltona
Christine C Wheeling end baby b o y ,''
Altamonte Springe
karen A Pierslrott and baby girl, Winter
Springe
,
Uj

DISCHARGES
Sanford
Frederick J H a rm

CALENDAR
THURSDAY. NOV. 7

&gt;4
was flooded, and officials closed
the main commuter artery from
the 14th Street Bridge to Alex,
andria. Va.. snarling rush-hour
traffic.

BIRTHS
CleortaL Riggint ababy girl. Sanford

•

E v e n in g lle m ld
7:30 pan.. Community United
Methodist C h urch . Highw ay
17-92. Casselberry. Newcomers
meeting. 7 p.m. Call Jean at
830-0995. Also. 7:30 pan., in the
annex conference room behind
Florida H o spital-A ltam o n te.
Slate Road 436. Altam onte
Springs.

FRIDAY, NOV. 8
Central Florida Klwanls Club.
7:30 a .in .. F lo rid a Federal
Savings and Loan. State Road
436 at 434. Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Klw anls
Club. 7 a.m.. Airport Restaurant.

Sanford.
O p t im is t C lu b of S o u th
Seminole. 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. Wvmore Road. Altamonte
Springs.
Gentle Exercise for seniors.
10:30 a.m.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
Ceniral Florida Blood Bank
F lo rid a H o s p ita l-A lta m o n te
Branch. 001 E. Altamonte Ave..
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Rummage and Bake Sale. 8
a.m. to 4 pan., sponsored by the
Nativity Council of Catholic

Women, at the Church ol Nativi­
ty. County Road 127. Lake Mary.
S a ilie H a rris o n C h a p te r
N'SDAR. 2 p.m.. Howell Place.
Sanford. Speakers. Mrs. John
Clements ami Mrs. W .ll Vinirig.
Arthritis Interest Group. 2 4
p.m.. Library Room 2 and 3
behind Winter Park Hospital,
200 N. Lakemout Ave.. Winter
Park. Deborah Slocum. KD will
speak on Arthritis and Nutrition.
Free to the public.
Central Florida Metal Delect­
ing Club. 7 30 p.m.. Goklenrod
Civic Center. 4763 Palmetto

Ave.. one block south of Alotua
Avenue. Goldcnrod.
Wukiva A A (no smoking), 8
p .m . W c k tv a P re s b yte ria n
C hurch. SR 434. at Wckivu
Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 pan.. Rolling
Hills Moravian Church. SR 434.
Longwood. Alannn, same lime
and place.
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m., St.
Richard's Episcopal C hurch,
Lake Howell Road. Alunon. same
time and place.
Sanford A A Step. 8 p.m.. 1201
W. First St.. Sanford.

(U S P S U IIIO )

Thursday. November 7, 1985
Vol. 78, No. 44

*«

.&lt;

;

Published Dally and Sunday, except
Saturday by The Sanford Herald.
Inc. 100 N. French Ave., Sentord.
Fla. 37/11.
Second Close Postage Paid at Sanford,
Florida 37711
Homo Delivery: Wools, 11.10; Month,
44.71; l Months, SU.2S; 4 Months.
$77.00; Yoor, SSI.00. By Moil: Week
SI.SO; Month, $4-00; j Months,
110.00; 4 Months, 477.S0; Veer,
140.04.
Phone (301) 377-3411.

&gt;

�.

/

*

t

---------------- -- .

A home In hake Mary was
burglarized hv a person with a
pcnchaiu for cigarettes and hot
dogs. The burglar used a method
of operation similar to that used
fit other burglaries tills fall.
Lake Mary Police reported a
burglary to the home of John
Hacker. 230 Van Hurcn. that
Hacker said oeurred between
2 :3 0 a. III. Oct. 2 9 and 12:20 u.
n t. Oct. 3 0 . Hacker said a n
undetermined amount of pro­
perty was taken in the break-in.
including a 19" color television
valued at $219 and it video
cassette recorder valued at $350.
Police said the thief apparently
gained entrance to the home by
breaking the lock on a sliding
glass door at the back of the
home. That is similar to other
break-ins in the city this fall.
The thief, according to police
reports, left a cigarette burning
in an a sh tra y and several
partially eaten huttings on the
kitchen floor. That is also similar
to other home burglaries this fall
in which the title! and/or thieves
left food scattered around the
kitchen and carried soft drinks
throughout the house' as they
burgled It.

oven and a $300 handgun were
stolen from the home of James
G. Walts. 62. of P.O. Box 646.
Scotts Road, Geneva, on Tues­
day. a sheriffs report said.

Action Reports
★ Fires
* Court*
ft Police

A $400 stereo was stolen from
the home of Steve D. Riggs. 36.
of 1285 Teal Road. Geneva, on
Tuesday, deputies reported.

FORGERY CHARGES
A 3 1-year-old Winter Springs
woman accused ol stealing two
payroll checks from Spanish
Trace Apartments. Altamonte
Springs, forging a signature and
cashing them for a total of $796.
Itas been arrested by Seminole
County shcrlfr s deputies.
A clerk at Freedom Hank.
A ltam o nte M all. Altam onte
Springs, reported to sheriffs
deputies that the woman wh*»
cashed the cheeks on Aug. 23
was driving a Catnaro. That and
fin g e rp rin ts on the checks
helped link the suspect to the
ease, a sheriffs rc|x&gt;rt said.
Linda E. Borges of 598 Dmmir
C irc le was arrested at the
Seminole County Jail at 8:24
p.m. Tuesday. She has been
charged with forgery, uttering a
forgery and grand theft. She has
been released on $5,(XX) bond
and Is scheduled to appear In
court Nov. 25.

EXTORTION
A 1 6 -ye a r-o ld A lta m o n te
Springs boy has alleged to
Seminole County sheriffs depu­
ties that a suspect whom he has
named has extorted a total of
altoul $2.7(X) from himover a
period of time. The boy said the
24-year-old suspect threatened
him. so to pay him off the boy
reportedly stole the cash from
his mother.
The boy and ills mother re­
ported the alleged extortion and
thelt to deputies Tuesday.

SANFORD POLICE
A patient watched helplessly
from his third lloor room at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal while his wife was robbed of
$5(Hi at gunpoint in the parking
lot below, a Sanford police report
said.
Kristine McWattcrs. 34. of Ft.
Lauderdale said she was walking
tow ard the hospital's Ironi
entrance on her way to visit her
husband. Thomas. 44. when the
incident occurred Sunday at
2:20 p.m. She told police a man
approached her and said. “ Don't
move, give me all your money, t
have a gun." He then pulled up
his shirt, pulled out a lianguu
and took tier p u r s e .. M rs.
MeWallers salt!.
McWattcrs witnessed the in­
cident and said he saw the man
flee Into the woods east of the
hospital after his wife began
walking in the opposite direc­
tion. Mrs. McWattcrs said the
thief told her to "keep walking"
alter taking her purse. Police
searched the area but were
unable to locate him.

BURGLARIES ft THEFTS
John T . Allison. 42. of 22 Old
Post Road. Longwood. reported
to sheriffs deputies a $350
handgun and a $363 camera
were stolen from his vehicle
between Oct 18 and 20.

* * • * • » »

•-

f

*• ' ** r 0- ■- &lt;

E v « i i n « H * r«M , S t n t o r i, E l.

Burglars Strike Again In Lake Mary

b
Daytime house bursars have
struck again In Lake Mary.
N o rm a n H o b b ln . 5 6 . 2 4 0
Washington Avc.. Lake Mary,
reported to police that his house
was burglarized while his family
was away on Oct. 50 between
the hours of 6:30 a.m. and 2:00
p.m. Robbin staled to police that
the house was locked when the
family left In the morning. Police
have reported several similar
thefts this Tall.
Police reports said the burglaris) gained entrance to the
home through the screencd-ln
pool patio in the rear of the
home. The thief and or thieves
entered through u patio door and
then removed a window ease­
ment with a screwdriver and
reached around and unlocked
the back door. Once inside police
say the burglar(s) tore the house
apart and escaped with at least
$2,950 in stolen goods.
Police reported no suspects
have been arrested in the ease
and It Is still under Investigation.
R e p o rts say the R o b b in s
neighbors didn't notice anything
suspicious during the robbery.
Taken In the theft were the
following Items: II) a portable
AM-FM cassette radio. (2) a video
eussette recorder. (3) a portable
video cassette recorder. (4| a
portable video cassette recorder
valued at $100, |5) a 25" color
T V valued at $700. (6) a com­
puter valued at $375. |7| a cable
decoder valued at $175. (H) a
1917 45 caliber automatic. |9| a
"high standard" .22 blue steel
aptomaiic.
Also reported taken in the
theft were the following Items:
It) one white Jewelry box con­
ta in in g these item s: (a) a
diamond ring, lb) five gold
chains, (e) four pairs of earrings:
one pair black pearl, one pair
green Jade, one pair white pearl,
one pair gold, (d) two rings
Ineluding a gray pearl ring In a
gold pastel setting and a ruble
zirconium ring, (c) a white pearl
necklace and assorted pewter
Jcwlcry. If) 15 one hundred
dollar bills.

'

police report said.
Robert Brotsch told police he
had gone to answer the phone
when he heard the shop's front
door close. He came out to the
front counter, found no one in
the store and discovered a tray
«r gold Jewelry had been taken
from n cabinet. The store had
been empty when lie went to
answer the phone. Brotsch said.

Mlml Michels. 30. of 104
Buckskin Way. Winter Springs,
Thieves broke into Lakevlcu
reported to sheriffs deputies she Middle School last weekend and
left her purse which, with con­ removed sporting equipment
tents. is valued at $105. In n and supplies from a coach's
shoping cart In the parking lot of office next to the gym. Sanford
Zayre's. State Road 436. Fern police said. The theft was re­
Park, at about 1:20 p.m. Tues­ ported by Assistant Principal
day. When she returned for it In J a m e s S h u d c on M o n d a y
about 10 minutes the purse was morning. Police said the point of
gone.
entry is unknown, as is the
amount of equipment taken. An
A $164 security light wns inventory Is being conducted.
stolen from the driveway of
United Tech Communications.
A Jewelry heist tit a local home
1291 N. U.5. Highway 17-92. netted burglars $500 worth of
L o n g w o o d . on M o n d a y or rings and chains on Sunday, a
Tuesday, according to a report Sanford police report said. Roban employee filed with sheriffs ert German. 57. told police he
deputies.
walked Into the bedroom of his
home at 2565 El Capltan at 9:55
RBI Inc. at 309 West First p.m. and discovered a Jewelry
Street was robbed of $3,000 box was gone. German said he
worth of Jewelry on Saturday found the empty case on the
when the only salesman on duty ground below one of the room s
was In a back room, a Sanford windows.

D e p u t y

1.1, M

A c c u s e d

By Susan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
A Seminole County sheriffs
sergeant accused of hitting a
Lake Mar)' woman In the face
several times Is under in­
vestigation and may face a
charge of battery. Seminole
County Sheriff John Polk said
today.
Polk said the woman. Steph­
anie L. McCullum, 29. of 136
Caleedrae Place. Lake Mary,
who made allegations against
Sgt, Ralph Salerno. 46. of
Altamonte Springs, was ques­
tioned by a s h e riff's i n ­
vestigator Wednesday and has
given a taped statement of her
allegations to lawmen.
Salerno Inis also been ques­
tioned. Polk said, but will
remain on duty un til the
allegations have been In ­
vestigated.
A c c o rd in g to un in itia l
sheriffs report by sheriff’s
deputy Darren TJomstol Ms.
McCullum was round by wit­
nesses wandering in an appar­
ent disoriented state near the
scene of the alleged attack,
which reportedly occurred in
the parking lot of Seasons

R estauran t. U .S . H ighw ay
17-92 at Dog Track Road, near
Casselberry at about 9:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
According to the account in
TJom stol"s report Ms. Mc­
Cullum and Salerno had met at
the resturant to "exchange"
p ro p e rty she had left at
S a le rn o ’s home when she
moved out. An argument de­
veloped and Salerno allegedly
hit Ms. McCullum In the face
several times, the report said.
Ms. McCullum had an open
cut on her face and TJomstol
called Seminole County Fire
Department rescue workers to
the scene to treat her. She
complained of pain and dizzi­
ness and could not say where
she lives, the report said.
A business card of a friend
was found In her possession
and Ms. McCullum was taken
to the Lake Mary* home of a
friend, the report said.
She reportedly told TJomstol
that another man working with
Salerno had witnessed the
alleged attack.
Polk said Salerno has been a
sheriff's deputy since Aug.
1972. He has a clean record.

ONLY 7 MONEY-SAVING

SALE HOURS!
\ 4*

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER9
8 A.M. to 3 P.M.

jk

n

Stop on In and save on
hundreds of Items
New Items, some with
slight damage.
Sales are on a first
come, first serve basis.
All sales are final.
Hurry In early for
the best selection.

About $ I .(XX) worth of Jewel­
ry. 300 pounds of meat worth
about $400. a $500 microwave

B la c k s Decker
• Pre-Hung Doors
• Bi-Fold Doors
• Hollow Doors
• Gloves
• Fire Extinguishers
• Havard Cuttery Knives
• Celotex Siding
• Dura Craft
• Contact Paper
• Closet Made Closet
Organizer
• Ball Mason Canning &amp;
Jelly Jars

iliK

c.

te

• Black &amp; Decker
Power Tools
• Oak Bathroom Accessories
• Gerber Spindels
• Ceiling Lights
• Fattened Ceiling Fans

wi
Ticket Time

• Bench Grinder
• Wood Lath
• Band Saw
• Visas
• Children’s Lawn Furniture
• Fertilizer Sproador
• Homelite Wood Eater

• Many More Items
/i

H«r*Id Photo by Tommy Vlncont

M elissa Johnson, on new duty with the Sanford Police
Department as traffic enforcement specialist, tickets a
traffic law violator. Ms. Johnson, a former police dispatcher,
stepped into enforcement Nov. 1, and Police Chief Steve
Harriett said he thinks it's only fair to warn drivers she will
be handing out $3 citations for minor traffic and parking
infractions. Ms. Johnson is set to patrol downtown from 8
a.m. to5p.m.

YI)U* sAllWIAttt SlUAt 0 * MRS! i n t j il!

|g

Phone 322-0500
*lNl

-IA

Vft) S M A P t t AVt S A N * M H O
' H lot n
**» f lit f ’ S *

if :]

�Evening Herald
turn m-mi
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322 2611 or 831-9993
Thursday. November 7, 1M5—4A
Wayne 0. Deyto, PwMIther

SdnstiMriliM KdHlfMP'

Melvin Adkins. Advertising Director
Homr Delivery: Week. §1.10; Month. §4.75; 3 Months.
§14.25: 6 Months. §27.00; Year. §51.00. By Mall; Week.
§1.50; Month. §6.00:3 Months. §18.00:6 Months. §32.50:
Year. §60.00._____________________________________

Bureaucrats Aim
Privacy Threat

&gt;

y
•:
*:
:
;;

How m uch privacy should citizens have to
surrender in the interest of governm ent
efficiency? T h e question arises anew from a
proposal by the federal Office of Management
and Budget (0 M B ). soon to be subm itted to
C o ngress, to w iden agencies* access to
Individual tax forms to check the eligibility of
applicants to federal benefit program s. O M B
wants agencies to be able to tap Internal
Revenue Service files for inform ation on the
"unearned incom e" — interest, dividends,
rents — of persons applying for guaranteed
student loans, federal scholarships, veterans
benefits, and the like. Such cross-checking
could help the government save 8300 m illion
a year in bogus claims. O M B says.
But it would also exact a price in lost
privacy for all Am ericans. One docs not need
to be paranoid to w orry about w hat can
happen when tax returns, designed to ensure
compliance w ith tax laws, are w idely avallabe
for other purposes to officials outside the IRS:
one has only to rem em ber the nations* recent
past. Prcsidnet Kennedy tried to use the IR S
in 1962 to punish executives for raising steel
prices. Adm inistrations from Kennedy to
Nixon used information from IRS files to keep
labs on political dissidents. Congress, alerted
to these abuses by Watergate, wisely forbade
most release of IRS data to other agencies.
But now. even as sophisticated com puter
te ch n o lo g y m akes real the prospect of
electronic government dosiers. the controls
on access to IRS data are slipping. Since
1976. Congress has passed 25 exceptions to
its anti-disclosure rule, most notably last
year, w hen it authorized giving IR S data to
states to check applicants* eligibility for
welfare, food stamps and un em plo ym ent
benefits. Under that plan. IRS inform ation on
44 m illion Am ericans will be subject to
inspection by state agencies.
Th a t Is a trend in the w rong direction. T h e
need for efficiency and econom y in govern­
ment must be weighed against the risk of
abuse of the privacy rights of all citizens.
A lthough it is theoretically possible to build
privacy safeguards into systems designed to
check benefit application against IR S data,
the closer the nation inevitably ^omes to a
national electronic data bank giving dozens of
agencies and thousands of officials access to
the most private financial records of citizens.
A n d the m ore bureaucrats a n d elected
officials that have that Inform ation, the
greater is the likelihood they w ill abuse it.
T o head off that Big Brotherish possiblity.
Congress should mandate that, as far as
p o s s ib le , in v e s tig a tio n s a b o u t b e n e fit
e lig ib ilit y be carried out by r e q u i r i n g
individual applicants to subm it their ow n tax
forms, not by authorizing direct agency
access to IR S records. W h e re there is
reasonable cause to suspect fraud Tjy an
applicant, the tax records can alw ays be
obtained through a warrant. If some privacy
must inevitably be sacrificed to protect the
public purse from fraudulent benefits claims.
Congress can at least attempt to forestall the
development of the kind of national electronic
databank most easily subject to abuse.

j

•

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

Please Write
Letters to the editor ore welcom e for
publication. All letters m ast be signed end
Include e mailing addreaa and. If poaalble, a
telephone number. The Evening Herald re­
serves the right to edit letters to avoid lib el
and to accommodate space.

•
BERRYS WORLD
*:

BEN WATTENBERO

Conservative Democrat Plans Campaign
Bruce Babbitt, the young and articulate
Democratic governor of Arizona. Is running for
president. Therein hangs a portent — maybe.
Candidate Babbitt is already visiting here,
there and everywhere. H« already has most of
the new-model electoral toys: a political action
committee and a tax-deductible foundation.
In most of these respects. Babbitt's activity is
not dissimilar from the stirring around already
evidenced by Sens. Ted Kennedy and Gary Hart.
Other luminaries will do It their own way.
Pundits expect Gov. Mario Cuomo to start
campaigning after his re-election race next year.
Jesse Jackson will also likely go to the post
again.
Babbitt, however, has a game plan quite
different from that of any of these four
Democratic stars from the liberal side of the
party. Babbitt says he's going to challenge that
wing of the party, and do it publicly.
For example. Babbitt says big-spending Dem­
ocrats have come to view the federal govern­

m ent as a candy store that gives away fiscal make public waves within the party.
Babbitt is going the other way. He wants to
goodies and entitlem ents to Just about any
political special Interest that Is strong enough to make changing the direction of the party his big
issue. He thinks things have gotten so out of
threaten candidates.
He says it's time Democrats got tough with whack that Democrats voting in prim aries will
that kind of promiscuous policy-making: they agree with him.
have to. in order to deal with the deficit. The
Babbitt may well be Joined by other can­
Democratic Party. Babbitt notes, has an honor­ didates singing a similar tune. Among the
able tradition of helping people in need. OK. he names one hears In this connection are those of
says, let's concentrate on that. Let's try to scale Sen. Sam Nunn, Gov. Charles Robb. Rep.
federal spending to people's needs.
Richard Gephardt. They are not household
Babbitt's means-testing idea is one that will names:
but In recent years that hasn't been
ruffle feathers: of conservatives because It tilts necessary to win primaries.
to the poor, of liberals because its anti-spending
rhetoric could undercut the broad coalitionary
All this may mean a public rather than the
base of federal programs. But Us political sex usual private struggle for what Is always called
appeal Is not primarily substantive. It comes "the soul of the party." It's easier said than
from the fact that a Democrat will campaign done. Tough-talking candidates have been
saying "We've been wrong."
known to turn to jelly as elections get closer.
W hat's new? In the past, there have surely But It could happen. It seems as If some
been Democratic primary candidates who have Democrats have finally figured out that you
disagreed with the leftward drift or the party. can't make an omelet without gently cracking
But they've usually felt It would be harmful to some eggs.

ROBERT WAITERS

ANTHONY HARRIDAN

American
Aid Plans
Backfire
Since the end of World War II. the
U n ite d S ta te s has fe rv e n tly
embraced a policy of undiluted
internationalism In its diplomatic
and economic dealings. Hundreds of
billions of dollars which could have
gone Into the development of the
United States have been exported to
non-viable nations in the form of
foreign aid.
The great expectation behind a
generation of giveaways, poorly
disguised as loans, was that the
faraway countries would become
healthy, productive, peace-loving,
friendly nations.
Nothing of that sort has hap­
pened. Instead, misery has in­
creased steadily in most of the new
nations of the wortd. They have
demonstrated Instability. Incom­
petence and hostility to the West,
chiefly to the United States. They
can't be propped up with U.S, aid;
they arc beyond bail-outs.
A number of the less developed
countries, albeit not hostile or
incompetent, have become archeconomic competitors of the United
States. Their exports are the driving
engine of these countries — exports
aimed at the U.S. Internal market.
T h e y have gained advantage
through wage-cutting trade.
The result of the export drive, as
Dr. John M. Culbertson of the
University of Wisconsin has said, is
a "fundamental decline in the
economic position of the West In
recent years." No country has
suffered more than the United
States, with Its near S i 50 billion
trade deficit.
While foreign trade offensives
threaten numerous American In­
dustries. the U.S. remains com­
mitted to its poliyy of pumping
money into the Third World.
In the recent World Bank and
International Monetary Fund meet­
ing in South Korea. Secretary of the
Treasury James Baker declared that
American commercial banks should
lend a total of $20 billion over three
years to "developing" nations, say­
ing this is necessary if incomes are
to rise throughout the world. Read­
ing that support for more World
Bank funding, one is inclined to rub
one's eyes and ask: is the Carter
administration still in the White
House?
Mr. Baker's plan is evidence of the
absence of the hard-headed econom­
ic nationalism this country needs In
order to survive. The U.S. is having
a terrible time getting together
capital for domestic projects of a
basic, long-term character. It can't
afford to export more capital. It also
can't afford to have Its internal
market — the largest in the world —
treated as a prize by foreign trade
adversaries.

Planners
Target
For Cuts

JULIAN BOND

Maybe Nixon's Needed
Why does Ronald Reagan get a
negative reaction from affirmative
action?
If you believe what the president
says, it's because the current af­
firmative action regulations impose
rigid quotas, which discriminate
against white men.
But if you take the time to read
the order, you'll discover that's
simply not true. Quotas arc pro­
hibited in the order Rcagnn wants to
scrub. He proposes to make It
Impossible to measure discrimina­
tion or judge the success of efforts to
end it.
If he succeeds in erasing Lyndon
Johnsons 1965 Executive Order
No. 11246. Reagan will be the first
president — cither Republican or
Democrat — In 44 years to weaken
the federal government's commit­
ment to equal opport unity.
After words on paper failed to
Integrate the federally subsidized
workplace, the Office of Federal
Contract Compliance established a
series of special program s to
"assure m in o rity group repre­
sentation in all construction trades
and in all phases of the work."
Best known of these was the
Philadelphia Plan, developed during
the administration of Richard Nix­
on. requiring that bidders for
fe d e ra lly a s s is te d c o n tr a c t s
establish goals for minority hiring
and commit themselves to "good
faith" efforts to achieve the goals
they set for themselves.
In 1970. Nixon's secretary of
labor. George Shultz. Issued the
regulations that his current boss
wants to discard.
The "Shultz rules" require iontractors to see whether there arc
fewer minorities in their workplaces
than would be expected according
to their availability to work. If the
contractors' own analysis shows
women and minority undcrhlred.
the contractor is required to develop
goals and timetables and to make a
good faith effort to meet the target

he has set for himself.
Quotas?
There arc none.
The order states: "Goals may not
be rigid and inflexible quotas, which
must be met. but must be targets
reasonably attainable."
Attorney General Edwin Meese
wants Reagan to sign a new execu­
tive order that will gut 11246.
making four changes In the existing
— and successful — program.
Meese would eliminate numerical
goals and timetables, leaving con­
tractors and federal enforcers un­
able to measure whether a con­
tractor was discriminating, and
under no time pressure to correct
past or present discrimination. The
Meese plan would prohibit the use
of statistical evidence required by
the Department of Labor and would
restrict evidence to "demonstrated
discriminatory treatment." limiting
the executive order to blatant, overt
discrimination of a sort seldom seen
today.
Finally, the Meese plan would
build in a disincentive for voluntary
action, asserting that the order does
not require goals or timetables even
for a "voluntary" plan.
A recent Cabinet revolt halted this
assault on affirmative action, for tbi­
tsme being.
Joining Meese were black con­
servatives Clarence Pendleton,
chairman of the U.S. Civil Rights
Commission, and Clarence Thomas,
head of the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission. Energy
Secretary John S. Harrington and
Education Secretary William liennet t were also in favor of gutting
affirmative action.
Holding the line were Housing
and Urban Development Secretary
Samuel Pierce Jr., the only black
Cabinet member; Transportation
Secretary Elizabeth Dole; Treasury
Secretary James Baker; Labor Sec­
retary W illiam Brock: and. of
course. Secretary of Stale George
Shu! t z .

W ASHIN GTO N (NEA) - A tawdry
political confrontation over the
future of federally funded familyplanning services graphically il­
lustrates the dark side of con­
servatism — Its penchant for in­
truding in people's private lives.
But conservatism 's proposed
solutions to contemporary social
conflicts routinely are mean-spirited
formulations that require con­
formity to zealots' inflexible and
unreasonable standards. Those
unwilling to relinquish control over
their personal lives become targets
lor punishment.
The current case in point is the
dispute over the renewal of the
Family Planning Services and Popu­
lation Research Act. It authorizes
federal funding (currently $142.5
million annually) for more than
2.500 public and private agencies
throughout the country that provide
fam ily-planning counseling and
medical services to an estimated 5
million women every year.
Hut the medical profession's uni­
versally accepted practice of ob­
taining "informed consent" from all
patients requires that all treatment
alternatives be explained and of­
fered to those who seek a physi­
cian's assistance.
In the case of unintended pre- &gt;
gnancies. doctors in both private
practice and publicly funded clinics
routinely offer their patients three
basic options — continuing the ]
pregnancy to term and keeping the
infant, offering the baby for adop­
tion or foster care, or aborting the
pregnancy.
Thai's not good enough for three
conservative members of Congress
— Sens. Jesse Helms. R-N.C., and
Orrin Hatch. R-Ulah. and Rep. Jack
Kemp. R-N.Y. — and tlie antiabortion fanatics to whom they're
pandering.
They want to abrogate the "in ­
formed consent" tradition by de­
nying federal funding to any in­
stitution or organization that even
counsels or refers patients for abor­
tions.
In addition, they would prohibit
government financing of any family
planning operation that provides
abortion services w ith private
funds. A 1981 federal survey of the
5,000 facilities receiving Title X
assistance found that only 74 were
In that category — and 44 of them
were hospitals.
Ironically, t he family planning
services now being threatened by
the opponents of abortion prevent
hundreds of thousands of unin­
tended pregnancies — and the
abortions that often follow — every
year.

JACK ANDERSON

'Angel Of Death' Had Family A id

'A W V V A '

By Jack Anderson And
Joseph Spear

"I've never seen anything quite like this. Just
how sedentary IS your lifestyle?”

W ASHIN GTO N — Josci Mengele
may be dead, but the Justice
Department is still trying to de­
termine whether he cheated the
hangman with the help of U.S.
authorities. The notorious "Angel of
Dead)" sent hundreds of thousands
to the gas chambers In the Nazi
death camp at Auschwitz.
"W e are combing archives around
the world, talking to people in every
continent, trying to put the puzzle
together and figure out whether
Mengele received any help or pro­
tection from the U.S. government
which enabled him to hide." Neal
Sher. director of the Office of Special
Investigations, told our associate
Lucette Lagnado.
Sher characterized the Investiga­
tion as "extraordinarily complex."
In terms of hard documentary
evidence, he said, it is far more
difficult than the case of Klaus
Barbie, the SS "Butcher of Lyon."
who was found to have worked for

U.S. m ilitary Intelligence after
World War I! and whose escape to
South America was arranged by
American authorities.
It is already clear beyond any
doubt that Mengele got substantial
help over the years from his family,
which owns the biggest farm ma­
chinery firm in West Germany.
Their help Is understandable, but
what bothers A m e rica n N azihunters is that the protection given
to the war criminal is not punisha­
ble under West German law-. In­
deed. to this day the Mengele family
cannot be forced to cooperate with
Investigating authorities.
Here’s what our associate learned
about the Mengelcs from sources In
Germany and this country:
— In the immediate aftermath of
World War II, Mengele's father
believed that his son was dead. The
young SS doctor's wife. Irene,
dressed in mourning clothes and
had a hometown priest say a funeral
mass for him. But the family soon
learned that Mengele was alive and

well. He returned and lived under
an assumed name in a nearby
village for several years.
Justice Department sources say
there is considerable evidence that,
once U.S. occupation forces learned
of Mengele’s crimes, the family
helped Mengele evade capture by
pretending he was dead. U.S. gov­
ernment documents of that time
reveal that Mengele was listed
officially as having died in 1946.
and thus was not brought to trial
with other death camp doctors at
Nuremberg.
— By 1949, renewed Interest In
Mengele prompted him to flee
Germany. According to his own
personal papers, the Mengele family
provided the money for his escape
to Argentina.
— Before he left G e rm a n y .
Mengele signed legal documents
"disassociating" himself from the
family firm, according to the Simon
W ic sc n lh a l C e n te r, w hich in ­
vestigates Nazi war crimes.
This dlsassociatiuu was to prevent

the authorities from seizing the
Mengele company's assets, as was
done with property of major war
criminals.
— Despite the technical breach.
Mengele continued to get money
from his family. The fugitive's
personal papers suggest that a
Mengele company executive, Hans
Scdlmelr. served as a go-between.
— In the 1950s, according to the
Wtesenthal Center. Mengele's father
went to Argentina and gave the
fugitive 1 million marks to Invest in
a pharmaceutical company.
— In the 1960s. according to the
testimony of people who sheltered
him. when Mengele moved to Brazil,
money.from the family enabled him
to buy a house for himself and a
farm for one of the couples who
helped him.
— Throughout the years, the
Mengele family refused to cooperate
with German authorities; under
German law they were not obliged
to. Nor did the family report his
death by drowning In 1979.

�•^

• .* I w * ,

y

' v

■ **

* •

- f M

• •

» *i

•

t. 7.

IMS

Cyclists B rave T h e H e a d w in d s
Five to be exact.

Herald Staff W riter
Stjmt*. Hhc 74-year-old Mary Henri
Peterson, coasted along with a smile
unrl a wave, while others, like former
Olympic champ John SlnbaJdl. 72. took
to the course with a look of fierce
d e t e r m in a t io n . A H b ra v e d th e
headwinds and readily agreed the heat
was on Tor the Golden Age Games
quarter-mile bike race.
In groups of threes pitting entrants
against time rather than one another,
the cyclists lined up and were off In a
flash ami a near flash at the sound of
the gun. T h e ir once around the
Seminole High School track took most
contestants less than a minute.
John Nagcrgelovlc. 64. took to the
course like he had been In competitive
racing for years, which, in fact he has.

"You do as much riding as you can.
and then you go back out there and do
some more," the Ormond Beach resi­
dent said.
Nagcrgelovlc said hc‘d discovered
last week. ‘T i l have all the time I want
to ride. I got laid off.”
This extra time may well come In
handy. Nagcrgelovlc had to settle for
the silver after being cased out of first
place In the 60-64 category by his
buddy Andy McGufDn. 60. McGuffln. of
Eustis. attributed his success to
"plenty of sprints, plenty of roadwork.”
Helen Medan 1. 66. was a first place
finisher and although the only competi­
tor In the 65-69 category, she turned In
a time that would have earned her the
bronze In the 60-64 field.
The Winterhavcn resident said she
swims three times a week, walks cvcrv

ELEVENTH ANN UAL QOLOEN AQ E GAMES
SCHEDULE OF EV EN TS

day and fills In "a lot of my extra time
with riding.”
Her husband. Rcnato. was at the
Seminole High track “ for moral sup­
port. to root for her and to hold her bag.
The Important things.”
Ellen Julius. 74. cycles "for fun and
fitness." and Iasi year won the gold In
the 70-74 quarlcr-mllc category. This
year she had to settle for the silver,
"but I'll be back next year for the
gold.” she said.
Ik-fore 82-year-old Alvar Ryaman
took to the track, he said he had "no
reason to care that all the younger
Tel lows pass me right by."
" I can’t lose.” he explained. " I ’m the
only one In my age category."
All. In fact, were shoo-ins on Monday.
They'd come out to enjoy, as well as
compete.

4CTMTT

ItMftlCMUHl

M R

idomoR

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, H jW
•g.iiuri* | Bill Mourn
700 PR
rnitti"( Contf'J
300 PR

Ciec C*"1*f
Oty Hi'l

*faie"t Show
Irnnis iCunt'iturs it r&gt;«m4r,i

One Center
BjftiMj Rrcuutt Club

700 PM

FRIDAY. NOVfMMR 8. I N S
Hobby Stiqa OPEN fO THE PUBLIC

SCO AW SOOPM

9 JO AM
1000 AM
•Uisurr Wilt i M&lt;les
10 00 AM
C*n*st» ■Doubles Only
10 00 AM
•Oomimi-s Doubi** '
100PM
*8r d&lt;. Party Rubber
100PM i 00 PM
Hutby Pno*r»araph»
PICK UP lUrt.gllS
100 PM
•ShuttirtoarJ Doubles Only
100PM
•Me Alt* 9 V.’e
7 00 PM
•Archery
BREAKFAST - TUESDAY THROUGH SATUROAY

I

Optimal Out
Eitwvon Hoiwnasin et
SrminoH County
Cn*#ift*r of Cowmen*
Sunns* Aleinn Club

Otf Hut
8:.i Anwnj
Ore Cmlrr
Cmc C*nt*f
C*rc Cwttt
Romm *Club ot Sanford
C’ty Hill
ft Uyllon firs
Semino'y H&gt;(h Sctioot
Seminole CommuM, Conti*
7.00 A.M.- tO O A.M.

Eit*i*ion Hom*ntj4*n ot
Seminole County
Boat Antnc*
fleet I w i t
AAAP
Sanford $*n&gt;or Mint*
Wornin *Club ot Sintorl
(■tinvon HonwnuAm of
SttninoH CSunfy
SAutflrtoirJ Club
OiMbied Amtncin Vdyrin*
Lon* Club

CIVIC CENTER

POST CEREALS

* DEADLINE: 9:00 P.M. THE DAY BEFORE THE EVENT

Scott Takes Gold In Checkers
By Susan Lodes
Herald S ta ff Writer
"Well, |'|| be u son-of-a-gun, he
Just picked me olT the board,"
Katherine Drake suld as she
went down In defeat to last
y e a r's G o ld en Age G u m rs
checkers chump Hugh Banks of
Orlando.
Ms. Drukc didn't have high
hopes when she entered the
■i heat. After all. It was the first
. checkers challenge for this
65-vear-old who traveled with-a
.’ group or 13 from Nashville.
Trim ., to join the Games for the
first time.
'
When she learned that In her
'■ first and only match she would
'• face Hanks. Ms. Drake said. "Let
•■me out of here." Hut then she
■ brined her resolve and said. "I'll
■go down trying, honey. I don't
- know what I'm going lo do. If I
surprise him you’d heller get a
Iwmle of champagne.
• "It don't bather me. honey,
'•one way or another." she said,
as her nerve steeled us the
match neared. "I might want to
smoke two or three cigarettes
1 before it's over with." Ms. Drake
said.
-&gt;1 Hut there wasn't tim e to
smoke, because Hanks' fust
moves burned Ms. Drake off the
laiard In the best two out of three
, games within 10 minutes.
In this, his second mutch in a
field of 1-1 players. 76-year-old

Banks dashed Ms. Drake's hopes
for beginner's luck. He went on
lo play other checker buffs,
Including some who have also
taken gold, silver and bronze in
past Golden Age Games check­
offs.
Banks admired Ms. Drake's
cITort and guts. "She knows
how. She must have beat some­
body or she woudn't be In that
chair. She's a good player." he
said. "I either win or get beat."
Banks said, "I don't take a lot of
time."
With a skeptical eye on the
1983 checkers champ. John
Eklund. 70, of Wauchula. Hanks
said. "If I get beat, whut dif­
ference docs It make? It's Just a
game of checkers. No matter
how good you get. somebody's
going to beat you."
Hanks, said a lot of people
t h i n k a n y b o d y c a n p la y
checkers, und that's true up to a
point, he said. "But once you
learn to play checkers, you learn
there Is ulways a better way to
play and plenty of people to beat
you. It's Interesting. It makes
your mind sharp."
And Banks was hoping his
mind would be sharp when and
If he ended up In a face-off with
Eklund who said he had warmed
up In the six mile Mini Race and
was ready to cool down at the
checkerboard at the Sanford
Civic Center.

YOUR
IHDEFEHDERTAGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

41S w. FW« St

William H. "Bill” Wight C.P.C.U.
President
H tf « M FlMts M M

sm

Katherine Drake, 65, of Nashville, Tenn., was no match for
1984 Golden Age Games Checkers champ Hugh Banks, 76, of
Orlando. But while Banks made short work of Drake in the
match, her competitive spirit was undaunted.
T o a c c e p t i h c c h e c k i-r later picked up a few pointers
challenge. Eklund said, "Ii taken from books. "Those three things
somebody able to smile and all helped." he said.
shake hands even If they lose
And Eklund and Banks fell
and feel like crying."
buck on their philosophical at­
It lakes a tad of luck to come titudes when they were bumped
up u winner, but basically. from the top spot in the checkers
Eklund said, checkers is n game challenge by gold medalist
based on skillful thought. He got Jessie Scott. 72. of Tflnton,
nn early start at age eight, had a Tenn. Banks took the silver and
natural aptitude and many years Eklund the bronze.

J e s t oP
avm g sJ
“ O

S A V E 1 0 % O N

F ir s t , A r t h u r S n o w . 6 4 ,
Leesburg: 2nd. Quinton Smith.
6 5 . O rla n d o ; 3 rd . C h a rle s
Swart/. 7H. DeHnry;

Age 75-79
No entries

First. Frances Knott. 67. Punta
Gnrdn: 2nd. Dorothy Williams.
76. Orange City; 3rd.- Evelyn
Mudgc. 82. Orange City.

G O L F -L O N G DRIVE
CONTEST
Men
Age 85-59

No entries

- Age 60-64
First. Jean Hess. Sanford. 122
yds.: 2nd. Harriett Boyd. Lake
Mary. 87 yds.

' Age 65-60

F I r s t . T h o m .•s J u a n Ic o .
Longwond. 228 yds.; 2nd. Ken
Holccck. Sanford. 223 yds.: 3rd.
Janies Gunster. Sanford. 175
yds.

Age 60-64
First.Clitirk Hess. Sanford.
2-17 yds.: 2nd.Walter Moore.
Sanford. 216 yds.: 3rd. John
Slade. Longwond. 211 yds.

Age 6 5 -6 9
First. Don Hess. Sanford, 201
y d s .: 2 n d . J o h n T i n s l e y .
Leesburg. 201 yds.: 3rd, Karl
Dippnng. Cincinnati. Ohio. 202
yds.

Age 70-74
First. Russell Valiev. Sanford.

Age 6 5 -6 9
First. Gayle Davis. Hamlet
In d.. 27 pts.: 2nd. A ubre y
Phillips. Cincinnati. Ohio. 26
pts.. 3rd. James Whelan. Or­
lando! 23 pts.

Age 7 0 -7 4

Women
Age 55-59

Women

Jeanette Griffin. Sanford, 135
yds.

First. Harry Brown. Hamlet
Ind.. 27 pis.: 2nd. Wilbur Ott.
Lakeland. 16 pis.: 3rd. Ralph
Klclnsrhmldt. Annndalt*. Va.. 12
pts.

Age 7 5 -7 9

No entries

Ag* 6 5 -6 9
First. Anna Sum m y.
Grnntvllle. Pa.. lOpts.

Age 70 -7 4
First. Ellen Brown.
Wilmington. Ohio. 9 pts.: 2nd,
Pearl Morrison. DcLand, 2 pts.:
3rd. Lucille Sandman. W in­
chester. III.. 2 pts.

Age 75 -7 9
No entries
G V*j •S• I fO« l 9»«

First. Don Rlcard. Longwood.
12 pts.; 2nd. Joseph Nltsch.
Longwood. 7 pts.

1Florida Public unities

B

REGISTER TO
9
WINEXCITINGPRIZES:
G a s (trill. a rm iN o rtrs a n d rnnkhunk

HURRY!

„

■• n o u n

R ttS S S S r-

1

Hair Ends \mrmbrr^7
Financing %ai(ablr
o
m

Women
Age 5 5 -5 9

Age 70-74

...

sater healer*, ranar*. dryer*
1 *nd much, much more *er on nalr m ul

Comi't-mtnt OurCimi|ilrli' l.liM'irfT.iiiihinthi-K.iiict'' ThrjTrrnm o t-fTklrnlr.es In
rlr,iA ami mclnrrmt Is lists fort-tmH authuctls in n.Aln* .ipiillam n. litlu- Imme
a her 9 ptrre lerlktr IIn. Ling h e iri hultrt *lth n rfl ftlfHun Kano- pun tier'

G a m e s Results

BILLIARDS - ROTATION
Men

E V E R Y

G A S A P P L IA N C E
*

216 yds.: 2nd. Glen Pcnnywllt.
Lake M ary. 203 yd s.: 3rd.
Raymond Newbaur. Altamonte
Springs. 193 yds.

Gerald W. Meyer
Account Representative

LM m

I
l *M

G o ld e n

Ffc.

* A

v i 1 ,§ ( i

your gam co.
Mil V s lh Sl.ifs-Sl /7:u-ltm
NtnAml
KM) N fill, SI/ .1 2 3 -m i

in

* iV i v r

i* t 1

h i

*

a

*.*

W A L -M A R T

First. Rosemary Simkanich.
Sanford. 6 pts.

Age 75-79
No entries

BASKETBALL — FREE
THROW
Men
Age 55-59
First. Bob Arkcrnian. Canton.
Ohio. 26 pis.: 2nd. Herbert
Crank. Polk City. 22 pts.; 3rd.
Thomas Dunklc. Orlando. 17
pts.
Age 60-64
First. Andy McGufUn. Eustis.
28 pis.: 2nd, John Davison. St.
Cloud, pts. 21; 3rd, Henry
Brandon. Orlando. 19 pts.

Age 6 0 -6 4
First. Ruby Phillips, Cincin­
nati. Ohio. 12 pts.; 2nd. MarieLouise Holbcrt. Kirkwood. Mo..
11 pts.: 3rd, Mora A rnold.
Valrieo. 10 pts.

CALL NOW

ffl

rofuel mu mi

322-2611

fm fnI fmonM Stmtt

Save 7 04
Man* Lri
e Butternut full gram
leather uppers
ePiamtoe

•SoR cushioned insole
• Longweanng oil resistant sow
e Goodyear Welt Construction
• Mens su es

eReg 29 87

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT COUNT,
IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E COUNTY,
*
F L O R ID A
&gt;
c a s e n o . u in e c A oe-E
5 U N I T E D C O M P A N IE S
J F IN A N C IA L C O RPO RA TIO N .
Plalntifl,

vs
. R IC H A R D D GW INN, and any
, unknown heir*. devisee*. gran
tee*. and other unknown person*
‘ claiminq by, through and under
the M id R IC H A R D D GW INN.
it deceased.

Defendant*
A M E N O E D N O T IC E OF SU IT
TO R IC H A R D D GW INN. and
any unknown heir*, devliee*.
grantee*, and other unknown
’ person* claiming by. through
and under the laid R IC H A R D 0
I GW INN. If deceased Residence
Unknown
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D lhal an action to
foreclose mortgage covering lh«
following real and personal
property in S E M IN O L E County,
.• Florida, to wil:
Lot S. Block 4. T IE R II. E R
T R A F F O R D ’S M A P OF TOW N
i‘ O F SA N FO RO . according lo tho
,i plat thereof a* recorded In Piet
Book 1, Page* Si through! *4, ol
the Public Record* ot Seminole
id County. Florida
ha* been tiled against you end
you are required to lerve e copy
ol your written delense*. If any,
lo il on C. VIC TO R B U T L E R ,
JR.. ESQ., 111! East Robinson
Street. Orlando. Florida 17*0t,
and tile the original with the
Clerk ol the above styled Court
on or before the 19th dey of

. ! - ■

-

•« — •

Legal Notice

legal Notice

December. If*2. otherwise, e
Ju d gm e n t m ay be entered
against you for tha relief de
manded In the Complaint.
W IT N E S S my hand and seal
of said Court on the Sth day ol
November. 19*5
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
CLERKO FTH E
C IR C U IT COURT
By: DieneK. Brummetl
Deputy Clerk
Publish November 7. la. 21, 21.
IM S
P E L SO
_______________

ob|ectlons by an interested
person to whom notice was
malted that challenges the valid
Ity ol the will, the qualifications
of the personal representative,
venue or lurisdicllon ol the
court
A L L C L A IM S A N D O BJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W IL L
BE F O R EV ER B A R R E O
Publication of this Notice has
begun on October 31. IMS
Personal Representative
B O N N I E
S H E E T S
W O O D RU FF
4»W illo rd Road
Longwood. Seminole County
Florida 22790
Attorney for
Personal Represantatlve:
R IC H A R D L W A T K IN S
*04 North Orange Avenue
Orlando, Florida 22*01
Telephone (M i) 429 213/
Publish: October It, November
7. IM9

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
Fife Number U4**CP
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
G E O R G E B W O O D R U FF
Deceased

NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The adm inistration ot the
e s t a t e at G E O R G E B.
W O O D R U F F , deceased. File
Number *5 4 **C P , 1* pending in
•he Circuit Court lor Seminole
C o u n t y . F lo r id a . P ro b a te
Olvlsion. the address ot which Is
20* North Park Avenue. San
lord. Florida2277).
The name* end addresses of
the personal representative end
the personal representative's
attorney are sat lorth below.
All Interested persons are
required to tile with this court.

W IT H IN T H R E E M ON TH S
FROM THE DATE OF TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE: (I) all claims

OEK tas
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIO H TEEN TH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT S EM IN O LE
COUNTY. FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.:
*1-112«-CA«*-E
SUN B A N K N A T I O N A L
ASSOCIATION, etc..
Plaintiff.
vs.

MICHAEL F. HOWARD, et us.
etal.
Defendants

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: MICHAEL F. HOWARD
PEGGY HOWARD
RESIDENCE: UNKNOWN
YOU ARC NOTIFIED that an
• c m Im farad *** ■ mortgage

legol Notice
on tne following property in
S E M IN O L E County. Florida.
Lot 44. T IM B E R R ID G E AT
S A B A L P O IN T . U N IT ONE.
according to the plal thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 24. page*
44 through 44. Public Records ot
Seminole County, Florida
has been tiled against you and
SA B A L P O IN T C O M M U N IT Y
S E R V I C E S A S S O C IA T IO N .
INC., a corporation. S A B A L
PO IN T P R O P E R T IE S . INC . a
condominium. D E P A R T M E N T
OF R E V E N U E . S T A T E OF
F L O R IO A . H P S . IN C ., a
F lorid a corporation, as In
lervenor and you are required to
serve a copy ot your written
defenses, it any, to it on
C H A R L E S R. G E O R G E . Ul.
Swann and Haddock. P A .
P la in t if f s attorney, whose
mailing address is 129 West
Central Boulevard. Suite 1100.
P O Box 440. Orlando. Florida
32102 0440. on or before the 29th
day ol November 1M9 end tile
the original with the Clerk ol
this Court either before service
on Plaintiffs attorney or imme
diately thereafter, otherwise a
default will be entered against
you for the relief demanded In
the Complaint or Petition
W IT N E SS my hand and seal
ol this Court on the 2lsl day ol
October IM9

(SEAL)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
CLERKO FTHECO URT
By: Susan E. Tabor
Deputh Clerk
Publish: October 24. 31. Nov
ember 7.14.1M9

0EK-I1I

*

18.83
8m 441

Msm r
•Durabt* marvm«da t«par
•Padded cooar
•Ooodyaar Waft Conetrucbon
•01 Waalatant aoN
•Mans a im evt-13
* Rag 1847

1 3 .9 6
Sale Date: Nov. 7 thru Nov. 10
3653 Orlando Dr., Sanford
OPEN: 9 AM-9 PM Mon.-S4t., 10 AM4 PM Sun.

KSMNMM^OUCy—• omm
ternyi

-

•* f

�U -Iv u rtm HwaM, toM fd, FI.

T O urt** Nav. M9M

FLORDA
IN BRIEF
Romanian Sailor Goto
Political Asylum In U . 5.
MIAMI (UPI) — The Immigration and Naturalization
Service granted political asylum today for a Romanian
sailor who walked into the service's Jacksonville. Fla.,
office and asked to remain In this country.
The asylum for Stefan Vemea. *38. of Constanta.
Komanla. as granted by Perry Rivklnd. Miami district
director for the INS.
"Th e action was taken through normal asylum claim
procedures and after a positive advisor)* opinion from the
department of stale which found that Mr. Vemea had
established a well'founded fear of persecution." said
George Waldroup. deputy district director for the INS.
Waldroup would neither confirm nor deny a report that
Vemea was being taken from Jacksonville to Miami.

Shuttlo Filers: M ora Research
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — The five shuttle astronauts
who underwent a variety of tests In orbit to see how they
adapted to the absence of gravity now face two more weeks
of tests to sec how they readjust to It on Earth.
Bonnie Dunbar. Gulon Bluford. Ernst Mcsscrschmid.
Rctuhurd Furrer and Wubbo Ockels were whisked away to
the doctor's office as soon as Challenger landed at Edwards
Air Force Base. Calif.. Wednesday from Its weeklong West
German spare research mission.

...L a n d

at 6 p.m. Tuesday with an
attorney representing Pauluccl.
According to C ity Manager

C ontinued from page 1A
on-line." Heathrow spokesman
Jim Tills said todav.
Payment for the site of this
new plant will cither be effected
through existing water and
sewer account revenues or a
bank loan. C o u n t y A d ­
ministrator Ken Hooper said.
Commission Chairman Bob
Sturm said today although the
county has yet to hire consulting
and design engineers, prelimi­
nary studies have indicated (he
plant could be on-line by 1987
with a capacity to process up to
10-million gallons of effluent a
dav.
The commissioners adopted
the contract at 2 a.in., after they
had u lt im a t e ly a p p ro v e d
expanding the Tuseawtlla-Dcer
Run treatment plant despite the
resounding resident protest that
prereeded the decision. In op­
position to the Yankee Lake
purchase was Commissioner
Barbara Christensen, who said
the measure "should be done
through a Joint effort with the
city of Sanford."
A ccording to S tu rm , the
purchase proposal was finalized

Frank Faison, one hour prior to
this a hand delivered letter
informed him Sanford's offer
had been refused.
The city was also told on Sept.
2 1 It would have to wait 30 days
for a response to Its offer. Faison
said.
"The Pauluccl representatives
told us they needed time to
conduct their own appraisal of
the property."
The letter received by Faison
Tuesday said in part "It Is in our
best interest to proceed with a
side to Seminole County." It was
signed by P a u lu c cl re p re ­
sentative and Heathrow Presi­
dent Roger Soderstrom.
Through the contract's stipul a t l o n s . i n a d d i t i o n to
Heathrow's having a 300.000
"substitute" sewer capacity to
accommodate the closing of Us
PUD sewer, the development will
also receive "g u aran te e d resene" sendee. During a period
not to exceed 20 years of the
plants' commencing operation.
3.5-mitlion gallons of dally ca­
pacity will be designated to
Heathrow’ "on an Incremental
basis."

asked me to step in again as
Interim city adm inistrator."
"I've been through all the
C o ttlf liH from p o f • 1A
storm s and knew enough about
Two m onths later Terry re­ t h e c i t y t o m a k e s o m e
signed and went back to being headway." he said. "I've learned
city clerk. Manning was again a lot. My patience Is shorter and
named city administrator but my skin Is thicker as a result.
this time he asked to continue to One of my shortcomings Is that 1
run the police depan ment. as don't have enough patience to
chief. He said if It came to deal with the long term pro­
choosing between the positions, blems that I have to as an
he would choose police chief.
administrator."

...M a n n in g

He said he will stay on In the
city administrator position for as
long as It takes for the com­
mission to find a qualified re­
placement. but he said he'
e x p e c ts Is s h o u ld be a c ­
complished within 90 days.
"1 would like to see them start
the process." Manning said.
"W ith all of the experiences of
the past year. I feel the com­
mission has learned a lot nnd
when they sit down imd sturt
Interviewing applicants, they'll
have a better knowledge of what
to ask and the type of person the
city needs as an ad in Inst rat or."
Manning said he feels some of
the criticism aimed at him in his
dual role can't help but fall on
the police department, hurting
morulr and affreting the de­
partment foru long lime.
"M y main concern Is the police
department." he said. "I would
have preferred to concentrate on
running that department, but I
have been w’ith the city long
enough not to refuse when they

Smcrllson said If It Is neces­
sary to replace Manning nothing
should be done about naming a
new city ad m in istrato r until
after the Dec. 5 election.
Commissioner Ju n e Lormann
said. "Greg doesn't want the Job.
He. hasn't officially dqne any­
thing. but he has mentioned to
me as an individual. He stepped
right in and worked with the
engineer and commission and
kept us apprised of what was
Manning said before leaving going on. T like his way of
on h is m l n l -v a c a t l o n he handling the city, he doesn't try
expressed his feelings Informally to hide anything."

and In d ivid u a lly w ith each
commissioner.
Mayor Harvey Smcrllson said
earlier thatno action will be
taken concerning any possible
resignation or finding a replace­
ment until It is formally pres­
ented.
Smcrllson said Manning told
him "'ll (resignation) would be
In the best Interest of the city
and everybody concerned. I
would be better off in police
work.'"
"I told him to think It over and
then we'd talk about It. "
Smcrllson added. "I think Greg
is doing an outstanding job
considering the length of lime
and his experience."
"I'd like to go back and review
the resumes we received the last
time and see if they are still
available and then run one
advertisem ent lo c a lly ." he
stated.

The contract also stales this quired by the stale to do this. Wc
treated effluent will bo pumped signed an agreement to get out
back to Heathrow for disposal nr (dumping Into) Lake Monroe
through a piping system that und we thought we were on our
"Sem inole County w ill con­ way." she said.
struct. operate and maintain at
Regarding the commissioners'
Its own expense."
action. Mayor Smith said sho Is
According to Slurm. Sanford "v e ry , very sad and disap­
and Lake Mary can nlso utilize pointed they did this. They went
the treatment facility, although right ahead and never said a
"they would have to arrange for word to us."
their own disposal."
According to Sturm, during
lhe county's efforts to obtain the
Faison called tills statement silt*, " a l l o u r d is c u s s io n
"false on Its face" because "our addressed a regional m in idisposal site was supposed In be plant." which he said "would
what's now their plant site."
offer service to Sanford and Lake
Faison declined to discuss how Mary." in addition lo northwest
the county's move will affect Seminole County. He added,
S a n fo rd 's state m an da ted however. "I don't know If this
wastewater management pro­ was ever relayed to them direct­
gram. Including lilt* stale grant ly."
already received by the city to
Faison and Smith both say ll
purchase its effluent disposal wasn't, although "th e y had
site.
plenty of opportunity." accord­
ing to the mayor.
Sanford Mayor Betlye Smith
said Monday the Yankee Lake
Faison also said the -other
parcel "Is the only site in our aspects of Sanford's wastewater
area that has the size and soil management project "w ill con­
type wc need" for the spray tinue to move forward."
irrigation system. Today shr
"W e’ve still got u program to
said "we don't know what we’re conduct." he said.
Although
going to do."
now Its u considerably more
"Th e problem Is we’re re­ complicated one."

GEORGE KOZLOW

Ba 1d w in • F a irc h iId F u n e ra l
1Ionic. Forest Citv.
PAUL WEXLER
Mr Paul Wexler. 67. 610
Parkwood A ve., A ltam onte
Springs died Wednesday at
Florida Hospital Orlando. Born
in New York City, on July 30.
1918. he moved to Altamonte
Springs from Brooklyn. N.Y.. in
1972. He was a owner and
operator ol an automotive parts
store .md a member of Con­
gregation Ohcv Shalom. He was
a member ol Jewish War Veter­
ans
Survivors: wile. Bernice: sons.
Allen. Lakeland. Larry. Alta­
monte Springs; ‘brothers. Carl.
Brooklyn. Leo. Queens. N.Y.:
sisiers, Betty. Sophie Lerner.
both of Queens; one grand­
daughter.
Beth Shalom-Goldstein Memo­
rial Chapel. Orlando.
JAM ES E. VALENTINE
Mr. James E. Valentine, 68,
338 Longwood Ave.. Altamonte
Springs, died Monday at Florida
Hospital Orlando. Born in Fort
Gaines. Ga.. on June 2. 1917. he
moved to Altamonte Springs
from there in 1947. He was a
retired laborer and a Protestant.
No survivors.
Marvin C. Zanders Funeral
Home. Apopka
BETTY ALONA SADLER
Mrs. Betty Alonu Sadler. 61,
450 Marth Hlvd.. Forest City,
died W ed ne sd ay at So uth
Flowers Hernt With Love

(Collins
323-1204

Continued from page 1A

• I’eler Kilburn. librarian ut
the Am erican U niversity of
Beirut, kidnapped Nov. 30.
1984.
t
• Father Lawrence Jcnco.
Roman C a th o lic priest and.
Beirut director of U.S.-based'
Catholic Relief services aid orga­
nization. klduap|H'd January H.
1985.
* |
• Terry Anderson. Associated,
Press Middle East Bureau chief,
kidnapped March 16, 1985.
• D a v id J a c o b s e n , a d ­
m in 1si rati vc director of the
American University Hospital,
kidnapped May 28. 1985.
,
• Thomas Sutherland. Dean
nf the Agriculture department of:
the Am erican U niversity of
Beirut, kidnapped .June 9. 1985

The Islamic Jlhud. which has
claimed responsibility for the
kidnapping of eight Americans
since March 1984. had de­
m anded the release of 17
Moslems held in Kuwaiti Jails for
the release of the hostages.
The 17 arc accused of carrying
out bombing attacks against
American and French Interests
in Kuwait in December 1983.
The United States has publicly
refused lo negotiate with I In*
kidnappers, ami the telephone
caller today did mil elaborate on
flic alleged indirect negotiations.
Islamic Jihad — believed lo be
holding five American hostages
— released Jeremy Levin, the
Beirut office manager ol Cubic
News Network, earlier Ibis year
C o n tin u ed from page I A
and freed the Rev. Benjamin reported. Holt refused Ireutmcut
Weir Sept. 14.
and went home where lie was
In October, the terror group later found unconscious.
said it killed U.S. Embassy
A c c o rd in g lo G a ra y , the
official William Buckley, ab­ -symptoms of Holts Injury mimic
ducted In west Beirut In March the symptoms of being drunk,
1984. The group released a which muy have caused his
blurred photograph ol what It In ju ry to go u n n n ile r d .
I
claimed was Buckley's body, but
Jellls was arrested al 4:30.
Ills corpse lias not been found
p.m. Wednesday al the Sanford
T h e A m erica ns still held poliee station. He is seheduled It)
appear in cntirl Nov. 25.
hostage In Lebanon are:

...B r a in

SOUVENIR PACKAG E
Seminole Community Hospital.
Longwood. Born in Hawaii, on
August 24. 1924. she moved to
Forest City from Miami in 1984.
She was a registered nurse and a
member of Church of the A n­
nunciation.
Survivors: husband. Samuel
YanDvck: daughters. Theodora
W e b b . Fo re st C it y . B e tty
H u g h e s . O p a -L o c k a . N ora
Humph Woodstock. Ga.. Brenda
Perez. Brandon: son. Van D..
Imperial Beach. Calif.: brothers.
John Davis, Virginia Beach. Va..
Joseph Davis. New Castle. Ruth
B u rris . D e la w a re . B e rn ic e
Crissman. Orlando; 14 grand­
children: one great-grandchild.
Ba Id w in -F a irc h ild F uneral
Home. Forest City.

A TIME T O REMEMBER

CHARLIE G. McWATTERS
Mr. Charlie Grayer McWatlers.
67. of 1051 Vihlen Road. San­
ford. died Wednesday. Nov. 6.
1985. He was born in Sanford
March 31. 1918 and was a
lifelong resident. He was a com­
mercial fisherman and attended
the Free Methodist C hurch.
Sanford.
Survivors include his wife.
Charlotte; two sons. Thomas
McWatlers. Fort Lauderdale and
Charles McWatlers. Sanford:
daughter. Sarah Presley. San­
ford; brother. Alfred McWatlers.
DcLand: 12 grandchildren: four
great-grandchildren.
G ra m k o w F u n e ra l Hom e.
Sanford. Is In charge of ar­
rangements.

The ideal w ay to remember your friends
and the evenfs in 1985.

ONLY *5°;

•ach

TH IS P A C K A G E IN C L U D E S
□ 7 Issues of the EVENING HERALD
7. Photos and stories

MAIL OR BRING COUPON TO:

McWATTERS, CHARLIE C.

Evening Herald

—G raveiid* funeral services for Charlie
McWetters. 47, of 10JI Vihlen Rood. Sanford
who died Wednesday, will be held at J p m
Friday *t Laka M ery Cemetery with the Rev
Ceriton Scarborough officiating Those who
wish mey make memorial contributions in
M r McWetter's memory to the American
Center Society or the Kidney Foundetion
Friends may cell at the Gramkow Funeral
Home this evening from i f pm . Gramkow
Funeral Home. Sanford, in charge

□ A special Golden Age tabloid

□ Each d a y’s results
□ Rules, details and schedules

Funeral Notice

3 0 0 N. FRENCH A V I.
P.O. BOX 1657
SANFORD, FL 32772-1657

I
I

| NAME
I

I
I

S O U V E N IR P A C K A G E
ADDRESS

I CITY
j z , r _

STATE

_

I

—

I
I

_

I
I

—

I

I
“
I
j ENCLOSED AM OUNT
— I
I □ Yes, I have enclosed $ 5 .0 0 per souvenir I
I
I
package.
j tf OF PACKAGES

MAILED ANYWHERE WITHIN
THE U.S. OR CANADA

S lW J t f t T
S T .r L\

...H ostages

While acting administrator the?
first time. Manning received the
same sahiry us Chaccy had.
* 3 4 ,2 9 0 . T e r r y w a s pa id
*35.000 while he held the post.
Manning's sulnry as police chief
was *30.400 plus *800 incentive
pay.
;
After Chaccy's resignation the
commission conducted a three
month search for a replacement.’
saying they wanted a pro­
fessional with sufficient educa­
tional and employment back­
g ro u n d . T h e y received 63'
applications and weeded out all
but two. who they Interviewed In'
person. The chose William T .
Pow ers, assistant c ity a d ­
ministrator and finance director
for the city of Perry. They offered
Powers *35.000. but contract
negotiations feel through when
the c o m m is s io n balked ut
Powers' demand for *40.000,
with a *5,000 pay raise In nine'
months. Terry, who had not
applied for the job. was then
asked to serve as c ity ad­
ministrator
1

G O LD EN A G E G AM ES

AREA DEATHS
Mr. George Kozlnw. 55. 312
Feather Place. Longwood. died
Tuesday at home. Born in
Chicago, on December 8. 1929.
he moved to Longwood from
Laurel. Md.. in 19H4. He was a
computer engineer. He was a
Army veteran.
Survivors: wife. Elko, daugh­
ters. Catherine. Washington.
D.C Donna. Tampa. Jennifer.
Altamonte Springs: mother. Mrs.
Luba Xepshu. Largo.

Commissioner Larry Goldberg,
who has been u staunch sup­
porter of Manning and was
instrumental In getting him
named acting city administrator,
said Manning has done an "out*
standlngjob."
C o m m is s io n e r E d M ye rs
said."Nothing has been *dis­
cussed. but I hud anticipated the
commission would evaluate the
situation in January. Greg didn't
want the job In the first place, he
doesn’t have time to do both Jobs
and he would lose too much by
moving off the police force. Ills
pension for Instance."
"I think he did u good Job.
Bringing in professional people
(the city engineer, the land
planner nnd the finance director)
was a big help."
After appointing Manning clly
administrator the second time,
the commission raised his sala­
ry. Manning told the commission

that they should know by Oct. 1
whether he was doing the Job
satisfactorily and decide whether
to make the arrangem ent per­
manent. For doing the double
duty. Manning has been receiv­
ing an annual salary of *36,000
— more than either of the twot
previous administrators.Because Manning Is doing two
jobs this figure represents half of
each salary.
4

EXPIRES 11-80-85

L

J

�SPORTS

*

R id e n o u r H opes ‘S a n fo rd C o n n e ctio n ' C licks Fo r Scots
l» « e la l to th e Herald
Any success that the Daytona
Beach C o m m u n ity College’s
basketball team has this season
m ay greatly depend on Its
"Sanford Connection."
Th e "Sanford Connection"
consists of Fred Miller. Willie
Mitchell and Darryl Mcrthle.
three former high school stand­
outs from this area who will all
be taking Jump shots this season
for Coach Ray Ridenour's DBCC
S c o t s . A n d a c c o r d i n g to
Ridenour, all three wltl play
major roles with the team.
Seminole Community College

coach Bill Payne said he was
interested In the trio but all three
Indicated a preference to get
away from Sanford to play, so
they opted for Daytona Beach.
As Treshmcn last season. Mill­
er. a graduate of Lake Mary
High, and Mitchell, a graduate of
Seminole High, both played key
be n ch ro le s as the S c o ts
advanced to the Junior college
state tourney for the first time In
the school's history. They were
eliminated in the semifinals.
With four of the Scots starting
players having graduated from
last season's team, both Miller
and Mitchell will now move Into

from him.
' ' F r e d d i e can really
penetrate." Ridenour said. "He
Is probaly the best pcnctrator I
starting positions as sopho­ have ever been around. Last
mores.
season he played very well for us
Mcrthle. who graduated from coming off the bench. I can’t
Lake Mary last year. Is heading wait to sec him play this year."
Into his freshman season for the
Miller said he has not had any
Scots. Ridenour said although problem making the transition
Mcrthle may not start, coming from coming off the bench last
off the bench he will still see as year to a starling role this
m uch p la y in g tim e as the season.
starters.
"It has been pretty easy mak­
Miller, an exciting 6-1 point ing the transition.” he said. "I
guard, will run the show for the haven't had any problem with it.
Scots as point guard. Ridenour
Miller said that along with
said he is expecting good things* running the show for the Scots.

Basketball

Ridenour Is also looking to him
for leadership.
"Coach (Ridenour) is depend­
ing on me to play the key role
and be a leader this year.” Miller
said. "It's a lot of pressure but I
did It In high school so I'm
confident I can do it again."
At 6-3, Mitchell w ill play
center for the Scots. As a backup
forward last season, he was the
Scots* second leading rcboundcr.
"Willie is our security guard."
Ridenour said. "H e Is one of the
damndest rebounders I've ever
seen for not having that much

&gt; N lC O T t .P i|« 9 A

H a w ks Jell,
O u st Tribe
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports W riter

Just before Seminole’s Sheri
Peterson served to open the
match. Lake Howell coach Jo
Luciano told her team, "Okay,
let’s get out of here in two."
It wasn’t that Luciano wanted
to go catch the Macnell-Lchrer
Report or something, she Just
felt that the Lady Hawks were
ready to go for the opening
round of the 4 A -9 D istrict
Tournament at Lyman High.
After trailing. 8-7, in the
opening game, Lake Howell took
charge and went on to nutscorc
the Lady Scmlnoles. 23-3. the
rest of the way cn mute to u
415-8, 15*3 victory.
I*akc Howell moves into to­
night’s 6 p.m. semifinal against
top-seeded D c L u n d . w h ic h
fought off underdog Mainland.
16-14. 15-3. In the other semifi­
nal. at 7:30, second-seeded
Lyman takes on third-seeded
Spruce Creek.
"I thought we could win it in
two." Luciano said. "Th e team
is beginning to Jell.”
Seminole took an early 3-1
lead in th e ft rut g a m e b u t L ake

Howell ran off five points on
Mary Kay Scott's serve for a 5-3
lead. Seminole tied it at 5-5 and
the teams then traded points
until the Lady Tribe hud an 8-7
lead.
Lake Howell regained the
serve on a spike by Scott and
Anita Cechowski then riddled
the Seminole defense witli her
serve. Cechowskl's serve ac­
counted for seven straight points
as the Lady Hawks built a 14-8
lead. Four of the serves were not
.returned and one was an ace.
Tw o Illegal hits and two net fouls
hurt the Scmlnoles on the rally.
Cindy Hogan's spike fended off
game point for Lake Howell, but
a Seminole missed serve gave it
right back to the Hawks and
they closed out the first game on
Scott’s serve.
Seminole seemed us if it would
get the serve back when Jackie
Farr unloaded a devastating
spike. Hut Lake Howell's Denise
Efstathion made an excellent
play to dig it out. Not only did
she dig It out. but Efstathion got
the pass to setter Cechowski
who set up Jolee Johnson for a
spike that provided the 15th
point of the first game.
E fstu th lo n 's dig nut only
enabled Lake Howell to gel the
winning point of the first game,
but it demoralized the Lady
Scmlnoles. Seminole couldn't
regain Its composure In the
second game as Lake Howell
rolled.
Johnson served the first five

Lyman
Bumps
Patriots

Volleyball

By Chris Fister
Herald Sports Writer

points of the second game, one
an ace. The closest Seminote
could get after that was6-3.
The Lady Hawks took an 8*3
leud on Cechowskl's serve with
Christy Tlb b itls' block of a
Seminole dink loading the way.
Luke Howell made it 11-3 on
Jaudon Jonas' serve and 12-3 on
the serve of Tam m y Lewis. A
spike by Scott returned the serve
to the Hawks and Michelle Arana
served the last three points.
Johnson’s spike highlighted the
(Inal Luke Howell rally.
"I felt we had a little better
attack when we went from
defense to offense," Luciano
said. "Th e transition was pretty
good."
Along with Cechowskl's serv­
ing und setting, senior coeuptalns Scott and Johnson
played well at the net. Lewis and
Efstulhlon were outstanding in
the back row. Tibbitts also
turned in un excellent perfor­
mance Including a number of
saves of balls that looked almost
Impossible to return. "Chrslty
(1 Ib b llts) had un excellent
match." Luciano said.

Lym an’s Lady Greyhounds
lived up to their "bump. set.
destroy." motto In the first game
against Lake Brantley Wednes­
day night with a 15-5 victory.
Lyman let down a bit In the
second g a m e th o u g h and
Brantley rallied fora 15-12 win.
N either team could take
command early In game three
and both were looking for some­
one to Ignite them. With Lyman
holding a 4-1 lead. Tam l Foss
provided that spark for the Lady
Greyhounds.
Not known for her serving
prowess In the past. Foss served
11 straight points, seven of
w hich w eren’t returned, as
Lyman claimed a 15-1 victory
over the upset-minded Lady
Patriots in the 4A-9 District
Tournament at Lyman High.
Lyman advances to tonight’s
semifinals against Spruce Creek.
The match starts at 7:30. Spruce
Creek advanced with a 15-9.
15-11 victory over Lake Mary.
Lake Howell and DeLand square

off In the first semifinal match.

DELAND STAVES OFFBUCS
After rolling to an early 10-2
lead. IX-Land's Lady Bulldogs
may have been thinking of the
road ahead instead of watching
out for the oncoming Mainland
Lady Hues.
Mainland bounced back to
take a 14-12 lead In the first
game before DcLand got back on
track to pull out a 16-14 win.
The Lady Bulldogs, two time
defending district champions,
went on to win the second game.
15-3. to advunce to tonight's
scminflnats.
In ltie opening game Patty
Corr served six straight points to
give DcLand the early advan­
tage. The Lady Bulldogs then hit
a dry spell and Mainland got
back in the match. With DcLand
holding a 12-10 lead. Raychell
Williams served four straight
points foru 14-12 Mainland lead.
DcLand regained the serve and
pulled w ith in 14-13 before
Mainland got it back. Mary
Aman’s hit kept the Hues from
closing out the game and DeLand got the serve ljack.
Mainland seemed like it would
get lite serve back on an errant
DcLand pass, but Kathy Wychc
ran it down and pul Just enough
on her bump to enable it to hit
the net and bounce untouched
past Mainland's defense. That
play seemed to fire up the Lady

H«r«ld Photo by Tommy Vtncont

Seminole's Jackie Farr uses a soft touch to
bump over a Lake Howell serve in district
Bulldogs and Tainy Martin went
on to serve the final two points of
the first game.
In game two. with DcLand

h o ld in g
McDowell
points for
Five of the

volleyball action Wednesday. Cindy Hogan
backs her up. Seminole lost to Lake Howell.

a 3-1 le a d . L o r i
served nine straight
a 12-1 DcLand lead,
nine points came on

Mainland illegal lilts,
C.C. Hayden later served two
points for a 14-3 leadand Wyche
served the final point.

Politowicz: Make Your M ove By Football Field
Once again, the 4A-5 District Cross
Country Championships will be held at
Trinity Preparatory School. Trinity Prep
Is one of the fastest courses in the
Central Florida area and the season Is
nearing the point of peak performances
so Saturday morning's meet promises to
be a good one.
For an accurate assessment of the
Trinity course, this reporter contacted
The one person who knows It belter titan
anyone else — Adrienne Politowicz.
Politowicz. a senior at Trinity Prep, has
been practicing und competing on the
course since she was In seventh grade.
Here Is a runner's-rye view of the
T r i n i t y P rep co u rse c o u rte s y of
Politowicz:
"You start out on a grassy field, then
stay on the grass and run alongside the
baseball field. Then you hit the road and
run on the road for about 100 feet. Then,
you’re back on the grass and follow it
around by the football field. You cross
over a road, come up In front of the
school, and then run on cement. Then
you're back on the grass and you come
back to the start for the second loop."
"It seems that's where people try to
make It up If they've fallen behind, on

Fred Miller, left, Derryl
Merthie ere two players from
Sanford coach Ray Ridenour
Is counting on this year.

'

Chris
Fister
SPORTS
WRITER

the start of the second lime around."
continued Politowicz. "i think the best
place to make your move would be by
the football field. That’s where people
start falling back."
"It's not a real flat course." added the
senior standout. "It's kind of uneven,
grassy, and has pits and stuff — not real
big ones — that you have to look out for.
When it gets wet. It’s a lot slower. The
way the grass Is. there's a lot of mud and
you kind of sink In it."
"It's a good' spectator course, too."
Politowicz said. "Th e facilities are not
big enough and all. but I'd rather have
state at Trinity than DeLand."
Politowicz said her times seem to

always be good at Trinity but that she
doesn't consider It her favorite course.
Among the ones she has run on that she
likes best is Boone.
The DeLand Airport course, the sight
of this year’s state meet. Is not one of
Politowicz' favorites.
*T really do n’t like the DeLand
course." site said. "You have to con­
centrate a lot more on It. You can't gel a
steady stride going either. It takes like
five strides and then you Jump over a
bole or go through a gully. It's a lot
harder to keep a good steady rate going
and It tires you out even more."
n tt m
Politowicz. who blazed to a time of
11:27 in winning the Individual title at
the Saints Invitational last weekend, said
site isn’t sure what meet she will run in
this weekend but that there Is a
possibility she will run In an A AU
qualifying meet.
The Lady Saints district meet will be
held at Trinity Prep next weekend (Nov.
16). In 1A districts, the tup two teams
and lop five Individuals qualify for state.
Politowicz will be the Individual favorite
along with Keswick Christian's Jennl

Soles.
"Th e quality of my races haven't been
that good recently." Politowicz said.
"But I was real pleased with my time last
week. I hope to keep getting better. I
think I can still go under 11 (preseason
goal). 1haven’t given upon it."
Lakeland Christian is the team favorite
in the district.
The district meet will also mark the
last time a classy young lady named
Adrienne Politowicz will run on her
home course.

Frid a y: Lady
Raider Outlook
Seminole Community College's
Lady Raiders open their
basketball season Friday night ;
at home against Brunswick
(Ga.) College. See Friday's
Evening Herald for the outlook
on coach llena Gallagher's
girls.

"Ta m l (Foss) was having a
little problem serving about
midseason." Lyman coach Jerri
Kelly said. "It's not that she was
never effective, but we had other
girls who were serving well. And
we like to use whatever is
working. Tonight, she did an
excellent Job.”
Lake Brantley got ofT to a slow
start in the first game as
Lyman's Dawn Boyesen served
five straight points to open the
match. Four of Boycscn's serves
weren't returned.
Brantley came back with four
straight on the strong serve of
Dawn Gebhart but a spike by
Foss stopped the rally. Lyman
then reeled off nine points before
the Lady Patriots scored again.
Kristie Kaiser, Donna Ball and
Boyesen served two points each
In that span.
Gebhart served a point to
make it 13-5 but a nicely placed
dink by Sheila Mandy gave it
back to Lym an and Mandy
served the last two points of the
game. Kim Forsyth's vicious
spike provided the final point.
Forsyth converted on four spikes
and one block in the game.
Lake Brantley came out fired
up In game two and it was
Gebhart's serve that got the
Patriots off to a good start.
G ebh art, o n ly a freshm an,
served four straight to open the
second game.
Lyman came back with five
straight for a 5-4 lead before
G?bhart came around to serve
two more for a 6-5 Brantley lead.
The Patriots regained the serve
on a Lyman net foul and Lynda
Abraham then had the best
sendee string of the match for
Brantley. Abraham served five
straight points as the Lady
Patriots took an 11-5 lead. Three
of the points came on Lyman
missed spikes while two came on
spikes by Glgl Griffin.
The Lady Greyhounds came
back to within one point. 13-12.
late In the game, but Gebhart
came back to serve the last two
points for a 15-12 Brantley win.
forcing a third and deciding
game.
"After the first game. I think
the girls let the game get out of
their minds.” Kelly said. "Its
very hard to lake a tournament
like this one game at a time. The
girls may have been looking
ahead."
Brantley won the coin toss for
the serve to open game three but
Gebhart hit her serve Into the
net. That was a bad omen for the
Lady Patriots who missed the
serve three of the four limes they
had it In the third game.
Lyman took a 4-0 lead with

Boo DISTRICT. Pag* 9 A

�V

.

,

&lt;

^

. &gt;

» % ■* «

•

t

■ •

4

*

M - I v t u l n i H w * M , to w fw d , F I.

|

t

•&gt;

*

'‘

ft •

■

&gt;

* » *

»

|

H

i

i

«.

*

* .....«

•- *** i

’n m n d s y , N o v. 7, tffts

SCOREBOARD

SPORTS
HMBREF
Tum or Clubs 2 Hom o Runs
A s 7RC M oves Into Top Spot
Rodney Turner clubbed two homers and a double and
drove In four runs Wednesday night as the Tim Raines
Connection moved Into first place In the Sanford Men’s
Softball Fall League with a thrcc-Innlng. 21-0 rout of
Thorne Land Clearing at Plnchurst Field.
TR C . which now stands at 14-2 and leads Session Well
Drilling (13-21 by one half game, scored seven runs In each
of the three innings while Thorne Land Clearing was
blanked on Just one hit.
Lloyd Wall’s two-run homer and Turner’s solo shot
highlighted the first Inning while Turner hammered a
tw o-run shot In the second and Burnett " S lim ”
Washington slugged a two-run homer In the third.
In other action Wednesday. Sunniland upended Cardi­
nal. 12-5. on the strength of an eight-run third inning and
Geyser Systems pointed out 11 homers to bomb McKee
Development. 24-4.
The big hits for Sunniland In the eight-run third Included
Gee Knight's two-run triple and RBI singles by Nick Mcrgo.
Chris Frank and Kelvin Riggins.

For Geyser System s. Ray Mack cracked three hom ers
while Jeff Brake. Mike Tim m ons and Marvin W hite each
hit two homers. Mark Dowell and Ted Miller added solo
shots.

Team Europo Loads By 1 Stroko
KAPALUA. Hawaii (UPI) — Team Europe holds a
one-stroke lead over the United S tates entering today’s
second rou n d of th e 9 7 5 0 ,0 0 0 N issan C up World
Cham pionship of Golf and it is Interesting to note how they
got there.
B ernhard Longer of West G erm any, captain of the
European six-man team went on the offensive to rout
Jap an 9-3. while his American counterpart Raymond Floyd
played defense to tu rn back the Australia-New Zealand
combine 8-4 W ednesday.
Both w inning team s gained an additional 10 bonus
points for totals of 19 for Europe and 18 for the United
States.
Playing under an overcast sky with barely a b ree/e over
llie normally windy 6.879-yard Kapalua Bay Course on the
Island of Maui. Lunger lined him self in the anchor position
and checked In with a 5-under-par 67.

Soviets Glum Despite Gold
MONTREAL (UPI) — The trium phant sm iles audiences
grew accustom ed to seeing during the Olympic gym nastics
competition were absent when the m en’s World C ham pi­
onship m edals were handed out W ednesday night
The victorious Soviet Union gym nasts were glum
because they felt they should have scored better, and the
silver-medalist Chinese were disappointed their brilliant
display of optional routines Wednesday night had not been
enough for them to successfully defend their 1983 title.
The East G erm ans w eren’t too thrilled with winning the
bronze cither.
But their disappointm ents paled when com pared to that
of the United States' rebuilding 1984 Olympic gold medal
team. Forced by Injury to com pete a m an short, the squad
fumbled and fell Us way through its usually strong optional
routines and finished ninth.

Men's Tennis Approves Test
LONDON (UPI) — Professional m en’s tennis players will
be tested for illegal drug use next year at two of the sport’s
live m ajor to u rn a m e n ts u n d er a rule unanim ously
approved W ednesday by the Men’s International Pro­
fessional Tennis Council.
Jo h n McEnroe, the world's No. 2-ranked player, playing
at th&lt;- Stockholm (Sweden) Open, voiced his support for the
ruling, saying. "D rugs w on’t help your tennis."
The new policy voted by the nine-m em ber council, which
represents the International Tennis Federation, tourna­
ment organizers and players, requires m andatory testing of
players as well as m em bers of the council and its
employees.
The testing will seek traces of cocaine, heroin or
am phetam ines, the MIPTC said

Bird Settles O ut O f Court
BOSTON (UPI) — Celtics su p erstar Larry Bird lias agreed
to an out-of-court settlem ent stem m ing from a barroom
melee that allegedly took place shortly before Ins shooting
slum p during last season's NBA playoffs.
Term s of the confidential settlem ent, reached in principle
late last m onth and finalized Monday, were not made
public.
Lawyers lor Bird, the man he i s accused ol punching,
and tlte unidentified woman who was reportedly the focus
ol the brawl all described the settlem ent a s "am icable.”
The tight in and around C helsea’s Bar near Boston’s
Quincy Market reportedly look place May 16. when the
Celtics were battling for tin- NBA s Eastern Conlerenee
Cham pionship.

Rams Will Start Kemp A t QB
ANAHEIM. Calll. (UPI) — Los Angeles Ram s coach Jo h n
Robinson announced W ednesday that Jeff Kemp will start
at quarterback this w eekend against the New York Giants.
Robinson chose Kemp, last y ear's starter, over Steve
Dils. Dieter Brock is out for at least a week after undergoing
surgery to remove a kidney stone.
"It m attered that Jeff has started before here and played
against this team (the Giants) twice last year." Robinson
said. "We feel he’ll do a good jo b .”

TV/RADIO
TNwtAit NfMt TV/R*8Ml#*rh
TttatiM*
AUTOMOM
Sin- -£)PN SCCAS.omV**!
fOOTtAU
tp» - ESPN Co*3* So" Jen S'iNv
Lo-*3Bi*£"S'*1* III
coir
20&lt;r - ESPN Nmo*C,pAo*8 C"«-"p
cm*so*Go:t S»cO"d'0v"d
Mild
I* I" - USA So-wo1»J*1* 5*0*
. 01 *3"e*
POAt MOATRACING
' Do* - USA Apoet OHS*a*t
C*0';«"dt
MW
TALK
•91i* - AtiSAV (ToO&gt; Sea'S To*
*t*C-’ it®***fl.iw

JAI ALAI

)¥mfl
440
omi un . pan mii. T am w n.
DO111)HIM

7/TONIGHT

'C *r o o I'O.-WWI
2df*4 F|*J*

Volleyball: V arsity — D istrict
4A-9 T o a m a a e a t a t Lyasaa High

union*

4Ed.ordoAnfoi

6 p.m. — Lake Howell vs. DeLand
7:30 p.m. — Lyman vs. Spruce Creek

ODD 11(11) IMM

A-l 411.W-DIM*

Football: Junior varsity
7 p.m. — Seminoleat Titusville
7 p.m. — New Smryna Beach at Lake Mary

FOOTBALL

8/FR1DAY

Stmaat* AniotwC**4*f*M*
T|4W

«

Football: Varalty
8 p.m. — Lake Mary at Lake Brantley
8 p.m. — Lyman at Lake Howell
8 p.m. — Oviedo at Cocoa Beach

)
?
ft*

1
0

Football: Sem inole

D iiratcTU )
«

1113**24

:*8(*n«

ja teo
sx rjo i.':
•Oto
*•» m
I lo.il
3C
0 lie MU P ail 1)121 T 0 All
’ mu ooiiimum
IrRfimt
i.*i.i*-i*
u*a ill 1*3
JP-j O**
IK JK

DISTRICT)**
?44D
L**4 MU'!
•

IttsEdii
2S30 UK 443
C.-j.j
S43 4)3
T0u'O"J0» dl.8
i»
01)1141X P||]I4)W Til) TIS3I 40
7TA341224
1 Go oV»*d
1320 443 1 *3
10u’»*33&lt; d’ •.-Co
4X )W
IGeret’dl To-41
1 43
01)11)203 PI) 11*413. TIt)IIII*H
tn|om«
1G***r CfI*£4*'l
'lit 24X 443
: C-J-: J .’.C
443 343
4C4tSjf04#'.|
4 20
011112*20 Pit 21*2)3 TIt 24140323
•n|iin*
’S’&lt;4 v«"d
IK ’]40 )«
4EC2W&gt;OA'to
4» IX
10u'4*fO&lt;dlocl
463
014214023:PI24I41II T041I40330
1WI(41*14
Ec-«.j :.C
14) 1) 40 343
lGC*01'S4ji"4
13® 14)
'3m*0*t-84
4K
0ll il3140 P;t41 111)) 2(142)3)413
IIIN|4I224
3Rm»-*3»
143 443 443
)Cit”0L4C4
9X tK
iD.*i*30*SVt’S
4*3
0 341)9DC P :• '« » 2.344! 14443
Pit 4II ) 1 1 ' 31) 4*I 04834443 !4f*tC.»r
))•43) 33
1I22l|*«24
) *4.-*t4
1) 40 2)|0 1,3
3Gc-oi-vi
IR IS

ff
2
7
1

Basketball: Junior College
7: p.m. — Brunswick at SCC Women

i 01
i -

]
\

Spf.cf Crtf*
CkLJfld
DISTRICT)*)

j
3
1
A «i O 4*9* --------------------1.4*4 0'4*1'*4

l
0

SOFTBALL

S**4t*8Mmi Fill bflNill ll4fM
Tiim
Am Lott
Ti"2R**MCon**t’on
ti )
S«tl 0*4*fUDrill."f
I) )
G*»i«6j*Vm"i
II )
Vf»i«O*it0p-«-2'
I I
2*0*"* L**dClt**i*3

B'4*"B42tfiEl»tl't
Su"f»lA"d
Card*d'i"d.C’ n

T**M**tO****i
No G*"2|l SC4du4d
Wt#tl4*T'tC*nH
No G4*"tl SCidu'iO
TAwrMtT'lGdm*
A c* -14- D li'M * 3* '

4 IS

4 It
) 11
) 14

AfRotiRir'irtwirt
St"* *"d’). CA'd.nUS
Ca*"«' 0")1 Thcr-wlmdCi**"32
GditrSfCrilli Vf«**D*.4Cfl-m- I
AWdfcr'irtWttt
L4*d"4"3 T*of"»LrdCf4")i|
Co*"t£'o" IJ GtiirnSrit"! U
AM6»D»,4O0*"m' ’S)."" **d4

MISL
MAJOR INDOOR SOCCER LEAGUE
tut
M
r i fit GB
V **614-4
l : xc
84•-4*4
2 ' M* '3
Dii is
1 1 vx 1
1 t sx 1
3"ie-,'3*
C*£4(0
3 t xc t‘»
Cfv6l*4
3 2 XC 2
fits*
M"H1 C-*
1 31M S’ L4.I
2 1 sT —
‘4* 06(0
*—
2 1M
1t W
’« * l
fl 1
A£- '4
3 1 300 » J
: 2 XC *
.41 4*3*41

Dm»** 3' L A Lm **i " JM

A'i4"'4l'Go'dmS'4*i nj*'
St*"'* A' Por'’J"d n(*t
NATIONAL NOtMT LIA0UI

NATIONAL lASMTIALL ASSOC
(i)tttii Ci)t)r4*ci

*tU«l« DniUM

80V0"

P"on.i») Sat'd" "'3*2
Sd"Aftfdnd P"'Wd4!p"A":J*t
D*'re.l»tW«" ng*onrtiflftt

NHL

NBA

O

no

One HU P14II 1)194: T14) 114433)
Mlfont
i Go'or
ISit *K )30
IJnwi
sol ix
tJ.Sitl
SK
aiKUIN.PIIlinM; THi II 1)1&gt;•
in(on*
jnci rj-'ooo
i *t 4a j m
.3 coiE 0'10
JJO IK
't : 0'doA-do
443
0 II1) 1141. Pill) MM Til 11114**3.
001)4111II HIM

7:30 p.m. — Faculty vs. Alumni

J
7
1
l
0

«Aeo-deA'co
'iX ’ii *J5
IPtotni
400 Ta
sPe.vo;.-*ri
i at
OI3IIS433 PilJliJSC Til) &gt;1)1143

41*341224

*40

011) 1» Mi PIM I 14) 44. T il 1411H 4*.

turn

Al Orla**Scnmoit
•WtttirwM

sCfjA-j*j

12X 140 )N
I! 00 )43

A L Ptt 01
i 1 40C—
4 ) )!1 1
) ) « *'t
) 4 U) 31
9 4 30C 41

N*« )4f1*f
^ tat 0**
Am*"Co*
N»» To'*
Crtlrtl Dnrt**
V *4.*f*
) 3 214 Dttroi
) ) 214 C*C4J0
) J «c It
*I14*'3
) 4 4* )
C&gt;,44*8
) 4 8) 11
1 4 230 )
1*84*4
WtlSraC«*Nrti2t4
Mml OutUM
N L Ptt 01
D**,**
) 31203 HStlW
4 3 ti' I'l
U*4*
) ) DC ] ■
)4* A"*0*c
) 4 4.2* )
04 41
) ) 400 )
1 ) 2K ) 1
$4£'4*&gt;4**0
FitilitOhihm
) 0t000 LA C PPf'l
• 1 100 1
L* LMtrl
Fqrt!4*8
) 2 224 1
) J U3 ) 1
Go8m S'in
1 J :« 4
P*om.i
3 S XV )
W«8n«l4461RlWltl
p*,;#j* pfi.l ’0) 1*8 4**42
S4* A * 2o*;Ol' * 4V* *3-9*10

0*2*011)3C*£490'S
P0*"4"8!'l OHM
A2'4** j 1
11p*0m&lt;i 104
Gc8m S-42* 10) Wo"* -O'
2N**i0461Conti
C" £4(3•'N*Aj**1*4 2300*&gt;
V: »4,te6J' Nf» 24*4 2300*2
LAC100**14-H0.I-C" » X0*2
04 M 4'D«",6*4X) *2
LAl4&gt;6*ll' U'** 1Be*2
C*.*4*8*' S*£*4Tm-0 '0X0Fri84llC4262*1

M ill) C3*l3rt*c*

N L T PS. OP 0*
19 ] 0 n )i 34
P" 43*0*4
*4l**3'0"
2 ) ) 14 14 |4
NV It 4"0*M
9 4 1 il 49 it
NT Ri*j4n
4 4 9 •) 4) *
Nt« Jtfn*
) 4 1 it 43 42
P'22Mur}l2
1 2 ) • 44 )4
AGM4IDnitiM
ijtOK
• ) 1 i* )2 41
isi’an
9 ) 1 12 H 31
8.1144
2 ) 1 i) 44 14
214*210•»
• 4 9 13 M )•
Mjnlrfl
) 4 3 it )4 40
042*0*411CinNftfKt
Ntrrii Ditim*
» L T PS OP 0*
S' tout
4 ) ) s 32 4)
C*(49a
4 2 1 • U )2
1 **41424
) 4 ) • W )t
042*0'
) 1 ) 2 n ’3
20*4*1*0
1 II 9 3 •j )2
Utijtht CktiM*
Ed-*0*-0n
10 3 1 ;i 4) 42
Cl 34*t
2 ) 1 i) it 41
V4"(C,.f*
4 ) ) 14 14 It
• 4 1 1) )2 M
»*' P*8
Lm *"3*4»
3 10 1 2 &gt;1 2)
1Rf8ii*i8461RrMltt
8.2*4021*m0431
NTIii4"8n) To*o*'3I
P22'i*8*'0*2i*l NrR4"9r*i3
C*3**&gt;1PintJt*66il
A4i*"(tanI 4,ii)t,r)i 1
0626324S' LouS3
Va*2*»*l3W-ni'il
EJn-on'on4LotAn(*M4
2Ni*104t 104-2261
*'4'M
a63jtB4i,an 13)0*t
C*£*30 *' p- *&gt;p** 2]j
FiiOUt'i G*-&gt;*m
S' Lx i**8.22*0*(■’
N*fll-V't*’A— 063 *3*'
p "it . 'J * i&gt;2*6* £4*1*1 " 3*2
Ta*o""04*D*2*52*&gt;3*2
V**£4u.t* 4’ E0—4* ’C*: *3*'

Hate Mail Brings Laughs
From Sisk After Surgery
A prescript inn?
Now who in iin- world would be sending him
one in the mail? Doug Sisk couldn't understand
it. He w asn't sick His pitching maybe, lint not
him.
The M ils’ right-handed reliever studied the
letter dial cam e with the prescription Ii ottered
him speellie directions.
"T ake one capsule of cyanide and two Tylenol
d a ily .'v ills an o n y m o u s good S am arium in ­
structed Sisk, leaving the obvious consequences
in liis Imagination.
Sisk rem em bers another poison pen letter
am ong the m m m iaiu oi hate mail he got during
tile I a s i half of 15)84 and the first half of last
s e a s o n when he couldn't get anybody out.
This one showed some solicitude. About the
com pany lie was keeping in the Mels’ bullpen.
"Stay away from Roger McDowell." the letter
writer ordered. "1 don't want you screwing him
up. too.”
Sisk laughed over those letters from his home
m Tacoma. Wash.. W ednesday. He had jusl come
Irom a rem arkable and exciting experience, lie
and his father were playing catch in his backyard
W hat's so exciting aboiii that? You'd be excited
a l s o ii they bad done surgery on your elbow only
a lew weeks ago and ii everything that happened
to Doug Sisk in tin- pasi |H m onths happened to
you
Tin- Mels’ '28-ycar nld siukerhallcr cam e out of
ilx chute like &lt;i jackrahhit al the start ol 15)84
l ’util m id-July, his ERA was O.it'J T hen lie ran
Into 2. case ol n-intiniiis and could hardly help al
all win-u the Mi ls were trying toealeli the Clths.
Mis right shoulder still bothered him at the
beginning of ibis year but he tried to pitch
anyway and tliai s when those "I hale von. I hale
you" letters cam e pouring in. The fans al Shea
Stadium got on bun so loudly and regularly, lie
knew what was com ing beforehand.
oK. guys, hold your ears.” he’d w arn some of
the other Mels before heading to tin- m ound from
tiie bullpen "I was pitching lousy but I didn't
need for the fans to stuff it down my throat. I fell
badly enough as it was. I was trying ”
Inexplicably. Sisk turned everything around
Irom Aug. 23 to Sept. 12. relieving in six gam es
without giving tip a run In 10 innings. The
following day. Sept. 13 in Montreal, the pain in
it is right shoulder and arm becam e almost
unbearable. Exam ination disclosed bone chips in
Ins elbow.

They were removed in New York on Sept. 23.
not even seven w eeks ago. and the doctors
originally told him it would be anyw here from six
to eight m onths — m onths, m ind you — before he
could seriously think of doing m uch pitching
again.
Now you can u n d erstan d why h e ’s that excited
over those catches he has been having xvitIi his
l.itlter.
II you w ould’ve asked me three weeks ago.
hell. I'd have told you I’d never pitch again." Sisk
said. "Now I'd say by the end of December. 1
■■4ioul&lt;l be throw ing pretty good.
"I'm j u s t lobbing ihc ball, but the swelling lias
gone down and I in not having any problem at all.
I can 't believe ii. I should be right there well
before the spring."
A couple of other big reasons also are m aking
him happy. On tlte 22nd of tills m onth, h e's
m arrying Lisa Miehaelson and lie lias gotten an
unexpected wedding present already. When he
got back luime at the end of the season, he was
inlornied his boat, an Inbourd-outboard 19-footer,
was gone. Hut it w as found and h e ’s got it back
now.
Over the past two seasons, the Mets have won a
total of 188 games, more than any other club in
the National League, yet they finished three
gam es behind the Cardinals in their division this
year and 0 1i behind the Cubs last year.
Dave Joh n so n says had Sisk not come up with
Ills shoulder and elbow problem s, the Mets
w ould’ve won both times. Jo h n so n isn’t holding
Sisk responsible and Sisk realizes that. But he
hates hearing it. anyw ay.
"W e played great for two years.” he says. The
other teams played better. Too bad we weren't In
the American League West."
Doug Sisk Just went and made himself some
brand new pen pals in Kansas City.

Mullin's Memorable Debut Deflates SuperSonics
U nited P re ss In te rn a tio n a l
Purvis Short and C hris Mullin signed
W arriors' co n tracts In the afternoon, and
itie SuperSonics' death certificate at
night.
Mullin, Golden S tale’s top draft pick,
made his NBA debut m em orable, bitting
a baseline Jum per will) 19 seconds
rem aining to cap a 15-point perform ance
and lift Golden S tate to a 105-101 victory
over Seattle.
The end of S h o rt’s holdout over a
contract dispute received less attention
liian Mullin s signing, but lust season's
fourth-leading scorer in th e league pro­
ved his im portance to th e W arriors by
scoring 10 or his 24 points In the fourth
quarter.

N B A Roundup
"It felt like there was great relic! m the
locker room before tin- gam e." Short
said. "Thai level of confidence never
existed Iasi year."
With a 1-5 record entering lIn- game
and two key players m aking their initial
ap p earan ces ol the year, there was
reason for optim ism . Ultimately, liusim plichy of outstanding laleni showed.
"It was simple basketball tonight, just
pass and cu t." Short said.
That style suited Mullin just line. The
6-foot-6 form er St. J o h n 's star earned
All-America statu s with a precision Jum|)

shot, not flashy moves. The winning
basket was perfect illustration.
"I was Just trying to set a pick for
Purvis, and I fell down." Mullin said.
"Then I found myself open In the corner,
sc1 1look the shot.”
Simple. Wonderfully simple Tor Golden
Suite-. Painfully simple for Seattle, which
lias losl four of six games t Ills season.
Xavier McDaniel. Seattle’s lop draft
pick, had 25 (joints, and A! Wood added
24. Wood committed a costly traveling
violation wilt) 10 seconds remaining anel
Seattle down by 3 points.
"I'm Jusl glad it’s over and glad I got
my feet wet," said Mullin. who added 2
rebounds and 1 assist In 24 minutes. "I
didn't know the plays, and my game

really hinges on out-thinking the op­
position. and I really couldn't do that a
lot tonight because I was unacquainted
with the offense."
In other games. Portland nipped Dallas
111-109. Detroit smothered Chicago.
1 2 2 - 1 0 5 . Sun A n t o n i o edged
W a s h in g to n . 8 1-80. P h ila d e lp h ia
whipped Indiana 105-97. and Atlanta
defeated Phoenix. 114-106.

P is to n s 122, B u lls 105
At Pontiac. Mich.. Isiah Thomas scored
16 points and Earl Curclon added 13
during a fourth-quarter surge to rally the
Pistons. Detroit overcame a 17-potnl
third-quarter deficit In winning its third
in ii row. The loss was Chicago’s third
straight.

I

UPI: Cox
Is Top
Manager
NEW YORK (UPI) - Bobby
Cox assumes his new Job as
general manager of the Atlanta
Braves knowing he left his man­
agerial career In style.
Cox. who led the Toronto Blue
Jays to the A L Eust title and the
club’s first pennant of any kind.
Wednesday was named Am eri­
can League Manager of the Year
b y the B a s e b a ll W r i t e r s '
Association of America.
Cox tends to agree with Detroit
Tigers manager Sparky A n ­
derson. who believes a manager
has never directly affected the
outcome of a game.
"Lots of times, a manager Is
managing a last-place team or
near-to-lasl-place team and he’s
one of the best managers in
baseball." Cox said. "Without
pluyers and u staff, a manager
doesn't mean a whole lot."
Without a top-flight manager,
however, talent can go u n ­
utilized. and personalities can
conflict w ith perform ances.
Cox’s strength us a manager was
his ability to communicate with
his players and get the most out
of his bench.
He left the Blue Jays as the
most successful manager In the
club's history, posting a fouryear mark of 355-302. Under
Cox. the Blue Jays won more
games (99) than any team in the
A L this season.
Picked as a preseason favorite
for the division title, the Blue
Jays took over first place on May
20 and held It the rest of the
way. They fought off a late surge
by New York to win by two
games.
"We knew the heat was on."
Cox said. "A nd having a great
spring made it even harder, but
we Just put it out of our minds
and did the Job."
Cox. who resigned after the
Blue Jays lost to the Kansas City
Royals In the A L playoffs to
become Braves general manag­
er. was thr only manager named
on all the ballots eust by the 26
voting members — two writers
from each A L city.
Tlte 44-year-old manager re­
ceived 16 first-place votes and
104 points to beat Kansas C ity’s
Dick How sc r for the award.
Howscr. finishing second for the
second straight year, picked up
4 first place votes and 63 points.
Ironically. Bowser's club de­
feated Cox's in the playoffs and
went on to win the World Series.
However, all votes had to be in
before the start of postseason
competition.
"I'm thrilled lo death, and
deeply honored.” Cox said. " I ’m
not Just saying this, hul without
the players and staff we had this
year It w ouldn't have been
possible."
Each writer was asked to
name three managers In order of
preference and points were
awarded on a 5-3-1 basis.
Gene Mauch of the California
Angels finished third in the
voting with 8 first-place votes
and 57 points. Billy Martin of the
New York Yankees was fourth
with 19 points and Jackie Moore
of the Oakland A's was fifth with
4 points.
To ny LaKussu of the Chicago
White Sox and John McNamara
of the Boston Red Sox each
received l point.
A former major-league inflelder. Cox became manager of
the Blue Jays in 1982 after four
seasons us m anager of the
Braves. In his first season with
Toronto he led the club to its
best season to that point 178-84)
and posted winning records the
next three seasons.
Bowser, who won Ills second
straight division title, lost by a
point to Detroit's Sparky A n ­
derson In last year’s Manager of
tlie Year balloting.

SMITH HAS SURGERY
H O U S T O N (U P I) — T h e
Houston A stros an no un ce d
Wednesday that pitcher Dave
Sm ith underwent successful
arthroscopic surgery on his right
knee and Is recovering at home.
A team spokeswoman said the
surgery was performed Tuesday
In Los Angeles.
D r. F r a n k J o b e , who
performed the surgery, said
Smith should be able to begin
running within the next three '
weeks and resume his off-season
training program.
"He left the hospital today
(1 uesday) and will recover at
home." Jobe said.
Smith, who lives In Del Mar.
Calif., led the Astros relievers
with 27 saves last season.
BOYESEN. SHEETS LYMAN
Darren Uoyescn and Ricky
Sheets, two Lyman High School
football players, were in corrcclly listed as playing for Lake
Mary among the prep football
leaders In Wednesday’s Evcntntf
Herald.
Boyesc n is u junior running
nuck and quarterback while
Sheets Is a Junior defensive end
and cornerback.

•
•
.
•

�‘ I

* '

f

Evtnlnf HtraM
, Sanford, FI.

#*

•

Hwnii y, W
w. 1, 1V
M
—
f*

Marino Questionable For Jets
M I A M I (UP1) Miami
quarterback Dan Marino, hob­
bled with a thigh bruise and was
listed as questionable for Sun­
day's game with the New York
Jets, said his leg Is Improving
daily.
M arino, who suffered the
bruise In last Sunday's 17-13
loss at riew England, threw
some early In practice, although
he was not In pads. Marino said
after practice his leg fell all right.
"It felt pretty good." he said,
"ltrclt all right."
C o a c h D o n S h u la s a id
Marino's leg was Improved since
Tuesday.
“ He was throwing the ball all
right," Shula said. "It was much

Football
Improved."
While Marino was out of pads,
w ide re c e iv e r M ark D u p e r
practiced in pads for the first
time In several weeks. Duper Is
trying to come off Injured re­
serve with a hamstring tendon
injury and ran much better in
practice.
"Duper worked prcltv hard."
Shula said. “ We’ll sec’ how he
feels (Thursday). It was the first
time In a long time in pads for
him. I don't think he really tried
to turn It loose."

COLTS SION McOREGOR
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - The
Indianapolis Colts signed Kell
McGregor and put tight end Tim
S h crw ln on Injured reserve
Wednesday.
S h c rw ln underw ent knee
surgery to repair a partial liga­
ment tear suffered Sunday
against the New York Jets.
McGregor, a fourth-round pick
for Denver last spring, was
signed as a free agent. The
Broncos waived the 6-6. 250pound McGregor three weeks
Into the regular season.
M c G re g o r played college
football at Colorado State.
The Colts also waived tight

end Paul Bcrgmann from the
reserve list. Bcrgmann. from
UCLA, was the team's first pick
In the 1984 supplemental draft
for players In the USFL and the
Canadian Football League. He
played with several USFL teams.

49E R 8 WAIVE LEONARD
REDWOOD C IT Y . Calif. (UPI)
— The San Francisco 49crs.
looking to beer up their ailing
defensive line, waived backup
center Jim Leonard Wednesday
and activated defensive lineman
John Harty.
Leonard anchored the of­
fensive line for the U.S. Football
League's Oakland Invaders last
season.

DeLand Slips Past Semi notes, 54-53
By Chuck Burgess
Special to the Herald

H tn M I

Daytona Beach coach Ray Ridenour makes a point while
Willie Mitchell, rear, listens.

...Scots
Continued from 7A
bright nr Jumping ability. Hr Is a
sure brl In get Ills sbarr of
rebounds every night
M ertbir Is a 6-0 shooting
guard. Kldrnour said the play or
Merlhie has been a pleasant
s u rp ris e . ‘ ‘ H r Is so m uch
stronger than I thought hr was
In high school,” Ridenour said of
Mrrthle. "and hr has really
Improved Ills shooting too.
"I don’t know how we tire
going to keep him out of the
lineup. If he doesn't start, he'll
probaly play 32 minutes (oT 40
minutes) a game."
Merthle said he Is happy with
Ills role.
"Even though I’m tint starting
I'm getting a lot of playing
lime." he said. "I have a lot of
time to play so 1 should he able
to work my way Into the starting
lineup.
Merthle added that since being
at DBCC he has found out that
there Isa big dllferenre In caliber
of play between the high school
and Junior college levels.
"Th e Junior college game Is a
lot. faster than In high school."
be sold.
Hldeuour said the Scots'
starting lineup would be Mitchell
at center. 6-4 sophomore Terry
Givens and 0*2 freshman Darryl
Harris at the forwards, along
with Miller at the point and 6-1
freshman l.evertls Williams at
the second guard.
Hldeuour said this team will
have great difficulty lu matching
last years 2H-4 record, hut hr
expects It to do well.

"We should be pretty quick,
hut without a true big man. we
are not going to be able to
rebound against the bigger
teams.” lu- said. "We'll win our
share of games, but no way In
the big game are we going to be
able to w in."
ik-sides a lack of size, the
45-second shot clock that the
M id -F lo rld n conference has
a d o p t e d ( a l o n g w i t h al l
N C A A -m c m b e r schools) this
season will also have a great
effect a g a i n s t t he S c o t s .
Ridenour said.
"It has hurt us a lot." he said.
"It seems like every year we arc
always smaller than the other
teams and because of this we
used to bring the ball out to
make their big men come out at
UH.

"Th is enabled us to be able to
do the things we do best. But
with the shot clock, we won't Ire
able to do that."
Miller said the Scots can have
a real good season, maybe even
us good us last year.
"We lost a lot of players from
last year, hut I think we still
have a lot of good athletes." he
said. "It Is going to all depend on
how bud we want It."
In the Mid-Florida Conference
race this season. R idenour
expects Seminole Community
College. Florida Ju n io r and
Santa Fe to have a good shot at
w i n n i n g t he ti tl e a n d an
automatic berth In the state
tournament.
"Yeah, they (SCC) should have
a good chance from what I know
about them." he said. "Florida
Junior College is there every
year. loo. and Santa Fe can't be
counted out because they have a
6-H guy In the middle."

...District
C ontinued from 7A
Hoyrsen and Moody serving one
point each and Kaiser serving
two. Forsyth slip|&gt;cd a dink past
three blockers to account for the
fourth point,
point. After Forsyth's
day at the net in the first
strong play
game. Hrantley put two. some­
times three blockers on her the
rest of the way.
"K im (Forsyth) was thinking a
lot at the net." Kelly said. “She
was dinking a lot Instead of
trying to cram It through the
blockers."
After Gridin served a point for
Brantley to make It 4-1. Foss
came on anti served out the
match.
One of Foss' serves was an ace
while Forsyth and Lori Helms
cuch had spikes and Hnyescn a
well-disguised dink.

CREEK DOWNS LADY RAMS
Jatke Mary staged an exciting
comeback Wednesday night but
the Lady Hams found that play­
ing catchup Is not the best way
to go as Spruce Creek claimed a
15-9. 15-11 victory.
In the opening game. Lake
Mary took an early 2-0 lead on
Betsy Perry's serve, but Spruce
Creek scored six straight on the
serve of Samantha Osterman.
The Creek went on to take a 12-6
lead before Angle Capps served
three straight to pull Lake Mary
within 12-9.
Spruce Creek regained the
serve though and Je n n ife r
Gaddis served the last three
points of the first game. Tyrlna
Mack's spike highlighted the

LADY LIONS ADVANCE
In District 3A-6 volleyball play
Wednesday. Kim Verne's serv­
ing paved the way for Oviedo's
Lady Lions to move into the
championship game as Oviedo
trounced St. Cloud. 15-0. and
15-9. at Kissimmee Osceola High
School.
Oviedo takes on Osceola to­
night at 6:30 for the district title
at 6:30. Osceola drubbed Jones.
15-6 and 15-11 in Tuesday's
other semifinal game.

S w im m in g

"It was the closest loss I've ever had In
coaching swimming."
Those were Donalyn Knight's, head swim
coach of the Sanford Seminole swim team,
after the 'Nolcs boys' team lost a hard
fought meet. 54-53. against Dcland at
Deland.
"It was a hard loss because we were
without Jay Adcock." Knight said. "Th e
water was real cold and Jay (Adcock) had an
asthma attack."
Although Adcock wasn't feeling up to par.
Seminole sophomore Jaime Bojanowskl was
feeling excellent.
Bojanowskl flew to victory in the 100
butterfly with a time of 1:01.7 and added
another triumph in the IOO breast In 1:09.9.
Bojanowskl also teamed with freshmen
Scott Lewis. Matt Chock and Junior Kirby

Swinehart to post a second place finish In
the 200 medley relay with a clocking of
2.09.6.
"I moved some events around because the
water was so cold." Knight said. “ I put
Jaime (Bojanowskl) In the 100 fly and Kirby
(Swinehart) In the 200 I.M. Instead of their
usual events."
Also swimming to wins in the boys' meet
was Swinehart In the 100 back. 1:13.2 ami
Lewis in the lOOfrec, 1:04.9.
Taking second places included senior
John Dubois (200 free 2:34 and 500 free
7:05). Scott Lewis 1100 hack 1:16.7). Chock
(50 free 29.6) and Swinehart (200 individual
medley 2:37).
The girls' meet wasn't as close and didn't

Foculty, Alumni To Collide
T h e o ld gr eat s and the
not-so-old greats — and even
some not-so-great old und young
— will be on display Friday night
when the third annual Seminole
High Faculty-Alum ni football
game will be pluved. Kickoff Is
7:30.
Football will be of the flag
v a r I e I y but t he ac t i on Is
nonetheless diminished when
these two rivals go at it. The
faculty won the first battle two

years ago but the ulumnl came
back lust year to post a win.
"Th e y were lucky to win the
first one." Alum ni coach Brent
Carll said earlier this week. "We
will re-establish our superiority
again this year."
Carll. who Is sidelined with an
injury. Is banks on cx-Scmlnoles
Tim Haines. Mike Good. Clifford
Mar t i n. Ni c k B ra d y . M ark
Whlgham and Rodney Turner to
make the difference.

YMIRSHF
AUMN
IN m Im

B u y tires the ea sy way...wifJT
The Perform ance G

B

b

w

b

m

i

m

I

T iHousehold Finance gives you a line

nf credit (mm WOOD to 1150.000, or more based on the
equity in your home.

In w i I I n i A

iv llw themwhenever
want access to your line of credit. Make them out just like
you would regular checks, for purchases, to pay bills,
whatever. The amount vou wnte iv the amount'you borrow
against your line nf credit.

BFGoodrich
Steel Belted Radiol
Lifesaver XLM*

Every payment you make replenishes your line of credit.
So. you have fundi to use again and again. Interest is
charged only on the amount you actually borrow.

ATA

AS LOWAS

(

lltt
R111/MRI1

OU«
PHICI

LPERMONTH*
FORASET
0F4TIRES

MONTHLY
paym ent

SET OF 4
ll.M

It.M

L P IU / M Itl)

« .«

l«.M

H

Rivi/iimr
s| n u /» R ii

lif t

ll.M

M.fS

i).te

J n u m n ii

tin

ll.M

M il

DM

• u

Jm u*.
Act now for the introductory rate of only 4.5 annual
percentage rate. Then, beginning January. 14W*. inter­
est will be computed monthly at ihe low annual per­
centage rale of three points user the prime rate as
quoted in 7fce Witt Sirvct JmtmiL There’s no points.
And no ptepasmenl penalty. A one-time l*»an partici­
pation fee and siamtard closing costs are charged when j
the loan is completed.

L tt M k ra *

. „

A O K
MOM

SSS
rally.
The Creek assumed command
early in game two as Osterman
served three straight points with
a dink and spike by Mack
leading the way. Th e Lady
Hawks eventually took leads of
8-1 and 14-4 before the Lady
Hums came alive.
Michele Cistaro came off the
bench to serve four straight for
the Lady Hums to trim the lead
to 14-8. Anqucnctte Whack's
d in k led the way . Wh a c k
whacked a spike to the floor to
return the serve th'’ Rams and
Capps served three straight to
make It 14-11. Nance Morgan's
hit returned it to Spruce Creek
though und Osterman came
back to serve the final point.
"I almost thought we had It."
Lake Mary coach Cindy Henry
said of the comeback. "But Its
hard to rally all the way when
the other team has 14 points. If
It was 13 or 12 we might have
done It."
Spruce Creek now advances to
the semifinals and a rematch
with Lym un . Earlier in the
season. Spruce Creek snapped
L y m a n 's 12-m alch w in n in g
streak.

have as many first places as the boys:
however. Knight was still Impressed with
the team's performance.
One Lady Swimlnole who will be In the
mood to swim fast In the district meet is
freshman Stasl Bojanowskl.
Bojanowskl destroyed the field In the 200
free finishing In 2:15.0 und followed up with
another conquest in the 100 fly where she
touched lu at 1:12.1.
Not only did Bojanowskl do exceptionally
well as an individual against the Bulldogs,
but she also contributed a leg of the
Seminolcs’ winning 200 medley relay team
of Junior Kristy Keeling, and seniors LcAnne
Sundval! and Shawna Cole. The relay
churned in at 2:27.0.
Scoring second place points included Cole
(200 I.M. 3:02). Keeling (50 free 29.6) and
freshman Ahhy Whitehead (100 breast
1:34).

T IR E M A R T
ru t

M V 10

SA '

-

I) I 1 MO O M

322-7480
Ills

IH h lN

l.l

in

s A M OHO

SI 1M
U T .H J I
SUM. I M

S

.1 Easy Ways To Reach l!s:
1. Use the hands coupon below.
2. Or call, or come in to sour
nearest HFC office. We have
new cMended hours.
3. Or call us toll-free 24 h«&gt;urv:
I-MNJ-62I-5554.

1667 8. US 17-92
937 W
. SR436
(Unit A Water Sports Ctr.)
IK-Marl Shopping Ctr.l
3/10 Mile North of Dog Track Rd.
2 Miles West of 1-4
Longwood
Altamonte Springe
698-0991
863-8489

SCUBA INVENTORY e

REDUCTION

i l F

SALE

JACKET BC W
IT
HMTIATM.......................................#119#l
ADVANCE DESIGN V E S T ........................ *22900
ALL DIVE KNIVES...............20-50% OFF
W ETSUIT rAMEBJOMI.............................................
W
IT
HJA
C
K
E
TAK
IRI FAM
*139”
SHERWOOD R EG ULATO R ........................ *119”
DIVING EQUIP. B A G S ................... . 2 0 % OFF
PRESSURE DEPTH GAUGE
COMBO W ITH CO M P A S S ........................ *105”
COMPLETE TANK SPECIAL

ctMSTWAs T

im J S k

Orman W

4.$149#5&lt;

LIFETIME AIR!
NO IN T E R E S T -

LAYAW AY 'T IL CHRISTMAS
NO SER VICE CHARGE - CALL FOR D E T A IL S

FALL SPECIAL SCUBA CLASS
MWCUSHtMV.4AN0V.lt
UMftt IPA
C
IS- E
M
O
L
LK
A
A
L
V

$ 1 Q tl
AV

Write my own homeowner loan?!

| Great idea! Tell me more.

Name
Addrew
City
Mail to:

State
Household Finance
Zavre Plata
M&gt;t Orlando Drive. Sanford, FL 32771

The best time to call me wtxild b e :-------- —-------My telephone number is (

I ------------------

Zip.

'
;
•

�HA-lwwinj HtraM
. Sanffd, FI.

SCflUTTS***®

Thursday, Nov. 7, im

|

“ffi" I
In white and co
tors. 12 oz. net
weight.

Entrance LOCK SET

Privacy LOCK SET
In antique brass finish
No TYLO 200TX3.

With deadlocking latch. A n
tique brass finish.
No TYLO 400TX3.

In antique brass finish.
No. TYLO 300TX3.

o r W e 'll g iv e y o u

Anybody's Ad Price

• N o H assle! ' 4-Piece FIRE TOOL SETS
Includes shovel.
poker, brush,
and stand
IV
Black
No BL510
RtS. 9.95

The Hearthstar Model " A ” factory-built heat
circulating fireplace system has a 3 3 " opening
and cast iron fuel grate Noi slocked at all stores Check

j

M
a

with you* local Scotly s store for availability

Antique brass finish
No. AB615.

KENCO CHEMICAL

DURACELL
Alkaline OATTERIES
C . D ' and
(single pack)

A A ' (twin pack) or 9-volt

Rid-A-Bug®
Home INSECT
KILLER
SPRAY

KEYHOLOIR
Brass No. 33 5 5 4

Merry
Christmas
KEYHOLOIR

PICTURE FRAME

« *j.

$ d 5 9

Small DOOR
KNOCKER

its m

Brass No. 3 3 2 0 2

P ro fe ssio n a lM
Powerlock*
TAPE RULE
1" x 2 5 ’. auto blade return
and blade locking knob
No 3 3 -4 2 5 S M PL425

GENERAL 0

A«f. 7 .4 7

8 " x 10" Brass
No 33528

Brass. No. 33 3 5 6

iout Choice:

Premixed, with spray­
er. K ills ro a c h e s,
an ts and other in ­
door pests. No. 912.
Gallon.

SWANS
Pair Brass No 33169

R if 9.88

While Quantity Last

ELECTRIC

Silicone II SEALANT
In clear, brown or pamtable white 10 3
fl oz r»

Green Synthetic Turf
CARPET
#
6’ and 12* widths

p 1

BICYCLES

R tf. 3.49
4 0 -Piece
Includes flexible
ratchet with 17
sockets, wrenches,
pliers and more
handy tools
No STI-8102A

----------

Boy’s 20 ” B M X , No 5 3 6 0 or girl’s 2 0 " high
rise, No. 5231.

Y«w Choke
In green or cocoa with
one da isy design
1 lV i" x 23Vi"
Vinyl, molded on 3outlet
connector,
18AW G , 2 wire In
white or brown

Built-in inner foam cushion
No-wax wearlayer. No adhe­
sives needed!
12’ width.

Yoitf C h o k e:

M a n ’s 2 6 " 10-speed racer. No 6 4 7 0 or
lady's 2 6 " 10 speed racer, No 6571

Cordless
SCREWDRIVER
Includes screwdriver,
charger,
bit and
charger stand
No 2305 02/2000

OPEN

ORANGE CITY

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

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

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254

OPEN

SANFORD
700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

�I

PEOPLE

Ivmiint HtraM
, tanfacd, FI.

Double Ring Rites Unite
Lisa Greene, R.F. Temple

W inner: Ufflo Miss
Cover G irl U .Sk .A .

Lisa Dale Greene of Austin.
Texas, and Robert Frank Temple
of Washington. D.C.. were mar­
ried at 6 p.m . Sept. 28 at
Covenant Presbyterian Church.
Austin. Th e Rev. Jam es S.
Boclens was the officiating
clergyman for the candlelight
and double ring ceremony.

Roxanne Erica Hirt, •-month-old daughter
of Terry and Robert Hirt of Osteen was
crowned Little Miss Cover Girl U.S.A., for
her age division, birth through 11 months, at
a pageant held at the DeLand Woman's
Club, DeLand. The petite beauty queen will
go on to compete for the national title on
June 21-33, 1986 in a pageant at Fort Walton
Beach. Roxanne Is the maternal grand­
daughter of Juanita Wright, Orange City,
and Rrances and Robert Hirt Sr. of Osteen.
Her paternal grandmothers are Wilma
Clark and Mae Smith, both of Osteen.

The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack I. Greene.
1242 Royal Oak Drive. Winter
Springs. The bridegroom is the
son of Lt. Col and Mrs. Charles
E. Temple Jr.. 534 E. Mariposa
Way. Santa Maria, Calif.

'No' Better Than 'M aybe'
To Man Looking For Date
DEAR ABBYt Your answer to
'’Often Stuck" was all wet. She
wanted to know how to avoid
giving her phone number to a
man In whom she wasn't inter­
ested. and you told her to take
his number Instead and say
she'll call him when she has
some free time.
Why is It so hard for women to
say no? I have had women give
me their phone number after
I've usked for it only to find them
surprised when I call, and then I
get turned down.
Women have told me that
they’re afraid of hurting a man's
feelings by refusing to give hlmc
their phone number. Believe me.
straightforward .honesty would
be refreshing after putting up
with some of the games people
play with each other.
STAN IN INDIANAPOLIS
DEAR STANt If a woman is
absolutely, positively not inter­
ested In the m an. ' t hen a
straight-forw ard rejection is
probably kinder than giving him
false hope.
But since It’s a woman's pre­
rogative to change her mind. It's
smart to ask the man for his
number In-cause the man in
whom she had no interest In
may might look belter to her in
November (after a long, dry
summer).

DEAR ABBY: I'm not happy
with my marriage and I want
out. but my husband Isn't the

Thandoy, Nov. 1.1

Dear
Abby

another.
No woman (or man) should
live with a mate who dishes out
verbal or physical abuse. I re­
commend family counseling for
you and your husband. If he
refuses to go with you. go alone.

DEAR ABBY:
type to let me go without a fight.
We've been married for 10 years
and have two children. I wasn't
quite 16 when I got married, and
he was 24. We fight all the time.
If we're not screaming and
yelling, we're hitting each other.
I don't like to fight In front of the
children, but I Just can't stand
there and take all his verbal
abuse, plus punching and slap­
ping.
Abby. Just one more thing.
There Is this man who really
cares for me and we think we
could be happy together If I were
free. I need to know how I can
leave my husband without get­
ting myseir. my children or my
boyfriend hurt. My husband can
I k - very mean If provoked.

RUNNING OUT OF TIME AND
COMMON SENSE
DEAR RUNNING: Yo u r
signature shows you to be a very
insightful woman. 1 don't know
whether your marriage went
sour because you found another
man. or you found another man
because your marriage went
sour, but don't chuck your
marriage in order In Jump into

I um a pastor who believes In a
lot of home visitation, and when
I go into a home I will inevitably
find the boob tube blaring. After
I've been seated for about three
minutes. I ask pleasantly. "May I
turn down the T V a wee bit?"
Usually they say. "Oh. Just shut
It off!" If they hesitate, or say.
"Well. I will turn It down Just a
little bit." then this Is a signal to
me that they are more Interested
In their "soap" than their salva­
tion. and in 15 minutes 1 am
gone.
And Incidentally. Abby, 1 don
not agree with you that people
are not socially obligated to turn
off the T V when someone drops
In unexpectedly. After all. is a
television program more priv
clous than friendship?

SOUTH CAROLINA PASTOR

Given in marriage by her
father, the radiant bride chose
for her vows a crisp white silk
organza Alfred Angelo Original
gown fashioned along a slim,
elegant silhouette. The low-cut
neckline was embellished with
delicate Vcnisc lace medallions
and tiny satin rosettes.
The
surplice bodice was enhanced
with full pouiTed sleeves worn
off-the-shouldcr. Her gently
(lowing semi-cathedral train,
edged in Venise lace, was
sprinkled with reembroidered
lace (lower motifs. A delicate
satin bow with rosette streamers
highlighted the back of tne
exquisite gown. A Juliet cap.
enriched with seed pearls and
iridescents. secured her laceedged chapel length soft tulle
veil and added blusher. The
bride's only Jewelry was a single
strand of pearls that belonged to
her late maternal grandmother.
She carried an arm bouquet of
long-stemmed pink roses. Alstic
lilies, slephanotis. pink orchid
lilies and trailing ivy showered
w i t h w h i t e k n o t t e d sat i n
streamers.
Jacqul Greene of Cincinnati.
Ohio, attended her sister as maid
of honor. She wore a pink gown
designed w ith a tiered, lace
neckline worn off-the-shouldcr.
The skirt was highlighted with
delicate lace insets and she wore
matching lace gloves. Th e honor
attendant carried an arm bou­
quet of long-stemmed pink roses
and wore a spray of baby’s
breath In her hair.
C a ro l G re e n e A s h e r, the
bride's sister, and Em ily Asher,
the bride's niece, both of West
P a l m B e a c h , w e r e the
hridiesmaids. Their gowns and
(lowers were Identical to the
honor attendant’s.

DEAR PASTOR: How impor­
tant u television program is to an
Charles E. Temple III of Sac­
individual Is a personal matter
that can be answered only by the ram ento. C a lif., served his
individual. I could be mistaken, brother as best man. Ushers
but I have always thought were Richard Temple, the bride­
healthy friendships are based on groom's brother, Sacramento,
mutual consideration, not ob­ and David Alcala. Austin.
ligation.
Im m ediately following the
wedding, the bride's parents
entertained at a buffet dinner at
Lost Creek Country Club in
Austin.
County in the Miss Florida
T h e b rid e g ro o m 's pa re n ts
Pageant in June. 1986.
Top prize in the Miss Seminole hosted the traditional rehearsal
County Pageant Is a $1,500 dinner at the Austin Club In
scholarship grant awarded by Austin.
the Chamber. In addition. Miss
After a wedding trip to points
Seminole County will receive
of interest in the central and
prizes and awards totaling more
eastern states, the newlyweds
than $5,000. Including a full
competition wardrobe and an are m a k in g th e ir home in
Wheaton. Md. The bridegroom is
all-expenses-pald trip to China.
employed as a government relaDeadline for application is
t i o n s r e p r e s e n t a t i v e by
Nov. 15. 1985. For further In­
J . C . P e n n e y C o . I n c in
formation. contact the Chamber
Washington. D.C.
offices at 834-440-1.

Mr. and Mrs. Robtrf Frank Tsmpls

!
I'

HOtlOAY SOUTIOUC
__ ,__

—

Friday. NosamOac ISIS

iDtOM-ifliA

MM

V i

l.sa

F.V* l.s.4

Ir-*-

&lt;V V « W r t V « » V V I V ,

‘E lizabeth's fa sh ion
'om er
Inventory Reduction
SALE1

50% O F F
FRI.. NOV. 8th G 9th

Miss Sem inole County Pageant O n
Applications for the 1986 Miss
Seminole County Scholarship
Pageant are now being accepted
by the Greater Seminole County
Chamber of Commerce, pageant
director Barbara Zander a n ­
nounced today.

Girls between the ages of 17
and 26 arc eligible to compete in
the pageant, scheduled Saturday
night, Ja n . 18. at the new
Altamonte Springs Hilton and
Towers. The winner of the pag­
eant will represent Seminole

GO FOR IT!

A FREE SOBIK’S SUB
1 2

3 ® 4 5 ® *

GO FOR THI
EXTRA POINT!

^

101-A W. 1st S t. &amp;
Comer of Park Avc.
Downtown Sanford
323-4366
Hours; M-Th. 12-3:30. Fri. 10-3:30
Sat. 10-4
MasterCard •VISA
WE MUST M A K E ROOMll

&amp;

\ ; i l l l i &lt; ;il i i | \ i i |
M ast * Even if you don't know port from
starboard, you’ll like the casual good looks of this
classic hotiter. A slip-on moc with a

For Your Entire
Season,
See The Festive
Fashions Ready
For You At . . .

slip resistant herringbone sole.

/ft

Hush Puppjes

TVtlillimeiMtiitlii

G ET YOUR GAM E C A R D
BUY SIX G ET THE 7th FREE

MAST-Available
In Brown

4 1 -W ..............................................3394971
U*eww*HRNw»434.................................................031-1913
............................... 730-1130

21122$ im t R at SL

M LFIntM .
•wMrtwa ImM

322-0204
,-Hm. AUL9-fcJS, Fri M

4 i l M ^ |k
OTHERDRESSES&amp;STYLESAVAILABLE
ALLRLEASEH
TLYPRICED!________

H
O
URS:
.-Than. S Sal. 9-3:30
Fri. 041

�%%.. ...

*r

2i —

BLONDIE
h i,w a s

Eveningi M tra W , S a n N rS , F t.

^ j~ p s q

-

ju u u »

7.

jjjl

H W A ig w

u

R J U - O F M u e C L ««_ W * W 4

algxAncmr

DlTHiRS

TR anday, W w .

M

M

n w r^ H

YMHf

•onrtS m!* rtfckfe

Myositis May Bo
Only Temporary

DEAR DR. GOTT — I was told
DEAR DR. O O T T - My
brother-in-law, 37. was recently 1 have • very rare disease that my life. What is this? Would
In an auto accident. While he they had seen in cats, but not in seeing another doctor help me?
was In the hospital, the doctor many human beings: chronic Will I have to live on IVs the rest
said he was going to treat him intestinal paeudo-obatructlon. It of my life?
DEAR READER — Although
for m yositis. My family has causes my colon to swell up like
11-7
never heard of that disease. Can a balloon, and when this hap­ In testinal pseudo-obstruction
you tell me w hat It is and if the pens, my colon does not func­ may be common to cats, it Is
tion. I'm very sick with this a lot rare In hum ans.
by
Mori
Wallttr
accident caused It?
BEETLE BAILEY
S e n d your questions to Dr.
DEAR READER - Myositis is _ of times and have real bad pain.
Gott
at P.O. Box 91428, Cleve­
I
have
had
six
operations
and
simply muscle Irritation. It could
AAAYBE SO M E O N E is
IT CAAAE WITH
land.
Ohio 44IO I.
WHAT IS
was
told
the
next
one
would
take
have caused by the traum a your
COMPUTER W ENT
THE L A ST
TH A T?
brother-in-law
experienced
dur*
ARM AM ENT
HAYWIRE
Ing the accident. 1 suggest you
Answer to Previous Puzzle
S H IP M E N T
I loking pit
ACROSS
wait and see how he feels in
I Equipment
□ □ d c
c c d
n n n n
several weeks before becoming
7 Sup
I 12, Roman
h
g
c
j
c
g
i
d
g
n n n n
alarm ed ab o u t his m yositis,
• Airport porter
4 PartrWfSMlt
which may be only a temporary, • I I, Roman
□ g c jg
C G in
n n n n
• Aid in diagnos­
ing (comp wd.)
condition.
12 Impuk
□ c c c n c n
n e m n n
10 Hank
DEAR DR. GOTT - I attended 12 Eskimo host
□GO DDG
I I Concerning (2
ywYs
a health fair recently. Blood was 14 •hskaiMia
b
d
g
G G G G n n n c in
wds.)
nwUWInV
taken for analysis. My report
□ □ D o n
n o
c o G c
11 Place for
I I Turkish tWo
showed high triglycerides (587) I I Daffy
unclaimed moil
□
c d c
n
c
n
n
c c o
and cholesterol (367). 1 am a 17 r
(abbr.)
n
c
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n n n
76-year-old female. 160 pounds. I■vI ifiasaaiw'wgiwwi
||i|taM«|Mi|ia| 21 Lending boot
THE BORN LOSER
ODD GOC
5 feet 8. a diabetic an d a
22 Nesds
Bfflw
□
c
c
c n
n n n n n c n
scratching
vegetarian.
Pm
puzzled
by
these
20
lonniosnd
IZ 2 A T S O *
TROUBLE 15THAT
24 Lag behind
□ o g o
g d d
n n c o
results.
SOU CCWfT KNOW THEM0WW?
21 Oirt of song
DEAR READER - Diabetics 22 liirmsss
□ □ n o
n e n
n n n n
21 Three-banded
OF HAED
have high blood fata, so I'm not 2 4 ____ Vogao
□ g g c
d c c
c o o n
21
Mock-tip
surprised by your triglycerides 21 Right to choooo 27 armadillo
WCttC1
Abominable
m
a n a cholesterol. Nonetheless, 22 Uneloao (pool)
82 Reclined
43 Tenant
snowman
S3 Fencing sword
44 Energy-saving
your values are quite elevated, 22401. Roman
21 Tsnnis player
SI Former Mldoaai
tima (abbr)
and 1 wonder if your physician 21 Town in Now
____ Nastaso
alliance (abbr.)
47 Pretty (Fr.)
20 Kind of grain
might not urge your to lose a few
0«inoa
57 Scouting group
41 Over (Gar.)
21 lird homo
pounds. This could Improve 21 Map
(abbr.)
4 1 __.__America
24 H I , Roman
•Mr
your diabetic control. Also, you
S I Army Transport
61 Singer
40
Alloy____
27
lop
don’t mention whether you are
Fittgtrald
Service (abbr.)
41 Mowing Mode
24
on diabetes medicine. With high 22
Msiodie
•
10 11
1 1 3
blood fats, your sugar, too. may
by Bob Montana be high and your medication 42 Carilast bom
ARCHIE
41 Military school ll
14
ti
may have to be adjusted upward
(•Mr.)
Off TH A T H O U SE ? TH E m a n
— or perhaps you should be 41 Thing in low
17
SOMETHIN®
10
11
W ASH IN G M lf C A B I t M V FATH ER
started
on one of the oral agents. 47 Narvous
/M U ST BE P O N E
A N P T H fl LADY IN B L U B IO
ai
^EJCuT youR
In any case. I'm sure your doctor SOftono
M V M O THP® '
monument
P O O R S H A P E S .) j ? " 5V
will want to take some action
114
Japonoao sash
|ia
M O O SE/
once he obtains your health-fair 14
I I Homs
data.
is
LIKE
»
17 I
&gt;■
St
I I Itspo of a
I 1'
WH&lt;T»y
DEAR DR. GOTT - I heard a
joumoy
31
SI
doctor on TV say there Is now a 10 Tho (Fr.)
In
medication to help people who 11 Rapidity
39
37
1 74
suffer from raw nerve ends 12 lo situated
caused by shingles. What can •2 Tax agency
I 41
1*
u
ishbr.)
you tell me about this?
44 Obliterate
DEAR READER - I don’t 15 Chemical suffix
«s
know precisely what the TV
by Howto Schnoldof doctor was referring to. I do
47
41
II I
so
EEK A MEEK
DOWN
know, however, that more and
M
»
1 Dacombar
more doctors are now using
VUHOMX» EBSkJ
OH,
yx kjow uuhat l
\
I( YOU'RE A GOOD
holiday
(abbr.)
cortisone for shingles. The medi­
40
41
•*
YEAH ?
TALKING TO ?
LIKE. ABOUTLOU 7 J
|^
FR1EK1D...
j
2 Villain in
cine appears to help prevent the
"Otholto"
13
y
A
nerve pain (neuralgia) that may
2 Midoast nation
a c c o m p a n y (and follow)
4 Capital of
shingles.
00 j«
Alaska
(C)19SS by NIA Inc
Y
q
1

WIN AT BRIDGE
\

jy )
By J a n a a Jaco b y

s&gt;

by Horgrtovos A Sailors

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

THERE GOES'

M P U P P IT Y ,

&lt;PH/HE /MADE
HIS FO R TU N E O U T

HE ^TAFTTEP O U T W ITH
A SIMPLE FIELD Pf&amp;DUClNG
FIVE HUNDRED BARRELS
\
A DAT /

OF OIL P

7-

T H E S E U F -A V s P E
Z lL L IO N A lR E /

—

by Wamor Brothors

BUGS BUNNY
'Ttev N O -S L U C &lt; o o c

WOULD y o u m in d
ACW OSS T H E w

.

a m ss

?

Unimpeded slam bidding Isn't
so hard. After you and partner
have agreed on a suit, you show
strength and controls, ask for
aces now and then, and bid your
slam. It's not so easy when some
nasty opponent skips three
rounds of bidding, pre-empting
in his long suit. Bidding a slam
now may require making some
Inferences, not to mention tak­
ing some chances.
The three-spade bid by West
was a nuisance, for sure. North
liked his hand but he had no
bidding room left for delicate
exploration. He finally decided to
get his partner into the de­
cision-making process, but at
the same time risked getting too
high. He cuc-bid four spades.
What did that mean? It meant

he was willing to play five
hearts, he had a control in
spades, and he thought there
Just might be a slam.
That cue-bid was enough for
South. Although his hand was
minimum, it had some very
good features. First, the heart
suit was solid. Second, that
diamond ace certainly took on
an added glow when North
announced he was interested In
slam. South asked for aces and
kings, and bid six hearts.
If declarer had tried to go set.
he might have succeeded. In­
stead. he won the ace of spades,
drew two rounds of trump, and
played ace and a diamond. With
that suit set up. he could now
draw the remaining trumps and
make the contract.

NORTH
A A

ll-S-U

V7 33
♦ QI 09 5 4 3
♦ AKQ

EAST
♦ 62
♦ 106 5 4
♦ K 62
♦ J 10 »2

WEST
♦KQJ9754

V9
4J 7
♦ 54 3

SOUTH
♦ 10 6 3

♦ AKQJ8
♦ A6
♦ 876

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Wool

North

East

3♦
Pass
Pass
Pass

4♦
SV
64
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
IV
4 NT
5 NT
6V

Opening lead: ♦ K

HOROSCOPE
AT

W h a t T h e D ay

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thovtt

u n em plo ym en t

i

ju s t

ip

x

F m u n ep
l o ss

it

o u r .,

o n e

M ope

jog th is YfAP. x x l .

O FFICE

Q W U-iFY pop SPECIAL
gSNSfVTf AS A
M ifip A N T W O P K ^ F a-****-* Tn/swf.^ (|.7

by Jim Davis

; GARFIELD
V O U PRINK TOO
MUCH COFFEE,
GARFlELP

G005H
-/ -

11-7

AN N IE
by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

‘

CA5KET?«y

W ill B r i n g ...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
NOVEMBERS. 1985
Great personal benefits can be
g ained in the ye ar ahead
through your creative involve­
ments. Put your talents to work
for you in a profitable manner.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22)
Y
o
u
are about to receive something
of substance for which you have
long yearned. Even though your
hopes will be fulfilled, it won't
happen the way you anticipated.
Major changes are ahead for
Scorpios In the coming year.
Send for your Astro-Graph pre­
d ictio n s today. Mall $1 to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper,
Box 1846, C in c in n a ti. O H
45201. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) An Important objective can
be achieved now. but you must
first let people in positions to

help you know what you expect help to your career. It's a person
with rlout win) has ulready done
from them.
several
favors for you.
CAPRICORN (Dcc. 22-Jan.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If
19) A new situation that has
been commanding your atten­ you are determined to sec an
tion has even greater potential important matter through today,
than you suspect. Reappraise It you'll get the results you desire.
carefully, taking In all of its Stay on course.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) It
ramifications.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) will be more gratifying for you
Your greatest luck today is likely today to aid others instead of
to come from situations that are serving your own Interests and
not of your own making. Chance ambitions. Render assistance
will have a hand In drawing you where needed.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Finan­
Into them.
P1BCE8 (Feb. 20-March 20) cial conditions continue to be
Partnership arrangements have favorable for you. A new way
more potential benefits for you could be found to expand upon
today than your independent what you already have going.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
operations. Ally yourself with
T
h
a
t
people who have what you lack.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) good news for which you've
Your greatest possibilities for been hoping might come today.
success today will be In Joint It pertains to a matter that
arrangements. A strong ally, affects your material well-being.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You
plus Lady Luck's Input, provides
the winning combination.
might have more control over
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) today's events than you think.
Someone with whom you'll be But you might have to pull the
Involved today can be of great strings from behind the scenes.

CLAYT
KT^O TTD SETAKEa

I&gt;WX&gt;rvuo EM-1 PIAMTtM.i= = p =

v o u e e rro
SQUEEZE ll\)
ANOTHER
jx o v m t.

5 1
F CLAITDE CLA Y ^

WANT V6€S
TH* MAIL

■0APDY*?

by Leonard Starr
NO- TRH8 IT UP TO
THe House, im e /
BE BACH SHORTLY/

M C O'TOSSY, A N N IE !!
WE
LOOM O U T /!

HUN? C

AMITY,

GeT04CA,4HM*S\

im D E a T A E E a i

^ nuetw-i A/urrtMf

CASKET
ill
|S M I
JL

JL

C*H

^1

&gt;

i ^ d

■J^rV- v

liLL

�f.h

-

Controversial
C Lacey
Takes Its Cue From Real Life

.

•

Moment F o r History
Chief Whitefeather J. Wayne Cummings
addresses gathering at dedication Saturday
of a historical marker near the Osceola Fish
Camp designating the site of the Indian
settlement of King Philip Town on the St.
Johns River near Lake Harney. Other chiefs
participating In the Indian ceremony, from
left, Joel Hale, "B lu e S k y " C.L. McDonald

and " R e d E a g le " H.A. Rhoden. The
Seminole County Historical Commission
chose this site where Seminole warrior King
Philip Eufala and his son lived when they
led the attack on Fort Mellon on Lake
Monroe on Feb. 8, 1837. The modern day
Indians held a ceremonial dance to bless the
land.

NEW YORK (UPI) - "Cagney
&amp; Lacey" will deal with the issue
or abortion next week and one of
the most touching scenes Is the
one In which Mary Beth Lacey
admits to her partner. Christine
Cagney, that she once had an
abortion.
If the scene holds an even
deeper ring or truth than usual,
It is because the story Tyne Daly
relates as Mary Beth really did
happen.
The woman to whom It hap­
pened is Barbara Corday. She Is
the wife of executive producer
Barney Roscnzwclg. creative
consultant lo the show, and
president of Columbia Pictures
Television.
"Th e story Mary Beth tells
about her history Is a very low
key one. a very simple one."
Roscnzwclg said recently when
the cast and crew was in New
York to shoot exteriors. "Tyn e
came lo me with her Instincts
aflame."
H e r a c to r's In stin cts de­
manded pyrotechnics — but
they were Instantly damped
w hen Roscnzw clg told her,
" T h is is a real story. Th is
happened to my wife."
When Corday saw the result,
her husband said, she cried.
Roscnzweig. who said his con­
sciousness has been raised on
women's Issues by his wife, four
female children and two female
stars, has strong private views
on the abortion Issue, but savs in

TyiM M oy
•

his show he was attempting to
raise questions, not give an­
swers, and to tell a dramatic
story.
He said he was struck several
years ago when he was leaching
a course at Pcppcrdlnc Universi­
ty and showed an old film that
Included a particularly ugly
scene involving an Illegal abor­
tion.
"Most of the young people In
the class were 18 or 19 years old
and female." he said. "Most of
them weren't old enough to
appreciate or understand what it
used to be like."
He said he believes he Is
professional enough not to let his
personal views interfere with his
dramatic Judgment.
In last year's two-part episode

makes a shocking discovery
when he stumbles upon his
parents' marriage license.

F rid a y T V H ig h lig h ts

8 :8 7 pm
lo Hollywood.
NBC. "NBC News Digest"
CBS. "Twilight Zone" - A
high school English teacher
(Adrienne Barbeati) falls under
the spell of a gargoyle-like de­
mon; and an old man (Danny
Kaye), who holds the lust hour of
the world In a magical timepiece,
finds an unlikely keeper to
assume Its responsibility.
N B C . " K n ig h t R id e r" Michael. K1TT. and the FLAG
team go undercover to halt the
7t30 pm
PBS. " T h e M acNciULchrcr smuggling of a lethal bacteria
capable of killing millions of
NcwsHour."
people within seconds.
ft pm
ABC. "Webster" — Webster. S t S O p m
George and Katherine takc~a trip
ABC. "M r. Belvedere" — Kevin

? pm

Unveiling

(Note: In some regions, news Is
broadcast at 6 and 6:30 p.m.
Check with local affiliates for
details.)
ABC. "A B C's World N jw s T o ­
night with Peter Jennings."
CBS. "CB S Evening News with
Dan Rather."
NBC. "NBC Nightly News with
To m Brokaw."
PBS. "Capitol Journal."

Indian girls from the Chero­
kee tribe in Geneva, Monyon
Eckerle, left, and Cheryl
Pontiac, right, unveil the
historic site marker for King
Philip Town as M onyon's
two year-old sister watches.

HoroM Photo* by Tom m y Vincont

0 111INDAV NEWS

TONIGHT'S TV
EVENING

a

6:00

4 5
* ONEW S
(35) JEFFERSONS
(101 MACNEIL / LEHRER
NSHOUR '
It) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN

6:05
ANDY GRIFFITH

6:30
4 NBC NEWS
Q C B S NEWS
O ABC NEWS q
|3S) TOO CLOSE FOR COMRT On her 42rd txrthdJ, Muriel
covers she s pregnant
It) LAVERNEt SHIRLEY

635
CAROL
IENDS

BURN ETT

on breast cancer, he M i d . the
purpose really was to educate
women that there were
alternatives In Ihe treatment of
breast cancer and he said the
show got "a little Q i i l n c y - i a h . "
co m plete w ith c h a rts and
teaching aids. Th is time around
the Idea is to present a situation,
not argue a polemic, he said.
Rosenzwelg said he set up a
meeting with the CBS censors
and rehearsed a long pres­
entation for the defense. Then
the new head of the department
told him. "Barney, understand,
you are among friends. Tell us
what Isnon-ncgotlablefor you."
"It took all the air out of my
sails." he said, delighted.
R o s c n z w e ig has a lre a d y
shown the episode to several
pro-choice groups, and now Is
showing It to pro-life groups.
He makes no bones that he
screened what he admitted was
a "potentially controversial"
ep iso de to th e p ro -c h o ic e
feminist groups that have been
"Cagney &amp; Lacey's" strongest
supporters before showing It to
pro-life groups.
He still smarts from an Inci­
dent early In the history of
"Cagney &amp; Lacey" when Julie
Adams played a Phyllis
Schlafly-Hke character and some
CBS affiliates were pressured
Into not airing the episode.
He thinks the conservatives
might have liked the character If
they had watched the show.

AND

7:00
4 1 100.000 PYRAMIO
O P M MAGAZINE Arnold
hea'feneqqer a man eho sor­
ed a plunge over Niagara Fails
O JEOPARDY
(35) BARNEY MILLER
i(10) NATURE A chronicle Nmed
er a ltve-,ear period Of India*
dangered Qhanal crocodile
) |l) CARSON S COMEDY C lA S -

:s
7:05
MARY TYLER MOORE

7:30
| 4 ENTERTAINM ENT TO N IG H T

et*ie» edh Gene Hackman
PRICE IS RIGHT
WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(35) BENSON
) (S| A l l IN THE FAMILY

o
o

7:35
: SANFORD AND SON

8:00
| (4) COSBY SHOW Sn tear old
jd* |Keshia Knight Pulliam) be­
etles Ihe Star ol her petmee toolill team g
MAGNUM. P I.
20 I 20 Scheduled an inter
e* tilth Prince Charles and Prin­
ts* Diana lhal a-red on British TV
October r;
I 135) HART TO HART
0 (10) TRACKS IN THE SAND Fojses on Florida s threatened sea
irlics Fool age includes Ihe nest
g ritual ot loggerhead and green
itties along Melbourne Beach and
special glimpse ol a spectacular
ater ballet 90 leel underwater with
giant loggerhead
D (I) MOVIE Breathless ' 119831
ichard Gere. Valerie Kapnnsky A
^spirited auto thiet unmien lion lly kills a patrolman and laler deelops an obsessive attraction to a
roman

8

8:05
J MOVIE The Fighting Seabees
1944) John Wayne Susan Hayraid A group ot World War II
ieabees is assigned to repair mili­
ary installations dangerously close
o enemy territory

830
B ® FAMILY TIES Sieved and
lyse are certain that Nick iScoll
falentine) has convinced Mallory
tot to attend college
S (10) THIS OLD HOUSE Intieliaion ol a protection TV system end
idchen tile

9:00

n (4j CHEERS Sam turns a viluide book Inal Diane lied given lo
wn as coKaterat on a loan.

1) O *»** * 8,yo* A TVM*
iherapist (Barbara Rhodes) hires

-

O

the Simons to look into Ihe mysteri­
ous circumstances surrounding the
death ol one ol her employees
&gt; O NORTH AND SOUTH The
Hazards and Ihe Mams get together
at Mont Royal Billy Hazard and
Charles Main graduate Irom Wesl
Point Justin laMolte imprisons
Madeline and kills Maum Salt,
Stars Georg Stanford Brown Tern
Garber and John Slockweil |Parl 4
ot6i:j
It (35)QUINCY
0 (10) RIVER JOURNEYS Writer ’
eiplorer Chn*lma Dodweil revisits a
Papua New Guinea tube wild whom
she lived lor Iwo years and at­
tempts the tirst-ever rail descent ol
the Wahgr River the eater ol
men g

9:30

0

il
NIGHT COURT Dan s
stunned when a lormer college
Inert) Ifemale-impersonator Jim
Bailey I unexpectedly drops in al the
courthouse

0

10:00

STREET BLUES Wash­
ington assesses his relationship
with his girltnend and her son Renko consults a therapist to learn
about his past lives, a wacky sculp­
tor lakes refuge on his own work ot
art
J O KNOTS LANDING lilimae in­
terfere* when Gary visits Ihe twins
Val has a proposal lor Ben Abby
tries to cover her tracks g
II (35) INDEPENDENT NEWS
0 (10) HEALTH CARE ON THE
CRITICAL LIST An eiammation ol
health care cost-containment pro­
grams in Ihe U S narrated by Jack
Kingman
0 ( 1 ) ROCKFORD FILES
l4 h il l

10:05
11 PORTRAIT OF AMERICA HA­
WAII

10:30
Ilf (35) BOB NEWHART

11:00
O '4 1 ® 0 ( 2 ) O N E W S
It l; |33) ARCHIE BU N KERS P U C E
0 110) DAVE ALLEN AT U R G E
0 ( 1 ) NIGHT GALLERY

11:05
(12 MOVIE The Last Detail (1974)
Jack Nicholson. Olis Young Two
rowdy shore palrolmen attempt lo
leach then emotionally withdrawn
prisoner Ihe facts of life

0

11:30

® TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson Scheduled gardening eiperl
Thalassa Cruso
(510 W KRP IN CINCINNATI
(7) O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
iff! (35) HAWAII FIVE-0
0(8)TWILIGHT ZONE

12:00

(© 0 NIGHT HEAT An investiga­
tion is called lor when a scientist
using a fictitious name and identity
i* murdered during a shipping plant
strike
(T) 0 COMEDY BREAK WITH
MACK AMO JAMIE
0 (!) MOVIE Dead Reckoning
(1947| Humphrey Bogan Lisabeih
Scolt

O

12:30

® U T E NIGHT WITH OAVIO
LETTERMAN Scheduled prognos­
ticator Jeane Duon
J ) 0 AT THE MOVIES Scheduled
reviews
Macaroni' (Jack Lem­
mon. Marc trio Maitroianm). Elem
(John Maikovich Kale Nedrgani
•To Live and Die m L A '

IE (38) CHICO AMO THE MAN

1:00
( S O T O M ANNOUNCED

11 (35) BIZARRE Guest BrUy Van
Sketches jn interview with Santa
open marriage Suicide Boutique
hound dog impersonation*

1:05

12 MOVIE Ciosswmds 1195II
John Payne Rhonda Fleminq

1:10
5 O MOVIE Cleopatra Jones
And The Castno Ol Gold (1975)
Tamar j Dobson Stella Slevens

11:30

4 SCRABBLE

' O a l l -s ta r blitz
0 (10) FLOAlOASTYLE
0 (8| ALL ABOUT US (MON-THU)
0 (81INOAY SPECIAL CLASH OF
THE DAYTIME STARS IFRI)

f t

AFTERNOON

O

12:00
4 MIDOAY

POINTS

1 O 7 ONEWS
H (35) BEWITCHED
0 (10) ALL CREATURES GREAT

O P E " ,#

ANO SMALL |THU|
110) WONDERWORKS (FRI)
(8) IT'S A GREAT LIFE (MONTHU)

S
MORNING

12:05
U PERRY MASON

6:00

o

4 NBC NEWS
S O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
I O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
II (351 GOOD DAY)
12 NEWS
0 | 8 | BATMAN

6:30
0 4 NEWS
5) O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
I
ABC $ WORLD NEWS THIS
M O RN IN O g
II |3S| TOM AND JERRY
12 FUNTIME
0|8| SUPERFRIENDS

o

6:45

t O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
0 (1 O | A M WEATHER

7:00
0 4 TODAV
5 O CBS MORNING NEWS
7 O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
II (35) G I JOE
0 ( 1 0 ) FARM DAY
0 (8) VOLTRON. DEFENDER OF
THE UNIVERSE

6:00
ll (35)JETSONS
0 (I) HEATHCLIFF

8:30
II |35) FLINTSTONES
0 (10)MISTER ROGERS(R)
0 ( 8 ) FAT ALBERT

9:00
0 4 0IVORCE COURT
5 O DONAHUE
7 O TIC TAC DOUGH
11)35) WALTONS
0 (10) SESAME STREET (R) g
0 ( 8 ) BRADY BUNCH

9:30
0 '4 i LOVE CONNECTION
7 0 JOKER S WILD
0 | B ) MV THREE SONS
U I LOVE LUCY'35

10:00
0 * 4 &gt; YOUR NUMBER S UP
15 i O HOUR MAGAZINE
' 7 ) 0 BARNABY JONES
ilf (35| BIG VALLEY
0 (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (A)
0
|l) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

1005
I X MOVIE

10:30

0 &lt; iISALE OF THE CENTURY

S

( 1013-2-1 CONTACT g
(IIOOO COUPLE

11.00

0 '4 &gt; WHEEL OF FOATUNC
5) Q P A C E IS RIGHT
1 ) 0 THREE S A CROWD (R)
11(351 DA*' A S
(
0 (10) WE RE COOKING NOW

EXTRAVAGANZA
SAT. NOV. 9

' 12:30
0

4 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
*5) O YOUNG AND THE REST­
LESS
&lt;tl o LOVING

01. (35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
0 (8) WHAT'S HOT I WHAT’S
NOT? (MON-THU)

1:00
0 *41DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 O ALL MY CHILDREN
)), (35) DICK VAN DVKF
(101 NOVA (THU)
110) RIVER JOURNEYS (FRI)
0 ( 8 ) MOVIE

h

m

8

1:05
91 MOVIE

1:30

5 OAS THE WORLD TURNS
ll (35IGOMERPYLF

SKATEBOARDING

2:00

0 4 ANOTHER WORLD
7 Q ONE LIFE TO LIVE
III, (351 ANDY GRIFFITH
0 (10) WORLD CHESS CHAMPI­
ONSHIP (THU)
0 (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

7:30 .
II (35) CHALLENGE OF THE
GOBOTS
0 1101 SESAME STREET(R|g
0 |8| ROBOTECH

sSUBWD'l

Exhibition by

M a rk L a k e
Contest: u mm ra

2:30
&lt; 5 iO CAPITOL
n (351 GREAT SPACE COASTER
0 (10) MAGIC OF WATERCOLORS(THU)
0 (10) PAINTING WITH ILONA
IFRI)

M f t s : M a rt Lafct A M a rt K w h

&amp;&amp;

F ir s t P r iz s :
Skateboard ft Trophy
Ni

2:35
3:00

§

participants

ractiw tiBpWas

Sponsored B y Subway
4 Native Casuals

112 WOMAN WATCH (FRI)
&lt;4 SANTA BARBARA
(10) FLORIDASTYLE
(8) INSPECTOR GADGET

3:05
tU BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS

330
till (35) JA Y CE ANO THE
WHEELED WARRIORS
0 ( 10) MISTER ROOERS(R)
0 (8 ) M A SK.

4:00 O &lt;4 AMERICA
15 10 OIFF'RENT STROKES
(7J O MERV GRIFFIN |M0N. TUE.
THU. FRI)
17 Q AFTERSCHOOL SPECIAL
(WED)
Jl &lt;3S)THUN0CRCATSq
l})0 G U K M N G U O H T
(7) O GENERAL HOSPITAL
111; (35) SCOOBY DOO

5:00 '

0 ll) NEWLYWED GAME
i J' O M ’A 'S 'H
i 7 &gt; 0 HEADLINE CHASERS
ill' 135) WHAT'S HAPPENING!I
0 ( 1 0 ) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
0 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
0 (8) TRANZOR

6:05
« LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

5:30

0 1 PEOPLE'S COURT •

J ’ OlPONKWS
JT (36) ALICE

ALL DAY
BUY ONE SUB

GET ONE FREE!
Buy ft sub and get one of equal value FREE!

JOIN THE PUN
and visit with these
participating merchants:

LO C A TIO N :

OSominolo Hondft
o 5 pt». Bar
. 5 Pts- Jowoliy ft Pawn
§ A jiitiii iMuranc*
oThoHalreuttinft Station

•
• NtttM Caftuala
• Ctoctmae ftpMlalty
PfOduds
• »lcyc*Com*ctJon

5 POINTS
P LA ZA
17/B2 A T 427 A 419, LK. MARY

�r—

- ■» " •

" T

#

V

l

V

- * * » - » ----------

&lt;

' * 1

T h u n B e y , N t v . 7 , 19BS

H f a M , I b i H b t N, F I.

W

legal Notica
NOTICC OF
PUBLIC H IAR IN O
Nolle# It hereby given that
Semi not# County hot received
Application lor Development
Approval tor « Development ol
Re g i o n a l I m p a c t ( D R I I
purtuont to Socllon 310 0*.
Flor Ido Statute*. from Iho Slot#
ol Florldo. Department ol
Community AHolrt.
Nam e o l O o yo lo p m tH ti
K logwood fttnet Development:
51* ocrot. Location of O m h *
moot: Th# til* It iocot#d wttt ol
1-4 bo r d # r # d by O r a n g e
Boulovord. Oregon Avenue ond
S. R. 40 In n o r t hwest er n
Seminole County. O*n*rol Detcrlptl*n *1 Development: Thlt
will b* o ml»#d u u d#v#lopm#nt
contoinlng 1,710 houtlng unlit:
300, 000 t g u o r * l o o t ol
nolghborgood commorclol
tpoco: 11 hoi* goll court*: 33
ocr* lot* tytf*m lor ttorm
w#t*r m*n*gm«nt; clubhout*:
ond o cont*rvatlon arc* lor
r*cr*ation and op*n tpac* Th*
pro|*ct will alto Include an
on-tlto poiabi* wattr tyit*m
and wail* wattr tr*at*m*nt
ladllty. Th* prof*ct will b*
compittad In two phat*t be
tw**n Itl 5 lf*0, and li m it s .
Lagal Description *t Oevelapm*nt Praparty: A tract ol
land bolng a portion ol Section*
if. 30. » and 30. Townthip l*
South. Rang* 30 Edit, Seminole
County, Florida, bolng mort
p a r t ic u la r l y d e s c r ib e d a t
follow*: Commence at th* North
'4 corner ol Section 3*. thence
North 1* d *g r**t 57 minutes 55
seconds Watt along th* North
boundary ol th# Northwest '* ol
Section 3* lor a dlttanc# ol
4*0.33 f#*t to a point ol lnt#ri#c
lion with th* Wttt lln* ol th#
Santord Grant, tald point being
th* Point ol Beginning ol th*
tract described herein; thane#
continue North 1* d*gr#*t 57
minutes 55 tacondt W ell a
dlttanc# ol 1*314* f##t to the
Northw#*t corner of Section 7*.
thane# North 1* degree* 54
mlnut#* 53 second* Wait along
th# North boundary ol the
North#a*t '« ol Section 30 for a
dlttanc# ol 1375 31 feet: th«nce
South 00 d#gr*«t M minute* 13
seconds Wait along th# Ea*t
boundary ol th# Northw#*t '« of
the Northeatt
ol Section 30 for
a dlttanc# of 1314 *1 l##t; thence
South I * degree* 55 minutes 34
seconds East along th# Soufh
boundary ol th# Northeast
of
the Northeast '« of Section 30 for
a distance of 370 00 feet, thence
South 00 degree* 01 minutes 13
second s West, ti2 6t feet;
thence Soufh 1* degree* 54
minutes 75 seconds Wait along
the North right ol way ot State
Road No 44 (per Department ot
Transportation Right of Way
Map. Section 77030 — 25051 for a
distance of 1974 *4 feet, thence
North 00 degrees 12 minutes 00
seconds East along a line being
parallel to the East boundary ot
the Northwest ’j of Section 30
for a distance of 113 17 feet
thence South 19 degrees 54
minutes 25 seconds East along
the E a s t b o u n d a ry at the
Northwest 'e ot Section 30 tor a
distance ot 244 00 feet, thence
North I * degrees 54 minutes 25
seconds West along the North
boundary ol th* Southeast
of
the Southeast'« ot the Northeast
’* ot the Northwest
ot Section
30 tor a distance ot 330 00 teat;
thane* North* 00 degree* I I
minute* 00 seconds East along a
line being th* West boundary ot
the Ea st 330 00 feet to the
Northwest ’* at Section 30 tor a
distance of 944 44 feet thence
North 19 degrees 54 minutes 21
seconds West along the Nortn
boundary ol the Norihwest '* ol
Section 30 tor a distance ol
**0.7* feet; lh*nc* North 00
degrees 02 minutes 42 seconds
West along tha occupied West
boundary of lha Southeast 14 of
tha Southwest &gt;.* of Section 1*
for a distance of 131107 feet,
thence North I * degrees 5*
minutes 40 seconds West along
the South boundary of the
Northwest
of the Southwest ’«
for a distanca of 5110* feet,
thence North 00 degrees 05
minutes 51 seconds West along
th* West line of the East ' i of
the N o r t h w e s t &lt;4 of the
Southwest
ol Section l* a
distance ol 443 05 feet, thence
North 45 degrees 24 minute* 05
seconds East along a line being
th# Southeasterly right ol way
ot Orange Boulevard as It physi
caiiy t»i*t* tor a distance ot
&gt;235 25 teet tnenc# South 19
degrees 59 minutes 43 seconds
East along in* North boundary
ol th# Southwest ’* ot Section 19
and along the centerline of
Nevada A.enu# according to tne
Map ot Santord Farm s as re
corded in Plat Boo* 1. Pages lit
and 121 ot tn# Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida tor a
distance ot 931 51 feet to a pent
ot intersection with tn# ten
te rim # ot South D ataw are
Street thence South 19 degrees
59 mmutes 43 seconds East
atong said centerline and along
the North boundary ol tne
Southeast
ot Section 19 tgr a
distance o&lt; 1104 00 teet thence
North 00 detrees 02 minutes 14
seconds East along the cen

teriin# of an unnamed ifr**t pee
said Map of Sanford Forma far *
distanca of *51.17 foot; matte*
North 71 degrees 55 minute* 73
taeond* E a s t al ong th#
Southerly right of way of O r­
ange Boulevard for a distance ot
1130.7* teat; thence South 00
degrees 04 minutes 44 second*
West along th# we*t lln* ot Let 1,
Block l. of laid Map ol Sanford
Farm* tor a distance of 5*414
feet; thence South I* degree* 71
minute* 55 second* Eeit along
the South line of laid Lot I end
an Easterly extension thereof e
distance of 343.91 feet to th*
centerline of South Georgia
Street a c co r d i n g to the
stored*scribed Map of Santord
Fermi; thence Norm 00 degree*
01 minute* 54 seconds East
along said centerline e distance
of 177.35 teet. thence Norm 71
degree* 59 minute* to second*
Ee i t along the Southerly
r i g h t - o f - w a y of O r a n g e
Boulevard for a distance of
325.43 feet; thence South 00
degree* 05 minutes M second*
West along the East boundary ot
Lot S. Block l. of sold Map ol
Sanford Farm* for a distance of
71319 feet; thence South I t
degree* II minute* 3* second*
Keif along th* South boundary
of Loft 1. 7, 1 and 9 for a
distanca of 1007.71 foot to a point
ol Intarsoctfon with th* cen
terlln# of South Indiana Street;
thence South I* degree* S3
minutes 39 second* East along
th* North boundary ol Lott 4. 3.
1 end I. Block 4 ol M id Map of
Sanford Farm * tor e distance of
1795 4t feet; thence South 00
degrees 04 minutes It seconds
West along tha East boundary of
Lot I. Block 4 ot M id Map of
Sanford Farm s and along the
West right of way of South O r­
egon Street I e 50 foot wide road
as it currently exist*) for a
distance of *40.50 feel to a point
of i n f e r s a c l i o n w it h tha
cenrerline ol Nevada Avenue
per said Map of Sanford Farms;
thence South 00 degrees 05
minutes 57 seconds West. 1705 Jt
teet thence South 74 degrees 57
minutes 44 seconds West along
the West line of th# Sanford
Grant a diatanc* of 17* 39 feat;
thenca South i f degrees 51
minutes 00 seconds East along
th* North boundary ot the
Southeast 'x of tha Southwest '*
of Section 20. Township 1* South.
Range 30 East tor a distanca of
53 14 teet thenca South OO da
grees 05 minutes 57 seconds
West 523 00 feet thence North
19 degrees 51 minutes 00 seconds
West along a line 523 feet South
of and parallel to the North
boundary of the Southeast ’&lt; ol
the Southwest ’* of Section 20.
Township 19 South Range 30
East tor a distance of 295 44
teet thence Sou'h 24 degrees 57
minutes 44 seconds West along
the West Ime o ' said Sanford
Grant for a distance ot 17*01
teet to the Point ot Beginning
Containing 529 274 Acres, more
or less
A Public Hearing concerning
this development will be held by
the Seminole County Board ol
C ou n ty C o m m is s io n e r s on
January 7 1914 at 7 00 p m . or
as soon thereafter as possible in
the Seminote County Services
Building at 1101 East First
Street. Sanford. F L 32771. Room
W170 Hearings may b* rnn
tlnuad from time to time as
found necessary. Further In­
formation pertaining to this
application may be obtained
from th* Office of Planning.
Room N34I. Seminole County
Services Bulllding. not East
First Street. Sanford. F L 32771,
321 1130. extension 371 Persons
are advised that if they decide to
appeal any decision made at
these meetings, they will need a
record ot th# proceedings, and
lor such purpose, they may need
to ensure that e verbatim racord
of tha proceedings Is mad*,
whlcn record includes the testi­
mony end evidence upon which
th* appeal Is to be made
B O AR D OF
CO UN TY C O M M IS S IO N E R S
S E M IN O L E COUNTY.
FLORIDA
BY ANTHONY
VANOERWORP.
P LA N N IN G D IR EC TO R
Publish November 7 1915
D EL 41
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO URT
OF TH E
E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT OF F L O R ID A ,
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY
C A SE NO.; 11-1)44-CA-09-G
G E N E R A L J U R ISD IC T IO N
O IV ISIO N
H O M E S T E A D SAVI NGS. A
fed er al

savin gs

and

LOAN ASSOCIATION
Pieintilt.
vs
LAWRENCE R
LORRAINE M
wife, et a'

SCOTT and.
SCOT T, his

Defendants.
TO ROBERT E SCOTT and
CA T HERI NE M SCOTT, his
wife RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
N O TICE OF ACTIO N
Constructive Service
— Property
YOU AR E H E R E B Y

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Ceteonty Cipher cryptogram* are craaiad from quaur.oni by tamoui
peopta pael and preaem
Each letter m in* cipher (tend* 'or
another Itx lty t d u e A epua/t f

by CONME WIENER

“ FRCNC
EGNC
BYC

YD

VCI

KRYDFPYW O
—

WGFRYWO

DBFYDAUYW O
YW

OPBNC

legal Notice

Legal Notice

...
KYWt

FRBW
KYFR

FG
B

G M F O Y IC ."

PCYORFGW .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION Deceiving someone lor his own
good
should tie shouldered only by the gods
—
Author unknown

NOTIFIED mat an action hes
been commenced to ferecloe* a
mortgage on th# fel leering reel
property, lying end being and
situate In Seminote County,
Florida, more particularly de­
scribed as follows:
. LOT 1, TH E COLONNADES.
SECOND SECTION, according
to mo Flat thereof a* recorded
in Plat Book 14, Page 14, of tho
Public Records of Seminole
County. Florida, more com­
monly known at. I0M Landmark
Lane. Casselberry, Flerdl*
and you ere required to serve a
copy of your written defense, If
an y , to It on W I E N E R .
SHAPIRO B ROSE. Attorneys of
Plaintiff. whOM address li 5404
Cypreu Center Drive. Suite M0.
Tampa, Florida. 33401. on or
before December 2. IMS, end
III* me original with tha Clark of
Mils Court either before service
on Plaintiff's attorney* or Im
mediately thereafter; otherwise
a default will be entered against
you for the relief dwwendad In
the Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and teal
of mi* Court on mu Itth day of
October. IMS.
(SEAL)
DAVIDN. BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
By; Susan B. Tabor
Doputy Clork
Publish: October 11. November
7.14.lt. )M5

OEK-113

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH C EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION HO.i 15-I7M-CA
AMERICAN PIONEER LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY.etc..
Plaintiff.
v».
D IA N E L. P A G E .e tv lr,e t#1,

Defendant*.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE I* hereby given met
pursuant to the Final Judgment
of Foreclosure nc Sal* entered
in the cauM pending In the
Circuit Court of th* EIGH
TEE N TH Judicial Circuit. In
and for SEMINOLE County,
Florida. Civil Action Number
15 1710 CA tho undersigned
Clark will Mil lha property
situated In Mid County, described as.
Lot 7. Block. J. NORTH O R
LA N D O R A N C H E S. SEC T IO N
7A. according to tha Plat thereof
as recorded in Plat Book 11,
Pag# 3*. of the Public Records
ol S E M IN O L E County. Florida
at public Mia. lo the highest and
best bidder for cash at 11:00
o'clock A M . on the 17lh day of
November, 1*15. at the West
front door ol the S E M IN O L E
County Courthouse. Sanford,
Florida

(COURTSEAL)
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K OF TH E C IR C U IT
COURT
By 'S ' Vicki L Baird
Deputy Clerk
Publisn: October 31. November
7, 1915
D E K 114

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
OF T H E B IO H T E B N T H
J U D IC IA L C IRCU IT.
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E COUNTY,
F L O R ID A
C ASE NO. 15-3474-CA-01-P
IR V IN J.M C SW A IN , es
Substitute Trustee and
Not Individually,
Plaintiff.
vs
RAYM OND H BEN SLEY.
Defendant
N O T IC E O F SU IT
To Th* Defendant. R A Y M O N D
H B E N S L E Y . e/O P a r le y
Btnslay, Bushklll. PA 11374,
A N D A L L O T H E R W HOM IT
M A Y C O N CERN ;
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that an action to
foreclose a Mortgage on Ihe
following described real pro
perty located In Sem inole
County. Florida, to-wif:
Lot M 10 That parcel ot land
lying in Section 1). Township 70
South. Rang* 37 East. Seminole
County. Florida, described as
follows: From th* Northwest
corner at M id Section 11, run S
00*03 ’10 ' E. 357 05 feet to a point
on tn* Southerly Right ot Way
llna ot a 50 loot Right of Way ol
Osceola Road, thenca run along
the Southerly Right at Way lint
of Osceola Road. N 77*34’37" E.
1753 14 teet. thence leaving M id
Southerly right of Way run S
12*33 23" E, *90 OO leet; thence
run S 77*34’37" W. 454 74 teet.
thence run South 401 75 teet to
the Point ot Beginning, thence
run East 1347 44 teet. thence run
S l l 'O l 'S l ” W. 450 00 feet;
thence run N 7 9 M 9 I9 " W.
1011 49 feel; thence run North
175 00 lo th* Point of Beginning
The above described parcel is
subiect to a 35 tool Ingress
Egress easement on the West
line and a 70 foot drainage
easement on the North line of
said parcel
has been tiled against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ot your written defenses, it any.
10 It on C H A R L E S E M E IN E R .
11 Wall Street. Orlando. Florida
32101, Attorney lor Plaintiff, and
file Ih* original with th* Clerk of
the above styled Court on or
before D ecem b er 10. 1915.
otherwise, a Judgment may be
entered against you lor the
relief demand in Ihe Complaint
W IT N F SS my hand and seal
ol said Court on tha 5th day of
Nov . 1915
(SE A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clark of ih# Circuit Court
Samingl* County. Florida
By Jean Brillant
Deputy Clerk
Publish November 7. 14. 21, 21,
1915
D E L 41

BLO O M C O U N T Y
oh. "an*. LJKsrries
anTo*..*M eM KK

me -r n w y n t a
AXJCHPKX
LAST MCtAS
CPrrm *

0MW6S6M6V

'€5--meme sauces
ncap/rur. ino/'mem i
smerjoumAC aneecp me
tw a t stum p

/ro w men

mm amr/me ‘n r
ms ’memu a*#**’onmis
mas

DE BORAH A. MARTIN an*
PATRICIA C. MARTIN.
Defendants
NOTICC OP M JIT
To; Th* Defendants. DEBORAH
A. M ARTIN end PATRICIA C
MARTIN, and ALL OTHERS
WHOM IT MAY CONCERN;
Y O U ARE HER EBY
N O TIFIED that an action to
foreclose a Mortgage on 1
following described reel pro­
perty located in Semlnele
County, Florldo.fe-wll;
That parcel ef land.lying In
Section 11. Township 29 South.
Rang* 37 Eei t, Seminole
County, Florid*, described as
follow*: From the Northwetl
corner ol taM Sectton n , run S
00*03'10" I , 353.05 feet to the
point on tha Southerly Right of
Way lln* *1 a M Mat Right of
Way af Oeceoli RaM; thence
run along mo Southerly Right at
Way llna af Oicaala Road. N
77*J*'J7” ■, 175314 Mat; thonc*
Waving laid Southerly Right el
Way. run S 1r t t W I , MOM
feet; thence run S 77*J1'37" w.
454.71 feet; thence run South
771 00 feet to m* Feint of
Beginning,- fhenc* run S
7**srir' E. 10114* feet; thence
run S M -O l'll" W. 4*017 feet,
thence run N 40*07'72" W. M4 57
feel; thervc* run Norm 175 00
feet to tho Point of Beginning
Tho above described parcel ll
subject to on Ingress Egress
easement described as follow*:
Beginning ef the Feint of
Beginning ot Mid parcel, run $
79*5*' l*" E. 35 54 toot; thence
run South 51.30 toot to tho F.C.
of a curve to the right having e
radius ol 70.00 toot, e central
angle of M -Sl'Jl" and a tangent
bearing ot S M ’ OO'OO" W.;
thence run along th# ere of Mid
curve 109.11 tott to the P.T.;
thence run N 40*0?'23" W. 70 00
foot; thence run Norm 125.00
foot to th# Point ol Boginning,
ha* been filed against you and
you are required to serve e copy
of your written defenses. If any.
to If on CHARLES E. M EINER.
II Wall Street. Orlando. Florida
33101. Attorney tor Plaintiff, and
file tha original with the Clork of
tha above styled Court on or
before November 7*. 1915.
otherwlM. a Judgment may be
entered against you for the
relief demanded In tho Com­
plaint.
W IT N E S S m y hand and M ai
of M id Court on this 71st day of
October, 1915
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
By: /»/ Jane E. Jaswelc
Deputh Clerk
Publish October 24. 31. Nov
ember 7. 14. 1915
D E K 150

I NT HE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E EIG H TEE N TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.;
l5-1*J9-CA-*9-0
C E N T R U S T SA V IN G S B A N K ,
etc.,

Plaintiff.
vs
G LENN J BEADLE,
et ux.et at.
Defendants

NOTICE OF SALE
NO TICE is haraby given thet
pursuant to the Final Judgment
of Foreclosure and Sale entered
in th* cau M pending In tha
Circuit Court of (he E IG H
T E E N T H Judicial Circuit, In
and for S E M IN O L E County,
Florida. Civil Action Number
15-195* CA 09 G tha undersigned
Clark will sail tha property
situated In said County, de­
scribed as:
Lot I. B LK N O . B R IE R W O O D .
according to tha Plat thereof as
recorded in Plat Book 17, P ag *
44. of the Public Records ot
S E M IN O L E County. Florida,
at public M ia, to Ihe highest and
bast bidder tor cash at II 00
o'clock A M . on Ih# 2nd day of
December IMS, el Ihe W E ST
FRO N T door of Ih* S E M IN O L E
County Courthouse. Sanford.
Florida
(C O U R T S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
CLERKO FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
By: /*/ Vtckl L. Baird
Deputy Clerk
Publish: November!, 14,1*15
D E L 51

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice .Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 505
Airport Blvd., Suit* 400. Senlord. Seminole County, Florida
under tha fictitious name ot
TEC H N ICO N , and that I Intend
to register M i d name with th*
Clerk ot the Circuit Court,
Seminole County. Florida In
accordance with th* provisions
of th* Fictitious Name Statutes.
To wit Section 145.0* Florida
Statutes 1*57
SUN T E C H G E N E R A L
C O R P O R A T IO N
A Carlngella
Publish October 74. 31 A Nov
ember 7. 14. IM S
D E K 45

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that wa
are engaged in business el 115
N Country Club Rd.. Lake
Mary. Seminole County. Florida
37744 under the fictitious name
ot M A N E C R E A T IO N S , and
that w* intend to register said
name with the Clerk of th*
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida in accordance with tha
p rovisio n s of tha Fictitious
Name Statutos. To-wit. Section
*45 0* Florida Statute* 1*57
/*/ France* Neville
l%l Vlckay Thome*
Publish October 74. I I A Nov
amber 7,14. IMS.
D E K 144

b y B e rk * B re a th e d

’CCO&amp;AICS Or fbbNOb: ’USA
’/NAO/KA
/SAUAbOb

IN T N « CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H R I I B H T I I N T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN AN OFOR
IIM IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASK NO. M-MM-CA-M-F
IRVIN J. MCSWAIN. 0*
Substitute Trustee end
Not Individually,
Plaintiff.

cnee, wvmrm/

mutetneemm,
ABom oe cmmchl
06NQ6 T0MXA0V
fKHtN/Nb.

me US €66006
ASSOCIATION s a /n w
ms

chcck for rn e caanp

n pupArmoAW/i.
I

ik m e
m sm sA
RACKET *

£

f i

I H n W

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice ll hereby given that I
am engagoR M bw»m*e* at m
Lake Merton Dr.. Alternant*
Sprlngi, Seminal* Ceenty.
Florida m i under the fktfttou*
name at TR IA L B IN AVION
CONSULTANTS, and that I in
fend M regtoter Mid name with
m# Clark ot me Circuit Court.
Semlnele County, Florid* in
accordance wtm the prevision*
ef me Pictlttou* Nemo Statute*.
To-wit: Section M5.0* FtorMd
Statute* 1M7.
im Nancy Kenyan, Ph D.
Publish October 24, 11 A Nov­
ember 7.14. t « s
DEK-147
FICTITIOUS K A M I
Notice to hereby given met we
ere m | i p t In butlnew el 5123
S. Hwy. 17-93, CetMlberry,
Semlnele County, Florid* undw
the fictitious name at EM M ITT
H. A MARY K. M ILLER d/b/a
TH E VILLAGE LOCKSMITH,
and that wo Intend M register
m M nemo with Ihe Clerk ef Ihe
Circuit Court. Semlnele County,
Florida In accordance with the
provision* *t th* Fictitious
Name Statute*, To-wlt: Section
•U.M Fiend* SiatutM IMF.
/1/EmmlttH. Miller
/U Mary K. Millar
Publish October M II A N*v
7,14, II
DIK-141
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle# it hereby given mat I
am engaged In buainaM at 3MS
Richmond, Sanford. Seminal*
County, Florida 22771 under the
flctlttou* name af PRO-TOUCH
LAWN SERVICES, and that l
intend to register Mid nemo
with Ihe Clerk et tho Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with Ihe pro
vision* ot the Fictitious Nam*
Statute*. To-wlt: Section M5.99
Florida Statute* 1937.
/s/J.Paul Jones
Publish October 31 A November
7,14.31,1915.
OEK-113
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle# Is hereby given that I
am engaged In butlneu af 4735
Swensneck PI , Winter Springs,
Seminole County, Florida 337M
under th# flctlttou* nemo ol
COTTAGE CARE. INC. end
that I Intend to register Mid
nemo with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florid* In accordance with the
provision* ef th* Fictitious
Name Statutes. To-wlt: Section
M5.09 Florida Statutes 1957.
i m Dawn Tuggle
Publish October 34, 31 A Nov­
ember 7.14.1M5.
OEKI44
___________
N O T IC E O F
P U A L IC M IA H IN O
Notice If hereby given that
Semlnele County hes received
Application for Development
Approval for a Development of
R e g io n a l Im p e d ( D R I I
p ursuant to Section 310.01,
Florida Statutes, from the State
of F lo rid a . D epartm ent of
Community Affair*.
N a m * ef D e v e lo p m e n t :
Plantation. S li t of Develop­
ment: 573 acre*. Location *1
D e v e lo p m e n t: T h * t it * Is
o c e t e d In n o r t h w e s t e r n
Seminole County bordered on
th* west by th* Weklvo River
end on the North by Markham
Road. General *• script ten ef
Development: Th* pro|*ct I* a
mixed u m development con­
taining 1,400 residential unit*;
• 3 acre* ot neighborhood com
m erclel space; a IS.t acre
school tlto; l.S acre day-car*
site; sewage treetoment end
water treatment plants; recre­
ation; parks, lake*, preserva­
tion and open space. Th * deval
opment will be completed In six
phases between 19*5 1993
Legal Description el Devel­
opment Property: P A R C E L NO
1 — T h # So u th ' i o l Ih #
Northeast '« and the Northwest
'4 ol Section 3. Township 70
South. Rang* 79 East, Seminole
County, Florida; and: P A R C E L
NO 1 - Th* E a it Vy of th#
North*#*! '« and the Southwest
'« of th* Northeatt to East of th*
W aklve Rivor of Socllon 4,
Township 70 South, Range 79
East, Seminole County. Florida;
and P A R C E L NO 3 - The
Wait ' j of Ih# Northwest to of
the Southeast to ol Section 34.
Township it South. Range 79
East. Seminole County, Florida;
and P A R C E L NO 4 - Tha
East 'j ol tha Northwest to ol
th* Southeast to ot Section 34.
Township It South. R in g * 29
East, Seminole County, Florida;
and. Lots 1 through 33. in
ciuilva, G A R D A P A R K , a c­
cording to tha plat tharaol re
corded in Plat Book 3, Pag# 57.
Public Record* ol Seminole
County, Florida; and. Lots 1
through 117. together with thet
b lo c k m a r k e d “ O R A N G E
G R O V E ". G A R D A P A R K
H O M E SITES, according to th*
plat thereof as recorded in Plat
Book 4. Pago 10. Public Records
ol Seminole County, Florida.
L E S S Lots t through 7. and 4*.
G A R D A P A R K H O M E SIT E S.
according to the plat thereof es
recorded in Plat Book 4. Pago
10. Public Record* ol Seminole
County, Florida
A public hearing concerning
this pro|ect will be held by the
S-*mlnole County Planning end
Zoning Commission on January
I. 19*4 4t t 00 p m . or as soon
thereafter a* possible in the
Seminole County Services Build
ing el 1101 East First Street.
Sentord. F L 33771, Room W 170,
in order to review, hear com
ments end make recommend#
•ions to tha Board ot County
C om m ission ers ol Seminole
County on Ih* above application
Those in attendance will be
heard and written comments
mey be tiled with Ihe Planning
a n d Z o n in g C o m m is s io n .
Further, a public hearing will be
held by the Seminole County
Board ot County Commissioners
on February 4. 19*4 at 7 00 p m
or as toon thereafter at potii
bl*. In Room WI30. Seminole
County Services Building. San
lord. F L on tha above eppllce
tion. Hearings may be continued
trom time to lima at found
n e ce ssa ry F u rth e r details
available by calling i l l 1130
Ext. 371. Further Information
pertaining to this application
may be obtained trom the Office
Ol P la n n in g , R o o m N 14 I,
Seminole County Services Build­
ing, n o t East First Street,
Sanford. F L 13771 Parsons era
advised that If they decide to
appeal any decision made at
theta meeting*, they will need a
record ol tha proceeding*, and
lor such purpose, they may need
to ensure thet a verbatim record
ol th* proceeding* I* made,
which record Include* the testi­
mony and evldnec* upon which
tha appeal I* to be mad*.
B O A R D OF
CO U N TY C O M M IS S IO N E R S
S E M IN O L E COUNTY.
F L O R ID A
B Y :A N T H O N Y
VANOERW ORP.
P L A N N IN G D IR E C T O R
Publish: November 7, IM S DEL-47

FICTITIOUS NAMB
Mn
|Tf|
hBjailtMHft B
AB
w
YYe a a tU i^ 1
1 HVBNM^B
ETft MjMMl

Oakafa Trail. Farn Bark,
Semlnele County, Florida 237M
under the flctlttou* name af
■ L ID A N T DISCOUNT IM­
PORTS. and mat l intend to
ragtotor aaid name with lha
Clerk ef the Circuit Court,
Semlnele Caunty. Fierido m
accordance wtm tka prouiHwio
of m# Flctlttou* Nam* Statute*.
To-wlt: Section *4509 Florida
Statutes 1*57.

/a/Jama* J. Duffy
Publish Navamkar 7, 14, 31, 3S.
IMS.
DCL-44
FICTITIOUS NAMB
Nolle* to haraby givan (hat I
am angegad In kusinaaa at 2M1
S. Santord Av*. H laniard.
Seminal* County, Florida 33771
under m# fktltleua name af SUN
STATE CONSTRUCTION C O .
and that I Inland la regular Mid
noma with lit* Clark of tha
Circuit Court. Samlneto County,
Florida In accordance with tha
prevision* ef tha Fictitious
Nam* Statute*. Te-wlt: Section
•45.99 FtorMi Statute# IMF.
/a/ltovanJ.ligM
PuMtoh November 7, 14.11, M.
IMS.
OIL-41

IN TMB CIRCUIT COUNT
FOB IIM INOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE OIVISION
FMa Nemker M-737-CP
IN N I: ESTATE OF
BEATRICE J. HUBBARD.
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* administration of the
estate of BEATRICE J. H UB ­
BARD. daciaied. File Number
1S-737-CF, to ponding In the
Circuit Court for Semlnele
County, Florida. Probate
Division, the address ef which to
Clerk ef th* Circuit Court,
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford, Florida 13771. The
me* and address** ef the
personal representative end Ihe
personal representative’* at­
torney ere sol farm below.
All Interested person* ere
required to file with mis court.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE F'RST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE; (1) ell claim*
against tho estate and (3) any
objection by an interested
person to whom thl* notice was
mailed that challenges th* valid­
ity ef the will, the qualifications
ef Ih* pertonal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ef the
court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO FILED W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of thl* Notice he*
begun on November 7.1M5.
Personal Representative:
ROBERT EDWARD
STROKER
P O Bex 373
Cumberland. Rhode Island
03144
Attorney for
Personal Representative:
GARY E. MASSEY. ESQ
MASSEY. ALPER
A WALDEN. P.A
Do* Douglas Place

mwettCltmSI.

Altamonte Spring*. FL
33714-2577
Telephone (105) *490900
Publish: November 7,14. IftS
DEL**
CORRECTED
AGENDA
SEMINOLE COUNTY
BOARDOF ADJUSTMENT
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
NOVEMBER 11.1915
4:00PM.
TOWHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GI VEN
TH A T tha Samlnela County
Board of Adjustment will con­
duct a public hearing to conaldar
th* following Itomt:
CONSENTAGENOA
A VARIANCES
I. RONALD D. DAOER BA{11-11-15&gt;-I4JV - Planned
Unit Development Zone — Rear
setback from 10 tt to 7.5 ft and
Side setback from 10 ft to I tt for
screen enclosure on Lot *7,
Waklve Hill* Section Four. PB
20. Pg 99, Section 4 21 29, S side
of Wickham Ct. oft Cable Or. W
of West Weklva Tr. (DIST3)
a MOBILE HOME APPLICATI ONS/A-I A G R I C U L T U R E
ZONE
4. DONALD E. WEAVER —
B A m - l I U ) 145TE - To piece
e mobile home |RENEWAL OF
TEN MOBILE HOMES) on Tex
Parcel* A/4 end A/t. Section
321 11. located W of BfcW
Packing Plant, N ot Florida Av*
on Ihe W side of Deleon St.
(□1ST II
0. S P E C I A L I X C E P TIONS/OTHER
4. M U L L E T T LAKE W ATER
A S S O C I A T I O N
B A ( 11 11-15) 74E - A - 1
Agriculture Zone — Request to
IncreeM customer connections
from 140 to 203 on th* N 100 ft of
S 330 It ol E 50 ft ot SE Li.
Section 17 20 37. along with an
easement for ingrtss and egress
over Ih* E 15 ft ol th* S 330 tt ot
SE to ol Mid Section 17. 330 tt N
of Cochran Rd. to mil* W of SR
44. (GIST 5)
7. A M O C O O I L C O . BAill 1115) 74Eand I S 1 V - C 3
Commercial Zone — Special
Exception for fuel pump* In
coniunction with a convenience
store end Rear Yard Setback
from 30 It to 10 ft on Acreage
Parcel 9G and Lot 50. Blk A.
plus vacated Forest City Rd
adjoining N line Blk A and Lot 1.
Blk B plus vacated Forest City
Rd adjoining N line, Blk B In PB
11. Pg 47. all In Section J 21 29, S
side of SR 434. between Mobil*
Av* and Vagabond Way. (OtST
1)
This public hearing will be
held In Room WI20 ot the
Seminole County Services Build­
ing. M0I E. First Street. San
ford. Florida, on November 11,
IMS. at 4:00 P.M., Jf as soon
thereafter es possible.
Written comments filed with
the Land Management Director
will be considered. Person* ap­
pearing at tha Public Hearing
will be heard. Hearing* may be
continued trom time to time at
found necessary. Further detail*
available by calling 331-1130,
Ext. 444.
Parson* ore advised that. It
they decide to appeal any de­
cision mad* at this hearing, they
will need a record ol the pro­
ceeding*. and, tor such purpoM.
they mey need to Insure mat a
verbatim record of the proceed
Ing* is made, which tha appeal
I* to be bated, per Section
2*4.0105. Florid* Statute*
SEMINOLE COUNTY
BOARDOF ADJUSTMENT
BY: ROGSR FERRA,
CHAIRMAN
Publish: November 7, IMS
DEL-30

CLASSIFIED ADS
S «m in o l«

O rlando - W lntar Park

322-2611____________631-9993
CLASSIFIED DEPT!

HOURS •1

RATES
’j j .-

!!!?!?

f bmsbmSm Smb I K •Sm
M N M T i n FM M V
M IM M V » -M b m

n

Ub m

MC a Im

f i r t i ill
SUmb

DEADLINES
Noon Th* Day B«forn Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
Monday - 11:00 A .M . Saturday

11— P m o n a l s

33- R m I Estate

Covrttt

fiittit mtunnimr cthth
ABOUT ION COUNBIM NO
F r e t P r eg n a n c y Testa.
Confidential- Individual
a s s i s t a n c e . C a l l far
appointment- evening hours
aval labia........................ H I- tsm
I will nat be responsible far any
debts Incurred by anyan*
other than mysalf at af

^IW JlH a rb a rtN Ja g U ^
25— S p o c io l N o t ic o s

*

*

*

*

*mihtoaefgetting••

e Baal litato U n m e t •
We etfe# FraoTvitien
aad taetiwvem Traletagl
Cell DickerVkfcIter#eti11*:
*7)-l447...t33-»ai...lv9. 774-IM#
Keyatai Ftortde., lac.
^ ^ ^ • gn JU ga rto n ce ^ ^ ^

41— Money to Land
NEED MONEY?

For Details: 1*09433 4254
Florid* Notary A»«oc letton
JANIt'S ALTER N ATIV E
tIN IO B C A N C
34 Hour tovlng care ter senior
cltljen*. Family environment
end hem* cooked meal*.
Cell:...... .........................345-714*
• M ARY KAY COSMETICS*
Skin car* and color flair
CO N N IE.........................313 7734

Everyone doe* at tome time. If
you own a home and have a '
job. if'teatler then you think.

CttWT?

MPROBUM!
134-1900
FRIEDLANDKR. INC.
tka
liiirtaiBO
I m b Ib
iiaVe
w e m w va^yM
711B. Altamonte Drive
•Lkeneed Mortgage Braky

NEEDED
H a ir c u tt in g model*.
M e l e / Fe m e l e for e de
monstratlon. Cell for more
Information: 331 5451.________
New Zeeland B Australia- April
1937. 1*44. Visit Auckland.
R o t e r u e , M o u n t Cook,
glaciers. Penguin Island.
Melbourne. Sidney 9 other
piece*. For brochure, cell
3234441.

Playhouse* Custom built &amp; de
livered by Christmas. Model
on Display. Cell: 331 0315.

SHAMLIE PR00UCTS
Sendl.............................. 333 4543

03— MortpaflM
Bought 4 Sold
W* buy fit end 2nd mortgages
Nation wide. Call: Ray Legg
Lie. Mtg Broker. 940 Douglas
Avu ■Alternant*. 7747711
W* buy lit A Jnd mortgage*.
Fast closing 4 fair price.
Barton Pilcher, Lie. Mtg.
Brkr Cell anytime. J22 74M

71— Help Wanted

27— Nurstry 4
Child Car*

Acrylic Applicator* needed to
apply protective coating on
cars, beets end plane* 13 to
111 per hour W * train For
work in Sanford area cell
Temp# 113 M e 7151

I will do babysitting In m y home
day or night. 133 3941, alter
1AM. Ask for Merv.

ASSISTANT MANAOER
POSITI ON Benefit*, end

Legal Notice
NOTICC
N O T IC E Is hereby given thet
the Board of County Com mls
sloner* ot Seminole County,
Flordla. Intend* to held * public
hearing ta teniliar the enact
ment at an ordinance entitled
A N O R D IN A N C E R E C O O I
F Y IN G A N D A M E N D IN G THE
C O N S O L ID A T E D S T R E E T
L IG H T IN G D IS T R IC T W ITH
T E N L E V E L S OF S E R V IC E
FOR T H E U N IN C O R P O R A T E D
A R E A S OF S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y ; S E T T IN G S T A N
D A R O S FOR TH O SE TEN
L E V E L S . C O N S O L ID A T IN G
E X IS T IN G S T R E E T L IG H T
ING D IS T R IC T S IN T O THOSE
TEN L E V E L S ;
C O N ­
S O L ID A T IN G N E W S T R E E T
L IG H T IN G D IS T R IC T S W H ICH
A R E C U R R E N T L Y B E IN G
C R E A T E D INTO T H O S E T E N
L E V E L S ; P R O V ID IN G D E F I
N IT IO N S ; P R O V ID IN G FOR
G O V E R N A N C E OF THE
D IS T R IC T B Y THE B O A R D OF
C O U N T Y C O M M IS S IO N E R S .
P R O V ID IN G FO R M A IN T E
N A N C E A N D O P E R A T IO N OF
S T R E E T L IG H T S W I T H I N
TH E D IST R IC T ; P R O V ID IN G
F O R A P P O I N T M E N T OF
SUBOISTRICT R E P R E
SENTATIVES
SETTING
F O R T H F IS C A L A N D T A X A
T IO N P R O C E D U R E S . SE T
T IN G F O R T H A M E N D M E N T
P R O C E D U R E S TO A L L O W
FOR T H E A D D IT IO N O F N EW
A R E A S TO T H E D IS T R IC T
A N D F O R C H A N G E S IN
L E V E L S O F S E R V IC E ; E M
P O W E R IN G THE L E V Y OF
S P E C IA L A S S E S S M E N T S OR
T A X E S W IT H IN T H E D IS
TRIC T; R E P E A L O F O R D I
N A N C E NO 14 70 A N D PRO
V ID IN G F O R S E V E R A B IL IT Y .
I N C L U S I O N IN THE
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY C O D E.
A N D A N E F F E C T IV E D A T E
et to oo e.m.,or e* soon thereat
ter es possible, at Its regular
meeting on Ihe 74lh of Nov
ember. I9t5. et th* Seminole
County Services Building, Room
WI20. 1101 East First Street.
Sentord. Florida. Persons ere
advised that. It Ihey decide to
appeal any decision m ad * el thl*
hearing, they will need e record
ol th* proceedings, and. lor such
purpose, they m ey need to
Insure that a verbatim record ot
the proceedings Is mad*, which
record Include* the testimony
end evldnec* upon which Ih*
appeal i* to be based.
□avid N Berrien
Clerk to th* Board of
County Com mlssionersol
Seminole County, Florida
Publish: November!. 1915
D E L 34

bonus Heir dresser eiperl
e n c * necessary Apply in
parson et Ace Beauty Supply,
Zeyre Plata, Sanford. Be
tw eenfA.m 4 P M __________

ATTENDANTS
Coin laundry attendants wanted
tor new laundromat in Sen
lord Apply in person Tues ,
Nov 11. 1*15. 13 Noon to 5

P.M. ef: Semlnele Centra.
14*9Orlande Or____________
Aut o equlppm ent dealer in
Winter springs looking for
mature, intelligent, non smok
ing secretary tor full or pert
tim e w ork.Telephone end
typing duties required. 3 girl
office. Cell: M r Turk or Mr.
Ow en337 3130M F 13

AVON IARNINOS WOWIII
OPEN TIR R IT O H IIS NOWIII
J]1-1535 er 133-1459

BACKHOI OPERATORS
Minim um J yrt experience with
pipelaying, lln* 4 grade exp.
C a l l H a rp e r M e c h a n ic * !
Corp . 331 1100 A ik tor P *t
Chambers
___________

Bill Lews'* Exterminators ef
New Smyrna Beach is new
opening office In Sanford.
Need professional salesperson
4 phone solicitors Immediate
ly CellM r. Lowe et 331 4149

BID-MEDICAL
CLICTRONICSTECH
Install, maintain 4 repair medi
cel electronics equipment.

APPLY: W. Volusia Memorial
Hospital. 7*1 W. Plymouth
Av*., DeLend, Fie. EOE
C A S H I f R/ CL I R K Apply In
person el: L ll’ Food Town. 710
Lake Mery Blvd E O E

ClASSIflED ADVERTISING
REPRESENTATIVE
•
M ust be fast, accurate typist
end have the Ability to work
with th* public General office
experience e plus. Pleasant
personality end willingness to
work es e teem essential.
Apply in person

TH E SANFORD EVENINO
HERALD
30# M. French Avenue
Sentord, F L 13771
Construction Help WenledMetel building workers, car
poolers, concrete laborer*.
Sentord Airport. Bldg 149

DAILY WORK/DAILY FAY
START W gjU N Q W l

I NO^

FEE!

Report reedy tor work et 4 AM
407 W 1st. St.......... Santord

3211590
D river* Wanted Pert time. 7
d a y * (optional). M o rn in g
hour*. Cell Jenny, 373 0410

NOW HIRING!
MALEIFEMALE
PART TIM E EMPLOYEES
Flexible Hours On 24 Hour Basis
4 to 8 Hours Per Day.
U p To 30 Hours Per Week
• CASHIERS • FOOD PREPARATION
• STORE MAINTENANCE
TO P SALARY IN TH IS AREA

ONE STOP CENTERS
APPLICATIONS AT
m M. lmmrt Ayr., teeferE

Mee.-frL 4J44J4

9 k

r

�71-H e lp Wauled

Sxpimmg m m* m . win
wrt M4 wMI kcw
ytM MVfftlM kttt. P lM f lC
tm ta » ta n R IT i M M tar
ootaAftahod c m M P i Hi m .
AIm Naff reftaf and p rtw li
Outy m m# w m . WMii m little

r ^ tT r ^ r ^
'XSmWMM.HMLMM.

I M H I t 11*1)4801541.
I ip iftu c iR M d i f fflu h in
operator* wanted an all
ope r a t i on * . M u s t Hava
■ilalaMMi
A
M M IIIM M V m P T m V R W I P f l P
sawing experience. M a M i
air canWtlanad facility. DM
affar aaia holiday*, paid
vacation*. health cart plan.
Plat a work ratao.
m i

M N O E L M ANUFACTURING
2S*eOld Lake Mary Rd.
SanfarAPI.

R -A p a r t R W ila
“
I/ R e n t

T rip le x / R e n t
M. I Bdrm.
appi. Just

A V A IL A B L E N O W

ninuiiMa

SBNIOR e r r u IN S DISCOUNT
RANCH S TY LE LlVttaOt11
I M F O M COURT APTS.

m m
Lovely t Bdrm. w/tcreon parch.
Newly palntad. Camplat*
privacy. BSE weak ♦ gggg
dtpasif. m u t t ar
O B T IIN A R IA - 3 bdrm.. ream
far garden and chlchant.
Partly furnished. tm-*3SS
moMACaW: MHB7B.

Vise *dwp*sit*Plb

1 *r&gt; tS4 MrflNnAWu**uu»rT
te H41HT MMUNM) 7NMN VN) HMT
16 WMTAUrWf
com homk ntm Worm i * uet

197— M H M t o
H e m e s/ Rent

•ENRRAL OFF ICR WORKER
aHIh baahhiaelng experience.
Call m a m . aaa far Saaan.

la war* In canvanlanca Mara.
Paid tvacetian. group taauranca available. Polygraph
required. Apply In parson:
UP d a m p Paai Mara
itMFroaahAeo., Iiatafd
M O U S ia a iP tR Wanfap far I
required. Cali: m a m
affar JS P.M. In I

flan Shatter
troubled taone.
L IC IN S IO CO SM ITO tO O IST
w/clientei# needed. Oead
banaflta. Call m s a tl._______
LPN ar MM aaadsd, S-ll aMN.
Gaad afmaaphora A banaflta.
Pull llmapaaltlan. Apply at:
Oabary Maaar...M N. Hwy. IM S
Oibary................................ BOB
MAIDS- Help ua clean wpi Call
Pop-lna. W tr u . Driver'*
license required____________
N E E D E D LPN far busy Dr.'*
office. PrlPey momlnp* anly.
Typing I* a mini. Starting at
M M hour. Call: Mra. Thome*.
Tu M .o rM a P .m H M .
NaaPeP Immediately- S now
dlitrlbutor* for Herbal dial a*
fa n on TV. 1*»4T2 4**1.
N I I D I P Partner In drywall
llnlthlng business. Transpcr
HHon needed. Call: Ml 7S14.
Now hiring lull lima /part time.
Cashiers and cook*. 17 year*
or older. Start at *3*0 par
hour. Apply In partan al
Church'* Fried Chicken, 2M!
French Ave.
NURSES
Need Chrlttma* Money? start
earning extra money for the
holiday* now. UN's. LPN's.
CNA's. and Live-In'* noaPad
now. Call: Sanford. HI-704* or
Orlando. *4**411.
M ID IC A L PERSONNEL
___________ POOL

NURSISAlois
All thlflt. Good atmo*phora
and banal lit. Apply at:
DaRery Manor...** N. Mwy 17ffl
Oibary............................E.O.E.
NURSIS A IO IS W A N TE D All
3 thill*. Mutt be cartIliad or
o par lanced Apply In parson:
Lakevlaw Hurting Cantor, PIP
E. 2nd St., Santord. Fla.
OFFICE C U M
B**lc skill* required, ixcallant
banal it* with compatltlva pay.
Apply In paraon at Lowe'*
Trut* Plant. 2«0I Aileron Cir­
cle. (Airport. Sanford Indus
trial Park.)_________________
Part lima, woman or man work
from from home on now tele­
phone program. Earn up to SS
to *18par hour. Call: M34341.
Part tlmo ettenPaat/talaa
partan • Alert. Intelligent,
individual naodad to look after
amusement canter In Sanford
plaia. Night* and weekend* IS
to 10 hour* par weak. Mutt b*
mature, neat In appearance
and bonabl*. Phono lor appolntmont: H1 4403_________
P RO OR AM A S S I S T A N T to
work with adult disabled.
Prev. exp In child car*, nurse
aid or w/ disabled preferred.
Good benefit*. 33I-7HI_______

REGISTEREDNURSE
Full lime. 3-11 shift. Charge
position. Apply at:
Dabary Manor...AO N. Mwy 17-fl
Oabary.......... .....................BOR
Residential J o u r n a y m a n .
L i ce n s e d . S a l a r y c o m ­
memorate with ability and
experience. Call: *4*44*3.
RN Naodad Part Tima on day
shift. Good atmosphere A
ban*lift Apply at:
Oabary Manor....** N. Mwy 17-DR
Oabary............................... BOB
Sacrolary/Racopllanlst- for
bi^sy manufacturing com­
pany. Pioaant telephone voice
and good tyoing a must. Sand
Resume' to: P.O. BOX 1*13
SBCURITV OUARD • Mature.
Intelligent, and aht* la pass
polygraph. Cobla Bool Com
pony. Call: 333 33*8._________
S U B ST I T U TE B A B VS I T T B R
NBBOBD- Occasional moot
Ings at church. Morning A
evening hours. 333 *371_______
TBLBPMONB SELLS- S3 per
hour plus bonus, f to 3 P.M.
Our-Office Altamonte Springs.
Call Ron: 77*4511.___________
WORD PROCESSOR
U lo t t per hour. Immediate
openings. Permanent posi­
tions. Never a F m I
P IBM DISPLAY WRI TER
* LANIER o r# WANG
‘tE M f PERM_______ 774-1141
93— R o o m * f o r R e n t
ROOM FOR RBNT
Weekly. Full house prIvllegM.
Call:.............................. 333*1*3
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the weak. Reasonable ratos.
Maid service. Call 323-88M ar
333-SM7 37 PM. 4IS Palmetto
Ave._______________________
TNH FLORIDA MOTBL
MO Oak Avenue............. 331*304
Reasonable Weakly Ratw
97— A p e r t m e n t *
F u rn is h e d / R e n t
Far*. Agfa, far SaaMr ONaaa
)ig Pal matt* Ava.
J. Cowan. N* Phana Calls

par month. «ig
Patmelt* Ave
t _____ ______
_________
Claaa In af ISIS West 1st
street. Sanford._____________
! Bdrm., kitchen with appllanco*. Ilvlngream. alr/haaf.
SITS par month phis deposit.
N i c e a r e a . 131- 3140
I b d r m . , p r i v a t e p ar ch ,
flraplae*. child OK. U1S m a,
SlMdwaatt. 3 lia o i.
S Bdrm., 1 bafh. Nice wall la
wall carpet, oc. kitchen A l
Bdrm. furnished. I large walk
m cMeats. Ill* shower A tub.

1 Bdrm. fully fumlahad maMM
ham* In Plnacrast Mob Ila
Ham* Park. M il Magnolia
AV# Let Ita. 44*5257 ar M3

111— S t o r a g e R e n t a ls

480AUP..
1 1 7 -C o m m tr c ia l

99— A p a r t m e n t s
J n fv rn is h e d / R a n t
BAMBOO COVB APTS.
Mb I . Abpart Bfvd.
I Bdrm., I Bath............. t m ma.
I Bdrm., I Bath............. ta g ma.
y*eee**ee**#*#*****e*#*e*e**IH0
.....~.....................................m + m
LAKE FRONT- I and I Bdrm.
apt*. Foal, tannnis. Adults, no
pot*. Flexible dspeilt.
Call:............................... 333-87*3
Near Downtown Upstairs. 3
bdrm., I bath. *333 me., dis­
count rant. *30* sac . No pats.
331*401or 3335117_________

NOVCMBCRSFECMi)
an energy effkant l bdrm. apt
• •108off 1st Month's Rent
• 1100 Security Deposit
• Senior Cltltan's Dlcount

FRMRUR ARMS

MM Florida Ave............ n y u t t
RIDOBWOOD ARMS APT.
2)H Rldpiwiid Av9&lt;
SPACIOUS I BEDROOM
•*» FOR 1ST MONTH'S RBNT
ffO V IM B IR ONLY I
PHONE M3+4M.POB O BtAILS
SANFORD- 3 bdrm., 3 bath,
w a sh a r/ d ry a r, blinds,
screened perch/petio. t*M de­
posit. Half off first mo. rent.
British American Realty.
*30-111*.
______

MQVf INSPECIAL!

Par Laaaat IMX3M an 1703.
Includes i j n sq. ft. bldg. 13
bays B title* I Zoned tar agio,
boat, trailer tola* 4 repair.
lather uses.) *4**331________
Retail B Office Space- M up t*
1.0M tq.fi. alto storage avail­
able. 333 440

R t n ta ls
New 3 Bdrm.. l bath luxury
C a n d a t . P e a l , tenni s,
washar/dryar. security, sets
par month. Lenderame Fla..
Inc. Ml MM._______________
PINE RIOO I CLUB

1.3.) Bdrm.. 3 bath, washer,
dryer, vertlclet. refrig, dish­
washer. Starting al 137).
•OLD REV MOMT., INC
__________ 471-7333__________
SANFORD- Brand new. 2 bdrm.,
3W bath, ties me It ! 3*3* or
433155*___________________

2 BEDROOM.
Call................................. 333-ltM
I and 3 bdrm. Also furnished
efficiency from *73 week. S3M
deposit. No pels Call 333 MM
or 133-4307 5-7 PM. 4IS
Palmelto.__________________
I BDRM. OUPLBX • *300 par
month *300 deposit. Call:
Ml 1*44evening*.___________
I Bdrm., I bath
air condition, corpet. Nice.
Coll:...............................373 144*

$100 OFF '
lit. Month's Rent
I bdrm., l bat*.............. *333 Mo.
3 bdrm., Ms bath...........*3*0 Mo
Each apartment hat patio or
bolcomy overlooking court­
yard. AM appliances, laundry
ream, and pool.

FRMRUR ARMS
til* Florida Ava............333 ****
3 bdrm.. 3 bath, over 1.0*0 sq,
ft . wesher/dryer, dishwasher,
fans, pool and clubhouse us*.
*333 per month. Fay only
a J a c trlc C a lh m iU A ^ ^ ^

103— Houses

Unfurnished / Rent
D I L T O N A - I bdrm., living
roam, dining room, wall/wall
carpet, itov*. refrigerator,
wall alr/haat. Nice yard. *330
mo. Yearly leas*. Alto Tnd
house without separate dining
room. *300 mo. No pots.
Available new. SIM security.
374-1040____________________
IO Y LW ILD I DRIVE 3 Bdrm. 3
both. 3 cor Eorag*. storage,
large polio and yard, new
paint, carpet, good schools
N I C E I W ill consider
leese/optton. MIS. Call: 333
5a*3evening* and weekends.
a a * IN DELTONA a * a
a a HOMES FOR RBNT a *
_______ a e I7*-1«3* e a_______
LAKE MARY- 1 bdrm.. near
school. Reference. *300 me..
333 UIO.___________________
SANFORD- Executive NameCountry living. 30x24 rac
room. 3/a ecr*. yet 3 ml. to 1-4.
3 bdrm.. 3 bath. dan. fireplace.
much more. MOO mo. 333-43*3.
SANFORD- SR 4*A. at Country
Club, extra clean, largo 3
bdrm., 3 bath, fenced. *430
mo. 333 3340________________
Small Lake Cottage for 1 or
ceupi* anly. Loam required.
MoooH. Call: 322 41M.
3 Bdrm. I bath, screened porch,
carpeted, appliances. S3M
plus security . 331-3148._______
3 bdrm.. 3 bath haute. Brand
now. t*M ma. 0*3-3*30 ar
433-MS*.___________________
3 Bdrm., t bath. Baraga ham* an
quiet street In Oabary. NO
pat*. t*M par month with
ktitaa. Call: S3*-3333._________
3 Bdrm .. I bath, alr/haat,
carpal, vary large. Mg yard.
Cdlli........................... 313-1400

Ml Mqlig^^qAI

STEMPER

R A M B LIW O O D Handyman
Special. 4 bdrm., ) bath,
daub!* garage, fancad yard.
MIAM. 345-37M

MINI FARM • t bdrm. ham*
Flu* fu**t cattoBO.barn. and
ether out buildings ON IS
SECLUDED A R C IS . Won't
last tang at llttA Ei.
SPACIOUS extra clean 4 Bdrm.,
3 bath, family ream, flrplaca,
separate dining. Mg porch.
small pr let. Only SS7.7M.
OTHER HOMES. LOTS.
ACREAOB, INVESTMENT
P R O P IR TY
CALL AN YTIM E
REALTOR..................... 333-4441
LIST W ITH USt

LobesTmRstBFH
Tasr Raatsl
Fgmfciirisr UtrfamMwt
Carports............ Frtvat* Fattas
1 i^ k | x a d iis a U a
4E*N LdnVfiftlflf. FVIS.WNItTETI
WATER BEDS ACCEPTED!

Call____321-1911
123— W a n t a d t o R a n t
Mother and adult sen wish lo
rent live room house w/fenced
yard. Two small dogs: on*
Inside A on* outside Will pay
(400 *500 monthly on short
form lease. Call 1 *13-134-1001

125— F o r L a a s a
IW Aar# MdaaNlal SMa • l.wa
sq. It. shop; 1.000 sq. It. shop;
and 7.0M tq. It. of office
^ g e c e ^ C a lh M T a T J a ^ ^ ^ ^
127— O H ic a R t n t a l s
2.000 sq. H. of office A storage
w/half acre fenced Industrial
parking. 337-I4H____________

141— Hamas Far Salt

BATEMAN REALlT
Uc. Raal Estate Brabar
RELOCATING- Eaavtitvl acre
earner let. Uka now. 3 bdrm..
1 bath, aat-in kltchan, pies
tree* A privacy. Priced right.
II ACRES *3*JM
344* (anterd Ave.

321-0757 Eva.-322-7443
FAMILY WANTED
For (his 3 bdrm.. 1 bath with
pool on It* acres al and ol
quiet Santord St. *54.500
DAVID BOOUE
Raaltor/Assoclate
333 3300alter hours 333 0)07

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
Responsible Couple- no pats . no
children. *333 per mo., SIM
damage, 3H-3SI7.___________
3 Bdrm., Samt-tumlibad. chain
link fence A beet dock on St.
John's River. *400 mo . plus
_ u M LM O O t^^djoU LM FSJf^

141— H o m o s F o r S a to
Sa n f o r d 3 Bdrm., 1 v« bam,
CB, Garage, central heat and
air. owner aaslsNd financing.
MAM dawn, *430 par month.
345-37M.

4/1. ham*. Fireplace and
lart* screened parch.
A**umabN,g(E.gEI.

S IN G LE S TO R Y
LIV IN G

1277.00
* FAM ILY A A D U L T *

1 4 1 -H a m a s F a r S a lt

R t n ta ls

121-Condominium
Ht.
MOPOf*. Call: 333-fbM.
I Bdrm., newly ramadalad.
Owner pays water, sowar,
electric. SIM par nook. Call:
33&gt;-feat.

CARRIAGE S w i
AM OUR NORM POOR
PAR
NewBi
Contact:

aflhamonmiPlM.

II \ l

I

Id
WE Hi

1 (1
VI

\ l

I 1

lO lt
•LSI

ASSUME NO QUALIFVINOO*roesui largo 3 bdrm. an
largo lot. Air and garagal
Beautiful wido epon view I
Trees, cevntry stmasphara.
**,1*1 dawn. 114%. *»** par
mantb FITI. Immacvlatal
Ml.***
ST. JOHNS AVB.I Oergeevt 4.7S
aero Nemeth*. Clete t* St.
Johns Rlvar. Camplataly
fenced1 In area *1 expensive
hemes I Unbeliev ably prlcedl

tn.ss*

WE NECOLISTINGSI

323-5774
3SMHWY. 17 43

LAKE SYLVAN Uka now 3
Bdrm., flraplae*. garage,
large fenced lot. SM.MO. Jen
niter Newman I34-07M. Real
Estate On*. Realtors. &gt;4*4108
Nice country horn* on 3 acres ol
land. 3 Bdrm. 3 bath, on paved
road. Priced below appraisal.
M4.M8. Call: 321-4845._______
R ID BRICK
3 Bdrm., Iv« bath horn* In
excellent condition on large
lot. Ready to move Ini Price
lust reduced to **4.450 Better
Saall

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR___________ 333-7*4*
R*S*i**ai*d Properly la
Oalfana 3 bdrm.. l/p. cathe­
dral callings, pool. *55.000.
Fleef Finance Confer. 33318*1

I

STEN STR O

■Eun-IEILTOI
SERfET#! SaiEI LdOSOf
WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY
USB YOUR IMAGINATION- 3
bdrm.. I bath tram# ham*,
l a f - l a kitche n, la-law
quartan, parch, (had. In "a*
I*" condition. S14.4M
FAM ILY STAR TER - 4
. m bafh.
kitchen, hue
screened par
’ utility
with had bafh. gauo*
UNBELIEVABLE 4 bdrm.. tv*
bafh. M h r y ham* with bay
■Indew B wrap around parch.
split plan, fireplace, eat-In
T N I CASUAL LI FE- 3 bdrm., 3
hath, wood cabinet* B sat in
kltchan. 11X3* peel, HrspUto,
breakfast b a r , caat r al
baat/ak. MUa*
LOTS OF CHARM- 4 bdrm., 3
bath. l-s*ary ham*. Break test
bar, formal dining roam,
oat-la kltchan. Dob * paNa.
WILL BUILO TO SUITl
YO U B L O T OR OURSI
EXCLUSIVE A G E N T FOR
WINSONO DEV. CORF.. A
CENTRAL FLORIDA LEADBRI M O R I H O M E FOR
LESS MONEY! CALL TO ­
DAY!
a O l N IVA-O SCIO LA R D. *
ZONED FOR MOBILES!
I Acre Cavalry tracts.
Wall treed ta paved Rd.
l*%Oawn. ta Yrs. at 1!%I
From *14.34*1
If ysv are leaking far a
successful career in Real
Estate, Stsnsfram Realty Is
leakinf tar yav. Call La*
Albright today at 131 343*.
Evening* 323-saei.

REALTOR.
BM W
SANFORD Hem# w/ office,
araf. retfarad "C rackar"
hem*. 3 bdrm., l ham, MM aq
ft. I acre. Lowi*g&gt;&gt;. 323 3340
■XPRESS YOURSELF. OWN A
CLASSIC! reached By tradf-

a. 4

m

Cad: Ran
tar/Aaaaciafe, 333-57*3. Tha
Wolf St. Company, H1-MM
DELTONA *4.500 and asaum*
no qualifying loan. *530 total
monthly payment. Ideal tor
Investor, retire* or small fam­
ily.
Visa til, Inc. Reader
&lt;4M)704.3H&lt;orl3M)gi4.Utt,COUNTRY W IO I REALTY
Roe. R.E. treher...........313-4335
^ T IR jA lL O ilim f k
1 4 3 - O u t o f S to to
P r o p e r t y / S o lo
•V OWNER- a bdrm.. 3V&gt; bam
horn* on t .s acres. In
Crossnora. N.C. Near beach A
Sugar Mountain ski resort.
2.315 tq. ft. living area, lull
basement, fireplace. *117,580.

1ST— C o m m e r c i a l
P r o p a r t y / S a to
COMMERCIAL SPECIALIST
SALES ANO APPRAISALS
ROOM. BALL. JR. P.A..C.S.M.
REALTO R..................... H3-43IS
153— A c r t a p a L o t s / S o lo
LO T FOR SALE- CbulvelaSmall lot an small lake. Paved
street City water, m .400.

304 Elm A vd Okt's Id spaed btba;
bad with mattress; BSE.
axcollonf condition. M7-Nil
KEROSENE SPACE n I a T I * LIK IN IW .E7 S .

2 1 7 -O a r a g a S a to a

WGfttW:

OVIEDO REALTY,INC.
__________ 30-44*3__________
SANFORD AVE. I*W acres.
Improved paiture. (44.500.
Owner financing.
Wallace Craaa Realty Inc.
Realtor..........................HI-M77
SANFORD 5 Building lota.
118.800 tech. All tor (45.000.
Call: 831 3335.______________
He ACRES
weeded, on paved road *13.580.
Call:........................... 331 4845
(1) 5-ACRB TRACTS- Partially
Improved. *37.000 each. Owner
^ In a n c ln g J lX H O O ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

322-2287
CONSTRUCTION NIC.
Custom B uild in g In
Central Florida
Since 1969

1 f t — P a t i A S u p p iia s
ARC Registered DalmatianMale. 3 yrs. eM. Iioa. Also.
*-yr eld West Highland Tarrlor. fra* to good home. 333
3430, after 7PM._________ ___
hunting dag. Male,
le and walker. tv&gt; year*
Beagle
old. Cal I: *45-3451.

PRESTO IMPORTS- Ladle* and
children shop, line gifts, sale
price*, plus alterations on
mens/lodle* domes. Semlnol#
Plaia next to Ico croom store
Coll: 3)44045.

■ s x v

Sea locally
C a ll : C red it Manager
i sea 447 am*
PIANOS...ORGANS...GW rfARS
Christmas claaranc*. Apada
Music Cantor, H M S. French.
M f l rtowTf
ra*. Call: after« :H
p m .:

2)1— Cart
CadRMc 77 Sadaa- Extra clean.
So* at: SB7 Rosalia Or. S U M
Firm I CMI: H1H03.
CHaftaw it, Hall dsntad. no
mat. run* gaad. (IM a ar trad*
tar station wagon 333-434*

*MYT0 MMJT0 *
★

AUCTION ★

Tfwy f l ................8G8C8
• # # # • Ha td s a e e ee e
■vary Thors. MS* at 7iN PM
* W h e re A n yB e B y *
* C e n B u ye r S till*

174 Nwy 17-41 D i Rary sag M M
e FURS AUTO M L IS *
Wa buy. sailor trada I
Financing Aval labia
558Wad* St........Winter Spring*
_________ *337 saw*______
P L Y M O U T H V O L A R ! ' - 77
wagan. 310 v-S. air. very
clean, SIMS. Ml 7*0*.________
(500 dm&gt;n a aaiuma law ma.
payments an a 1405 Chrysler
LaBaren GTS Call: M1-MM.
'77 Cadillac Coopa DaVUtaAaautifui body, rune great.
New tire*, brakes, shacks.
S3.18C. 333-1SSC._____________
7* OLDS CUTLASS SUPREMBA/C, with ps/ph, am-fm
stereo Good all around candl
tlpn. &gt;3,358 3334744_________
*M MERCURY CAPRI- 4 sp.,
new tiros, good can#Ian. dark
blue. (3.440.03*8471_________
I I C N I V I T T I - a dear, a
cyclindar, air, standard trans.
Only (23*5.
It

C I T A T I O N - a door. 4
cyclindar standard trana. air,
radio. Only (37*5.

7* FORD PICK UP- m V-S.
Standard trans. Only ( t m .
Ernie Jochaaw Av*e Sots*
CaRi............... wi..«. m... wR1*RR

or can pull A-rebuild yeurv
tm . Steve: Hi-asM.________
a Used P235/75 RIS Gsodysir
Wrangler radial*. Call: H 3
0503 attar 4 P.M.

AC T II CONSIONMINT. open
Ing at: 317 B. 1st. Street. Is
looking for stylish fashions for
man. woman and loon*. Call:
323*33*.___________________
..m -iit *
KOKOMO.
Baby bads, clathts. fays,
playpens, sheets, fewals,
parfomsi. MAA377-jH-4aaa

229— Miscslleneous
ANSWERING M A C N IN I (Un•den), new w/phone, reg.
(144.45- O N L Y f **.*S;
COROLESS P H O N E (Un
Iden). ION ft. range, new reg.
( 144.45- O N L Y ( 44 . 45;
KEROSENE H EATER
(Sanyo), 14.400 BTU, now reg.
074.45 ONLY (4**5.
F LEA WORLD.....tat. A Sun.,
Rew O,..................S iim i 4341.
Fireplace screen, (10; 3 Dinette
chairs. (40; manual portable
typarwrlter; (25.134 (554

Buses/Vens
1470 C H IV Y C M AAA dM#
wheel pkk up. A/C P/S. a
new tires, tapper, new pain*.
I4.es* ar best offer. Call:
m i -taw.
___________
299— M c t o r c y c t o s
e n d B ik e s
1488 GaldWIng Ietaratal* Puli
four pseksgs. Moods allttta
work. Asking 11000. Call:
333 3535days only
241— R e c r e e t io n e l
V e h ic le s / C e m p e r s
W AIT’S RV C lN T IR
Specialist in sale* and sarvlca.
Clast A's. Mini's. ) ) Ft. Park
Modal*. Travel Traders, and
Sth wheal*. Open 7 days par
weak. 501 N. Hwy 441 Apapka.
30M0A0813.

CONSULT OUR

K a B a w n u a iH
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

A d d itio n s I
R e m o d e li n g
r c m o o u i u g s p e c ia l is t

Wo Handle
The Whole Ball Of Wax
B . L U M CONST.
322-7029
Financing Available

Applience Repair

O n O ur 1 A c re Plus
lo t In Exduoivo Wayside
Woods. (Vh M L W . Of 1-4
In Sanford)

BUILDINGS- all steal. 50 x li
*18.440. 108 a 715- (44.4*0.
others from 13.35 sq. ft.
1-141D M (collaeii

LAKE MARY- He Qualifying
Now 3 b d r m . . 3 b a f h,
flraplae*. all appliances,
vaulted ceilings. (7588 dawn 4
a t t u m * *54, 5 0 0 F H A
mortgage. 323-44*5.

■lb. Mary

L«t Ur Build
Your Or«am Homo

g n

295— Trucks/

Materials

209— Waaring Apparal

322-2420
Far (3AM total cask setrlght
yaw caeM spend Christmas by
the sxtraerdlnary ftraplaca In
the beautiful snormse* family
rw m of yavr awa kernel
*444.3* monthly an a tvs ARM
will alt Mealy In yavr bvdgat
while yav anJay year 3 hdr^n.
heme, with It's formal living
roam, spacious aat-in kltchan,
screened parch, patla A much
mar*. Far mar* In** an this
ham*. unhaiievaMy priced at
*54,7M, please call: Mary
Burkhart, Raaltar/Asaaciet*.
333-4443 ar Tha Wall St.
Company. 331 1005__________
YOU CAN OWN for *345 month
w/*3.000 dawn. Sailor will fi­
nance. Charming (Ilka now), 3
bdrm., wall/wall carpal,
central haat/alr. appliances.
Day*only: HI-3140.

2l»—Wentod to Buy

155— C o n d o m i n i u m s
C o -O p /S a lt

CALL AN Y TIM E

2MI FARK A'
S*t Lk. Mary I

BACKYARD SALE- *11 Santa
N . bahlad Bahama Jake. Frt
• Sat. I V I R V T N I N O
PRtCEPTOSELLt_________
BAZAAR- bake and plant sail.
N w M f A M.- 4 :30 P.M.
RonLaa M W ia Hama Cantar
Saturday 4m, 4A.M.-3 P.M.
fitMDOfCNIN
CARPORT SALI- '7* MGR. '78
During Nevambar
Oadge flatbed truck, email
tag ar Sal
appilancas. furniture, clothes
CaHUs
A many other household
Items. 134 N. Sunland Or.,
Sunlend Batatas. Nov. 7 A 3.
333am .___________________
FIVE FAMILY • 1*3 Plnacrast
Dr. Frl.- Sat.. 4 A.M. to a P.M.
Ethan Allan C a b ln a t,
furniture, mite. House held,
J enny Lind high chai r,
WaHavHam atln:
llnene*. claming, tools and
CARRIAGE COVE
much mere________________
HACIENDA VILLAGE
F L E A MARRBT- Nov.ath. a
LAKE KATHERN ESTAES
A.M. to T 514 E. 1st Street,
KOVE ESTATES
(•ram Towers). Clothe*, ma­
OAK SPRINGS
terial pats A pans, and
assorted Homs._____________
SPECIAL
We'll pay your 1st 3 month’s
Frt-g#t. am a tm. io-4. ios w.
space rant If you purchase a
list St., between Park A Oak.
h a a m
■ «
nOmf OvTInfMISOWmBfr.
Gas heater, couch, consol*
stereo, freerer, trash com­
H I 7033
pactor, children's clothes.
IvanlnatSaM
. h i -:
wood paneling- hlghchalr.crlb
Baraga Sal*- 71* Park AV*.. Frl
Front kltchan, air, scraan
A Sat.. Nov. S A 4. 4-1. Pum.
parch, full a* slid*, electric
extension ladder, mlac.______
heat. Located at tl Oaks. Rt.
Moving Solel Sat., A? Every
M. Can mave. Available Im­
thing priced ta said Don't
mediately. Contact Let 50,
miss Itl Corner ot 17-43 A Ifh
33104B7 or 574-00*4.
St,________________________
MOVING SALI- Nov. tm. 4
A.M. la 5 P.M.. 414 W. 30th
I l l — A p p ila n c a s
Street. Baaabill cards, small
appl lanes*, soma furnlturo.
/ F u m itu ra
NEIGHBORHOOD YARD
SALE- Saturday. Nov. 4th. •
Electric B fat rang**, raA . M , 7. Sonora Blvd. In
flgarators. washers, dryers,
Sonora Development. (Olt
fumliur# B bedding. 1331740.
Sanford Aval.
Calory Oty FarMfvra._______
RUMMAGE SALE
Lutheran
LOTS OF FURNITURE, In
Church- Rodsemar. 1515 Oak
eluding refrigerator. Soma
Ava. Nov. 4,14054A.M.- 3P.M.
brand new, all In excellent
RUMMAGE M L B and BAKE
condition. 32*7337, attar a A
on weekend*.__________
SALE. Friday A Saturday,
Nov. 8th A tm. 4 A.M. to 4
New and used. Parrot cage,
P.M. Nativity Church on 437
tables and more. Call: weak
(of* of 17 43)._______________ _
days 7 P.M.- 10 P.M. Anytime
on weekends. 331*8*4.
YARD M LB • Tobies, what
nets, lamps. Micsllanoou*. bar
stools, much more. 3010
Hlbuscu* Court. Sot. A Sun 4
ID — Talavision/
A M . to 5 P.M.______________
Radio /Sltrao
YARD M LS • 3317 Hartwell
Ava. Saturday. Nov. tm. 4
A.M. to 7________________ _
COLOR TELEVISION
YARD M LB Saturday Nov.
Brand new 25" color television
*th. *• 7. 3 families. Miscella­
still In box. Lott In loyaway.
neous household goods, namo
Two year guarantee. Balance
brand children's clothes,
(4S8 or *25 month.
adult* clothing. Ah Soul’s un­
iform*. No solo before * A M
117 E.WeodlandDr_________
MICROWAVE OVEN
TAPPAN
YARD M LR Friday A Satur­
day * A.M. to 4 P.M. tobto A a
New 1405 modal. Family sire,
chair*. 1 wheel adult Mka.
left In layaway, still in box.
odd* A end*. *03 Juanita
le-yaar factory guarantee■
Court, (unload Estates______
balance SIM ar *14 month. T*
YAR
D SALR- m McKay b w q .
sat, celt 4*3 53*4day or night.
Frl A Sat. AT. 3 microwave
OOOOUSEDT.V'IttSandUP
ovens, lots clothes. Also, look­
MJIItr'l
ing for elecfrlc stove A hot
J ilt Orlando Of. Call: 3H-8M9
wafer heater.

171-Building

.•NR^S m EPRBNv

■ S TA TI AUCTION
Friday, Nav.Nh*iM P.M.
BRIDGES EBON
NWY*LJv*f laafaf M

taVaantaSaatard
S E L L I N O OR B U Y I N G A
MOBILE HOME?
LITUSHILPl
NawOrUsad

d. Call: I
*37fmo./*dM**»t MME10

219— A u c t t o n a

traah pick up Included. *3M
gar month. Call: 333-01M.
t Bdrm., 3 bath, ec, carpet, all
madam canvanlancat.

m u s is

FASHION MOORLS • far fa#T
Ian doalgnar. TV. catalog*. all

1 5 7 -M a M t o
Ito m A d MI a U
rmVVmV r 99W9

34 hr^Sel^kef kta^Ixt^sOkarpe l
17 Vr. la p .....44A5441.....57A0433

B u ild in g C o n tra c to rs
Commercial d Residential
Seminole Forma A Concrete
Remodeling. Rapairing.
Licensed Florida Builder*
Free 1st t
.3234*17, axt. II
C a rp e t/ F lo o r
C o v e rin g s
C AR P ET M L IS
A INSTALLATIONS
Cell Ml SM7 after a P M.

C e t e r in g

H o m e R e p a ir s

N u rs in g C e ra

JUNES’ CATERING
ALL OCCAtlOHSI
W* Satisfy II.................. M1-7*ie

C A R P E N T E R - Repairs and
remodeling No |ob too small.
Call: 3234*45
WILLIS HOME REPAIR
Remodeling.......Addition*....... A
All Types Repairs 1........1nsured.
NO |0O TOOim ill............. 331/740

OUR RAT « » ARE IgW ER

C le a n in g S e r v ic e
Caftaga Cara lac............att-asM
Uc. Insured, landed.
I l l par heur. all damastk tabs
Heed Carpel Cleaning. Living.
Dining Beam A Nall S3*.**.
Sole A Chair. 135.331-3SM
JUST OINIES
Professional cleaning
Call................................32344*3
SFIC N* SPAN CLIANINO
Homes, oltlces. ok. Cleaning
supplies furnished.
Santord......................... 333 *040

L e n d c le e r in g
OENEVA LANDCLEARING
Lot/Landclaarlng.......... Fill dirt
Topsoil....Ponds ...Drain ditch**
Site Preparation...Call...34*-5*30

P r e s s u r e C le e n i n e
CUNN IN O HAM AW IPI
Average ) Adrm. Hem*. (15
Average Mobil* Ham*. (M
Call:............................... H I TSta
S e c r e ta r ia l $ e r v k e
CUSTOM TYPING- Blgar f M

CaNi D.J. B »

L a w n S e rv ic e
CLASSIC LAWN SERVICE
We do e v e r y t h i n g . F r a*
estimates Call 33*253*
M a s o n ry

Aayfblai EtactrkeL..S4nca 1*781
■aNawtas...M Nr. Sarvic* C*N*
Tam's llocfrk S#rvk*...M3-3714

Gregatos G Seas Mpaaary
Quality at resonabia price*
Speclsllilng In Flraplae**/Srkk
Call i.......................-M S-Hl-tTM

NaJaATsoSmaN
111 Bartaa Laaa. taatard
MI-44M

M3-*7t7__________

. (104)3337403.

E le c t r i c a l

H e m e Im p ro v e m e n t

*1* I . SacawTstTsanaerd

M e v in g A H a u lin g
LOO'S MAULING- Appliances.
|unk, lireneed, gargaga. etc.
Cal1333*517 la m te l pm

A L L i N ' i T i B i saavici
You've Called Iha Beat
New Call Iha Basil
FAY L S M f.................. 33i i&gt;

ECHOLS TR IE SERVICE
Fra* I
M l q l

W e ll P rillin g
M VE M ^ fTTrS h S C TB a R *
tar lewn, peel, serdea. ek. I

BUM SHALLOW W fLU
Lk....

�• ...................

• • *•* / •- /

** Kvtwlm MtwM, hiHwJ, FI.

'• •

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

!...........................................
.........................

-

• »

• • • r ■
■

•

•

■

• ' • • * ■* , l 1 !*f/ J ' , * T V* * *“T'

•'

Tlmniiif, Kw. i, i m

FRIDAY, SATURDAY
SUNDAY ONLY!

SEMINOLE COUNTY

SEMINOLE GREYHOUND
PARK-SEE MAP BELOW/] 9

3 DAYS ONLY!i

.
nwiwSS

*^SsNv

Factory
A u t h o r iz e d

-

f S + * C'

Te nt

Sale!

0
.

0

NEW! USED! CAR! TRUCKS!

,

OVER^3,000 VEHICLES MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEKEND
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON EVERY CAR!

'

4 ?$»
FINANCING
AVAILABLE

i

d
ON THE SPOT
FINANCING AVAILABLE

Barnett
Bank

0

BARNETT BANK
LOAN OFFICERS
ON PREMISES
TRADES WELCOME

T O D A Y TO N A

/

H W Y. 434

DOG
TR A C K
ROAD

j

m
FOLLOW
OUR
SEARCHLIGHT1L

SEMINOLA BLVD

ALL NEW 1986 CARS andTKUCKS
ON DISPLAY UNDER THE BIG TOP
AMC-BMW-CHEVY-CHRYSLER-DODGE-FORD
^HONDA-ISUZU-JEEP-MITSUBISHI-SUBARU
9 LDS-pEUGEOT-PLYMOUTH-PONTIAC *
RENAULT-TOYOTA-VW-LINCOLN-MERCURY^

SA LE
L O C A T IO N
2000 Scminola Blvd.
Casswlbwrry

1 SOO

SELECT QUALITY USED
CARS A T AUCTION PRICES!

H W Y. 436
■rc

lO

f* '

*

1 2 . 9 % *

T O O R LA N D O
to

APR
FINANCING

7 2 MONTH FINANCING

SALE LOCATION - SEMINOLE GREYHOUND PARK
2 0 0 0 SEMINOLA BLVD., CASSELBERRY
t

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218077">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, November 07, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218079">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218081">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on November 07, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218083">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218085">
                <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;, November 07, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218086">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218087">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218088">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218089">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21843" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21447">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/1c9a7c35bd195dd34da8ca6c818bf78a.pdf</src>
        <authentication>ad1a5082a1ea776d52f7f5ff81f49c56</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218111">
                    <text>1

Year. No. 87, Monday, December 2, 1983— Sanford, Florida

Evening Herald -

2 Die In Sports Car Wreck
Two Seminole County men
were killed Sunday when they
were thrown from their tumbling
•ports car on Interstate 4 In Lake
Mary. Their deaths brought the
Thanksgiving Holiday traffic
death toll In Florida to at least
33.
Dead is Gregory A. Fraker. 27,
of 1626 N. Atlantic Drive, Alta­
monte Springs, and Allen Curtis
Tedder. 39. o f 1701 W. Carlton
St.. Longwood. They are the
39th and 40th traffic fatalities In
the county this year and the
third In Seminole County during
the holiday that began 6 p.m.
Wednesday and ended midnight
Sunday. A Deltona man burned

to death In a fiery two-vehicle
c ra s h e a r ly T h a n k s g iv in g
morning on State Road 46. west
o f Sanford.
According to Lake Mary Police,
the men. with Fraker driving,
were westbound around 9:36
p.m. In a speeding 1964 BMW
hardtop when It left the In­
terstate for an unknown reason
and rolled, ejecting Fraker and
Tedder. The car was traveling
between 80 and 90 mph at the
time and left the road on a
straightaway Just south of Lake
Mary Boulevard.
Tedder, hurled 84 feet, died on
Impact. Fraker. tosssed Just
behind the car. died shortly after
paramedics arrived. Tests were

Price 25 Cents

North's Blizzard To Cool Florida

scheduled today to determine If
alcohol was Involved. The men
apparently were not wearing
seat belts, according to Lake
Mary Police.
Statewide, fatalities from four
u n related tra ffic a c c id e n ts
Sunday helped pushed the
statewide holiday death toll to
33. below the FHP’s expectation
that at least 42 people would be
killed In traffic accidents.
The Patrol said that after
preliminary investigations, at
least seven o f the 33 fatalities
were alcohol-related. FHP did
not Investigate the Lake Mary
accident because It happened
within the city's limits.

conditions for clearing the roads would Improve
An angry winter storm blasted the upper &gt;by morning.
Midwest with sub-aero tem peratures and
In Des Moines, the airport remained open, but
bllaawd conditions, stranding air and road many of the roods were closed. Including
travelers and closing schools today.
Interstate 60. the main east-west artery.
"Basically the entire state Is snow and Ice
Florida
cooling trend with
» spokeswoman for the Iowa
tonight a temperatures easing Into the low 90s. rPvf red-*'
W
l
expected horn the north at 10 to IS Highway Patrol. All schools In Des Moines were
mphs. Tuesday, the Sunshine state's forecast Is closed, as were the state universities and most
other colleges.
SO* W! th hlgIm ,n ,hf&gt; mid-SOS and
winds IS to 20 mph.
Blizzard conditions Sunday forced Iowa of­
ficials
to call In the National Guard to search for
In the country’s midland, the first bllssard of
vehicles
stranded in wind chill readings of 50
the winter eras over Lake Huron and on Its way
degrees
below zero. A 15-car pileuo w as
to Canada early today. but not before It left up to
reported near Mitchellvllle.
2feet of snow and below-sero temperatures with
''There's some idiots still out there.” said Ed
60-mph winds In the Upper Mississippi Valley.
Thornton, a foreman for a Department o f
Most road crews In Iowa and eastern and Transportation garage In Des Moines.
southern Minnesota quit for the night hoping

•M BUtSAaD.pafa«A

Zoo Backers
Drafting Tax
Referendum

For

B y ia rs k N s u
H erald *t a ff W rite r
Advocates of maintaining a zoo In
Sanford decided today to seek legisla­
tion to allow a referendum asking
whether voters are willing to fund a
local zoo through property taxes.
Supporters of a local zoo agreed to a
property tax figure o f 15 cents per
•1.000 assessed property value. The
figure was agreed up as supporters met
this m orning at the Cham ber o f
Commerce.
The tax would net §900.000. a figure
which the group admits Is more than
the funds needed to subsidize the size
of zoo they want.
O perating costs fo r a sm all-tomedium size zoo Is §540.000 based on
1985 costs and would Increase to over
•600.000 next year, according to
Centra] Florida Zoological Society Ex­
ecutive Director Alan E. Rozon.
The additional money money would
act as a ’ 'cushion" against possible
operating cost Increases, said A.B.
Peterson Jr., one of the proposed zoo
supporters.
_
The 15 cents property tax would be
the maximum that could be levied
under the proposed bill. An amount
equal to or less than that could be
collected if the referendum Is approved,
but an assessment beyond that would
have to be approved by a special act of
the legislature. Peterson said.
The group Is pushing for legislation

(USPS 481-210) -

Fir*, Roscye

First Response
Pact Must Wait
r\

ih •.
r. **

_

S h O D O in P S o r M
•*
W
r '

fi/ a a

Hw«W M W Sy Tammy Vtocwrt

\Flw w

Sa *.SiLr,SI rTT
., he h#* ct&gt;° ^ n tor hor fam ily gift
wrapped at the Retired Senior Volunteer Program's 12th annual
S*t0r e for.
ch,,drtn M r|V today. The store will be set up
at the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce building through Dec.7
Tshanda is enrolled In the Early Childhood Migrant Class for 3- and
4 year-olds at Goldsboro Elementary School, Sanford. Children are
brought from their schools to shop. Most Items in the store were made by
RSVP volunteers.

S s s ZOO, page 8A

By K aren Talley
H erald S ta ff W riter
Seminole County Fire Chief Gary
Kaiser Is looking into a new com­
munication system for his fire de­
partment and at the same time has
fired off a memo to County Commission
Chairman Bob Sturm criticizing San­
ford Mayor Bettye Smith for saying the
county is dragging Its feet In negotia­
tions to reach a first response pact with
the city.
Kaiser’s memo was prompted by the
letter Mayor Smith sent Sturm last
month requesting the two governments
renew wastewater management and
first response fire and rescue Jointventure discussions. In the corre­
spondence she states that Sanford
Chief Tom Hickson received "less than
enthusiastic support" from Kaiser re­
garding first response when the two
men met earlier this fall.
Kaiser disagrees with this statement
and his position Is apparently bolstered
by Hickson, who said the m ayor
"m isinterpreted" what he told her
about the meeting he had with the
Seminole fire chief. Both men said they
came away from the discussion with an
understanding that a first response
agreement would, for the time being,
have to take a back seat to the county's

efforts to obtain a new fire co m ­
munications system.
A f ir s t r e s p o n s e p a c t w o u ld
necessitate the city Joining the county's
communications system.
Sanford's fire chief said he agreed "It
wouldn't make sense" for the city to
Join the county's present system. "I can
see their point." Hickson said, "and I
told the mayor that. Why convert to
system they may not be using for very
much longer?"
Kaiser pointed out that he's been
proposing first response fire and rescue
service for nine years and has received
"little Interest" from Sanford all that
time.
Now. according to Kaiser, while the
county is looking at a new com ­
munications system for Its fire de­
partment. "I don't see the logic o f
discussing first response."
"W hether we get a new system or
not. I’ m still all for Sanford Joining us. 1
thought I'd made that very clear to
Chief Hlckaon.” Kaiser aald.
At the chiefs' meeting. "O ary (Kaiser)
said because o f the Information they’re
collecting (on a new communication
system), first response couldn't be an
Issue right now ." Hlckaon said. " I
guess Mayor Smith Just misunderstood
■ ••P A C T , page BA

Filipinos Denounce Acquittals In A quino M urd er D o o D a h D o e s It

MANILA. Philippines (UPI) — Filipinos de­
nounced the acquittal today of Armed Forces
chief Gen. Fabian Ver and 25 others In the
Benlgno Aquino murder as a fatal blow- to the
country'sjudlclary.
"It's a triple murder." said Aquino's brother.
Agaplto. "T h ey killed Nlnoy all over again. They
killed (alleged assassin Rolando) Galman and
they also killed the Judiciary." Nlnoy was a
popular nickname for Aquino.
"Not only Is It condemn^blc but it Is a
relndlctment o f our entire Judicial system ." said
human rights lawyer Joker Arroyo. "T h e gov­
ernment does not have the capacity or the
willingness to render Justice or Impartial Judg­
ment."
Aquino's widow. Corazon. who Is expected to
announce she will challenge Marcos in presi­

TODAY
Action Reports........
Calendar..................
Classifieds............... ......... 2B.3B
Comics....................
Dear Abby...............
Deaths.....................
Dr. Gott....................
Editorial..................
Florida.....................
Nation......................
People......................
Sports.......................
Television................
Weather.................... ............. 2A
World........................
------------ Intldo
• Snowman freezes Bucs,
21-0,5A
• Shuttle crew will be comet
watchers today, 2A
• Lake Mary won't close
road, 3A

dential elections, denounced the decision.
"Justice is not possible so long as Mr. Marcos
continues to be head of our government." she
said.
Bandila. an alliance of special Interest groups,
criticized the ruling In a statement delivered by
former University or the Philippines President
Emanuel Soriano.
"T h is travesty of Justice strengthens our
resolve to dismantle the dictatorship." It said.
"Today Is certainly the saddest day In our
nation's history. For today, we are finally
convinced that Justice Is dead In this country."
Opposition leader Salvador Laurel, a presi­
dential aspirant In an election tentatively sched­
uled for February, vowed to reopen the case If he
Is elected.
"Justice will ultimately be given him (Aquino)

after we topple the Marcos regim e." he said.
U.S. State D epartm ent spokesm an Pete
Martinez said Sunday night there would be "no
comment at this tim e" on either the verdict or
Vcr’s reinstatement.
Many Filipinos were troubled by the deadly
silence In the courtroom after the acquittals were
announced.
None o f the 26 defendants showed any emotion
at all — except for Ver.
"Thank God, It's all over." a Jubilant Ver
shouted as he left the courtroom, smiling and
shaking hands. "There was never any evidence
against m e."
The decision was read by court clerks almost In
lls entirety as about 300 demonstrators de­
nounced It outside.
See AQUINO, page 8A

Warning After Rape

Badge, Light Don't Identify Cop
B y Susan Loden
H erald S ta ff W riter
A badge and a blue light don't
necessarily a police officer make, as a
South Florida woman has learned.
Her truck was pulled off Interstate
by tw o m en w h o fla sh ed a
police-type blue light In their vehicle
and show ed badges when they
approached her car.
The woman challenged the men
when the ordered her out o f her
vehicle Just after midnight Thursday,
but then It was too late. The men
s h o w e d n o w e a p o n s , but the
34-year-old woman was knocked out
with a flashlight. When she awoke In
the bed o f her pickup truck at about 3
a.m. she was bruised and nude, a
rape victim.

What should she have done? In­ car. Spolski said. In a routine type
sisted on seeing a photo-bearing traffic situation, there would no
Identification before foiling her car reason for a plain clothes sheriffs
window down or getting out of the deputy to display a weapon, or for a
car. said Seminole County sheriff's uniformed officer to draw a gun.
spokesman John Spolski.
Spolski said similar incidents like
Then, if In doubt about the identity
Thursday's
ln Ft. Lauderdale plagued
of the officer. Spolski advises a driver
Seminole
County
two years ago. A
to stay in their vehicle, with the
police
Im
postor
whose car was
windows rolled up and that they ask
that the officer, if driving an un­ equipped with a blue light was
marked car. call a marked patrol car stopping cars, brandishing a gun and
making threats.
to the scene.
•
Another alternative. Spolski said,
Spolski said he expects there could
would be for the driver to ask the possibly be "copycats" who would
officer to follow him and her to the m lmlck the Ft. Lauderdale area
Jail or to a police station, to confirm attack and cautions motorists that a
that the stop was official.
badge Isn't proper Identification for a
In the case of a weapons bran­ police ofllce.r
dishing officer approaching a stopped
Bm W A R N IN G , page 6 A

TMI Reactor Restarted After Shutdown

DAYS T I L CHRISTMAS

MIDDLETOWN. Pa. (UPI) - Three
Mile Island operators have restarted
the plant's Unit No. 1 nuclear reactor
after determining the cause o f an
electrical malfunction that shut down
the unit for about 12 hours Sunday.
A spokeswoman for GPU Nuclear
Corp.. owner o f the plant, said a
"m in u te a m ou n t" o f radioactive
steam was vented Into the air Imme­
diately after the shutdown, which

officials described as a minor mishap
"o f no consequence to the public
health and safety.
"N o emergency condition exists or
was declared at the plant." said Lisa
Robinson, the spokeswoman.
The reactor was restarted at 1
percent power Sunday afternoon
after plant operators replaced a faulty
relay switch believed to have trig­
gered the shutdown. GPU spokesman

Doug Bedell said the unit is expected
to resume producing power at 75
percent capacity today.
Control rods dropped automatically
Into the reactor's core early Sunday
to cut off the nuclear reaction when
th e g e n e r a t o r m a lfu n c t io n e d .
Robinson said.
She sold part o f the shutdown
procedure Involved venting sleam
§ « • REACTOR, page 8A

W ith D isre sp e ct
PASADENA. Calif. (UPI) — More than 100
off-beat entries. Including a flasher's drill team
and a Santa Claus on roller skates, delighted
thousands o f cheering and laughing onlookers
at the 9th annual Occasional Doo Dah Parade
Sunday afternoon.
About 40.000 spectators lined Colorado
Boulevard and adjoining streets for the lrreverant parade, begun as a spoof of the
elaborately otganlzed Rose Parade that draws
national attention to Pasadena every New
Year’s Day.
Among the more popular entries was .
flasher's drill team — a group clad In trench
coats over white T-shirts with the slogan.
"W here's the beef?"
Members o f the Ocean Beach Geriatric Surf
Club and Precision Marching Surf Board Drill
Team carried their surfboards and tried to
catch a wave to the tune o f "Surfer J oe." while
being chased by a large plastic shark.
One group attracting groans was the Texas
Chain Saw Massacre Drool Team, with mem­
bers displaying both saws and artificial limbs.
While normal marching bands eschew the
Doo Dah Parade, the procession did attract
such "m usical" entries as the Mercy Hospital
Bakersfield Bedpan Band, with members
dressed In nurse's frocks drumming out a beat
on bedpans, and the Marching Leech Kazoo
Band.
The la rgest en try was called
"Styrofoamasouros." a 50-foot dinasour skele­
ton pulled by attendants dressed as cave
people.
T w o groups Imitated the Bhagwan Shree
Rajneesh and his followers, with one of them
carrying a make-believe guru on a litter under
a sign reading "M y other car Is a Rolls-Royce."
In a nod to the upcoming holiday season,
Santa Claus zoomed by on his roller skates
wearing bright red shorts.
Among the veterans of past Doo Dah prudes
were the Precision Briefcase Drill Team,
wearing business suits and waving suitcases In
intricate routines, and a group called Toro.
Toro. Toro pushing lawn mowers in formation.
As usual, this year’s parade hod no theme,
no prizes, no official order of inarch — and
little sanity.
•
It did have a queen and grand marshal,
drinking buddies Jerry Collins and WUlie
Bowman of the Loch Nesa Monster Pub. Local
legend has It that the Doo Dah parade was
conceived at the Loch Ness by regulars
grousing that the city’s famed Rose Parade
would smell a little sweeter with a healthy dose
of diarespect.

W4

/

�3 A —Evening HeraM, Sanford, F I.

M in d ly , D ac. 1 , If t t

Atlantic*’Construction Practice Over

Crew Will Be Comet Watchers Today

NATION
_____

IN BRIEF

E y W Illio a H ir w a a i
UPI $ e lt «e « W riter
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - Atlantis’s
construction crew built a 45-foot tower and
swung It about like spacewalking Paul
Bunyans to usher in the space station era.
then relaxed today and awaited a chance to
ace Halley’s comet.
Astronauts Jerry” Ross and Sherwood
Spring spent 6 'A hours working tn the
shuttle’s open payload bay Sunday night In
their second spacewalk in two days to
practice construction techniques considered
vital to N A S A ’s plans for building a
permanently manned space station In the
1990s.
"Y ou guys do good work and ’Ace
Construction Co.' might be In business in a
few y e a r s ." radioed is tro n a u t David
Leestma from mission control in Houston.
The other crew members are commander
Brewster Shaw, co-pilot Bryan O'Connor,
Mary Cleave. Rodolfo Nerl of Mexico and
Charles Walker, a commercial engineer with
McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co.

W

Stars Shina On President
During Hollywood Saluto
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - President Reagan ended his
Thanksgiving vacation In California today, basking in the
glow of an all-star Hollywood salute to him.
The President was (lying to Seattle on his way back to
the White House to attend a $700,000 fund-raising lunch
for Sen. Slade Gorton. R-Wash.
Reagan has been silent for a week on the panoply of
domestic issues facing him. but was expected to use the
political appearance today to throw In a few licks in
support of his bclcagured tax reform plan and his balanced
budget proposal.
The president Sunday night took part tn a television
taping of "All-Star Party for Dutch Reagan.'* a Variety
Clubs benefit to be aired on CBS Dec. 8.
Among the more than 100 stars, most o f a conservative
political bent, were Frank Sinatra. Charles Bronson. Monty
Hall. Sammy Davis. Dean Martin, An gle Dickinson,
Liberate. Hurt Reynolds. Joan Collins, Linda Evans and
John Forsythe.

On the eve of landing, the shuttle liters
faced a light schedule today that Included
tidying up the ship's cramped cabin and an
opportunity to view Halley’s comet from
space. The crew began an eight-hour sleep

Knaves Burgle Nave
NEW YORK (UPI) - The theft o f $7,000 In donations and
poor-box money from the St. Patrick’s Cathedral parish
house may have been an inside job because the two
masked gunmen knew their w ay around the maxe-Uke
building, police say.
Capt. Charles Luisi of the Manhattan Detective Bureau
said Sunday police arc "checking Into church employees."
Luisi said the suspects, who struck Saturday night In the
parish house adjacent to the landmark cathedral, "w ere
quite familiar with the physical layout o f the building.
They apparently knew where they were going."
He also said. "T h e suspects were familiar with the
ushers’ procedures."
Luisi said the suspects held four church ushers at
gunpoint before locking them and two maintenance
workers In a walk-in vault. No one was Injured.

period about 2:15a.m. EST.
Atbuttla, making Its second (light, is
scheduled to end the 23rd shuttle mission
Tuesday at Edwards A ir Force Base. Calif.
Because o f rain on the normally dry lakebed
shuttle runways. Atlantis is expected to
land one orbit early around 4:33 p.m. EST
on a concrete strip at Edwards.
While Atlantis's ctew slept early today,
NASA engineers hauled the flagship shuttle
Columbia to the launch pad for blastoff Dec.
18 on the 10th and (Inal shuttle flight of
1985. Its crew will have a hard act to follow.
In one o f the smoothest shuttle flights to
date. Atlantis's astronauts successfully
launched three costly communications sat­
ellites and laid the groundwork for largescale orbital construction.
"L et's go build a apace station." Ross
exclaimed Sunday alter completing the
assembly o f the 45-foot aluminum tower.
"OK. Where do I sign up?" replied Spring.
The spacewalks on Friday and Sunday
were designed to demonstrate the ability of
s p a cesu lted con stru ctio n w o rk ers to
assemble the trusses and beams that will be
used to build an orbital habitat in the next
decade.
"1 think we're very anxious to get this
data and I think It'll be put to very quick use
in planning the nation's first space station."

Trod* Union Prosidont Colls
South African Loadors Drunks
Ijr ■ r t id s s i s j i t
J O H A N N E S B U R G . S ou th
Africa (UPI) — The leader of a
new trade union federation has
e n d o r s e d c a lls for the
withdrawal of U.S. Investments
from South Africa and labeled
w h ite -m in o rity gov e rn m e n t
leaders drunkards and crimi­
nals.
Also on Sunday, an American
executive said a group of nearly
2 0 0 A m e r ic a n c o m p a n ie s
operating In South Africa have
asked the white-minority gov­
ernment to abolish apartheid
an d Im p ro ve ed u cation for
blacks and mixed-race people.

Machinists Call Holiday Strike
HARTFORD. Conn. (UPI) Machinists at Pratt A
Whitney began a bleak holiday season today by striking
the giant jet engine maker for the first time In 25 years in a
dispute over subcontracting and other Issues.
A spokesman for the company urged strikers to consider
the hardship placed on their families and said all plants
would remain open for workers who choose to cross the
picket lines.
Workers represented by the International Association o f
Machinists Sunday approved the strike at Pratt 8t
Whitney’s Middletown. North Haven and Southington
factories in their first walkout since 1960.

In P ort E liz a b e th , about
50.000 blacks set a six-month
deadline for the abolition of
apartheid — South A frica 's
system of racial segregation —
and pledged to resume a con­
sumer boycott if it Is not abol­
ished by mid-April.
A similar boycott started In
Pretoria Sunday was expected to
take effect today as blacks living
around the city press demands
for political representation and
an end to m ore than four
months of emergency rule.

WORLD
IN BRIEF

M ob ile O il Co. e x e c u tiv e
Patrick O'Malley said in Cape
Town that 186 American com­
panies doing business in South
Africa sent a letter to govern­
ment ministers Friday urging an
end to apartheid and segregated
schools.

Israel Apologizes For Spying;
Promises Probe O f Pollard Case
JERUSALEM (UPI) — An Israeli apology for spying on
tlie United States apparently has defused a crisis between
the two staunch allies, but questions remain 'about a
counterterrorist unit accused o f collecting American
secrets.
"Spying on the United States stands In total contradic­
tion to our policy." Prime Minister Shimon Peres told the
Cabinet Sunday. "Such activity to the extent it did take
place was wrong and the government of Israel apologizes."
Peres said an inquiry was continuing.
Secretary of State George Shultz, en route to South
America, said. "I thtnk this is an excellent statement and
we are satisfied by it and we welcome it."
An Israeli official said: "W e have defused the crisis. ...
Israel has responded courageously."
The apology came 11 days after Jonathan Jay Pollard
was arrested in Washington on charges of spying against
'I k United States for Israel and Pakistan. He was accused
of passing hundreds of highly sensitive documents to
Isrtel. precipitating a possible crisis with Washington.

"W e told them there can be no
equality under segregation."
O'Malley said. "W e said they
must at least create one overall
education ministry, even If they
cannot Im m ediately abolish

said Doug Heard, chief investigator o f the
tower project.
Rosa and Spring first practiced erecting
the 190-pound tower and taking It apart
Friday. During Sunday's outing. Rasa rode
on the end of the shuttle's robot arm.
operated by Cleave from inside the crew
cabin, to complete the task again.
Once the tower was assembled, the
spacewalkers took turns lifting It out of Its
mount in the cargo bay and maneuvering It
about as future workers might during
construction of a real space station.
, Television beamed down from the shuttle
showed Spring on the end of the arm nearly
50 feet above the shuttle, easily swinging
the* spidery truss about In a spectacular
demonstration o f the effects of weightless­
ness.
The spacewalkers then reassembled an
open framework pyramid structure made
with six 12-foot. 65-pound beams and
maneuvered it about as wetl.
"G od. I hate to go in ." Spring said shortly
before the triumphant spacewalkers re­
turned to the shuttle's airlock at 9:57 p.m.
EST Sunday.
"1 know," said Ross, reflecting on the
vaguertea o f shuttle flight assignments.
"Especially when you think It might be the
last time you ever get a chance to do It."

Ban Booze O n Beaches

segregation."
Elijah Barayi. elected presi­
dent Sunday at a rally to cele­
brate the fo rm a tion o f the
500.000-member Congress o f
South African Trade Unions,
said. "CO SATU Is in full support
o f disinvestment."
"Disinvestment would work
toward a d ism an tlin g of
apartheid if It was properly
applied." he said. and. although
blacks w ou ld suffer, whites
would be equally heavily penal­
ized.
Calling the white government
"d ru n k ard s and crim in a ls,"
Barayi said President Pieter
Botha should resign to make
way for Jailed African National
Congress leader Nelson Mandela.
Barayi addressed about 10.000
trade unionists In a sports
stadium In Durban. The crowd,
waving banners saying- "W e
hold the key to power.” sang and
danced and applauded when he
gave the government six months
to abolish apartheid.
"T h is Is a last warning to P.W.
(Pieter) Botha to get rid of the
passes, to get rid of the troops
from the townships before the
house burns down.” he said.
Barayi said blacks would bum
their identity books, known as
"passes.” if the deadline was not
met.
Police shot and ktlled 69
blacks in the last pass-burning
protest at Sharpevllte on March
21. 1960.
The Pretoria boycott, also In
support of demands for political
reforms, got under way Sunday
and is scheduled to last to Jan.

2.

FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI)
— A hot spot for c o lle g e
students in their annual spring
b re a k p ilg r im a g e is F o rt
Lauderdale. Fla., but town of­
ficials hope a new alcohol ban
on Its beaches will change the
town's party reputation.
Although the law Is aimed
mainly at the annual exodus of
c o lle g e stu d en ts, the ci t y
commission agreed to apply it
year-round — effective Tuesday
— on the advice of City A t­
torney Donald Hall.
"I'm not crazy about It. but
w e’re going to give it a shot."
said police chief Ron Cochran.
If we're going to have the
ordinance, and the commlslon
has indicated they want to,
we’re going to enforce It year
round. And whether they know
it or not. we are going to have
to arrest people.”
Fort Lauderdale officials have
in recent years indicated that
they want to rid the city of its
Image as the spring break
capital o f the nation. They have
said the crowds and rowdlness
has gotten too large for the
community.
But Cochran expects pro­

blems enforcing the law and is
skeptical about Its success.
"Each one of these arrests
means a confrontation, and
confrontations, especially dur­
ing peak crowd periods like
spring break, arc not wise
crowd control strategy," he
said. "W e ’ re not sure what
we’ll be dealing with."
The law makes it Illegal to
carry an open container of
alcohol while walking or driv­
ing in public ptaces east o f the
Intracoastal Waterway. First
offenders face a $50 fine and
repeat offenders face a max­
imum o f a $500 fine and 30
days In Jail.
Meanwhile, Broward County
commissioners arc working on
a law to ban dri nki ng In
au tom obiles coun tyw ide, a
m ove the city of Fort
Lauderdale Is supporting.
"Our general counsel tells us
numerous similar ordnlnances
have been overthrown, been
declared un constitu tion al.”
said city commissioner Scott
Cowan. "W e have to proceed in
a v e r y c l e a r and p re c is e
manner.”

L. Mary Chamber Of Commerce
Schedules Christmas Party
The Lake Mary Chamber of
Commerce will hold a Christmas
party at "T h e Crossings" club
house on Dec. 19 from 7-9 p.m.
School volunteers and volun­
teers from the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program (RSVP) will
host the charity benefit.
Each guest will be required to
bring a stuffed animal or a toy to
gain admittance. The toys will

be donated to needy children
residing in and around Seminole
County.
For more information contact
Chamber President Buzz Petsos.
stop by at the chamber head­
quarters located within
"Llpplncott's Ink Spot” print
shop at 165 N. Country Club Rd
in Lake Mary, or call 322-7351.

Norfolk Southern Has
New Hope For Conrail WEATHER
to return to the private sector.
It also w ould prolong the
suspense for an anxious railroad
industry, which foresees dramat­
ic changes if the merger goes
through.
The m erger would have a
major Impact on commodities,
ranging from Midwest grain and
Appalachian coal to car parts
and wood products, and would
affect interested parties from the
California Association of Manu­
facturers to the New England
Electric System.
"Contrary to appearances, this
is an issue o f direct importance
to California." manufacturers
from the state told Sen. Alan
Cranston. D-Calif., in a recent
letter. "Studies show that about
a third of C onrall's billings
o r i g i n a t e o r t e r m i n a t e in
California.”
New England utilities say the
merger could increase the cost of
electricity from coal-flred power
plants.
Norfolk Southern's withdrawal
from the Conrail sweepstakes
seemed likely until two weeks
ago when Justice Department
officials, in a preliminary ruling,
said the railroad appeared to
have resolved antitrust concerns
blocking the merger.
Douglas Glnsburg, assistant
That* quotation* provided by members of
tha National Auoclation of StcuriHat 0 m Jon
attorney general for antitrust
i f f rapratantativa Intar daalar prlcat as of
matters, said a Norfolk Southern
mid morning today Intardaalar markati
track divestiture plan would
changa throughout tha day. Pricat do not
Include ratall markup/markdown
maintain rail competition that
Bid Ask
otherwise would be lost in many
............
t*
American Pioneer SAL.......
40&gt;1 Midwest and Northeast markets
Barnett Benk................. ...... ........
First Union.......... ...............
44Vi
in a merger.
Florida Power
However, at a Senate hearing
A Light................... ......... ........ MVe 23H
Fla. Progress............... ....... ............21 n i&lt;% Nov. 21. Glnsburg conceded he
Freedom Savings................. ........ lots n *
m a d e his a n n o u n c e m e n t
HCA............... ......................
without Independently verifying
........ U H 24V*
Hughes Supply ..........
114$ m any o f N orfolk Southern's
Morrison's..... ...................... ........ ItH
NCR Corp............................ ............M i 37 claims for Us plan, which calls
Plessey.......................................... at* 13*
for the Guilford and Pittsburgh A
Scotty's......... ....... ............... .........I3H lift
17 Lake Erie railroads to buy or
Southeast Bank.................... ............U *
SunTrust...............................
lease Norfolk Southern track.
If *
W A S H IN G T O N (U PI) - A
Justice Department action and a
scheduled vote in the Senate
have refueled Norfolk Southern
Corp.'s hopes for buying Conrail,
a merger that could send eco­
nomic ripples from Maine to
California.
Senate Republican leader Rob­
ert Dole of Kansas says he will
schedjle a vote this month on
Norfolk Southern's $1.2 billion
bid for Conrail. the govern­
ment-owned freight rail carrier.
A favorable vote would provide
needed momentum for Norfolk
Southern, which last tasted vic­
tory in April when the Senate
Commerce Committee approved
legislation permitting a Norfolk
Southern-Conrall merger.
Norfolk Southern officials say
that, unless the Republicancontrolled Senate approves the
Conrail sale before the year
ends, they may withdraw their
bid.
That withdrawal would leave
the g o vern m en t runn ing a
railroad that, with $500 million
In profits in 1984. appears ready

Millions Petition For Aquino
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) — The wife of slain opposition
leader Hcnigno Aquino told 15.000 cheering supporters
"you will hear what you want to hear" when President
Ferdinand Marcos signs a bill for early presidential
elections.
Corazon Aquino spoke after a mass Sunday at Santo
Domingo Church, where a priest splashed holy water on
bundles of petitions signed by 1.2 million supporters
demanding her candidacy.
Her husband, a former senator and Marcos' chief political
foe. was killed at Manila Airport in August 1983 when he
returned from three years of self-exile in the United States.
Armed forces chief Gen. Fabian Ver. 24 other soldiers and
a civilian were acquitted today of charges in that slaying.

Bonner Departs Russia Today
MOSCOW (L PI) — Yelena Bonner booked a ticket to fly to
the West for medical treatment today, leaving behind her
husband. Nobel Prize laureate and famed dissident Andrei
Sakharov.
Airline officials said Bonner was scheduled on an
afternoon Alitalia (light to Italy where she will be treated
for an eye ailment for about five days.
Bonner. 62. told her family in Boston she will then travel
to the United Stales for heart bypass surgery before
returning to the Soviet Union.
Western correspondents planned to stake out Moscow
airport and some even had tickets on the plane to travel
with her in the hopes o f talking to her for the first time In
more than a year.
Bonner told her son In the United States that she had
pledged not to talk to the Western media and was told she
would be refused permission to return to the Soviet Union
and her husband if she did.

STOCKS

Hijacking Death Toll Now 60
An Israeli woman shot during the EgyptAir hijacking
died from her injuries, raising the death toll in history’s
bloodiest hijacking and rescue to 60. Maltese state-run
television said.
Egypt said Sunday it hoped Malta would extradite the
surviving hijacker of the Egyptian Jet In return for Cairo’s
extradition last summer of two Maltese nationals accused
of trying to assassinate a former Libyan prime minister.

I

I

N ATIO N A L REPORT:
A blizzard "that turned ugly In
a hurry” blasted the upper
Midwest with up to 2 feet o f
snow and bclow-zero tempera­
tu res w orsened by 60-mph
winds, closing schools, canceling
flights and stranding travelers.
A R E A READINGS (9 s.m .):
temperature: 71: overnight low:
6 7 ; S u n d a y ’ s high: 84:
barometric pressure: 30.04: rela­
tiv e hu m idity: 100 percent;
winds: south at 8 mph; rain:
0.00 inch; sunrise: 7:00 a.m.,
sunset 5:28 p.m.
T U E S D A Y T ID E S: D aytona
Beach: highs. 11:45 a .m .,------; lows. 4:58 a.m.. 5:56 p.m.;
P o rt Canaveral: highs. 11:37
a . m . , ------- : lows. 4:49 a.m..
5:47 p.m.; B ayp ort: highs. 3:24
a.m., 5:49 p.m.; lows. 11:02
a .m .,------- .
EXTENDED FORECAST:
Fair and cool Wednesday. A
chance of showers Thursday
then clearing again on Friday.
Lows from the 30s north to 60s
south but warming to the 40s
north Thursday morning. Highs

HOSPITAL

from around 60 extreme north to
the 70s south.
A R E A FORECAST:
Today...m ostly cloudy with
chance o f showers or thun­
derstorms. High around 80.
South wind 10 mph becoming
northwest and Increasing to
around 20 mph during the
afternoon. Rain chance 50 per­
cent. T o n ig h t...c le a rin g and
colder. Low around 50. Wind
north 10 to 15 mph. Tuesday...sunny and cool. High in
mid 60s. Wind north 15 to 20
mph.
BO ATING FORECAST:
St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — A small craft
advisory will be required this
afternoon. South wind 10 to 15
knots shifting to northwest 20 to
25 knots this afternoon. Wind
north 20 to 25 knots tonight and
Tuesday. Sea 5 to 8 feet this
afternoon continuing tonight.
Higher seas in the Gulf Stream.
Bay and Inland waters becoming
rough this afternoon. Widely
scattered showers and a few
thunderstorms today then partly
cloudy.

EiPtiing Herald
(USPS M l ISO)

Saturday
ADMISSIONS
Batty S. Cyphers, Deltona
DISCMAROIS
Sanford:
Charity L. Etclevon
Hatlla B. Angle. DsBary
Aba Basketf. Deltona
Dorothy E. Draw. Daltons
Thomas F. Tlcconl, Orange City
Linda 0. Jacksonand Baby Girl
Teresa M. Morris and Baby Girl
Saaday
ADMISSIONS
Shirley R. Close. OeBary
Cynthia D. Edwards. Geneva
Louisa Mitchell. Osteon
DISCHARGES
Joseph w. Kona, Santerd
Mary Ellen Prtvett. Genova

M onday, Decem ber 2. 1985
Vot. 71, No. 87
Published .Daily and Sunday, aacapt
Saturday By Tha Sanford Herald,
Inc. M i H. French Ave., Sanford,
Fla. n m .
Second Class Pottage Faid at Sanfard,
Florida 31771
Home Delivery: Wash, Sl.ttj Month,
SS.ISj 3 Months, SH.lSi t Mddths,
S37.SO; Year, SSf.M. By Mall: Wash
SI. 19/ Month, M .M j 3 Months,
S1I.0SI * Months, U2.S»I Year,

ssg.gg.
Phonn 0031 313-Mtl.

c

�In take Mory

Evening HaraM, Sanford. FI.

A 2 2 -y e a r-o ld A lta m o n te
Springs woman told Seminole
County sheriffs deputies she
was raped Friday by a man who
approached her on North at
Jackson streets In Altamonte
Springs, hit her In the face,
choked her and dragged her Into
nearby woods behind Foster's
Bar.
The assault happened at about
2 p.m. and sheriffs deputies
have the name of a possible
suspect In The case, a sheriffs
report said.

There is a half mile dirt road In Lake Mary that
several residents would like to see closed hrrsiisrr
o f noise. tralTlc and trash, but the city wants to
keep it open so police and rescue units can
• provide service to the adjacent Lake Bingham
Woods subdivision.
T h e unhappy neighborhood residents brought
their case to a Lake Mary city commission
meeting last week.
A t that same meeting tne commissioners voted
to allocate 97.600 In contingency funds for a
temporary building the police department wants
to occupy. Commissioner Buzz Petaos discussed
his continuing dislike o f portable buildings and
questioned why the city opted to obligate
themselves to pay a total of 917.776 to an
Orlando company over the next two years to pay
for the temporary structure.
A group o f area residents led by developer
Hanns Schwelzer's son Bruce and Karen Rob­
ertson told commissioners that when they
purchased their homes In Lake Bingham Woods
they had been told the road was a temporary
Florida Power and Light access rood and that It
would soon be closed. They complained o f noise
from cars that passed behind their homes and In
part blamed college students from nearby
Seminole Community College.
ftorafd Fkotoky Tommy Vincent

Some Lake M ary residents would like to see
this road running behind their homes closed,
but tha city commission refused to honor
their request on a 3-1 vote.

Another resident. BUI NefT, said. " I f police and
firemen can get back there anybody can."
Roger Jarand. an administrator at Seminole
Community College, told about his knowledge of
the situation.
" I have lived in that area (Lake Bingham-Road)
for seven and a half years and I use that road four
times a day to get back and forth from the
college." Jarand said. "I don't think traffic Is that
bad and frankly I like having that road open. I f
one o f you had a heart attack you sure would
want that thing open. W e Just went through a
terrible brush fire season here and having the
volunteer fire department back there could save a
home from burning."
Jarand went on to say that the area has a large
Incidence o f house burglaries and that he
wouldn't argue the point If commissioners did
vote to close the road but he said the move would
be "shortsighted." He argued that the developer
(Schwelzcr) hired Orange Paving Co. o f Orlando
to dump sand in the middle o f the road to close It.
"T h a t's not a very friendly thing to do to new
neighbors, you know." Jarand said.

The proposal failed 3-1. Commissioners Charlie
Webster and Buzz Petaos also voted against
closing the road/Mayor Dick Fess was absent and
Commissioner Paul Tremel was taking his place
as vice-mayor and did not vote. The mayor only
votes in case o f a tie in Lake Mary.
In other business the commission gave the
police department 97.660 out o f the city’s total of
924.876 for emergency allocations to pay for
electrical hookup and furniture for a 24-foor by
60-foot modular building unit.
Police Chief Harry Benson told commissioners
he was pleased with the portable building the city
agreed to lease for the next two years from
Diamond Engineered Space in Orlando but he
said It would feel more like home for his
department If electricity, water, phones, com­
munication equipment and furniture could be
purchased, hooked-up and moved In.

O yste r B ow l
Has Crack Lineup

Action Reports
* fires
* Courts

it Police
D U lA R R E S T 9
The following persons have
been a rre s te d In S e m in o le
County on a charge of driving
under Ihe influence:
—Raymond William Farmer III.
o f 101 Hattaway Drive *122.
Escondido, Altamonte Springs,
was arrested at 1:39 q.m. Satur­
day after his car failed to main­
tain a single lane on State Road
436. Altamonte Springs.
—Shawn Earl Warner. 26. o f
Houston. Texas, at 2:49 a.m.
Saturday after he was seen
driving erratically on State Road
436. Altamonte Springs.
—Steven Christopher Stover. 27.
o f 607 Majorca Avc.. at 2:22 a.m.
Friday after he was seen driving
erratically on Slate Road 436,
Altamonte Springs.
—John Thomas Cleslar. 44. of
152 Bedford Court. Sanford, at
2:54 a.m. Friday, at the In­
terstate Mall on Stale Road 436.
Altamonte Springs, after his car

O AM B BROKEN UP
T h re e m en ch arged wi th
gambling after Sanford police
reported breaking up a game o f
dice at Joe's Pool Hall. 1301 W.
13th St., have been released on
9100 bond each, while a man
a r re s te d with them for
possession o f less than 20 grams
of marijuana remained Jailed In
lieu o f 9500 bond.
The arrests were made at 9:47
p.m. F rid ay. C harged w ith
gambling were: Corbblln Bemell
Dixon. 28. of Orlando; Leroy
Barton. 25. o f 1204 W. 12th St..
Sanford: Rickey Charles Floyd.
30. of Route 2. Box 193 Sipes
Avc.. Sanford. Charged with
possession of pot was London
Dontae Mathis. 18. o f 1011 Vk
Holly Ave.. Sanford.

was seen traveling at erratic
speeds.
BURGLARIES * THEFTS
Ronde L. Swanson. 39, a
bartender at Charlie's Bar. 2000
Howell Branch Road. W inter
Park, told Sem inole County
s h e r iffs deputies her purse
* outlining $113 was stolcn'from
the bar on Thursday or Friday.
Jewelry valued at 92.000 was
stolen along with two video
recorders with a combined value
of 9950 from the home of George
V. Doherty Jr.. 42. of 920 Lake
Marl on Dri ve. A l t a m o n t e
Springs, on Thursday or Friday,
a sheriffs report said.
John D. Mackenzie, 57. of 657
Wren Drive, Casselberry, re­
ported to sh eriff's deputies
03.020 worth of Jewelry was
siolcn from his home Thursday.
A 9350 washer and a 9500
dryer were stolen from a (podcl
home of Centex Homes of Or­
lando. 2390 Klmbclwlcke Circle.
Oviedo, between Tuesday and
Friday, according to a report
R onald Dr ummo n d of that
com pany filed with sheriff's
deputies.

CALENDAR

SAVE ENERGY
Aft. TEAR ’ROUND

MONDAY. DEC. 2
sary. no charge. For Information
Central Florida Herb Society. call 862-0090.
nutRts
7-9 p.m ., Sem inole County
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30
Mast Pimp/Aif I
Citn-IffkiMt i
Agriculture Center. Highway
p.m.. closed, 8 p.m.. step. 130
Contra! Fa M :
17-92, Sanford. Free meeting Normandy Road, Casselberry.
open to anyone Interested In Clean Air Rebos Club, noon,
W A U
growing or using herbs. Wreath closed.
making demonstration. For In­
W ED NESD AY. DEC. 4
M
M M H I
formation call 695-6750 after 5
IN I Soofsto Avo., I m M
S a n fo rd Ro t a r y - Br e a k f a s t
p.m.
Club. 7 a.m., Skyport Restau­
rant. Sanford Airport.
Seminole YMCA SUmnastlcs
class for women. 6:15 p.m. In
Teague Middle School gym. Call
862-0444 for Information.
Altamonte Springs Lions Club.
6:30 p.m.. D uffs Restaurant.
W e k l v a S q u a re. A l t a mo n t e
Springs.
Rebos Club AA, noon and 5:30
p.m.. closed. 8 p.m.. step. 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos at noon, closed.
Apopka A lcoh olics A n on y­
mous. 8 p.m.. closed. Apopka
i)
E p is c o p a l C h u r c h . 615
Highland.
Al-Anon Step and Study, 8
p.m.. Casselberry Senior Center,
200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m,. closed,
1201 W. First St.
K i i s i n c s s I n s i n .iiK c 7
Fellowship Group AA. senior
citizens, 8 p.m.. closed. 200 N.
Lake Triplet Drive, Casselberry.
&lt; &gt;r11 11, i i i n
it In
Overeaters Anonymous. 7:30
p.m.. West Lake Hospital, State
Road 434. Longwood. Call Mary
at 886-1905 or Dennis at 8627411.

"T h a t Is a really nice building and we need the
space pretty badly," Benson. Lake Mary s first
and only police chief, said. " I think If we (police
department) shop around we m ay be able to get
everything wc need for less than the 97.600 we re
At that time the city had to force Schwetzer to
asking. W e’re definitely bargain hunting." he
remove the dirt so people could pass.'
said.
C ity building official Stan Welling told the
Petaos, on the other hand, has fought the
commission that the road has only a half right o f
portable building concept since hta days on the
way of 25 feet from the city and the road,
planning and zoning board and questions the
m eanders through private property and in*
contract the city signed on Oct. 29. 1985 with the
partially on an FP&amp;L right o f way. Commissioner
Cleveland, Ohio based company.
Charlie Webster said that the road was there
"1 don't understand why the city should form a
when he bought his property nearby some 25
Capital Facilities committee to look into buying
years ago and that the road became more traveled
land for new city buildings while we sign a
when Larry Dale developed the adjacent Cardinal
contract obligating the city to spend 9667 a
Oaks subdivision and widened one end o f It a few
month for the next two vears." Petaos said.
years ago. He downplayed any problems with the
road and said there was realty nothing the city
Petsos also said the contract not only finan­
could do about It.
cially obligates Lake Mary until Oct. 1987 but
TUESDAY. DEC. 9
Welling said he had been approached by area
also states In section *27 that. "T h e city may
C
asselberry
Klwanis Club.
citizens about the situation in the past and said,
exercise the option to purchase this unit on or
7:30
a.m..
Casselberry
Senior
"it appears something needs to be done there."
about October 9. 1987 for a buyout price of
917.776." That would mean It would cost the city Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
But when the vote for closure came only
of Lake Mary a grand total of 933.784 to purchase Drive. Casselberry.
Commissioner Russ Megonegal voted for the
Sanford Toastmasters, 7:15
the aluminum and wood portable structure.
measure. Other commissioners, most notably
a.m.,
Christo's Restaurant. 107
Ken King, said the Idea o f putting barricades at
Notwithstanding his commitment to stand W. First St., Sanford.
either end had been tried In the past without
atone with his argument. Petsos finally gave In
Central Florida Blood Bank
success because drivers could simply create a
and voted for the allocation along with the rest of Seminole County Branch. 1302
new road of their own by driving around them
the commission. The commission achieved a E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.m.
through the woods. King also said that the only
"consensus" of opinion by arguing that the police to 7 p.m. Florida Hospitalparts of the road that are clearly under city
department’s critical lack of space (they share Altamonte Branch. 601 E. Alta­
Jurisdiction are the two openings and that the rest
cramped quarters with the volunteer fire de­ monte Ave.. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
of the road snakes through the woods changing
partment in a single concrete block building)
Sanford Dupl i cate B rid ge
course with weather conditions.
outweighed any immediate financial concerns.
Club, 1 p.m.. Greater Sanford
ChamLer of Commerce. 400 E.
First St.
Sanford Lions Club. noon.
%
Holiday Inn. Interstate 4. San­
ford.
South S e m i n o l e County
Klwanis Club. noon. Quincy's
Restaurant. Highway 17-92 and
Stacey Doolittle
S absl Point
Live Oaks B ou levard,
Jim Fullano
Elem entary
Casselberry.
Matthew Hawkins
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) — A crack
" A ” Honor Roll
Senior Citizens Christmas arts
Matt Kiefer
lineup o f the Cajun country's best
F irst Nine W eek*
an d c r a f t s , 9-11 a . m . ,
oyster shuckera were to pit skills
Robin Johnson
Am y Nelman
Westmonte Park. 500 Spring
Sunday In the first French Market
Megan Metohik
Jennifer Pearl
Oaks Blvd.. Altamonte Springs.
Oyster Bowl.
Michael Richards
Melissa Roesner
Call Claudia Harris at 862-0090
Debra Rosenbluth
Michelle Southall
A series of qualifying heats trimmed
to register.
Dominick Shaw
the ranks o f the professional oyster
Drop-in story lime for children
Nicole Vince
Corinne Taraska
shuckera
—
most
from
hotels
and
ages
3-5, 2 p.m., Casselberry
Jennifer Westrlch
Tiffany Taraska
restaurants
—
before
the
final
competlBranch
of the Seminole County
Jill Young
David Berman
&lt;
Uon.
with
Judges
selecting
a
winner
Public
Library
System. Seminole
Erin Kenny
Christina Provenzano
based on speed and finesse.
Plaza on Highway 17-92 at State
David Coalter
Gary Ackerman
Road 436. Program runs each
Contestants were required to pop
Michelle Reynolds
Catity Break
Tuesday through Dec. 10 For
open 24 oysters as fast as they could
Shayne Thomas
Danny Collins
more Information call 339-4000.
and arrange them prettily on the half
Jean McGregor
Melissa Dulskl
Handicap bowling. 4-6 p.m..
shell In a tray. Points were to be
Llann Calandro
Melissa Glttlngs
Altamonte Bowling Lanes. 93 a
deducted i f the oysters cam e out
Matthew Harris
Kim Johnson
session for 2 games and shoes.
damaged or dirty.
Jill Swaynos
John London
For information call Claudia
Jared Varttek
Readc Palmer
"T h e holiday season Is traditionally a
Harris, therapeutic specialist.
Jessica Yaruslnskl
Brlttnle Pennington
time o f heavy oyster consumption.-and
862-0090.
Eric Schultz
Marcia Snyder
we want to spotlight. this important
&gt; 24-Hour A A group beginners
Jennifer Evaul
Greg Tadd
Louisiana seafood." said W ank Tulloa.
open discussion. 8 p.m.. Second
Christina Kroll
Keith Walsh
chairman o f the Louisiana Seafood
and Bay Streets. Sanford.
Heather Pearce
Adam Witt
Promotion and Marketing Board.
17-92 G roup AA. 8 p.m..
Mandy Beeghly
Tracy Coalter
c lo s e d . M e s s ia h L u t h e r a n
Billy Chatlos
Elena Rahona
Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road.
Overeaters Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m.. Florida Pow er &amp;
Light. 301 S. Myrtle Ave., San­
ford.
Handicap clogging begins 6
p.m/
at Eaatmontc Recreation
William 0. Singtr and Wf KatMaan to
Hicks and Wt Jarat $.. Lot If Waklvo Club
Jam M. Thamaa and Wf Mary to Richard
Center, Altamonte Springs. Fee
Apryl L. Wllllamion, Lot M Tfca Hlghlandi L. Plaids and Wf Barbara B. Laf I Bik A,
EttsSac3.H4J.300
Sac 1, Iff,TOO
T.G . Jonas Co. to Mark S Grych. Lot 1 Door is 91 per month. For Information
Marl Inf Park Un. 4 S M S
Cation Hama* to Woodraw D. Rkhardon
Run Un. 10. till. 100
Hyland Oraup to WUNam Wanton ana wt
and Wf Vivian W.. Laf IS Alafeya Waada Ph I. Sandra P. Lotto Boor Crank. IIS , 100
Mario B. M uhlmar and Wf Thalma to call 862-0090.
UnA.ISI.300
Wheelchair tennis lessons. 6-7
Oanlal
H. Eckrood and Wl Paulina B. Lot 33
Ryland Croup to Bruca T. Frvcd and Wf
Imar a Carp to Cary W. Folsom and Wf OakraA., Lotto Baar Craoh.IU3.400
GaWJa Manor, toJ.700
p.m., Westmonte Center. 500
Swan J.. Lot 30Twcawllto. Un. 13, tlto Jto
Judith Harris and Hb David to Gordon L.
Jamaa Sly toRaodA. BUnard. Cammanca
Jama* McKaaby Jr. to Dantta M. Orofl. Laf MW car. Lot B0 L e if wooA PUOO
Murdock and Wt Laura J.. Lot 10 Blk Z3 Mo. Spring Oaks Blvd.. Altamonte
Springs. No experience neces­
14 and IS Oats pari) Bib O Lonfwaod Park.
Orlande I it Addn .U4.400
Harry I . FausMandWf Amy tolfanloy E.

School Releases
*A' Honor Roll

-M

Altamonte Woman Reports Rope

Road Stays Open;
Police G et Building

"M ain Road Is covered with trash and It Is
becoming heavily used by people who use It for
access to other streets," Mrs. Robertson said. "1
don't like all those cars going up and down that
Koad night and day. People can look right up Into
the backs of our homes from there."

e. t. If

fffctoryflams

CHRISTMAS GIFT CENTER
§1 ln f9ri Pfaxa

T TONYRUSSI INSURANCE
R

, r

P h . 9 2 2 -9 2 9 5

J - 2 5 75 S« Preach Ave., heater*
v fu to - O w n e r s in s u ra n c e
I ife. Home. Car. Ruviiaw. One name saw it all.

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N
WARMING SIGNALS OT PMCHCD NONES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
A rn m B *
•Saktoct To ro te LMtos

Frequent H eadaches
Low Back or Hip Pain
Dizziness or L oss of Sleep
Num bness of Hands or F eet
N ervousness
N eck Pain or Stiffness
Arm and Shoulder Pain

Itsfsitiso lactate: Felon Beaffsis. tint** T«L Skirt
lap Tet Skel toe Tel to* T * M * Bsde.

- T he p a tie n t AND a n t o t h e r p e r s o n r esp o n sib le for p a tm e n t HAS a RIGHT t o r efu se to
PAT CANCEL PAYMENT OR BE REIMBURSED FOR PATMENT FOR ANT OTHER SERVICE EXAMINA­
TION OR TREATMENT w h ich IS PERFORMED AS A RESULT OF AND WITHIN tj HOURS OF REIPOM
OlNO TO THE ADVERTISEMENT FOR t h e FREE SERVICE. EXAMINATION. OR TREATMENT

8 AM
10
8 PM

F O R D P A I N C O N T R O L C L I NI C
OF C H I R O P R A C T I C , INC.
J4/T S A l HL’ OH T Be V D

SA N IO W O

D: ANiil s■!T

bANfUMU l.’ IV/Dl

AVOID PROBATE &amp;
MINIMIZE ESTATE TAXES
la Probata

Fteurint Barton B. Stock, a/tfior of ITS EASY TOAVOIDPROBATE(racaWr Ha. 2 aa *a
But Sate Uat in Central R.). Fra* Py*. Money (Mates Estate PlateR toy S*sy.
toneicanGuarantyTrust 4 MarciaMaskCPA, PriceWaartouw.
For a etoow or tingb parson. |oM i
Koft

REALTY TRANSFERS

i not apBrsprla* m you I

tar

own tnatn. no tor* a i
Slw calls nc

I — III

.tfyavatotomarvt

• N*eriMft*euMdaiMaa»wL»eWiteNtoeratawtoSUM**

ism

Tiaaftowtoepanastern total tadBraa (TtoaX4Ok.S(TIm i) a la taka Fat
Cate la Motor Pvt You a * atetf 9 am a Is la aw** - MMtflO PR
kick Mam — narrates raanate R par past* V30 w rate
!By Datonkk 4 OraWck eaters WYK. a* Lite htetor* CM Hte&gt; at

VM M

i

i

�*

Evening Herald
(u in m - M i
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 309-322 2611 or 831-9993

Monday, December 2, IMS—4A
Waym D. Dsyk, FvMIttor
■

Jtfkwnjfe
nnffi^
^n
iw
v jp
vv
j b v iiv i

Home Delivery: Week. $1.10: Month. $4.75: 3 Month*.
•14.23: • Month*. 027.00; Year. 051.00. Bv Mall: Week.
01.50. Month. 06.00:3 Month*. 018.00:6 Months. 032.50:
Year. 060.00.

Congress M ust
Stop S illy Sally
Th e Legal Services Corp. m ay be right that
past audits o f federally funded legal services
agencies were too friendly and cozy, but the
search-and-destroy teams that LSC is now
sending out are hardly the answer. Instead o f
scrupulous but Impartial monitors. LSC has
been using teams that include not only people
who are vehem ently opposed to the program
but individuals w ho have themselves been
defendants In suits brought by lawyers from
the local legal services agencies that they are
supposed to be auditing.
In the case o f California Rural Legal
Assistance, which provides legal asslstancce
to thousands o f California farm workers, and
which Ronald Reagan has been trying to
destroy since he was governor of California,
the 17-member m onitoring team includes a
form er official o f the Immigration and Natu­
ralization Service w ho was sued by CRLA In
Texas, a form er official o f the American Farm
Bureau Federation who specialized in farm
labor issues, and a longtime lobbyist for the
National Rifle Association. Others on the team
have backgrounds in international trade,
m arketing, crim inal investigation and public
relations. How those backgrounds and the
accom panying attitudes qualify the team to
engage in an effective and objective audit
defies the imagination.
Federal law requires that audits be done
every 16 months to make certain that the
agencies, which provide legal services to the
poor, are run responsibly. In the past, those
examinations, which were usually done by
staff members of other legal service agencies,
m ay well have been as LSC officials charge,
too much of an exercise In mutual back
scratching. But under the new system, the
audits have now gone off the other deep end.
demanding thousands of documents. Includ­
ing detailed client files, which can only
intimidate the agencies and their clients,
impair the delivery o f legitimate legal services
and jeopardize general confidence In the
process.
All that m ight be understandable had there
been a series o f scandals In legal services
delivery. But in recent years, the only major
scandal has been the Legal Services Corp.
itself, which has been packed by the Reagan
adm inistration with people hostile to its
program s and which has often seemed more
like an instrument designed to destroy rather
than support the activities it's supposed to be
administering. Had it not been for Congress,
the whole legal services program would by
now already be dead. The audits are another
sally in that cam paign, and once again
Congress will have to step In.

Still N um ber One
A s U.S. com p etitiven ess In world m arkets
d eclin es an d w e w o rr y about econ om ic decay,
o u r liv in g stan dard s rem ain the w orld 's
highest — far h ig h e r than those o f the
c o m p etito r w e m ost fear: Uapan. W hile the
d ifferen ce In per ca p ita Incom e between the
tw o nations Is no lo n g e r enorm ous, the U.S. is
s till com forta b ly ah ead: $14,093 vs. §9.717.
and the a vera ge U.S. hourly w a ge last year
w a s $9.17 vs. J ap an 's $6.06.
T h ese num bers reflect livin g conditions in
J apan th at m ost A m erican s w ou ld n 't tolerate.
T h e a vera ge Japan ese hom e is on ly h a lf as
large as th e A m erican (and tw ice the price),
o n ly 34 percent o f Jap an 's com m u nities have
m o d e m sew er system s, and central heating,
m o d e m kitchen appliances, even washer and
d ryers, are rela tively rare. T h is doesn't m ean
Japan Is poor. M ost Japanese fam ilies have
television s, m odern sound system s and cars.
But m on ey still m atters. T h e Japanese m ay
b e savers, not spenders, but th ey still sim ply
h a ve less m oney than Am ericans. W e m ay
h a v e ou r slum s, but it w ill be a long tim e yet
b e fo re th is cou n try ceases to be the most
c o m fo rta b le place to live In on earth.

BERRY'S WORLD

O iO K O i M eO
O VtKN
|

•

President's Popularity A Political Paradox
Reflecting on the recent Geneva summit. I am
struck by one of the paradoxes of American
politics: the public tendency to give a political
leader new approval and enhanced popularity
for moving even modestly to correct earlier
blunders and mistakes.
President Reagan Is emerging from his recent
talks with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev
with the image of a peacemaker, an advocate of
cultural and scientific exchange, a proponent of
arms control and a reasonable negotiator. It Is
said by Mr. Reagan and others that he brought
the Soviets back to the negotiating table by his
toughness and Ills military buildup over the last
five years.
I’m delighted that the president, after five
years in office, finally met with his Soviet
counterpart. I am delighted, too. that the two
men have agreed to meet again in 1986 and
1987. In this dangerous nuclear age. It Is
suicidal folly for the two superpowers to break

communications between their two top leader*.
The political paradox ta that after five year* o f
the worst possible management o f SovietAmerican relations (make that six years. If you
include the last year o f the Carter presidency).
Mr. Reagan has suddenly emerged with a
popular negotiating triumph.
Rut for the sake of history, and In the Inten-ul
of truth. It is Important to keep these develop­
ments In perspective. What are the facts?
Fact 1: For the first time since the second
world war. an American president has gone
through an entire four-year term without
meeting his Soviet counterpart.
Fact 2: For the first time since World War II,
Soviet arms negotiators abruptly broke off arms
control talks with American negotiators: this
happened in 1982. If Mr. Reagan wants to claim
credit for the Soviets’ return to arms negotia­
tions. he should also assume the blame for
driving them out of the negotiations three years
ago. since they left In disgust over what they

considered an Irrational Reagan negotiating
position.
Mr. Reagan claims that the secret of his
success In handling the Soviets .Is that In
escalating military spending he has been
following a more ' ‘realistic" course than his
predecessors. Actually, the Reagan policy was
based on the illusion that the Soviets were
ahead o f us in strategic military power, and
therefore Mr. Reagan had to Increase arms
spending during the last five years to catch up.
The truth Is that our strategic military power
has been superior to that of the Soviet Union for
40 years and remains so today.
Fact 3: Nothing substantive was achieved on
arms control at the summit and neither the
1979 S A LT II agreement nor the ABM Treaty o f
1972 was reaffirmed. After six years of worsen­
ing relations and a stalemate on arms control,
the recent summit has begun to restore arms
control to about where it was under President
Carter in 1979.

DONALD LAMBRO

W ASHINGTON WORLD

Useless
Spending
Abounds

Ladies In
Tea Time
Thanks

WASHINGTON - For the past
decade l‘vc been investigating and
exposing wasteful, unneeded, un­
affordable and ineffective federal
spending totaling tens o f billions of
dollars — from revenue sharing for
wealthy communities to corporate
welfare.

&gt;7 H«l«a T k o a t i

un V k l U H n m

1 have pored over countless
c o m p u te r p rin to u ts d e ta ilin g
billions of dollars In grants, ques­
tioned contract officials- about dubi­
ous procurement projects and held
each program and agency up to this
single criteria: Is this expenditure
necessary? Very often, the answer Is
no.
So it Is always more than a little
astonishing to hear political leaders
in Congress and elsewhere, and
many of my colleagues in the
national news media, say that
spending can’ t be cut without
hurting the needy or cutting deeply
Into the muscle of our national
security. When I hear such talk on
the House or Senate floor or In the
press galleries. I have to wonder
where these people have been
living. Certainly not in Washington.
Can anyone defend giving away
$4.6 billion a year In borrowed
•'revenue sharing” money to every
community in America, regardless
of need? I mean, really — $200,000
a year for Beverly Hills? Does
anyone truly believe that America
will crumble if we stop distributing
S3.5 billion a year In communityd e v e lo p m e n t b lock g ra n ts to
thousands of localities that hardly
qualify as poor — especially since
the states are piling up healthy
surpluses?
Does anyone think our defense
will he weakened if we stop retiring
officers as early as age 38. or cut
$750 million a year In commissary
subsidies for well-pensioned mili­
tary retirees In second-career Jobs?
The list o f highly cuttable pro­
grams. and the potential three-year
savings. Is seemingly endless: $3.9
billion in cheap Export-Import Dank
loans to Fortune 500 giants like
Boeing and General Electric: $1.8
billion in subsidized loans for
wealthy rural electric and telephone
cooperatives; S I.4 billion in Urban
Development Action Grants that
have helped rich corporations like
Hyatt and Am way build ritzy hotels:
S5.3 billion for the Small Business
Administration, which helps few
businesses, and whose bureaucracyalone costs nearly one-quarter of a
billion dollars a year: and on it goes.

"... Yeah, I guess you could say that the

hospital put me on a special d ie t
WILLIAM RUSHER

'Facts' Can Mislead
Among the many blessings we
Americans can count as we sit down
to our holiday dinners this year, is a
brief respite from the national
hysteria over carcinogens, or can­
cer-producing chemicals. In our
food. The environmentalists, who
long ago discovered that they could
terrorize large segments of the
population into doing their bidding
by exaggerating the risks of cancer
from various sources (e.g. nuclear
power plants), aren’t quite crazy
enough to take on the traditional
celebratory dinner.
And yet. as the American Council
on Science and Health points out —
not lo frighten us. but rather-to
show us how meaningless or even
misleading some of these "scientific
facts" can be — there are Indeed
m in u te q u a n t it ie s o f k now n
carcinogens and powerful toxins in
typical American meals.
Take cream of mushroom soup,
for example. Mushrooms contain
h y d r a z i n e
s a n d
parahydrazmobenzalc acid — both
known carcinogens. As for roast
turkey, there lurks within it a
substance called methyl glyoxal
that is not only carcinogenic In rats
hut also mutagenic (l.e.. can cause
genetic mutations). And yams: Did
you know they contain cyanogenetic glycosides, which can pro­
duce hydrogen cyanide upon being
chewed or digested, thereby releas­
ing cyanide? Even pumpkin pie has
safrolc In It. a chemical that causes
liver cancer in animals.

"Our purpose In presenting this
lesson on to x ico lo gy ." explains
A C S H ’ s ex e c u tiv e d irector Dr.
E liza b eth W h elan , " I s not to
frighten further our already chemi­
cal-phobic nation, but rather to
emphasize the reality that the
human race has long been con­
suming naturally occurring toxins.
These minute levels o f natural
poisons, however, ’have no known
deleterious effects on health. When
one understands the omnipresence
o f to x in s and c a rc in o g e n s In
nature's own food supply, one can
see the absurdity of panicking over
minute levels of man-made chemi­
cals (like EDB and PCB).”
The ACSH. which is one of the
sanest organizations now advising
lhe public on the scientific uspects
of health (including nutrition), has
Issued a tongue-in-cheek menu,
listing the toxologlcal effects of
chemicals naturally occurring In
every course from soup to nuts. But.
as ACSH Research Associate Linda
Behre stressed: "T o receive toxic
levels of the chemicals In this
particular meal, one would have to
consume truckload quantities every
day of turkey and vegetables — a
sheer impossibility. It is neither
necessary nor practical to avoid the
minute levels of carcinogens and
toxins in our food. Our preventive
medicine efforts are better spent In
more productive ways."
The press release accompanying
the menu ends with a perky "Bon
uppetlt from ACSH!"

Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Nancy
Reagan Is sending a thank-you
letter to Ralssa Gorbachev for the
tea, the hospitality and the gifts she
recevled from the Soviet first lady at
the Geneva summit meeting.
Mrs. Gorbachev was expected to
do the same for the same reasons.
The two first ladles hit it oiT, and
they will be seeing each other at
future summit meetings — next
year In Washington and In Moscow
in 1987.
Mrs. Reagan was influnetlal In
bringing about the summit meeting,
pushing for a "g e t acquainted"
session to size up the Kremlin
leader, while some o f President
Reagan's advisers wanted to play it
safe, having him go to Geneva only
If there were substantive agree­
ments to sign.
Aides said the first lady also urged
that the two leaders meet In small
cozy salons at the villas where they
held forth, adding to the picture of
the chummy "fireside summit."
U.S. observer* and reporter* were
struck by Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev's ability to make de­
cisions without reading option
papers or consulting advisers. They
also saw that he was clearly the
man in charge who was prepared to
argue his case on all scores.
Reagan was Impressed by the
depth of Gorbachev's convictions
and belief in his own system of
government.
While neither man convinced the
other on the substantive Issue of
"Star W ars." the president's dream
of a total defense in space for the
United States, the big plus was the
Improved understanding of each
other, and the slight opening o f a
window where the dialogue could
continue Into the future.
The so-called "new s blackout" at
the Geneva summit was viewed as
m ore o f a " d l m o u t " or a
"brow nout" for the two leaders
continued to field questions during
picture takings. And although the
lid was on for White House officials
who are known for flagrant leaking
of news, still there was enough grist
for the rumor mill to keep the wires
humming.
The irony of It all Is that Secretary
of State George Shultz bragged that
It w as he w h o h a d p r e s s e d
Gorbachev for the news blackout,
and the Soviet leader went along. So
an official of a democracy asked the
leader of a closed society to refrain
from giving out any information.

JA C K ANDERSON

Suriname Is A Cuba In The Making
By Jack Andes son And
Dale Van Atta
WASHINGTON — Suriname Is
developing into another Cuba-style
dictatorship in the Western hemi­
sphere. Its Marxist strung man. Desi
lioutcrse. desperate for cash to keep
ills repressive regime afloat, has
turned to two tainted sources of
money: Libya and Colombian drug
dealers.
But lie's learning that there's no
free lunch in the foreign-aid game.
When Suriname was given its
independence by the Netherlands in
1975. the Dutch promised $100
million a year in aid until 1990. The
stip en d c o n tin u e d e v en a fte r
Boulcrse's military coup in 1980
and itis growing leftward till.
Bouterse cultivated and modeled
himself after Maurice Bishop, the
Marxist prime minister o f Grenada.
At Bishop's suggestion. Bouterse
s u c c u m b e d to F id e l C a s tr o 's
overtures and welcomed a Cuban
ambassador to Paramaribo in Sep­
tember 1982.

!

Cuban aid soon followed, as did
the quid pro quo. Dozens of Cubans
arrived in Surinam e to assist
Bouterse in setting up a Marxist
dictatorship — which would be
under Castro's control. The Cubans
trained Bouterse’s bodyguards, and
e v e n a c te d in th at c a p a c ity
themselves. Surinamese officials
were sent to Cuba for indoctrina­
tion.
Both the Dutch and American
governments (the United States was
a lso s e n d in g S u rin a m e som e
modest aid) grew increasingly un­
easy at the blossoming BouterseCastro relationship. In December
1982. when Bouterse rounded up
and executed 15 opposition leaders,
Dutch and American aid was cut off.
Castro, him self dependent on
Moscow gold to bolster the shaky
Cuban economy and his foreign
adventures, proved stow in provid­
ing the money he had promised
Bouterse. So. according to our CIA
sources, the Surinamese dictator
accepted the offer of a loan from

Colombian marijuana and cocaine
traffickers.
Meanwhile. Brazil, which borders
Suriname on the south, woke up to
the danger o f this Castro foothold
and sent a military strike force
across the border In April 1983.
Literally under the gun, Bouterse
agreed to decrease the Cuban pre­
sence in his country in return for a
8300 million aid deal with Brazil.
Bouterse dragged his feet on the
bargain, until Bishop was deposed
and murdered by Cuban-backed
Grenadan Marxists. Blaming Castro
for the death of his friend and
mentor, and fearing for his own
neck after the U.S.-led invasion of
Grenada, Bouterse sent his Cuban
advisers packing. Though he had
previously claimed there were only
15 Cubans In Suriname, about 100
were kicked out (leaving only eight,
according to our sources).
This left Bouterse with nothing
but his own poverty-stricken popu­
lace and the Brazilians to support
his dictatorship. He needed more

money — and gratefully accepted a
promise of $100 million from L i­
byan dictator Muammar Khadafy.
What does Khadafy expect to get
for his money? Our sources say he
hopes to expand his Influence In
South Am erica. He also wants
Surinamese passports for Libyan
assassination squads, and hopes to
get them for his Palestinian terrorist
sidekicks as well.
Khadafy has already set about
.turning Suriname Into a Libyan
"staging area" for terrorist attacks.
One Surinamese source told us
there are more than 200 Libyan
military instructors In the country,
training terrorists.
Meanwhile, Bouterse Is raking in
money from his connections In the
drug trade. Our associate Donald
Goldberg has learned that the oper­
ators of a huge cocaine factory
destroyed in Colombia moved their
base to Suriname, where it is
guarded by Bouterse’s troops. Drugs
r e p o r t e d l y are s h i p p e d to
Amsterdam in diplomatic pouches.

i

�SPORTS

■vinvni nirviVf Nvnvnif

p i*

Msaday, Dec. 1.1 W -IA

Nelson Needs
Stars To Heal
For Woodham

Snowm an

Freezes
Bugs , 21-0

IjrChrtonitar
Lake Mary coach Harry Nelson
Is hoping the affects o f Friday
n i g h t ’ s hard-hitting gam e
against Lake City Columbia will
wear off soon. That's because
the Rams go up against defend*
ing state champion Pensacola
Woodham this Friday In the
5A-1 Section playoff at Lake
Mary High.
’’W e ’ve got a few guys hurt­
in g." Nelson said after Friday's
7-3 yictory over Lake City. "A n d
we can't be lim ping around
against Woodham. We have to
have those guys healthy."
The two players who were
b a n g e d up F r i d a y a r e
linebacker-fullback Brett Mode
and quarterback Shane Lctterto.
Mode injured an ankle early
Friday and did not play in the
backfleld moat o f the game. But.
the senior standout did stay In
on defense and made a number
of crucial stops.
Letterio had a rib Injury In the
second half and had to leave for
two plays before returning. Let­
terio threw for 170 yards in the
game and that was all o f the
Rams’ offense since Lake City
held them two minus two yards
rushing.
"L ak e City was a bunch of
hard hitters," Nelson said. "B ut
my kids played a courageous
gam e."
Pensacola Woodham and Lake
Mary both have 9-2 records
goin g into F rid a y ’ s contest.
W ood h am ad van ced wi t h a
28-12 victory over Jacksonville
Rlbault this past Friday In the
Region 1 game. Woodham's only
two losses this season were to 4A
schools. Pensacola Escam bia
and Milton, both ranked highly
in the stale.
Although Woodham will be

Football
the favorite Friday. Lake Mary
can't be counted out. Stranger
things have happened In the
playoffs. For Instance. Apopka's
loos to Merritt Island this post
Friday. Apopka went in with a
104) record and ranked number
one In the state poll (BA).
Nelson, in an earlier interview
last week, however, predicted
that the Blue Darters may be In
fo r a rou gh b a llg a m e . " I
wouldn’t be surprised if Merritt
Island knocked off Apopka." he
said. "Merritt Island alw ays
plays Its best football at the end
of the season."
Lake Mary has played its best
football the last two weeks with
a 28-7 victory over Lyman in the
last regular season game that
clinched the district title and
Friday's region victory over Lake
City.
The Lyman win was one of the
Rams' better offensive showings
of the season while the Lake City
triumph was keyed by the de­
fense. Lake City had over 200
yards total offense in the game
but the Lake Mary defense
tightened, up every time the
Tigers got close to scoring. The
big defensive series came late in
the fourth quarter when the
Rams put on a tremendous
goal-line stand.
Lake City had a second down
at Lake Mary three and could
have gotten a first down at the
twp. But the Rams stopped the
Tigers cold on three straight
plays to hold onto their 7-3 lead.
The big play came on fourth
down at the two when Tom
Kothera and Molle stopped Lake
City fullback Chip Davis for a
loss of a yard.

HmMPMikyTMRvVlKMl

Shane Letterio looks for an opening. Lake
Mary's junior quarterback shook off an
"T h a t w as one heck ot a
stand." Nelson said. "Kothera
and Molle made the initial hit
an d t h e n t h e o t h e r g u y s

injury to his rib to lead the Ram s past Lake
City Columbia for the region championship.

swarmed on him (Davis)."
The Lake Mary defense held
Lake City to Just 48 yards total
offense in the final period.

Nelson said the Rams will be
In the game against Woodham If

B«s H E A L . Page 6 A

Lady Seminoles Pick Up Experience
B y C hris F lster
H erald S ports W riter
Both Seminole High’s Lady
Seminoles and Lake Brantley's
Lady Patriots chalked up the
Rotary Ladles Invitational to
experience.
T h e tw o Sem inole County
teams put a number o f inexperi­
enced players to the test against
teams with significantly more
experience. Both Seminole’s and
Brantley's young people had
their moments o f brilliance but
also m ad e s o m e yout hf ul
mistakes.
"T h e whole tournament we
played with very experienced
people." Seminole High coach
Charles Steele said. "T o compete
with kids like Cocoa Beach had,
you have to have a team that has
played together for a while."
Steele has Just three players
with varsity experience on his
squad, which dropped a 61*35
decision to Edgewater's Lady

Eagles Saturday In the third
place game at the University .of
Centra Florida.
"There’s Just a tack of maturi­
ty on the team right now ."
Steele said. "Thq girls don’t
have confidence or patience on
offense."
Lake Brantley, on the other
hand, had a rough time with
Cocoa Beach on Wednesday, but
came back to win the consola­
tion bracket title for the second
year In a row. After drubbing
Oviedo on Friday, the Lady
Patriots downed Lake Howell,
66-53. Saturday.
"W e've got some really young
kids and they haven’t worked
together very much." Brantley
coach Cindy Frank said. "A s
soon * as they get some floor
experience, they shcktld be doing
all right."
Saturday. Seminole was play­
ing without its most experienced
player, senior forward Catherine

Basketball
"K itty " Anderson, who sprained
an an k le in F rid a y 's gam e
against Cocoa Beach.
The Lady Seminoles stayed
close, to E d gew ater as they
trailed Just 17-11 after the first
quarter. But the Eagles, sparked
by J a ck ie Sessler and T a ri
Phillips, w ent on a tear in the
second quarter and outscorcd
the Seminoles, 13-6, for a 30-17
halftime lead.
Seminole could not get on
track offensively in the second
half ks Edgewater breezed to
third place in the tourney.
"W e missed a bunch o f layups
that the other teams weren't
missing.” Steele said. "W e broke
all the presses the teams showed
us but we couldn't put the ball in
the basket.' W e ’re a much better
team than we showed. W e Just

Basketball
Patterson. Karen DeShelter and
Lawson, the Lake Mary Rams
extended their lead to 34-18
after two periods of play. DeShelter hit six o f her eight points
in the second period and Lawson
also added six to the scoring
surge.
" S h e 's (L a w s o n ) was ou r
leading scorer last year In Junior
varsity,” head coach Bill Moore
said abou t th e sophom ore.
"S he's very tough on defense,
but needs to be a little more
consistent on the offensive side
of the game. She did extremely
well considering this was her
first tournament and games as a
varsity player."
A Ram player who has had a
year o f experience to her credit
la Patterson. Patterson popped
nine points through the net. all
of which came in crucial polnta
o f the game for the Rams.
"Cynthia (Patterson) Is very
quick and strong." Moore said.
"S he scored 17 points yesterday
against Titusville (Astronaut)
and Is getting better after each
gam e."
In t h e t h i r d p e r i o d .

year by having an impressive
tou rn am en t. S h e scored 17
points against Cocoa Beach. 14
against Oviedo and connected
for 16 more In the win over Lake
Howell. Asplen. the Lady Patri­
ots' All-Tournament selection,
also grabbed six rebounds Sat­
urday. dished out six assists and
came up with four steals.
Wain pumped in 17 points to
share high-scoring honors with
teammate Laurie Rivers. Wain
also grabbed 12 rebounds white
Rivers hauled down nine. Rivers,
a Junior center, turned in a
strong tournament underneath.
For Lake Howell. Erin Hankins
poured in 16 points. J olec
Johnson added 11 and Kellec
J o h n s o n t o s s e d in e i g h t .
Hankins scored in double figures
in all three games for the Lady
Hawks.
Lake H ow ell's Ladv Silver
See RO TARY, Page 7A

SCC Eyes Upset
Of No. 1 Falcons

Lady Rams Salvage
Consolation Crown
B y Chuck Burgess
Special to the Herald
LAKE MARY — The Lake
Mary Lady Ram s basketball
team had at least some consola­
tion in the 1985 Lady Sunshine
Basketball Classic this past Sat­
urday. It rolled over rolled past
Gainesville Eastslde. 55-36. to
win the third-place game.
After losing the opening round
of the tournament to Titusville
Astronaut 65-46. the Lake Mary
R a ms t ur ne d t he w e e k e n d
around by winning the consola­
tion round o f the tournament.
The Lddy Rams Jumped to an
early 3-0 lead when sophomore
center Teri Whyte hit a layup
and was fouled. Whyte, com ­
pleted the three point gift and
gave the Rama the lead only
1:21 Into the period.
T h e Rams w ere paced by
Junior guard Tony Lawson who
poured in a Ram game high 12
points. Whyte was the only other
Ram in double figures with her
11 points.
The Rams m oved to a 14-8
first quarter lead when Lawson
connected on a 10- footer with
36 seconds in the period. That
was as close as the Eastslde
Rams could get.
With the scoring o f Cynthia

haven't put it together y et."
For Seminole, senior guard
Temlka Alexander was the only
player in double figures with 14
p o in ts . K im " B i g W h e e l "
Johnson contributed six and
Leticia Strickland five.
Surprisingly, the Sem inole
p la y er se lec te d to the A ll*
Toumament team was Yolanda
Robinson, who scored Just eight
points in three games. " I think
whoever picked the team con­
fused her (Robinson) with 'Kitty'
(Anderson).” Steele said.
For Edgewater. Sessler and
Phillips netted 17 points each
while Pat Wilson tossed in 13.
Phillips was the All-Tournament
selection for the Lady Eagles.
With Lake Brantley's young
players still breaking Into varsity
action, the Lady Patriots’ senior
leaders. Sherry “ Ice" Asplen and
Kim Wain, led the way Saturday
against Lake Howell.
Asplen started off her senior

&gt; J
Lak e M a r y 's Anquenette
Whack w orks around
Eastslde's M ary Faison.
Gainesville’s Daphnie Johnson
staged a m inor comeback when
she scored four of the six points
scored In the third period by the
Eastslde Rams.
Johnson ended the day with a
game high 22 points. Most o f the
total came on fast breaks and
easy layups when the Lake Mary
defense collapsed at the begin­
ning of the period.
" W e ’ re a very young and
in experienced te a m ." Moore
said. “ Our defense today showed
that. It’s going to take a little
while to set them (players) in a
fixed lineup."

Bv Bam Cook
H erald Sports Editor
After easily disposing of North
Florida Saturday, coach Bill
Payne's Seminole Community
College Raiders look to atone for
their lone defeat of the year
Tuesday night when they host
Florida College.
Tlpoff is 7:30 p.m. at the SCC
Health Center. There Is no
charge for admission.
"W e played pretty good and
made them play bad." Payne
said about Saturday's 79-64
licking. The victory was the
eighth in nine games for Payne's
fourth-ranked Raiders.
SCC's guards tuned up lor the
rematch \vlth good performances
Saturday. David Gallagher, a
5-10 sophomore, handed out a
season-h igh 12 assists and
scored 12 points. He hit 5 of 7
floor shots.
G allagher effectively
engineered a Raider break which
put SCC in command, 32-25, at
halftime despite the fact It hit
Just 13 o f 34 attempts for 38
percent. North Florida converted
12 of 27 for 44 percent.
Roberta, one o f Gallagher's
running mates, added 11 points
while third guard Mike Landed

Basketball
chipped in six. Strong forward
Greg "S lim " Johnson added 10
points and 11 rebounds. Jeff
Day. Darrls Gallagher and Vance
Hall had seven points each.
Efrem Brooks popped off the
bench Tor six points.
LA D T RAID ER R A P - SCC’s
women return to action Tuesday
with a 5 p.m. lidllfler against
Florida College. Coach Ileana
Gallagher's girts are 6-2 after
disposing of Panola (Tex.) last
week.
SIMIMOLK i n ) - Dr. Golloghor J 4 11 7,
Brookl 3 5 0-1 4. Ov Golloghor 5-1 I S 12.
Hughs* S I &gt;2 2. London &gt;• SO «. Ratafia
4-11 25 11, Rflllly S I SO 0. Morrlt &gt;10 SO 4.
Jackton 1-4 12 5. Jofmion 4-11 &gt;4 10. Hotl 20
117. Day 21 11 7. Total!: 3270 (41 % ) 1&gt;24
(54.1) 7*.
NORTH FLORIDA (44) - GoJnoa SO SO A
Grant 4 J SO A Starling +10 SO A Humhroy
I t SO 4. Mooro &gt;7 SO 4. Matary S I SO A
Armatrong 1-0 1-1A Dwnaon s it 7-0 H Davl!
SO SO A Donga &gt;11 &gt;4 IA Colo S I SO A
Whit* S3 SO 0. Total!: 17 45 (41 % ) ISIS (47
% )4 4
Halttlmo — Sofflinoto 11, Norm Florida H
nohounda - North Florida 47. Somlnoto 34.
Aultta - North Florida 10. Somlnoto 72
Foul! - North Florida 1A Somlnoto 14
Foulod out — non*. Technical — non*.

OREEN BAY. Wls. (UP!) They may have to start calling
Green Bay quarterback Lynn
Dickey the snowman.
In one of the wont winter
storma in NFL history Sunday
and with more than 13 inchea of
snow already on the ground.
Dickey connected on 22 paaara
for 299 yards to set up three
Packers' touchdowns in a 21-0
win over the Tampa Bay Bucca­
neers.
It wasn't the Aral time Dickey
has shown his stuff In near
blizzard conditions. He tossed
for 371 yards against Denver last
year during a 15-inch snowfall.
Packers Coach Forrest Gregg
said the game against Tampa
Bay was very similar to its last
major snow contest against the
Broncos.
"Lynn Dickey deserves a lot of
credit." he said. "T o be able to
throw the football under those
conditions was close to being
phenomenal."
Dickey gave Green Bay a 7-0
halftime lead. After connecting
on an 18-yard pass to James
Lofton and a 19-yard pass to
Paul Coffman, he then carried te
ball the final yard for his first
rushing TD of the season.
When asked shout his ability
to th ro w th e b a ll d u rin g
snowstorms, Dickey said, "I look
at it as mind over matter."
"They did not let the snow get
to them." Tampa Bay Coach
Leeman Bennett said. "Lynn
threw the ball Just great W e
applied no pressure to him, and
give him credit for doing an
excellent Job of getting the bail
to his receivers."
Tampa Bay quarterback Steve
Young got his team to within
scoring distance only once In his
second NFL start. But after his
drive was stopped at the Packers
16. Donald Igwebulke missed a
33-yard field gosld attempt.
“ I won't put the blame on the
w eath er." said Young, who
completed only 8 pomes lor M
yards and rushed for 31 yards.
"The Packers had to {flay in
the same stuff and they had very
few problems. They were able to
score 21 points in it and we
should have scored too."
The 65 yards the Packers gave
up was Its lowest defensive total
since It allowed Just 58 yards
against Atlanta on Oct. 1. 1967.
in a 23-0 victory.
Bennett said he realized he
would not be aide to change
weather conditions in Green Bay
and told his team Wednesday to
concentrate on its own play and
to be above the elements.
" I really feel fortunate we
didn't get beat a lot worse than
we did.” Bennett said.
" I felt it w as very, very
important that we gain a lead
early if we could." Gregg said.
But Green Bay’s first effort to
get on the scoreboard failed
when right comerback John
Holt blocked A1 Del Greco'a
25-yard flelu goal attempt with
Just 32 seconds remaining in the
first quarter. Del Greco also was
wide on a 24-yard attempt in the
third quarter.
Gregg said he felt the field
conditions would get worse as
the day went on and an early
lead was necessary to win.
Halfback Gerry Ellis, rushing
for his first 100-yard game this
reason, gave the Packers a 14-0
lead in the third quarter on a
35-yard touchdown run.
Fullback Jesse Clark scored
Green Bay’s final touchdown on
a three-yard run in the fourth
quarter.
The shutout was the first for
the Packers In 125 games in the
last eight years. The last shutout
also was against Tampa Bay in
1977 during the first meeting of’
the two teams.
The snowstorm was the worst
for the date in the history of the
Green Bay weather bureau,
which began keeping records in
the late 1880s. More than 10
inchea of snow fell before kickoff
and more than 13 fnchea were
on the ground before the game
ended. The storm was expected
to dump up to two feet of snow
In the area before ending.
L am bcau Field, norm ally
packed for a home game, drew
Just 19,856 fans with 36,586 no
shows and 485 unaold tickets. It
waa the w ont attendance Mnce
the stadium opened in 1957.
W hen aaked If the .league
should stop playing ^ m e a In
Green Bay In December. Bennett
replied. "I would think If you
aaked their season ticket holders
the answer would definitely be
yea.

�HtflM, Saafori, FI.

Ptc. *, I W

Line, Marino Worry Ditka As Bears Hunt 13th
MIAMI (UP1) - The Miami Dolphins,
who know about going undefeated, can
ensure that the Chicago Bears do not.
Monday night In the Orange Bowl,
the Bears' fierce pass rush wilt run up
against a Miami offensive line that has
allowed only 13 sacks this je a s o n .
Bears* coarh Mike Ditka expresses
great respect Tor the Dolphin line,
which has been banged up by Injuries
this season.
"You can't get to him ." Ditka said of
Miami quarterback Dan Marino. "H e
has the quick release. We're going to
have to contain him on the coverage."
The Bears, 12*0 and bidding to be
the NFL's first unbeaten team since
the 1972 Dolphins, have given up only
2.096 y a rd s p a ssin g , wh i l e the
Dolphins. 8-4, have passed for 3.218.

The Bears also have picked off 30
passes while Marino has thrown 17
interceptions this season to go with 19
touchdowns.
Miami offensive linemen say the
Bears have the best pass rush they've
faced all season.
"They Just don't have two or three
good guys." said right guard Steve
Clark, "th ey have five or six. They’re
all good players. They're all aggressive
and quick and know what they're
doing."
"A ll the Bears across the front line
are great players." said rookie of*
fenslve tackle Jeff Dellenbach. "They
play the Intimidation game, It's part of
the Bears style."
Chicago's leading sacker is right end
Richard Dent with 10. Tackle Steve

Football
M cM lch ael has eigh t sacks and
linebacker Otis Wilson has 7.5.
"Everyone knows that .Chicago’s
strength Is putting tremendous pre­
ssure on the quarterback." said Miami
coach Don Shula. "T h ey know he
(Marino) Is a drop-back quarterback, so
they'll be relentlessly trying to break
down the pocket and put pressure on
him ."
Despite the Bears* pass rush, the
Dolphins plan to do what works best
for their offense — Marino throwing
the ball. Wide receiver Mark Clayton
leads the Dolphins with 36 catches for
795 yards, and running back Tony

Continued from BA

nun

RAM

RAP

— Tickets

for

Dave Mitro. Lake Mary's talented tight end, hauls in a pass
en route to a score against Lyman's Byron Overstreet.
Friday’s championship game
against Pensacola Woodham arc
available at Lake Mary High
School for 84. They will be on
side beginning Tuesday at the
athletic office from 8 a.m. to 3:30

p.m.
"Mainly, we're trying to push
the sales during the lunch hours
(10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.)."
Sharon Baumgartner. Lake Mary
athletic secretary, said today.

United Press International
Just when the Rm m thought it was safe at the
top o f the NFC West, ihc San Francisco 49ers
have chewed Los Angeles' oncc-safe lead to a
single game.
San Francisco will try to take the final bite out
of that differential next Monday night at home
against the Rams.
Los Angeles, which last won the division in
1979, was undefeated after seven weeks and
owned a four-game lead over the then-struggling
49ers.
To view how much things have changed In six
weeks, one need only look at the two teams'
results Sunday. The 49crs demolished the
Redskins, who usually cxcetl down the stretch,
and the Rams were whipped the Saints, who are
guaranteed their 19th straight losing season in as
many years of existence.
At Washington. Carl Monroe returned the
opening kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown, and
Kcena Turner ran back a fumble 65 yards for a
score, sparking the 49ers. 8-5. to a 35-8 rout of
the Redskins.
The loss drops the error-plagued Redskins, who
had won the final four regular-season games over
each o f the previous three seasons, to the brink of
playoff elimination. The defending NFC East
champions' 7-6 record places them two games off
the pace in the division with three games
remaining.
Either the 49ers or Redskins have represented
the NFC in the last four Super Bowls.
"It's going to be extremely, extremely tough to
get into the playoffs." Redskins safety Curtis
Jordan said. "N ow . we're banking on everyone
else."

TJwr Bears own two straight shutouts
and have not allowed a touchdown in
13 q u a r t e r s . N e v e r th e le s s , th e
Dolphins believe they can score.
"W e have Dan Marino and I think
the Bears can be hurt by the passing
gam e." Dellenbach said. " I don’t think
anyone on this team feels they’re going
to shut us out. We can score on
anybody.
"There's no question they’re a very
good defensive line, but we can hold
our own against them ."

Basketball
Kenny Smith added 16 for North
Carolina. 5-0. UNLV. 4-1. led
34-28 at the half.
At Honolulu. Don Redden
scored a career-high 31 points
and had 10 rebounds, and Der­
rick Taylor added 20 points to
lead Louisiana State over Hawaii
Pacific. LSU is 4-0.
At New York. Ron Rowan
scored 20 points and teamed
with Mark Jackson to crack the
Cardinals' pressure defense.
Jackson finished with 17 points
and 11 assists, and Walter Berry
had 22 points and 13 rebounds
for St. John’s. 3-1.
In o t h e r S u n d a y g a me s .
Purdue beat Arizona 81-74 for
thi rd p l ac e in the Al a s k a
Shootout while Vtllanova
dropped Alaska-Anchorage
71-59 for fifth place and Missouri
bl asted T e xas - Sa n Ant oni o
80-47 for seventh.
In the finals of the Cavalier
Classic. Virginia stopped
Virginia Commonwealth 79-75.
El sewher e, it was: South
Alabama 67. Texas 66; Arkansas
6 8 . S W Mi s s o u r i 67: a n d
Oklahoma 91. Hawali-Hllo 68.
In a ragged meeting of top
teams Saturday. No. 1 Michigan
beat No. 2 Georgia Tech 49-44 In
the Hall o f Fame Tip-off Classic
at Springfield. Mass.
Michigan shot 18 percent in
the first half and 31 percent for
the game. Georgia Tech, with
Mark Price limited to 6 points on
2-of-13 shooting, hit less than 30
percent. Antoine Joubert o f
Michigan scored 21 points, in­
cluding 2 free throws in the final
minute.
In other weekend games. No. 3
North Carolina beat Purdue
73-62. Oklahoma upset No. 7
Illinois 59-57. No. 9 LSU downed
Brigham Young-Hawali 89-71.
No. 13 Notre Dame routed Butler
87-56. Loyola (III.) bumped No.
14 North Carolina State 60-58.
No. 14 Iowa dumped Abilene
Christian 92-62. No. 18 UNLV
edged Arizona 60-59. No. 19
DePaul edged Northern Illinois
63-61 and No. 20 UCLA defeated
Temple 75-59.
In a big victory for its resur­
rected b a s k etb a ll p rogram .
Miami (Fla.) upset Georgia 81-78
to capture the American Medical
International Classic.

NFL Roundup
At New Orleans, Morten Andersen kicked 5
field goals, and the Saints defense set up two
fourth-quarter TDs, leading to a 29-3 victory over
the Rams. 9-4.
The Saints improved to 5-8 In the debut of
Interim coach Wade Phillips, whose father. Bum
Phillips, resigned last week.
B angals 45. Oitera 37
At Cincinnati. Boomer Eslason passed for 320
yards and three TDs and Larry Klnnebrew ran for
three scores to pace Bengals, 6-7. Houston. 5-8 . is
all but out of contention In the AFC Central.
V lU o fa 3§. Baglas 33
At Philadelphia. Wade Wilson, benched to start
the second-half, threw three fourth-quarter TD
passes. Including a 42-yarder to Anthony Carter
with 1:11 left, to rally the Vikings. 6-7.
Philadelphia. 6-7. had built a 23-0 lead, but
Minnesota scored 28 fourth-quarter points.
C hargars 40, B ills 7
At San Diego. John Hendry returned one of four
Bruce Mathlson interceptions 75 yards for a TD.
and Dan Fouts passed for 261 yards and three
scores, pacing the Chargers. 6-7. BurTalo. 211.
scored Its only points when 1985 overall No. 1
pick, defensive end Bruce Smith, lined up in the
backfleld to block on Joe Crlbbs' 2-yard run.
Saahawka 34. Chlafa 0
At Seattle. Dave Krleg passed for 254 yards and
two TDs to enable the Seahawks. 7-6. to keep
their slim playoff hopes intact. Kansas City. 4.9
has dropped eight of Its last nine games.

Rising Hurricanes
Really Oust Faust

MVP Henderson Is
Antidote For Duke
United Press International
Duke should be thankful Its
players are better than Its
schedule maker.
The No. 5 Blue Devils defeated
No. 4 Kansas 92-86 Sunday
night to win the preseason
National Invitation Tournament
in New York. Tonight, they are
back home to play East Carolina.
"I view our club as very tired."
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski
said.
However, there is solace in
facing a team tonight that has
won a total of 11 games over the
last two years and Is supremely
capable of finishing in last place
in the Colonial Athletic Associa­
tion.
In tio way whatsoever will the
Pirates of East Carolina resemble
Kansas — no Danny Mannings
hitting turnaround Jumpers, no
Calvin Thompsons striking from
everywhere. Duke iiad all of that
Sunday night.
But David Henderson provided
the antidote for the Blue Devils,
storing 30 points on 12-of-14
shooting to capture Most Valu­
able Player honors for the
tournament.
"David uses all his ability."
said Johnny Dawkins. Duke's
All-America guard. "H e plays
with such confidence. It's a
irlbuic to him. the things he did
tonight. He showed he’s a great
player."
Mark Alarie added 21 points
and Dawkins 20 for the Blue
Devils. 5-0. whi l e Ai naker
handed off for 9 assists. Kansas.
3*1. was powered by Manning,
who scored 20 of his 24 points in
the second half. Thompson hit
his first 10 shots and finished
with 22 points, and Ron Kellogg
added 20. Cedric Hunter ran the
floor well and had 14 assists.
The Jayhawks trailed 76-74
with 3:48 to go before Alarie
made a tip-in, and Dawkins a
baseline Jumper. Manning an­
swered with a turnaround, but
Tommy Amaker's drive capped
a 6 -point burst, and the Dhevils
were secure.
In the Top 20 Sunday. No. 3
North Carolina rallied past No.
18 Nevada-Las Vegas 65-60 to
win the Great Alaska Shootout.
No. 9 Louisiana State ripped
Hawaii Pacific 101-89. and St.
John's downed No. 10 Louisville
86-79 In the consolation game of
the preseaaon NIT.
At Anchorage, Alaska. Brad
Daugherty scored 21 points and

Dent o ff and sometimes they put both
outside linebackers on the same side
and blits both. They Just give you a lot
o f different looks, or they'll give you
that blits appearance then drop off and
play sone."

49ers Chew Rams
Lead To One G am e

...Heal
(he .defense continues to play
solidly. Lake Mary has given up
Just 10 points In the last three
games and Just three In the last
seven quarters (Lyman scored
on Its first possession of the
game).
Offensively. Lake Mary must
get its running gam e going
against Woodham. Sophomore
John Curry ran far 177 yards
against Lyman but was held to
13 on 15 carries against Lake
City.
The passing game has been
clicking for the Rams the past
two weeks. Ray Hartsfield and
Byron Washington have been
Letterio’s main targets while
tight end Dave Mltro has made a
big contribution. Mitro caught
two passes, one for a touchdown,
against Lyman, and two more,
one for a 26-vard gaing. against
Lake City. Mitro had another
reception, that went for over 30
yards, called back by a penalty
against Lake City.
“ After he catches the ball.
Mitro is a strong runner." Nelson
said. “ He's made some big
catches the past two games."
This past Friday night. Lake
Mary proved it Is capable of
winning outside the area, this
Friday, the Rams will try to
show they are capbale of playing
with the best.

Nathan has 54 for 512.
"O ur strength has been Marino
throwing the football, so you've got to
work hard to get him the time do it."
Shula said.
To hear Ditka talk about the Miami
offenw. you would think the Bears
were 0- 12.
"It's going to be tough. We haven't
gone up against a passing game this
car that does the things Miami does."
c said. " I don’t know If we can keep
up with their receivers. I don't think
wc can pressure Marino."
The Bears make themselves hard to
figure by offering different defensive
fronts.
"It's very unique what they're do­
ing." Shula said. "It's basically a
four-man line, occasslonally they drop

No O pening

* -»* * »— **»**

Mercer's Kim Averlll looks for an opening against Virginia.
Averilt, who played her prep basketball at Lake Mary, didn't
find many against the ISth-ranked Lady Cavaliers. Virginia
squashed Mercer, 93-52, Saturday to win the round-robin
college division of the Lady Sunshine Basketball Classic at
Lake Mary High School. Averlll and ex-Lady Ram teammate
each scored two points. Mercer lost three games.

Holbert, Unser Jr. Win G T
DAYTONA BEACH |UPI| - Al
Holbert of Warrington. Pa., and
Al Unser Jr. of Albuquerque.
N.M.. won the three-hour In­
ternatio nal Motor Sports
Association's Camel G T finale
Sunday at Daytona international
Speedway.
Holbert and Unser drove their
Porsche 962 at an average speed
of 105.077 mph and finished 89
laps on the 3.56-mile circuit.
Holbert. who won his fourth
C a m e l G T t i t l e , had an
8.36-second margin over
runners-up Hurley Haywood and
Brian Redman, who drove a
Jaguar XJR-5. They were the
only cars on the lead lap after 3
hours and 55.13 seconds.
The victory was H olbert's
ninth this season, tying the
IMSA record for wins in a season
held by the late Peter Gregg and

Auto Racing
John Paul Jr. It was Unser’s first
IMSA victory.
P e t e r Hal s me r and John
Morton finished third, one lap
behind, in another Porsche 962.
Bob Tullius and Chip Robinson
were fourth, two laps down. In a
new Jaguar XJR-7. and Randy
Lanier and Michael Roe were
fifth In a Chevrolet March, three
laps down.
Holbert had lu shake off a
strong challenge by Haywood in
the final three laps o f the race.
But he took advantage of a
yellow caution flag that was put
up b e c a u s e M i k e A l l e n ' s
Chevrolet Lola blew a tire, sen­
di ng ru b ber and fib erglass
across the road.

United P ra ia International
For Notre Dame coach Gerry
Faust, the ending was Ignoble.
For Miami coach J im m y
Johnson, the game signified how
high the Hurricanes have risen.
Unrankcd at the start of the
season. No. 4 Miami (Fla.), an­
nihilated the Fighting Irish 58-7.
embarrassing Faust in his final
game as Notre Dame coach.
" I really believe the entire
country saw the very best team
In the country." Johnson said.
"I also believe they saw the very
best player, (quarterback) Vlnny
Tcstaverde."
Teslavcrdc destroyed the Irish
with a superb passing perfor­
m ance. compl et i ng 22-of-32
passes for 356 yards and 2 TDs.
"B y far. this Is the best game
we played this year, and the best
game I played." said Tcstaverde.
a fourth-year Junior. "W e knew
all along we had the best team in
the country, and I think what wc
did shows what we're capable of
doing when wc have it all
together."
As good as Miami Is. the
Hurricanes arc still a long shot to
win the UPI national champion­
ship. If No. 2 Oklahoma beats
Southern Methodist next Satur­
day, the national cham pion
almost definitely will be the
winner of the New Year's Day
clash between the Sooners and
No. 1 Penn Slate in the Orange
Bowl.
The Hurricanes. 10-1. face No.
9 Tennessee Jan. 1 in the Sugar
Bowl.
After a tumultuous five years
in which his Notre Dame teams
went 30-26-1. Faust went out
with dignity.
" M y f eel i ngs are for the
players more than anything."
said Faust, who resigned last
Tuesday and will be succeeded
by Lou Holtz. " I bleed for them ."
With his future unsettled.
Faust made dear he wants to
remain a coach.
" Y o u have your ups and
downs, and I've had a couple of
downs, but If I had a chance to
do It all over again. I would start
right now."
S a t u r d a y ' s m assacre was
Notre Dame's worst loss In 41
years, surpassed only by a 59-0
shellacking by Army In 1944.
The Fighting Irish finish the
year 5-6, and suffered their first
losing season since a 5-6 finish
In 1981. Faust's first year as
coach.

Football
Oklahoma turned in another
strong defensive game, whipping
17th-ranked Oklahoma State
130 al Stillwater. Okla. to run
its record to 9-1. and 7-0 In the
Big Eight Conference.
A viscous winter storm turned
the field Into a sheet of ice.
"T h e field neutralized the of­
fenses." Oklahoma coach Barry
Swi t zer said. "O u r defense
played outstanding. During the
month of November, no team
has scored against our defense.
"These were the worst condi­
tions I’ve ever seen any game
played under."
The Cowboys, who will defend
their Galor Bowl title, fell to 8-3
overall. 4-3 in the conference.
in other key games Saturday.
Tennessee won the Southeastern
Conference title and a berth in
the Sugar Bowl by whipping
Vanderbilt, 30-0: Alabama upset
No. 6 Auburn 25-23: Florida
routed No. I 1 Florida State
38-14; No. 12 Louisiana State
dumped Tulune 31-19; Georgia
Tech upset No. 20 G eorgia
20-16; Houston shaded Rice
24-20 and West Virginia edged
Syracuse 13-10.
SOONERS SOLE CHAM PS
STILLW ATER. Okla. (UPI) O klahom a c la im ed sole
possession of the Big Eight
Conference championship Sat­
urday by slipping and sliding
past Oklahoma State 13-0 on a
field covered by a mixture of
slush and sleet during the first
half and a solid sheet of ice
during the final two periods.
The No. 2 Sooners — 9-1
overall, 7-0 in the conference
and looking for a national cham­
pionship — host Southern Meth­
odist this Saturday and will play
No. 1 Penn State In the Orange
Bowl.
The Cowboys — 8-3 overall.
4-3 In the league and 17th
ranked prior to Saturday night's
lee Capades — slipped Into a tie
with Colorado for third place In
the Big Eight und will meet
Florida State In the Gator flow)
on Dec. 30.
"These were the worst condi­
tions I’ve ever seen any game
played under." OU Coach Barry
Sw i t z e r said f o l l o wi n g the
Sooners' first shutout against
the Cowboys since 1958.

�I

*

IvtNitf HwM, Iwlwi, H.

Bit. 1»

Romp Past FSU Leaves Gators Wondering
UaftHPitMlstirMtiMa]
GAINESVILLE (UPI) - Florida State
began preparing for the Gator Bowl
Sunday while Florida was left thinking
about what might have been.
T h e G ators. In e lig ib le fo r the
Southeastern Conference title and a
post-season appearance because of
NCAA probation, trounced their state
rivals 38*14 Saturday In the regular
season finale for both teams. Kerwtn
Bell threw for 343 yards' and three
tou ch d ow n s and N ea l A n derson
rushed for 95 yards and tw o scores as
the Gators extended their home un­
beaten streak to 20 games.
Florida finished 9-1-1 with a 5-1
record In the SEC. a mark which could
have sent the Gators to New Orleans
Jan. 1 for a Sugar Bowl date against
No. 4 Miami (Fla.). Instead. Tennessee
will represent the SEC.
"W hen I get In a groove like that, I
feel I can complete every pass I

throw ." said Bell, who hit on 14-of-22.
(Deluding TD passes o f 75 and 14
yards to Ricky Nattlel and a game­
breaking 82-yard strike to Frankie
Neal. "N ot too many people can stay
on Ricky one-on-one. They were giving
it to him and we were taking advan­
tage o f It."
The 11th-rated Semlnoles, 8-3, en­
tered Florida Field averaging 35 points
per game. Florida grabbed a 28-0
halftime lead and six Florida State
turnovers undermined any comeback
bid, although the Semlnoles pulled
within 28-14 In the third period on a
58-yard punt return by Delon Sanders
and C h ip F e r g u s o n 's 4-yard
quarterback keeper. Florida State has
a lm o s t a mo nt h to p rep are for
Oklahoma State In the Gator Bowl at
Jacksonville, Fla.
"T h e y kept us ofT-balance," said
Florida State defensive tackle Stanley
Scott. "W e were confused and unset­
tled out there."

SPORTS
IMBREF
Knlghtt G o O ut With Arm or
Shining, Carvo Up Samtord
Central Florida football coach Gene McDowell knows
how to win early and he knows how to win late. Now. If he
can figure out what to do with those middle seven games
he'll have quite a program.
The Knights, who opened their season with two victories,
closed it the same way Saturday night with a 35-14
thrashing orSamford (Birmingham. Ala.) University before
a record-low 3,022 fans at Orlando Stadium.
The victory allowed the Knights to finish with a 4-7
record and offset the sting of a seven-game losing streak.
"T h is definitely salvaged our season." first-year coach
McDowell said. "W e Improved each game. It was a great
way to finish the season."
As he did In last week's win over Savannah State.
McDowell substituted freely after UCF took control.
Quarterback Tony Lanham, wide receiver Ted Wilson and
running back Aaron Sam closed out with excellent efforts.
Wilson caught tw o touchdown passes among his 11
receptions for 139 yards. His 11 grabs broke the school
record for career receptions (106) and tied the record for
moat catches in one game.
Lanham completed 11 o f 14 for 170 yards and two TDs.
He opened the scoring with a 44-yard toss to Wilson and
later hit the fleet Junior from Zephyrhllls for a 3-yard score.
Sam became the first UCF rusher to gain 100 yards this
fall as he picked up 114 on 12 carries. Sam scored on a
14- yard scamper In the first quarter and Robert Ector,
bounced In from three yards out as the Knights took a 21-0
lead.

No Blowout But Lakers Win
U n ited P re s s In te rn a tio n a l
Many NBA teams hope to play .500 ball and make the
playoffs. The Los Angeles Lakers are expected to produce
nothing but blowouts.
The Lakers trimmed the Michael Jordan-less Chicago
Bulls 117-114 Sunday night, and found themselves
making excuses.
"W e're going good now. and everyone Is expecting us to
win and blow people out every night." Los Angeles coach
Pat Riley said. "W e ’re not going to win by 15 to 20 points
night In and night out. I don't want people Just to believe
we were lucky to win. Instead. I want them to know that
we won a tough gam e."
At Portland. Ore.. Mike Mitchell scored 34 points on
15- of-27 shooting from the field to lift San Antonio to a
117-106 over the Trail Blazers. Arils Gilmore added 24
points as the Spurs improved to 10-8.

McEnroe Overcomes Leconte
MELBOURNE. Australia (UPI) — John McEnroe staged a
dramatic comeback Monday to subdue Henri Leconte. 5-7.
7-6 (7-4). 3-6, 7-6 (7-5). 6-1 In the fourth round o f the $1.5
million Australian Open at Kooyong.
McEnroe fought back from a 2-1 defelclt In seta, saved
two set points In the third set. and was down 1-5 in the the
fourth set tie-breaker before subduing the Frenchman In 3
hours. 30 minutes.

Football
With the Semlnoles gaining
momentum and most of the crowd o f
74.461 hushed, Bell uncorked the
game’s critical play when he spotted
Neal alone down the middle and found
the speedy Junior for the clinching TD
with 3:33 left in the third quarter.
"Everyone was pumped up coming
out for the second half," said Seminole
defensive tackle Gerald Nichols. "Then
Bell threw that long one and that took
the wind out o f our sails."
Galen Hall, who sports a remarkable
17-1-1 record at the Gator helm. Is
confident the final year o f NCAA
sanctions will be lifted when Florida's
football program Is reviewed next fall.
"T h is Is a very fine Florida State
team and w e wish them the best of

TV/RADIO
mruu

t »m - tefTVI, NFL CNctp Irirtri
Wifil Dvipfito

■UMUCANM ROCS NOTRE DAME

The Miami Hurricanes, like the
Gators, closed out the regular season
In grand style.
The Hurricanes, who will play Ten­
nessee Jan. 1 in the Sugar Bowl In
New Orleans, scored In every way
Imaginable. There were field goals of
39. 47, and 48 yards by Greg Cox.

N o Punster:
Fuzzy Wins
Record Skins

3/TONIGHT
P rsp Football: Bam laolt High School
7 p.m. — Awards Banquet at cafeteria
Prop B asketball: V anity/JV G if la
6:15/8 p.m. — DeLand at Seminole
6:15/8 p.m. — Lake Howell at Lake Brantley
7 p.m. — Lyman at Apopka
Prop Basketball: Freshman Boys
7 p.m. — Lake Brantley at Lyman

MURR1ETTA. Calif. (UPI) Although he*B always been a
marvelous golfer. Fussy Zoeller
has prlmarly been known as the
PG A's touring comic.
You know Zoeller. He's the one
who waved the towel In mock
surrender on the I 8 U1 green o f
the 1984 U.S. Open: the same
guy w hose m iddle name Is
3/TUE8DAY
Urban.
B asketball: Junior College
And let's face It. his nickname
5 p.m. — Florida College at SCC Women
Is Fuzzy.
7 :30 p.m. — Florida College at SCC Men
But during this weekend’s
thi rd annua ) S k in s G am e,
Prep Basketball: JV/Varsity Boys
Zoeller may have proven — to
6:15/8 p.m. — Seminole at DeLand
the public, at least — that he ta
5/8 p.m. — Boone at Lyman
putter first and punster second.
Prep B asketball: V a n ity G irls
Zoeller, a Skins newcomer and
6:30 p.m. — Boone at Lyman
the on ly participant to be shut
P n p Soccer: JV /V anlty Glrls/Boyt
out In the first round. Sunday
4/6/8 p.m. — Lyman at Seminole
earned a record 8255,000.
4/6/8 p.m. — Winter Park at Lake Brantley
He bagged three skins on three
birdies — Including a 15-footer
on the 12th hole for 6150.000 —
B O W L A M E R IC A R E SU LT S
to defeat Arnold Palmer. Tom
Watson and Jack Nlcklaus be­
MSULTSf ROMBOWLAMERICAN
fore a national television au­
Town and Country: N«ll B row ntw ord-Ill.
Rtebtelt: Tom FIIMnt-311. Worron Fr»tt*-310.
dience.
Blolr Agoncy: R. Cummlngt— 20). R. Flthor— 20A, N Flth*r— 303.
"W h a t a feeling," said Zoeller.
Dick Mlnnlck— 201, L tro y Mill— *11. Goorgo H aytt— 203, F.
"T h a t putt on 12, that's what
Btokoly— TO.
It's all about, to have the oppor­
Thuriteoy Night Mixed. Tim W addlo-)1). David Rlchardo— 3lt,
tunity to choke. I didn't choke.
Slava Suword— 11). Donna Larion— 303, Dick Bruce— 111, Tom
Larton— 110. Scott Larson— WJ. Nlta Johnson— m . Oafabia Joan*—
" I t surprised the hell out of
100. Carl Mlllor— M l.
m e."

RATIONAL MM(TRAIL
■ttltrt CMttrnu

MATTRt

t ■*. - EISL M i I M

A»*rlci

IN M l. - WMH* SprtiT * rite

OrttMttarBriM
I

- MOW* NFL: 0 « f l Iter*ri

MNM«

BASK ETBALL
awsimeMitwNiFwa
M

M

i (S I - AtexriNr 14. M m
l
l W iw 4 Htetew* 4 RW * 1

Tiuiinim

H p M r Ml) - i«wl«r % FWHIpi 17,
Hltew 11 Ttyter i, J#**** 4, Fritter t Cite
1 Trial*: D 1) 11*1
H*MH*M. f JpMter a SteMtete 17. Ete)

- ( »w te a

s fe M Mt -

JtellM. TriMcM - MM

HU- kwarswi t a.
/Upter It. TteN l X Itetn 17. n th 17.
H *w *4W Atrirtt.Tlteh: USU M .
IS a M s * US) - f . Jrivtetti t Hi m
a Lite* L l M m * II, Write* t SUM) t

KuNI.Kwtenl frith. S11XS
Mritei** - la * Irarity * lri» Kuril
24 Flute — trite Hritefl X trite Intel** 0.
Ftuteri rift - K teteet*. Htrttet. Kuhn

MMririiitiaWteTrits

TttHrutri- Lri*HritellmtkCtriif

WteNWMia Drirrit in

XririTM-TrineteritTw
riVF- (trite Hxrtete....... Criri Iridt
Kin* Btritar ..........
Tfrot Ftr*
On* Uteri............. ........ CocmI mcH
OriiMrgrit.......... ........ Ck m Bmca
Tm FMx*, ....... .
........ WMvFirk
■••ttiJrite*. ...... .........Wnter Frik
TrilF*M&lt;fx........... ........ EUririter
Tririte* Barimon___
Vterry AipM*................. trite Writer,

Oriiriari Iit,N*» terttt •

M ritM LA IU M fl

■ L T F it FF
1 4 * in m
( 4 1 m IM
1 4 1 M l IN
&gt; H 1 » 744
1 tl 1 114 M»

MY Jri*
Ntte Ixfirite
Mlritf
IxSriMBrite
■vfri*

FA
»
121
141
2M
m

extent
7
1
4
i

CMririte
NtHBuri*
CiMMMlI
HrilM*

LA lt l* n

4 •
71
71
14

JR a t M
441 IN W
.413 144 20
JN a III

Strife U I.DriN trm DOT)

see a

S * Ante* 117, Peltate m
LA tM n 117. O w jfi ID

Garinsee ri writ is i

I I I

Swi Deft
( h im City

|
(

7 I 4*1 Ml W
II

IT
44
S4
4 4
74
1•

NlnteOl

HI M W

7 ii a w a

W
1
1
7
4
4
Criterri
■Cki&lt;*t*
12
7
Dt**t
4
G riri l* r
4
Mimttri*
2
Tri*M Bit
Writ
LA Erin*
t
)«* Frri(i*c»
4
2
Nt« O rllrit
Atlanta
2

S L T Fh.
fhil^laftla
* *^^PF^^T*teP
n i * a
swung*
M ill)
NY ItlriWr*
m i i a
M-V l4*f*n
II II 1 22
«4
4--BUM
P IfrWy
t 12 1 it
Fithkteth
i « ) it
trite 0
Bute*
ii » i a
it m i a
QutBic
•uMtte
a ti i a
Mtnfrtri
ii t j a
Hriltertl
i; n i a

i « m mm

f

btmt

Drill*
MY GiriN
WMkiitete*
FMMririM*
SI La.il

Haute* 111. SriTri— rtelit

RATM A I HSCIIT LIA M t
■all* Caalinaia

r o c iu u t u w i
iitr lc u CrihrteM

national

Dtntr

Oriitt lU tA C U fp n lil
WhMtAM HI. M riteH

NHL

NFL

Ft). FF FA
m
m
I2i
41) 21) 121
JR 224 lit
r il 722 »
■ a »

4 4 1M 224 127
4 4 SR Ml m
7 • .40 2*7 RI
7 1 441 172 Ml
n 4 IM 147 171
4 1 M mi m
1 4 41) III Ml
4 I JO l» »
II 4 IM 142 Ml

It Lo.it
Chit***
Mlnnntt*
Drirrit
TteriM

BF BA
ii) m
ff 71
a a
tl N

v m
v a

ti
a
a
tt

?t
n
7t
a
77 a

W L T Fte. 4F BA
it t i n m m
i t i g mi it
117 i ii a m
1 II 4 14 n 117
1 IS 1 a MMl

EFteritgn "
17 4 1 17
II 1 1 »
Criwm
Vritrinri
t il 1 1
tu i a
WlteUFW
Lm Argrin
I 11 I 12
iriwwr* ■■rite
OuriKl ImN*I1

til a
Ml M
WH7
w in
71 lit

Ptnaurrifi NT R «*ri* «
Crifvy L NY liirite n t

EriMriniHarittet)
TriaiteL SritriallOTl

Metenri » Drirrit I
M.lrihL Writewt«J
Ctecjfi A U t Alteriri 4 (Itel

1IlirYlte a

Bates*LMraterwr!

Drirrit )1. tent Ytrk J«h S
Drill* a SI. lari* 17

Seminole High School will hold Its football awards
banquet tonight at 7 In the high school cafeteria. All
players, coaches and parents are invited.
After the meal. Seminole coach Dave Mosure will
announce the winners for the yearly awards. The Tribe
finished 4-6 In its first season under Mosure.

Cterilrite&amp;MYGtertlU

’l

CMup ri Mterit I A*.

p N p n T V / M ilp rtl

Iteriff’lM II
Grttiiby II.Ttexp*•*, I

..iR o t a r y

Vlnny Testaverde touchdown passes of
15 yards to Mike Irvin and 7 yards to
Melvin Bratton, a 17-yard pass from
Geoff Torretta to Andre Brown, ntna of
I yard by Testa verde and 0 yards by
Warren Williams, a 61-yard Intercep­
tion return by Bennie Blades, and a
blocked punt recovered In the end
zone by Bill Hawkins.
Notre Dame could manage only a
3-yard TD run by Allen Ptnkett In the
second quarter.
Testaverde finished 22 of 32 for 358
yards, two touchdowns and no In­
terceptions.
"W e wanted to prove we were a good
team and w e left no doubts," said
Miami defensive end John McVeigh.
"Everything was working for us,"
said defensive tackle Daniel Stubbs.
"W e came d ose to having a perfect
game. The 80-yard drive for their
touchdown was the only bad part of
the game. Otherwise, we showed the
wjhote country what we could do.”

SC O REBO A RD

Seminole To Honor Footballers

(42-29) and Lake Howell games
were due to turnovers." Frank
said. "W e averaged 26 turnovers
In three games. "It comes from
the Inexperience. If we can get
Continued from 8A
that slat down, the overall score
Hawks had the hot hand in the
of games w ill be a lot better.
early going Saturday as. led by
“ The bench didn't hurt us at
Hankins and Jolee Johnson, the
all In three gam es." Frank said.
Hawks stayed within two points,
"E verytim e I've gone to the
26-24. at halftime.
bench they've done well In the
"Lake Howell was hitting ev­ time their in there for."
Seminole and Lake Brantley
erything It put up In the first
return
to action tonight. The
half." Frank said. "T h ey played
much better against us then I've Lady Semlnoles host DeLand at
seen them play before. The 7:45 (Junior varsity at 6 ) while
p l a y e d z o n e I n s t e a d o f the Lady Patriots host Lake
man-to-man and It seemed to Howell In the first Seminole
Athletic Conference game. Tlpoff
calm them down more."
Brantley came back strong In at Lake Brantley High la 8 p.m.
the third quarter and took a (JV at 6:15).
Cocoa Beach went on to win
44-38 lead Into the fourth period.
The Lady Patriots spent moat of the tournament with a 17-polnt
the fourth quarter sewing the victory over Winter Park In the
win up at the free throw line. fin als. S e n io r gu ard Elaine
Brantley went to the line 54 H a r l o w w a s s e l e c t e d t h e
times In the game and m&amp;de 30 toumamen Most Valuable Player
for the second year In a row.
shots.
Frank was pleased with the A ls o m a k in g all-tournam ent
Patriots' shooting from the field from Cocoa Beach were Chris
and the help It got from its Wade. Chris Norgren and Karen
bench, but. along with Inexperi­ Walker. T in a Pinkney. Lynn
ence. turnovers were the main Parka and Ranesaa Jones made
it from W inter Park.
concern o f the first-year coach.
. ..fioxscores fn SCOREBOARD
"T h e closeness of the Oviedo

luck In the Gator Bowl." Hall said.
"W e played an excellent game, a
complete game, and I don't think
enough can be said about what this
senior class has accomplished: I feel
we're one of the lop teams in the
country."
The Gators will lose starting running
backs Anderson and John L. Williams,
along with star linebacker Alonzo
Johnson, but Bell still has two years
remaining.
"Bell Is remarkable." said Florida
State Coach Bobby Bowden. "W e hit
him good early — we knocked him flat
— and It didn't even bother him ."

NnOrtM m lf.LA K tn tl
Clncimiti 41 HsutMn 27
N N Ens«teX.ln*M riri4)1
Oriwtrl!, WlhtenHU
M trinritSPH M aM M n
Sm Fratchet B.W «M |lvi I
tai Drift 4. Bultris 7
Strife K U n ta C iiy I
LA B ria n 14. Aflate* 14

Wbriml.FMMripN*l
lanwiten l Criswy )
V m a iW ri Matereri. 7. » ■ *.

Fiwririp ri MY l a p n M » *

msL
Utericity7.lJiA*pK)4
DanaLWcMtat
S ri Otefi 4 #

Scratch on Thurariay: Dor*Gorman— 114.
Myilory Ladla*: Da lore* Shower*-104.
Pin SueHer*: Myron Gate*— m Roy Lyna-WP.
Sowthaaat Bank: Buddy lowton-201, Ed Houatoun-119. Ivory
Whitakar— 114. Cubit Malona— 233. Patty Herding-Ml, Nancy
Swalm— MI/1M. Charla* Baatty-111. Cliff Chatfnuf-lOt. Jett
Chestnut— IM, Jaff Chaitnut-1M. Bill S ln n o tt-lll. Donald
Andoo on 11HW/AI0, Eric Storm— MO. Larry Plcandat— M l. Bud
Corbett— 273. Lae Garrlton-30J. Bill Gilbert-2il. Ed Smlfh-204,
Rick J e t t -m , Don Canlglia— 337, William Steven»-70f, Donald
M cK a y-M f. Dottle Hogon-110. Gil Banton-111. Gil Benton— 311.
Don Gorman— 144 213/4M. Kll Johmon-113. Ron Allman— 714110/401.

Equally surprising was the
poor play o f Nlcklaus. the de­
fending champion and course
designer.
T h e Golden Bear won Just one
akin for 615.000 — thanks to a
missed tap-ln by Palmer on
Saturday's first hole — and had
Just one birdie. His missed putts
on Nos. 15 and 17 allowed
Zoeller and Watson to claim
skins.

TG IF : Dormy Gorman— 203, Roland Chevler— 212, Bob Bates— H i.
Jim Jemlgan— MO. John Dot— 303101. Bruce Barger— 111. Jim
M o ra c »-lll 117/407, Orval Pollard-202, Ed Shutter-301100. John
Adoma— HO. John Waugh-110134/437.
Wadnoiday Morning Ladle* AAatch: Shirley Bauer-210
Formtorv KenChapman— 3ti.Cap8ylund— m .
Ball and Chain: Brad Foley—210

All this from the man who
dropped a 12-foot putt on the
final hole In 1984 to collect an
Incredible 6240.000.

Tuoeday Swingers: Ro m Framko— 111. Kathryn Otto— 201.
Educators: Rob Kooy— 111.

Tuesday Night M U t d : Sharrla Warlock— 327, Freddie
Etctavon— M3. John Plndsr— 204. Sharon Kirkpatrick-301. Dean
Hamilton— 300.

" I much preferred the way
things went last year." said
Nlcklaus. very quiet while hls
ptaylng partners were enjoying a
rollicking post-match news con­
ference.

CFRH: Tom Fablptkl-104. Scott Page-3J7. Dale Cutrlght-104.
UnpfofiMionili:
Montgomery— 224. Charles Show— 201, Al Fryer— 300, Gone
Roger*— 334 33I/4JJ. Cubit Malone— 313, Buddy Lange— MS,
-Wallace— 347. Dave R(chord*-333. Aaron Kaufman-211 231/440.
Danny Hale— 304. Dan Naal— 310, BobOehlnikl— 104 217.
Sanlord City League Ralph Hockanberry— 234, Ronnie Green—
303, Mike Colbert— 104. Bob Orwlg— 231, Jimmy Mayer— M l. Lou
Sridtler— 211. Rich Williams- 203. Ron Allmon-330310/430. Jim
Carver— 111, Don Gorman, Sr.— 243, Ward Bshrtnt— 300. Rich
Foster— 303, Roland Olks-310117/433.

Watson finished second with
$ 100,000 and th re e skins.
Palmer, the sentimental favorite
and first-day leader, also won
three holes and was next with
$80,000.

SophisticatedFtootles: ColeenLemon— 31).
Washday Dropout Seniors: Lss Buddenhagsn-300,. M yron
G a to s - M7 230/410.
3 M ‘s: Ed Fslr lck-312. Gena Dykat-113.
C o u n t ry C o rn e r L a d le s : C a ro ly n B a lts — 201, B e ts y
Betteisen— H2-104.
Islander Vacation: Charles Elbery— 224. Ron Lomond— 133. Lon
G ra v e r— 130, Rich Hem lnger— 233, Bill H a tla tl— 203. Pic
P leerdal— 72). John 5mlttv-20*.

A birdie on the 15th netted
Zoeller $70,000. and hls magical
day ended with a 20-foot birdie
putt o f $35,000 on the final hole.
Palm er won $35,000 on the
13th and Watson $70,000 on the
17th for the only other sec­
ond-day skins.

Drill Inn Mixed: David Norman-301, Joa ReMln-204, Bob
M a y«rs— 710, Gary Larton— 101, Chuck Sllmely— 231, Jamas
Johnson— 100, Marcl lwlnskl-300, Roland Olka-111. William
Guempal— 305-30). Batty Horn— 210.

Lari* 2

Tacw*# L Ctevriate &lt;

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES...

S to «l

We also make 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Residential or Com mercial Real Estate
up to $100,000.
Personal loans are available including
Revolving Credit Line.

H
|Fiwwati
|PIBS/BBRII
[ FIM/7IRI4
|P2B4/7JRI)
|wm/7iRii
Inu/nRu

%

■■■
it.tj
«.t»
U.M
4B.M
43.tt
MM

Belted Radial

*

IMt
IMt
tl.M
IMt
UN
ILM

Family Ctadtt Smwices, Inc
CARLOS SL SANTIAGO, JR.

In Tha PartTsqusrs l hopph*g Ctr.
longwood, FL 32780

831-3400

A O K

TIRE

M A R T

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
1i &gt;

»KI *li &gt;1 4 ,

�SA—t w aln f H f l M , laal f i , Ft.

M»n$sy, Dtc. 2 ,1SU

FUDRDA
IN BRIEF
Cuban
NawspaparRubllthar
In Miami To Face Drug Chargaa
MIAMI (UPI) — The exiled Cuban publisher o f a
financially strapped, powerful anti-Castro weekly newspa­
per, Patrla. In Miami today was scheduled to appear In
federal court on charges he sold $90,000 worth of cocaine
to undercover agents.
Alberto A. Rodriguez, owner and founder o f the
Spantsh-language newspaper Patrla. was scheduled to
appear before a U.S. magistrate on charges o f selling seven
pounds of cocaine to the agents. He was being held Sunday
without ball.
Drug Enforcement Administration agents arrested
Rodriguez. 63. In his office Friday after a three-month
Investigation. DEA spokesman Billy Yout said.

Thlof Abandon* Car And Baby
HIALEAH (UPI) — A still-at-large car thief got more than
he anticipated when he realized the car he had stolen had a
silent passenger — a two-year-old child — in the back seat,
police said Sunday.
Hazel Barrios is safe and unhurt with her parents today
after the thief abandoned car and child In a nearby parking
lot. said Hialeah spokesman Lowell Coffin.
"This one ended safely, which was fortunate." Coffin
said. "T h e parents are extremely distraught."
The quick-hit crime almost certainly was Intended only
to be an auto theft. Coffin said. In his haste, the thief
probably didn't see the child, he said.

tim e." he said.
Abraham said the steam re­
leased into the air Sunday con­
tained "the very slightest trace
of radioactivity."

...Reactor
Continued from Page 1A
through a safety relief valve to
reduce pipe pressure while the
reactor cooled.
Bedell said the faulty relav
switch was part of a system
designed to shut down the gen­
erator when the production of
electric power exceeds demand
by a certain degree. But for some
reason, he said, the relay switch
tripped the generator much
sooner than It should have.
Karl Abraham, a spokesman
for the N uclear R egu latory
C om m ission , d escrib ed the
shutdown as a routine event. "It
happens to one rea ctor or
another In the country all the

The exposure to someone
standing downwind at the pe­
rimeter of the plant would have
been "a small fraction of 1
milllrem." he said. In compari­
son. an X-ray gives o ff 30
millirems.
Sunday's incident was the first
shutdown since the reactor was
restarted Oct. 3. The plant was
idle for more than six years after
its twin reactor was crippled in
the nation's worst commercial
nuclear accident.
Unit No. 1 is a pressurized
water reactor, which means Its
nuclear reaction heats water in a
closed-loop system of piping.

...Pact
1A
what 1told her.”
According to the mayor, the
"issue” as described by Hickson
indicated to her a first response
agreement with Sanford "w as
low down on the county's priori­
ty list."
Sh e also said she ask ed
Hickson twice about his meeting
with Kaiser and. "h e told me the
response was less than en
thuslastlc."
"I'd be the first to apologize If I
was w ron g." she said, "But
there's still somthtng I don't
understand. The county has
pushed for this for so long and
when we wanted to come to the
table for It. they pulled back."
Under a first response agree-

...Warning
C o b tinned f r o m page 1 A
All Seminole County sheriffs
deputies carry a photo-bearing
identification card which they
are required to present to the
driver of a vehicle they stop, he
said.
He also said It would be most
u n u su al fo r an u n m a rk ed
sheriffs car to make a traffic
stop.
It would be a Judgement call
on the part of the driver as to
w h a t a c t i o n to t a k e If
approached by a gunman after
having been stopped by a re­
puted police car. Spolskl said.
A police officer, he said, under
the law. can not fire a weapon
unless he feels life Is endangered
— a situation, which would not
come up in a routine traffic stop,
nr If an officer had stopped to
assist the driver of a disabled
vehicle.
If a person has doubts about
the identity of a police office,
who is indeed an officer, and
that person fails to obey orders
from the officer and Is subse­
quently charged In connection
with falling to cooperate with
police. Spolskl said, before a
Judge In court Is where that
person would be vindicated.
He added that usually a traffic
violator Is aware that he or she
has broken the law and knows
the reason for an official police
slop. A driver. Spolskl said,
shouldn't hesitate to ask a
sheriff s deputy to confirm his or
her Identity.

AREA DEATHS
Lillian Sheehan. Fern Park.
14. 1935 in Brooklyn. N.Y.. she
B ald w in -F alrch ild Funeral came to Longwood from Long
Home. Altamonte Springs, is in Island. N.Y.. In 1973. She was a
charge of arrangements.
bookkeeper and a member of St.
Stephen's Lutheran Church.
M ARGARET E. KORIK
Mrs. Margaret E. Korik. 75.
S u r v i v o r s I nc l u d e her
1679 Hastings Drive. Deltona, husband. Edward Sr.: two sons.
died Saturday at her residence. Edward Jr.. Lake Mary. William.
Born July 30, 1910 In Brooklyn. Lon gw ood: daughter. Karen
N.Y..
she movqd to Volusia Stevens. Altam onte Springs:
County from Queens. N.Y., in sister. Katherine Bucclno. Or­
1978. She was a homemaker lando: three grandchildren.
and member of Our Lady of the
B ald w in -F alrch ild Funeral
Lakes Catholic Church. Deltona.
Home. Altamonte Springs. Is In
S u r v i v o r s i n c l u d e h e r charge of arrangements.
JOHN R.W . LAW RENCE
husband. Michael; son. James
Little. Long Island City. N.Y.:
Mr. John R.W. Lawrence. 70.
sister. Mary C. Baldwin. Deltona: of 768 Logan Drive. Longwood.
five grandchildren.
died Thursday at his home. Born
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake April 3. 1915 in Canada, he
Mary, is in charge of arrange­ moved to Longwood from Battle
ments.
Creek. Mich. In 1961. He was a
locksmith and a member o f
JEAN 8. KOCH
Mrs. Jean S. Koch, 50. of 102 C h r is t E p is c o p a l C h u rc h .
Sweet Bay Lane. Longwood. died Longwood.
Survivors include a son. John
Saturday at her home. Born May
E.. Longwood: two daughters.
Dorothy Nolan. Sanford. Kay
Moore. Battle Creek; brother.
T h om as A l. L on gw ood ; six
grandchildren.
G arden C hapel Hom e for
Funerals. Orlando. Is in charge
of arrangements.
SAM UEL B. PARRISH
Th is Is sometimes prudent.
Mr. Samuel Burle Parrish. 62.
However, If you are thinking about
of 1801 W. Third St., Sanford.,
pre-arranging a specific funeral
died Saturday at Central Florida
you are urged to contact an exper­
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Born
ienced Funeral Director. Careful
May 14. 1923 In Greensboro.
counseling with him can avoid un­
N.C.. he moved to Sanford from
wise planning with a salesman.
Fayetteville, N.C.. In 1958. He
We offer a method of FREEZING
was a refrigerator mechanic and
TO D A Y S FU N ER AL C O S TS through
a Baptist. He was a past presi­
our new Pre-need Funeral Plan; brief­
dent of the Florida Bee Keepers
ly, here are some of the plans major
Association and a member of the
features:
Fraternal Order of Foresters.
Orlando. He was an Army veter­
• You Make The Decisions Today About
an of World War II.
Your Funeral Arrangements And Costs
Survivors include his wife.
• Convenient Installments If Needed
Margaret; a daughter. Margaret
Without Finance Charges
Faye. Venice; two sons. Samuel
• The Plan Is Not Insurance
Lee. Venice, and Stephen Ray.
IF YOU WISH TO CANCEL. 100% OF THE
Sanford; two brothers. Dewey.
MONEY PAID WILL BE REFUNDED
Fayetteville, and Hubert. Gore.
Va.; three sisters. Mary Lake,
Fayetteville. Mabel MacIntyre.
Wauchula, and Betty Mercer.
FU N E R A L HOME
Baltimore. Md.

W HAT A B O U T
PRE-ARRANGING
A FU N ER A L?

GRAMKOW
130 W EST A IR P O R T H O U L E V A H O
S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A

Flowers Scent With Love

(Collins

TELEPHONE (303) 322 32 13
Locally Owned And Operated Since 1956

! GRAMKOW FUNERAL HOME

XNt

»

323-1204

I vouM Ilk* 10 Iwrn mar* about jour funeral orrong«m«nl plan. P IU H tend Oook!«t.
I untfartton* IM&gt;* I* no oMIgatlon.

OAKLAWN

NAME __

• FUMIAl SOM • CUKTTtV • TlOttST
is vans kit csskx
Om Utal Sawr TN»t te a St iMfyWMs

ADDRESS

CITY_____

ZIP_____

PHONE

Springs hooked into the existing
em. he didn't know whether
same would apply for San­
ford and Casselberry under
new one.

r

The Motorola Company, which
services the county's existing
system. Is working on a coat
estimate for the new technology.
Kaiser said, and once received,
the financial data will be pres­
ented to the County Commission
for review.
The Seminole County chief
said the new system Involves a
series o f trunk lines such as
those utilized by telephone com­

...Blizzard
C oatiassd frost paga 1A
The Nebraska w o m e n ’ s
volleyball team was stranded in
Williamsburg. Iowa. Sunday as
they attempted to travel by bus
back to Lincoln. Neb.
"T h ey were supposed to drive
s t r a i g h t t h r o u g h , b u t at
W i l l i a m s b u r g they w e re
practically ordered off the road."
said Terry Beek. Information
director for the school.
Snow fell Sunday night from
the West Coast to the Great
Lakes and blizzard conditions
were reported In Minnesota.
Iowa, Wisconsin and Michigan.
Blizzard warnings were posted

...Aquino
C oatlaasd from page 1A
The others. Including A viation Security
Command Chief Brig. Gen. Luther Custodio. who
could have received a death penalty had he been
convirted. simply filed out showing little emotion
at all. Custodio was perspiring profusely.
Aquino's widow said as she watched the
proceedings on television she thought It odd the
courtroom was so quiet after the Judgment. If
they were so Innocent, she said, "th ey would be
Jumping with Joy and not Just standing In there
not doing anything at all.
"But of course, this Is my own perception of
how Innocent men are supposed to act. For all I
know, different people act differently. So. as I've
said, who am I to Judge?"
Archbishop o f Manila Cardinal Jaime Sin also
denounced the verdict, saying: "T h e flagrant
disparity between the conclusions by the re­
spected Agrava (civilian commission) board and
the decision handed down today by the Sandtganbayan (trial court) threatens to push our
country to the brink of violence and despair."
The court upheld the theory that the popular
opposition politician was killed by alleged com­
munist-hired assassin Rolando Caiman, clearing

s a tte te r tS f.

panies. Coordination of channels
would be accomplished through
two computer term inals, one at
the
the county's Em ergency Opera­
tions Center and the other at the
Sheriff's Department.

These central processing unite
would be "a vast Improvement”
over the county** "out dated”
two-way radio system, according
to Kaiser. He said current pro­
blems such as voice distortion
and i n t e r f e r e n c e t h r o u g h
crowded frequencies would be
eradicated by a multi-channel
system that would enable "m aximum and exclusive utilization
of frequency."

In the four states as well as in
parts o f Oregon.
G u sts of 60 mph were
expected to drop wind-chills 60
below zero early today In the
northern Plains, and freeze
warnings reached Into central
Texas, the National Weather
Service said. Twenty-two record
lows — including a reading of 27
below in Great Falls. Mont. —
were set Sunday in 11 states.
At least 48 deaths have been
attributed to the wintry weather
that has clung to the nation’s
northern reaches since Nov. 24.
Up to 2 feet of snow plied Into
drifts 8 feet high and blanketed
northwestern Wisconsin Sunday
night. Eau Claire. Wls., reported
17 inches of snow.

Ver. 65. and seven others on charges o f allegedly
covering up military Involvement.
The general counsel o f the civltlan commission
that recommended the Indictments against Ver.
24 other soldiers and a businessman also thought
it curious.
"Obviously. I'm not feeling very happy." he
said. "1 would have expected smiles and hugs. It
was all very somber. But people could say that's
military discipline for y ou ."
"W e cannot erase the sadness and shame
that befell us." Ver said in a statement afterward.
But he said he hoped Filipinos would Join hands
and put the nation "back on the road to
greatness."
The United States has warned that Ver's
reinstatement could trigger an angry response
from Congress, which is concerned that a
growing communist insurgency could threaten
two key U.S. military bases in the Philippines.
The court defended the soldiers who shot
Caiman 26 times after he had been disarmed,
saying It was "reasonable to expect them to react
In that fashion." Galman allegedly eluded a
security net of 1.199 soldiers at the airport.
Aquino had languished In a military stockade
fur nearly eight years on charges of Illegal
possession o f weapons, murder and subversion
before being allowed to go the United Stales In
1980 for heart surgery.

.vehicle spun out ol control and
was struck by another vehicle on
the driver's side. T h e names of
both fa t a lit ie s w e r e b e in g
Continued front paga 1A
G ram k o w F u n eral H om e.
withheld early today pending
Sanford, is In charge o f ar­
In Tampa. 39-year-old K en­ notification o f relatives.
rangements.
neth Baber, of that city, died
W illia m L oeb a n d D ebra
M AR VIN A . REVELS
Sunday when he fell from his Huston Rockafellow were both
Mr. Marvin Arthur Revels. 71. bicycle and was struck by a killed Saturday night In Sarasota
of 1457 Missouri Ave.. Sanford, vehicle. A FHP Investigation when their motorcycle went out
died Friday at his home. Bom concluded that the driver of the of control and slid Into the path
Nov. 1. 1914 at Leesburg, he vehicle had failed to yield to a of an oncoming truck, a FHP
moved to Sanford from there pedestrian In a walkway and spokeswoman said.
around 1970. He was a retired that the Incident was alcoholTwo elderly pedestrians were
maintenance man for the Coca related.
killed when they were struck by
Cola Company.
Another pedestrian In Fort vehicles Saturday. Gusale Stein.
Survivors Include two daugh­
Lauderdale
was killed Sunday 74. was killed In Sunrise, and
ters, S y lv ia C. Autrey. and
Janice S. Treadaway, Dalevllle, when struck by a vehicle on Charles Raymond Boyd, 80. died
Ala.; three sons. Sidney H.. New N orth Federal H ighw ay. In in Quincy, the patrol reported.
Also Saturday night. Margaret
C h u r c h . V a . , M i c k e y M .. Okeechobee County, the driver
of
a
vehicle
heading
north
on
the
Truerrow.
28. died when her car
Phoenix. Ariz.. and Brian K..
Sanford; a sister. Irene Phillips. Florida Turnpike was killed and slammed into a trailer In Lake
England; 13 grandchildren and two passengers injured when the City.
three great-grandchildren: sev­
eral nieces and nephews.
Brisson G uardian Funeral
approved, the cou n ty would
Home. Sanford, is In charge of
then have the authority to ap­
arrangements.
point a board to call for a
referendum. Zoo supporters said
LO W E LL B. SA P P
Continued from page 1
today they would like to see the
Mr. Lowell B. Sapp, 73. of
1045 Banana Lake Road. Lake to allow the referendum because referendum held during a gener­
Mary, died Friday at Centra] the Central Florida Zoological al election because o f the costs
Florida Regional Hospital. Born Society west o f Sanford may Involved in holding a special
election Just for a referendum.
Feb. 11. 1912 In Lake City, he move Its facilities to Orlando.
Count
y C o m m is s io n e r B ill
m oved to L ak e M ary from
Whether or not the zoological
Panama City Jn 1957. He was a society goes ahead with Its Klrchhoff. also at the meeting —
retired meat cutter and was a plans, the local group said It the zoo is tn his district — said a
Baptist.
wants to see funds generated special election would cost the
Survivors Include his wife, through a property tax to fund county between 960,000 and
Ruth M.; five daughters. Mae construction of a new facility $70,000.
The group agreed to try and
Tonry. Brandon, Eileen Mlkalus, now or later by the zoological
M elbourne. Barbara Pflu k e. society if It stays In the present have the referendum put on the
ballot during the first primary
S a n fo r d . J o a n n e M cG u rlc. location on U .S. 17-92.
election, around the first o f
A c w o r t h . Ga. . and A l i c e
"W e encourage and support September.
Stldman. Fairfax. Va.; two sons.
the
present zoo staying where it
Frank Newkirk. Mlcheal Nix,
"W e don't want to cost the
both o f Sanford; 26 grand­ Is. But we’ve made our point county m ore with a special
that we do want a zoo there and election," Peterson said.
children; one great-grandchild.
now
we arc setting the equip­
He said the group w ill promote
Brisson G uardian Funeral
ment
In motion." Peterson said.
the zoo issue If a referendum
Home. Sanford. Is In charge of
arrangements.
Another member of the group. comes about. Offers o f financial
Doug Stcnstron. also stressed assistance have c o m e from
that the group's concern ts to various people In the communi­
Funaral Notices
have a zoo "som ew h ere In ty. and Peterson said the group
Seminole County, preferably In would use any donations for
publicizing the zoo Issue.
KORIK, MARGARET E.
the same location."
— Catholic flr*v«vd* M rvlctl for Margarot
When questioned by Peterson
"It's
important
to
emphasize
E. Korik. 75. of I47» Hailing* Drive, 0*1Iona,
If the group would be "cutting
who dlad Saturday, will bo hold Tuaiday, that we support the Central
lls throats" by asking for more
Doc. 3. at II a m. In Oaklawn Mamorlal Park Florida Zoo and hope they find
with tha Rav. Fathar William Kllllon of­
money than is needed. Klrchhoff
t
h
e
y
c
a
n
r
e
m
a
i
n
t
h
e
r
e
,
”
ficiating. Visitation for family and frlandi
said that although the zoo effort
will ba hald today 2-4 and 41 p.m. Oaklawn Stcnstron said. "But what If they
F untral Horn* In Charge
do move outside the county? may "lo se some v o tes." the
T h a t ' s wha t w e 'r e ta lk in g additional dollars would provide
N IV ELS. MARVIN A.
some "le e w a y " in funding the
about."
— Funeral tarvica* for Marvin Ravalt. 71, of
1437 Mluorl Ay*., Sanford, who dlad Friday,
Stenstron and Chamber o f facility.
will ba hald Wadnaiday at I p.m. at tha C o m m e r c e P r e s id e n t J a c k
Peterson said more figures on
Brluon Guardian Funaral Horn* with Pastor
operating
costs for a zoo will be
Patar Courlas officiating. Frlands May call at Homer agreed to present the
forthcoming, but he added that
tha funaral Homa Tuasday 2 4 and 4-1 p.m. proposed bill once It is drafted to
Burial will follow In Evargraan Ctmatary. the county's legislative delega­ the $900,000 is about "oneArrangamants by Brisson Funaral Homa, a
tion. Peterson said he will make third" more than what would be
Guardian Chapal, 132 2111.
the finishing touches on the bill needed.
Zoo advocates said they want
regarding property tax and other
LA BO, ISIDRO
— Funaral sarvlcas Isidro Late of 111 Hays Information, and said he did not
to see a facility house animals
Drlva, Sanford, will bo hald Tuasday at 11
native to this part of the country,
a m. In tha Gramkow Funaral Homa Chapal think the group would meet
rather than exotic animals. They
with tha Rav. Fathar Lyla Damn officiating. again until after the the measure
Visitation will te 3-4 and 7 * p.m. today. goes before the legislature.
said they want a facility that
Burial will te In All Saul* Catholic Camatary.
residents from Sem inole and
Deadline
for
filing
Is
April
8.
Gramkow Funaral Homa. Sanford, la In
surrounding
counties can enjoy.
charge.
If and when the legislation is

...Wreck

IDA C. FULLER .
Mrs. Ida C. Fuller. 100. West
State Road 436. Forest City, died
Sunday at Florida Living Nurs­
ing Center. Forest City. Born
F e b . 2 4 . 1885 in a N ew
Hampshire, she moved to Forest
City from Mount Dora in 1981.
She was a homemaker and a
member of Community Con­
gregational Church. Mount Dora.
Survivors Include a son. Bill of
DeWitt, N.Y.: two grandchildren.
R ehbaum -H arden Funeral
Home. Mount Dora, is In charge.
BLANCHE GOLDER
Mrs. Blanche Golder. 87. of
196 Jaffa Drive. Fern Park, died
Saturday at Life Care Center.
Altamonte Springs. Born April
24, 1898 in Eaton town. N.J.. she
moved to Fern Park from Little
Silver. N.J.. in 1967. She was a
retired examiner for a clothing
factory and was a Methodist.
She is survived by a daughter.

130 W. AIRPORT BLVD.
SANFORD. FL 32771

ment. the closest Are station
answer* emergency call*, re­
gardless o f whether they are in
the city or county. T h l* could
necessitate city (Ire fighting un' It* traveling Into unincorporated
Seminole County or vice versa.
According to Hickson, Sanford
residents "m ight suffer” by the
arranangement " If we were out
In the county and there was an
emergency In the city."
Although he was "Impressed"
with the c om mu n i c a t i o n s
technology the county is looking
Into, Hickson said he "still has
reservations'* regarding first
response. "Regardless o f what
the new system would ofTer, 1
need a guarantee that there will
be equity o f service before I'll
commit m y department to first
response." he said.
The cities of Longwood and
Altamonte Springs have first
response pacts with the county.
Casselberry voted last summer
to Join, but was told it would
have to wait until the county
makes a determination regard­
ing the new communications
system. Kaiser said.
I f th e n e w s y s t e m w a s
adopted, approxim ately
• 100,000 In conversion costs
"would be wasted” if Sanford
and Casselberry were to Join the
county now. Kaiser said. He also
said although the county bore
the c o n versio n costa when
L o n g w o o d and A l t a m o n t e

...Zoo

�PEOPLE

Mmtfey. Ok . &gt;, i9BJ-t§

In And Around Longwood

Seminole County Getting In Holiday Spirit
It Is time Tor county students to begin
thinking about those projects for the
1986 Seminole County Social Studies
Fair. Participation In the fair is open to
all students, kindergarten through
grade twelve, who attend Seminole
County Schools.
Students enrolled at the elementary
school level may elect to do their work
in the projects or media categories. In
addition to projects or media, second­
ary students may choose from the
following categories: speech, debate,
current events bowl, drama and/or
music and essay. The project, grades K
through 12, Judged the "Best of the
Fair" will be forwarded to state-wide
competition.
The 1966 Seminole County Social
Studies Fair will not take place until
April, but It 1s never too soon for the
Individual or class to start planning for
this educational event.
Altamonte-Mattland Christian
Women's Club Invites you to their
Christm as brunch-program,
"Christmas In Flight." on December
12th from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. at the
Maitland Civic Center.
The special feature is the "Back to
the Future" fashion show: the special
music Is "S olo Flight with Brian Bruder
and the special speaker Is Betsy
Sudaby o f St. Petersburg with a talk
entitled "Flight Insurance"
Tickets are 86 per person. Brunch
and nursery reservations and cancella­

tions are a must. Please call Jo
H a m m o n d . 3 3 9 -3 9 5 6 o r M arsha
Reynolds. 834-7885.
The Altamonte Maitland Christian
Women's Club is also holding a De­
cember Prayer Coffee on Dec. 5. 9 a.m..
at the home of Isabel Hurlbcrt. 220
Lake Seminary Circle in Maitland. Call
831-1234 if you are planning to come.

school from 10a.m .-4 p.m.

Nancy
F ry .

“ Santa's Secret Sh op" at Lake Orienta Elementary In Altamonte Springs
Is set for Dec. 7. for students to do their
Christmas shopping for friends and
family. Meanwhile, their parents can
take care or some of their shopping at
the "Craft Fair" which is to be held In
conjunction with the "Secret Shop.*’
Both shopping events will be at the
school from 10a.m .-4 p.m.

Center's support group for the families
of those with mental Illness. COPE,
meets at 7:30 p.m. the 1st and 3rd
Wednesday of each month. The group
meets at the Center's offices, Suite-377,
in Crane's Roost Office Park in Alta­
monte Springs.
This month's meetings are Wednes­
day the 4th and Wednesday the 16th.
Don't miss the Bahia Shrine's 1985
Longwood Christmas Parade on Satur­
day the 7th. Floats, marching bands,
drill teams. Shriner's Shenanigans and.
o f course. ol‘ Santa will be featured.
The 2-hour parade will have Repre­
sentative BUI McCollum as Grand
Marshall and is to begin at 10 a.m.
A t the parade's conclusion, area
children are invited to Join Santa at the
Longwood Community Building for a
talk with Santa and some Christmas
goodies.

There will be a special Christmas
meeting of the Central Florida Herb
Society w ith a wreath-m aking de­
monstration from 7-9 tonight at the
Seminole County Agricultural Center
across from Flea W orld on 17-92
between Longwood and Sanford.
Seminole Boy Scouts will be Joining
Scouts from all over for the Dec. 7
"S cou t Scamporce ‘ 8 5 ’ * at Disney
World.
The fun-filled day. In celebration of
Scouttng’s Diamond Jubilee year, is
open to all Scouts and their families at
a discount o ff regular Disney World
prices.

The deadline for crafters to exhibit
their works at Sabal Point Elementary's
4th annual "Holiday Crafts Bazaar" is
this Wednesday. Dec. 4. Call the school
to place your reservation for the
December 7 event to be held at the

The Seminole County Medical Health

TONIGHT'S TV

I
i |S|NAFfV DAYS AQAM

*00

'OANOVONFmH

(Mcftart) L— on) town up to And
out «fto’a trying to mafco It i
ae it a te n ts dead.

CD Z

r comoo to tht otd o» a for­
mer prootiluto oho * M ng tramod
on a

f:3 0

ill

6:35
CAROL RURNKTT ANO

(O

% 7.-00
• ® in i1m pvr4
(35 # PAL MAGAZMILoma
Oraona and MicAaat Landon: how

j£| to) ROCKFORD FEES
K k06
O NBA BASKETBALL Chicago
Budo at Saeromonto KJngo(Uwa)
1030

dt(3d|SOSMWHART

11.-00

®®TOGD(

Embary. Jack WaM.

736
02 MARY TYLER MOORS

1230
(£ • MM0N A SRION Tha Simon

730
• ® SNTIRTABMMNT T0NMHT
intanrtawalthChayyChaoa
—IPRBRMNBMT
B I S S .O F FORTUNE
U TTU DRUMMER BOV
© p i) um
Artmatad. A lUnd-haortad drummar
boy la determined to find a bad
makar'a tear camiono that haw
baan rapoaaaaaad by tai codactora.
Voicaa: Zaro Moat*, Grow Genoa
0 (S) ALL M THE FAIRLY

aionlaL (Donald O’Connor) la
ac m f t ol murdering a rival magi-

(A)
ST JUOf
1230
O M OW "Tha Qotdan Mate"
(1*52) Rhonda Ftammg. Starling
Hayden.
1230
■ ® LATE MGHT WITH DAW)
LETTIRMAN From Juno 19d5: Don
johnaon. eomadian Oaorga MSer

630
61 (3 ) A-TEAM Tha A-Taam trtaato
provant larronata horn kidnapping
an attraettw rock alar (Valarta St*-

(R)

wnaonlD

130
(Q) pd) BIZARRE Skatchas tha
Church ol Punk: an mtarvlaw with
Sirhan Slrhan. tha tutura Johnny
Carton, tha Rav. T V Saawad
m (f) M OW "Tha Unflruehed
Danca" (1947) Margar01 O'Brian.
Danny Thomaa.

(1) flk RU00LFH, THE REDNOGEO REM0CER Tha etaaaic
VuMttda muaical about a randaar
who la ridicuSd BY hs Chrtatmaav«a paara bacauaa ho hao a ahOiy
noaa, Songa include tha tttta tuna,
"Hody Jody Chnatmaa” and "St*ar
and Odd "(B)

88f

) FMOCCHKYS CHRMTMAS
Tha Irua meaning o4 Chrtatmaa
ahinaa through lor Plnocohio whan
ha thaa to aam monay tor Oapotto’e gift
• (IB) NOVA Tha carpantar*, mei and anglnaara ol Iho
I at work
3| (S) MOV* "Conroe*" (1*70)
Jon Volght. Paul WlnflaM. A whlto
atruggtoa to bring
Naming to a group
o( knpovw iahad
oupotlmpi
Mac* cMdran m South Carom*
636
Q
M O W "Mirado On Mill
Straw" (1M7) Mauraan OHara.
John Payne. An old man namad
Krta Kring* la Nrad by Maey’a to
play Santa CSue in mo ThanfcagNingOayparada.

' • ® AWTCE Tha
taka on.a
-vOnwifl
- ^ I fmXHm
^U n n rl
OOf PwWn nooo
j

® Q M OW "Tha Riwr’a Edge
(1*S7) Ray MtUand. Anthony Oumn
(D (3*1CHICO ANO THE MAN

1:10

( 9 • MCCOY McCoy baita a trap
lor crookad hjnd-resere. (R)
1:30
f lj (M ) BCTV Skalchaa Matoaral
Thatchar (OHara) and Tip O’Nom
(Candy) art guaatt on ‘ MgAWne
Mdonvtdo"; a parody o* adancahction Mma ol tha 1950a.
230
® • M OW "Traatura Ol Ruby
Hida" (1993) Zachary Scott. Carota
(D(SS)QUNSMOKZ
236
O
M OW "Caaaar Tha Conguaror" (1910) Camaron Mftchad,
DomMgua Warm.

/V

It Can you
believe it's time to prepare for
the holidays again? Well. It Is. so
CSS EARLY MORiMIO
do yourselves a favor and do
) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
your Christmas and Hanukkah
3(39)0000DAY)
shopping early.
If you're wondering what to
TOW) BATMAN
give
Aunt Jennie or Grandpa,
0:30
130
who don't go out much, let me
• 9 ) NEWS
DAYSOPOURUVCS
(T&gt; TO C M EARLY MOANS10
tell you what not to give them:
ALLMVCMURSN
OCXVANDYKE
Forget dusting powder, af­
® Q 6 ABC'S WORLD NEWS THM
ONSTAGSATWOLFTRAP
tershave and cologne. (They
IM) TO*?ANOJERRY
probably have several unopened
M(10) WILDAMSKCA(TUt)
FUNTIME
Bitot NATURE(WTO)
boxes gathering dust on the
B (19)NOVA(THU)
_____
shelves.)
(l)8UPERFRMN0B
B (to) SECRETS OP A DESERT closet
Grandpa
doesn't need another
S
E
A
(F
R
O
6:45
(B(«) MOW
necktie, and Aunt Bertha doesn't
(7) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
• (10) A.M. WEATHER
really want any more brooches,
135
(DM0W
7:00
necklaces, bracelets or earrings.
■ ® TODAY
1:30
With the price of groceries so
( 5 a C M MORNINQ NEWS
■ ASTHEWORLDTURNS
high, older folks who live alone
® O OOOO MORNBOQ AMOSCA
(M)OOMERPYlE
(10) SMTER ADMAN; THE on a fixed income would be
i poaLJOE
&lt;W) FARM DAY
MOTHERTERESAOFSCRANTON delighted to receive a basket of
(TUE)
goodies. Include small cans of
S m VOLTRON. DEFENDER OF
230
THCUMVERM
salmon, chicken, ham. tuna,
ANOTHERW0RU&gt;
vegetables, fruit. Instant coffee,
7:15
ONEUFI TOLIVE
• (10) AJM. WEATHER
f f l ANOVaflFnTH
tea bags, crackers, cookies and
dtNOVATION(MON)
7:30
)|10) GREATCHEFSOFCMCA- instant soup mixes.
C T jp d ) CHALLENGE OF THE
Older people who live in con9(TUE)
TO (10) W000WHQHTS SHOP lined quarters do not need more
(W) SESAME STREET (R)g
(l)ROSOTECH
"things" that are ornamental
S(W ) KATHTSKITCHEN(THU)
7:35
B
(W) FLOMOA HOMS ORCMM only. Don't send music boxes,
(Q FUNT8T0NCS
(FRO
statuettes or other brtc-a-brac.
230
830
A tr ul y t h o u g h t f u l gift:
(M ) JET SONS
(T)TOCAFfT0L
postcards
and some lined sta­
©
(M
)
GREAT
SPACE
COA0T1R
(DHCATHCUFF
tionery with envelopes and a
• (10) MORS MAGIC MKIH00S

®r

R

S

!8

|{

8

S

8

8:05
(DIOREAMOFJEANMC

8:30
(TJ (M ) FUNTST0NC8
SB (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
B ( l ) FAT ALBERT
8:35
3 1 BCWTTCHED
630
I ® OIVORCECOURT
jQOONAHUE
) B TIC TAC DOUGH
)(M ) WALTONS
1(10) SESAME STREET (R)g
1(1) SHADY BUNCH
8.05

32 HAZEL
930
■ ® LOVtCOHWCDON
m OJOKERTSW lLO
B (* )M Y THREE SONS
9:35
O I LOVE LUCY

I

(10) MAGIC OF WATERCOLI(THU)
OM(l
(10) FAINTING WITH IONA
330
T O ® SANTA BARBARA
( E B q u o n q l iq h t
® B GENERAL HOBFfTAL
©GflBOOOBYOOO
B lM )FLO M O AB TYli
B 0 ) th e LAST LAUGH / THE
SHOW MUBT POOR MON)
TO (9) THE FORBBT OF MtoFORTUNE/THE MAQC MMR0R (TUB)
• |S| DAYDREAMS / RUNAWAY
a r m m ayo r f o r a d ay / th e

MQHT THE STARS WfNT OUT
) THE MAGIC SHOF /CONEAAM(FAB

m (31) JAVCI ANO TNI
WHEELEDWARRIORS

330

(96 MB VALLEY
(KRELECTRC COMPANY (R)
• (9) CAROL SURW TT ANO
1036

330

® TO MOW "Alan
(1963) MariaWllaon. Hotel CJmmIngs.
330

OtoDiiOMUjev
430

O PS S8HT toENOUGH

430

8

QM0VS
10 30

■ ® SALSOFTHSCOtTUHV
I MS)S-M CONTACTQ
B toooooouflk

1130

I IT) WHEELOFFORTUNE
■ R
Bn

Abby
gen erou s su pply o f postage
stamps. (Enclose some felt-tip
pens, too.)
A handy gift: an assortment o f
greeting cards for all occasions,
so t h a t ' they. too. can send
birthday, anniversary, gradua­
tion. get-well and condolence
cards to others. (Be a sport and
affix postage to some o f the
envelopes.)*
Don’t give a gift of clothing
unless you’re absolutely sure the
size Is right. That goes for color
ans style, too.
If you're tempted to pass along
a scarf, purse, wallet or some
Utile doodad you received three
Christmases ago. please don't:
the recipient will probably find It
Just as useless as you did.
(Besides, you might get It back
the year after next.)
If you are aware (hat someone
on your gift list is living on a
pension, a check for any amount
would be much more appreci­
ated than some useless little
trinket. Another thoughtful gift
would be a year's subscription to
a newpaper or magazine you are
sure he or she will enjoy.
If you buy a gift on sale, be
sure It's appropriate, since If the
recipient tries to exchange It. he
wi l l be told. " S o r r y , sale
merchandise Is not returnable."
Never give a pet to anyone
unless you're absolutely sure a

(Is your social life in a slump?
Lonely? Get Abby's updated,
revised and expanded booklet.
"H ow to Be Popular" — for
people of all ages. Send your
n a me and a d d r e s s c l e a r l y
printed with a check or money
order for 62.50 and a long,
s t a m p e d (39 c e n t s ) selfaddressed envelope to: Dear
A bby. Popularity. P.O. Box
38923. Hollywood. Calif. 90038.)

(W) JOYOPPAMTMQ(TUt)
(10) MAQC OF ON. PAMTM

HOUR MAGAZINE
BARNABY JONES

* HUMBERTS UP
B 1 8YOUR

D ea r

pet Is want ed and will be
properly cared for. And If you
want to delight someone who
considers his pet a “ member of
the family." Include a (in or two
of cat or dog food Tor the pel.
Don’t g ive wine or liquor
unless you're sure the recipients
Imbibe. Candy, nuts and fruit­
cake make wonderful g f U N r
those who aren't counting calo­
ries. but please have compassion
for those w ho are. and lead them
not into temptation. Also re­
member that many older people
have difficulty chewing hard
candles and nuts. And nutri­
tionists caution: "L a y o ff sugar
and salt."
Instead o f giving someone a
gift with permission to “ take It
back and exchange It If It's not
what you w an t," save yourself
(and them) time and effort by
giving gift certificates In the first
place.
Hotlday time can be very
depressing for people who arc
alone, so if you know someone
who might be alone and lonely,
give him (or her) (he best gift of
all—an Invitation to have a
holiday meal with you and your
family. Loneliness is the untimate poverty.
L o ts . A S S T

MOIL (MON)

230

436

(M l TNI RED BARON TM

A L L : Here Is It with
some minor revisions:

336
O B U 0 E BUNNY ANO FRtoNOB
330

_____

•(Cyan Cannon) narrowly i
.cowry by — Nate. NWai
with hat tort and mwy'ro t
out ollha POW camp wMh Gaatapo
•ehM KMn (Robart Hardy) only a
MapbaMnomarnaalhwyhaatoma
Garman border. (Part 2 of 1)
® • M00NU8HTMQ Raprlaa H
the aaaaon pnmSr* DwunTa wddnrKf-cfsy pranro i t m i to i

6. -06
&lt;D WORLD AT IA IO C (FRO
6:30
• ® THW WEEK M COUNTRY
MUSIC (MONO

• ® 1 1030

MQHTWATCM

■ «

MM MWHART(WfO. THU)

6.-00

BP.

7:35

D E A 1 ABBVtW c read you in
the Midway Driller, Taft. Calif.
As residents In a nursing home,
we hope you will run again your
column on what to give older
people for Christmas. It made a
lot of sense, and people will
listen to Dear Abby.
TH A NK S FROM A L L OF U S

5. -00
■ THKSAMT
(5 ) NKWS
OCT SMART (MON)

6:80

1130
M ® TONIGHT Ootat hoot: Joan
nwra. SchoduM: Bright# NtaSan.
Tom Jonaa, Rotor FaR.
® TO WKRP M CMCMNATI
® B ABC NEWS WGHTLWE
©(-**) MAWAIFTVI-0
66 (I) TWILIGHT ZONE

Maaico and tha Ba(a Penmate.

Give Old Folks What They
Want, Not What You Want

O WORLD ATLARBCfTUS)

tSI DAYS ALLEN AT LARQE
RMQHT GALLERY
SECRETS OF A
IA look H tha rang* ol Ooh. toa*
and mammas mnaMtmg ew Ooaon

(tOlFLOMMimi
MAIL ABOUTUS

• ® r s COUNTRV(Tua-PHB
OT BEVERLY HRI BRIMS (MON.

M g

_ .
TOO C U M FOR COM­
PORT A n te Mandate a ganteM
Homy up
ate a gorgaoua Honda In a raataurant
• f f llA V B M IM W

B l ALL-STAR MJTZ

with Mr. Cassady and his miniature
steam-train for rides soon.
The City of Casselberry's Parks and
All this was for fun and learning too!
Recreation Department Dec. 7 sched­ The students enjoying all the events
uled trip for city residents to attend the were: Jeremy Bcsekcr, David Bocchino.
play. "Man of La Mancha." is set for Sean Callahan. Suzanne Kcchejlan.
this Saturday. The play is being Olivia Mattrson, Melissa Rooney. Jason
presented at Burt Reynold's Dinner McNamara. J.R. Vincent. Billy Harrell.
Theater In Jupiter.
Ryan Sharp. Beau Doming. Tammy
Reep and Tammy Williamson.
The Sweetwater Oaks Garden Club's
Annual Tree Lighting Ceremony will be
The members o f the Longwood Civic
on December 5. 7:30 p.m. at the League Womens* Club are to meet at
Gazebo at Sweetwater Oaks entrance. their club's building on Dec. 10 for a
Representative Fran Carlton will be the covered-dish Christmas supper at 6:30
special speaker along with special p.m. A ll m e m b e r s arc ur ged to
music by the Sweetwater Episcopal participate In the program or Christmas
Academy Chorus under the direction of songs with Merle Kent at the piano.
Rachel Rautenstrauch. Mr. and Mrs. Hostess-chairman is Nannctte Meyers
Everett Huskey will light the tree. with Areva Barnes assisting.
Reverend Howard Taylor of the 1st
All family members are welcomed —
Baptist Church o f Sweetwater will come and bring your holiday favorite to
present the invocation. All neighbors share.
arc urged to attend.
Also, the Sweetwater Oaks Garden
L o n g w o o d V i l l a g e ' s Mer chant ' s
Club will have their Christmas lun­ Association will be presenting special
cheon December 9 at 11:30 a.m. at the Christmas happenings until Christmas
Park Suite Hotel In Altamonte Springs. at the 434 and t-4 shopping center.
There will be a fashion show with Entitled "N ew England Christmas." the
Fashions by Evelyn presented.
festivities will feature entertainment
Reservations must be sent to Marilyn and visits for the youngsters with Santa
Reilly by December 2.
and the Mrs. Highlighting the activities
will be the Christmas House. Here,
According to Carolyn Blstllne. the children to the age of 10 may shop for
Director of Oak Tree Kindergarten in reasonable prices for items donated by
Longwood. the boys and girls have the Village's merchants. Proceeds from
been busy so far this year. They went the Christmas House will go to a good
to the theater In Orlando in September cause, the Special Wish Foundation,
and in October they visited Longwood which grants the wishes of terminally
Fire Station. Plans are set for a visit III children.

USSST"—"

Ju st T h e Right G ift:
A W ild Bird Fe e d e r
Perhaps one o f the most en­
tertaining and educational gifts
for children, or anyone young at
heart. Is a wild bird feeder.
Taking care o f a few feathered
friends by providing them food
and water In the backyard pays
many dividends. The
60-milllon-plus people who feed
wild birds find that it is a great
way to have pets that are no
bother. The W ild Bird Feeding
Institute says that attracting and
observing the antics of colorful
songbirds appeals to all ages,
wherever they may live.

430

TO® AATOBCA(MON. WBUto
if) MAMSTAMTjTUP
® TOOWF'ABNTSTROKES
® BjTOW ORtoFMpKM, TUB.
THU. FAR

B

There baalclly are two types of
feeders to choose from. One Is
the traditional wooden feeder
with a base, roof and two Bides of
wood and the other two sides of
a clear material so you and the
birds can see the seeds. The
other type Is a clear plastic tube
with openings cut In the sides so
the birds can reach the seed.
T h ere are m any variations.
While a wooden model with a

large landing area may attract
cardinals, you also might find
that grackles and blue Jays
appreciate the same landing
area. The trick Is to select the
appropriate bird seed to attract
the species you like. If you select
a tubular feeder that dispenses
Just nlger seed, you'll have
finches and even a pine sisken or
two. But the cardinal cannot get
a meal at this style feeder.

American goldfinches vie for
positions on a tube type feed­
Feeders may be hung Just er filled with black thistle
about anywhere outdoors: from seeds.
a bush or tree, from the eaves pf
a house or garage, mounted on a
tree or post, qr even attached to
an apartment window. If you
can, place your feeder near some
c o v e r , such as a bush or
evergreen tree, so the birds will
have a place to go when startled.
If squirrels are a problem, mount
your feeder on a post with a
baffle underneath. Be sure the
feeder is at least 8 feet away
from any climbable surface and
6 feet above the ground bo they
cannot Juipp to it.

(

�\

If PI.

M M t f a y . D K . I , IM S
ilk'f".'Vy i,'J

Louisiana
Gavam or
To Tastily

Nf T U B CtBCVHT COURT
C ITY OP LAKE

NEW ORLEANS
(UP!) — Oov. Edwin
Edwards, who has ac
cused prosecutors In
his federal racketeering
and fraud trial of con­
d u ctin g a p o litica l
witch hunt, apparently
Is ready to endure

cross-examination at
their hands.

Edwards, on trial
with seven associates,
la expected to testily in
his own behalf as the
case enters its 12th
week toda&gt; following a
five-day Thanksgiving
recess.
The case could go to
the Jury by week's end.
D efen se a tto rn e y
jJames Neal, in an in
form al settin g last
week. Jokingly polled
reporters on whether
th ey fe lt E d w a rd s
should take the witness
stand In his own behalf
before U.S. District
Judge Marcel
Ltvaudais Jr.
Edwards, however,
let It be known earlier
he a lw a y s had in
tended to address the
Jury.
“ I knew that before
the trial started," he
said.
By t e s t i f y i n g .
Edwards would open
h im s e lf fo r cro ssexamination by Re­
publican U.S. Attorney
John Volz, whom the
governor has accused
of conducting a politi­
cal witch hunt against
Democrats.
Edw ards and the
others are charged
with acquiring and
selling state permits for
construction of hospi­
tals and nursing homes
through a conspiracy
that Involved bribery,
d e c e i t , fraud and
extortion.
The defendants con­
tend they engaged in
shrewd business deals,
and that Edwards did
not participate after he
returned to office as
governor.
The other defendants
are Edwards' brother.
Marlon Edw ards; a
nephew, real estate
agent Charles David
Isbell; hospital consul­
tants Ronald Faigout
and Jam es Wyllie:
hospital architect Perry
Segura; former New
Orleans City Attorney
Philip Brooks; and
seafood dealer Gus MlJails.
Edwards' testimony
is expected to track
statements he made to
the grand Jury that
indicted him. and of
defense witnesses who
already have appeared.
In his grand jury
testimony, introduced
Into evidence earlier in
the trial, Edwards de­
nied taking Illegal ac­
tions as governor to aid
the alleged conspiracy.
He conceded, however,
that his brother’s clout
was synonymous with
his own, and that he
trusted Faigout to say
and do things in his
name.
The prosecution
c on te n d s E d w a r d s
earned $2 million from
the scheme and helped
it as governor with an
order in July 1984 to
prohibit any more
permits beiqg Issued —
with eight exceptions.

ORDINANCE NO. TV
AN ORDINANCE OF T H I
C IT Y O F LO NO W O O D
F L O R ID A , A N N IX IN O TO
A N D IN C LU D IN G W ITH IN
T H I CORPORATE A R IA OF
T H I C ITY OF LONQWOOO.
AN A R IA OF LAND II T U A T I
AND H I M IN IIM IN O k K
C O U N TY . AND MORC
PARTICULARLY DfSCRIBCD
AS FOLLOWS: T H I W IS T Vs
OF T H I NORTMWf ST U OF
T H I N O R T H R A S T to O F
SECTION 7, TOWNSHIP &gt;1
SO UTH. R A N O I N EAST
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
FLORIDA: L E U TH E NORTH
A N F E E T OF TH E EAST
4*3.17 F E E T OF TH E WEST
M S N F E E T: AND LESS TH E
NORTH I N N F E E T OF TH E
WEST I 0 N F E E T ; AND LESS
TH E SOUTH M S N F E E T OF
TH E NORTH 734.00 F E E T OF
TH E WEST I N N F E E T : AND
LESS THE EAST 7SN F E E T
OF TH E NORTHEAST V* OF
TH E SOUTHWEST V* OF THE
N O R TH W E S T V* OF TH E
N O R TH E A S T fe OF SAID
SECTION 7; AND ALSO LESS
R IG H T OF W AY FOR
C H A R LO TTE S TR E E T
CO N TAIN IN G 14.95 ACRES
MORE OR LESS. PURSUANT
T O F L O R IO A S T A T U T E
171.044, P R O V ID IN G FOR
LAND USE CLASSIFICATION
AND ZONING OF TH E SUB­
JE C T PROPERTY; PROVID­
ING FOR THE AM ENDM ENT
OF TH E OFFICIAL ZONING
M A P A N O T H E C I T Y 'S
COMPREHENSIVE LAND USE
PLAN. PROVIDING OIREC
TIONS TO TH E C ITY CLERK;
SEVERABILITY. CONFLICTS
AND EFFEC TIV E DATE
WHEREAS, there Km bMn
fifed with ftw City Clerk of ttfe
City of Longwood. Florida. •
petition confining the names of
proparty portion In tfio aroa of
Somlnofe County. Florida, de­
ter Ibodet fellows:
T H E W EST to OF T H E
N O R TH W E S T fe O F T H E
NORTHEAST fe OF SECTION
7. TO W N SH IP 21 SO UTH.
RANGE M EAST. SEMINOLE
C O U N TY. FLOR ID A; LESS
TH E NORTH 40 00 F E E T OF
TH E EAST 4*2.17 F E E T OF
TH E WEST 445.00 F E E T ; AND
LESS TH E NORTH 21* 00
F E E T OF THE WEST 152.03
F E E T ; ANO LESS TH E SOUTH
445.00 F E E T OF TH E NORTH
734.00 F E E T OF TH E WEST
150.00 F E E T ; ANO LESS THE
EAST 75.00 F E E T OF THE
N O R T H E A S T fe O F T H E
S O U TH W E S T fe O F T H E
N O R TH W E S T fe OF T H E
N O R TH E A S T fe OF SAID
SECTION 7; AND ALSO LESS
R IG H T OF W AY FOR
C H A R LO TTE S TR E E T.
C O N TA IN IN G 14.55 ACRES
MORE OR LESS.
WHEREAS, Mid petition &lt;*41
duly corf IMad to to# Somlnofe
County Proparty Appralior
punuant to Florida Stoluto
171.044 ot tha General Lowi of
Florida which provide* that a
Municipal corporation may
annai proparty Into Iti cor­
porate llmltt, upon tho volun­
tary petition ot Ww owner* and
tho lutflcfency of tho petition
ha* boon received; and
WHEREAS, the City Commlufen at tho City ot Longwood.
Florida, It doting* ot annexing
end redefining the bcunderfet of
tho municipality to ncludt tho
tublect property purjuant to tha
authority contained In tha City
Charter of tho City of Lon?wood.
Florida, and Florida Statute
171.044. Ganaral Law* of
Florida.
NOW. THEREFORE. BE IT
ORDAINED BY TH E CITY
COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF LONGWOOO. FLORIOA. AS
FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1: That tha City ot
Longwood, F lo rid a , dot*
herewith and dot* hereby annex
and rad*line tha boundary lint*
of lh* municipality of tha City ot
Longwood, Florida, by Including
ttwM certain contlguou* land*
lying In Samlno e County,
Florida, and mon particularly
detcrlbed a* follow*:
TH E W ES T V* OF TH E
N O R TH W E S T l* OF TH E
NORTHEAST fe OF SECTION
7, TO W N SH IP 21 SOUTH,
RANGE :o EAST. SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA; LESS
THE NORTH 4001 F E E T OF
THE .EAST 4*2.17 F E E T OF
THE WEST 445 00 F E E T; ANO
LESS T H E N OR TH 21*00
=EET OF TH E WEST 15213
FEET. AND LESS.THE SOUTH
445 00 F E E T OF THE NORTH
734 00 F E E T OF THE WEST
150 00 F E E T; AND LESS THE
EAST 7500 F E I T OF THE
N O R T H E A S T V OF T H E
S O U TH W E S T to OF T H E
N O R TH W E S T 'A OF T H E
N O R TH E A S T 'A OF SAID
SECTION 7; ANO ALSO LESS
R IG H T OF WAY FOR
CHARLOTTE STREET
CON TAIN ING 14.55 ACRES
MORE OR LESS
SECTION 2: Thai fhe City had
determined that a fend ute
clarification ot Heavy Induttrl
al and toning clarification of
Induitrlel. Ganaral (12) thould
be datlgnafed tor all lh# herein

C ELEBRITY CIPHER

Ctwarff) Cipher cryptogram* «re cu e!** horn quomtaw* by lamou
pace*, peat and praam. Caen lanar m ina capnar panda tar
arvnhar reefer's dUe J apuaa v.
by CONNIE WIENER

‘ KM

IDS

OLDBKX
VBRPL
RKCR

TO
CMP

CMGK

DKUI

DKW P

LCDS,

IDS

MBS

MCEUU."

—

QLP

YMD

annaMd properties.
SECTION 3: Thai tha Cemprehontlve Plan an4 Adapted
Land Ute Map and Official
Zoning Map of the City of
Longwood. Fferlde. ore hereby
omandid to Include the onwoi "
property in the heroines*
datlgnafed land gee claoolflcatfen end toning category.
SECTION 4: That tha City
Clark It hereby authorized fe
emend, altar and aupplamenf
the Official City Map *4 fe* City
of Longwood. Florida, to Include
tho annexation contained In
Section 1.
SECTION I: That upon I
ordinance becoming effective,
the retident* and property
owner* In the above descrlt
annexed area* ihall be antltfed
fe all tho righte and privileges
end Immunitfe* a* art. from
time to tint# datarmined by the
governing authority of tho City
of Longwood.
SECTION 4: If any taction or
portion of a (action or subeec
lion of thl* ordinance prove* to
bo Invalid, unlawful or un­
constitutional, It thall not
hold to Invalidate or Impair tha
validity, force or affect of any
ether lection or portion of *
taction or titoiection or part of
thl* ordinance.
SECTION 7; That all crdl
nance* or part* of ordinance* In
conflict herewith art hereby
repealed.
SECTION •: That thl* ordi­
nance thall taka affect Immedi­
ately upon Its final potioga and
adaption.
FIRST READING: October
14.1*05
SECOND READING:
PASSED ANO A D O P TE D
T H I S ------------ D A Y O F
----------------A.O. INS.
Mayor, City ot Longwood.
Florida
Attest:
City Clark
Publish: November It, 10. 25.
Decembers. 1*05
D ELI
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT, IN
AN D POR S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. FLORIDA
c a s e NO.at-nei-cA-at-0
STANWICH B.V. f/k/a SIC
(N e derla nd) B .V ., a
Netherlands Corps.,
Plaintiff,
BARENT VAN B U R E N .--------VAN BUREN. wife ot BARENT
VAN BUREN, if married, and
M YERS VAN BUREN. and
— VAN BUREN. wife of
MYERS VAN BUREN, If mar­
ried. and any unknown hairs,
devisee*, grantee*, and other
unknown person* claiming by.
through and under tha told
BARENT VAN BUREN. and
MYERS VAN BUREN. If de­
ceased. CITICORP PERSON TO
PERSON F IN A N C IA L
CENTER OF FLORIOA. INC..
JAMESTOWN VILLAGE UNIT
ONE HOM EOW NERS
ASSOCIATIONS, and EMMA
ELLIS.
Defendants.
NOTICE OF SUIT
TO: BARENT VAN BUREN.
------ VAN BUREN. wife of
B A R E N T VAN B UREN . If
married, and MYERS VAN
B U R E N a n d ---------- V A N
BUREN, wife of MYERS VAN
BUREN. It married, and any
unknown hair*, devisee*, gran­
tee*. and other unknown person*
claiming by. through end under
the Mid BARENT VAN BUREN
and MYERS VAN BUREN, If
deceased Residence unknown.
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N OTIFIED that an action to
foracfeM mortgage covering tha
following real and personal
property In Seminole County.
Florida, towll:
Lot 1002. Block 'A', ot tha
p r o p e r t y d e s c r i b e d as
Jamestown vlllga. Unit On#. ■
according to tha plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 20. at
Pages • and *. of tha Public
Records of Samlnola County,
Florida. Together with a per­
petual nonexclusive aaMmanl
tor Ingress and agrast as de­
scribed In paragraph 2 and
pursuant to Grantors' reserved
right as provided tor In para­
graph 4 of that certain quitclaim
daad recorded In Official Re­
cords Book 1102. at Page 771. of
tha Public Records of Seminole
County. Florida. Tha loregoing
being subject to zoning re­
quirements and **Mm*ntt in
existence at ot tha dato hereof;
State ot facts as shown on
survey dated September 25,
1*73. prepared by Jones, Wood A
Gentry, Inc., as resurveyed end
recertified on March II, 1*74
and tha terms and conditions of
the Declaration ot Easements,
covenants and restrictions re­
corded In Official Records Book
1100. Pag* 1173, ot the Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
has been Iliad against you and
you are required to M rvt a cop,
of your written defenses, if any.
to It on C. VICTOR BUTLER.
JR.. ESQ.. 1211 East Robinson
Strset, Orlando. Florida 32(01.
and life tha original with the
Clark ol tha above styled Court
on or before feh 12th day of
December. 19*5, otherwlM, a
Judgment may be entered
against you for tha rallaf da
mended In the Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and Mel
of Mid Court on the tth day of
November, l»*S.
(SEAL)
DAVID N. BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
By: SuMnE. Tabor
Deputy Clark
Publish: November 11, II, 25.
December 2.11*5
DEL 72

PRCDKBOK

PLDJPLO.
PREVIOUS SO LU TIO N : "Confidant: one entrusted by A
with tha eacrots of B, confidad by him to C ." — Ambrose
Biarcs.

CALL TO LL FR EE
r-aaa-342-iaii

COUNTY

M €t
til
T O WHOM I T M AY COMCflRM
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y GIVEN
by the Pfenning
Beard at the City a4 Labe Mary,
Florida, that
hotd e Public NoartoRot 7 p.m.
a)
h u g e at zoning tram A-1
Agriculture to R-CE Rural
Country Betake. on fee
wMhto ttw mwddpel limlto
Labe Mary, and mere *
described ee totfewe; to wit
Tho SWfe ol fee SWfe ot the
Nwvs ot fee NWto at lection to
Townahlp to South. Range 31
leaf; AND the NWfe ot the
SWfeeffeoNWfeeffeoNWfeaf
Section to Tewnehlp to South.
Range 3b Eeet.
Tho Public Hearing win
held at Labe Mary City Hail. 1M
North Country Club Read. Laba
Mary, Florida, an tha
of December, ltos, at 7 p.m., ar
awn' tlUygaTH*
MY
which time Interaetod portlet
and agefeat the request will
fwfor
ch
ditiww
)iA
a*g
*■-*-**nvBrmfi
IuapIjik m
m#
if. saiB
f
continued tram time to 1
until a final rtcommondoth
made by tha Planning
Zoning Baard.
Thl* Nattca shall ba path
thraa (3) public places wl
fee City at Laba Mary, at tha
City Hell within Mid City and
published In a newepapar at
general circulation In the City of
Lake Mery prior to toe dale ot
the Public Hearing, tn eddttlsn.
notice shell be pooled In too area
w Of CQntvOTfOV if MVBf TfTrfMfi
(111 days prior to ttw dato at toe
Public Hearing.
A taped record ot this moating
It made by the City for He
convenience. This record may
net constitute an idaqm ta re­
cord tor tha purpaaae et appeal
tram a decision mode by toe
City with re sport to too ferageIng matter. Any person wishing
to Insure that on adieueto
record ot toe proceedings la
m aintained ter appellate
purpose* I* advised to moke toe
necessary arrangements at hit
or her own expense.
C ITY OF LAKE MARY.
FLORIDA
I I I Caret A. Edwards
City Clerk
Dated: November 25.1*05
Publish: Oecember 2. 12. 1*as
OEM-4

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given toot 1
n engaged In buslnou at Bldg.
102. Catapult Rd.. Sanford,
Samlnola County, Florida 22771
under the fictitious name of
ALAN ADEN d/b/a/ F LIG H T
OPS INC., and that I Intend to
register Mid name with the
Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with toe provisions
ot the Fictitious Name Statute*.
To-wlt: Section 045.0* Florida
Statutes 1*57.
/*/ Alan Aden
Publish December 2. *. 14. 23,
19*5.
OEM-11

C ITY OF LAKE
MARY NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by the Planning and Zoning
Board ol tho City ol Lake Mary,
Florida, that Mid Board will
hold a Public Hearing at 7 p.m.,
on Decamber II. IMS. to:
a) Consider a request for
change of zoning from A t
Agriculture to R-IAA Single
Family, on the following de­
scribed property lying within
the municipal limits of Lake
Mary, and more hilly described
as follows; to wit:
The west 150 feet ot Section 10.
Township 20 South, Range JO
East, lying north ot Lake Mary
Rood; The East 200 toot of the
South 40 acre* ot Government
Lot 1. Section *, Township 20
South. Range 30 East; and the
East 200 teat of that pert of toe
NE to ol the SE i* of Section f,
Township 20 South. Range X
East, lying north of Lake M a ry
Road.
The Public Hearing will be
held at Lake Mary City Hall. 154
North Country Club Road. Lake
Mary. Florida, on the ltto day
of December, 1945, at 7 p.m., or
at toon thereafter at possible, at
which time Interested portlet
for and against toe request will
be heard. Said hearing may be
continued tram time to time
until e final recommendation It
made by tha Planning and
Zoning Board.
This Notice thall ba potted in
torso (3) public places within
tha City of Lake Mary, at tha
City Hall within Mid City, and
published In a newspaper ot
aeneral circulation In toe City ol
Lake Mary prior to too dato of
tha Public Hearing. In addition,
notice thall ba posted In too area
to bo considered at feast fifteen
(IS) days prior to the date ol the
Public Hearing.
A loped record ot this meeting
Is made by the City for Its
convenience. This record may
not constitute adequate record
for toe purposes ot appeal from
e decision mode by toe City with
respect to toe foregoing matter.
Any person wishing to Insure
toot on adequate record ol the
proceedings fe maintained for
appellate purposes Is advised to
make toe neceiMry arrange­
ments at hit or her own expense.
C ITY O F LAKE MARY,
FLORIDA
/t/Carol A. Edwards
City Clark
Dated: November 25. IMS
Publish: December2.12.1(05
OEMS

by Berk* Breathed

srrmaimu'r

*7Wf

B /rvM m M M f.
i n m a t* .
M N
O F C M a e -r
H u ta x v r
s tta o M a n m rrr
m m m .
j

7J€

mtrr

M te tM
MOML5
S C W .”

j

Ifr
&gt;

I • •m.

• * »

r M

0 - 6

9

* * 1

lemtaetoCaaafy, Florida
CasaMBd0*CA04R
INEE.ThoMerrtiBOOf
Richard Lyon Porker, HiwBand
and Cheryl Ann Parker, Wife
NOTICE OB SHERIFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS HORBOV OIVEN
by virtue of these certain Writs
at Execution. as rytod above,
and mare pertlculorfy feet eertain Writ ef BeaiNot* Issued out
of and end* fee seal *1 toe
Circuit Ceurt af Seminal#
County. Florida span a final
litdgmanf rendered In the
afertM id court en to* 2bto day
af August A.O. 1*44. to feet
certain case enftttod. IN RE:
The Marrtogs of Richard Lynn
Parker, Husband, and Cheryl
Ann Parker, Wife, which
atoroMld Writ cl Execution w e
delivered to me as Sheriff af
laminate County, Fferlde. end I
have t o v t o d j ^ H w f e i y m ,
Richard* Lynn"Parker, Mid
property being located In
Somtneto County, Florida, mart
p a rticu la rly described as
totlaws:
That undtv tdM one-hatf (H )
interest of Richard Lynn Porker
In a residence localad af Rt. 1
Ban 2M K, Santord, Fferlde,
mare partlcularty dMcrtbod m :
The W e t Vs ef toe Nertoooef fe
of toe Northeast U ef toe
Northwest V* (feet too*l S Net)
and toe East N feet ef the
lx
S4L
WBtltlWWi tE wt ffto trmitmWf
Wl TVBB
fe B* IK IW f Wl
Tewnehlp If South, Rente I f
East.
and toe wndwaitnad m Sheriff
ef Somlnofe County. Fferlde.
will at ii:M A.M. entoo Jrdiey
of Oocomeor, A.O. HIS. offer
fer Mfe and tell fe too hfetwet
bidder, FOR CASH. tub|*ct fe
any and all exleftof feint, at toe
Front (west) Door at the step*
ef toe Somlnofe County CeurthouM In Sanferd, Florida, toe
That m M Mfe It being made
fe satisfy tot farms af m M Writ
of Exacutton.
John !. Polk. Sheriff
Seminole County, Florida
To bo advertised November It,
il. 29 and Oecember 2nd with
toe Mfe to bo held on December
Litas
DEL-42
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT,
IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIOA.
CASK NO. M-171S-CA-M-0
IN RE: The Marriage at DE­
BRA ANN K E ITT.
Petitioner/Wife.
LEROY K E ITT, JR..
Rstpondont/Huabend.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO : LeRoy Keltt, Jr. !t2l
Airport Boulevard Sanferd,
Florida 32771
YOU ARE H ER EB Y
N O TIFIED that a Petition fer
Dissolution of Marriage has
been filed against ysu. and that
you are required to servo a copy
ef yeur roaparae or afeeding to
tha Petition upon tha Peti­
tioner's attorney. Themes C.
Greene, Esquire. Poet Office
Box 4tS, Sanferd. Fferlde 22771,
and fife toe original reepenM or
pleading In the attics of to#
Clerk ol the Circuit Court.
Samlnola County CeurthouM.
Sanferd, Florida 33771, en or
before too 30th day ot Da
comber, Ifts. If you tell to do so.
e default judgment will be taker
against you fer the relief do
mended In toe Petition.
D ATED at Sanferd. Somlnofe
County Florida, tolt 19 day ot
November, 1*05.
CLERK OF TH E CIRCUIT
COURT
By: Sandra Baker
Dtputh Clark
Publish: November IS. 25. Da
camber2.(, 1*45
DEL-123
IN TH B CIRCUIT
COURT OF THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO.; 0t-33b3-CA-O*-O
AM ERIFIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.
vs.
JOHN J. COPPINGE R, at el..
Defendants.
AMENDED
NOTICE OF SALK
NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN
that on ftw 20tt» day of De­
cember, 19*5, at II a m. at toe
West Front Doer of toe CourthouM of Samlnola County,
Florida, at Sanferd, Fferlde. toe
undersigned Clerk will offer fer
Mfe to tho highest bidder tor
cash tot fallowing described
reel property:
The North 70 test ot Let 30 end
Lot 3*. less the North 45 feet
thereof, CUTLER COVE, ac­
cording to too Flat thereof as
recorded In Piet Booh IL Page
IL ot the Public Records of
Somlnofe County. Florida.
Including specifically, but not
by way of limitation, the follow­
ing equipment; Range; Dispos­
al; Dishwasher; Fan/Hood;
Heating and Air Conditioning;
UfAte# u — Ji—
Together with all too Im
provement* now or hereafter
erected on ttw property, end all
•e l e m e n t s , r i g h t s , a p ­
purtenances. rants, royalties,
mineral, ell and gee righte and
protit*, water, wafer rights, and
water stock, and ail fixtures new
or hereafter attached fe toe
property, including replace­
ments end additions thereto.
This Mto Is made pursuant fe
o Summery Final Judgment In
Foreclosure an fared In Civil
Action No. 45-2303-CA-gP-G now
pending In too Circuit Court In
end fer Seminole County,
Fferlde.
D A TE D this 31*1 day ef
November, 1*45.
(SEAL)
OAVIDN. BERRIEN
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By: Diana K. Brummatt
Deputy Clerk
Publish: November 25.
,11
DEL-157

Samlnola

-Orlando - Winter F«fc

3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 ____________________

Ferk.NJk.09
P LAIN TIFF
ve.
_ _
Richard L. Fttfez and
Cheryl W. Parker
DEFENDANTS

CLASSIFIED ADS

F E D E R A L N A TIO N A L
MORTOAOR ASSOCIATION.
R O B E R T !. M ILLE R. Of ol,
N O TICE OP ACTION
S T A T I O F F L O R ID A T O
RICHARD CAVILL end CAROL

n522e

C W h i»
fe Rt l Bar
tit, T o b b w Read. Marsha!!.
Nr
You a rt
answer or written
If any, In ttw above
i wfto toe Clerk ef tort
to serve a copy
thereat gpan tho PtototlfTs at­
torneys. wheee name and
address appear* twrean, en or
before toe tfth day af December
tfM, the nature ef this proceed
toB being a suit fer foreclosure
ef mertBatt agelnel Ihe Mtowing described property, to-wlt:
Late I and 2. Black M .
SAN LAN D O T H E SUBURB
B E A U T IF U L . SANFORO
SECTION. M recorded In Plat
Baak L Pate 44. af tot Public
Racardi af Samlnato County,
Florida.
If you tall to file yeur answer
or written dstarwai in the above
on Ptatottfra att, a default will ba ontorad
against yaw tor tha rallaf de­
mand* In too Complaint ar
Patltfen.
DONE AND ORDERED A T
Sanferd. County of Seminole.
Stole of Florida, this I4lh day of
CLERK O F TH E C IR C UIT
COURT
•y: IstaneZayM
Deputy Clerk
Publish: November IS. 25. Da
comber 2.0. Hbf
D E L-125
___________
IN TH E CIR CUIT COURT
IN AN O FOR
SBM IN O LI COUNTY,
FLORIOA
PROBATE DIVISION
Fife Number 1 14-771-CP
IN RE: ESTA TE OF
GINA LYNN VAN HORN,
N O TICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The administration of ttw
Estate ef G INA LYNN VAN
HORN, Oocaomd. File Number
45-772-CF, Is pending In tha
Circuit Court for Samlnola
County, F lo rid a , Probata
Division, tho addrau ef which Is
P .O . Drawer C. Seminole
County CawrthouM. Sanferd,
Florida, 32771.
Tha nomas and addresses ef
the Personal Rapratontativa
and tha P e ria n a l Reprasantatlva's attorney art sat
forth bofew.
All Interested persons era
required to fife with this court.
W ITHIN THR EE MONTHS OF
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims
against tha estate and (3) any
objection by an Interested
parson to whom this notice was
mailed that challenges tho valid­
ity of toe Will, the qualifications
el the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ot the
COurf.
A LL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS HOT SO P ILED WILL
BE FOREVER BAR R IO .
Publication ef this Notice has
begun en November 25, HM.
Perianal Ropraeonfatlve:
PAUL DAVIS VAN HORN
1400 Ro m Boulevard
Orlando. Florida 1200*
Attorney fer Personal
Representative:
PORTER L.P EA D EN . JR.
Suite 117
001N. Magnolia Avenue
Orlande. Florida 33002
(2O9)04P«Sao
Publish: November 25.
December 2,1945
OIL-150
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS H ER ER V GIVEN
that by virtue ot toot certain
Writ of Execution Issued out of
end under the seel of ttw Circuit
C ourt of Orengo County.
Florida, upon e final judgement
rendered In the aforesaid court
on tho list day ot February.
A.O. 1*15. in that certain c m
antltfed. Borg Warner Accep­
tance Corporation (Laating
Division). Plaintiff, - v s Sfereo Etc.. Inc., a Florida corp
and Joseph Millstone. Defen­
dant, which atoreMld Writ of
Execution was delivered to me
os Sheri It ol Somlnofe County,
Florida, and I have levied upon
tha following described property
owned by Je*»jih Millstone. Mid
property being located In
Seminole County. Florida, more
p a rticu la rly described as
tot lows:
Condominium Unit No. 312.
KENSINGTON PARK, o
CONDOMINIUM, according to
the Decl ar at i on of C on­
dominium. recorded In Official
Records Book 1444. Pag* 1*5 as
emended by that certain First
Amendment fe Declaration ot
Condominium recorded In Of­
ficial Records Rook 1455. Pag*
142* and ra-racordad In Official
Records Book 1454, Page 1713.
all among too Public Records ot
Somlnofe County, Florida,
together with toe undivided In­
feros! In and to tho Common
E lament* appurtenant to Mid
Unit os sat forth In u W De­
claration of Condominium,
and tho undorslgnod os Shorlft
of Somlnofe County. Florida,
will at 11:00 A IM. on too 10th
day ol December. A.O. 1(45,
offer tor Mfe and Mil to too
highest bidder, fer cash. sub|act
to any and all existing loins, at
too Front (Wosl) Door at tho
steps ot tho Somlnofe County
Courthouse In Sanford. Florida,
too above described reel proP*rty.
That Mid Mfe Is being made
to satisfy tot farms of Mid Writ
ot Execution.
Jo h n !. Port. Sheriff
Somlnofe County. Florida
To bo advertised November IL
25. December 1 and * with too
Mfe on Oocombor 10, l«45
DEL-110
FICTITIOUS NAME
Noflc* It hereby given tool I
am engaged In buolnoM ot 440
Homer A v * . , Lon gw ood ,
Somlnofe County, Florida under
the f i c t i t i o u s M i n i o f
B E V E R L E Y ' S S I L K IM ­
AGININGS, and lhat I Intend to
register said name with tha
Clerk of tha Circuit Court,
Somlnofe County, Florida In
accordance with toe provisions
of the Fictitious Name Statutes,
To-wlt: Section 044.00 F fer Id#
Statute* i«97.
/*/ Rover fey A. Couldor
Publish December 2. 0. 14. 23,
IM4.
DIM -4

CLASSIFIED DEPT. RATES
I
HOURS 'i ! 5 U £ * d w S !S
MSUL.MJML
iZ E RB mB r n Hm&gt; lZ
M B M V ttm n B M V
tf
,E
m b iiib m

M T M M V • •B b b b

mbb

C BR aB ttfttfB B Jbtfh ftfc

SUN! «* M B

DEADLINES
N oon T lio Day B afora Publication
*
Sunday • N o o n Friday
M on day -1 1 :0 0 A .M . Saturday

21— Personal*

ansisraaM
KTCCiniR
ABORTION COUNSELING
Free PreRnency T o i l s .
Confidential- Individual
a e a l i t a n e o . C a l l f or
Mpatotmafft- avonlni hours
AvTliMfe.......................321-7405
&gt;to fife Holy Spirit. Holy
Spirit, you who sotv* all prabtams, who light #11 road* m
that I can attain my fMls.
Veu wfw give me to* divine
gift to torglvo and to target all
evil against me and that In all
Instances ot my life you era
with mo I want In this short
.prayer to thank you fer all
things and to confirm once
again that I never want fe ba
separated tram you over In
Mito of all malarial Muttons. I
wish to ba with you in otomel
glory. Thank you fer yeur
mercy toward me and mine.
A M IN . Tha penen must say
tola prayer Mr 3 consecutive
days, tha favor will ba
granted even It It seams dif­
ficult. This prayer mutt bo
published Immediately otter
the fever It granted without
mentioning too favor. Jot. W.

25— SftclB l NOTfctt
JANIS'S ALTERNATIVE
SENIOR CARE
34 Hour laving core fer i
citizens. Family
end heme ceek
245-7140
eMARY KAY C O S M ifiO e
Skin Cera and cetor flair
CONNIE........................BS71A

27—N u r w r y *
CM M Cart
Will babysit In my
0
u ||1x|a1w UlnA
oN
BTYTlfMPflV "1^1 K IB i
Phene: 221-4947.
33— R m I C it a t o

e e e
e Thinking at getting so
e Rm I Estate UcenstT e
We offer Free tultfen
end continuous TraMnei
Cell Dick or Vicki fer detaltit
47l-tt47...323-J2M...Bve. 77*NR
Keys* ef Fferlde., Inc.
I* Yeera ef E xparlencet

23— Lott A Found
55— B u t l n t t s
LOST- Bird. Largo (1FT long)
Red Mac ow. C a l l Tom
Neeley: 112 073*or 3*00241.

2S—SpBCiBl NofiCBS
ICCONC ANOTARY

OpportuftHta
UNLIM ITED EARNINGS. MM
your own business, fed v
p e r t t l m e , s e l l i n g gg
automotive product*. Far to
formation cell yeur Meet dto
trlbufer 305-4*0-3242.

For DotWt: 1400-431 4354
Florida Notary Assoc totIon
Seasent Santa wilt personally
call or write. Send S3.90 to
Florida Specialty Consultants,
Box 111, c/o Sanferd Herald,
P.O. Box 1457, Sanford. FL
32771, with child's nemo, ago,
oddraM or phono.

Ugol Notice
I N T H I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SBM IN OLICO UN TY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
Fife Number M-430-CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
SUSAN J. JORGENSEN.
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Tha administration of tho
astafe of Susan J. Jorgensen,
deceased. F l i t Num be r
45-420-CP. Is pending In toe
Circuit Court for Seminole
County, F lo rid a , Probate
Division, the address of which Is
Post Office Drawtr C. Sanford.
Florid# 33772-0450. Tho nemo*
and addraseos of to* porsonal
representative and toe personal
representative's attorney era
Mt forth below.
All interested parsons #r#
required to fife with this court,
W ITHIN THR EE MONTHS OF
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
•THIS NOTICE: (1) ill claims
against to# estate and (2) any
objection by an interested
parson on whom this notice we*
served that challenges the valid­
ity of tho will, to* qualifications
of tha personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ot to*
court.
A LL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of this Notice has
begun on November 25.1*45
Porsonal Representative:
Thornes H. Everhart
451 Onora Road
Sanferd. Florida32771
Attorney tor
Personal Representative:
Lauren Y. Dotzol
Doan. Mead. Egarton,
Bloodworm, Capouana
A Bozerth. P.A.
P.O. Box 234
Orlando. Florida 32402
Telephone (205) 441 1200
Publish: November 25 A De­
cember 2,1*45
OEL-154
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that by virtue of that certain
Writ ol Execution issued out of
and under too seel of toe Circuit
Court of Seminole County,
Florida, upon « final judgement
rendered In toe afertMid court
on tha 12th day of j una, A D.
’***• ,n ‘hat certain case en
titled. Israel Discount Bonk ot
New York, Plaintiff, -v s — Om
Jain, his wife. Defendant, which
otartMid Writ ot Execution was
delivered to me a* Sheriff of
Somlnofe County, Florida, and I
have levied upon to* following
Jfeocrtbad property owned by
Om Jain, his wife, said property
being located In Samlnola
County, Flo rid a , mors
p a rticu la rly described as
follow*:
&gt;&lt;• C O L O N N A D E S .
TH IR D SECTION, according fe
mo.plel |hareot_e&gt; record* In
Plat Book I*. Page M&gt; Put|tc
Ftortda* 0&gt; SWT,I'V '# Cow»»Y&lt;
and the untonigned as Sheriff

wliitT!
£fuon
",v'theFl0fW
*'
win at 11:00 A.M.
3rd day
ot December, A.O I9W. offer
tor Mfe and Mil to to* highest
bWdar, for cash. *ub|ect fe any
n ^ . L V l V 1^ t*lnt- •• tho
Front (Watt) Door at too stent
of the Seminole County Courthow# In Sanferd. Florida, to#
above described real property.
. T h e ' “ !!*•*• I* holngmado
to satisfy tha terms of Mid Writ
of Execution.
JohnE. Polk. Sheriff
Seminole County, Florid#
To bo advertised November II,
December 3 with toe
sole on December 3, m s
DELS

4 3 -M o r tiH M
Bought ftSoM
We buy 1st and 2nd mertgmq
Nation wide. Cell: Rey lag
Lie. Mtg Broker. *40 OeRfe
Av*., Altpmoftf*. 774-7752

U90I Notte*
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given M l
am ango0*5 in bueinoM etto
Certs Nuevo, CeiMlbetn,
Seminole County, Florida IBB
under to* flctmeue name 0
SUZY Q's, and that l intend B
register Mid name with to
Clerk ef the Circuit Court
Somlnofe County, Florida Is
accordance with to* prevtttoe
ef toe Fictitious Name Stetvtae
To-wlt: Section 0410* Florida
Statutes 1*57.
/*/ Sue Chevalier
Publish November 25 A Dp
comber 2. f. 14. IttS.
DEL 111
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given tool e*
era engaged In button** d
Various Local Ion* Through**
Somlnofe County. F lorMB undr
the f i c t i t i o u s na m e *1
D I VER SI F I ED IN TE R IO R !
end that we Intend to refltfe
Mid name with the Clerk el M
Circuit Court. Seminal* County.
Florida to accordance with Ml
provisions ef the PIctltleM
Nemo Statute*. To-wlt: Sectoe
045 0* Florida Stetvtoi 1*57.
/*/Frederick J.Lenedile III
)*J Penny S. Lonsdale
Publish November 25 A 00
camber 3. *, 1*. 1(H.
OEL-153
FICTITIOUS NAME •
Nolle* Is hereby Riven B0t l
am engaged to busInet* d F A
Box 25*5. Sanferd. SemMN
County, Florida undar M*
llctltlout name ef P EO IM L
CRED IT A COLLECTION, m i
toot I Intend to register ted
nemo with toe Clerk ef *•
Circuit Ceurt, Somlnofe Cawfe,
Florida to accordance wife M*
provisions el the FIctltlM
Nemo Statute*. To-wlt: SecMM
1*5 0* Florida Statute* 1*57.
/*/ William Thomen
Publish December 2, 0, 1A IL

ms.

DEMI
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SAL!
NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN
toot by virtue of the! certain
Writ of Execution Issued out d
end under 1h* teal of tho
CircuitCourt of Orange County,
Florid*, upon * fine) judeoment
rendered to tho eferaMld court
on tho 20th day el May. A.D.
1*45. to that certain co m «►
titled. Principal. Inc. PlatoNN,
-v s — Royal Star Conefructlen.
Inc. Defendant, which aforesaid
Writ ot Execution wet detlverad
to me et Shorlft ot Seminole
County. Florida, and I have
levied upon toe follewtot de­
scribed property owned by
Royal Star Construction, told
property belnf located to
Seminole County, Florid*, more
particularly detcrlbed a*
follows:
Lot *. LoTOURNEAU ACRES,
according to tho plat thereof, at
recorded In the Flat Book 2A
Paget 44 end 47 of the Public
Records of Seminole County
Florida.
end the undersigned m Sheriff
ot Somlnofe County. Florida,
will el 11:0* A.M. on ttw 3rd day
of December. A.D. I N I offer
fer m i * end tell to the highest
bidder, for cash, subject to any
end all existing loin*, at the
Front (West) Deer at the stop*
of the Somlnofe County CourthouM to Sanferd, Florida. Ike
above detcrlbed personal pro­
perty.
That Mid tale I* betoR made
to Mtlsty too terms of said Writ
ot Exacutton.
JohnE. Polk,Sheriff
Somlnofe County, Florida
To bo advertised November II,
1A 29 and December 2 wife the
JJl* on Oecember 2, HM
OBL-40

�71— HtlpWanfad

H -IM

Acrylk nppHtotoTf M M (*
m * v pretocMre coaling an
a n . bontoandptanae. M to
•ll per haw. W Yfrein warn Hi I m M m m call
Tempo giggpartu.

n -N ^ R M M

V IM mI

h

141-H m h m N r fate

w/re*. ip
• N b U

f g

f jg

g

tor mod*m manufacturing
pl®n. IV M il if r M ^ fd iM t*
m m tranip*rtalt*n. Sjuel
paetttom. Nm t

temp

323*9171

•

— g p r- T T ii*

IP N ar RN aaadafc B it M M .
Bead i tm u p h in A benefit*.
Putlttmapaatttaw. Apply af:

BAL FRIDAY

M a r y M*apr..dB *L Nary. 17-N

housowlvoo and ratlrata

n m --------- 774-iw

it
O PSNTSRR iTO RIBSNO W Itl
m m u rn m a m
ClWfWt
Lam lnator*. A ll 'pheiaa!
Excellent benefit*. Waft

M A .M -M a .p u . c a n
Driver's License t
Coll Pea-In* 7*7473*.

313*9171

A rt t. Call: 33)-3l»7.

miMO

D IL IV IR Y
W A R IH O U S I
SS.M H r Train! Deliver In
rampdny baa truest Local I
Oaodpatantlal toadvancaand
— » l FullbanafINt

Call:

f

a

m i French Are.
Oasparatafy
_______
Start lmmadlaNly7 up to ai
par hour. Apply Domlna't
Plua. 1*10 French Ava. Sarv
Nrd. Call: M l-3000.

. lapol Notica
FICTITIO US R A M I
Notica It hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 04
Gladwin Avenue, Fern Part,
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitious name of "CALL
LINDA” WORD PROCESSING,
and that I Intend to register said
nemo with the Cttrk of the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
previsions of the Fictitious
Nemo Statutes. To-wit: Section
0*3.01 Florida Statutes l*S7.
/t/ Linda A. Barti
Publish November IS U t
December i.* , isas.
DEL 130
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO.: OS-ltM-CA-W-P
T A SPROPERTY
INVESTMENTS. INC..
Plaintiff,
vs.
JAMES DESANTELLO.
Defendant.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that on the itth day of De­
cember, INS, at 11 a m. at the
west front door of the Court
house of Seminole County, at
Sanford. Florida, tho un­
dersigned Clark will offer tor
sale tho following described real
property:
Lot I. Osceola Acres — That
parcel of land lying In Sactlen *,
Township 10 South. Range 33
East, Seminole County. Florida,
described os follows: -Beginning
of the Southeast Corner of told
Section *. run along tho East
lino of sold Section », ond the
canterline of a 30 foot Right of
Way of Osceola Road, N
00*00'lt" W. ngo U fast; thence
run N r i S ' N " W. 73 00 feat to
tho Wast Right ef Way at said
Osceola Road; thanes run N
tfM O S" W, 1*301* fsat to tho
Point of Beginning; thence run S
00*M34" W. 4*0.00 loot; thence
run N «**5*'0*" W, 330 00 feet;
thence run N 00*03 34" E. 4*0.00
feet; thence run $ M*S*'0*" E.
W0 00 feet to tho Point ot
Beginning.
Tho above described parcel
contains 3.00 acres, more or
lass.
Tht above described parcel Is
sub|ect to a 13 foot Ingress
Egress easement on tho
Northerly lint of Mid parcel.
together with alt structures,
Improvements, .fixture*. appli­
ances, and appurtenances on
Mid land or used In conjunction
The aforesaid Mia will be
made pursuant to a Final
Judgment ot Foreclosure an
t a r a d In C i v i l No.
U lt t t C A d e P now pending In
lha Circuit Court of the Eigh­
teenth Judicial Circuit In ond for
Seminole County, Florida.
D AT E D this 31nd day ot
November, 1*03.
DAVID N. BERRIEN
Clark of tho Circuit Court
By; Diene K. Brum matt
Deputy Clark
Publish: November 33.
December 3, IM3
DEL-13*

CALL BART

m l b s r ip

Don't fret Nora's
training far p
that enjoys pasplsl Large

STemper

333*9171

dMlMPIbl^MHMMSiH
P Gf^m
pen TVVS HW pBBTfw

IN V O K E
CLERK
Ta g*.gg Hr Train N r data entry
ta computer. Price and amend
Invokes! All banaftN paldl

rl Staff relief and hama
care *hlft* available far
R.N.'l L.P.H.'S. and Nurae
Aida's
CALL US TODAY I
Call: Santord.N1-IBP*sr
Orlande. M B * ! I.
MEDICAL PERSONNEL

a

323*9171
LA TH E
OPEBATOR
• M l Hr. ta start
benefits are grandl Any
rlencol No layoffs with ana of
tho stablast com pany's
aroundI
around!

•Y OWNER Country Club Rd.
Assumable. Almost new. 1
flrnlara
•a I9 U
MD
m, n
ffH K f, M V

watt, *7*.*m .
It Call: N1 7311

f

a

Emptayrotnl
323-317*
1333 French Avo.

Lagol Notica
IN TH E CIRCUIT
COURT IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO.) M-M3-CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
ESSIE MAE WIDEMAN,
Deceased.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
TO A LL PERSONS HAVING
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
AGAIN ST TH E ABOVE
ESTA TE AND A LL O TH ER
PERSONS IN TER ESTED IN
TH E ESTATE:
YOU ARE H ER E S Y
N O T I F I E D that tha a d ­
ministration of the Estate af
ESSIE MAE WIDEMAN. deceasad. Co m number M-M2CP,
1s pending In the Circuit Court
for Seminole County, Florida.
Probate Division. N o address ef
which Is Seminole County
Courthouse. Probate Division.
Sanford. Florida 33771. Tha
personal representative of No
■state Is CLANTON WIDEMAN.
whose address Is 130 Ronwlnd
Trail. Maitland. Florida. The
nemo and addreaa ef tha
personal representative's at­
torney Is set forth below.
All persons having claims or
dsmands against tha astaN are
required. W IT H IN T H R E E
MONTHS FROM TH E DATE
OF TH E FIRST PUBLICATION
OF THIS NOTICE, to flit with
tha clerk of tha above court ■
written statement of any claim
or demand they may have. Each
claim must be In writing and
must Indicate tho basis far tho
claim, tha name and addraia ef
tha creditor or his agent or
attorney, and tha amount
claimed. If tho claim Is net yet
due. tha data whan It will
became duo shall be stated. It
tho claim Is contingent or unli­
quidated. tha nature ef tho
uncertainty shall be stated- II
the claim Is secured, tho securi­
ty shall be described. Tha
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies of tha claim to tha clerk
to enable tho clerk to mall ana
copy to each personal repre­
sentative.
All parsons Interested In tho
estate to whom a copy of this
Notice of Administration hot
been mailed a rt required,
W I T H I N T H R E E M ONTHS
FROM THE D A TE OF TH E
F I R S T P U B L I C A T I O N OP
THIS NOTICE, to file any ab­
jections they may hove Not
challenged tha validity Of tha
decadent's will, the qualifica­
tions at tho personal repre­
sentative. or tho venue or
|ur Isdl ctlon ot No court.
A L L CLAIMS. DEMANDS
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
F IL E D WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
Date of the first publication of
NIs Notice of Administration:
December 1. INS.
CLAXTON WIDEMAN
As Personal Representative
of No Estate ef
ESSIE MAE WIDEMAN,
A TTO R N EY FOR
PERSONAL REPRE
SEN TATIVE:
William T . Conner, Esq.
341S. Orlande Ave.
Suite 101
Florida National Bank Bldg.
Maitland. FL 33731
n u is u -iN i
Publish: December 2. t, INS
O EM -10

EXCITIN G NEW THINGS A RE
HAPPENING AT
TH E

$100 SECURITY DEPOSIT
1 S 2 KOtOOM 9FT5. M U L U U ,
ADULTS JUS F M H U a W UCOM
2714 RIDGEW OOD A V E ., SANFORD

■a2 a . 7 « —

97— Afartmanfs

121— Condominium
Rontolt

brlng^yauj
story living,
•aund cantrailad w alls.
^ ^ W nf U a r a R B I I ^ M

S IN G L E S TO R Y
L IV IN G
UmTgrantiFM

f

a

PRIiSM AN
h w l— |

tshlrsMKsyl^Tsp

323*917$
I tor adult MR
facility. Prefer experience
wlN dltaMad. child
nurelna facility. 331-7331.

salary, Incentive* and
benefits. Par appointment
call: ***-*3*3 after i t P.M. or
T O B U anytime.___________

Pull time. &gt;11 shift,
position. Apply af:
M N. Hwy 17-*l
RN Naadad Perl fla w ah day
shift. Gaod atmosphere A
benefits. Apply af:
ioar....S* N. Hwy 17-ft
BOE
SECRETARY
BOOKKEEPER
weak. Guaranteed satis­
faction hare I Keep busy I
Same variety create* a
challenging career I

323*9176
M33 Preach Ava.
TIM P O R A R Y
ASSEMBLY
MECHANICS
Several openIngaI 1 monN pre­
lect wlN a strong chance of
going permanent w lN a dy­
namite company I All you need
Is bask knowledge and wlllIngnese toworkl

323-9176
B B French Ave.
Three people needed tor branch
•f large electrical appliance
firm. Must be abto to manage
on *400 a weak or need net
apply. Call Tuesday t -l l only.
331-344
W AR IH O U SI
ATTENTIO N M IN I Shipping.
Receiving. Abto to lilt 30 lbs.,
own transportation. 14 an hr.
Permanent position*. Never a

774-1941

------------S4.se/HR. and every day Is pay
day tor three panana to help
introduce a new optical pro­
duct to Altamonte Mail vlsl-

JSL Call Jim: 3t7 W?0.
93— Rooms for Rm 9

MkBIttq*M; IM a S3S- B4P,NB&gt;
ethers from M .1 1 eq N1-3*1M&gt;1 (cettoct)

Auctton loaf Sunday
afNem anNiPM .

COMMERCIAL S P IC IA L ItT
SALES AND APPRAISALS
■OEM. BALL, JR. F.A..CSJIL
REALTOR
m a ttt
17 *3 A Airport Rd. 3 Bldg h
sq ft. an 3 acres. Many 1
. Raal Estate One ■43333M

CALL A N YTIM E
REALTOR
LIST W ITH USI

4P3IM1

22L

219— B M tffM

acustom
AMSbRbuilt
aIMA
44BMrtM w7
traitor. BMM N r
an.
219— W m M I 9d B «y

LO T POR SALE ________
•mall tot an small laka. Paved
street. City wator.aLMB.

h m m

= = = =

M u me.
LAK E FRONT- 1 and I Bdrm.
apto. Paaf, tormni*. Adults, no
pats. Plea ibtodeposit
CM'-'............................... 30-0743
LARGE IF F IC IN C Y Ideal tor
I
333377*
Now B drm.. 1 boN, Air 1
♦toned. carpets,
up. S333 mo plus dwatlt. Call:
m m .
Nice efficiency near team.
Clean. S*3 par weak. Call:
391-1-----RIDBIW OOO ARMS APT.
SM6 $M$9R(EI Aw
SPACtO U it BEDROOM
BN PON 1ST MONTH'S R ENT
NOVEMBER ONLYI
POR DETAILS
ROOMY I bdrm., 1 baN. S370
mo. t3M security-1 MONTH'S
PR B E R I N T I I Kids a.k.
• H BW .______________

SMMMOOAH flUMC
Call..

nurrum

1 9 1 -1

C A M E L M R R Y - I acre.
PR-t.MMgg.w.

U ti/te te

esoeeeseeeeeoeten»m*M49»Oil.

323-9171

T.v‘

219— A n c G m b

ISCIVMMICHI2IR M9C0IMIT

17m

prepram, la m up to M to St#
ear haur. Call :TO-4i4i.
PHARMACY
ASSISTANT
Will tram wlN llto fyptnp and a
little common sanest Assist in
niimp

Cater

R EA LTO R

O TN IR HOMES, LOTIv
ACREASE, INVESTM ENT
PROPERTY

-33&gt;3*SS
1 bodt Coeds In
Villas In Santord.
par month. Call: 433-3734

I bdrm., antra large and com­
fort abl a. ■ ot-Tn-kltchon.
weaker/dryer
Putty

191— H m i s m

k
ach HLAmM m_- ___
rM
1^*7
fffw riW re f r
ISM Sq Pt. Free standing build­
ing w lN ample parking. Im­
mediate occupancy. 1-S year
toaaa available. TO720*
Offtcae tor rent. On 17-n. From
IM to *M sq. ft. Call: m v n
ar 333-0toe._________________
*M Sq F T. 310 additional If
naadad. Ample parking. It.00
Sq Ft. Laka Mary. 1 to S year
toaaa available. 333-730*.

141— Homos For Salt
SMfDtOKALTY
REALTO R...................333-3334
COUNTRY W IO I REALTY
Rag. R.E. Broker..........TOUTS
47* Hwy. m.Ostoan, Fla,

II \ l I I I I \ l h
I t l VI ] U I (
OUPLEXf 1-1 perckas* tor
1 buyers.
w ltk kitchen equippodi
Central air A carpet I Priced
ASSUME HO QUALIFYING*
3
Trees,
•AIM dawn. 114%. U*« par
P IT I. tmmacalatol

FvrnM w d/R ont
9295
OB LTONA- Furnished. 1 bdrm.
Also FlerMo ream wlN 1
clean, attractive. Ne pets.
Available. Yearly lease.

574-1040

323-5774
U M N W Y . I7-*I
HOME FOR SALE By owner.
Oft Markham Weeds
341# Dawn Cr t . {Reside
Hanover Waods). 4 Bdrm, 2
BaN. large tot. Priced to will
Call B I - I N tor appointment.

191— H o vu t
UnfuralslMtf/Roitt
OEBARV- 3 Bdrm., 3 baN.
painted. S4*0 per monN +
security. 333-3733evsnlnos.
I D V L L W I L O E SCH OO L- 3
bdrm.. Fam. Rm.. alr/hoat.
Fenced yard. No pots. S433
plus security. 331-313*.

Baby h#d»^
Nptaypani , I

OVIEDO R IA L T Y .IN C

127— Offict Runtals

SANFORD A V E.- Owner financ­
ing. ta.S acraa. Improved

REALTY*REALTOR
Sutters Salts lgg*f

■N1-W77
I7M

W l LIST AN D SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

Estate One. 4T3-3N*.

sprinkler ayatom, utility
shads, screenparch. MUR

PMCiniRTNIR HOIICtOI
3 bdrm., 1 baN, range, ref.,

N E E D E X T R A S P AC Bt I
bdrm., 1 b*N In Mayialr ana.
Otnto# ream, central kret aad
air, L-Shapad living ream wlN
Rragtac*,

A dryer. Peel A club heuee.
Sendlowood Villa*. M l,
i f l»R * # jtjS to re ^ «n j«q

CUSTOMIZED DREAM HOUSE
3 Bdrm., 3 baN an acre let.
Spilt plan, eat-to kifthsa. din­
ing ream, central boat and air.
patMl* tans. Slta4M
CHARMINO ATM O S FN IR - 3
■drm., TV, bath, targe lot wtN
trees, set-to hHcbon, In-law
euertars, llreplece, dining
ream, parch, in * jaa

WILL bUILD T O W i r t YOUR
LOT OR OURSt EXCLUSIVE
A G E N T P O N W IN S O N O
DEV. CORP.. A CENTRAL
FLORIDA LE A D E R ! M O R I
HOME FOR LESS M O N IY I
CALLTOOAVI

323-3200

0 0 0 IN O IL T O N A o o o
* o H O M IS PON R E N T a a

Keyes

_____ # « *74-1434 o » ____
I, children o.k.
Great area. SS39 mo. Call Judy
Sullivan: Eves. 4*3-1111. Pat
Gostl Properties, Inc. 7t0-»3P.
B drm.. 1 baN, Liv­
ing Rm w/flreplocs. paddto
tans, central haat/alr. blinds.
Lrg. shady earner tol. Ha pots.
1st. Last and Security.
303-01-3777 or 4*3-301*.
107 Idyllwlld* Drive. 3 bdrm., 3
baN, targe patio. 1 car part,
storage, now paint and carpet.
Good schools. NICE. U M a
monN. Will canaldsr lease
option. Call: 323-3443 eves..
33FS331 days.
3 B d r m ., I Path- Fenced
bockyard Sanford. *4M per
monN glut security. Call:
321-3*34. a:0&gt; to S:M._________
3 Bdrm.. t baN, *373 par monN.
*3M deposit, call: 331-.—
Rotorencos required.

291-Cart

M
OnreneN
MOMIVf W
DONMN99
saw

^MYKNIAMnO^

Assume payments on 11x40
mabik heme. Adult Sactlen at
Carr logo Cave.
Call:.............................. x

* MICTION

it
they *3....__ ...... Ooytore Beach
* * * * * NsMaanann*

mfUCMTTO WCT10R
Every There. NNa at 7iN PM

* W hart Anybady *
* Can Buy or S till*
1$YggtgIf
S E L L I N O O R B U Y IN G
MOBILE HOME*
L E T U S H IL P I
OrUaad

im x m a r e it

A

RanLeal

‘fB M aW M E?1In S U P f R SPECIALS*
*7*Grand Prlx SUM

■O EN IV A-O SC IO LA R O •
ZONED FOR MOBILES!
3Acre Country tracts.
Wtli freed an pnvod Rd.,
20 \ Down. 10 Yrs. at 11%I
From S IM M I
If you ar* Inaklng for ■
succasilul career in Reel
Estate. I tonafrem Realty la
tasking tor you. Call La*
Albright today nt ITT-MTS.
Ew in gs TO-UM .

CAU ARY TIME
SANFORD/ LAKE MARY
Dream
Homos Available
Newt All Prices. Seminole
and Volusia Counties. Great
Terms. Cell tor Free
Computer Search Today I!

PtANOt„.ORGANS... GUITARS
Christmas ctoaranca. Apaito
Music Cantor, t m S. French,
Ave,i^4to&gt;____
Feat I U t i l ............ i n i B
■state. I seal lent csndHton
^ ^ ^ ^ r^ 7 M 7 f jy k m ^ _

157— MoMk
H om st/Silu

RANC H S T Y L E H O M E - 3
•drm. It* baN an I acres.

Spacious lamlly/kltcken
camba, scraanad perch,
beautllel hrlch end cedar
toctol. 317S4M

River reck ato________
Diet, ben reck dry wetto.
Miracle Concrete Cempeny
M » Etm Ave.................. b u t s i
New Surpiua Lumbar Far Sato
up to M % savings. Call: at•IM after 3pm Sundpy and

195— CunMmlniumi
Co-Op/Site

JUST PERFECT •3 Bdrm., 1%
balk, set-to kitchen, dtotag

229— AAitCtila

322-2420
1341 PARK A V I..
Lk. Mery
*01 Lk. M4ry Blvd...
YOU CAN OWN tor *3*3 month
w/U.000 down. Sellar will fi­
nance. Charming (Ilka new), 3
bdrm., wall/wall carpet,
central haat/alr, eppllancss.
Days only: 331-31*0.

111— AffMiancM
/ Fum iturt
MICROWAVE O V IN
TAPPAN
New INS modal. Family sis*,
toft In layaway, stiff In box.
10-yoar factory puarantoe.
balance af BSP ar It* monN.
To sat. call M3-S3M day or
n i g h t . __________________

193— TtkvIsiOfl/
Radio/Starto
OOOOUSBOT.V'SMSandUP
Millar's
Ml* Orlando Dr. Call: 323MS3

CHICO A TH E MAN.
W -MM
PONTIAC TR A M A M
Mr. IJ4 N mlk
M lM ^ J ^ T M W r

299-Trucks/
■usat/Vana
PkhupV4ton.
Cajlt

241— Racraattenal
V tM citt/C am sort
For Sato R f t Tarry Travel
Traitor. Saif cantalnedi A/C
and awning. S3NI7.

CONSULT OUR

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

119— Storof# Rwitals
service. Private ontranco. MO
a weak. Call: TOM 33.331-4*47
orTO-n*»._________________
Cloan, newly painted, near
town. US wk. plus security.
Call: 331-Wto evening.
private koto A
r a f r l g a r a t a r . Cemplafo
privacy. M a weak A SIM
security deposit. Includes
ulllltlss. Call: 33&gt;334* or

TOtott____________

SANFORD Furnished reams hy
Maid servlet. Call: T O 4107
S-7 FM. 413 FalmtHo Avo.
TH IF L O R IO A HOTEL
300Oak Avenue..............331-U04

97— Agartmantt
Funtisbtd / RbuI

A P A R TM E N TS

Large oldfr homo In sicslknt
condition. U A M ».

E IN IT N

in

149— Cummurcial
Prupurty/Sate

N m e rn n n g g r R N
All shifts. Good
Apply af
..M M .

ta

M TU U M U m

ATT I NT tOH INVISTONSI
Largs house an West 1st St.
Zonad GC-1.S53.M0.

Celt:
KUKSEI
If DAYS T IL L CHRISTMAS

f

SM Iln warranty. NO MONEY
DOWN. Prep henw Mat. No
GGMgMM. CSM M O H

321*9799 Ivu.-I22*7449

Farm Has. Inc., Port e / t i ?
feed off Orange Blvd. Apply
B it and 1-3, Monday through
Friday.
■no to da
and help me pat

INSIDE

Ewpbywi nl

313-517*

a n ew u s tm o

Nhare can yeu find a
Bdrm., us
air A heat,
MMM ? catt re tamai

Coiy Tbdrm an Summerlin Avo.
Only U7,300.

*P &lt; V &gt; ® F
I no v
rn f
Raporf raady N r wark at a AM
» W - IN . St............... Sanford

up.

Faaf Brewing pine delivery
company taking applications
tor a L m gasad and Laba
Mary area. Call:
tor Undo or too.

_____________ w i f i _____
HMrNylWa- Put! A Port time
N r new Mien In lanNrd.
Splpry -f cpmmlaslpn A
_bpnpflts. Call Lprplnt m -f m .
Noasakaapor, governess ■

Convenience Mere. Tap tetery,
hoapitelliatlon. I week v*c»
Men each • manth*. Other
benefit*. Apply:
Ml N. Laurel A m ., Santord, FI.
&lt;:3»-4:)A3tondM ■Friday.CkM Cara- Infants, toddler* and
pra-school teacher*. Expert
tnca and maturity a plus.
Happy Acres, *N Rlvarvtow,
p&gt;-saas.
_____
COST ACCOUNTANT
Experienced, affraaslva, and
matura parson with ttreng
coat accounting history lar
•rowi ng Sanford ba le d
m anufacturlnt company,
•ond raauma' or apply in
a n t n to : Cable Boat Com
•pnihC/O Far sannot manat
ROX IM7, ISP Silver
Lake Rd., laniard. FI. TO 71 .
DAILY WORK/DAILY PAY
•TART WORK NOWI

SANPORO I S CLUB RO.- 3
■drm., super Napa In/euf,
new appliances, heat/alr.
Only HJW dawn an new 11%
FHA loan, owner pays loan
and closing casts. S4S.MP.
Call:........................... MI-3343
1 A N F0 R 0 lee R. I I M.- 4
Bdrm., Ito baN, tip-top con­
dition, oppteinces. hoof/alr,
a » O aa
I^ w u la d i
f
1 —*
C9rn9r
Iff,
good nolphbarhood. Buyer
pays UUP dawn an new 11 %
Fha Lean, sailer pays all lean
and dosing casts. ULM S.
Call:........................... UI3343

N In k *

r

•Mb prtoato baRt A
r a f r l g a r a t a r . Compl ete
privacy. M l a week A *1N
security deposit. Includes
utilities. Call! 333-334* ar
3 W B I.
_______________
Fore. Apts, tori
31* Palmetto Ave.
J. Cowon. No Ptwno Coll*
RO • 1 Bdrm.. apt. K
l U M dapaait. Rak
retired. Call :44»4ff
adults, no
tme. plusdapdslt. m m * .

V

Additions A
Rtmodtling

U * A Up...

117— Commtrcial
Rtfifalt
i g L a go a r
I
I
.
^mNB
1(74 Sq Ft. Free standing build­
ing w lN w $ i9 pirttlfif. ImnrePflf WwiRwHf* T#
&gt;available. TO730*.
Retail A Office Space- I N up to
3.0M so-ft. alio storage avalli

m

m

W* Handle
The Whel# Ball Ot Wax

A L U M CONST.
322-7929

m

«M Sq F T . 11# additional If
naodad. Ample parking. SAM
Sq Ft. Laka Mary. 1 to &gt; year
tease i»sllsbt o .a &gt; 7 m

121— Condominium
Rtntols
Haw | Bdrm.. I baN Iusury
Cendes. Pa a l, tennis,
r/dryer, security. S4U
monN. Landarama FL,
par man
Inc. Celt:
SA N FO R D - S Bdrm ., paal.
waahor, dryer, mkro. Wae
medal, M M par monN. 77&gt;

________
SANFORD- S Bdrm. towwhauaa
Living A family ream. pool.
U73 par month. tCMton fa

buy! ne-sPMarM4-7M1,

EH00U1M SPECIALIST

C lt a n i n g S a r v l c t
JUST 01 HIES
Protosalonal cleaning
Call................................ TO4443
S P IC riP A N C L E A N IN O
Hama*. oHIct*. ate. Cleaning
auppitoaturnlahod.
Santord.......................... TO W N

L a n d c la a r in f
GENEVA LAMOCLSARINB
Let/Landctearing..........Fill dirt
Tepdoil...Panda....Drain dltckaa
Sit* Frmration...Call.-&gt;WJ*M

Appllanca R tfa lr
3* hr.
17 Vr.

No Extra Cbargal
.44&gt;*441,.. .474-0*33

Carpantry
All types af capantry A remadillng. 37 yaara axp. Call
Richard Orem 33I M71.
GARY'S CONSTRUCTION
Hi Phases, new cenatructlen,
addition*, dacha, etc. alio
concrete work. 13 yeoi
rtonca. Call: Gary TO -ll U

Ciaaninf Sarvica
Cadtoga Care In*.
Lie. toaursd. Banded
Iteaarkanr.ad damiakc toba
A HiN w m

Anything Btoctrtaal...Stoca 1*7*1
■*Xmato*-.34 Hr. lervlca Can*
Tom's lloctrk l*rvk*...TO-171*
G a n a ra l S a rv ic a t
aPACN 'SBN D *
304 E. Commercial Sl.Santord.
TO1137 Packaging A Shlppmg
H o m t Im p ro v a m tn t
Cailtor'a Building A Ramadallng
NaJabTaalmaU
lit Burton Lana, tontord
3)104X3

PAPER HANGING A commercial. Free Bat. Call:
BnvTevtorBt4to3._________

M a s o n ry

CUNNINGHAM A W IF I
AvoraG*)Bdrm.Hama.tU
Average Mobile Hama. M l
Call:...............................Bt-T3t4

QwmyetnwenabliM^
Special 1ilng In Flreglacaa/Brkh
Caw,--------------------------SM-TO-gm

Sacrutarlal Sarvica

Financing Avaltabto
E le c tric a l

Fapar Hanfint

cu^ w ^ ^ C TBySS

M o v i n g A H a u l in g
LIGHT Ma J l i NB
AND D ELIVERY
CaMi----------- ------------------- M U M
LOU'S HAULING- Appliance*,
junk, firewood, gareapq etc.
Cal133343171 am to 1*m

Traa Sarvica

AjTTre^arvC^^TSrel
Cert After 4 PAL: B X U M
A L L B trt TR E E SERVKB
t4M Call No Baaf«

N u rs in g C a ra
OUR M T ■ » A R

H a m a R a p a ir t
CARPENTER Repair* ani
remedtllng. No lab tea tmail.
Call: TO N 4L
»f ll^ N O « « N M J A IR ^
AJlTVpMRtotoirtl........
No W l igg wmii.......

(

Wall Drilling
P a in t in g
Cmmtogbam and Wtte. Expert
p a i n t i n g , f a i r pr i c e * .
LltllW d Colt: 331-7314.

SAVE

--- mnCBBTO
h SSi i m W E L L !

t

�•union

f i.

ForglvonoMM / i

,

ProBBuro May Prolong
DEAR
_ This
Thk •Isn't
__ ...
. „
DEAR DR.
DR. OOTT
OOTT —
nlsatloa
whose local chapters
■ strictly medical question, but I
hope you can help. Our younaest ore available through your local
hcnoital or the Yellow Pages.
began drugs at
, went all the
DEAR DR. OOTT - 1have had
way to cocaine, and even heroin.
-s ;
tr * lu* trt. - 'or
n„ i - procea* &gt; he conned and mouth far itMut ih n * &gt; ftr, tjL conditions uae sinus Infection.

12

Income. He?nw^ibiildlS'hto

•CKTLKBAILKY
a l l t h is

J»

f

i

HiKINO a m

a

r

life, at age 29. with the 1 ^ ? ^
inspiration of a lovely girl. He
has a good Job and will be
married soon. But he hasn't
been able to begin repaying us.

by Mart

p

WHAT ARP
VOtJ TALXINg

"

r

” * • , 8 " e d " c o d lc ,, E m i t t i n g

nia indebtedness and disclaim*
ing any part o f our wilts. But our
two daughters won't forgive him
" J " * l° “ Mend the wed­
ding. We feel they should give
blm emotional support. Are we
wrong? Are there any organisa­
tions or groups through which
our daughters could realise that
drugs are horrible disease and
learn forgiveness?

w n 5 ?

T H t BORN LOSER

READER “
A drug
addict can cause phenomenal
family upheaval. I think it is to
you and your husband's credit
that you have been able to
Torgive you son and persist in
•upportmg him emotionally now
that he is recovering. I’m afraid
the * Ct ° f forgiveness is a
highly
decision, nowhowj personal ucv-jsion.
m v
ever, and your daughters imay
not have progressed to the point
where they can forgive. Your

by Art
W flN D * 2 &lt; »F D R '

THAT STURDY*)*,

t a k M lm e 1* ta u d ilb ,e : th e ir# " “ Y

ARCHIE

by M M ontatia

V

m
k

“ o a zacM iiry in o u r
“ TMSATWf ntOPtCTIONj
m

*. w tA T M e w M c r '

s

s
n

s

sd

'A RCH IE'

m
»»•*

•IK A MEEK
KWOOVUHAT
V0UR7RXJBIC157/

B tA o a a a n t
EVERVmilOS
f

WHAT 1

approximately 0 0 percenTof the S ^ J S b J S i ? - J d ? * r
‘^SL80 P* " * Bl
* that
f*
time.
test
Yer
found
£ l Had about every **■*
three. doctors and clinics can normal, your bitter taste may
think of. Is there any known reflect disease in your mouth.
cause or cure far this type of
Send your questions to Dr
problem?
doit at P.O. Box 91428. Cleve­
DEAR READER — If you have land. Ohio 44101.

m

U CLI
VCkft

While you are correct In wan­
ting the family
rally CliUUflU
around
---- ” " V to s«aa«/
vm.r —
— for
r his
L&gt;- wedding, your
your
son
choice to attend Is
is yours; you
cannot speak for your daughters.
Saying that they "should'’ at„ . . .
»---- ---- *»ip s i«u y r
which may serve to push them
IU
,a^ ay- Thelr attendance.
and their forgiveness, has got to
be voluntary.
As part of his recovery, your
■on is going to have to accept
responsibility for the bad feel­
Ings he has created In his sisters.
Perhaps if your son were to show
good faith and m ake sm all

" *era s rs z

bv H n w l. ______ rest,,1
“ U? n to you. your
92 Verne he
° y H 0» b te h n c ld c r daughters could be convinced o f
his willingness to make progross. If they truly want to learn
S£E?
more about drug abuse, they
could seek help from a drug
counselor or attend meetings o f
Narcotics Anonymous, an .orga-

ACROSS

□nn

•oSsL***

ST

t tssndsf s
Msw
11 Ancient n«M
efVMi
11 New suffix

14 Car
I I Aster

11 trees
19 layer state*

lONmerty
22 Oasis'wits
21 Attest

«

_ _

CDDD

CDDD

□nc cinnn nnnn
nnn nnon nnen
□□□DC: nnn non
□nnn nnn
"nnnnn cn n n n n
non nnnn nnon
□nnn nnno nnn
nnnnnn nnnnnn
nnn o n c e
□nn nnn nnonn
□non nnno nnn
□nnn e n n n nnn
n n n n n o D c nnn

u "sWement pten L
.
H E **? 2f tody mtoeaet

J? uJH i
29 0ww?teriw

Rent)

20 le s * African
Rent
21 JeSMai erde-

29 Lawyer jeSSrj

2221

t

nwumrnasOm
*7 Meet »* e * i|

40 Claw
41 Marieabout
assart

22 Neen svfffai
24 Me

a

AM om-----“ RMHIMH

47 Adam’s
•rendeon
49 lew deyrae

a

t

n
1

It
ie

______

44 EMeet of the
Pleiades
41 Declare

te

Ri

To

[14

in

dOOMadna
41 Oees
44 Weridty
an
U a.
4 4 Sort of

I a?
112

church
4 9 Fend d u ______ _

Wla.

10 Aueeien men's
name
11 CemMant

1212. Hemen
12 Verne here

24 0e away
&gt;* Nefarious
••

•1

42

41

M

I 20

•1

•2

•4
by NIA. Inc

WIN A T BRIDGE
B y Jam es J acob y
T h e h ig hl ig ht or Prank
11 2
Stewart's "Christmas Stocking."
- j a collection of tales centering on
an Imaginary local bridge club In
late December, may well be a
tcam of four match between the
bad guys - club boor Bill Frump
and three out -of -t own p ro ­
fessionals
and the good guys
— the club regulars. The stakes
for the club were high — the
monies accumulated in the prize
fund — but that was hardly
meaningful to Frump, who had
Inherited a considerable fortune.
Our next three columns will
feature unusual plays involving
K-J combinations that only seem
by Warner Brothers like Christmas presents. In to­
day's deal. Minnie Bottoms, so
VOU SMOULD S EE WWA7$
named for her ability to get a
IN *TM£ krei^LE
b o t t o m s c o r e on e v e n
run-of-the-mill hands, was the
defender against a prosaic one

MR- MEN AND LITTLE MISS

^

7HAM A
AAJMUTEO
w A T A TIME /

HELP/WE.

•UQS BUNNY
V ^ rT ER .-fce R # A p ty
IN MV S O U P

CON SlOER
YO U R SELF

L U C K .Y

no-trump contract.
Minnie’s opening lead o f a
spade w as captured by d e­
N O R TH
clarer's king, and clubs were
4 m
prom ptly led. In addition to
VJ74
• 74 5
be i ng a n ot-so-good b rid ge
A A I0 9 I
player. Minnie was also myopic,
and so in reaching for her club W E S T
EAST
Jack she Inadvertently pulled out 4 Q I 0 8 4 2
♦ J9
the king. What was out*of*town V K 94
*AQS3
4J • ]
♦ Q 10 9
South. Bill Frump's Imported + KJ
♦ 7«S«
bridge pro. -to think? It looked
Ike a singleton king, and Just
SOUTH
4 A K3
looking at Minnie Bottoms would
flfll
tell anyone that deviousnesa was
4 A K43
not her characteristic, so de­
4QJ J
clarer finessed back against the
vulnerable: North-South
club Jack that East was pre­
Dealer South
sumed to hold. When Minnie
dug out the club Jack, declarer
Wwl
Nerth Em
had to fall by a trick In one
I NT
Pau
Piss
Pus
no-trump.
Be with us tomorrow as more
Opening lead: 4 4
myopia leads to disaster for Bill
Frump's hirelings.

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

FRANK AND ERNEST

..C \

^
1 V i. &lt; G - A
GARFIELD
l f ' 8 % TR E /

cced quietly toward them.
CANCER (June 21-July 22
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Plan a full agenda today becaus
JJl
t arS arc rin«ln g today, it the busier you are. the happie
will be because friends are say­
by Bob Th iv u
YOUR BIRTH DAY
you II feel. What's equally |m
ing nice things about you. Those
DECEM BERS. 1985
In a position to do favors will do portant is that you’ll do well a
A m o n g y o u r o u t s t a n d i n g so without being asked.
whatever you attempt.
T H E fr B A R E O V E R T H R E E
assets in the year ahead will be
L B O ( J u l y 2 3 - A u g . 22
F15CE5 (Feb. 20-March 20) Do
your ability to make and main­
Socializing
with others todaj
Bi l l i o n c e l l s i n t h e
not put lim itations on your
tain friendships. People like you;
will
spark
the
brighter aspects 01
thinking at this time; you're
this will become more evident
your
personality.
Wherever you
•&gt; H u m a n
y . ..
capable o f achievements that
with each passing day.
S ° 'y ° u wm be welcomed.
might surprise even you. Go all
■A O fTTA R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Utt'OF CO U R SE r c a n t
J l ) The best o f your leadership
P
‘
Ycn en°ugh time, things will
A R IE S (March 21-Aprll 19)
qualities will be at the fore
S E T O R G A N IZ E ? /
a..!*ay
working out to
Very soon, possibly even today,
today. Even people who have
you
re
going
to
receive
some
T
h
il
U
,
r
T
au
C
advantage
today.
|%4 »•
brief dealings with you will be
- *TV-tAN*J 12. ^
extremely
pleasing
news
from
a
r
o
^
d
in
a
'bC
C9Pec,a,1y
true
aware of this. Looking for un­
regarding your material inter­
distance. The sender will be cats.
usual Christmas stocking stuf_________ •
by Jim Davit fere? Astro-Graph predictions for someone you like.
T A U B U B (April 20-May 20) Ynn’ ~ * , A ,SCPt- 23-Oct. 23)
the year ahead make the perfect
You
re likely to be more astute You re in an excellent cycle for
gift for the entire family. Mall $1
buslnesswlse today than you r - aafu»,y Pr°m o tln g p ro ­
to Astro-Graph, c/o this newspawere yesterday. Go back and ducts, enterprises or Issues that
1846' Cincinnati. OH clean up any loose ends you’ve you believe to be worthwhile
45201. Be sure to state each left hanging.
Get out and sell.
,wmie.
person's zodiac sign.
SC O R PIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22l
G E M IN I (May 21-June 20)
C A W C O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
E v e r y t h i n g s h o u l d b e In Your possibilities for personal
Your chances for success will
b®1* " now
be greatly enhanced today If you harmony in the romance de­ than they haveare
been for quite
partment for you and yours
don't broadcast your Intentions.
today. Matters o f the heart have "om e time You could develop a
Sgt your objectives, then progreater significance than usual.
a“ ^ c" ° W from “ v'r a ' directions

ANNIE

TUM BLEW EEDS

^ Upward Starr

* T. K. Ryan

J R J S S S 5 * l HRAKVWMlBBSAli
w rO Ntihos* floo pth irfiv kiohas .
»«5MRCN.

lkm rar ch

?.

m oea rn

C t! J
f t

o*

*■

........ — --------— s

L

. - W

~ '' t t

''V

11

•

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218072">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, December 02, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218073">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218074">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on December 02, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218075">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218076">
                <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;, December 02, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218078">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218080">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218082">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218084">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="21842" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21446">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/0f31bae5f892c63f8b7d26d96c25ffd9.pdf</src>
        <authentication>be4c245aaae655786c7d7fbc651bdce5</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="218100">
                    <text>rv.

Coach Karren Newman Faces Toughest Opponent Ever, 5A

78th Year, No. 46, Tuesday, October 15, 1985— Sanford, Florida

Evening

Herald

—

(USPS

481-280)

—

Price

25 Cents

Body Of Man Missing In Boating Accident Found
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer
The body or a former Sanford man who
drowned after trying to rescue a woman knocked
overboard during a boating accident was found
Monday morning about a mile from where he
disappeared Saturday night. The woman
managed to swim back to the boat on her own.
Thomas Richard Lively. 29. of 1311 Racine
Road. Orange City, was found about 8:30 a.m.
around 300 feet north of High Bank Marina.

according to the Volusia County Sheriffs De­
partment. The area Is about 3 miles from DcBary.
Lively, a father of four, dove into the murky St.
Johns about 9:30 p.m. to help Peggy Bethel. 27,
of Goldcnrod. who was Jolted off the bow of a
28-foot cabin cruiser when It struck a channel
marker, said the boat's captain Fred Good of
Sanford, Lively's father-in-law. The channel
marker had been vandalized and was not lighted.
When Mrs. Bethel surfaced, she hollered for her
husband. Jimmy. 36. who was also on the boat.
Bethel and Lively dove in. Lively first from the

end of the boat. Good said. Lively reached the
woman but could not help her. Mrs. Bethel made
her way to the boat, which had backed up to get
the trio, while Bethel tried to help Lively who
apparently was floundering in the strong current.
Bethel tried to tow Lively by the neck but the
man struggled. He also tried to drag the man by
the shirt but the current was too strong to save
him. All three could swim. Good said.

Lively, born In Sanford in 1956. moved to
Orange City In 1980. Me was a field superin­
tendent for Briar Construction Co. in Longwood
where he worked for his father-in-law and with
his attempted rescuer. Bethel. Lively, who wus a
U.S. Army veteran leaves a wife, a son. three
daughters, his parents, six brothers, a sister and
four grandparents.

Rescuers searched a two-mllc stretch of the
river after the Incident and continued Sunday

Funeral services arc scheduled Wednesday at
Oaklawn Memorial Park. Lake Mary.

Delinquent
Driver Caught
After Chase
A Sanford police officer who
spotted a man he knows has a
suspended driver s license, ac­
cording to Jail reports, triggered
a high speed chase when the
suspect saw him and bolted.
After a chase by car and a
quick run on foot the man was
nabbed at about 3:50 p.m.
Monday.
When the driver saw the
officer he reportedly sped away
north on Tangerine Avenue and
then south onto Southwest
Road, a police report said.
Police pursuing the suspect's
1972 Mercedes reported It trav­
eled at about 60 inph on
Southwest Road, ran a slop sign
and ulmost collided with a vehi­
cle that pulled In front of it on
the roadway.
The car slid sideways onto
22nd Street and stopped on
Blackston Avenue after the left
front tire blew out. the report
said.
The suspect Jumped out of the
car and ran north on Blackston
Avenue, where a policeman on
fool caught him. Ihc report said.
Sanford Police Captain Herb
Shea said today the officer
pursued the car because a
computer record shows the
driver has had one accident. 10
traffic convictions and four sus­

Job On Line
For Longwood
Building Chief
City Set To A ir Gripes

H * r a M P lw to k y T a m m y V in c k trt

Sanford lawmen search a 1972 Mercedes
abandoned by the driver following a high-

speed chase Monday on Southwest Road in
Sanford. The driver was caught on foot.

pensions of his driver's license. driving, attempting to flee to
The 4-door car was preliminarily elude police und driving with a
searched at the scene and Im­ suspended license. He was being
pounded for further Investiga­ held at the Seminole County Jail
tion. It will be returned when the in lieu of 8500 bond.
Cotton Is on probation for
towing bill Is paid. Shea said.
Billy Lee Cotton. 30. of 33 possession of marijuana and
William Clark Court. Sanford, cocaine and Is also under a
has been charged with reckless pre-sentence Investigation on

two of the charges of driving
with a suspended license, ac­
cording to the Dept, of Correc­
tions' probation office in San­
ford. He also awaits dispositions
in the county court on charges of
breach of the peace and battery,
records show.
—Susan Loden, Deane Jordan

Sanford Nixes Pub For Fairway Plaza
By Fred Cooper
Herald Staff Writer
A request for permission to sell uleohollc
beverages at a proposed pub for Fairway
Plaza was unanimously rejected by the
Sanford City Commission.
Discussion on the proposal consumed
most of Monday night’s city meeting.
The pub was described as a 1.000 sq. ft.
establishment which would scat 32. located
at 2680 Orlando Drive owned by Lori
Enterprises. Inc.
Business and residential neighbors, a
mobile home park owner and a spokesman
for 140 p e titio n s lg n a to rs a lig n e d
themselves against the request citing noise,
proximity to schools, patronage of plaza by

school students und negative affect on
property values.
Commissioner Milton E. Smith made the
motion to disapprove.
Earlier In the meeting, commissioners
showed enthusiasm for a report by the
Youth Advisor)' Committee presented by Its
president Alvin Jo'nes. Several officers and
members of the committee were Introduced.
Citing a survey of Junior and senior high
school students. Jones said the youth of
Sanford Indicated gym facilities. Including
weights and table games, a swimming pool
and dancing area arc their greatest needs.
The committee Is planning sponsorship of a
Homecoming parade on November 15.
according to Jones.

Muyor Bet lye Smith said she will uttend a
meeting of the group soon and indicated
other commissioners may wish to do so also.
The committee is composed of both youth
and adults.
Jones indicated the parade will lollow the
same route as the Christmas Parade.
The proportion of the agenda set aside for
a public hearing to consider establishing a
historic preservation board and an Initial
historic district
and regulations for the
district attracted no discussion and the
board tentatively approved the measures to
be voted on finally Oct. 28. Mayor Smith
requested commissioners be ready to make
nominations for the board.
See SANFORD, page 8A

5 Measles Cases
At Child Center

High Court To Hear Arguments
In Major Church-State Case

By Jim Be aria
Herald Staff Writer
The discovery of five cases of measles at a
day care center In Seminole County has
prompted a meeting between school and
ebunty health department officials today lo
determine If all students in the county have
been properly Immunized.
Dr. Jorge DeJu. head of the Seminole County
health Department, will meet with Seminole
County School Superintendent Robert Hughes
today to determine the number of students In
the county who have not been immunized for
measles. Dr. DeJu said of those 40.000 students
in the school district, some have not been
immunized because of religious or medical
See MEASLES, page 8A

WASHINGTON (UPI| - The Supreme
Court, which struck down a state law
allowing prayer In public schools last
term, now faces the major church-state
case of this term — whether students
can hold their own prayer meetings In
school.
The court hears oral arguments today
in a case brought by a Christian student
group In Williamsport. Pa., which is
appealing a lower court ruling that said
allowing religious clubs to meet on
school time violated the Constitution's
prohibition against establishing religion.
A high court decision, expected some
time next year, also will help settle the
constitutionality of a federal law requir­
ing high schools to permit religious clubs

to meet during the school day.
Last term, the high court struck down
an Alabama law that mandated a
moment of silence for prayer In public
schools, saying the law unconstitu­
tionally entangled church and state.
The Williamsport case began In 1981.
when a group of students asked to meet
to discuss the Bible and pray during the
twice-weekly half-hour period allowed at
Williamsport High School for various
student clubs and activities.
School Principal W ayne Newton
agreed and 45 pupils attended the first
meeting of the group, called Petros,
which is Greek for rock. Some students
read Bible verses and some prayed.
See COURT, page 8A

United Way Has $67,059 Of $550,000 Goal
United W ay o f S em in ole
County volunteers reported a
total of $67,059 In pledges and
gifts towards this year's goal of
$550,000 at Monday's report
meeting held at the Casselberry
Senior Center.
This Includes the Oct. 4 golf
tournam ent at Sabal Point
Country Club that raised ap­
proximately $6,500.
Seminole United Way Execu­
tive Director Bob Walko said
reports are slower coming in and
this year's total Is running
behind last year at this point In

and Monday.

the m onth-long fundraising victory dinner, which will cap
the campaign, is scheduled for 6
campaign.
However. Walko said he feels p.m. at the new Altamonte
good about the drive.
Springs Hilton Towers.
" W e 'v e given more pres­
John Knapp is this year's
entations and passed out more campaign chairman.
brochures to more companies
Division chairmen Include
than ever before. We are going to
be working toward our goal right Allen Davis Jr., golf tournament:
up to Oct. 24 and beyond,” he Ivun B ow ers and B arbara
R a m b o. S e m in o le C o u n ty
said.
There is only one more report s c h o o ls : R u s s M o n c r ie f.
meeting scheduled for campaign Seminole Community College:
workers. That is a luncheon at Mike Potter. Central Florida Re­
noon on Oct. 22 at the Holiday gional Hospital and Robert
Inn In Altamonte Springs. The Blumcntrltt. Florida Hospital-

Orlando: Sanford Mayor Bettye
Smith and Gary Earl, govern­
ment; Newman Brock and Rick
Wollner. professions: Bob Patchett and Bob Douglas, financial;
Ken Cone, com m ercial anu
special gifts: Sharyn Dickerson,
m ajor In du stry: and Buck
Hodges and Ron Pruitt, major
retail.
Jim Hilton and Mary LaMay
are in charge of training and Kay
Bartholomew is in charge of
promotion. Michelle Slmos is
public relations chairman.

By Jane Casselberry
Herald 8taff Writer
After six years as head of the
building department. Longwood
Building Official R.A. "B ud"
Bryant's days with the city may
be numbered.
C om plaints made against
Bryant by City Administrator
Greg Manning will be considered
at n public hearing set for
Monduy Oct. 21.
The commission opted Mon­
day night to advertise the hear­
ing rather than discuss com­
plaints against him unofficially
ut a work session so If they
decide to lire Bryant after the
hearing it will be "by the book."
Bryant said did not care if a
public hearing Is held because
the complaints against him "are
nothing" and "do not apply to
the building department. It Just
shows how little they have
against me."
After conducting an inquiry.
Manning presented commission­
ers with his written report at
Monday night's meeting, mak­
ing specific charges against
Bryant. In the statement. Man­
ning said. "Mr. Bryant’s deliber­
ate violation of the Personnel
Policy and Procedures Manual Is
considered a very serious breach
of discipline and bring Into
question his future effectiveness
as a city employee."
in reviewing Bryant's Job per­
formance. Manning cited six
developments completed within
the last five years since the
current zoning ordinance was
adopted where there were In
d iscrep a n cies betw een the
approved site plan and regula­
tions and the completed project.

Some of Bryant's problems
stem from a vague memo sent
by him on Sept. 25 to members
of the city commission.
Manning stated “ I am con­
cerned about the unsubstan­
tiated allegations made by Mr.
Bryant which have seriously
harmed the reputation of the city
and the building department. I
believe that Mr. Bryant is guilty
of (violating) Rule No. 20 of the
Personnel Policy and Procedures
Manual which prohibits any
e m p lo y e e from m aking or
publishing any false, vicious or
malicious statement concerning
any supervisor, the city or Its
operations. I am also very dis­
turbed by Mr. Bryant's direct
Insubordination and refusal to
comply with my verbal Instruc­
tions to discuss any problems
with me prior to going to the city
commission.
He said Bryant not only failed
to discuss the memo with him
prior to its distribution, but also
failed to provide him with a
copy. In the memo Bryant stated
"...It would appear officials in
areas likely to be affected by
such catastrophlcs (such as hur­
ricanes) would look closely at
their Building Departments In
order to insure that they are
adequately staffed with compe­
tent. dedicated people whose
concern is the protection of the
health, safety and welfare of all
citizens within theirjurisdlctlon.
"It Is quite apparent that this
cannot be accomplished unless
the Building Department is
permitted to perform its duties
as prescribed by the adopted
building codes and applicable
See BUILDING, page 8A

TODAY
Action Reports..... ............2A
Bridge............... ........... 6B
Calendar............ .........3A
Classifieds.......... .....4B,5B
Comics..............
Crossword.......... ......... 6B
Dear Abby.......... ......... IB
Deaths............... ......... BA
Dr. Gott.............

Editorial.......... ........... 4B
Florida........... ........... 8A
Hospital.......... ............ 2A
Nation............ ........... 2A
People............ ........... IB
Sports............ ........ 5A-7A
Television........ ............ IB
Weather.......... ........... 8A
World............. ............ 2A

Hepburn's Secret
RADNOR. Pa. (UPI) - Actress
Katharine Hepburn says the
secret to her youthful appear­
ance and Inner happiness is
vitality.
"Lack of vitality is a terrible
lack." Hepburn. 75. wrote In an
article In the Oct. 19 Issue of TV
Guide. "It can mean that you
Just don't try."
"S o m e tim e s you have a
choice — to try or not to try.
And you can't make yourself
try. It's that negative attitude
and Just a terrible habit." the
actress said.
Hepburn said despite the
physical limitations of old age
she finds satisfaction and
strength In physical activity.
"W h at do I consider my
vitality V
First, physical vitality — that
which makes me clean that
room, dig that (lower bed." she
said.

�IA — Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Tuesday, Oct. IS, IMS

NATION
IN BRIEF
Arkansas Retailer
Is Richest American
NEW YORK (UPI) — The richest* person In America
drives a pickup truck, owns a chain of discount stores In
small towns and has a name that probably woidd go
unrecognized by most people outside of Arkansas.
He's Sam Walton and he's worth $2.8 billion.
According to a survey published by Forbes Magazine
Monday, the homespun Arkansas retailer has passed
Gordon Getty, son of oil magnate J. Paid Getty, as the
wealthiest person in the country.
The magazine listed -12 first-time entries In Its annual
compilation of the country's -100 wealthiest — people
whose net worth lops $i50 million. Their combined
fortunes totaled $134 billion, an average of $335 million
each.
Walton drives a pickup truck — and owns the 745-store
Wal-Mart chain. Last year, Wal-Mart did a business of $6.4
billion, mostly In small towns In the Sun Belt. Walton and
his family own 54 million shares of the concern's stock.
Walton began his career as a J.C. Penny Co. Inc.
management trainee in 1940. After operating a group of
Ben Franklin stores with his brother, James. Walton
opened the first Wal-Mart in Rogers. Ark., on July 2. 1962.

UA W Chrysler Strike Likely
DETROIT (UPI) — The first United Auto Workers union
strike against Chrysler Corp. In the United States since
1973 appeared more likely as little progress was reported
among negotiators facing a deadline of midnight today.
A 17-hour bargaining session recessed at about 2 a.m.
EDT today. Talks were scheduled to resume at 9 a.m. One
source said Chrysler delivered "new pieces” of an
economic proposal, but neither side would confirm the
report.
UAW spokesman Bob Barbee said Monday that union
subcommittees had met with management, but had made
little headway. On Monday night. UAW shop stewards
prepared for a walkout authorized by workers last week.
Across the border in Canada, contract talks between
Chrvslcr-Canada and the ncwly-lndcpcndcnt UAW-Canada
look an optimistic turn late Monday, as union leaders
reacted favorably to a new financial package.
Contracts are being negotiated separately for the first
time by the UAW and its newly Independent Canadian
branch. The pacts will cover 70.000 U.S. workers and
10.400 in Canada.
In the U.S. talks, the UAW rejected Chrysler's initial offer
last Wednesday, and as of early today the company had not
made another official proposal.

Prison Guard Hostages Released
LUCASVll.LE. Ohio (UPI) — Two guards held hostage for
about 15 hours by Inmates at a maximum-security prison
were released unharmed early today after officials agreed
to transfer four Inmates, including three on death row’, to
another facility.
The guards were set free from the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility after officials agreed to the transfers
and to allow a list of inmates' grievances to be read over a
local radio station, said Bob Prosser, a spokesman for the
Ohio Department of Corrections.
Prosser said the guards. Randy Mehaffcy and Bill Dunn,
were not harmed during the ordeal. They were taken
hostage shortly at about 12:30 p in. Monday in the J-l cell
block, which is reserved for difficult inmates.
Dunn was released by the inmates at 2:53 a.m. EDT In
exchange for a radio. Mehaffev was released at 3:46 a.m.
after the Inmates heard the grievances broadcast by the
radio station.
The four inmates. Jay Scott. John William Byrd Jr..
William G. Zuern and Eric M. Swofford. all of Ohio, left the
prison at about 4:30 a.m. cn route to the Franklin County
Jail in Columbus. Prosser said.
Byrd. Scott and Zuern all have been sentenced to death.

Killer Wants To 'Die In Peace '
MICHIGAN CITY. Ind. (UPI) — Even an organization
called HOPE seems to have given up on condemned killer
William Vandiver, who insists Ids execution lake place as
scheduled Wednesday.
"I want to be left alone to die in peace." Vandiver, 37.
said in a recent interview.
Vandiver, of Chicago, is scheduled to die In an electric
chair at the Indiana State Prison for the March 1983
stabbing death and dismemberment of his father-in-law.
Paul Komyutti Sr.. 65. of Hammond. Ind.
The Rev. Wanda Callahan, spokeswoman for Hoosiers
Opposing Executions (HOPEI, said her group will not hold
a vigil at tile prison because Vandiver lias chosen not to
fight the execution order.
"W e as an organization choose life rather than death."
she said, "and will, therefore, exert our energy trying to
keep the rest ol the men on death row alive." Henry
Schwarzchild of the American Civil Liberties Union s
Cupital Punishment Project said from New York his
organization still has not found a way to stop the
execution. Barring any last minute snags, the switch will
be thrown shortly after 12:01 a.m. EDT Wednesday, but no
later than sunrise, state correction officials said.

Ricky Skaggs Top Entertainer
NASHVILLE. Tcnn. (UPI) — Country music turned the
clock back by naming the industry's top traditionalist.
Rlckv Skaggs, as entertainer of the year.
Skaggs, a bluegrass influenced singer from Kentucky,
beat out Alabama, an upbeat, more contemporary group,
and Lee Greenwood. Reba McEntire and George Strait in
the Country Music Association’s 19th annua) awards show
broadcast Monday night from the Grand Old Opry House.
Skaggs' victory had to be considered a major upset
because of the dominance of Alabama, a group that had
won tlie prestigious award the three previous years and
which continued to be leaders In record sales and concert
tickets.
Skaggs. Strait and the Judds were the only multiple
winners during the awards show. Skaggs' band was named
Instrumental group of the year.
The Judds, a mother-daughter team, won vocal group
and single of the year for "W hy Not Me." The single award
is given to the best song by a performer.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C e n tr a l F lo r id * R e g io n a l H o ip iU I
M onday
A D M IS S IO N S
L t m m l , B B e lla m y
J o h n C C re w *
D o r o lh r in c R L illie *
Jo te p h R M o o re
C r y s ta l R T a lle y
N a n cy C V a n d u ie n
Dor a A H a u le r , A lta m o n te S p rin g *
K a th y E Irv in e . C a * * e lb e rry
G a b rie le D a p la n o . D e lto n a

L o v e n ia M T o m a ton. G e n e v a
R o b e rt J C a r r o ll, O ra n g e C ity
C la r e R. M a y * . O ra n g e C ity
S a n lo rd

D IS C H A R G E S
S a n lo rd
D o r i* B S m ith
K a th le e n s . R eard o n . L a k e M a r y
G e rtru d e M C o n k lin . O ra n g e C ity
M a d e lin e C H a rd y , O ra n g e C it y

MIT Professor
Gets Nobel Prize
For Economics
STOCKHOLM. Sweden (UPI)
— Italian-born American Franco
Modigliani today won the Nobel
Memorial Prize in Economic
Science for his pioneering analy­
ses of household savings and
corporate finance.
Modigliani, 67. a professor of
economics at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, won the
$225,000 award for developing a
theory that people save for their
old age and for theoretical analy­
ses on which corporate finance is
based.
The prize was the third Nobel
to be awarded this year and all
have Involved Americans. Two
A m erican gen eticists were
awarded the prize for medicine
Monday ar d a Itrston-based an­
ti-nuclear .roup inundcd by an
American and a Soviet won the
Nobel Peace Prize Friday.
Modigliani, reached by tele­
phone at his home in Belmont.
Mass., said. "I'm very, very
pleased ... thnt my work has
been recognized. This Is a nice
way to crown my career.
"I will use (the prize money) in
a c c o rd a n c e w ith m y own
theories of how people behave —
namely, distribute It over the
rest of my life." Modigliani said.
"I'm not going to go on a binge. I
will use it gradually. That's what
my theory says people do."
Modigliani, who was born in
Rome and became a U.S. citizen
in 1946. said he began his study
on saving habits 30 years ago.
"Saving plays a very Impor­
tant role in econom ic life
because it is what permits in­
vestment and capita) formation,
which is in turn what is behind
growth and well being." he said.
” 1 have been studying why
people accumulate or don't and I
have a view that Is quite dif­
ferent from what used to be
believed before." Modigliani
said. "It Is related to the notion

that the major reason why peo­
ple save is for retirement or for
major expenditure."
M od iglian i published his
theory on the life cycle house­
hold saving in 1954. The theory
has been used as the theoretical
basis for the study of pension
and retirement systems, the
Royal Swedish Academy said.
"In particular, it has proved an
Ideal tool for analyses of the
effects of different pension
systems." the academy said.
"Most of these analyses have
indicated that the introduction
of a general pension system
leads to a decline In private
saving."
While the life-cycle savings
hypothesis deals primarily with
microeconomics, the academy
a ls o c i t e d M o d i g l i a n i 's
macroeconomic work in 1958
w ith A m e ric a n eco n o m ist
Merton Miller. The ModiglianiMiller theorums helped form the
basis of corporate finance.
Awards commute member
Annsar Llndbcck said Modigliani
"gave birth" to the field of
corporate finance.
The choice of Modigliani con­
tinued a trend in which the
economics prize is awarded to an
aging American professor from
an elite university. Economists
from the United States have won
13 of the 23 awards announced
since the Nobel Prize in Econom­
ic Sciences was established In
1969.
Modigliani is the second Nobel
economic laureate from MIT.
Economist Paul Samuelson won
the Nobel in 1970.
"The United States has gained
a position of dominance because
it has an enormously efficient
university system." said Up­
psala U n iversity P rofessor
Ragnar Bcntzcl. one of the five
Nobel economics Judges.

Harald Photo by Tommy Vincent

Flying High
Eight-year-old Laura Craft rides high on a spinning swing at
the Wll-WIn mini carnival. Wll-WIn, an organization designed
to help the disable learned |ob skills, opened Its new thrift
store and workshops at 25th Street and Old Lake M ary Road
Saturday. Laura is the daughter of Roy and Ann Craft of
Longwood.

Ballot Counting Equipment Test Set
In preparation for the $100
million school bond referendum
on Oct. 22. Seminole County
Supervisor of Elections Sandra
Goard Is expected to test ballot
counting equipment 3:30 p.m.
Friday In her office in the
County Services Building, 1101
E. First St.. Sanford.
The procedure, which is a
logic and accuracy test required
by law. Isopen to tlie public.
A deck of pro-punched test
ballot cards will be run through
the computer to make sure it is

counting correctly. The same
cards will be processed again
before and after ballots from the
referendum are counted as an
added precaution.
Seminole county voters will
have the opportunity to vote on
bond issue between 7 a.m. and 7
p.m. on Oct. 22 at their assigned
polling places.
The ballot counting equipment
will be checked again prior to
the three municipal elections on
Nov. 3.

Man Gets Two Years For Pot Possession
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer
j
A motel guest arrested on a
I drug charge after he drew suspi­
cion by peering Into cars in the
motel parking lot has been
sentenced to
years in prison
for possession of marijuana. He
is one of four persons with
criminal charges against them to
appear In court recently.
Roland Kenneth Smith. 24. of
28 E. 8th St.. Apopka, was also
ordered by Circuit Judge Ken­
neth M. Lefllcr to pay the Public
Defender's office $300. Smith
pleaded guilty to the charge Oct.
8.
Smith attracted suspicion
April 30 after the manager of the
Fern Park M otel, on U.S.

Highway 17-92. Fern Park, saw
the nighttime reconnaissance.
After a deputy arrived at the
motel. Smith ignored his knocks
though he eventually did let the
deputy Into the room, a sheriffs
report said.
The deputy reported seeing
marijuana laying on a table in
the room and more pot was
found on the bathroom floor and
In Smith’s pocket.
v •{ u u i i c r eotxrt act .'on a
21-year-old Winter Park barmaid
pleaded guilty to possession of
cocaine. She was originally
charged with sale of cocaine but
pleaded to the lesser charge.
Edle Michelle Parnell’s June
25 arrest was sealed April 27
when she reportedly sold ‘4i

ounce ol cocaine lor $80 to
undercover agents. At tlie time
of the sale she was manager anti
b arm aid o f the H id eaw ay
L o u n g e . S ta te Road 436.
Casselberry, a sheriffs reports
said.
She could receive up to a year
In the county Jail when sen­
tenced Nov. 20 by Leftler.
(n a third case a Winter
Springs man, hit with a drug
charge after being stopped for
speeding, has pleaded guilty to
trafficking cocaine.
Daryl Kenneth Parkhurst. 21.
of 251 Tradcwinds Road, en­
tered the pica before LcITlcr who
set Nov. 30 for sentencing.
Parkhurst faces a mandatory
sentence of at least 3 years and a
mandatory sentence of at least

S50.000.
A Florida Highway Patrol
tro o p er reported stopping
Parkhurst’s vehicle at about
2:30 a.m. Dec. 23 after the car
was clocked at 110 mph on State
Road 436 In Altamonte Springs.
A search of the vehicle re­
vealed three bags of cocaine.
In another case heard:
Michael Frank Plutrowskl. 28.
o f 2 0 0 7 E . L a k e D r iv e ,
Casselberry, arrested May 6 on a
charge of selling Vi ounce of
cocaine to an undercover agent
April 19. Plutrowskl pleaded
guilty to a lesser charge of
possession of cocaine. He could
receive up to a year In the
county Jail when sentenced by
Leffler Oct. 30.

D is n e y , J e r r y L e w is FBI R e p o rt To p ics
PHOENIX (UPI) - Former FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover ordered agents to scrutinize
Walt Disney Productions because he felt a
1962 Disney film portrayed his agents as
Inept and inane, the Arizona Republic
reported Monday.
The late director was upset that bumbling
characters in the Disney movie "Moon
Pilot" were Identified as FBI agents and that
Disney, a friend, reluctantly changed the
reference to them to "federal security
agents." the Republic said.
An FBI file on Disney, obtained by the
newspaper through a Freedom of Informa­
tion request, contained a copy of a review of
the movie with a handwritten note In the
margin that said. "I am amazed Disney
would do this. He probably has been

Infiltrated."
There is no proof who wrote the comment
but other information in the file indicates It
was Hoover, the Republic said.
The file deals primarily with Disney but
also contains information on comedian
Jerry Lewis. The file has a single, unex­
plained reference to Lewis as "the un­
scrupulous actor." the Republic said.
After reading a summary of the script of
"Moon Pilot." Hoover directed his chief Los
Angeles agent to meet with Disney and tel)
him "the bureau will strongly object to any
portrayal of the FBI In this film.” the report
said.
Disney said he would change the refer­
ence to the officials from FBI agents to
"federal security" agents, although he

thought the change "unrealistic." another
file memo said.
"He (Disney) stated that he would never
portray the FBI other than in a favorable
light due to his esteem for the director and
the bureau." said a memo to Hoover.
Movie reviewers commented that the film
leveled a "humorous rifle" at the FBI.
depicting the agency "as a mass of dolts."
Another Disney movie, "That Darn Cat."
produced in 1964, also cuused grumbling
among FBI agents.
The bureau closely monitored the pro­
posed film's progress and an August 1964
memo to Hoover said, "an established
source at the Disney studios" revealed that
the screenplay "depicts the FBI in a most
complimentary manner."

Weekend Thieves Steal Cars, Siberian Huskey \
Weekend thieves went for va­
riety In Seminole County steal­
ing everything from a dog. to
cash, to stereo gear and cars.
Among the cars stolen was the
1972 Ford o f R oxanne J.
Hammaker. 29. of 1303 McNeil
Road. Altamonte Springs, taken
from her home on Saturday or
Sunday. A sheriffs report said
the car is valued at $ 1.200.
A $240 iawnmower was stolen
from a utility building at the
home of Rudolph A. Rozang, 49,
of 507 South St.. Altamonte
Springs, on Sunday, a sheriffs
report said.

1424 F ariw ay Oaks Drive,
Casselberry. A sheriffs report
said the vehicles were not
locked.
A pump, a motor and a tank
with a combined value of about
$1,000 were stolen from a yard
at 205 Pine St.. Geneva, on
Saturday or Sunday. James L.
Van Horn, of Geneva, reported
his loss to deputies.

A Siberian huskey worth $350
was stolen from the front yard of
Jeff W. Lelfurneau. 26. or 1926
Linneal Beach Drive. Apopka, on
Saturday, a sheriffs report said.
Linda Lee Abb &gt;lt. 37. of Re­ And at 1951 Linneal Beach
dwing Way. Casselberry, told Drive. Bruce Anthony Mater. 22.
police a thief took $200 from her r e p o r t e d 'a 1 9 8 5 H o n d a
purse and $50 from the purse of motorcycle worth $2,800 was
Patricia Lee Aide. 29. of Orlando, stolen from his garage, deputies
after they fell asleep at a party at said.
2231 W. Lake Brantley Drive.
L o n g w o o d . on S u n d a y , a
Sara L. Swingle. 27. of 1900
sheriff s report said.
Heathwood St.. Casselberry,
reported $520 worth of Items
Two radar detectors worth Including (wo suitcases, stereo
$250 were stolen Saturday or gear and a microwave oven were
Sunday from vehicles parked In stolen from her home between
the driveway of Kevin Spolski of Oct. 4 and 12.

George C. Kourtls, 15. of 792
W h ite Oak St., A ltam on te
Springs, reported to sheriffs
deputies he found a briefcase
and some scattered papers in his
yard on Saturday. The items
belong to Gerald D. Mcclrcalh.
40, of 1064 Blackwood St.,
across the street from Kourtls'
home, a sheriffs report said.
They had been stolen from his
vehicle and Mcelrcath told depu­
ties the briefcase had contained
$3,200 cash, a $5,000 cashiers
check and a $150 handgun. The
Items were stolen Friday or
Saturday, the report said.

4
C a lvin H a m ilto n . 54, o f
Western Grove, Ark., reported to
Seminole County sheriffs depu­
ties he was drinking with a
group under the Wcklva River
Bridge overpass and loaned his
car to someone. After he got the
vehicle back he discovered his
wallet containing $406 was
missing. The theft occurred
Friday or Saturday, a sheriffs
report said.

E i w i i n g llc t u ld
I U S P S 411 110)

A 1984 Lincoln worth $20,000
has been stolen from the garage
of Nathan Hargcs, 33. of 6420
Admiral Point. Oviedo. Deputies
reported the car was taken
Friday or Saturday.
Property manager at the Girl
Scout Camp. Stale Road 419,
Chuluota. reported to sheriffs
deputies a $950 portable radio
was stolen from the camp be­
tween Aug. 20 and Sept. 20.
Scott Cole. 34. of Chuluota. filed
the report Saturday.

Tuesday, October lj, t?as
Vol. 78, No. 44
Published Daily and Sunday, eicepl
Saturday by The Sanlord Harold.
Inc. 100 N. French Ave., Sanlord,
Flo. 11771.
Socond Clait Postage Peldot Sanlord.
Florida 11771
Homo Dolivory: Week. *1.10/ Month,
04.71/ 1 Month*, SU.ll/ a Month*,,
027.00/ Ytar, 011.00. By Mail: Waek
01.00/ Month, 00.00/ 1 Month*.
010.00/ 0 Month*, 011.00/ Yoor,
040.00.
Phono &lt;MS) 111 1 *1 1 .

�Grabbed Walking Through Apartment Complex

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tueeday, Oct. IS, tfIS—3A

M aitland G irl, 16, Beaten, Raped By Two M en
A 16-year-old Maitland girl
reported to Seminole County
sheriffs deputies she was benten
and sexually assaulted by two
men. The girl snld she was
grabbed by the pair as she
walked through a Fern Park
apartment complex on her way
to visit a Mend at about 11 p.m.
Saturday.
The girl reported she was
grabbed as she walked near the
sw im m in g pool at T iffa n y
Square Apartments. The sus­
pects dragged her to a handball
court, beat her. ripped off her
clothes and sexually assaulted
her. They took her clothes and
purse when they fled, a sheriffs
report said.
The girl was left unconscious
on the court and when she
awoke at about 6 a.m. Sunday
she went to her friend's home
and made contact with the
sheriffs department. Deputies
who questioned the girl said she
had scraped elbows and her face
was swollen and discolored. She
was examined at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford.
WINDOWS SMASHED
A 22-ycar-old A ltam on te
Springs man who allegedly
smashed the windows out of 555
N. Lake Blvd. *53. Altamonte
Springs, during a dispute with a
woman who claimed to police he
was there to take their Infant
daughter from her. has been
charged with burglary to an
occupied dwelling.
Altamonte Springs police who
arrived at the scene at about 6
p.m. Sunday as the suspect and
two other men were leaving in a
vehicle, pursued und captured
the suspect who reportedly fled
on fool into an nearby apart­
ment. u police report said.
The man arrested had re­
portedly been involved In a
confrontation with Kimberly
Lucdecke. 22, of 555 N. Lake
Blvd., over their daughter. Ms.
Lucdecke was cut on the ankle
when the suspect allegedly
broke windows out of her home
with his fists, police reported.
Richard Douglas Corbitt of 550
Holloway Ave. *21. was arrested

at a 6:28 p.m. He wns being held
In lieu of $8,000 bond.
BEHIND TREE ATTACK
A Winter Park man reportedly
involved In a dispute at a
Casselberry apartment ran when
Seminole County sheriff s depu­
ties arrived on the scene. A
deputy who chased the suspect
reported the man hid behind a
tree and Jumped out to punch
him in the chest und continue
running.
The man was nabbed, but
allegedly resisted when deputies
attempted to handcuff him. The
other person reportedly involved
in the original dispute at the
Semoran North Apartments,
State Road 436. refused to file
charges against the suspect and
would not make a statement to
deputies, a sheriff s report said.
Robert Thomas Clay, 24. of
1920 C a rrtg a n A v e .. w as
charged with battery on a policeofficer and resisting arrest with
violence at about 4 a.m. Sunday.
He has been released on $3,000
bond and Is scheduled to appear
in court Oct. 28.
KNIFEMAN NABBED
A man chased by Altamonte
Springs police from it van parked
at Palm Springs Printing, 584
Palm Springs Drive, reportedly
discarded a knife during the
chase. After he was nabbed the
man reportedly said the knife
was lor protection, because he
had been beaten before. Police
charged him with armed bur­
glary to a conveyance.
The officer became suspicious
of the suspect he saw standing
outside the van reaching inside
11 at about midnight Saturday.
The man appeared to be moving
something inside the vehicle and
ran when he spotted police. He
refused a police order to stop,
but was eventually nabbed at
Atrum IN. 4999 Cranes Roost
Blvd.. a police report said.
Police reported finding a 10Inch. sheathed knife in a Federal
Express box near the suspect.
He reportedly said the knife was
Ills and he carried it for protec­
tion. a police report said.
Owner of the van and the print

CALENDAR
TUESDAY,OCT. IS
I Can Cope, an education
program for cancer patients and
their families. 7 to 9 p.m..
private dining room of South
Seminole Hospital. 555 State
Road 434, Longwood. Tuesdays
through Nov. 19. To register or
for Information rail 834-1200
ext. 892.
24-Hour AA group beginners
open discussion. 8 p.m.. Second
and Bay Streets. Sanford.
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m..
c lo s e d . M essiah L u th eran
Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road.
Ovcreaters Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m.. Florida Power A
Light. 301 S. Myrtle Ave.. San­
ford.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 16
Full Gospel Business Men's
F e llo w s h ip In t e r n a t io n a l
breakfast meeting, 6:30 a.m..
Holiday Inn. State Road 436 and
W y m o re R oad. A lta m o n te
Springs. For details call 6564255.
Casselberry Rolury breakfast.
7:30 a.m.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive.
Jewish Young Singles, 8 p.m..
Jewish Community Center. 851
N. Maitland Ave.. Maitland.2
COPE Su pport G rou p o f
Sem inole Area, 7:30 p.m..
Seminole Community Mental
Health Center. Cranes Roost
Office Park. Suite 377. Pelican

Building, Altamonte Springs.
First and third Wednesdays lor
families and caregivers of long­
term mentally disabled. Free of
charge.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford. 9 a.m. to
5 p .m . F lo r id a H o s p ita lAltamonte Branch. 11 a.m. to 7
p.m.
Sanford Kiwanis Club, noon,
Sanford Civic Center.
THURSDAY, OCT. 17
South Seminole Senior Citi­
zen s. 1 p.m .. C a sselb erry
Woman's Club. Overbrrok Road.
Opal Register will present pro­
gram on Scandinavian trip.
National Action for Former
Military Wives. 6:30 p.m.. up­
dated information will be given
on any new or proposed legisla­
tion regarding m ilitary exspouse laws. Call 628-2801 lor
information on meeting place.
Square dancing lor the handi­
capped. 3:30 to 5:30 p.m..
Eastmonte Center. Altamonte
Springs. Fee is SI a month. For
information call 862-0090.
R E A C T U nit. 7:30 p.m ..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N. Lake Triplet Drive.
Sweet A delin es (w om en's
barbershop chorus), 7 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N . Lake T r ip le t D r Iv e .
Casselberry.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed.
First United Methodist Church.

Fall .Fest
Savings.
SAVE 10% ON EVERY
GAS APPLIANCE 0
IliiN grills, tinier healers, ranges, tlners
|F|0(idl ,,u,)1(t. t mm,.*
.... . On-iL,-* OutOMTiliti-lr.....
Killian, Uni frrmn rfllrh-lil immIn

I fW V ® D P / } I |

Action Reports

Timothy Ballard Kroger. 22. of
1805 W. Fourth St.. Sanford, has
been charged in the case and
was being held In lieu or $5,000
bond.
FLED AFTER ACCIDENT
A 30-ycar-old Casselberry man
who reportedly fled after Ills car
was Involved In an accident with
a motorcycle at Semoran North
Apartments. Casselberry, drove
away, but was arrested after his
damaged car was found parked
near the scene, a police report
said.
Kenneth John Lyman. 23. of
Minnesota received a broken fool
and back Injuries in a crash
when a car cut in front of his
motorcycle at about midnight
Friday. Police reported he was
treated at Florida HospitalAltamontc Springs and damage
to his bike was estimated at
$600.
The suspect's car. with a
damaged rear bumper, was re­
portedly seen circling the Re­
flections Apartments, and was
later found parked at Semoran
North Apartments, a police re­
port said. Damage to that vehicle
was estimated at $900.
Kurt L. Elliot, of 1230 Reflec­
tions Circle, has been charged
with leaving the scene of an
accident with injuries and vio­
lating the right-of-way. He was
Jailed at 3:18 a.m. after being
arrested al Semoran North
Apartments. He has been re­
leased on S5.000 bond and is
scheduled to appear in court Oct.
28.

REGISTER TO
WINEXCITING

oa

o.

* A

On* grill, nn essories ami rooMxmk

In Amt Sate Mono
While V hj Save Korns
Sale End* Ntm-mber 27 M
Financing Waitable
o

jy

D o Today”
—

Sun Bank is ready to
loan you money today
...for a new car, boat,
home improvements or
any worthwhile reason.
And our simple inter­
est loans are designed
so that you only pay on
the amount of money
you owe and only for

P o o r R i c l u u x l ’s A l m a n a c

the amount of time it
takes to pay the loan
back. The savings can
really add up.
So don't wait till
tomorrow...call or visit
any of our conveniently
located Sun Bank
offices today.

Us
The bright w ay to bank.

U K IflinVl (ONMMV
ND

IIO

b M

C o u r OR A t IO N

your g a s c o .
briand
an vmhsmm-w d:u nr&gt;i
Sa n lon l

II III H IMIi M r.122-573.1

DUIARRE8T8
The following persons have
been arrested In Sem inole
County on a charge of driving
under the influence:
-Robert F. Barnes. 27. of 1436
F a i r w a y Oaks Dri ve.
Casselberry, was arrested at
3:10 a.m. Saturday, after his car
traveling north on U.S. Highway
17-92. Casselberry, hit the curb
several times. The vehicle lost a
hubcap and one of its rear tires
blew out. but Barnes continued
to drive until stopped by a
Florida Highway patrolman.
—Thomas Edward Stofiel, 36. of
Orlando, at 8:18 p.m. Friday
after a woman allcrtcd Alta­
monte Springs police to a possi­
ble drunk driver on State Road
436.
—Dexter R. Goody. 54, or 357
Cherokee Court. Altam onte
Springs, at 12:10 a.m. Saturday
on State Road 434. He has also
been charged with driving with a
s u s p e n d e d lic e n s e and
possession of a suspended
license.
-W anda Ann McCall. 29. of 789
D Orient a Ave.. Altam onte
Springs, at 12:05 a.m. Sunday,
after her car failed to maintain a
single lane on State Road 434 in
west Seminole County.
—Paul S. Robertson. 43. of
Orlando, at 5:30 p.m. Sunday on
Interstate 4 at Lake Mary
Boulevard. Lake Mary, after his
car failed to maintain a single
lane. He has also been charged
with driving with a revoked
license.

WhenY)u Needa Loan..
“N ew r Leave
That T ill
Tom orrow
W hich Ifou C an

I and much, mm li mure nn- on site lum al

I Ii-.HI .iih I r n c l n m n l tn iin U » (iio iihi-I .lu llm rtli ini&lt; «&gt; llri4!aw tU m r» T .ilr hnm«n I r ir M n in e tm Ih h llm Unit U l U i i ImiIIi -I * llh i i r r t T:i|i|im J t .iiw |»un h a w

HURRY!

perty damage, careless driving,
attcmplng to flee to elude police,
obstruction by resisting without
v io le n c e , d r iv in g w ith o u t
★ Fires
headlights and running a stop
sign. He has been released on
★ Courts
$5,500 bond and Is scheduled to
appear In court Oct. 22 and 28.
★ Police
HEAD BASHED
A 34-ycar-old Sanford man
shop Virgil Thomas was con­ who allegedly hit his wife In the
tacted by police and reportedly head with a Jack handle during
said the suspect did not have an argument outside their home
permission to be In Ills van. the Saturday has been charged with
report said.
aggravated battery.
Donald Todd Adkins. 18, of
The woman, who was not
275 Cranes Roost Blvd., *222, named In a Sanford police re­
has been charged In the case. He port. was treated at Central
was being held In lieu of $10,000 Florida Regional Hospital, San­
bond.
ford.
DRIVER FLED, CAUGHT
G e o r g e C o r b in o f * 7 6
Casselberry police reported Seminole Gardens, was arrested
catching up with a driver who at his home. He was being held
reportedly lied after his vehicle in lieu of $8,000 bond.
was Involved In an accident with
DISORDERLY THEFT
another car on U.S. Highway
A man charged with disorderly
17-92. Casselberry, at about 7 conduct after Altamonte Police
p.m. Saturday.
spotted him urinating on the
Police reported witnesses at roadside of State Road 436 had a
the accident scene described the charge of auto theft added after
suspect's vehicle and police they determined the car In his
spotted and pursued the car possession was stolen, a police
from Lakcvlcw Avenue, to U.S. report said.
Highway 17*92, to State Road
The man was arrested at 12:41
436 and back to 17-92, where a.m. Monday and police reported
police farced the suspect's vehi­ they determ in ed the 1971
cle. which at times was driven Chevrolet he had possession of
without headlights on. to stop.
had been stolen while parked at
John Henry Scanlon. 33. of the Islander Bar. U.S. Highway
1080 Laurel Oaks Court, Oviedo,
17-92, Sanford. Owner Cedric B.
was arrested at 7:18 p.m. Satur­ Keith, 25, of 2740 Ridgewood
day. He has been charged with Ave. *49, Sanford, told police he
aggravated assault, leaving the wanted to press charges, a police
scene of an accident with pro­ report said.

Member FDIC/Cl#85 Sun Dank*. Inc

�E v e n in g H e r a ld
(USPS 481-280)

:ux&gt; N FRENCH AVE . SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Code 305-322-26 1I or 831-9993
Tuesday, October 15, 1985—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins. Advertising Director

llnmr Delivery Week. SI lo Month SI 75 A Months
Sl-t 25 i&gt; Months S27 On Vo.tr Sol no Hv Mail Wi-i-k
SI ail Montli Sit (Ml 3 Months SIHOO It Months $32 50
Vr.it Still (K&gt;

Lehman Too Good
For Navy Tastes?
John F. Lehman II. 38 years old when he
took office, was one o f the youngest Navy
secretaries in history. He has become one of
the most successful. He makes his pre­
decessor in tin* Carter years, the courtly
Edward Hidalgo, seem a polished nonentity.
But now the question is being asked. Has
Lehman been too successful for the N avy’s
own good?
A phenom enal pace o f spen din g and
expansion has been set. It cannot possibly be
maintained. What will the impact on the
Navy be. when key goals and objectives are
cut back?
That is the question asked in a Congressio­
nal Budget Office study published recently.
“ Future Budget Requirements for the 600Ship N a vy."
It says the Navy should meet its goal of 600
battle force ships by the end of this decade.
That will be a result of increasing the Navy's
budget at a real (inflation-adjusted) average
annual rate of about 7.5 percent in the last
five years. The momentum is irreversible.
The new ships will be built.
But to support and operate and maintain
and m odernize a 600-ship Navy in the 1990s.
the N avy's budget will have to continue to
increase at a real rate of between 3 percent
and 5 percent a year, the CBO calculates.
"S u ch sustained real grow th would be
unprecedented in peacetim e." the budget
experts note. The premise of their latest study
is that, based on historical precedent and
recent congressional budget-cutting actions,
the m oney won't be forthcoming.
Three possible strategies to accom m odate
the budget cuts are considered in the study:
Strategy 1 — Cut investment, resulting in a
smaller or older Navy.
Strategy 2 — Reduce support expenditures.
Strategy 3 — Procure less expensive ships.
T h e s e a r c n ot m u t u a lly e x c l u s i v e
alternatives, and probably all o f them will be
implem ented in combination. Congress and
the Navy, as the CBO suggests, had best
make long-range plans now to accommodate
the budget cuts that arc likely to come.
Otherwise the N avy's readiness and capabili­
ty could be severely affected.
Lehman will have to play a leading role. It
will be a test of his toughness and his tactical
genius. It will not make him so popular as his
success in getting the lion's share of the
Reagan defense buildup for the Navy. It may
be even more difficult. But it will be just as
important.
The budget deficit is now the decisive factor
in our national life. Unless there is a sudden
surge in federal revenues, a deep cut in
d om estic spending or a change in the
president's attitude toward a tax increase,
defense spending must level off and perhaps
decline. Because the Navv has done so well, it
will be the lirst service to feel the pinch.

No Tea Party
11 the British had only waited, there would
have been no Boston Tea Party, and the
United States might never have become a
nation.
In the 18th century, tea was the drink in
the Colonies. When the British unwisely
decided to put a tax on it. Boston merchants
got angry and created a bit ol history by
dum ping tea cargoes off the sides of ships.
We were reminded of this recently by a
newspaper article about how to make tea
correctly. It is som ething that few people
know how to do. and virtually no restaurants
even try to do.
If the Reagan administration put a tax on
tea. most people would not care. Today.
Am ericans do not have enough loyalty to tea
to dump it in Boston Harbor, which is a pity.
In fact, tea drinkers arc am ong the most
abused segm ents of American society. Just
try getting a warm cup of tea in the m orning
lor breakfast at a hotel. Usually some lout
brings it with a tea bag immersed in tepid
water.
This m ay not seem Important to coffee
drinkers, but it is a sign ol the times. And tea
d rin k ers m ight w ell con clu de that our
national taste is going down the drain.

BERRYS WORLD

“ The bloom is off the rose — rather like it is
with the HIGH-TECH STO C KS we bought."

DONALD LAMBRO

Do Black Voters Differ From Leaders?
.it
WASHINGTON — Republican strategists
nationally who approve of Reagan's overall 27 percent of all blacks say they're liberal.
The poll created an uproar among black
should carefully study the results of a new
performance.
leaders who attended the Congressional Black
survey which finds that national black leaders
— Prayer in the public schools? Only 40 Caucus conference here two weeks ago. Rep.
are much more liberal than the black public on
percent
of black leaders polled favor it, com­ Mickey Leland. D-Texas. its chairman, said.
a number of political Issues.
pared lo 83 percent support for school prayer "We're obviously not out-of-touch. We have the
The survey was conducted by a professional
safest seats in Congress.
polling firm for the American Enterprise In­ among blacks in general.
stitute's Public Opinion magazine. The findings
— On the question of busing schoolchildren
But automatically winning re-election doesn't
were derived from telephone interviews with
from one school district to another. 68 percent mean that black leaders in Congress, or
105 black leaders from six national black of the black leaders polled support forced elsewhere, are in tune with the socially
groups, as well as 600 randomly selected black busing, while busing is opposed by 53 percent of conservative beliefs of their black eonstitutents.
Americans.
blacks nationally.
The poll shows that many black voters
Can a slgniiicant number oi black voters be
— Only 14 percent of black leaders think that effectively appealed to with the kind of econom­
strongly disagree with black leaders on many
Issues. Its findings also suggest that this abortion should be banned, while 43 percent of ic-growth issues on which Reagan won big in
divergence of opinion could allow Republicans the black population supports such a ban.
1984? Richard Wlrthlin. Reagan's chief pollster,
to make some significant inroads into one of the — Harsher sentences lor convicted criminals? A says his polls show that upwardly mobile blacks
last voting blocs the GOP has yet to crack.
sizable majority of black leaders — 65 percent — aged 24 to 44 are “ highly receptive" to GOP
Consider these findings:
say yes. However, nationally, an even greater economic proposals to expand the economic pie
— A whopping 77 percent of black leaders majority of blacks — 85 percent — want stlffer for everyone.
support giving minorities preferential treatment sentencing.
GOP strategists say that opens the way for
in Job and college placement. But among blacks
— Is the Republican Party more or less this Republican offensive in 1988: a powerful
in general, an identical 77 percent reject special
treatment under affirmative-action programs, Interested in solving the problems of black political pitch to black voters on social Issues as
well as on key economic-growth initiatives, such
saying that "ability should be the main Americans? Only 9 percent of black leaders say
it is more interested, compared to nearly twice as enterprise-zones legislation, to bring Jobs to
consideration."
the Inner cities: the youth-unemployment wage,
— Only 13 percent of black leaders surveyed that number. 17 percent, for blacks generally.
to
pul unemployed black youths to work: and
— Sixty-eight percent of black leaders sur­
like the way President Reagan is handling his
job. compared to 30 percent among blacks veyed classify themselves as liberal, while only the Urban Homestead Act.

WASHINGTON WORLD

ROBERT WALTERS

Mob Rule
Indicated
In Trial

Gifts Get
Attention
Miss Vote

KANSAS CITY. Mo. (NEAI - A
criminal trial underway in U.S.
District Court here is producing
intriguing new information about
organized crime's apparent influ­
ence over both the Teamsters union
and Nevada's gambling casinos.
The federal prosecution of alleged
Mafia leaders from throughout the
Midwest represents the culmination
of a five-year probe conducted by
the Justice Department. FBI and
Internal Revenue Sendee.
When the indictments in the case
were unsealed two years ago.
then-Attorney General W illiam
French Smith characterized them
as among "the most far-reaching
ever returned" by a grand jury
examining the power of organized
crime.
Named as defendants in those
indictments were 15 men. including
alleged leaders of the Mafia In
Chicago. Milwaukee, Cleveland and
Kansas City. Four have pleaded
guilty, while two others will be tried
later.
The nine men currently on trial
are accused of secretly gaining
control of a pair of Las Vegas
casinos, then looting them of almost
$2 million by "skimming" revenues
before they were reported to lax or
gaming authorities.
The casinos, the Stardust and the
Fremont, were acquired in the
mid-1970s by the Argent Corp.,
ostensibly headed by Allen R. Click,
a young California financier
But almost S62.8 million used to
make the purchase allegedly was
covertly tunneled to Argent and
Click in die form of a loan from the
Teamsters union's Central Slates,
Southeast and Southwest Areas
Pension Fund.
In addition to court-approved
electronic surveillance and seized
documents, prosecutors here are
relying upon a man they describe as
"th e highest ranking La Cosa
Nostra figure" ever to agree to
testify for the government.
He is Angelo A. Lonardo. reputed
to be a former underboss of the
Cleveland "fam ily" of the Mafia who
now is serving a life sentence in
federal prison following his 1983
conviction on conspiracy and nar­
cotics charges.
In interview s with the FBI.
Lonardo has provided this account
of ills Involvement in the selection
ol both Roy L. Williams and Jackie
Presser as successive presidents ol
the scandal-plagued Teamsters un­
ion:

By MARY BETH FRANKLIN
WASHINGTON (UPlI - In the
past few weeks, members of Con­
gress have been presented with
socks, toys, pants and bags ol sugar
by lobbyists trying lo make a point
and Influence their votes.
In both cases — the clothing
re ta ile rs and Im p o rters who
supplied the socks, stuffed bears
and pants, and the coalition of food
processsors. consumers and candy
makers who doled out tin* sugar —
the House voted against their post
lions.
The special interest groups suc­
ceeded in capturing attention — not
an easy task in a power-hungry city
like Washington. But they failed to
accomplish their goal, at least in tin
first round.
Both may get a second chance
when the issues come before the
Senate.
Reporters took notice of tlie un­
usual lobbying techniques and
greedily scooped up the booty
ch u ck lin g about I tilin g their
Christmas lists and their larders
But reporters don't vote.
Members of Congress do vote, hut
the question is how many ol the
lobbyists' gills made It past the
congressman's front office to grab
the boss's attention?
Those involved in the visual
lobbying campaigns defended their
methods and predicted it will catch
on.
Pamela Koslmaycr Is a publit
relations consultant representing
the American Fair Trade Council, a
coalition of retailers, importers and
shippers opposed to a bill lo impostquotas on textile and apparel Im­
ports.
Last week. Koslmaver. accom­
panied by an assistant dressed in a
Panda costume, criss-crossed Capi­
tol Hill distributing Jeans to mem
bers of Congress and the press. The
message: "T h e textile bill gets
America by the seat of the pants'".
She kicked o ff her c lie n t’ s
S500.000 lobbying campaign two
weeks earlier by distributing small
stuffed teddy bears with a two-sided
price lag. One side listed the lower
price the bear sells for now. and on
the other side, a price tag more than
three time higher than the group
said consumers would pay if the
Import bill becomes law. Most
stuffed toys and dolls are made in
whole or In part overseas.
The following week it was Im­
ported socks, with the message:
" T h e tex tile bill socks it to
America."

Bill Will Hurt Taiwan
TAIPEI. Taiwan (NEAI — "Happy
Is the country that has no history."
So goes an old Chinese proverb, But
the leaders of the Republic of China
on Taiwan aren't so sure about that
these days In terms of International
news coverage, the profile of this
p ro sp ero u s, v ig o r o u s ly a n t i­
communist island nation is a bit
lower than they would like to see it.
Peking has hogged the Asian
headlines recen tly — m oving
toward a free market in agriculture
and o th e r a r e a s , r e p la c in g
octogenarian communist bosses
with youngsters in their 50s and
60s. prom ising Hong Kong a
"special" status when Britain turns
it over in 1997, etc. Meanwhile, here
In Taipei, life hums along pleasantly
enough — but what headline can
you put over that?
Just now the local excitement is
being provided by the so-called
"Double Ten": the tenth day of the
tenth month, which Free China
celebrates as Us Independence Day.
thill being the dale on which the
Manchu Dynasty was overthrown In
1911. Every year on Oct. 10. units
of the armed forces ol the Republic
of China, plus cadets, school
children and special delegations of
all sorts, pass in review before the
president of the Republic. Chlang
Ching-kuo. eldest son of the late
Chlang Kai-shek, In front of the
Presidential Palare here in Taipei.
There are Nationalist Chinese flags
all over town, special lighting on the
buildings and boulevards, and
chauffered limousines rushing vis­
iting dignitaries from overseas to
one glittering reception and/or

dinner after another. But the media
thrive on stories of conflict, misery
and misfortune, and in the ROC
today these arc In short supply.
One area of disagreeably news­
worthy dispute does remain: in­
ternational trade. Even here, how­
ever. Taipei's real and serious
difficulties with the U.S. Congress
tend to be overshadowed by the
much larger but essentially similar
problems Involving Japan. Both
countries sell the United States far
more than they buy from It. with
the result that the American trade
deficit is. In both cases, propor­
tionately huge. Worse yet. both
Japan and Free China are outcompeting American manufacturers
over a whole range of products —
and doing so. it should be stressed,
in terms of quality and economy
that are by no means simply the
consequence of cheaper labor. As a
final and unforgivable turn of the
screw, both Tokyo and Taipei have
in the past undeniably protected
certa in sectors o f th eir own
economies from U.S. competition,
though this manifest injustice Is
diminishing fairly rapidly.
The U.S. Congress, which is
understandably responsive to the
concerns of American workers and
businessmen. Is gearing up lo do
something about all this —hut here
a word of caution is in order, quite
apart from the strong case to be
made lor free trade on behalf of
every American consumer. That
word is: Let us not, in pain or anger,
unintentionally do really serious
harm to our friends on Taiwan.

JACK ANDERSON

Army Prepares To Repeat Computer Error
WASHINGTON — Last June we
charged that a vital Army computer
project was turning into another
blllion-dollur boondoggle, and re­
ported that the Army’s Inspector
general was Investigating the mess.
The Investigation Is now com­
plete. but the Army has refused to
release the report.
Sen. Charles Grasslev. R-lowa,
who is becoming the nemesis of
Pentagon wastrels, has asked for a
copy but has been rebuffed. Internal
Army documents, which we've re­
viewed. explain why.
In a nutshell, the Army plans to
solve the problem by repeating Its
mistake. Generals, historically,
prepare to fight the last war they
won. In this case, the Army Is
preparing to re-fight a war it Just
lost — and to fight it on an even
bigger scale.
The Army has spent at least $40
million on Just the "brainstorming"
stage of its CAMIS computer project

— trying to decide what the com­
puter system should be designed to
do. While the money is being spent
on schedule, the work is months
behind. The delay, according to our
Army sources, can be blamed, in
part, on the sole-source contractor.
So now the Army plans to have
CAMIS absorbed by the new. allencompassing Starnct computer
system. Why? Because, according
to a July memo seen by our
associate Donald Goldberg, "the
Army didn't have a 'Chinaman's
chance' of successfully defending
CAMIS" to Pentagon superiors.
But here's the rub: The generals
intend to have the Sturnet system
designed and built by vet another
sole-source contractor. Electronic
Data Systems Corp. of Texas In
effect, the Army Is busily rebuilding
the Maglnot Line.
The Army is aware that the new
plan is "still not without risk." So
an August Internal report warns:

"T h e Compel it ion-in-Contractlng be no r a t io n a le on a c o s tAct has created an environment and effectiveness basis" lor canceling
an expectation that sole-source other, competitively won contracts
contracting will no longer take to be absorbed by Starnct. Grant
place. It is possible that the sole- wrote, adding: "Largely because of
source contract ... may be pro­ the perception that (Electronic Data
tested."
Systems) had u lock" on these
In other words, it's strictly an earlier contracts, "we had to take
image problem. And this, the report rather extraordinary measures" to
suggests, can be handled by a good persuade other companies that it
public-relations campaign. "The was worth their while to bid on
Army should attempt to mitigate them.
these risks through an effective
To cancel these (contracts)
liaison and information campaign" would at least appear to confirm
— aimed at Defense Secretary that viewpoint and could readily
Caspar Weinberger. Congress and lead to protests or legal actions ....”
t
h
e m
c
d
I
a
Grant wrote.
At least one Army official, Wayne
He also warned the generuls that
Grant, acting assistant secretary for not only would a sole-source con­
financial management, has warned tract on Starnct "send a clear
that the "n ew approach being signal that would discourage other
recom m ended" — that Is. the contractors from future bids, but It
sole-source contract to Electronic would run head-on into opposition
Data Systems — may not be In the from Weinberger and his chief
Army's best interests.
associates, who are now committed
For one thing, "there appears lo to the competitive-bid process.

�SPO R TS

Lake Howell Sweeps Postal Run

By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer
ALTAM O NTE SPRINGS Lake Howell High wasn't Just in
the spotlight Monday night. It
owned it.
Lake Howell was 4 for 4 as it
won the Junior varlsty boys and
girls and varsity boys and girls
team races In the Seminole
County Postal Run at Lake
i Irani ley High. It was the second
time in the history of the Postal
Run that a team had swept all
four titles.
The boys race was the closest
as the top two teams were
separated by Just eight seconds.
The top live times for each team,
lor two miles around the track,
.ire added up to determine the
team champion.
The Silver Hawks finished

with a team time of 51:55.5
compared to 52:06.3 for Lake
Mary's Rams. Lyman was a
close third at 52:49.5.
Lake Mary's 1-2 punch of Ken
Rohr and Eric Petersen had the
Rams in good shape but Lake
Howell bunched three runners
together and got its fifth runner
in Just In time to nip Lake Mary.
Leading the way for the Hawks
was Anthony Howe who was
third with a time of 10:02.3.
Lake Howell's next three run­
ners went 8-9-10 as Jeff Van
Buskirk was eighth (10:17.5).
John Davis ninth (10:19.9) and
Phillip Buster 10th (10:25).
Running fifth for the Hawks, in
his first varsity race, was
freshman Kavan Howell who
was 20th at 10:50.8. Also runn­
ing for the first time on varsity

Cross Country
was Steve Steffv who was 21st at
10:52.
"Kavan (Howell) won the JV
meet at Boone so we moved film
up." Lake Howell coach Joe
Corso said. "He's coming along
real well. All they guys ran really
well tonight."
For Lake Mary. Rohr, one of
the top two milers In the state in
track, was second to Seminole’s
Billy Penlck at 9:47,5 followed
by Petersen in fourth at 10:08.5.
Rounding out the Rams' top five
were Jeff Hale 113th at 10:39.8).
Marc Eskin ( 14th at 10:40.6) and
A n th o n y S u r lc s |19th at
10:49.9).
Seminole's Penlck turned in

one of the lop Postal Hun times
ever with a 9:39.2. Following
Penlck In the top five lor the
Tribe were Kelvin Abney (15th
at 10:45), Kelly Faint (25lh at
11:07). David Johnson |28th)
and John Hcrbergcr (29th).
For Lyman. Robin Rogers and
Nick Radkewlch continued to
run well as Rogers took fifth at
10:14.1 and Radkewlch sixth at
10:15.2. They were followed by
Mike Mohler ( 11th at 10:31.1)
and Wade Jacobson 116th at
10:45.8).
Lake Brantley's top performers
Included David Payne (12th at
10:34.9). Jose Culvlno ( 17th at
10:46.5) and Steve Drake IlHth
at 10:47).
For Oviedo. John Newsom was

the top performer as lie took
seventh with a time of 10:16 6.
Tile girls varsity race was not
as close as Hie boys as Lake
Howell had five of the top eight
and complied a team time ol
60:57.2 compared to 64:29.4 for
second place Lake Brantley
Lvman was third at 67:38.6.
Lake Howell's top five in­
cluded Individual champion Lisa
Suniocki (11:34.7). Martha
Fonseca (third at 11:55.6). ArmE nd (filth at 12:19.4). Jenny
Bolt (sixth at 12:24.7) and Mary
Fonseca (eighth at 12:42 8). Also
finishing in tire top 10 tor UnLady Hawks was Bonnie Oliver
who was ninth at 12:48.5.
"W e're just now doing speed
work so lire girls were a little
tight but I was really pleased

SPORTS
EDITOR

The Lyman 'Battler1
Needs Your Prayers

"It’s really sad." Henley continued. "The girls
were extremely upset and teary-eyed but they
wanted to pluy."
Jerri Kelly. Karrcn's assistant, and Annelle
GrlUln. who coached in Karrcn's place while she
was at Florida Slate, will run the team, The girls
will resume play tonight against Lake Brantley,
Henley and Smith both said decision right now
lies with the man above. "All we can do is hope
and pray und keep our fingers crossed." Smith
said. "She needs to show some progress In the
next few days."
If progress Is able to be shown. Karren Newman
will show It.
„
"She's a battler." her uncle. Ron
Lefty
Kcuuud. said. " If unybody can pull through it,
she can. We're all praying."
If might help if you did. too.

See POSTAL. Page 7A

Ozzie's Homer
Helps Cardinals
Crab Momentum

Sam
Cook

Karren Newman, a person that you couldn't
help but admire and respect for her dedication
and intelligence, has a nevcr-glve-ln attitude
when It comes to facing life's struggles.
It’s an attitude which is etched across her
determined lace. It's an attitude which she
transmits to her Lyman High School volleyball
team. When they take the volleyball court, the
Lady Greyhounds become a microcosm of their
coach, always hustling, always intent, always
into tin- game.
Karreti. the daughter of Sanford's Estelle
Smith, obtained her doctorate during a two-year
sabbatical from Lyman at Florida State.
She returned to the Longwood school this fall.
Sin- brought with her a rejuvenated thirst for
coaching, enterprising new tcchlnqucs and the
same old Karren Newman who wouldn't give up if
she was backed to the one-yard fine on fourth
down with one second left on the clock.
That’s Karren. And she Just didn't wear those
attributes, she made them work. Her Lady
Greyhounds loved her for It.
Three years ago. Iter Lady Greyhounds won 24
and lost 3. They were the district champions.
This year, they may be better. They have won 11
consecutive matches and are considered one of
the elite among the slate's volleyball powers.
Maybe, the elite, after winning the Evans Trojans
Invitational earlier this year.
Karren and her Lady Greyhounds were going to
find out where they stand among the state's best
this weekend when they were to travel to
Jacksonville for a tournament among the elite.
Karrcn's girls will have to make that trip
without their coach.
Tragically. Saturday night. Karren Newman
wtis Involved In an automobile accident. Her
stepfather. Sonny Smith, said she was travelling
to Sorrento, to a friend’s house. He said she was
lour miles from her destination. Just east of
Mount Plymouth on State Road 46 when she
apparently lost control of her vehicle In one of the
curves. He said she collided with another car. No
one was Injured in the other vehicle.
Karren was Injured, seriously.
"K a rre n said 'she rem em bered seeing
headlights and she threw herself on the seal to
avoid the steering wheel. " Smith said. "It was a
glancing blow but the car caved in on her. The
doctors said getting down saved her life."
Smith said Karren suffered a dislocated seventh
vertebra, a cut on the forehead and a smashed
little finger on her left hand.
She is paralyzed from the waist down after a
four-hour operation Monday at Orlando's
Humana Lucerne Hospital. She is in intensive
care.
Smith said the next three days arc critical.
"There is no brain damage and she came through
the operation very well. WeTc hoping the
paralysis Is a temporary thing." Smith said.
"We're looking for any kind of a sign, the
movement of a finger or a toe. anything that will
give us hope."
Typical of Karren Newman, her thoughts arc
not about herself at this critical time. Smith said.
"All she thinks about Is her volleyball team." he
said. "She's thinking about Jacksonville and
wanting to get them ready for that."
Lyman Principal Carlton Henley said the whole
school has been stunned by the blow .
"Everybody has reacted in disbelief." he said
Tuesday morning.
Henley said he met with the team Monday and
the decision was made to play on. something the
girls wanted to do for their coach and something
their coach wants of them.

with them." Lake Howell coach
Tom Hammonlree said. "They
arc a very competitive bunch."
Seminole High's Shownda
Martin took second with a time
ol 1134 7 while teammate De­
bbie Coleman was 17th at
13:13,7. Dorchelle Webster.
Seminole's number two runner,
did not run Monday. Also runn­
ing lor the Lady Tribe were
Noelle Brown (25th at 14:29.3).
Lashownda Gathers (30th at
15:58.8) and Michelle Pearson
(3 1st at 15:59.2).
Lake Brantley placed seven
runners in the top 20 including
C olleen L le v e rtz (sixth at
12:42.1). Michelle Herbsl (10th
at 12:50.1). Kristin Longmlre
(I 1th at 12:53.6). Heather

H e r a ld P h o to b y T o m m y V in c o n t

S e m in o le 's Lori S w ain, left, an d N a n cy M c Q u a tte rs h ad a lo t to k ic k ab o u t F rid ay.

Sem inole's C heerleaders:
The Backbone W ith Spirit
By Chuck Burgess
Special to the Herald
They're the women behind the men. the
enthusiastic backbone of all football teams and
the most easily forgotten.
No. this description Isn't depicting the Ameri­
can Mom's Association, it's an account of a high
school football cheerleader. The girls that an­
al ways there when the team needs them. But
most importantly, they loo suffer with the losses
and celebrate the wins as much as tin- team.
Seminole High School has an exceptional
group of young ladles that arc among the best
cheerleaders in the state, according to sponsor
Gayle Tipton. Tipton said they average about
seven to eight hours of practice time on regular
game weeks and approximately 20 to 25 hours
during cheerleading competition weeks.
Tipton said the Seminole girls won two
first-place trophies In "cheers'* and "sidelines"
categories at the Universal Cheerleading
Association compcitlon at the University of
Central Florida.
This year's squad is comprised of Linda
Cushing (captain). Debra Scnsakovic (cocaptain). Kelly Castle. Sharon Gaines. Kaylla
Givens. Margaret Hall. Jodi Jones. Rebecca
Martinez. Nancy McQuatlers. Kristin Merrlfleld.
Suzl Nye, Lori Swain. Revonda Wallace and
Renee Workman.
Cushing, who Tipton calls a "hard working
and devoted cap ta in ." feels the key to
cheerleading is the crowd. "It's great when the
crowd gets Into the game and responds to our
cheers." Cushing said. "Last week at Lake Mary
everyone was up und cheering right along with
us."
Although Cushing has a lot of respect for the
crowd, she also has n high regard for her squad.
"W e work very hard during the week and we’ve
come together extremely well," she said.
Coming together often pays big dividends in
high school sports. As the Seminole football
team will attest after beating Lake Brantley last
Friday night at Sanford. Not only were the
players in high gear, but the varsity "rah rails"
were swinging and dancing as well.
After losing their first four games, one would
think that 'Noles would be discouraged. Howev­
er, they proved otherwise. "A lot of people were
saying the team wasn’t doing great and they
game up on them." Jones said. "But we have
never lost faith in them (football team) because
we know how hard they work and try to win."
Cushing said hard work is the key to this
year's cheerleading squad, which plans to do
well In the state competition later this year. "W e
should do well at the rate we're progressing."
said Cushing.
Although many players and fans alike have a

tendency to take the cheerleaders for granted,
the girls said this doesn’t dampen their spirits.
"I guess we're sort of forgotten sometimes."
Jones said. "But we don't let it bother us that
much.”
They have the Rodney Dangerfield outlook on
cheering — they don't get any respect, but they
keep on trying. "It's kind of hard cheering when
the team doesn’t win," Cushing said. "But we
know how they feel and we feel bad for them."
Emotions play a big part in a cheerleader s
career. Every play of a game can be and up or a
down. "Last week everyone was crying when we
lost to Lake Mary. Inti this week we're on cloud
nine." Jones said.
Watching the cheerleaders has been a na­
tional pastime for some people. Many people get
just as much enjoyment observing the sideline
show as viewing the action on the field.
"They enhance the spirit of the game and
really put on a show." said Susan Lazcndy. who
said she Isa devoted Seminole fan.
Not only do Sanford's cheerleaders get
noticed, but they do gel respect and admiration
from their fan’s. "I think they're the best
cheerleaders around the area." Tim Ward, a
graduate of Seminole, said. "1 know they put a
lot of work in their cheering and it really shows
In the way they perform."
Even though the girls work as a squad, some
stand out because of their frantic exuberance
over the game. Merrlfleld is one of those who Is
looked'up to because of her spirit.
"Kristin (Merrlfleld) is probably the most
spirited person I've ever seen." said co-caplain
Scnsakovic.
Merrlfleld. known as 'Spazz'. is constantly
moving about screaming, clapping, and making
spirited gestures. She is one who always thinks
the team is going to win.
"I thought we were going to win against
Titusville even though we were behind by 14
points." Merrlfleld said. She was almost right as
Seminole rallied in the second half but came up
a touchdown short.
In the game against Lake Brantley, the entire
squad was motivated much like the group they
were cheering for. After each score the girls
would throw miniature mega])hones Into the
crowd as souvenirs.
"The things we throw into the crowd arc to
get the fans excited und help us cheer," Gaines,
a cheerleader for four years, said.
All In all one thing Is perfectly clear to players
and funs. The cheerleaders on the sidelines are
there for u reason. And that is to motivate the
players und fans to bring more excitement to the
game.
Which the Seminole girls do very well.

ST. LOUIS (U1M) — Momentum sides with the
St. Louis Cardinals, and history favors the Los
Angeles Dodgers entering Game 6 of the National
League playoffs.
Fresh from a three-game sweep over the
Dodgers, climaxed by Ozzie Smith's dramatic
one-out homer in the bottom of the ninth In
Mondays 3-2 victory. St. Louis has a pair of
20-game winners ready to try to clinch their 14th
NL crown.
•Under the old bcst-of-flve format, champagne
would have (lowed at Busch Stadium Monday.
Instead, bags were packed for a return trip to the
West Coast.
Erratic Joaquin Andujar. 21-12 during the
regular season and the loser In the second game,
will pitch in Wednesday afternoon's game, John
Tudor. 21-8 and the winner In the fourth game. Is
set II a seventh game becomes necessary.
The Dodgers can take solace in some recent
history. The home team has won 13 straight
NLCS playoff games, and their pitcher in the
sixth game. Orel Hershiser. is unbeaten at home
in 11 decisions and has won 11 in a row overall
dating back to a loss July 7 at St. Louts.
"I'm undefeated ut home, and 1 don't think the
way our pitching rotation has been set up 1b pure
happenstance." Hershiser said. "A s a slnkcrball
pitcher. I'm much more effective on natural turl
than I probably would be on the surface in St.
Louis."
In addition, only seven teams have ever have
come back to win a seven-game series after
trailing 2-0. Five of those series have Involved the
Dodgers.
St. Louis manager Whltey Herzog elected to go
with Andujar. the loser in the 8-2 second game
loss, in part because Danny Cox is nursing a sore
elbow.
Andujar doesn't talk much to the media these
days, but teammate Terry Pendleton isn't worried
that Andujar can match the feat of being the
winning hurler in the Cardinals' pennant and
World Series' clinching triumphs in 1982.
"Joaquin has his ways about him." Pendleton
said. "But his attitude and approach toward
pitching and winning never varies. When he gets
out there. It won't make any difference to him."
Should Andujar again find trouble. Herzog
enjoys a bullpen that has proved strong in the
playoffs.
"Our bullpen lias been outstanding. It got out
us nut of some Jams In today's game." Herzog
said.
In Monday's contest, southpaw Ken Dayley
escaped a two-on. one-out Jam after Bill Madiock
knocked out starter Bob Forsch with a two-run
homer He induced pinc-h-hitter Enos Cabell to
bounce into an inning-ending double play.
In the seventh, it was rookie Todd Worrell's
turn to bail out Dayley. who walked leadoff man
Mike Seioseia on four pitches, and yielded a single
by Cabell.
Worrell went to 3-0 on Sax before receiving
help from pitching coach Mike Roarke and
striking out Sax.
"1 was a little bit nervous although I've been in
that situation since I've come up." Worrell said.
"1 was doing some mechanical things wrong that
Mike Roarke noticed. I made the correction and
got it into the strike zone, made two good pitches
and got the third in the strike zone."
"The 3-2 pitch to Sax was evidently a bad
pitch." conceded Dodgers skipper Tommy
Lasorda. "It changed the whole complexion of the
game."
Los Angeles starter Fernando Valenzuela, who
survived eight walks and a shaky first two
innings, was allowed to hit for himself, and
grounded back to Worrell. Rookie shortstop
Mariano Duncan fouled out.
Tom Niedcnluer. Dodgers relief ace. got Willie
McGee to foul out to start the ninth.
Smith, who. like McGee, walked and scored on
Tommy Herr's first-inning double, delivered his
first major-league homer batting left-handed. It
came on a 1-2 pitch and cleared the rightfleld
wall.

Joaquin Andujar
...the erratic one

Orel Herehlaer
...unbeaten at home

�6A — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

Ozzie Sports New Look

Tueiday, Oct. 15, 1TB5

S P O R TS

ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Ozzie Smith Is unique
In what he does. Not so much in what he
thinks, though.
What he thinks is that too many people
look at the way he plays shortstop for the St.
Louis Cnrdlnals. marvel over some of his
spectacular acrobatics in the field and
regard him as a one-dimcnslonal player. An
extraordinary glove man who isn’t much
with the bat.
That Isn't so hard to understand. After all.
Smith has won five consecutive Gold Gloves
and Ills remarkable defense has earned him
the name “ The Wizard of Oz."
The Cardinals pay him S2 million a year
and even he realizes little of that Is for what
he does with his bat.
Even so. people won't ever look at him the
same way anymore.
Not after what he did Monday at Busch
Stadium where for one electric moment he
made everybody forget about his sheer
genius with the glove.
His ecstatic Cardinal teammates weren't
thinking about that at all when they
mobbed him World Series-style for his
ninth-inning homer off Dodger reliever Tom
Nledenfucr.
The home run was the first Smith has
ever hit left-handed. It powered the Cardi­
nals to a 3-2 victory, moving them ahead of
the Dodgers, three games to two, in the
National League's best-of-seven playoffs.
The Cardinals now need only one more
win to wrap up their second pennant in
three years and they'll be looking to get it
when they send Joaquin Andujar. their
moody, petulant right-hander, against Orel
Hershiser. In Wednesday's seventh game In
Los Angeles.
Without coming right out and saying so.
Smith gives the impression that only his
defensive talents are appreciated.
He's probably right about that. But his
thinking on the subject Isn't that unusual.

IN BRIEF
Rogers Captures Late-Model;
Warmack Keeps Stock Control
NEW SMYRNA REACH, David Rogers drove the Wayne
Densch Budweiscr Firebird to victory In the 25-lap
laic-model feature on Saturday night at New Smyrna
Speedway.
Previous week's winner. LcRoy Porter was second, with
early leader hen Faulk, In the Champion TV Rentals
Firebird. Greg Frocmmlng and Bruce Lawrence rounding
put the top five. Heat winners were Rogers and Tim
Nooner.
The thundcrcar feature went to Harry Brazcc. Rick
Lokcv and Kenny Copley were the heat winners.
Sanford's Joey Warmack won the street stock main.
Second place finisher and division's points leader Doug
Howard was protested. But a close Inspection showed that
everything on the car was legal, and Howard is on his way
to the track title.
With only two weeks remaining in the season-long point
chase, more protests and counter protests are expected
among some of the high point drivers In each respective
divisions.
Bobby Sears drove the Skip's Shoes and Western Boots
Pinto to victory in the four-cylinder finale.
The Great American Sack Race went to the Bell Brothers,
with "Peanut" Northup smashing his way to victory In the
giant Detroit Demolition.
R e s u lts in S C O R E B O A R D

Bostick's 4 Hits Propel Chicks
Jennifer Bostick was 4 for 4 and Debbl Pegel and Kathv
Mavres had three hits each to lead Knuckolls Slick Chicks
to a 13-3 victory over Dynamic Control in Oviedo Women's
Softball League action Monday night at the Oviedo Little
League complex.
Kathleen Green added two hits for the Slick Chicks and,
along with Pegel. turned in an outstanding defensive
performance in the outfield. Debbie Main was 2 for 2 for
Dynamic Control.
In Monday's second game. Don Covey won its third
straight with a 9-4 triumph over Clgi's Misfits. Linda Lewis
was 4 for 5 to lead the offense while Ruth Tempesta and
Linda Kenny were both 3 for 5. T.L. Dancv. liana Burgess
and Robin Baggct had two hits each. For the Misfits.
Debbie Burkhart was 2 for 3.
In the nightcap. Connie Walburger was 2 for 3 and drove
in four runs as the Tubmaster Mice opened the Misfits.
12-8.
Cindy "Nub" Wood was 3 for 4 with three infield hits for
the Mice while Terri Mann and Jan Williams added two
hits each. Bobbi Hazier had three hits and Candy Goebel
two for the Misfits.

Mendi, Echeva Eye Partido Win
Mendi and Echeva. the best pair of players the
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton has ever entered in
Partido tournament play, are close to bringing the Fern
Park plant its first scries championship.
The hotshot doubles team, which look a 2-1 lead in the
best of five series with a 2J-10 victory Saturday at Ocala,
take on frontcourter Arita and backcourter Goronna
Thursday night following the 13th game.
Ocala won the first game. 21-8, but Orlando stormed
back to take the second (21-7) and third games. In the
three-year tournament. Orlando has never won. something
parimutuels manager James "Buzz" Bussard said could
change Thursday night
"They're playing real well." Bussard said about the duo.
"They could wrap it up. We expect another good crowd.
We had 1.000 people stay around and watch the last one.
That’s unusual."

Lady Lions Can Wrap
Up Orange Belt Title
By Chris Fister
Herald Sports Writer
Oviedo's Lady Lions can say
goodbye to the Orange Belt
Conference with a bang tonight
as a win over Kissimmee Osceola
will clinch the conference crown
for coach Anita Carlson s team.
Oviedo will move up to 4A next
season and compete only in the
Seminole Athletic Conference.
Tonight's match starts with
Junior varsity at 6 followed by
varstly at 7 at Osceola High.
Carlson said she couldn't re­
member how many years in a
row Oviedo has won the OBC but
that, "they (other teams) will
probably be glad when we re
gone."
The Lady Lions, who stand at
8-0 in the OBC. run (heir overall
record to 12-2 Monday night
with a 15-10. 15-2 victory over
Lake Brantley's Lady Patriots in
a Seminole Athletic Conference
match at Lake Brantley High.
Oviedo is 4-2 In the SAC.
"W e got oil to a little bit of a
slow start but came on strong in
the second game." Carlson said
of Monday's match.
Curlson said Kelly Price and
Stephanie Nelson at the net and
Lisa Knapp in the back row were
Monday’s leaders.
"Kelly (Price) hud an excellent
game at the net." Carlson said.
"Stephanie (Nelson) was little off
In the first game but came on in
the second with lot of blocks and
some good dinks and hits. Lisa
(Knapp) played the back line
really well."
Oviedo returns to SAC action
Wednesday night at 6 when it
hosts Seminole in what Carlson
said should be an interesting
match. Seminole has improved
significantly since the teams’
first meeting.
The Lady Lions are currently
second In the SAC. one and a
half games behind first place
Lyman. Lyman goes for its 12th
straight win overall and its sixth

Milton
Richman
UPI EDITOR/Sports

Granted. Ozzie Smith Is a true artist in his
own field, but so many other great ones in
different fields similarly keep seeking recog­
nition and appreciation in areas where they
aren't nearly as skillful.
Smith makes his living with his glove.
Some baseball Judges like Jerry Coleman,
who once played second base Tor the
Yankees and managed the Padres, call him
the best defensive shortstop they have ever
seen.
Smith played three straight years without
hitting a single homer. Last year, he hit one
for the Cardinals. This year he went on a
minor rampage and lilt six — one less than
he hit in all his previous eight seasons. So
we're not talking about any Babe Ruth here.
"I always felt I was a better offensive
player than I was given credit for." said the
Cardinals' gymnastic 150-pounder.
Smith rarely goes up to the plate
consciously trying to hit a homer. That
wasn't what he was trying to do against
Nledenfucr. a big right-handed power pitch­
er who relieved starter Fernando Valenzuela
in the ninth and opened the inning by
getting Willie McGee on a foul pop.
Nledenfucr worked the count to 1-2 and
then came back with a fastball inside that
Smith unloaded.
"That's not really what 1 was trying to
do." Smith said. "1 was trying to get an

Royal Hopes Hang
By Gubicza's Nails

Calendar
conference win tonight at home
against Lake Brantley. Lake
Brantley is 1-7 overall and 1-4 In
tin1 conference after Monday's
loss.
In another conference match
tonight. Lake Howell (2-1 in the
SAC) hosts Lake Mary (0-4).
Thursday. Seminole is at Lake
Howell and Lyman at Lake
Mary. Lyman will also compete
in the Jacksonville Invitational
this weekend,
• In cross country Saturday
afternoon, many of the top
teams on state will be on hand
lor the DcLand Invitational at
tlie DcLand Airport. Junior
varsity races start at 2 p.m.
The DcLand Airport will be the
site of this year's slate champi­
onships (ail classes) so most
teams within a reasonable dis­
tance who have a shot at making
slate like to check out the course
before they run it when it counts
most.
• In swimming this week,
there are three dual meets with
Seminole at Lyman today, Lake
Mary at Trinity Prep Wednesday
and D cL a n d at S e m in o le
Thursday.
• In freshman football tonight
(kickoffs at 7). Seminole hosts
Lyman. Lake Mary is at Oviedo,
and Lake
Howell is at Lake
Brantley. In Junior varsity foot­
ball Wednesday night. Seminole
Is at Lake Brantley. In JV action
Thursday.
Lyman is at Lake
Mary and Oviedo at Lake Howell.
Also on Thursday night.
Seminole High's varsity travels
to Daytona Beach to take on
SeabreezeIn a District
5A-4
game.
In Friday's games. Lake Mary
hosts Spruce Creek. Oviedo is at
Lyman in an SAC game, Lake
Howell is at Winter Park and
West Orange at Lake Brantley.

T O R O N T O (U P I) — T h e
Kansas City Royals are hanging
on by their fingernails — Mark
Gubicza's fingernails.
Kansas City manager Dick
H o w s e r h a s c h o s e n h is
23-year-old right-hander to pitch
tonight when the Royals try to
stave off elimination by the
Toronto Blue Jays in the sixth
game of the American League
Championship Series.
Toronto holds a 3-2 lead after
Kansas City's 2-0 victory at
home Sunday, and the Blue Jays
need Just one win In two games
to put the first Canadian team In
the World Scries.
"W e've got two games at home
and we need to win on e."
Toronto manager Bob Cox said.
" If I could pick one city to play
in. I'd chose Exhibition Stadium
and Toronto."
The Blue Jays need some
friendly confines, because In the
last twp games at Kansas City,
the Royals let Toronto score In
Just one inning, the three-run
ninth that gave Toronto a victo­
ry. That the Blue Jays have
scored only once in the last 18
Innings can't make Cox feel too
secure. It gl ves Kansas City hope
that If It can continue to get that
kind of pitching, it can reach the
World Series.
Cox has nominated 17-game
regular-season winner Doyle
Alexander for the sixth game,
and lias his ace. Dave Stieb. set
to pitch either the seventh game
or open the World Series on
Saturday.
Alexander was routed In the
third game, the contest In which
George Brett hit two home runs,
a double, single and scored four
times to personally put Kansas
City back in the series.
He earned so much respect,
the Royals walked him with
nobody out and runners on first
and third in the middle of the
next night's game.
"W e've got a big Job ahead."
Kansas City catcher Jim Sundberg said. "W e've got to win

extra base hit, get In scoring position. How
did I feel about what I had done? 1 was real
happy Tor the guys. These guys have
continued to battle all year. It has been a
real Joy playing with them."
It was no Joy for Nicdenfuer. Back In 1Jot
In a play off between the Dodgers and Astros.
Houston's Terry Puhl hit an Inslde-the-park
homer o(T him. The Dodger reliever re­
membered how he considered lackllng I uhl
as he made Ills way around the bases.
He had no such Impulse with Smith,
which was Just as well. With some of the
moves Smith has. Nledenfucr wouldn’t have
stood a chance.
"The last thing I was thinking about with
Smith up was a home run.'* Nledenfucr
said. "1 was trying to come up and In with a
fastball and he just turned on It. There isn't
anything I can do about it now. 1 can t go
back and get the pilch back. I'm a power
pitcher. I'm not gonna take away from my
basic game no matter who's up."
Dodger coach Monty Basgall was as
surprised by Smith's unexpected display of
power as most others in the ballpark.
"1 Just about fell off the bench." Basgall
declared. "Th e little sonuvagun made
himself a good hitter and you gotta give him
credit. When lie first came up. he couldn't
lilt you If you ran across home plate. But If
anybody has value in this game, he has. The
last time he signed they said they gave $2
million to a .180 hitler. Well, he's more like
a .280 hitter and getting better all the time."
Smith batted .276 for the Cardinals tills
season and apart from his first year In the
minors that was Ills best showing. So were
his 54 RBI and those six homers of his.
If you watch him with any regularity,
you’ll see him do a cartwheel and backflip
before the first game of the season and the
last one. He did It again before Monday's
game. The way he’s going, the rest of the

Baseball playoffs of the 1980s

A.L. Playoffs
Game 6 of the American
L eagu e C h a m p io n sh ip
P la y o ffs between the
Kansas City Royals and
Toronto Blue Jays will be
televised by O rlan d o 's
WESH-Channel 2 tonight
at 8:15. Toronto leads the
best of seven series, 3-2.
the next two games."
If they do. the Royals will
become only the fifth team in
major-league history to come
back to win after trailing 3-1 in a
best-of-seven series.
Toward that end. Howser has
made an interesting choice for
the sixth game In the 6-foot-5.
210-pound Gubicza.
"The flag's not up." Howser
said from the quiet of his office
Monday during Kansas City's
light workout. "W e re not hurt­
ing. The distress signal isn't up.
We're not in a panic situation.
"W e don't have to do this." he
said. "But we’ve got a lot of
pitchers. We can do a lot of
things."
Howser settled on Gubicza as
his sixth-game starter when he
warmed up left-hander Bud
Black, the starter in the second
game, twice Sunday in the
middle of Danny Jackson's
eight-hit shutout.
" H e 's the m o s t-re s te d ."
Howser said of Gubicza. who
pitched three hftless Innings
against Toronto in the first
game. "He did have some suc­
cess. but that doesn't have an
effect on how he’ll pitch. But it
might be a bit of an edge on how
he'll feel."
The Royals are almost as
confident as the Blue Jays en­
tering the sixth game. They
know they held the lead going
Into the last inning of two
Toronto victories, games In

NATIONAL LEAGUE
(Wlnor/Gamoo/Looor)

AMERICAN LEAGUE
(Wlnn*r/Gam«a/Lot«r)
TIGER8 3-1 ov*r Royals
ORIOLE8 3-1 over Whit* Sox
■r«w*r* 3-2 ovor Angola
YankMt 3-0 ovor A'o
Royal* 3-0 ovor Yankoos

1984
1983
1982
1981
1980

Podroo 3-2 ovor Cubo
Phillioo 3-1 ovor Dodgoro
CARDINALS 3-0 ovor Srovot
DODGERS 3-2 ovor Expo*
PHILLIES 3-2 ovor Aolroo

• World champion in CAP8 •
NEA GRAPHIC

which relief ace Dan Qulsen- Gubicza." Howser said. "I don't
berry's problems getting out see why he can't go Into the
left-handers proved fatal.
middle or late Innings.
Quisenberrv wasn't brought in
"Whatever happens. I've got a
to pilch to lefty Llovd Moscby on iot of dlferenl ways 1can go." he
Saturday night, and he wasn't said. "I think of everything. Of
even warming up in the eighth course. 98 percent of it Isn't
or ninth Innings Sunday.
worth a dang."
Which may or may not have
While insisting he isn't looking
something to do with the selec­ for Just lour or five innings from
tion o f the h a rd -th ro w in g Gubiez.it. Howser also said the
right-handed Gubicza.
left-handed Black is "probably"
The theory goes like this: going to be the first man out of
Gubicza starts and pitches four the bullpen if needed.
or live strong Innings against
"Black is well rested now. He
T o r o n lo 's le fty -d o m In n te d can go three or four innings. I
lineup.
didn't want to start him. because
Then a left-hander. Black in I warmed him up three times
this instance, goes through the Sunday.”
Blue Jays lineup until Toronto
Gubicza. who goes almost
manager Bob Cox has Inserted exclusively with a fastball and
all his right-handed platoon hard slider, will be pitching
players — Garth lorg for Ranee against a veteran of pressure
Mulllniks. Cliff Johnson for Al games In Alexander.
Oliver and possibly even taking
The right-handed Alexander
out Ernie Whitt If his team is had only lost two Septemberbehind.
October games since coming to
Then. Howser would be in a Toronto three seasons ago —
position to get right-hander until Brett got ahold of him. Blue
Steve Farr or Quisenberry into Jays' fans remember quite well
the game against a Toronto it was Alexander who pitched
lineup that has no left-handers the division-title clinching game
left on the bench to pinch hit.
against New York on the ncx"I'm looking for more than t-to-last day of the regular
four or five Innings out of season.

Jets Hassle Marino, Spear Dolphins
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. (UPI) - As
much as the New York Jets tried to
downplay their battle for first place In the
AFC East against the Miami Dolphins In the
week leading up tu the game, they
ballyhooed their 23-7 victory Monday night
that gave them the conference’s best record.
"First of all, this is a rivalry." explained
Jets right tackle Marvin Powell, who led the
way for most of Freeman McNeil's 171
yards. "Secondly, they are the cream of the
conference, no doubt about It. They are the
pride of the AFC East. When Miami goes to
the playoffs, every guy In this room roots for
them. It is always a milestone to beat
them."
It was a milestone victory. The Jets. 5-1.
took sole possession of first place for the first
time since 1969, snapped Miami's sevengame winning steak over them, and mat­
ched their best start ever, winning five
straight.
The Jets defense became as familiar a part
of Dolphins quarterback Dun Marino's
Jersey as the number 13. and the offense
kept the linesmen moving the first-down
chains.
Using multiple fronts, one In which
All-Pro defensive end Mark Gastincau lined
up as a blitzing middle linebacker, and

Football
mixing coverages, the Jets hurrassed the
usually-lethal Marino into his poorest
statistical outing us a starter in his threeyear career.
"He got rid of the ball quick because we
were close to him most of the night,"
linebacker Lance Mchl said. "He knew we
were coming."
Marino completed 13-of-23 passes for 136
yards with a long gain of 25 yards, and no
touchdowns. The lone score for Miami. 4-2.
was a 3-yurd run by Eddie Davenport In the
third quarter that brought them within
13-7.
The Jets outguined Miami 476 yards to
200. and held the ball for 37:14 compared to
the Dolphins' 22:46.
"It was a big win. we beat the defending
Super Bowl representative and the team
that has won our division regularly." Jets
coach Joe Walton said. "It makes you think
we might have a pretty good football team "
The Jets definitely have one thing: an
awesome running back. When healthy.
McNeil is one of the NFL's most feared
weapons. He constantly slithered and stut­

J.
i

ter-stepped through Miami's defense.
McNeil became the first player ever to
rush for more than 100 yards against Miami
four limes.
Leahy hit field goals or 22 and 18 yards in
the first half to give the Jets a 6-0 lead.
NAM ATHS JERSEY RETIRED
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. (UPI) - Joe
Namalh. who brought glory to the American
Football League and New York Jets, had his
No. 12 retired during halftime or Monday
night's game between the Jets and Miami
Dolphins.
The Giants Stadium crowd stood and
chunted 'J o e, J o e " as the form er
quarterback was driven on the field. He
received u standing ovation for several
minutes.
The exuberant crowd refused to let
Namuth speak. Namath implored them It
was "time to run the play." but the fans
continued cheering.
"With all my heart and spirit," Namalh
said ufler the noise subsided. "Number 12
will always be a New York Jet."
Wccb Ewbank. Namuth's coach for most
of Ids 12 years In New York, presented him
with his No. 12. the first number retired by
the Jets.

I - * *■' •

�lies Pay Dividends
or Penick, Samocki
By Chris Filter
Herald Sports Writer
ALTAM O N TE SPRINGS cminolc High’s Billy Penick
Ind Lake Howell’s Lisa Samocki
lave put In mega miles to get to
there they are today. They work
Is hard as anybody and It
Ihowcd Monday night as both
Vjrned In strong showings at the
bcmtnolc County Postal Run
Icspltc running with little rest.
I Pcntck, a senior. Boarcd to one
Jf the top Postal Run times ever
s he finished the two miles on
ic
Lake Brantley High track
irlth a time of 9:39.2. Lake
lary's Ken Rohr chased Penick
or most of the race but Penick
bulled away with two laps to go.
| Pcnlck’s feat Monday night
vas even more Impressive conlldcrlng he ran in the Bishop '
Moore Invitational on Saturday
knd then competed in the De­
Leon Springs 20-mile Biathlon
bn Sunday.
Actually. Penick went more
|tke 25 miles in the biathlon as
ic and coach Sid Blackwell took
wrong turn on the cycling
bourse. Blackwell said he had

Cross Country
Just passed Penick in the race
and was about to pull away
when they went off course. "It
wasn't marked very well," he
said.
"I was surprised Billy ran as
well as he did," Blackwell said.
"This is his third race In three
days. And he really looked
strong.”
As did Samocki. The Lake
Howell Junior had Seminole’s
Shownda Martin running in her
shadow for most of the race
before she shifted Into high gear
with two laps to go and left
Martin behind. Samocki, runn­
ing on one days rest after
winning the Boone Invitalonal
on Saturday, finished with a
time of 11:34.7.
"Lisa was still u little tight
from Boone but she said she felt
good and she looked real
strong," Lake Howell coach Tom
Hammontrec said. "L is a is
mentally maturing. Now. she
goes out and sets the pace."

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thorne Land Stuns
Raines Connection
■S
W' p"rt

r-M |

V/RADIO
m o u n d *, TV/R id a Sporti
M
AUTO RACING
10pm - USA, Loudon 106
S im - USA. Loudon 100
IA S I RAIL
I I S pm - NBC 111 American Ltafue
fcimo.onVi.p Op t o I. K m n C&lt;ty R c m 'i H
Ivor&gt;o Btut J i n . &lt;L!
FOOTBALL
* )0 pm - E , n C*bV»mon. Kn.g*n on
ngnh. Gmt McDowell Snow
U p * - Ernns C if m in n Kmgnti on
JujM v Gene Me Dowtu Sho.
J im
- ESPN Gol*gr. Netxaika *1
i latnma S lit,
BASEBALL
I I I S pm - WKISAM IJ C l A m *,tin
league Oump«nh&gt;p Seres Game i K in v il
l i t , Roya't at Torinto Blue J i n
TALK
o* pm - WKISAM 11*01 Scon Tut
&gt;CPr»topft* Puuo

t

AI ALAI
AS M oodi Semina*
Mn d i r u M

Fnl*****

J n v iO fin
II K IN I i n
Zugaia farrago
&lt;00 * JO
OVnForuna
JOC
O f lllU M . P I ) I I 8* 11. T 111 J i l l * s
Second gomn
**v*'o
me in sn
GaC-O *
* x t *c
Zugaia
*10
0 1 * 11 s it * . P I H I H IM . T IS * HISS I*
P O I I S i l l II
Tkrrd |1 mi
Zuga/a Andi*
t OC * 00 lad
F OuStO F 0* 0*10
J jo ) »
P *l ESorn
lad
o is p iw n . p u s s u t M t ip n i i n j i
-m
Ftw ik p iaw
} Ran*
U d l « &lt;M
&lt;1 G a ri,
100 J «
f EcMno
tJO
O lid ) B M ; P&lt;*ISM PB. T U I J i n i n
Firrppjm*
B iU o A / d
IJM
&gt;00 1*0
} FausloZarraga
1 00 i n
I Zugaia Z u m ifi
J JO
0 U S ) 1311, P U S H IM , T H U S SIS n .
oo : i 4 i u i i u M
t ill* i m *
I &amp;*&lt;t, A/tl
II JO 1*0 *10
I Pm And*
n o 100
1 M le 'O rari
1*0

H e r a ld P h o to * b y T o m m y V in c e n t

B i l l y P e n i c k and L i s a
Sam ocki, right, were the
in d iv id u a l c h a m p io n s in
Monday's Postal Run.

Legal Notice

RACING
Saturday PNW*
LATE MOOf L I
Fastest Qbti'ld* Dt,td Rogers Orlando.

II nine

F ir,I hail 114lips) I Roft*,
Second heal I I I Lap*) I Tim H a rt* New
Smyrna Beech
F t i V * IIS idpo) i O i.d Raft*,. »iarxfc
I LtR o, Port* Oiando J L t t F u l l .
Orlando. 4 Crof Froemmmg Orlando S
Bruce L itttn c t. Otlond 4 Jot M,ddt&lt;on
So D lfloni J T,m Ptoontf N n Sm ,m i
Btt*h. I Harold ' F it B it Jctmun Sanford
I Phil Dorman L l l l M ir,. 10 Jo n Matter
N n Smyrna Beach Lap Laodert I r t &gt;** &gt;
I I Da.*) Rogers l i s

TNUNDERCARS
F m « l Quai.ler Jerry filth . Pit* Smyrna
Beach IP IP lK
First hail 11 lap, 1 1 R&gt;ck LoOey Orlando
Second r a il ( I lapil I Ktnn, Copier
Apopt*
F l l l j r l (JO Iip tl I M**r, B 'atw w m tr
S p rig , J R .t, L o tt, Orlando. J Jt* r,
Filch. P*t« Smyrna Beach I HU P«rr,
Tiluteil*. S JfH Bun*. Dtiloni, 4 Ron
Ditto Mimt. I Curl T o w , Longtood I
Tomm, Patleeton. Scolt,moor 4 Jim
C h in o*,. Orlindo. 10 H om 'd firin g ,
Apop**
STRIC T STOCKS
Hoo&gt; 14 laptl 1 Jd t,W trm K l Stnlord
Feature IIS lip ,) I Jo t, Wtrmic* Sin
lord 1 Doug hm ara L it * Htitn i t -I
P it * V Apopt*. 4 Trd M.tchum Sanford S
Mart K in a ,, Oslrtn 4 Gary Klt&lt;n t&gt;lando
&gt; Budd, Whittord. O l,lo n i 6 r * (- Lap
L t a d r i Doug H » a t I J Jo t, Wirmaot
) !S
FOURCTLINOERS
H r|i il lapti 1 J t * r , S,mon, N n Smyrna
Bta(h
F o a V l I I I laptl 1 BottJy Soar, Ol'ttn J
J f- r , Srmon, NSB. 1 Curt, M
Santord
t &amp;v, Lingo Outdo S J t ll Btlu DtLmd I
Rnha*0 N m m OiNtn J K t*r, M a m
Santord I D rtta Hughtrl. Hon, Hill. I
K ftn Ptrry. TiTutrillt 10 Dout Oirnp, Net
Smyrna Bta&lt;n Lap Ltadt* Boot, Star,
I &lt;S
ROADRUNNER1
HiaT II lap,) I Alan W i'ktr h i , Smyrna
Btach
Foaiuro 110 tapil I Aim W ane N n
SmyrnaBoach 1 Tommy E li',. E d p n i V )
Don R oPtrti. Sintord * Ron Jonntan
Daytona Grach S D id H o w d L i t * Htdn
I John H at,, lo n g m d . I Ron Carpantt*
O o rt | Krrry B tlltIP W . T,tus«.iit • M.M
KubtntA. Lenfinod II Jot Barr,
THE C l EAT AMERICAN SACR RACE
t Tht Ball Brorhtn. I Chr&lt;, Ban* 1
Ktntlyflurdmt
DEMOLITION D E B IT
I Pttnut Northup. Olandt J M at Fritti.
Cocoa

NHL
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEA G U E
R 414 1 C u l t t t x t *
PftfK * 0*Tt*-M
‘I t i f H GF GA
N*a i t ' H i
7 0 8 4 D 1
Ph.l4j* p f .4
7 1 8 4 13 10
7 1
1 1 8 7
NY iin -.d t’ i
NY B jn g m
1 7 { 2
1 33
P'tHfev'9*
0 7 8 0
S f

0
Bans"
Qurtu
Her rfo*(j
Buffalo
Mor'rti

M im t Dmiieii
I 0 0

I

3 0 0
2 0 0
} 1 c
7 1 0

1
4
4
4

5 17
if
1)

'4
1)

3
4
4
|

13

Norm Dmii ion
W L T Ph C f CA
1 \ 0 2
1 f
Toronto
T 2 0 2
4 1
V IfM O 'l
0 t 1 I
• l|
Drirol
0 7 1 1
f 7*
Ck&gt;(*)o
0 J 0 1
1 17
Dmrtion
C t'jarr
7 0 0 4 V s
EOrr-on'ort
7 0 0 4 10 1
VtrtcOu,*'
2 \ 0 4 tj tl
Lot Kngriti
e J c 0 n 70
Wiftniptf
0 ) 0 0
i 17
M tndi, t B ru it,
Bilt*iol Datrotl
V iK O u if A NT lia n d rri J

5&lt; l a .4

BASEBALL
LOS AN G ELES

•Br *ft

Duncm „
LAndrt t r cl
G u trrtro it
M id io o IP
M o rin ili rl

ST

LOUIS

1 1 r n il

1 0 0 0 M cGtt cl
4 1 J 0 Smith , ,

1t 00

Jill
*01]
l l l l Clam It
10t 0
1 0 0 0 Ctdtno rt
1000
Scoicii c rl1001
and-urn if 1000
100L
Land
1000Htry Jo

Brock I t
1 0 0 0 Ptnd Iton I t « 0 I 0
C lt t ll It
10 10 Porter c
10 0 0
N itdtntutr pO O O O Fortch p
0000
S ir I t
1 0 0 0 D o y lt, p
10 10
V l'tn tu itt
p 1 00 0WorrtU p
000 0
M itu t t f, I t 0 00 0 M*rp*f pn t 0 0 0
L in t , p
0000
T o u t,
SI I S I Totol,
l i 1 11
• Ruchtd hru on u t c k ir', taNriorawt
DdOtjt ahtn •in n ttg ,un,cor|d
l a , An fttn
pot 144 104- 1
SI loan
M R P R I- 1
Gamt dmninf RBI - Smith It)
E-VaNniutta. Portt* D P-St Lo u , 1
LO B -Lai Angola, L St Loud &lt;0 I B - Harr
Ptnd it ton HB-A»ad'oc4 I I I . Smith I II
SB-Londrum (l| S -Fo ru h Smith
IP H * E l I B SO
Lo, Angtlt,
V itr jJ t l*
I 4 I 1 I 1
N'Wrnlv** ( t 8 l)
1
f i l l
*t Loan
lo ru *
! 1] 1 a J
72) 7 0 8
Worn Ii
7 0 0 D
Ll*it&lt; IW 18)
1 0 0 8
»c 2U tttf i rfi 7t*
W P-V iW uun* T -1 5* 4-11 &gt;31

FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
PREPS

Diltrut IA 4
Total

Statmalt Count, Fattfatl Slandtaf,
ItraiaaN AMtltc Caaltrtact
Trial
W l
C l O rtrill
L i n M i*,
1 0 - 1 1
l l i t HOW
I
I
I 1 1
L,m *n
1 0 - 1 1
Orddo
1 0 - 1 1
Sammod
I
I
I,
I *
Ltkt (trin ity
0
1 1 ,0
S
TN rrW ly'tfim t
S rm n c * l&lt; S ric r* ;* Ip m
F n d t,'iC im t 1
Sprue* CritA I t L i t ! PA**,. Ip m
Or td o it Lyman. Ip m
H A tH M tllltW m itrP irK Ip m
W n iO ra n g titL ist B'm titT Ip m
Oct llrtw IS i
Stminod I &gt;. L**t Brmtdy 10
l i l t Alar, II. L M i HoatH 1
Orddo M. Cocoa 0
lo n lyfim t, K h td u t,)
Caam alO cI IS
l,m *n*lStm ine-t 4 pm
L l* t M *r, 1*Orddo tp m
I pnt, f in d , Khtdu dd I
Ottlrtcf &lt;A S
Tw a
Titmu.td
S ta tn tn
Stmuiod
N n Srnyrru Bitch
Orddo

Mainland
LWtMar,
Lyman
Spruct Crttt
DtLmd
Dntric, SA 1
Ttam
Apopn
Eton,
Last Hanoii

W
I

l

(

1

0
0

WmttrPark

I I

I

I

WtktOrangt
L a ir Brm 'dy

0
0

1
1

NFL
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAOUE
A n trlc a a C t i l t r t o u
Eat!
W l T Pit PF PA
f 1 0 13) 14) 4*
« ] 8 4*1 14) 181
3 ) 8 MO ’04 H 4
ji
i n »9t ■
j 4 1
0 4 8 808 44 I4J

84V J th
Wvtmi
N fa E wg'end
Iftd-404p0l&gt;t
Buffalo
Ctutral

W
)
)

l

Cl
0 o

0

1

I

I

0

1

I
1 I',

4 J
4
4
1 J

CVrflfnd
P.ttrtvish
C m cixxs I i
Houston

i
j

8
0
0
8

841 114
139
1)1 18*
14) 71
)U

•7
'81
1*4
171

• fit
Dfrwtr

4 J 8

441 114 III

4 ) 8 447 IX M)
LA R l.d ff l
4 J 8 447 18* ’64
5* * 11*
3 1 C MO 111 131
t t n u i Ci*e
5»n O tgo
) ) 8 MO 1)1 144
Motional CoohrtKt
f lit
W l 1 Pel PF PA
3 1 0 133 IJ* n
D*: 10»
NY Gonif
3 3 0 MC ■I! n i
) 3 0 MO I&gt; U 4
Wo»ti'"9*on
3 3 0 MO 14) &gt;43
S' Lou&gt;i
Ph.iooripti-o
7 4 0 33) II *0
Ctfitnl
4 0 6 1 000 f* *•
O-coje
3 3 0 MC 1)1 12)
Minnesota
3 ) 0 MO &gt;8) 1M
Dftrol
O w n Bo*
1 3 0 MO IU 140
C 4 0 000 111 177
Tampa Bar
• fit
LA Rams
4 0 0 1000 11) I f
San Francisco
) ) 0 MO ID n?
j
) 0 MO U* tss
Na* Ortfam
i 4 1 OOC IJO tF2
Atlanta
Monday, R n tir
NY J t l l 1) Miami r
SaadiT.Od N
CmcmnatritHoulMn. Ipm
Dana, a' PhtladAptna. I p m
Indanapoi'i at Buttaio l p m
LA B a d w , at CNut land t p m
LA Sam, a' Kama, City. Ipm
N tn O ra m iitA U m tl Ipm
NY J i l l at Nan England 4 pm
SI Laudltpimburgh. Ipm
SmDrtgoaiMamtuta ip m

w as 5 5 :5 7 .6 co m p a red to
59:18.3 for second place Lake
Mary.
Leading the Hawks was Indi­
vidual champion Brent SprContinued from BA
Cumlno { 12th at 13:00.5). Mindy tnghart who recorded u time of
Olinger (I3lh at 13:03.3). Kim 10:57.0 to edge out Lake Mary's
Pacctelll (14tii at 13:05.5) and Ashley Morasch (10:57.7) who
Heather Hunnlcut (18th at finished strong but couldn’ t
catch Sprtnghart.
13:41.6).
Lyman's top runner was Craig
Lyman’s top performer was
Julie Greenberg who finished Webber (seventh at 11:37.2) and
fourth at 12:01. Also finishing in Lake B r a n tle y 's was Sam
the top 20 were Jennifer Hltzgcs Sherman (1 1th at 11:51.6).
The girls Junior varsity race,
(15th at 13:07.3) and Tara
which was one mile, was a close
Drahcny ( 16th at 13:08.3).
For Lake M ary. H eath er battle with Lake Howell edging
Hclkklla Is making her way back out Lake Brantley in the end.
Into form as she finished 19th at The Lady Hawks team time was
13:56.3. She was followed In the 30:33.1 compared to 31:01 for
top five by Tabatha Gano (21st the Lady Patriots.
Rachel Barnes (5:43.6) and
at 14:10.9). Nlkl Hays (22nd at
14:22.2). Dcbi Smith (26th at Kim Lascur (6:01.2) went 1-2 in
14:29.9) and Marjon Stonerock the race to lead the way for Lake
Howell. Brantley then claimed
(28 th at 15:19.9).
Leading the way for Oviedo the 3-4-5 spots with Kim Vlleno
was Cathy Champ who finished (6:06.5), DecAnn Decker (6:07.6)
and Lisa Frizzell (6:08.5).
20th with a lime of 14:08.5.
Lym an's top runners was
Lake Howell thoroughly domi­
nated the boys Junior varsity Gretchen O 'G rody (11th at
race with seven o f the top 10 6:24.3) and Oviedo's was Cathy
runners. The Hawks team time Bergman (14th at 6:41.9).

...Postal

After being blanked cm four
lilts through six innings, tilings
didn’t look Inn bright for Thorne
Land Clearing going into the
bottom of tiie seventh.
However. Its defense kept It In
the game as it held the powerful
Tim Raines Connection to Just
three runs.
Then, all heck broke loose.
Thorne Land Clearing erupted
for four runs on five lilts In tinbottom of the seventh to pull off
the upset of lhe year, a 4-3
victory over the previously un­
beaten and seemingly Invincible
Connection In Sanford Men’s
Fall Softball League action
Monday night at Pinchurst Field.
The loss dropped the Connec­
tion into a tie for first place with
Sessions Well Drilling.
The Connection took a 2-0 lead
in ihe second on an RBI triple by
Billy Griffith and run-scoring
single by Fred Washington.
Lloyd Wall’s RBI single in ilu­
mp of the seventh made II 3-0,
Mark Thorne led off the bot­
tom of tin- seventh with a base

4

SCOREBOARD
O i l I I SIM ; P it IS I II III T i l 14 ) M l *
Serenth l i n t
I tas'ioAngel
m i n 1*0
* Gortn'oJa Mtnd'
J K J 00
I A *im *n F in n
J 00
O U IIU M ; 9 ( 8-41181 SI, T (Id FI BIT M
[■gkttigam#
S Echm aAndi
j i n n *c i n
* Itcube Caiiacon*
1*0 s *0
) Urtlt* 0 , 1*1
&lt;10
O i l I I JIM , P IS 1H J 4J * ; T I H l i m i t
Ninth p « i
1 Arra II Angel
| H S JO J JO
J L k u Oi C l’IKOrt*
SM S *0
S A r im in O u in d d
lC
0 ( 1* ) n n . P i m n it. T m u m to
IBNifim ,
I L«u 6e Bot
JO 10 1*0 1*0
I M iktlZ w rt
100 1*0
I Gartnipii And*
J to
Q I 48 IM B 8; P ( M l 11148: T (1411 OSM
111* flin t
I ArlmtyoBofc
1*10 I U i n
1 RtntAngti
I JO J H
* EcneilZorre
1*0
0 1 1 I I ISM . P I I I ) 144 X , T i l l * ) B i l l .
Pk i i i i u i i i i n i » t n s u i t Jtcip tf
t t r r y t n f r t U I A lin
111* fllH t
I A r r ill
U K MO 1*0
I Ecntv*
I ?0 I I &lt;0
1 C ffn lg ii
| n
Q ( I I I J J « . P ( I I I n i l . T IIM l M W ,
O D im n w
IM f im t
J LtCuOtZirrt
M X S*C I X
I EctianoZutrll
J in IIX
* E dwt-do On* nd *
i|X
0 II II I F * : P 41 I I H IM . I II M l 111 M,
001111111 ) 4* 4*
A - 1.1*4 H - I I R M I

Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1985-7A

I n F rtftc net «tOt*o*V 1pm

Wiih’flfton|ttiVGi*n*i Ipm
StlftltfttDtnvtf ip m
T*mp* B jr It M^mi 4 p m

UPI POLL
NEW YORK (UPlI - Tht U n tta P rm
Inttma'icna' Bat'd of Catch., Top M co tgr
igottaii rtt rig, *.tn I r,t pact .e t c and
'north ir, p a - tr ttw , &lt;dt|i pc nf, ibaitd 1"
11 point) Id* lirst plan 1* Ipr ifconO t»c
and !a&gt;t o w l t rant mf
1 Iona l l l l 1) 8)
S7J t
2 Ot inenva 111) 1)81
s’ : 2
SS4 3
3 Merman i l l ) . 58&gt;
4 Pmn state u u
4S4 4
i A rtan u i 111
430 7
1 h rtra n a la &gt;l
»
7 Alburn (111
331 tt
1 Brgn*m Young | ) t )
Tfi to
f A.r F p c t I I 0)
243 12
to On* State l l l l
ITS IS
11 Florida S*a'f l i t )
*3 4
124 s
12 Otianoma State i l II
13 Batur IS 1)
’Of If
14 A aCra-na ,* il
&gt;02 «
t4 Gforg a i l tl
c: 17
94 14
UClA m i l
17 Lou-i ana S la t &gt;11 )
1* if
11 Tu rn 1)11
X 14
tl Trnnniw I) 1 1)
1 13
Arm,
|S
tl
70
'4 l
20 Aruona 14 II
•4 I
I urwIhAtd tail rrtt*

B F G O O D R IC H
= W '/ M H IG H TECH S
S S f / M RADIALS
SSrn
WE MAKE CARS PERFORM

FRONT BRAKE

J0B$44.95
*44.95
*14.95
LUBE *9.95

REAR BRAKE JOB
ALIGNMENT
OIL CHANGE l

HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS. _ ^
INSTALLED (uch) *12.95
FBT.C.V.
BOOT REPAIR

. . .

*44.95

Above Prices Good For
Most Cars &amp; Light Trucks
A O K
M o t,

w
4 S»S» ’I

f rl

T IR E
H i

30

but

M A R T
B I 1 N uon

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
,
1413 V It i ruh A*t

N O T IC E TO C O N T R A C T O R S
O F F IC E O F T H E STATE
O F F LO R ID A
D EPA R TM EN T OF
T R A N S P O R T A T IO N
1)9 South W o od lan d B o u le v a rd
D e L a n d . F lo r id a 3J7JO
O c to b e r 1. 1985
C O N S T R U C T IO N A N D
M A IN T E N A N C E PR O G R A M S
M IN I C O N T R A C T S
Sealed b id , w ill be r e c e iv e d In
th e d o w n t l a l r . C o n f e r e n c e
R o o m o l the D is tr ic t O llic e ,
D e p a rtm e n t o l T ra n s p o rta tio n .
719 South W o od lan d B o u le v a rd
D e L a n d . F lo r id a ( M a ilin g
A d d re s s P O Bo« *7, D e L a n d ,
F lo r id a 31711 00*7) u n til 10 30
A .M ( D e L a n d L o c a l T im e ) on
T h u rsd a y , the 7ih o( N o v e m b e r.
19*5 fo r the fo llo w in g w o rk
NOTE
P ro p o s a l fo rm s w ill no l be
issu e d a fte r 10 JO A M ( D e L a n d
L o c a l T lm e l W e d n e s d a y .
N o v e m b e r 6. 1985
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y (B R R P
FU N D S) STATE P R O JE C T
J O B N O . 77040 15)3. W o rk con
i l i l s ot c le a n in g and p a in tin g a ll
s tr u c tu r a l ste el on B rid g e N o
770004 o v e r the s t r a it betw een
L a k e Je ssu p an d the SI Jo h n s
R iv e r on S R 44 eas* ot S a n fo rd
( W P A 5)17633) (45 c a le n d a r
d a y s)
TH E A B O V E
B R ID G E
P R O JE C T H AS B E E N D E S IG ­
N A T E D AS A S E T A S ID E
P R O JE C T FO R C O M P E T I­
T IO N
S O L E L Y
AM O N G
C O N T R A C T O R S W H IC H H A V E
BEEN
C E R T IF IE D AS A
D IS A D V A N T A G E D B U S IN E S S
E N T E R P R IS E B Y T H E D E ­
P A R T M E N T 'S O F F I C E O F
M IN O R IT Y P R O O R A M S . B ID
P R O P O S A L S W I L L B E IS S U E D
O N L Y TO T H O S E F IR M S
C E R T IF IE D BY TH E D E ­
P A R T M E N T A S D B E 'S .
M A R IO N C O U N T Y t DTO
FU N D S) STA TE P R O JE C T
J O B N O . 3MI0-3SS3. W o rk con
tist:. ot c o n s tru c tin g a re te n tio n
a r e a a n d I n s ta llin g c o n c re te
p ip e , m ite re d end se c tio n s, one
Inlet w ith u n d e rd ra in , g ra d in g
a n d g ra s s in fro n t o l th e O c a la
D r iv e Inn on SR 35/500 In O c a la
( W P A 51134741 (60 c a le n d a r
d a y s)
N O B ID B O N D R E Q U IR E D .
W ag e R a te s P u rs u a n t lo the
.F a ir L a b o r S ta n d a rd s A c t, the
m in im u m w ag e r a le s fo r the
p ro te c ts In clu d ed in th is N o tice
S h all be S3 35 p e r hour
L is t ot b id d e rs w ill not be
g iv e n out 7] h o u rs p rio r lo the
le ttin g
T h e S t a le o l F l o r i d a D e
p a r tm e n l o l T ra n s p o rta tio n in
a c c o rd a n c e w ith the P r o v is io n ,
o l T itle V I ot the C iv il R ig h ts a ct
o t 1964 (7* S la t 357) an d the
R e g u la tio n , o l the D e p a rtm e n t
o l C o m m e rc e (15 C F R . P a r t B)
Issued p u rsu a n t to su ch A c t.
h e re b y n o tllie s a ll b id d e rs that it
w ill a t t ir m a liv e ly Insure that
m in o r it y b u sin e ss e n te rp ris e s
w ill be a tlo rd e d fu ll o p p o rtu n ity
to s u b m it b id s in resp o nse to th is
In v ita tio n a n d w ill not be d is
c r i m i n a t e d a g a in s t on th e
g ro u n d s ot ra c e , c o lo r o r na
tio n a l o r ig in in c o n s id e ra tio n tor
a n a w a rd
N O T IC E TO A P P R O X I M A T E
Q U A N T IT Y S U B S C R IB E R S
N O N E F U R N I S H E D W IT H
M IN I C O N T R A C T S
A ll w o rk Is to be done In
a c c o rd a n c e w ith the p la n s and
p r o | e d s p e c u la t i o n s o t the
S tate o l F lo r id a D e p a rtm e n t o l
T ra n s p o rta tio n
U n le ss o th e rw ise n o tifie d by
c e r t if ie d m a il, re tu rn re c e ip t
re q u ested , b id ta b u la tio n s w ilt
be p o ste d In th e d o w n s ta irs
C o n fe re n c e R o o m o l the D e L a n d
D i s t r i c t O I N c e . 719 S o u t h
B o u le v a rd . D e L a n d . F lo r id a on
th e 14th d a y fro m th e le ttin g
d a te U p o n p o stin g . It w ill be the
D e p a r tm e n t's Intent to a w s - d to
th e lo w b id d e r. A n y b id d e r w ho
fe e ls he Is a d v e rs e ly a lfe c te d by
th e D e p a r t m e n t 's I n te n t to
a w a r d to th e low b id d e r m ust
tile w ith the C le r k ot A g e n c y
P r o c e e d in g s , 605 S u w a n n e e
S tree t, T a lla h a sse e . F lo r id a , a
w r itte n N o tic e o t P ro te s t w ith in
77 h o u rs o l p osting ot the b id
ta b u la tio n s
A p ro te st file d p r io r to the
n o tic e of D e c is io n to S o lic it B id s
o r th e In te n d e d d e c is io n lo
a w a r d a c o n t r a c t s h a ll b t
d e e m e d ab an d on ed u n le ss re
h ew ed w ith in th e tim e lim it s
p ro v id e d In S u b se ctio n U ) .
A d d it io n a lly , a lo r m a l w ritte n
p ro te st se ttin g fo rth a s h o rt and
p la in s ta te m e n t ot the m a tte rs
a s s e rte d b y the p ro te sto r m u st
b e tile d w it h t h t C le r k ot A g e n c y
P ro c e e d in g s w ith in 10 d a y s of
th e P r e lim in a r y N o tic e o l P r o
test. In a c c o rd a n c e w ith se c tio n
170 S3 (SI. F lo r id a S tatu tes, ta ll
u ra to t ile a p ro te st w ith in the
tim e p r e s c r ib e d In S e c tio n 130 S3
( I I , F lo r id a S ta tu te s
s h a ll
c o n s titu te a w a iv e r ot the p ro
c t e d ln g s u n d e r C h a p ta r 170.
F lo r id a Statutes
O r d e r s lo r these d o c u m e n ts
s h o u ld be d ire c te d to T . J.
G e o r g r . M in t - C o n t r a c t A d
m ln ls lr a t o r , D e p a rtm e n t ot
T ra n s p o rta tio n , P O
B o s 47,
D e L a n d . F l o r i d a 3 7 H 1 0047.

Legal Notice
T h e re w ill be no c h a rg e lo r
c o n tra c t d o cu m e n ts
The r ig h t I, re se rv e d lo re je c t
a n y or a ll b id ,
STA TE OF F LO R ID A
DEPARTM ENTOF
T R A N S P O R T A T IO N
C A B E N E D IC T
D e p u ty A s s is ta n t S e c re ta ry
D is tr ic t 5
P u b lis h O cto b e r IS. 33. 1985
D E K 67
N O T I1 E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
FO R TA X D E E D
N O T I C E
IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , that S U S A N L S H A R P
the h o ld e r o l the fo llo w in g c e r t■r
ic a te , h as H ied s a id c e r tific a te s
lo r a la x deed to be Issued
Ibereon The c e r tific a te nu m
b e rs an d y e a rs ot Issuance, the
d e s c rip tio n ot the p ro p e rty , and
th e n a m e s in w h ic h It w as
asse ssed a re a s fo llo w s :
C E R T I F I C A T E N O 1701
Y E A R O F I S S U A N C E 1911
D E S C R IP T IO N OF PRO
P E R T Y S E C 79 T W P 31S R G E
31E N W &lt;4 O F S E *4 ( L E S S N
BBO F T O F W 990 F T + S 396 F T
O F E 330 F T + S 440 F T O F W
4*0 F T O F E 770 F T )
N a m e in w h ic h a sse ssed Id e ll
B o y d e l at
A ll o l sa id p ro p e rty b e in g in
the C o u n ty o l S e m in o le . S la te o l
F lo r id a
U n le s s su ch c e r t if ic a t e o r c e r ­
t if ic a t e s s h a ll be re d e e m e d a c
c o r d in g to la w th e p r o p e rty
d e s c r ib e d In su ch c e r t ific a te o r
c e r t lllc a t e s w ill b e so ld to th e
h ig h e st b id d e r at th e c o u rt house
d o o r on the IB TH d a y o l N ova m b e r, 19*5 a l 11 :00a m
A p p r o x im a t e ly (175 00 c a s h
(o r la e s Is r e q u ir e d to b e p a id b y
s u c c a s s lu l b ld d a r a t th e sa le .
D e p o s it o l 70% ot th e b id lo be
p a id w ith in 34 h o u rs a t ta r c lo s
Ing o l the sa le . B a la n c a d ue
w ith in 4B h o u rs a fte r c lo s in g of
th e sa le A l l p a y m e n ts s h a ll be
c a s h o r g u a ra n te e d In stru m en t,
m a d e p a y a b le tu the C lu r k o l
C ir c u it C o u rt.
D e le d th is 3rd d a y o l O c to b e r.
1985
(S E A L)
O a v ld N B e r r ie n
C le r k o l C ir c u it C o u rt
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
B y G in g e r D enton
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h O cto b er B, IS, 77, 79,
I9B5
D E K 41
N O T IC E O F
P U B LIC H E A R IN G
The S e m in o le C o u n ty B o a rd ot
C o m m is s io n e rs w ill co n d u ct a
P u b lic H e a rin g to c o n sid e r a
re q u est to c o n stru c t a 690 s q u a re
foot b oat d o ck on the fo llo w in g
d e s c rib e d p ro p e rty
Lot 4. L a k e B ra n tle y Shores
S u b d iv is io n P la t B ook 70. P a g e
77, S e m in o le C o u n ly . F lo r id a
The P u b lic H e a rin g w ill be
h e ld In R o o m W130, S e m in o le
C o u n ty S e rv ic e s B u ild in g . 1101
E
F ir s t S tre e t, S a n fo rd .
F lo r id a , on N o v e m b e r 5, 19*5. at
10 00 a m o r as soon th e re a fte r
a s p o ssib le
W r itt e n c o m m e n ts m a y be
H ied w ith the L a n d M a n a g e m e n t
D iv is io n a n d those a p p e a rin g
w ill be h e a rd
P e rs o n s a re a d v is e d that, it
th ey d e cid e to a p p e a l an y de
c illo n m a d e at th is h e a rin g , they
w ill need a re c o rd o l th« p ro
ce e d ln g s. an d to r su ch purp ose,
th ey m a y need lo Insure that a
v e r b a tim re c o rd o l the p ro ce ed
Ings is m a d e , w h ic h r e c o r d
In clud es the te stim o n y an d evl
d en ce upon w h ic h the ap p e a l Is
lo be b ase d, p e r S e ctio n 7B6 0105.
F lo r id a Statutes
H e rb H a r d in
D ir e c to r
Land M anagem ent
P u b lis h O c to b e r 15. 19*5
D E K 19
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
FO R T A X D E E D
N O T I C E
IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , th a t T h o m a s G A B
M a r y L W e lsh Ihe ho ld er o l lh*
fo llo w in g c e r t if ic a te s h a s tiled
s a id c e r t lllc a t e s lo r a la x deed
to be Issued th ere on The c e r tltl
c a le n u m b e r s a n d y e a r s o l
issu a n c e . Ihe d e s c rip tio n ot Ihe
p r o p e r t y , an d th e n a m e s In
w h ic h it w a s assessed are as
fo llo w s
C E R T I F I C A T E N O 900
Y E A R O F I S S U A N C E I9B0
D E S C R IP T IO N O F PRO
P E R T Y S E C 34 T W P 70S R G E
33E N 107 53 F T O F S 410 13 F T
O F E 3*3 4 F T O F SW '* O F

swu.

N a m e In w h ic h assessed C
F u lle r
A l l ot s a id p ro p e rty being in
th e C o u n ty o l Se m in o le. S la te of
F lo r id a
U n le s s su ch c e r t ific a te o r c e r
tlllc a t e s s h a ll be re d e em e d a c
c o rd in g to la w th e p ro p e rty
d e s c rib e d In su ch c e r tific e te o r
c e r t lllc a t e s w ill be so ld lo the
h ig h e st b id d e r at th e c o u rt h o u ie
d o o r on th e 4th d ay ot N ov
e m b e r. 19(5a t II 0 0 a m
A p p r o x im a t e ly *125 00 cash
lo r tees is re q u ir e d to be p a id by
s u c c e s s fu l b id d e r a t the sa le
D e p o s it o l 70% o l th e b id to be
p a id w it h in 14 h o u rs a lte r c lo s
Ing o l th e sa le B a la n c e due

Softball
hit and. wit Ii one out. Danny
Grncey smacked an RBI double.
Gracey scored on a single by Otis
Raines to make it 3-2. Sieve
Martin followed with a base hit
and Raines scored on Mike
Whlten’s single to lie It. The
winning run then scored on a
sacrifice fly by Kmmllt Davis.
In Monday's second game.
Geyser Systems pounded out 19
lilts rn route to on 1H-3 victory
over winless Cardinal Indus! rlcs.
Cliff Reynolds was 4 for 4 and
drove in two runs to lead Geyser
while Tom Hise added throe iutr..
In the nightcap. McKee Devel­
opm ent a u tslu ggcd Brown
Boverl Electric. 20-14. McKee's
six-run sixth inning proved the
difference. Brett Von Herbulls
had a most productive night at
the plate as lie was 4 for 5. bit
for the cycle (home run, triple,
double, single) and drove In live
runs.

Legal Notice
w ith in 48 h o u rs a lte r c lo sin g o l
Ihe sa le A ll p a y m e n ts sh a ll be
c a sh o r g u a ra n te e d in stru m e n t,
m ad e p a y a b le lo the C le r k ol
C ir c u il C o u rt
D a te d th is 19th d ay ot Sep
te m p e r. 1985
(S E A L)
D a v id N B e r r ie n
C le r k of C ir c u it C o urt
S e m in o le C o u n ty. F lo r id a
B y G in g e r D enton
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h S e p te m b er 24. O cto b er
l.B . 15. 1985
D E J 166
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
FO R T A X D E E D
N O T I C E
IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , that T h o m a s G A B .
M a r y L W e lsh Ihe h o ld e r o l Ihe
fo llo w in g c e r t ific a te s h a s file d
s a id c e r t if ic a te s tor a tax deed
to be issued ih e re o n T he c e r t lt l
c a t e n u m b e r s a n d y e a r s ot
issu an ce, the d e s c rip tio n ot the
p r o p e rt y , a n d th e n a m e s In
w h ic h It w a s asse ssed a re as
lo llo w s
C E R T I F I C A T E N O 901
Y E A R O F I S S U A N C E I9B0
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O
P E R T Y S E C 34 T W P 70S R G E
37E N 107 S3 F T O F S 307 59 F T
O F E 362 4 F T O F S W '4 O F
S W '4
N a m e in w h ic h asse ssed Jo h n
L . F u lle r
A ll ot s a id p ro p e rty b e in g In
th e C o u n ty ot S e m in o le . Sta te ot
F lo r id a .
U n le s s s u ch c e r t if ic a te o r c e r
tlt lc a te s s h a ll be re d e e m e d ac
c o r d in g to la w Ihe p r o p e rt y
d e s c r ib e d in su c h c e r t if ic a te o r
c e r t lllc a t e s w ill be so ld to the
h ig h e s t b id d e r a t th e c o u rt house
d o o r on th e 4th d a y o t N o v
e m b e r, 1915 a t 11:00a.m .
A p p r o x im a t e ly 5175.00 c a s h
fo r fees Is r e q u ir e d to b e p a id b y
su c c e s s fu l b id d e r a t th e s a le
D e p o sit o f 70% o f the h id lo be
pa-d w ith in 74 h o u rs .t ile r c lo s
in g o l the sa l* B a la n c e due
w ith in 4B h o u rs a fte r c lo s in g ot
the sale. A l l p a y m e n ts s h a ll be
c a s h o r g u a ra n te e d in stru m e n t,
m a d e p a y a b le to the C le r k o l
C ir c u it C o u rt,
D a te d th is 19th d a y of Sep
(e m b e r. 19BS
(S E A L)
D a v id N B e r r ie n
C le r k o l C ir c u it C o u rt
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
B y G in g e r D enton
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h S e p te m b e r 24. O cto b e r
l.B . 15. 19S5
D E J 145*
I.
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T I O N
FO R T A X D E E D
N O T I C E
IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , th at T h o m a s G A B .
M a r y L W e lsh Ihe h o ld e r o l the
fo llo w in g c e r t lllc a t e s h as H ied
s a id c e r t ific a te s lo r a tax deed
to be Issued th ere on The c e r t it l
c a le n u m b e r s a n d y e a r s o l
issu an ce, the d e s c rip tio n o l the
p r o p e rty , a n d Ihe n a m e s In
w h ic h II w a s assessed a re as
fo llo w s
C E R T I F I C A T E N O 903
Y E A R O F IS S U A N C E I960
D E S C R IP T IO N O F PR O
P E R T Y S E C 34 T W P 70S R G E
32E S 10? 53 F T O F E JB2 4 F T
O F SW' 4 O F SW' 4
N a m e In w h ic h a s s e s s e d
A llo n s o F u lle r
A ll o l s a id p ro p e rty b eing In
the C o u n ly of S e m in o le . State o l
F lo r id a
U n le ss su ch c e r tific a te or c e r
t lllc a le s s h a ll be re d e em e d ac
c o rd in g to la w th e p ro p e rty
d e sc rib e d In su ch c e r t ific a te o r
c e r tific a te s w ill be so ld to the
hig h est b id d e r at the c o u rt house
door on the 4lh d ay o l N ov
e m b e r, 1915a l 11 0 0 a m
A p p r o x im a t e ly SI75 00 c a sh
lo r le e s It re q u ire d lo be p a id by
su cc e ssfu l b id d e r a l th e sa le
D e p o sit of 70% o l the b id to be
p a id w ith in 24 h o u rs a lte r c lo s
m g o l the sa le B a la n c e d ue
w ith in 4B h o u rs a lte r c lo s in g o l
the sa le A ll p a y m e n ts s h a ll be
c a sh o r g u a ra n te e d In stru m en t,
m a d e p a y a b l* to the C le r k o l
C ir c u il C o u rt
D a te d th is 19th d ay ot Sep
(em b e r. 1985
(S E A L)
D a v id N B e rrie n
C le r k o l C ir c u it C o u rt
S e m in o le C o un ty. F lo r id a
B y G in g e r D enton
D e pu ty C le rk
P u b lis h S e p te m b er 24. O cto b er
I. ■. 15. I9B5
D E J t i l _____________________
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T I O N
FO R TA X D E E D
N O T I C E
IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , th a t T k o m a s G A A
M a r y L W e lsh Ike ho ld er of ttu
fo llo w in g c e r t ific a te s h e t H lec
s a id c e r tific a te s lo r e la x deec
to be issu e d th ere on T h e c e r t lt l
c e te n u m b e r s a n d y e a r s o l
issu a n ce , the d e s c rip tio n of the
p ro p e rty , e n d th e n a m e s In
w h ic h .t w a s assessed a re a t
tollOWS:

C E R T I F I C A T E N O B9 S
Y E A R O F I S S U A N C E 19*0.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F PRO
P E R T Y : S E C 34 T W P 70S R G E
33E N 107 53 F T O F S *15 t* F T
O F E 312 4 F T O F S W Q O F

Legal Notice
SW' 4
N a m e In w h ich assessed E
F u lle r A K A / E a r l F u lle r
A ll o l s a id p ro p e rty b eing in
Ihe C o u n ly ot Se m in o le. S ta le ol
F lo r id a
U n le ss su ch c e r tific a te o r ce r
tltlc a te s s h a ll be red eem ed ac
c o rd in g lo la w Ihe p r o p e rly
d e s c rib e d in su ch c e r tific a te or
c e r tific a te s w ill be so ld to the
hig h est b id d e r a l Ihe co u rt house
door on Ihe 4lh day o l N ov
e m b e r. l9 B 5 a l II 0 0 a m
A p p r o x im a t e ly 5125 00 c a sh
lo r le e s is re q u ire d to be p a id by
su cc e ssfu l b id d e r a l the sa le
D e po sit o l 30% ot ihe b id to be
p a id w ith in 74 h o u rs a lte r clos
ing ot the sa le B a la n c e due
w ith in 4B h o u rs a lte r c lo s in g o l
the sa le A ll p a y m e n ts s h a ll be
c a sh n r g u a ra n te e d in stru m e n t,
m ad e p a y a b le to the C le r k o l
C ir c u it C o u rt
D a te d th is (91h day o l Sep
le m b e r. 1985
(S E A L)
D a v id N B e ir ie n
C le r k o l C lr c i. ll C o u rt
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
B y G in g e r Denton
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h S e p te m b e r 74. O c to b e r
l.B , 15. 1985
D E J 163
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T I O N
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E
IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , th a t T h o m a s K K r a u s e
th e h o ld e r ot th e fo llo w in g c e r t ll
Ica te s h a s H ie d s a id c e r t lllc a t e s
fo r a la x d eed lo be issued
Ihereon
T he c e r iih c e le num
b a r s an d y e a rs o l issu a n c e , the
d e s c r ip tio n o t th e p r o p e rly , e n d
th e n a m e s in w h ic h If w e s
a sse sse d a r e a s fo llo w s:
C E R T I F I C A T E N O 1470
Y E A R O F I S S U A N C E : 19*3
D E S C R IP T IO N O F PR O
P E R T Y :
L E G LOT
III
C O U N T R Y C LU B V IL L A G E
U N I T 2 P B 2 i P G S 71 BO
N a m e In w h ic h a s s e s s e d
C o u n try C lu b V illa g e B u ild e r s
Inc.
A H ot s a id p ro p e rty b e in g In
th e C o u n ly o f S e m in o le . S ta te of
F lo r id a .
U n le ss su ch c e r t ific a te o r c e r
H H cate s s h e ll be re d e e m e d a c ­
c o r d in g lo la w fh* p r o p e rty
d e s c rib e d in su ch c e r t ific a te o r
c e r tific a te s w ill be so ld to the
h ig h e st b id d e r at th e co u rt house
door on Ihe 4lh d ay o l N ov
e m b e r. I9 t5 a t II 0 0 a m .
A p p r o x im a t e ly 5125 00 c a sh
fo r le e s is re q u ire d to be p a id by
su cc e ssfu l b id d e r a l the sa le
D e p o sit ot 70% o l the b id to be
p a id w ith in 74 ho u rs a fte r c lo s
in g o l the sa le
B a la n c e due
w ith in 48 h o u rs a lte r c lo s in g o l
ih e sa le A l l p ay m e n ts s h a ll be
c a sh o r g u a ra n te e d Instrum ent,
m a d e p a y a b le to the C le r k ol
C ir c u it C o u rt
D a te d th is 19th day of Sep
(em b e r. 1985
(S E A L)
D a v id N B e r r ie n
C le rk o l C ir c u it C ourt
S e m in o le C o u n ty, F lo rid a
B y G in g e r D enton
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h S e p te m b er 3a. O cto b er
l.B . 15. 19B5
D E J 164
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
FOR T A X O E E D
N O T I C E
IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , m a t T h o m a s K K ra u s e
the ho ld er ot the fo llo w in g c e r t it
■cates has IMed s a id c e r t illc a le i
tor a la x deed to be issued
th ere on T h e c e r t lt lc e le n u m
b e rs an d y e a rs o l Issuance, the
d e s c rip tio n ot the p ro p e rty , end
th e n a m e s In w h ic h It w a s
a sse ssed a re as tol low s
C E R T I F I C A T E N O 1447
Y E A R O F I S S U A N C E : 19(3
D E S C R IP T IO N OF P R O
P E R T Y :
L E G
L O T 107
C O U N T R Y C LU B V IL L A G E
U N I T 2 P B 23 P G S 78 10
N a m e In w h ic h a s s e s s e d
C o u n try C lu b V illa g e B u ild e r s
Inc
A ll o l s a id p ro p e rty b ein g In
Ihe C o u n ty o l S e m ino le. S la te ot
F lo r id a
U n le s s su ch c e r titic a te o r c e r
H H c a le t s h e ll be red eem ed ec
c o rd in g to le w 1h» p ro p e rty
d e s c rib e d In su ch c e r tific a te o r
c e r tific a te s w ill be sold to the
hig h est b id d e r a t th e c o u rt house
door on th e 4th day o l N o v
e m b e r. 1985a l II 0 0 a m .
A p p r o x im a t e ly SU 5.00 c a s h
tor tees is re q u ire d to be p a id b y
su cc e ssfu l b id d e r a l th e t a le
D e p o sit o l 30% ot the o ld to be
p a id w ith in 24 h o u rs a lte r c lo s
in g ot the sale. B a la n c e d ue
w ith in aa h o u rs a tta r c lo s in g o l
th a sale. A l l p a y m e n ts s h a ll be
c a sh o r g u a ra n te e d In stru m en t,
m a d e p a y a b le to the C le r k ot
C ir c u it C o u rt
D a te d th is &lt;9th day ot Sep
te m b e r. 19*5
(tC A U
D a v id N B e r r ie n
C le r k ot C ir c u il Court
S e m in o le C o un ty. F lo r id a
B y G in g e r D enton
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h : S e p te m b er 14. O cto b er
1.1. 15 .1M5
D E J 187

�*~"*v,nl&gt;,9 Harald, Sanford, FI.

Tueidey, Oct, n , m s

...Building

Bryant objected, stating that a project is completed to his to thc building department on
the building official Is required satisfaction arc for thc building the advice of the cltv attorney.
by Florida law to be head of thc Itself. The building department Bryant failed to take appropriate
B u ildin g D epartm ent. The
Continued from page 1A
Is responsible for checking thc action when he failed to Issue a
city ordinances. Outside Influ­ commission considered making building and doesn't have any­ stop order on construction to
ence in building department Hasslcr building official and thing to do with thc outside — Florida Residential Communities
decisions Is a dangerous practice keeping Bryant as building In­ that belongs to thc city engineer, pending a decision by the Board
Tutsday, Oct, IS, IMS—I B
that can lead to Inadequate spector. but City Attorney he said.
of Adjustment on a variance
protection where it Is sorely Gerald Korntan advised that
Bryant said, "They don't real­ request. Bryant had said he did
needed. The Building Depart­ since Bryant had been appointed ly understand how thc building not have the authority, but thc
ment's crcdlbllty Is based on building official by the previous department operates. A CO has city attorney sakl he did.
Manning also cited improper
making decisions that arc fully a d m in istra to r "a p p a re n tly not been Issued to Barclay
&gt;v
backed by the building code's without authority" and the ap­ Square Plaza because it Isn't perform ance o f duty when
and city ordinances, otherwise it pointment was acknowledged by complete and hasn't had a final Bryant "wrongly issued a a CO
loses thc ability to protect thc the city commission, the re­ Inspection yet. If certain parts for Park Square Plaza even
health, safety and welfare of the moval or Bryant from the posi­ are safe to use in thc opinion of though six septic tanks required
MIAMI BEACH (UPII — National public housing officials
tion or building official would thc building Inspector, that part by thc site plan were not in­
citizens of thc city."
fired the first salvo in their battle to upgrade public
require
a public hearing and of thc center can be passed, but stalled and a sewer system was
The commission Interpreted
housing at their national convention here bv urging
direction of thc city commission.
they can't get a CO for the installed by Dynamic Control
this
broad
statement
as
being
an
Congress not to enact a celling on the federal debt.
An opinion was also sought development as a whole until It without proper permit.
allegation
that
some
official,
or
Public housing, community redevelopment and social
DEAR ABBY: I’m a 16-yearManning also complained that
officials, were pressuring Bryant from the state attornev general is entirely completed."
programs would be the first sendees to go If Congress
DEAR LIED: You are wise to
as to whether Hasslcr could
old girl. Recently I went Into Hie
Bryant has also been accused Brvant failed to issue citations
and
interfering
with
his
ability
to’
"Victim” should contact thc
enacts an accelerated federal deficit cutting plan. Melvin J
realize Unit lying about using
legally hold thc position of build­ of "departure from thc chain of for illegal signs.
do his Job.
hospital for some minor surgery.
clerk of thc court he provided a
Adams, the new president of the National Association of
drugs or being on the pill could
When I got there. I was asked o
The city's only other building
Bryant, who had not been ing official as well as his other command" by making a com­
service for, an thc clerk will
Housing and Redevelopment Officials, said Monday.
title.
have created a dangerous situa­
/lot of personal questions —
plaint to thc Home Builders Inspector. Jerald Davis, was laid
informed
by
thc
commission
of
About 3.000 housing officials holding their’ national
tion. but fortunately for you notify the state treasury to
Complaints by Manning In­ Association concerning improp­ off by thc city at the end of
(routine things, such as. "Do you
the hearing as of early today,
reimburse him. Courts realize
convention on Miami Beach passed a resolution opposing
everything went well.
Jsmoke f Do you drink? Do you do
said today he never said what cluded outside violations, such er use of building department
September, leaving Bryant re­
the so-called Gramm-Rudman amendment.
Knowing you lied, you should that witnesses arc thc keynote to
; any kind ol drugs? Are you on
Manning attributed to him when as improper landscaping, trees funds by thc city. On May 15. sponsible for all the inspections.
Adams said a shortage of low cost housing will become a
have called the nurse after your a trial and have state statutes
( the pill? Most of the questions I
he said he (Bryant) has "never not being tall enough, improper John Sloop, a member of HBA
Funding for the position was
strictly relating to their reim­
crisis In Chicago. Miami. New York and cvcrv other large
parents left and revealed thc bursement.
; would have truthfully answered
been subject to any Influence or parking areas and signs or wrote the city attorney about thc deleted from the budget for the
U.S. city by 1990. ’ The stage has been set’ for a ma|or
truth.
wheeistops
being
missing
at
; no to. but my parents were in to “ put me under." Luckily.
transfer of S8.500 from the
pressure to Influence anv de­
1985-86 fiscal vear. which began
rental housing crisis." said Adams.
LOGAN PERKINS
DEAR ABBY: I just read thc
Barclay Square Plaza. White building department to the
the room at the time, so I just everything went well.
Oct. 1.
cision
made
bv
him
in
his
COLONIAL
HEIGHTS, VA.
Adams, who has been head of the Dade County (Florida)
Rose Nursery. Park Square Police Department. Sloop was
Abby. can't they ask you these letter In your column from
said "n o " in all those questions
capacity as Building Official."
Manning said Bryant's de­
DEAR
LOGAN
PERKINS:
Department of Housing and Urban Development for 14
someone
signed
"
T
h
e
Real
Plaza,
Island
Business
Center.
so as not to be grounded for the questions in private? i can see
concerned that thc money from
He also denied a statement by
cision indicates a lack or un­
Compensation for witnesses who
years, was elected president of the national group Sunday
Victim."
It
seems
"Victim
"
had
Wlldmere
Business
Plaza,
and
rest
or
my
file.
Then.
I
worried
how
not
being
honest
could
building fees could, according to derstanding and an unwilling­
Manning that "Mr. Bryant states
are subpoenaed to testify varies
replacing William RatzlafT.
H
y
Island Lake Center.
all the way up In the time of my cause a dangerous situation. I witnessed a minor crime and Irom state to state, hut if I ever
law. only be used within the
that
no
member
of
thc
Cltv
ness to cooperate In resolving
He said the shortage looms everywhere "there is a
was
subpoenaed
three
times
to
Bryant
said
the
certificates
of
building department. Subse­ what he considered a problem.
operation, hoping I wouldn't gii know this has been a problem
Commission, myself or other
witness a crime (minor or mahomeless population" and current prospects In Congress
occupancy which he Issues after quently thc funds were returned
Into a coma or something from with a lot of kids my age. appear In court to testify. He
members
of
thc
stall
have
ever
In
an
other
case.
Manning
said
for tax reform would exacerbate the problem.
J°ri,‘
1 hoPc M s In Colonial
the drugs or whatever they used Including my brother. Sign me complained that It had cost him Heights, Va. — or In some other
attempted to Influence any de­
Adams said at a news conference that the government
$487
for
time
ofr
work,
parking.
LIED AND SCARED
cision he was required to make
community that rewards Its
must help out with more federally subsidized housing and
in
his
capacity
as
Building
Of­
under
15
months
old
cannot
be
favorable tax treatment of rental housing In general as well
measles
and
we
have
contacted
The court should have In­ witnesses with full compcnsaficial."
tlon.
given the vaccine and many of
as low cost rental housing.
all
school
administrators
about
formed
this Individual that if
Bryant, who had previously
the center’s kids are under that
DEAR ABBY: You have had
witnesses Inform thc clerk, ci­
Continued from page 1A
declined to comment on the
age. thus prompting quick re­ the danger of measles In the
several
letters In your column
schools."
Dr.
Deju
said.
ther verbally or by letter, of their
m em o to thc co m m issio n reasons and others have moved sponse by the health depart­
lately about how to handle
expenses,
they
shall
be
reim­
here
from
out
of
thc
countv
or
because Manning had ordered
ment.
Thc outbreak apparently oc­
C E N T R A L C IR C L E
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Two environmentalist groups
lively discussion on perennial
bursed. This Includes mileage, unannounced visitors who show
employees not to speak to thc state and may have be affected
curred after a woman from
Measles
Is
a
an
acute
In­
A Ha l l o w e e n t h e in e ,
Monday suggested the state abandon Its claim to
llowers that can be grown in
meals and lodging. Travel can be up at an Inconvenient time.
press without his approval, to­ by contact with those alrcadv fectious disease that affects Orlando, with the virus, eanic In
created by hostesses Jackie
Years ago. I read a delightful
Infected.
•
thousands of acres of disputed submerged land, but tighten
the
South.
by
any means: bus. air, personal
day said. "I did not intend to
children and is characterized by contact with a person from this
Pa Mai n and Be t t y M c ­
book.
"Hat on the Hall Table."
the law that put the land Into dispute in the first place.
*.&lt;■
auto, train. Each state has Its
Five cases of measles were a high fever and red spots on thc county who In turn made con­
Morenee Wchrwaln gave a
point a finger at anyone, but was
Clelland. greeted members ol
The
lady
of
the
house
always
Also on Monday, the state Department of Natural
;
limits
on
how
much
It
will
pay
history ol thc Amaryllis and
Just making a general statement confirmed at the "Kids World" face. If untreated It can cause tact with a woman from the day
the Central Clrlce as they
kept a hat on thc hall tabic near
Resources attacked an alternative suggestion that would
per
mile
If
a
personal
car
Is
day
care
center
in
Casselberry
presented
potted
plants
to
as to how thc Building Depart­
serious injury or death to care center who then infected
gathered for their October
the front door. When the
a low continued private aquisltlon and mining of the
driven.
some of the members.
ment should be permitted to Friday, according to Dr. Dcju. He children and is highly con­ onc of the children at thc school.
me et i ng at the Sanlord
doorbell
rang, she'd put the hat
disputed land under the Marketable Record Title Act but
said
all
five
children
have
been
Part of my duties for thc
I he circles participation in
operate without any Influence or
Dr. Deju said.
tagious. Dcju said.
Garden Club.
preserve state government's rights to regulate the use of
removed
from
thc
center,
taken
°u
&gt;
L
Pr
hcad
bcforc she opened
'he
Grannies
Attic
Sale
to
be
Supreme
Court
of
Virginia
Is
to
pressures being exerted and did
Eleven children, ages three
Ba rbara B radsh a w .
the land and the water on top of it.
Dr. Dcju said new students to
held at the Garden Club Nov.
reimburse Commonwealth wit­ the door. And if the visitor was
not intrtid to imply that any blood tests to determine the months to five years old who had
horticulture chairman, led
In a 37-page report. DNR analysts wrote that the
the area have at least 30 days to
15-16 was also discussed.
nesses. and even witnesses for someone she wanted to sec
outside pressures were being exact cause of their Illness, and been in contact with the children
she'd say. "Oh. I'm glad you
alternative suggestion by phosphate Industry would
produce an Immunization certif­
indigent defendants.
been given gamma globulin to
exerted."
who contracted the disease, have icate from their doctors showing
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Laurence Sobieck
caught
me - I just got home.
strearns
publ,r s rlHbt lo enJ°&gt;’ Hs own rivers, lakes and
Manning said his Interviews limit their reaction to the In­ been isolated within the day enre
Come in."
they
have
been
properly
Immu­
fectious
disease
and
to
fight
with city commissioners and
center to ensure their separation nized and that the immunization
If It was someone she didn't
The 1963 law allows property owners to gain clear deed
staff also failed to disclose any infection in the bloodstream.
from the other 70 children at the Is current enough to allow them
want
to sec. she'd say. "Oh. I'm
If they arc older than 15
° ' ' c lr 'and as
as no onc has
a counter claim to It
action by any commissioner or
within 30years.
school. Dcju said. "W e have to remain in school. If they have
so sorry. I was Just leaving; I
months
they
will
be
given
staff member to exert any Influ­
have an appointment."
But the law's architects never mentioned what effect It
tor a Sl.th A i Playolt game it necesmeasles vaccine three months contacted all nurseries In the no such certificate, they'll be
ence on Bryant.
N ETW O RK (MON)
»*Ty i
county
and
Instructed
them
not
Since we don't wear hats
might have on the 22 million acres of river and lake bottom
I
O
LOVING
given
21
days
to
get
the’
neces­
CD (5) B A T M A N (TUE-FRI)
The commission has been from the date they were given take admissions from parents
&gt; O OUR FAM ILY H O N O R JerII (35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
much
thpsc days, a purse and
the federa1 government ceeded to Florida at statehood I n
sary
Immunization
shots
or
not
EVENING
thc
gamma
globulin,
according
'y s day nl rncsonmq neats Fr,nv *
trying to replace Brvant as
„
6 :3 0
without instructing them of thc be allowed to remain In school
® &lt;•&gt; "M A T'S HOT) WHAT'S
ear keys on the hall table would
1845. but lor which the state holds no formal deed.
drug-related stakeout is fouled up
to
Dr.
Dcju.
He
said
children
0
4
N
EW
S
NOT?
(TUE-FRI)
building official since July bv
work Just as well.
necessity of vaccination for until they do. Dcju said.
l i / and her partner hecom e emo1 O CBS e a r l y m o r n in g
6:00
Carrie Lynn Schnelker and
transfer7 m!llC
SuPTC™e Co" r' held the law allows the
lio n .ill, involved .n a |uven,l#-a*.
d e s ig n a tin g C ity E n gin eer
1:00
H
EW
S
H.B. IN AURORA, COLO. Michael Laurence Sobicck were Center In 1980, Site is employed
O '*
} O (J Q N EW S
s.lult CAM* ;
0
'4
&gt;
DAYS
OF
OUR
UVES
Charles
Hasslcr
head
over
the
HI
(35)JE
F
F
E
R
S
O
N
S
S e ,h ‘
k/ I p t ? hhands of ,hosc ” *°verelgn lands."
as acting counsel for the port of
&gt; O ALL MY CHILDREN
M O ° ^ 8W0"lDNWaTHffl
J I (35)INDEPENDENT N EW S
married Sept. 7 In Seattle bv the Seattle.
Building Department as well as
® &gt; ' 0&gt; “ * c N E Il / LE H R E A
acres
, H the
^ R,
^
T ™ * its
thc
loss of so™ 50.000
Clanahan. chairman, will be setting for a peddler's license
II (35) DICK VAN DYKE
ff ) (10) CO N N ECTIO N S A N A L ­
M (35) TOM A N D JE R R Y
acres nf
ot land
stale considered
own.
N EW 8H0UR
Hon. Robert McBcth.
Public Works and the Planning
ffi (10) THE BOOTH (MON)
13 FUNTIME
invited to the session to respond was ignored based on the pre­
TERNATE VIEW O F C H A N G E D is­
Thc bridegroom Is the son of
f f i (I) H A P P Y D A YS AGAIN
lant Voices Jum es Burke traces
ffi(10) WAR. A COMMENTARY BV
The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.James Sobieck. Port
and Zoning departments. The
® ( S | SU PE R FR IE N D S
to questions.
the
chain
o
l
events
whrch
contribut­
OWYNNE
DYER
(WED)
mise that the sales location will
f i 05
Gerald Schnelker. retired Lt. Col Angeles. Wash. He is a 1972
elty administrator and commis­
6 :4 5
ed lo the production ot the modern
ffi (10) MOVIE (THU)
The Commission approved a be on private property. The
11 A N D Y GRIFFITH
Continued from page 1A
U.S. Army and Mrs. Schnelker'. graduate of Port Angeles Senior
&gt;
O
EYEW
ITN
ESS
D
A
Y
B
R
E
A
K
tei^LommurucAttorn
n«f*orfc
iRi*
*
sioners
have
maintained
Bryant
®
J
,0&gt;
F
L
O
R
ID
A
H
O
M
E
G
R
O
W
N
They won in U.S. District
request by John P. While of
® 110) A M W EA TH ER
_
6 :3 0
(Fnl)
115 Foxrldgc Run. Longwood.
CD (5) R O C K FO R D FILES
A request by the Housing I lants At Work to set up a table effect or the approval by the
High School and attended the
Court, which said equal access was hired by thc former ad­
0
* N B C N EW S
ffi (I) MOVIE
She Is a 1973 graduate of University of Washington. He ts
com
m
issioners
extends
pro­
Authority
for
permission
to
«
a
7
:
0
0
1
0
:3
0
&gt; 0 C B S N EW S
to school facilities for thc re­ ministrator. David Chaccy as a
lor the display and sale of posed stiles times on Saturdays
0 4
TODAY
Lyman High School. Longwood. employed by Northwest Carto­
&gt;t (35) B O B NEW H ART
f t 10 A B C N EW S g
Continued from page 1A
5 O C B S M O RN IN G N EW S
ligious club was simply accom­ "building Inspector" and even proceed with an application for a Interior and exterior plants un­
ax m o v ie
105
and graduated from thc Univer­ graphy.
from
two
to
four
hours.
;'&lt; * * &gt; TOO C L O S E FO R C O M ­
community
development
block
7
O
O
O
O
O
M
O
R
N
IN
G
A
M
E
R
IC
A
11:00
FORT Murml m o r t i out when *h«
Newton then decided Petros modating. not advancing re- though he has been permitted to grant was rescheduled for a derneath the bridge which con­
0
4 ) 0 ;
Q N EW S
The commission also:
Thc nine member Homemaker sity of Florida in 1977 and
The newlyweds anre making
function
a.s
"building
official"
•nd
Henry
diieg.ee
o»e&lt;
Sera
i
il^lon
as
long
as
there
was
no
nects the *106 and *202 bulld? I (35)O .I.JO C
J I 135) A RCHIE B U N K E R 'S P L A C E
could not meet until he obtained
new |ob
commission workshop session
• Approved annexation of
(MiooMCRRvii------Clubs comprising the Seminole Georgetown University Law their home in Seattle.
was
never
officially
approved
in
® ( 10) FARM DAY
official
sponsorship.
® (10) D A V E A L L E N A T L A R G E
ings
on
the
north
side
of
the
approval from thc superin­
® (II L A V E R N E * SH IRLEY
(»0)PAM riN a c s r a m c s (PRf) C o u n t y E x t e n s io n H o m e m a k e r a
CD (•) NIGHT G A LL E R Y
(•) VOLTRON, DCFTNOCR O f
A school board member ap­ chai position by the cltv coni- O f f i c i a l s o f t he H o u s i n g First Street pedestrian mall area. property lying at the Northwest
THE UNIVERSE
tendent o f schools and the
2-00
C o u n c il w ill h o ld th e ir a n n u a l
6 :3 5
Authority.
Elliott
L.
Smith,
ex
corner
of
the
interneetion
of
2.-00
mission.
1 1 :0 5
pealed
thc
case
and
in
July
A staff recommendation for dis­
11
C A R O L BU R N ETT AND
ANOTHER WORLD
school s attorney. Thc superin­
Holiday Showcase on Oct. 18
U MOVIE Rough Night In Je ri­
*
7 :1 5
Airport
Boulevard
and
Country
ecutfve
director,
and
A.
A.
MeFRIENDS
approval based on precedent- Club Road.
7 Q ONE LIFE TO UVE
®&lt;10)A.M. WEATHER
cho t I967t Dean Martin. George
tendent said ft would be improp­ 1984. a federal appeals court
from
9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
J I (35)ANOYORFFTTH
Pepp.nd A town boss is challenged
7 :0 0
er for thc school to approve such reversed the decision, saying
Seminole County Center Agri
f
f
i
PO)
UNCOMMON
R
L
A
C
a
7:30
by
a
tem.ite
stagecoach
owner
O * *100.000 PYRAM ID
1' (35) CHALLENGE OF THE
T H f ARCHITECTURE O f FRANK
Auditorium (Just off 17-92 at the
an activity on school prop*-rtv or that allowing thc religious club
1 O P M M A G A ZIN E atuntnom OOBOTS
LLOYD WRK3HT(TUE)
1 1 :3 0
access
to
school
facilities
would
school time.
stop
fight near Flea World and
•n Sandy Richm ond acft«*$s T#n
ffl
&lt;
10)
SESAME
STREET
(R)
n
Q 4 TONIGHT Mo%t Johnny C a r­
f f i (10) ALONA CHINA (WE0)
Garr
CD (I) R0B0TECH
the SCC Humane Society).
son Sc r
Gt»org&lt;« Burns
When the school's attorney advance religion unconstitu­
f
f
i
(10)
WORLD
C
H
U
B
CHAMPI­
l7. O JE O P A R D Y
tionally.
ONSHIP (THU)
J O W K R P IN CINCINNATI
Member clubs will display and
concluded allowing Petros to
WASHINGTON
The will recur." White said.
II (35) B A R N E Y M ILLER
\\ ASHING! ON (UPI)
(UPI) —
- The
________
.
.
•
„
7 :3 5
t O A B C N EW S NIGHTLINE
The
school
then
turned
down
f f i M°) PA.NT.NG WITH ILONA
1J FUNTSTONES
Fein was suffering a heart at­ awards, the limit for pain and
Thc women of Holy Cross
sell
handcrafted Items. There
meet would violate the First
CD (10) N ATURE O F THINGS F e a ­
Supreme Court let stand a de­
11 (35) HAWAII FIVE-0
Lunc..eon. complete
The case began In Februarytured how man threaten! the Great
will also be a rawing for a quilt Episcopal Church. Sanford, will ssert and beverage, with de­
Amendment ban on entangle­ thc students' request to meet c i s i on t oday u p h o l d i n g a 1976 when Fein. 34 at the time, tack.
C D (8 )T W IL I0 H T 2 0 N E
suffering
was
set
at
$250,000
6:00
la ie ie c o s y it e m
2 '3 0
during
the
1984-85
school
year.
hold Iheir Fall Festival Thurs­ served from 11.30 a will be
made by council members.
In February 1977. after recov­ and Fein s award was reduced.
ment of church and state. 10
California law that limits finan­ experienced chest pains. He
11 (33) JETSONS
- ( D O c a p it o l ’
12.00
CD (») C A R S O N S C O M E D Y C L A S ­
•m. to 2
A
day
after
the
appeals
court
day.
Oct. 17 In the parish hall.
CD
(I)
HEATHCLIFF
SICS
Admission will be 50C per
1 O SIM O N t SIM O N R.ck and
club members and their parents
c i a l a w a r d s In m e d i c a l called his doctor, who was ering from the heart attack und
I f (M)ORCAT SPACE COASTER
p.m.
Donation
Is
$3.50.
"In
providing
for
an
absolute
ruling. Congress passed the malpractice suits.
f f i (10) INNOVATION (MON)
A J encounter all sorts ot danger
returning to work. Fein brought
person and will entitle patrons to Members have made a variety of
sued In June 1982.
8 :0 5
7 :0 5
employed by the Pcrmancntc a malpractice suit against the cap on non-cconomle damages
when they tr, to transport a video
f f i (10) MAGIC O f OIL PAINTING
Equal Access Act. which bars
1 J I D R EA M O F JEAN N IE
1 1 M A R Y T Y LER M O O R E
refreshments and chance on the handcrafted items for sale In the
The
court
dismissed
the
ap­
(WED)
game from San Diego lo Las Veoas
They charged that their rights public high schools from deny­
Medical Group, an affiliate of the medical group. Testimony at his that can be awarded by a Jury
7 :3 0
8 :3 0
door
prizes to be drawn periodi­ Indoor booths and will also have
tR l
f f i (10) STORMWATCH (THU)
peal
br
ought
by
a
t
t
o
r
n
e
y
of free speech, free exercise of ing equal access to students who
Kaiser Health Foundation, and trial said that as a result of the (the law) has legislatively man­
JI (35)FUNTSTONES
“ Ik T h e r e A n y S ic k
f f i (10) MAO 1C O f WATERCOLhomemade goodies for sale In
0
'4
e n t e r t a in m e n t t o n io h t
&gt;
O
C
O
M
E
D
Y
B
R
E
A
K
WITH
cally
throughout
thc day.
dated that the most severely
religion, free association and wish to meet for "religious, Lawrence Fein against the Per- sought treatment.
ORS(FRI)
(D( 10) MISTER ROOERS(R)
Interview with Judith lig h t ite r ol
M A C K AN D JAM IE
A
m
o n g Y o u ? " (James B:1 4 )
the
Kountry
Kitchen.
An
added
misdiagnosis
and
resulting
lack
This
event
Is
open
to
thc
CD
IS)
FAT
ALBERT
manente
Medical
Group.
Justice
Who $ the B o n '’
equal protection of the law were political, philosophical or other
Injured vi cti ms o f medical
CD (S) MOVIE
la s t Tram From
2*35
feature this year will be a yard
public.
His condition was at first of Immediate treatment, a large malpractice arc to be singled out
U j O PRICE IS RIGHT
Bryon
White.
In
a
brief
written
Gun Hill i t9b9» K.rfc Douglas An.
violated
8 :3 5
IX WOMANWATCH (FRI)
speech."
thony Quinn
sale on the church grounds.
1 O W H EEL O F FO RTU NE
11 BEWITCHED
B E H E A L E D !!
notice, said he would have heard diagnosed as muscle spasms and portion of his heart muscle had to pay for the special treatment
I f (35)B EN SO N
_
„
3 :0 0
thc case, but the votes of four later, following a trip to the died and his life expectancy was accorded to negligent healthcare
1
2
:3
0
6.00
O H * ) A L L IN THE FAM ILY
O
(4) BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
O
1 LA TE NIGHT WITH DAVID
0 ' 4 DIVORCE COURT
(MON. WED)
high court members arc re­ Kaiser emergency room, again cut In half, to about 16 or 17 providers and their insurers by
„
7 :3 5
L E T T E R M A N Sch ed u le d
Dyan
i O DONAHUE
years.
O ' l l SANTA BARBARA (TUE,
diagnosed as muscle spasms
quired In order to set a hearing.
IX
S
A
N
F
O
R
D
A
N
D
SO
N
Cannon
com
edian
George
Miller
&gt;
O
TIC
TAC
DOUGH
the California legislature." Fein
THU. FRI)
( ( F D t D r r t iC T H r " 1
Fein won thc suit and was said in his appeal to the
gud.irisl
Duane
Tddy
"Given the continued national
II (33) WALTONS
( ii O OU1CKNG LIGHT
6:00
t'iirltfi* hs
The next day. after more
® (10) SESAME STREET (R) g
t O MOVIE Mr M o lo &amp; GamCD O 0ENERAL HOSPITAL
concern over the malpractice severe pains. Fein again went to awarded S I . 2 million, with Supreme Court.
0
4 A -T E A M / P LA Y O F F S H A
AREA READINGS (B a.m.):
SPECIAL
SCHOOL
bie
t
*938)
Peter
to
rre
ly
n
n
B
a
r
i
CD
(*)
BRA0Y
BUNCH
participate* in a stock-car race to
(Ll(3S)8COOflYDOO
Temperature: 76: overnight low: Daytona Beach: highs. 10.24 crisis.' it Is likely that more tbe emergency room and saw S500.000 of the money for pain
In arguing against high court
ensure that Hannibal i nephew *
" (35) CH ICO AN D THE M A N
ffi 110) FLORIOASTYLE
9 :0 5
7 1 : M o n d a y ' s h i g h : 91; am.. 10:48 p.m.: lows. 3:41 states will enact similar types of another doctor, who ordered an and suffering. However, under a review, the medical group said
HOLIDAY M A T IH E i.
ffi (I) INSPECTOR GADGET
ch a n ce l o l winning the event aren t
« HAZEL
a.m., 4:28 p.m.; Port
1:00
com prom ised by saboteurs (May
limitations, and that the Issue electrocardiogram that showed California law enacted to cut thc law was enacted to combat
barometric pressure: 30.08: rela­
3 :0 5
1 ' (35) DAVE DEL D 0 T T 0 R E A L
F R I•-SA T . -SUN.2:15 ONLY
be pre-empted lor a Is u lh AL
highs. 10:16 a.m..
0 :3 0
down on huge malpractice the "medical malpractice crisis'.'
tive humidity: 94 percent:
OX BUOS BUNNY AN0 FRKN0B
EST A T E SEM IN AR
Playolt game il necessary ).
0 * LOVE CONNECTION
The movie that
10:40 p.rn,: lows. 3:32 a.m.. 4:19
winds: calm: sunrise: 7:26 a m
1 O H O M ETO W N Ben .Peter
• O JOKER'S WILD
„t
3 :3 0
1 :0 5
will make the
p
m.:
Bayport:
highs.
2:26
a.m..
sunset 6:56 p.m.
Joey and Christopher attempt to re
CD (•) MY THREE SONS
dJ
(35) JA Y C E AND THE
13 MOVIE Ihe Nutty Prolessor
3 58 p.m.: lows. 9:39 a.m.. 9:24
whole family
capture their youth by participating
WHEELED
WARRIORS
(19631
Jerry
le
w
is
Siena
Stevens
T
M
A
P
I
l
l
National Report Firefighters p.m.
9 '3 5
in a grueling basketball game
f f i (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
Care-a-Lot.
II I LOVE LUCY
In southern California battled
1:10
fZJ O W H O 'S THE B O S S ? Mona
f f i (D M .A .8.K.
Extended
Porecaat
Florida
K
'
W
t
f
t
TUESDAY MITE. 7:00 P.M.
J
O
MOVIE
R
abbil
Run
H970|
receives an unexpected inheritance
10:00
nearly a dozen fires early todav
4 :0 0
Jam es Caan Anianette Comer
from j mysterious benefactor : j
except
northwest
Generally
NURSERY PROVIDED
LARRY
E.
ROBESON
0
*
YOUR
NUMBER
8
UP
after the blazes, fanned by hot.
0 (4 AMERICA (TUE. THU. FW)
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
I ' (351 H ART TO HART
lair and unseasonably
5 O HOUR MAGAZINE
Mr. Larrv E. Robeson. 52. of Mary, is in charge of arrange­ Home. Forest City. Is In charge
2:00
i f 10 tXFFRENT STROKES
Santa Ana winds, destroyed a through period. Lows in warm
const
ruction
company
and
a
tD (10) N O VA An e&gt; am.nai.on ot
’ OBARNABYJONES
of arrangements.
II (33 )Q U N S M O K E
(JD fjM E R V GRIFFIN
upper 53 Cove Estates. Osteen, died ments.
the aggressive agricultural techno­
dozen homes, left one man dead
II (35) BIO VALLEY
member of Congregation Ohcv
1! (3i) t h u n d e r c a t s g
MERLIN
E.
GREINER
60s north to upper 70s &lt;
logies
being
used
lo
develop
tough­
2:10
Sunday
at
Central
Florida
Re­
south.
ffi
(10)
ELECTRIC
COMPANY
(R)
and forced evacuation of PepS h a l o m . S u r v i v o r s : wi f e ,
f f i (10) SESAME STREET (R tg
COL. RUPU8 F. CAUSEY
er crop strains g
Mr.
Merlin
E.
Greiner.
75.
of
f O
MOVIE No Road Back
Highs
mid
80s
to
around
90
FIRST ASSEMBLY
CD
(I)
CAROL
BURNETT
AND
gional
Hospital.
Born
Jan.
18.
f f i( l) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS OF
pcrdlne University.
CD (*) MOVIE th e Autobiography
T h e l m a ; m o t h e r . R |v a
Col. Rufus F. Causey. 68. of 311 W. Seminole Drive. Lake
|I957| Skip Momeier Sean C o n ­
FRIENDS
THE UNIVERSE (MON. W COFN)
A
r
e
a
P
o
r
e
c
a
a
t
Ccn
.
193J
in
Michigan,
he
moved
to
tral
Ot
M
n
s
Jane
Pittm
an
1
1974)
Cicely
nery
OF GOD 304 W .3 7 tb S T R E E T
Thunderstorms dumped more
Southfield. Mich.; son. Jody.'
271 Kerry Court. Altamonte Mary, died Sunday at Central
f f i (D INOAY PREVIEW SPECIAL
.. •
1 0 :0 5
T y io n
O delta
A !I 0 year-old
SA N FO R D . FL 33771
(TUE)
than 3 Inches of rain on parts of Florida ... mostly sunny with a Osteen In 1955 after being dls- Springs, died Saturday at Florida Regional Hospital. Born
Orlando: daughters. Barbara,
2 :3 0
INVASION
U
,S
A
11 MOVIE
k
4m .I i
woman recalls her life Irom slate
CQmAx h * BUIAM
1305) 3 2 2 9 2 2 2
J O C B S N EW S NI0H TW ATCM
Texas and more than an Inch on slight chance of thunderstorms charged from lhe U.S. Air Force. Florida Hospital. Altamonte. In SAlnt Marys. Pa. on Nov. 20.
days in Louisian- to civil right*
'alo Alto. Calif.. Nancy. Orlando.
-M IB S IM O in a c W 6 M
1 0 :3 0
..
4:08
ate in thc afternoon. High In the He was employed by Lee Con­
d em onslrationt in the I960*
HI FUNTSTONES
parts of Arkansas Monday
3 :0 0
Born
in
Isla.
Texas
on
Sept.
23.
0
4
SALE
OF
THE
CENTURY
1909. he moved to Lake Mary
m U\ L.?n ,iw o o d : b r o t h e r .
lower 90s. Light east wind. Rain struction Co.. Sanford. He was a
11 (33) I LO VE LU C Y
® ( 10) 3-2-1 CONTACT g
causing Hooding in some areas.
4 :3 0
Marshall. Southfield: sisters
a.
8 :0 5
chance 20 percent. Tonight ... Baptist and a member of thc 1917. he moved to Altamonte from Bridgeton. N.J., in 1982.
11
MOVIE
One-Eyed Jacks
® (1)000 COUPLE
Cl) O THREE'S COMPANY
3
:
1
5
In s o u t h e r n C a l i f o r n i a ,
Mrs
Jacqueline
Sorkln.
Flint’
Springs
from
Tennessee
In
1969.
119611
Marlon
Brando
Karl
Malden
He
was
a
retired
trucking
dis­
11. (35) TRANSFORMERS
II MOVIE Ihe Swimmer (19681
11:00
firefighters in Los Angeles and Isolated thunderstorms ending Veterans of Foreign Wars.
An e i-c o n lergns Inendship with h n
Mich.: one grandson,
He was a retired sales repre­ patcher. Survivors: wife. Millief f i (D SHE-RA: PRINCESS OP
B url Lancaster Janice Rule
O &lt; WHEEL OF FORTUNE
There are no known survivors.
betrayer
so
that
he
can
cuitom-de*
Ventura counties worked to then mostly fair. Low in the
POWER (MON, WED-FRI)
sentative. was retired from the
i
Shalom-Goldsteln Memo­
5 O PRICE IS RIGHT
sign h it revenge
3 :3 0
Brlsson Guardian Funeral Air Force and was a member of daughter. Elaine Neff. Dallas:
contain nearly a dozen major lower 70s. Light wind. Rain
rial
Chapel.
Orlando.
Is
in
charge
7 O THREE'S A CROWD (R)
4 :3 5
(11 (35) L E A V E IT TO B E A V E R
Home Is In charge of arrange­ Christ the King Episcopal stepdaughter. Lucy Paskoskl. of arrangements.
6 :3 0
H (35) DALLAS
dX BRADY BUNCH
fires early today. The blazes had chance less than 20 percent
Lake Mary; sister. Shirley
(?) O 0 R 0 W IN 0 PAINS The truth
4 :0 0
ments.
Wednesday
...
mostly
sunnv.
ffi (*0) WE'RE COOKING NOW
blackened more than 9.400
5 :0 0
Church. He was a World War II Erickson. Bridgeton: 10 grand­
hurts When Maggie gives an honest
l l (35)RHODA
ffi ID INDAV SPECIAL. ROOKIE
High in the lower 90s. Light
THOMAS R. LIVELY
0 (J) NEWLYWED GAME (TUE,
criticism
o
l
her
daughter
s
writing
acres by Monday night.
velcran
and
a
member
of
DAV
OF THE VEAR (MON)
4
:
2
0
THU.
FRI)
c
h
i
l
d
r
e
n
:
s
i
x
g
r
e
a
t
­
skills r j
wind becoming northeast 10 to
Mr. Thomas Richard Lively. and Central Florida Realtors
ffi (() INDAY NEWS (TUE-FRI)
At least nine houses and a 15 mph.
J
O MOVIE th e Secret Night
i I O M 'A 'S 'H
g r a n d c h i l d r e n ; 2 step29.
of
1311
Racine
Road..
Or­
F
u
n
e
r
a
l
N
o
t
i
c
e
s
0:00
Callei (19751 Robert Reed Hope
nursery were destroyed Monday
(7/ O HEADLINE CHASERS
1 1 :3 0
Association.
Survivors:
daugh­
grandchildren.
Lange*
0
(4)
RIPTIDE
/
P
LA
Y
O
F
F
S
A
B
o
a
t
i
n
g
F
o
r
e
c
a
s
t
S
t.
ange City, died Saturday as the ters. Janice Atnar. Louisville.
a t (36)WHAT'S HAPPENING!!
O 4 SCRABBLE
In the Malibu area, and three
loum aiisl hues Cody. Nick and
Gr amkow Funeral Home.
f f i (10) OCEANUS (MON)
7 O ALL-STAR BLITZ
4 :3 0
more houses were leveled near Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50 result of a drowning In the St. Kv.. Kimberly Neff. Orlando: Sanford. Is In charge of ar­ -R OMB eE mS Oo Nr ia. lL AtcRr vRicYe *E . tor L a r r y E R o b e io n
Murray to fmd out who k trying to
f
f i (10) UNDCAST AMONG HUMAN
f f i (10) FLORIOASTYLE
11
(35)
RHOOA
miles
—
East
to
southeast
wind
Johns River. Born in Sanford brothers. James. Hemphill. Tex­
kill her and why (May be pre-empt,
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
downtown Los Angeles. In the
CD (D ALL ABOUT US (TUE-FRI)
rangements.
|c o u p o n |
ed tor a t ilt h A L Playolt game rl
March 16. 1956. he moved to as. Sidney. Seattle: sister
f f i (10) NEW LITERACY: AN IN­
* l' £
San Fernando Valley, a man 10 knots or less through tonight
necessary |
WEDNESDAY
BARTON HECHT
TRODUCTION TO COMPUTERS
becoming
northeast
10
to
15
Orange
City
in
1980.
He
was
a
AFTERNOON
1 O MOVIE Prom ises To Keep
died of a heart attack while
0J*D)
VFw‘°P o»r£ *l|HOmr S*n'» ^ n#*1^ riiSl
Mr. Barton Hecht. 50. of 551 t*rwc.»
knots Wednesday. Sea 2 to 3 feet field superintendent lor Briar Mildred Wallas. Midland. Texas
MORNING
(Premiere! Robert Milchum, C h ris­
No wi! 0r uCOndUC" n9 m,fT*orlal
trying to save his home.
f f i (10) M O N E Y P U Z Z LE (THU)
five
grandchildren.
Matilda Place. Longwood. died
topher M ilchum A roustabout*
Increasing Wednesday. A few Construction Co. He was a U.S.
f f i (10) A R T O F BEIN G H U M A N
_
12.00
W E D N E S D A Y TIDES:
visit lo the wile and son he deserted
Baldwin-FaIrchiId Funeral Monday at South Seminole L I V E L Y . T H O M A S R .
(FRI)
showers.
„
5
:
0
0
0
(4
&gt;
MIOOAY
Army veteran and a Baptist.
30 years earlier mttrets new wounds
f f i (I) I DREAM OF JEANN*
Home. Forest City, |s in charge C o m m u n i t y H o s p i t a l .
0
#1fiMSRIrwn F n e vye• •- b
«wnu|CMcktn.
unmin
Country
( 7 I O THE SAINT
(DOODONEWS
and causes dormant resentments
Survivors include his wife of arrangements.
t o # * your t o
l l •-----------m y Hr# » t o #1 ma
Hems.
- t o c t o u t t o “-31 (35) NEWS
10
re
s
u
rf
a
c
e
;
j
6
:
0
5
41 (ID BEWITCHED
•*4 Irtali to y*
Longwood. Born In Chicago on
Judy: son. Joshua: three daugh­
IX OET SMART (MON)
OX
L
E
A
V
E
IT
TO
B
E
A
V
E
R
ffi (10) MURDER MOST ENOUSH
FRANK D'AMATO
R n D i D * Country CMcktn.
(7) O MOONLIGHTING In blackMay 11, 1935. he moved to
1X BOB NEWHART (TUE. THU)
ters. Angel. Samantha and Kara,
(MON)
IB«*». enemy coN t i n and •
and-whrle sequences David and
Mr. Frank D'Amato. 84. of Longwood from Detroit in 1983.
_
8
:
3
0
f f i (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
Courla, olllclatlrV Thtre !!|||b2
Madd« tune-travel lo the 1940s lo
all of Orange City: father. Thom­
f f i l l ) P E O P L E 'S C O U R T (T U I.
5:15
7025 N. Lake Blvd.. Altamonte
investigate a murder g
(TUE)
(12 WORLD AT LARGE (WED)
THU, FRI)
’
as Lively. DeBary: mother. Betty Springs, died Sunday at Florida He was u project manager for a Funaral Horn,* l II*. Ma7y m c7 a T g , ° * kl,w n
1 1 (35) QUINCY
ffi (10) MYSTERYI (WED)
r h M # quotations provided by members ot
(D O C Z JO N E W S
A Light
5
:
3
0
M
onroe;
six
l
h
a
r
p
e
.
Lake
24ty
® 03) WAR A COMMENTARY BY
f f i (10) N O V A (THU)
a i (15)ALICE
,
Hospital, Altamonte. Born in
" " Ftatlonal Association ot Sacurltias Daalars
FI, Progr,**
...........
® (41 THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
...........*71* 27U
QWYNNE OYER An eiammation ol
ffi (10) WONOCRWORKS (FRI)
brothers. David. Louie. Donnie Italy on October 4. 1901. he
oro representative Intar dealer prices as ot
f f i (10) O C E A N U S (MON)
Freedom Stvlngi
MUSIC (MON)
.............. Illy
tbe
professional
soldier
and
lha
Ilk.
ffi (D IN0AV SPECIAL: BUN0
and Robert, all of Sanford. Floyd. moved to Altamonte Springs
tnterdealer markets H C A .............
O 141I S COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
maant used by the career officer to
S U N D A Y (MON)
B
S
"
"
"
Flowers S^rntwJthTov!^
COUNTSVCMOtM
Hugh«i Supply.............
U
BEVERLY
HILLBILLIES
U.S.
Air
Force,
and
Wayne
ol
itiauilaui
tus
military
organisation
t
.........
77*4
CD (D IT'S A OREAT UPI (TUE“ f f i O O ) n e w LITERACY: A N B fr
Irom Miramar In 1980. He was a
fw
i f m#
SANFORD
Morri*on‘»..................
attitudes
and
tvs
own
beliefs
g
............. H U
H'e
Wekiva; sister. Vivian Monger, retired tailor und a member of
PRO
T R 0 0 U C T I0 N T O C O M P U T U S
NCR Corp......
„
8:00
CASSELBERRY I
ISM French A*
..... . . Jjlt
. COUNTRYOSOVt
O (4) NBC NEWS
(W*D)
A t la n t ic B a n k .......................
P ltM cy ..............
Sanford:
paternal
grandparents.
(Hwy. 17-S3)
1 0 :0 0
41 N. Hwy. 17 S3 !
12.-05
SANFORD
» 'i
1*1
O
CBS
EARLY
MORNING
St. Mary Magdalen Catholic
A m a f lc a n P lo n a a r S A L ........... , u
,
f
f
i
(10)
M
O
N
EY
P
U
Z
Z
LE
(THU)
StottyV.........................
O (4) REMINGTON STEELE /
•314)151
m-ssso
OX PERRY MASON
Louis and June Lee; maternal
NEWS
................ 1*H
CASSELBERRY
H i French A*
ii
B a m a t t B a n k ........................
« '■ / ’ /
f f i (10) A R T O f B E M Q H U M A N
PLAYOFFS I aura and Steele take
South,,it Bank
Church. Survlvore: wife, Mary:
.......... 301* M U
7 O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
F i e r i * Power
...................
(Hwy.
17-SI)
41
N.
Hwy.
17-S3
grandparents.
Richard
and
t
lo
the
friendly
skies
Io
tmd
out
who
1
2
:
3
0
Sun Tru it......................
sister. Teresa DeFao, Italy.
41 (35) OOOO OAYl
............. IJ'4
31'y
f f i (I) M O R K AN O M M O Y
SS141I1
i.
O (4&gt;SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
committed a murder on board a noAgnes Rans. all of Lake Monroe
(J2) NEWS

PEO PLE

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

Truth
Consequences Can
Risky Business
Hospital

Official Warns Of
Shortage In Public Housing

Dear
Abby

GARDEN CIRCLE

MARTA Settlements Considered

Carrie Schnelker
Weds In Seattle

—

_

^

Holiday
Showcase
Planned

•..Sanford

Church women Set
Lunch, Festival

Medical Malpractice Aw ard Limit Upheld

O'
Hoo.
C

om

a.s a
will
for «
Ovle
seas
Sem
Tc
JUMl(

varst
Ca
mcrr
row (
that,
pro h.
gone
TIi
8 0 ll
recor
with
Lake
a Set
mate
Oviec
"w
slow
the s
of Mo
Cat
Step!
Lisa I
Mood
"K«
game
“ Stef:
in the
the st
sortie
(Knaj
really
Ovl
Wedtt
hosts
said
matcl
signlf
first n
The
secon
half (
Lyma
stralg

AREA DEATHS

MIRACLE SERVICE

WEDNESDAY
FAMILY SPECIAL

Three Piece Chicken
Dinner

$049

STOCKS

$ 6 9JL

(Hollins

Bald win-Fairchild Funeral

* 323-1204

trilli tellinar (May be pre-empted

ffi (D PHYSICIAN 8 TELEVISION

()) O
LESS

VOUNO ANO THE R U T ­

Eight Piece
Thrift Pack

888

0 1 B E V E R LY M U B R J J U

I

�2B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tueiday, Oct. IS, 1985

304 E. COMMERCIAL ST.
HOURS
SANFORD, FL 32771
Mon.-Frl 9:30-5:30
(305) 323-1137
Saturday 9:30-12:30 Noon

TH E

FURN ITURE H O U SE

PAC N’ SEND

17*0 N O R T H HIG H W AY 17-92
SOUTH
F IR S T
NORTH
ACRO SS

FOR LESS THAN S10 YOU CAN SHIP
25 POUNDS TO THE FOLLOWING CITIES
CLEVELAND ■ DALLAS •ST. LOUIS •DETROIT
NEW YORK ■PHILADELPHIA ■BALTIMORE

NEW-USED FURNITURE
^
ANTIQUES

(Dm * Not Includ* Packaging)

J

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
PACKAG IN G SHIPPING FO AM MOLD SYSTEM CUSTOM BO XES
PACKAG IN G SU PPLIES
OIFT W R APPIN G
FRUIT ORDERS
Canvanltot D e sn te a n L p c a tk n Around Corner From Post Office

a gT

VERY LITTU MARKUP-LOW PRICES
LAYAWAY-WE OCLIVER
X CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME
OPEN 7 OAYS A WEEK 321-2063

e

A L A N ’S
FABRICS a n d RUGS
C u it o m M a d r

RENTALS

DRAPES
P\v9 ’ * Bedrpreadi
(Im U- V '
• Cmlom lhodrs

sa p s*

•

* u s t &lt;* r y

7*59
i 59 PorV Drive
SonFo,

•

1016'» S. FKHCH A IT.

£

323-9421
HWY. 17-92 A 27th ST. SANFORD

ALL
PERMS

$ 2 5 °°

Includes Cut A Style
Lout; A Tinted Hair Extra_

C A L L 322-5742

TOW ERS

(p ia ffe

3 2 3 -4 5 6 9

SALES

TOWERS BEAUTY SALON

START CREATING
YOUR CHRISTMAS
GIFTS NOW
ASK ABOUT OUR
CLASSES
&amp;

A D V E R T IS IN G

CON SIGN M EN T CLOTHING
I
J

• Co.pri-

Don’t Get Caught Napping

w
s 4

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

ECONO IM A G E

• Vnr«.col*

3 2 2 - 5
5 7
7 8
8 3
3

C M 322-2611 Howl

• PUT TOUR BUSINESS ON THE M O V E

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

I

M in i b lin d *

'JfcrV-^

/T

ft

Prepared by A dve rtisin g Dept, of

M ANY EXCITING ID EAS &amp;
COSTUMES TO CHOOSE FROM

B T l S v v * C°,n,te*
#

O F F LE A W O RLD
T R A F F I C L IG H T —
O F H IG H W A Y 43*
FRO M HANDYW AY.

Business
Review

B SALON

519 E. 1st St. (Bram Towers) Sanford

SAMFOKD

Eddie Senkarik helps customer Janice Wallace select paint.
A C E AUTO

FLO W E R S

RADIATOR

FO R A L L
O C C A S IO N S

R A D IA T O R S

711 F R E N C H AVE.
322-0235
SA N F O R D

aSP*

OPEN MON.THRU FRI. 8-0
SAT. 8:30-3
ALL WORK
GUANANTEED
1 OAY SERVICE

DAVE’S UPHOLSTERY
• FURNITURE • BOATS • C A R S
]

?
; V

4 0 0 N. 1 7 -9 2

Discount
Paper, Office, &amp; Janitorial
Supplies
Rental Equipment

5W
J H ih

N e tt To Sob ik a S u b Sh o p

1215 N. HWY. 427
Longwood, FL

vs4

L O N G W O O D , FLA.
Fn 8 0 0 A M

f lf l£ 7

lO i’OUDl

Haney 5 V icim Pmutp*
Owner!

6 00 P M

(=) MOVIE REVUE

(VCR)

VIDEO CONNECTIO N RENTAL
W E’RE FLORIDA’S LARGEST &amp;
LOWEST PRICED MOVIE CHAIN
OVER 16.000 MOVIES TO CHOOSE FROM

Movie World Has A New Name 6 Location
HWY. 17-92. Kmart Ploio
SANFORD. FL

7 C 7

il 5U \ rv*.t*&gt;

(3 0 5 ) 8 5 2 -1 6 0 0
W on

AND
O A K LA W N F U N E R A L H O M E
S R. 4 * L A K E M A R Y

PAPER &amp; SUPPLIES SPOT

NOW IS THE TIME TO BRIGHTEN YOUR STILL GOOD FURNITURE
• LARGE SELECTION OF MATERIALS • QUALITY WORKMANSHIP
f * E E ESTIMATES
REE PICKUPS A DELIVERY

FAST LCK'AL OELIXTHY
J L n Attom r&gt;&lt; Srn r Yo u
I I S S. S A N F O R D A V E .
SANFO RD

PH. 3 2 2 5 0 6 6

C

• Silk Flowers
• Fresh Cut
• Plants

M F 8 3D5M
5 AT 6 30-1

1*5ffi
I

Sp6i

Professional
Car Care

323-7272

Olde Tymes
*£•■ Connection

WATCH &amp; JEWELRY REPAIR
and PAWN SHOP
l*h. 323*1327
2109 S. FRENCH AVE . SANFORD
.

• S j i r i M l (&gt;f *l£ti • C lIM o tl. W n rk
a !( cs! he&lt; Vnuqtn Jt-wt'lrv a Knl* v

• i loi K • \\,iii h

Krpeii

• itmi: St/mu stum s,-ttinc
\utir.»is.ils
• Kmi-Jcwdrv Suit s
Wt BUY GOLD i SILVCB • AMTIQUt CLOCKS A W AUMS • WHS

■ T if f

104 MAGNOLIA MALL

►J !l (Around TK* Corner fro m Th* Clock)

f a 321-7157

SANFORD

Antiques • Collectibles
M on Thru Thuft And Sot 10-5
Fndoy 10 - 8
Whether Your’re Looking For A Olft Or An Accessory
For Your Home* Come In And Let Our Staff Help You
With A Selection That Will Be An investment*

Distinctive Mirror Designs
FOR E V E R Y DECOR

GLASS
FOR E V E R Y
PURPOSE

S r s i l t ^ gUM I PUtT
710 MMNOUA AVE., SANTORO

WEIGHT
LOSS
CENTER
No Drugs — No Contracts —
No Prepackaged Foods
Free Consultation

glass, and auto glass replacement.
Senkarik has customized mirrors for walls and
ceilings. They stock Plexiglas in four thicknesses.
They also carry a full line of nationally famous
Sanford-manufactured Pen Paints. McLoskev's
Man o' War Ultra Spar Marine Varnish and
Hope's two-step method of Instant relinlshing.
Hope's reflnlsher removes old finish with on
stripping, paint brushes or sandpaper. Follow up
with a finish coat of Hope's Tung Oil.
Senior citizens are members of the American
Association of Retired Persons are always eligible
for a discount on paint and paint sundries, such
as brushes and rollers.
Senkarik also carries a large selection of
wallpaper designs lueludlne photo murals and
grass stock from which to choose.
They have art supplies artists whether they are
beginners or professionals in such quality brands
as Grumbacher. Delta. Wtnsor-Newlnu and LIqultcx.
Call on Senkarik at 322-4622 for nil of your
paint and glass needs.

ANY 2 DR. OR
S E A
4 DR. C A R ...........
O U
‘GET CHRISTMAS GIFT CERTIFICATE NOW1

IM O W O P E N
o. m

Senkarik Glass At Palm Co. lias a reputation In
Sanford for (food reliable service and quality
products that jjnes back more than 35 years.
Located at 210 Magnolia Ave. in downtown
Sanford, they carry Benjamin Moore paint
products such as Moore's exterior house paint.
Moorgard latex with luster. Moorglo latex with
soli gloss (great for painting trim and exterior
doors) and Moorwood exterior stains.
Benjamin Moore makes the finest paint pro­
ducts at everyday prices, according to Jerry and
Eddie Senkarik. whose lather founded the
business.
Jerry and Eddie will take time to discuss vour
palm and glass needs with you and are always
glad to give you helpful advice.
They will even go to your home to discuss
special paint problems you may have and give
you an overall estimate of the materials you will
need for the Job.
Senkarik specializes In all types of glass
Including desk and table tops, cusiom residential
glazing, shower doors, storefront commercial

AUTO G LA SS W n TI

3 2 1 -2 2 8 9

euiv r t t m t

Senkarik G la ss &amp; Paint
For Quality, Service

GRANDOPENING
SPECIAL
• FREE Check-Up
01 All Hearing Aids
• FREE Hearing
Test and Analysis
• FREE In-Home
Service

June Dunwild

Len Yordon

BBLTONB

AM ERICAN WEIGHT LOSS CENTER

Hearing Aid Center

2970 Orlando Dr.
(Zayre Plaza) Sanford

2200 S. F rench Avenue, San lord
(Sem inole Service Center)
Corner W. 22nd A F rench Ave
M O N . T U E S . • T H U R S . «:0«-l:00
A ll Other T im e t B y Appointm ent
To A vo id W e ltin g C A L L MJ-I4QQ

323-6505

»

Veteran Volkshop technician Ray Eland checks out Nissan

Winterize Your Car
Now At Volkshop
Don't let the balmy Indian Summer weather
lull you Into a false sense of security and Jack
Frost catch you by surprise. Marvin Wright,
owner of Volkshop. 214 Palmetto Ave.. Sanford,
says. ''Winterize your Volkswagen, Toyota.
Datsun or Nissan now and avoid the rush."
Let Marvin and his tried and true team of
technicians get your car ready for cold weather
by cheeking your antifreeze, belts and hoses,
batteries and charging system.
"A properly tuned car will start better In cold
weather. The choke adjustment needs to be set
for winter weather." Marvin said.
Volkshlp specializes In Volkswagens. Toyolas.
Datsuns and Nissans. Call Marvin al 321-0120 for
an appointment to have your vehicle worked on
or a free estimate for your particular make and
model. They will Inspect you car for defects
without charge.
"T o some dealers. It's Just another car." said
Marvin, “ but at Volkshop we take each one
Individually. We treat our customers right, that's
why we have so much repeat business."
All of Volkshop's work Is guaranteed.
They specialize In engine and trans-axle
rebuilding for VWs, Toyotas and Datsuns. They
also do lubrication, and oil change and repairs on
brakes, front ends, transmissions and exhaust
systems.
Volkshop is dedicated to keeping your vintage
VW Bug looking and running Its best. If your VW
is showing Its age. the (oiks at Volkshop can
completely recondition and refurbish It from the

I

ground up for only a fraction of what a new car
would cost. This Includes tires, paint Job. new
engine and brakes.
If you are one of those ear owners who likes lo
do his own repairs, you will find the quality
Trcuhaff and Bosch parts, Continental belts and
hoses and Castro) motor oils for VWs. Toyotas.
and Datsuns.
Volkshop Is open Monday through Friday from
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call for an appointment for your
car.

mow it to toll it in

the Horold Bonnots Boviow
CALL 3 2 2 -2 0 1 1

�Business
Review

_____________I_______________________________________

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser
A D V E R T IS IN G

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Jim
L a sh ’s
B lu e B ook C ars

CoK 322-211 Mow!

★ SALES: unirwoit

PUTTOUR BUSINESS Oh Tt MOVE •

•

★ SERVICE: SWTCU.

A D V E R T IS IN G

#1IV R T IS IN G

★ RENTALS:
»

Fam ily Credit's
Financial
Consultants,
from left,
John Murphy,
assistant
manager
Sharon
Alexander
and Carlos
Santiago,
manager

Tt a m

*MT

321-0741
830-66SS
HWY. 17*92
SANFORD

t m m t N C t a n d a t w v i c t t* g a n p o a o . s e m i n o u c o u n t y

D an M y ers

FPINCH AVt
SANFORD FLA. 32771
nos)-:321-2360

A

Hire

glass ilylNJ0r

Has The Paint Products
For All Your Needs

Country Service Center
119 ELM AVE. SANFORD

323-3966

P r e c is io n S h a r p e n in g C e n te r

HOME AAADE COUNTRY CRAFTS
DECORATOR ITEMS
CRAFTS MADE TO ORDER
Sto p By Sr Visit O ur Showroom!!
Mechanlcol and Electrical Repairs

We’ll Bring The
Best In Decorating
Right To Your Home
CUSTOM DRAPERIES - BEDSPREADS
WOVEN WOODS ■ MINI BLINDS - VERTICALS
_CARPET • VINYL • WALL COVERINGS

FREE ESTIMATE
NO OBLIGATION

Preducti

319 W. 130i ST. SANFORD

Custom Reflnlshlng
Stripping By Hand
Insurance And Moving
Claim s
Furniture Repairs

B&amp;L
FUEL OIL SE R V IC E

GET READY FOR THE HOLI­
DAYS. BRING YOUR WORK
IN AND AVOID THE RUSH

PROMPT - METERED DELIVERY

When you need u loan, come to the source in
Longwood — Family Credit Services located in
the Park Square shopping center on State Road
434 west of Highway 17-92. If you are looking for
a way to fulfill a lifelong dream or Just trying to
get through an emergency. Family Credit offers
ways to meet your loan needs.
Whether it's a small loan of a few hundred
dollars, or a large loan of several thousand, they
have a variety of plans.
The staff at Family Credit doesn't treat you like
a number, but they give you personalized
attention.
The have loans to meet your individual,
business or family needs such as home improve­
ments. bill consolidation, college education, or
starting your own business.
The make loans up to S 100.000 for first and
second equity mortgages on residentlonal or
commercial real estate.
They also buy mortgages and work with
mortgage brokers and offer small personal loans
Including revolving lines of credit.
Carlos Santiago Jr., assistant manager since
May. has been promoted to manager replacing
Martin Scott, who was transferred to the Orlando
office of Family Credit. He Is married and lives In
Winter Springs.
Santiago, a 1989 graduate of Trinity Prep and
University of Central Florida, was formerly with
Barnett Hank Consumer Credit Department in
Winter Park.
John Murphy, formerly with the Barnett Bank
of Winter Park In the Consumer Credit Depart­
ment. Is assistant manager of the Family Credit
Longwood office. Sharon Alexander is the
customer representative.
A 1982 graduate of University of Central
Florida. Murphy is married and lives in Winter
Park.
Carlos. John and Sharon, financial counsulhints. Invite you lo come by their Longwood office

Scrx'lng Sem inole County

BICYC
SKATEBO

E

3096 HWY. 17-92 (Nexl To Bamott Bank)
Sanlord
(Inilda Fair Auto Salat

_____ Sptcialiiing
SptcialiiingInSfceA
In Sfce APert
Parts For
V.W.'s, Toyolnd Datsun
(Carnajd 9 Palmetto)

214 Sabnetto Avt.

PALM-CAAD-CRYSTAL 9AU READING

I HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL

AFFAIRS

(305)
695*7005
t&lt; Mppij. •*

BEEN M B U SM U S FOR SO YEARS
M PRIVACY OF MY NOME
HOURS 8 AM - 9 PM 7 Days A Week
IM M U N N 1B 4

aoMwnnir

VOTED BEST PSYCHIC FOR 1964 BY
CENTRAL FLORIDA SCENE MAGAZINE
Ita Raa6t«a Far U Wtm TMt A4

*4 .9 0

12% Cemplete PaHata
* 9 .9 9
(October Only!)
Hours:

9-6 M F
8 6 Sat.

417 Mofitelle St.
Altamonte Sprlwga

8 3 0 *8 5 5 3

T r e o s u r e Island J e w e lr y
(N«it To Drlvst'i Ucani* Buiaoit)

2601 Vi S. Sanlord Avanua
Sanford
/fours
STIVI

322-0528

sum-

Mon.-Silt.

9-6

Imagine a sale
on the best o f
Levolor blinds.
Verticals m hun­
dreds o f colon in
excitmgdecorator
fabrics and
alumimans. It's
hen and now
and the savings
an fantastic.

LEVOLOR*
Vertical Blind

Sale!

GREEN SWcRiy?/
ALL CURLS
STARTING A T .

*45

Ur

C A R E FREE CU RLS - EL A ST A CU RLS

PERMS__ *25 up
REUXERS..l 25 ur
ACCENT COLORING

314120

THORNHILL INTERIO RS, ETC
2927 8. HWY. 17-92. SUITE H4
IN THE CENTER M ALL ACROSS FROM THE ZAYRE

...........
321-9579

HOURS: Mon. - Fft 10-1:30: Sat 10-1.00, C lo M d W td n o td a ,

EVALUATION

695-6699
1015 H W Y . 17*92 L O N G W O O D

WARMNO MONA* PMCtCO HIVES

Pre-School
Education Program
18 Months Thru 12 Years

Calaataa l* c Fata* la d y * Fitatiaa Tan, Slat Taat. Shart Ana tan
Aal Talk (racial.
*•*» #*’ I V and a v C'Mi* t-mio** M V O

fa« tHilt
•ion 0* 'MI’W i'

*0

&gt;'•ftt

a

•:* ***V|*{a«bt
; a* aafOOt* 1)W'**-** '/ K-v**

a'j.l*' HM»V*0* *Hl IAll s«o»&lt;( |l|fONQA*»|e’IMM*

108 PM

7 Days A W, (6S [),,s A Vrai

2 4 / i s A&gt;HP()H1 BL v n
I/1SP9J
It llu a
M

A M O R !)
O H| AN [) I) M&lt;( K t k y

ER NEW
GEM ENT

m

Southern
FRIED CHICKEN

LUNCH SPECIAL

M-Sat. 11-3 PM
2 Pc. Chicken
Colo Slow, Mashed
Potatoes, Gravy

* 1.99
2100 8. French Ava.
Sanford, FL

1 I 'l'W 'I W

A CHILDS WORLD
2 8 5 4 S . S a n fo rd A ve .

“THE OFFICE SOURCE”
Y o u r Computer Store

HAMMERMILL TIDAL DP
COPIER P A P E R .........

2 9

COME SEE US!
at tho
Greater Orlando C o m p u te r Show
October 18th - 20th
At The Expo Canter - Booth 352
PHO N E

323*5815

S a n fo rd

111 M A G N O L IA A V E . S A N F O R D

m H

0

• SPANISH LESSONS
• FAMILY STYLE MEALS
• FIELD TRIPS
• TRANSPORTATION TO &amp;
FROM LOCAL SCHOOLS
• COMPUTER SKILLS

*19*0»«

SANFORD PAIN CONtOL CLINIC |
OF C H I R O P R A C I N C .
8AM

1 ^ c U t S *V to lU H O it

»i* ust f0

3 PC

Cl

ESDAY SPECIAL*
d a n . chooaa an , 1

PHOSE

fFormerlv First Sanlord Computer Store)

323-8424

— FREE DELIVERY —

SANFO RD GULF SERVICE, INC.

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES

ISCarCaie

JOUtO• 2 . 4 9
DCET SPECIAL-

We also moke 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Residential or Commercial Real Estate
up to 9100,000.

£»•&lt; a pc chlckan,

*pt
a no
roiia

322-94-

* 6 .5 2

Ortrt

M-Th 11930 p m
F A Gal 11 10 30 p m

Sun 13a pm.

Back By Popular Demand
10% Sweat Feed

MEMBER SANFORD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

'H O N E

W ESTERN HAY A G R A IN
fe a tu rin g C arnation Feed s

WE SELL:
Diamonds At Wholesale Prices
New And Preowned Jewelry

In f o r d

"HrH Chtckrn In Town"

LONSWOOD

321-2004
323-9379

VOLKSFOP

A A N iO R f

MADAME KATHERINE

3
Ear **ierc,n9
Custom Made Jewelry

•t —

N e e * P a ir S t i l l n e s s
Arm a n d p u ld e r P a m

Full A uto Detailing Available

V

ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES

F roq u e n ) A d achos
Low Bact Hip-Pain
Oi.Vinnsj Loss ol Sloop
NumUnopI Hands 01 Kent
Norvousi

/ ^

^

Gold • Silver • Diamonds • Coins
Sterling • Dental Gold • Pocket Watches
Gold • Silver Coins • Collectables

Corner ot S. Park Ava. 9 Oak

S POINTS PLAZA 17-92 LAKE INY
FUAWMLB (Fit, Sat. Sm)

SPIN AL

nU

Sanford

TOP CASH PAID

SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22's FILED

P.J.’s C Y C LE &lt;MT=R

and
Experts In Auto
And Marine Paint,
Body Work Specialists.

Jewelry Cleaned

2510 A OAK AVE. SANFORD

All Popular
— U}»iy Haw Far

322-7496

506 W. 13th St.

“CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE”
3 2 3 -7 7 1 0 o r 3 2 3 -3 8 6 6

Raleigh

FREE

LOVELAND'S REFINISHING

f Jewelry
,
Repairs

Serving Sanlord lor 27 Yaara
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 9-5

“ THE PRICE BUTERS”

A &amp; R AUTO CARE
BODY SHOP

POST OFFICE BOX B6B
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA 32746

BLAIR AGENCY

or call 831-3400. Olflce hours .
m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
Family Credit Services, Ihil opened lls
Longwood office one year agols 'wholly owned
subsidiary of the Citizens an&lt;(ijt)H-rn Bank of
Georgia Corporation. C&amp;S Nona! Bank of
Georgia has been serving tlijioutbeast since
1897.

DECORATING
DEN

In f t u . m r w Si tu r |U5|

JANE PHILIPS

PHONE 323-8856

Family Credit
All Your Loan

322-3315
322-7642

P h ilip s

Paint

ROBERT L. DONALDSON
U.S.N. (RET.)

Tueiday, Oct. IS, teas—3B

MEET OUR
DEDICATED
GENERAL
MANAGER
CHRIS PETRIS

Personal loans are available Including
Revolving Credit Line.

- - -• -

n i ta ts ■■^1 I■■A4.

S r llw UTTII ADS

that MUSUIt UP...

P l e u e C a ll

• HtATINQ 6 MR CONOmONINQ

hi M l m i PNfili,

• FRONT-CWNO ALIGNMENT
• OIL CHAMOE • LUBC
• BRAKE SERVICE

BUSINESSREVliWI
Deaf daley, Hart yaur ad
in ttia nail luua....

Colt: 322-2611

For Appointm ent

HdM W Ha

• TUNIUMNOINS REPAIR
• TIRE* A BATTERIES
• WHEEL BALANCE
• ROAD EERVICE

^

M U 1 FRENCH AVE., SANFORD \

322-4524

&amp;

Family Credit Services, Inc.
A S3 Company

ON S R. 4*4. NEAR 1F-W

'
CALL
CARLOS M. SANTIAGO. JR-

n&lt;* rut Nvtn Ihcraim Cu
F l U?M

831-3400

�9

4B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tueiday, Oct. 11&gt; H U

71— Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS

Legal Notice
N O T IC E O F
S P E C IA L B O N D E L E C T IO N
I N T H E SC H O O L D IS T R IC T O F
S E M IN O L E CO U NTY.
F L O R ID A
O N O C T O B E R 77, 1985

approval as required by law;
such projects being described as
follows
PRO JECT S’
1 New construction ot an ele
m enlary school
II New construction ol a district
service center;
I I I Acquisition ot a new (50
acre) hlqh school slle.
IV
Additions (new construe
lion) to existlnq school sites
and or alteration, remodeling
a n d re n o v a tio n ot e n is lin g
school lacllltlesas follows
1 Croom s H igh School
2 C a sse lb e rry E le m en ta ry
School
3 L a k e M a r y Ele m e n ta ry
School
4 Lake Brantley H igh School
5 Lake Howell H igh School
6 Sterling P a rk Elem entary
School
7 Red Bug Elem entary School
8 Geneva Elem entary School
9 M idw ay Elem entary School
10 W ilson Elem entary School
11 W oodlands E le m e n ta ry
School
12 G o ld sb o ro E le m e n ta ry
School
13 Seminole H igh School
14 E a stb ro o k E le m e n ta ry
School
15 English Estates Elem enla
ry School
16 Bear L a k e Elem entary
School
17 L o n gw o o d E le m e n ta ry
School
18 Id y llw ild e E le m e n ta ry
School
19 Spring Lake Elem enlary
School
20 Winter Springs Elem enla
ry School
21 Sabal Point Elem entary
School
22 Pine Crest Elem entary
School
23 Forest City Elem entary
School
24 A ltam on te E le m e n ta ry
School
25 Lake Orienla Elem entary
School
26 Lawton Elem enlary School
27 Keelh Elem enlary School
28 W ekiva Elem entary School
29 Santo'd M iddle School
30 Jackson Heights Middle
School
31 Teague M iddle School
J2 Tuskawilla M iddle School
33 Lym an High School
34 Milwee M iddle School
35 Rock Lake M iddle School
36 Lakeview M iddle School
37 South Sem inole M iddle
School
38 Ro se nw ald Exceptional
Student Center
39 Hopper Ele m en la ry School
40 Lake M a ry H igh School.
"Total Cost and Schedule ot

N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
THAT
A S PEC IA L
BOND
ELEC T IO N
w i l l be h e ld on
O c t o b e r 77 1985. In t h e S c h o o l
D is t r ic t ol S e m in o le C ounty.
F lo r i d a (such O l s l f l c l c o m p r ls
m g a ll o l S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F l o r i d a ) , to r the p u r p o s e ot
d e t e r m i n i n g w h e t h e r o r not
G e n e r a l O h llg a t.o n S ch o o l
B o n d s ot the D i s t r i c t s h a l l b e
i s s u e d In a n a g g r e g a t e p r i n c i p a l
a m o u n t not e » c e e d ln g
SI05 000 000, b e a r i n g I n t e r e s t ,
p a y a b l e a t s u c h r a l e o r r a t e s nol
e x c e e d i n g th e m a x i m u m l e g a l
r a l e p r o v i d e d b y a p p l i c a b l e law ,
as s h a l l be d e t e r m i n e d a l the
t i m e ot th e s a l e th e r e o f , m a l u r
Inq In i n s t a l l m e n t s o v e r a p e r i o d
ot n o l to e x c e e d ?0 y e a r s f r o m
t h e d a t e o l I s s u a n c e ot the
bonds
b e i n g c a l l a b l e a s re
q u i r e d by la w lo r the p u r p o s e ot
f i n a n c i n g Ihe c o s t o t a c q u i r i n g
b u ild in g
e n la rg in g
fu rn ish in g
or o th e r w is e Im p ro v in g b u ild
m g s or school g r o u n d s o r lor
a n y o t h e r e x c l u s i v e u se o l p u b l i c
s c h o o l s w i t h i n th e D i s t r i c t , as
m o r e s p e c ific a lly d e scrib e d and
p r o v i d e d In a r e s o l u t i o n ot Th e
S c h o o l B o a r d ot S e m in o le
County
F l o r i d a , a d o p t e d on
S e p t e m b e r 4 1985
T h e p l a c e s o l v o t i n g In s a i d
b o n d e l e c t i o n s h a l l be Ihe s a m e
p l a c e s in t h e C o u n t y w h e r e the
la s t G e n e r a l E l e c t i o n w a s h e l d
or s u c h o t h e r p l a c e s a s s h a l l be
d e v q n a t e d b y th e S u p e r v i s o r o l
E le c t io n s an d d u ly n o tice d
p u r s u a n t to law
T h e p o l l s w i l l b e op e n a l Ihe
v o l i n g p l a c e s on Ihe d a t e o l the
s p e c i a l b o n d e l e c t i o n f r o m 7 00
A M
u n t i l 7 00 P M
a ll as
p r o v i d e d In s u c h r e s o l u t i o n
a d o p t e d on S e p t e m b e r 4, 1985
p u b lis h e d h e r e w ith below
A ll q u a lifie d electo rs re sid in g
w i t h i n t h e D i s t r i c t s h a l l be
e n title d Q ualified a n d p e r m it t e d
to v o t e a t s u c h b o n d e l e c t i o n
iS E A L l
THE SCHOOL B O A R D
OF SEM IN O LE CO U N TY
FLO R ID A
s NANCYW ARREN
CH A IRM A N
ATTEST
s ROBERT W HUGHES
SECRETARY
P u b l i s h S e p t e m b e r J4 O c t o b e r
I, 8 15 1985
D E J 151
R E S O L U T I O N N O 85 7
R E SO LU TIO N
O R D ER IN G
AND PR O VID IN G FOR THE
H O LD IN G
OF
A S P EC IA L
BOND
E LE C T IO N
IN T H E
SC M O O L
D I S T R I C T
OF
S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y
F LO R ID A ON TH E Q U ESTIO N
OF
ISSU ING NOT E X C E E D
I N C 5 105 000 000 G E N E R A L
O E l i &amp; a TIO N S C H O O L B O N D S
OF T h e D IS TR IC T
A H E R F A S Th e S c h o o l B o a r d
ot S e m in o le C o u n ty
F lo rid a
hereinafter
c a l l e d the
B oard
on A u g u s t 28 '985
dul y
and le g a lly
adopted a
re so lu tio n e n title d
RESOLU
TION
R E Q U E S T I N G
AP
P R O V A l
BY
STATE
DE
PAR T M E NT OF ED U C A T IO N
OF A G E N E R A L O B LIG ATIO N
B O N D ISSUE P R O P O S E D F O R
THE
SCHOOL D IST R IC T O F
S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y

Fl

o r id a

,

which

Priority —

SCH EDU LE A ’
t C onstruction ot D istric t
Service Center — 6 000 000
2 C ro o m s H igh School —
485 322
3 C a sse lb e rry E le m e n ta ry
School — 2 313 996
4 Lake M a ry E le m e n ta ry
School - 1,821 060
5 Lake Brantley H igh School
- 7 106 487
ft Lake Howell H igh School —
6 681 144
7 Sterling Park Elem entary
School — 1,788,415
8 Red Bug Elem enlary School
— 1,652 948
9 Geneva Ele m en lary School
- 4.482,831
10 M i d w a y E l e m e n t a r y
School - 2.550.139
11 Wilson Elem entary School
- 4.343.567
17 W oodlands E le m e n ta ry
School - I 730,603
13 G o ld sb o ro E le m e n ta ry
School - 1 336 975
14 Seminole H igh School —
8 732 831
15 E a stb ro o k E le m e n la ry
School - 2 388 009
16 E n g lish E sla le s Elem enla
ry School - 1 531 821
17 Bear Lake Ele m en tary
School — I 992 4)6
18 L o n g w o o d E le m e n ta ry
School - 1 675 003
'9
Id y llw ild e E le m e n ta ry
School — 1 348 6i5
70 Spring Lake Elem entary
School — 1 833 661
2) Winter Springs Elem enta
ry School — 2 109 268
22 Sabal Point Elem entary
School - I 722.356
23 Pine Crest Elem entary
School — 2.238 074
24 Forest City Elem entary
School — 2.075 169
25 A lta m on te E le m e n ta ry
School — l 949,512
76 Lake Or tenia Elem entary
School - 2 078.389
27 Lawton Elem entary School
- 1 161 813
26 Keelh Elem entary School
13 700
29 Wex i ,a E -ementar y School

resolution

w a s a d o p t e d p u r s u a n t to the
r e q u i r e m e n t s o l S e c i o n 23a 3a
F l o r i d a S t a t u t e s 1 1983) a n d
W H E R E A S , In a n d b y s u c h
r e s o l u t i o n th e B o a r d p r o p o s e d
t h e i s s u a n c e o t P o n d s b y the
S c h o o l D i s t r i c t Ot S e m i n o l e
C ounty
F lo r id a (h e re in a fte r
ca lle d
D i s t r i c t I in th e a g
g r e q a t e p r i n c i p a l a m o u n t ot not
e x c e e d i n g 5105 000 000 l o r (he
p u r p o s e at f i n a n c i n g the c o s t ot
a c q u irin g
P u i'd m g
em argm g
f u r n i s h i n g o r o ’ h e r w i s e Im
p r o v i n g b u i l d n g s or s c h o o l
grounds
o r to r any o th e r
e x c ' u s i v e u s e ot t h e p u b l i c
schoc s w ’ h in s u c h D i s t r ic t
i n c i u d ng t h e r e i n m e p r o t e c t s
h e r e i n a f t e r s et f o r t h p r o v i d e d
i -* be t o u n d at t h e t i m e o l ’ he
c o n s t r u c t i o n ot the p r o t e c t s th at
t h e a m o u n t s a l l o c a t e d b e l o w to
c e r t a m ot *he p r o t e c t s a r e m a d
e q u a t e to r the c o m p l e t i o n ot
s u c h p r o j e c t s , the b o a r d m a y in
ts d i s c r e t i o n
a ll o c a t e add!
t i o n a a m o u n t s to s u c h p r o j e c t s
tro m other p ro te cts h e re in
i s t e d a n d it It b e t o u n d a* ’ he
t i m e ot rne c o n s ’ r u c L o n of ’ he
p r o ie c ’ s ’ hat
ess th a n the
a m o u n t s a i o c a ’ e d Cl- O A ’ o
c e r ’ a n gr m e p r o i e c t s a - e
n e e d e d ’ or ’ h e t o m p l e ’ on ot
s u c h p ' O i e c t v the B o a r d m a y in
•’ s d s c r e ’ i o n a ' l o c a ’ e t h e
a m o u n t s sc s a v e d ’ c ot h e r p r o
ie e l s
o’
* through unusual
e o r q i* gn y g r c i r c u m s t a n c e s
i n c l u d i n g c h a n g e s in p o p u l a t i o n ,
it
s dee m e d n e ce ssa ry and
a d . s a t e to c h a n g t an y of the
s t h p u s it e s or m o d i f y a n y ot the
p r o je c ts d e s c r ib e d below
the
board may
in its d i s c r e t i o n ,
m a x i - s u c h n e c e s x a ' y c h a n g e s in
s i t e s or p r o i e c ’ s
s u b i e c l to

- I 149 680

30 Santoro Middle School —
5 840 338
31 Jacxson Heights Middle
School - 3 769.839
32 Teague 7/iddie School —
2 490 142
33 Tuskawilla Middle School
2 55* 000
34 L ym a n H igh School —
3 796 025
35 Mtiwee 7/iddie School —

CELEBRITY CIPHER

C»wt»ri1y Cipher cryptogram* *&gt;• c e e ’ M trom quotation* c , tamoul

pas! »rva
Ciicfi Wltr in th* ppf-w stands fey
anotnsK Toast * ctom D mium/§ C
CO N N IE WLENFP

■FHLUI

BHRCUWF

UJHREHRM
XPCRT

UP

DPRACFHPR

PA

PA

GRI

O WG T

EHRT

HF

UP

GRT

CRJGKKHRWFF.”

—

YGBWF

UJCVXWV.
PREVIOUS SO LUTIO N
II I hadn't been an actor, I
would have eaiun and dtunk myfcelt to death long ago."
— Roger Moore

BLOOM C O U N T Y
RtPCCOMUHC,'
youpom

WMY ROOM’

K itmo
UF£ a hjmm
te w *
ftAFY FOR

1.777.644
36 Rock L ake M iddle School
- 1,780.528
37 Lakeview M iddle School —
1 204.698
38 South Sem inole M id d le
School - 1.107.428
39 R o se n w a ld Exceptional
Student Center — 1.238.098
40 Hopper Elem entary School
-6 .7 70
41 Construction ol new ele
Tienlary school — 5.500.000
42 Lake M a ry H igh School —
2 937.382
43 Acquisition ol new high
sc h o o l s lle — SO a c r e s —
1.250.000
Total 1110,090.771
" P r i o r i t y ot p ro je c ts and
estimated cost
W H E R E A S , a certified copy
ol such resolution was Ira n *
m illed lo the Department of
Education ol the State ol Florida
tor consideration, approval ol
the sam e was thereafter made
by the H onorable R a lp h D
Turlington. C o m m issio n e r of
E d u c a t io n o l the S la t e o l
Florida, on behalf ol the De
parlm ent ol Education; and
notice ol such approval was
thereafter duly transmitted lo
the Board; and
W H E R E A S , all things re
quired lo be done prior lo Ihe
calling ol a bond election within
ihe District on Ihe Issuance ol
the proposed bonds have been
done, and It is now desirable lo
call the necessary bond elec
tion;
NOW. T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
R E S O L V E D B Y T H E SC H O O L
B O A R D OF S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A , that
S E C T IO N 1 B O N D S It Is
hereby found and determined
that General Obligation School
B o n d s ol Ihe D i s t r i c t
(hereinafter called "B o n d s ") , in
an aggregate principal amount
□I not exceeding 1105,000.000,
bearin g Interest, payable at
such rate or rates not exceeding
the m axim um legal rate pro
vlded by applicable law. as shall
be determined at the time ot the
sale thereof, and m aturing In
installments over a period not lo
exceed 20 years from the date ol
Issu a n ce o l the Bonds, are
required for the purposes set
lorlh In this resolution The
Bonds and Ihe interest thereon
will be general obligations of Ihe
D istrict for the paym ent of
which the full faith, credit and
taxing power ol the District
shall be pledged
S E C T IO N 7 S P E C I A L B O N D
E L E C T IO N
A special bond
election is hereby ordered to be
held In the District on October
22, 1985, lo determine whether or
not the Bonds shall be issued
S E C T IO N 3 N O T IC E O F
S P E C IA L B O N D E L E C T IO N
T h i s r e s o l u c t l o n s h a l l be
published In lull as a part ol the
notice ol the special bond elec
lion, together with a Notice of
Special Bond Election in such
form as shall be determined by
the Secretary ol the Board. In
The Sanlord Herald, a newspa
per ol general circulation in the
District, once each week lor at
least 4 consecutive weeks, the
first publication to be not less
than 30 days prior to the date of
the bondelecllon
S E C T IO N 4 P L A C E S O F
V O TIN G . IN S P E C T O R S.
C L E R K S . The polls will be open
al the voting places on the date
ol such special bond election
trom 7 00 A M . until 7;00 P M
All qualified electors residing
w ithin Ihe D istric t sh a ll be
entitled and permitted to vote at
such special bond election on the
proposition provided below. The
places ol voting and the in
sp e clo rs and c le rk s lor the
special bond election shall be
the sam e as those places deslg
naled and those persons ap
pointed tor the last general
election held within the bound
aries ot the District on Nov
em ber 6. 1984. or such other
polling places or persons as
shall be designated or appointed
by the Supervisor ot Elections
and duly noticed pursuant to
Chapters 100 and 101. Florida
Statutes
SEC TIO N 5 O F F IC IA L
B A L L O T The ballots to be used
&gt;n the special bond election shall
contain a statement ol the de
s c n p t l o n of th e p r o p o s e d
issuance ot Bonds, and shall be
m substantially Ihe following
form
BALLOT
School District of
Seminole County. Florida
Special Bond Election October
77. 1985
Shall the School Distrcit ot
Semmole County, Florida, issue
G e n e r a l O b l ig a t io n S c h o o l
Bonds m the aggregate principal
a m o u n t ot no t e x c e e d i n g
1105 000.000, bearing interest al
such rale or rales not exceeding
the legal rale, a s sh a ll be
determined al the time of the
sale thereof, and m aturing In
installments Over a period nol tx
exceed 20 years trom the date ol
issuance ol such bonds, lor (he
purpose ol financing Ihe cost ol
acquiring, building, enlarging,
or otherwise improving build
mgs or school grounds, or other
school purposes, more
specifically described In a reso
lulion of The School Board ol
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a ,
adopted on September 4. 1985
Ihe principal ol and interest on
such bonds to be paid from a
special ad valorem tax lavlad on
atl taxable property In such
District without limitation as to
rate or am ount?
Instruction to Voters
Qualified electors desiring to
vote for the issuance ot such
bonds are instructed to punch
the ballot card In the hole next
to the words " F O R B O N D S ",
qualified electors desirin g lo
vote against the issuance ot such
bonds are instructed lo punch
the ballot card in the hole next
to th e w o r d s " A G A I N S T
BO N DS"
S E C T I O N *. A B S E N T E E
V O T IN G . Paper ballots shall be
used at the special bond election

lor absentee voling. The form ol
ballots to be used In such special
b on d e le c tio n tor absentee
voters and the Instructions to
voters shall be In substantially
Ihe form set out above
S E C T IO N 7 P R IN T IN G O F
B A L L O T S The Secretary ol the
Board Is hereby author I red and
directed to have printed sample
ballots and lo deliver them to
the inspectors and clerks on or
before the date and time tor
opening ol the polls lor such
special bond election The Sec
retary Is turlher authorized and
directed to m ake appropriate
arrangem ents to have printed
on plain while cardboard or
p a p er and d elivered In ac
cordance with law. the official
ballots tor use In such special
bondelecllon.
S E C T IO N I V O T E R R E G IS
TR A T IO N BOOKS
The
S u p e r v is o r o l E le c t io n s of
Sem inole County, Florida, Is
h e re b y a u t h o r lie d a n d re
quested to lurnlsh to Ihe In­
spectors and clerks at each
place where the votes are lo be
cast In such special bond elec
tion, applicable portions ol the
rrglitra llo n books or certified
co p ie s thereof sh o w in g the
names ol the qualified electors
residing In the District.
S E C T I O N 9. E L E C T I O N
PROCEDURE
The s p e c ia l
bond election shall be held and
conducted In Ihe m anner pre
scribed by law for holding gen
era! elections In the area ot the
District The Inspectors at each
polling place shall, upon Ihe
closing ol Ihe polls, secure and
deliver the official ballots cast
to the Supervisor ot Elections
who shall cause sam e to be
counted .ts authorlied by law
The Su p e rv iso r ot Elections
shall then tile returns of such
special bond election Immedl
ately thereafter, and shall de
liver the same to the Board.
Such returns shall show the
num ber ot qualified electors
who voted at such special bond
election and the number ol votes
cast respectively for and against
approval ol the proposition. The
r e t u r n s s h a ll, a s s o o n a s
practicable, be canvassed by the
B o a rd at a special meeting
called lor such purpose, and the
re su lts d e te rm in e d and
certified
S E C T I O N 10, E L E C T I O N
R E S U L T S It a m ajorlly ol the
votes cast al such special bond
election shall be " F o r Bonds.”
the Issuance ol the Bonds shall
be a p p rove d ; and then the
Bonds, the Issuance of which
shall be thereby approved, shall
be Issued as hereafter provided
by Ihe Board
S E C T I O N 11
SEV ER
A B I L I T Y In the event that any
word, phrase, clause, sentence
or paragraph hereof shall be
held Invalid by any court ot
com petent ju risd iction, such
holding shall not aftect any
other word, clause, p hrase,
sentence or paragraph hereof
S E C T IO N 12 R E P E A L I N G
C L A U S E All resolutions In con
diet or Inconsistent herewith
hereby are repealed Insolar as
I h e r e is c o n f l i c t or In
consistency
S E C T IO N 13. E F F E C T I V E
DATE
T h is resolution shall
take aftect Im m ediately upon its
adaption Ih l* September 4.1985
Voting for adoption of Ihe
f o r e g o i n g r e s o lu t i o n w e r e
m em bers:
Nancy W arren
Jean Bryant
W illiam J Kroll
Pat Tefson
Joseph W illiam s. Jr
Voting against adoption of the
l o r e g o i n g r e s o lu t i o n w e r e
m embers:
None
Adopted this 4th day ol Sep
tember, A D,. 1985
B y Nancy Warren, C hairm an
The School Board ot
Seminole County. Florida
Robert W Hughes, Secretary
The School Board ol
Seminole County. F lorida
C E R T IF IC A T E
I, R O B E R T W H U G H E S .
Secretary ol the School Board ot
Seminole County. Florida, and
Superintendent ol Schools ot
Sem inole County, do hereby
certify that the foregoing resolu
tion entitled. " R E S O L U T I O N
O R D E R I N G A N D P R O V ID IN G
F O R T H E H O L D IN G O F A
B O N D E L E C T I O N IN TH E
SC H O O L D IS T R IC T OF
S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY,
F L O R ID A . ON T H E Q U E S T IO N
O F IS S U IN G N O T E X C E E D
IN G 1105,000,000 G E N E R A L
O B L IC A T IO N SC H O O L B O N D S
O F T H E D IS T R IC T . " was pres
enled, considered, passed and
a d o p te d b y a d u ly ca lle d ,
noticed and assembled Special
Meeting ol the School Board ot
Seminole County, held on Ihe 4th
day ot September. 1985. In San
lord, Seminole County. Florida,
and I further certify that a
foregoing resolution is a true
and correct copy ol the original
re so lu llo n d uly adopted and
spread upon the official minutes
ot Ihe said Board
In testimony whereof. I have
hereunto set m y hand and of
tid a l seal this 4lh day ot Sep
lember. 1985
Robert W Hughes
Secretary, Tht School Board
ot Seminole County, Florida
Publish September 24. October
1.6, 15. 1985
D E J 150______________________
N O T IC E O F
D E S I G N A T E D P O L L IN O
P L A C E S FO R TH E
SC H O O L B O A R D O F
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y,
F L O R ID A
S P E C I A L B O N D E L E C T IO N
TO B E H E L D
O C T O B E R 21.1985
Notice Is hereby given by
Sandra S G oard that the follow
Ing Precinct Polling Places have
been established and designated
pursuant to Resolullon 85 2. The
S c h o o l B o a r d o l S e m in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a d a ted S e p ­
tember 4, 1985 calling tor a
Special Bond Election to ba held

by B erke Breathed
m n n .im t f r u t i
2DT'C£NTVKY
Neo-boowiu, m rs m
FvKtirme
um .
PACK
\
M FHR

by The School
r d ot
S e m in o l e C o u n t y F o r ld a
October 22, 19(5.
Precinct — Location
t. Church ol God, 1 ». 22nd
Street. Sanlord
*2. W ilson Elem en ySchool
L ib r a r y . O ra n g e ue vard
(H ighw ay 431), Paola
3. M id w a y School / brlum ,
J l t w a y A ve n u e , tlnole
County
4 . A ltam onte Sp j C ity
Hall. 225 Newburypc /Venue,
Altamote Springs
5. Oviedo W om en's j. K ing
Street (between H igh hoi and
Methodist Church), O (
6 . Geneva Com m ui &gt;louse,
First Street, Geneva
7. Com m unity Hou .venue
E &amp; 7th Street, Chuluc
I. W estm inister U 4 P r e ­
sbyterian Church,
iwthlp
H a ll, 2441 R e d B Road .
Casselberry
9 Forest City Bap hurch
E d u c a t io n a l B u ild . W e s t
L ake B ran tle y R 01 :orest
City
10. Lake M a r y Pi iterlan
Church, 128 W. Wllb Aenue,
Lake M a ry
I I . Seventh D a y fen llit
Church. 455 M altlan Aenue,
Altamonte Springs
*12. Spring Lake E ro tary
School A ctivity Canti ra n g #
Avenue. Altam onte Sp 4
13. Winter Sp rings 6 Sta ­
tion. 102 N o rth M i Road.
Winter Springs
14. Longw ood He I C a ra
Center, 1520 S. Gr&lt; .tre-et,
Longwood
15. S a n fo r d C lv l in t e r ,
Sa n lo rd Avenue at pinole
Boulevard, Sanlord
16. L a k e v i e w C - s t l a n
Church, 1400 Bear L (Road,
Apopka
17. C o u n c i l C h ro a rs,
Casselberry City Ha 8 Lake
Triplet Drive, C aiselb 7
18. Sanora Clubhoui b it oft
S a n fo rd A v e n u e o h n o ra
Boulevard, Sanlord
19. Sem inole Hlg thool,
Georgia Avenue, Sant
20. Seminole Count ^ c u l ­
tural Center Auditor! ,J 20 S
Orlando D rive. Senior
21. Sanlord C lly H &gt;00 N.
Park Avenue. Sanlord
22. S a n fo rd C lv l Enter,
Sanlord A venue at rln o le
Boulevard. Sanford
23. P r a i r i e L a k i E p t i l t
Church. 415 Ridge R c Fe rn
Park
24. Seventh D a y dentist
Church, South of S R a x M o ss
Road. W inter Sp rings
25 Altam onte Spis C ivic
Center, 803 M a g n o A venue
(SVV o il Longw oodvenue),
Allam onte Sp rings
26. L ake M a r y Flrtuse, S E
Corner ol W ilb ur Aue and
First Street, Lake M a
27. Seminole Cou School
Board Otllce. Intertlon ot
Mellonvllle Avenue Celery
Avenue. Sanford
28 C hu rch ol Chrlf Latter
Day Saints. 2315 Pakvenue,
Sanford
29 Salvation ArrrrOQ W.
24lh Street. Sanford
30 H oliday Inn, S E S R 66 8
14. Service Road, Sari
31 E n g lish EstalSchool,
Oxford Road. Fern Pr
32. Melodee Skellnpk. 2700
W . 25th S tre e t (n e r ot
A irp o rt B o u la v a rd d 25th
Street), Sanlord
33. Longwood Cltytl, C o r­
ner of W arren Street W ilm a
Street, Longwood
34. A llam on te Sp s E le ­
m enlary School, 30tnaview
D rive off P a lm Sprl Drive,
Allam onte Springs
35 Sp rin gs O a ks tmunity
C lubhouse, 500 S p O a k s
Boulevard, A ltam ontrlngs
36 St M a r y M agdeChurch
S o c i a l H a l l . 161 it la n d
Avenue, Altam onte Sp s
37. Sanora Clubhoucest oft
S a n fo rd A v e n u a o a n o r a
Boulevard. Sanford
38 South Sa m in cM Id d le
School, E a st side Oueen's
M ir ro r L a k *. turn ith oft
Winter P a rk Drive, C 4 berry
39. Ashwood Concnlum s,
1000 L a k e o f t h V o o d s
Boulevard. Fern P a rk
40 E lk s Club, HowBranch
Road. Goldenrod
41 M ilw e e M ld d ic h o o l,
Highw ay 427, Longwoa
42 P ln e c r e s t E lt n l a r y
School Auditorium , 4Y 27th
Street. Sanlord
43 W i n t e r P i r Y M C A
(formerly E a s t b r Pool
A ss o c ia tio n C lu b h c ). o il
Eastbrook Boulevard ml note
County
44 San Josa A p a r in s R e c ­
reations! Room, o il 636 on
Winter W o o d s B o v a r d ,
Seminole County
45 Sausalllo Clubht, C o r­
ner ol Sausallto Boutrd and
Bocana Drive. Casselty
46 Rolling H ills I Club.
1745 Jackson Strael, Lwood
47 Rolling H ills ra v la n
C h u rch , S a n la n d o ir ln g s
Drive, Highw ay 434, Lwood
41 Ram ad a Inn -m arly
Altamonte Sp rin gs I t Rac
quet Club). 151 N o u g la s
Avenue. Allam onte S p s
49 SI. R ic h a rd s scopal
Church. 5151 Lake H o Road.
Seminole County
50 Winter Sprlngt-e Sta
tion e2. 851 N o rth W ay.
Winter Springs
51 SI S te p h a n h a r a n
C h u rc h , 2140 H lg t y 414,
Longwood
52 First Baptist pal of
Casselberry (formerliown es
C asselb erry B a p tlitiu rch ).
770 S e m i n o l e B o v a r d .
Casselberry
53. L o n g w o o d C e iu n lty
Building. Corner ot H a and
Church Street. Longwt
54 . W e k i v a P re t t e r la n
C h u rch F e llo w sh ip ||, 201
W ekiva Sp rln gto a d .
Longwood
55
L u t h ir a m v in
Fellowship Hall. H lp y 426,
S o u th ol O v ie d o , n ln o le
County
S4 Sterling Perk H o w n e rs
Association Pool Hr, Dew
D rop Lane (oil E e g k rc le In
Sterling Park), SemlnCounty
*57. Lake K a th ry jllle g e
C l u b h o u s e , oft S l n o l e
Boule verd at the end 1 Street,
Casselberry
58 South Seminole W Post
•207, SR 417 North ofigw ood
H ills Roed. Sem inole(ity
59 Village Green Afm enfs
Clubhouse, H 2 Esse,venue,
Altamonte Springs
60 Chrlstlen Nelghtood Al
Dance Church. 301 irkham
Woods Road, Sem lnokunty
*1. Forest Lake Eientery
School. 2801 Sand L Road.
Forest City
« Hew Tribe* M U . 1000
E First Street, Senior
43 U p sala ChurcAnnex.
Corner ot Country V Road
and U p se t* Road, m in e !*
County
44. Altam onte Sp ** Ele

Sem inole

O rla n d o - W inter Park

322-2611

831-9993

C L A S S IF IE D D E PT .
HOURS
8:30 A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

RATES

1 t i m e .................... 67C ■ lino
3 consecutive times 61C • line
7 consecutive times 52C • line
10 consecutive times 46C « line
Contract Ratos Available
3 Lines Minimum

DEADLIN ES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
M on d ay - 11:00 A .M . Saturday

21—Personals

55— Business
Opportunities

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
A B O R T IO N C O U N S E L IN G
Free P re g n a n c y Test*
Confidential
Individual
a s s i s t a n c e . C a l l lor
appointment evening hours
a vailab le.....................321 7695

B E A U T Y S H O P 4 station* 2 are
rented. 517,000/TERMS! Call
_____
after 4 30 : 323 9679

61— Money to Lend
NEED MONEY?

23— Lost &amp; Found
Lost- E a st 70lh St. Area. Black
&amp; w h ite le m a le cal.
R E W A R D I Call 322 7330. after
6PM
LO ST- Shephard/Collle- male,
black &amp; tan. w earing while
r e lle c lo r c o llo r a ch oker
chain. Needs his heart medl
cine I Mellonvllle/Jessup P a rk
A rea. N a m e C h a rlie ! R E
W A R D . 322 8099

Everyone docs al some lim e It
you own a home and have a
job. it's easier than you think

CREDIT?
NO PROBLEM!
834-8900
F R E E D L A N D E R . INC.
The M ortgage Prople
710 E. Altamonte D rive
•Licensed M ortgage Broker

63— Mortgages
Bought &amp; Sold

25— Special Notices
BECOME A NOTARY
F o r D etails I 800 432 4254
Florid a N otary Association
• M A R Y K A Y C O S M E T IC S *
Skin care and color flair
C O N N I E .................... 322 7734

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B a b y s i t t i n g In m y h o m e
anyllm e. Call between 6 am a
_ ^ £ m o n l£ _ 3 T T 2 9 4 ^ _ ^ _ _ ^ _

We buy 1st and 2nd m ortgages
Nation wide Call R ay Leqg
Lie M tg Broker. 940 D ouglas
Ave., Altamonte 774 7732

71— Help Wanted
A C C O U N T IN G C L E R K S
E xperlence In accounts payable,
r e c e i v a b l e s , or p a y r o l l
C o m p u te r e xp e rie n ce pre
fered Perm anent positions
Never a Fee!

TEMP PERM......... 774-1348
33— Real Estate
Courses
*
*
*
★
• Thinking ol getting a *
* Real Estate License? •
We otter Free Tuition
and continuous T raining!
Call D ick or Vick I tor deta its i
471.1447...323 3200...Eve. 7701050
K t y a s o l Florida., Inc.
59 Y e a rs Eeperiencat

ASSEM BLERS
A T T E N T IO N m en U 35 hr
lor m od e rn m a n u fa ctu rin g
plant 50 lbs . strong, reliable,
ow n t ra n sp o rta ilo n
Equal
Opportunity E m p loyer Per
m anenl p ositions N ever a
Fee!

TEMP PERM......... 774-1348
A von C hristm as E a rn in gs
Two W a y s l.B e a Representative.
122-5910...................... 171 102*
A L L T Y P E S JO BS
S T A R T W O R K NOW !

Legal Notice

romes
M ill M l

***' ■ * *

m enlary School, 300 Plnevtew
D rive otl P a lm Sp rings Drive,
Allam onte Sp rings
45. Forest City E le m en lary
School, 980 Sand L a k e Road.
Seminole County
40. Forest Lake Elem entary
School, 7(01 Sand L a k e Road,
Forest City
47. Winter Sp rings Elem enla
ry School. H ighw ay 434, Winter
Springs
*68 E lk s Club, Howell Branch
Road, Goldenrod
49 R a m a d a Inn (form erly
Altamonte Sp rings Inn A Rac
quet C lu b . 1st N D o u g la s
Avenue, Altam onte Sp ring*
*70 5t. Stephen L u th e ra n
C h u rc h . 2140 H ig h w a y 434,
Longwood
71. Flr*1 Ba p tiil Church ol
S w e e t w a t e r , 1671 W e k i v a
Sp rin g* Road. Seminole County
72. Flrtt Baptitt Church ot
Longwood. 630 E. B a y Avenue,
Longwood
* IN D IC A T E S C H A N G E F R O M
N O V E M B E R 4. 1914, L O C A
T IO N S
Dated; September II. 1985
/*/ Sandra S. Goard
Su p e rv iio ro l Election*
Publish: September 24. October
1.1, 15. IM S
D E J 157

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice I* hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 6 I( S
P a rk Ave., Sanlord, Seminole
County, Florida 32771 under Ihe
f i c t i t i o u s n a m e ol K E J
E N G I N E E R I N G , and that I
Intend to register said name
with the Clerk ol the Circuit
Court, Seminole County. Florida
In accordant# with the pro
visions ol the Fictitious Nam e
Statutes. To wit: Section 845 09
Florida Statutes 1957.
l \ i Kenneth E . Jarrett
Publish October I. IS. 72. 29,
19*3
D E K 45
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged in business at 117
E
O ra n g e A v e , Longw ood.
Seminole County, Florid a 37750
under the fictitious name ol S I S
LA W N M A IN T E N A N C E &amp; A P T
C L E A N IN G , and that I Intend lo
register said nam e with the
C le r k ol the C irc u it Court,
Sem inole County, Florid a in
accordance with the provisions
ot me Fictitious Nam e Statutes,
To wit Section 865 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
/*/ Pam ela A Sim pkins
Publish October IS. 27. 29 A
Novem ber 5,1983
D E K 16

t NO

▼

A crylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coating on
cars, boats and planes 55 to
t i l per hour We train. For
work In Sanlord area call
_____Tam pa 813 886 7131.
A V O N E A R N IN O S W O W Itl
O P E N T E R R I T O R I E S N O W t It
121 5331 or 171-0459
Backhoe Operator needed Im
mediately lor piping pro|ec! In
Sanford area. Call; 313 7440

CASHIERS
Convenience store Top Salary
hospitalization 1 week vaca
tlqn each 6 month*, other
benefits. Apply:
707 N Laurel Ave
Sanlord
8:30)0 4:30......... M on Ih ru F rl.
Certllied Dental Assista nt
needed M u st have at least 2
years experience 321 5010
C O M B IN A T IO N
R E C E P T IO N IS T
SECRETARY
BO OKKEEPER
Computer skills a plus, 373 8435

COOK
F O R R E T I R E M E N T V IL L A G E
331 5951

DELI SANDWICH
MAKERS
8 A M T O 1 P M , M onday thru
Saturday. Good P a y Good
Benetits Call: 373 1643 tor
Inlo

DELIVERY DRIVERS
Full or part time 54 00 per hour
* mlleaqe &amp; lips Averaqe
55 58 per hour M u st be 18 with
car 8 Insurance Call Plrra
Kwlk. alter * P M 377 8330
D R I V E R lor tractor trailer
M onday thru Frid ay
DOT
cerllled Benefits, polyqragh
required Apply In Person
Parts Clly Distribution
Center. 901B Cornwall R D
E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
W ith or w ithout sh o rth a n d )
P re te rr ably W A N G word
p ro c e sso rs Needed In the
Lake M a ry Area
Ablest Tem porary Services

111 )f«0

E x p In D ry Cleaning 8 P re ss
In g
E x p C oun te r P e rso n
needed also 372 0577. 322 1870
E X P E R IE N C E D
R E A L E S T A T E A SSO C
Fu ll A Part time
O V IE O O R E A L T Y . IN C
345 640)
E X P E R IE N C E D
SEAM STRESSW ANTED

371-4517
FASHION M ODELS
lor lash
ion designer. TV, catalogs, all
ages 423 9839__________
FORKLIFT OPERATOR
54 50 hour Good stable distribu
lor looking for willing learner
to grow with the com p an y!

i f f e y Employment

ft Y il

323-5176
2523 French Ave.

N O TICE

FEE I

Report ready for work at 6 A M
407 W tsl S t .............Sanford

321-1590

Legal Notice
N O T IC E O F
FO RECLO SURE SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
pursuant to a Final Judgm ent ol
foreclosure dated October 4. and
entered in C ase N o 15 2407
CAD9C of the C ircuit Court ol the
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit in
a n d lo r S e m in o le C o u n t y .
F lo rid a w herein H O M E
S A V IN G S O F A M E R IC A . F A
Pl a i nt i f f , a n d R O N A L D L
W A T SO N , a single man. and
P E L T Z E R C O N S T R U C T IO N ,
INC. are defendants. I will sell
to the highest and best bidder
for cash In the Seminole County
Courthouse In Sanlord, Seminole
County. Florid a at 11 00 o'clock
AM
on the ith day ol Nov
em ber 1985. the following de
scribed property as set forth in
said Final Judgment, towlt.
Lot 176. T U S C A W IL L A . Unit
I B. a c c o r d in g to the p la t
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
75, Pages 57 and 58. Public
Records ol Seminole Counly,
Florida
Together w ith ell Interest
which Borrow er now has or m ay
hereafter acquire In or to said
pro(&gt;erty and in and to (a l atl
easements and rights ot way
appurtenant thereol. and (b) all
buildings, structures, im prove
m e n!*, fixtu re s, and ap
purtenances now or hereafter
placed thereon. Including, but
not limited lo. all apparatus and
equipment, whether or not phys
tcally alflxed lo the land or any
building, used to provide or
supply air cooling, a ir condt
honing, heat. gas. water, tight,
power, refrigeration, ventila
tion. la u n d ry , d r y in g , d ls
hwashing, garbage, disposal or
other services, and all waste
vent system s, antennas, pool
equipment, window coverings,
d r a p e s a n d d r a p e r y ro d s,
carpeting and lloor covering,
awnings, ranges, ovens, water
heaters and attached cabinets;
it being Inlended and agreed
ihel such Items be conclusively
deemed to be alflxed to and to
be part ol the real property; and
(c) all water and water rights
(whether or not appurtenant)
and shares of stock pertaining to
such water or water rights,
ownership ol which alfects said
property; and (d) the rents,
income. Issues and profits ol all
property
D A T E D T h i s 4th d a y of
October. IM S
C ir c u it C o u rt

By; /*/ V icki L Baird
D e p u ty C le rk

Publish: October 1 . 15.19*5
) E K 42

PRODUCTION
HELP
• Now Hiring For 1st, 2nd,
And 3rd Shifts.
• Immediate Openings
• N o Experience N ecessary
U.S. FLOOR *
to
1 A*pax1
COVERINGS

EOE

K N IG H T S
OF

CO LU M BU S

JACKPOT *250
BIG N *250
BIG X *250
GAMES
S35-S40-S50
Thurs. A Sun. 7 p.m.
2504 OAK AVE.,
SANFORD

TEMPLE SHALOM

8

%

B IN G O

Saturday 6:45 P.M.
WtdMiday 6:45 P.M.
All Regular Garnet
$50.00
2 S2 50 Jackpot*
1715 Elk cam Mvd.
ICemer PrayMtnct Bhd.)

___ Deltona, FL

KIWANIS CLUB
OF CASSELBERRY
FtlBAT NIGHT 7 P.M.
U S IM -t lO O
(2) 52SO JACKP0TI
Santa* Citizen* Center
Sacral Lak* Park,
Casselberry
SSS-M 21

DM yeu knew that
Mfe ar argMUzatien can appur ta tbh
6*tJngnedi weak tar an­
il $3.50 par wnafcT TM*
it an Meal way to M a r *
the public af yaw club
activHItt.
it yaw club w argaalzatiau
weuM Mb* ta ba McbMad In
tbit Uttbig call:

Evening Herald
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT

321-3411

�71— Help Wanted
F R O N T O F F IC E
tiOO hour. En|oy yourself! Gen
erou* boss need* you to areel
the public!

Employment
323-5176
_________
2323 Fronch Avo.
Full And Part Time Late Night
Positions Available Schedule
can be flexible for ochool or as
a 2nd |ob. Apply |n Person al
Rex's, 1000 W. Hwy 434
H O L L Y W O O D J O B S I 0|T
porlunltles In prosperous Mo
lion Picture Industry All oc
c u p a tlo n s. F o r Info, c a ll
312 658 0788. Ext 31

HOUSEPARENTS
Couple, mature adult. Chris
llan Shelter for abused 8.
troubled teens 149-3099
IN V E N T O R Y C O N T R O L Wood
p ro d u cts co m p a n y has an
opening for an Inventory ton
trot p e r s o n
M u s t be
m otiva te d , o rg a n lie d , and
h a v e goo d co m m u n ic a tio n
skills. Scheduling background
helpful. A p p ly at
T ru sso
M anufacturing, 1143 E 30th
Street, Sa n fo rd A irp ort or
Call: 371 6730

JANITORIAL
PERSONNEL
To help clean retail store
m ornings 8 to 10 am Ideal tor
r e t lr e d / s e m l re tir e d
Cal l
626 5112,8 a m t o i pm
LABO RERS
_
Reliable workers needed
for first shift
Ablest Temporary Services
__________ 371 3140 ________
LA N DSCAPER
Experienced In mowing, edging,
and mulching Must be rell
able. P e rm an e n t position
Never a Fee!

TEMP PERM.........774-1348
L P N or R N needed, J i t shlff
Good atmosphere &amp; benefits
Full time position A pply at
Dtbary Manor...40 N. Hwy. 17 12
Debary........................... E O E
M A C H IN IS T with lathe
experlnece M u st have own
tools W ages com m ensurate
with experience Call
371
1783
M A N A G E R tor 10 unit apt
b u ild in g M a in t e n a n c e e&gt;p
prelerred 321 5890eve
N U R S E 'S A ID E 'S and Live In's
needed Immediately 3330 per
week plus room and board
E x p e r i e n c e re q u ire d
Call
Wanda at
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L
POOL
321 7088

NURSES AIDES
ORDERLIES
All shills Good atmosphere
andbenetils Apply at
D eBary M a n o r 60 N Hw y 17 87
_______ D e B a ry E O E
O tlice M a n a g e r tor Sanford
Dally Labor Office H ours 1
lo 4 M onday Thru Saturday
371 1380
_____________
PART T IM E P U B L IC IT Y
A G E N T lor non profit organl
lafion Call 321 7954 or 373
0747
___________
Part time, women or men work
from from home on new tele
phone p rogram E a rn up to 35
to 310 per hour Call : 323 4241
P A R T I D E L IV E R Y
3160 week D ealership wants you
lo deliver lor them! Great tor
a H S grad that's looking lor a
future!

Employment
323-5176
2373 French Ave.

PEST CONTROL
ROUTE PERSON
Needed Prefer I y r experl
ence Call M on thru F rl 8 to
3 322 0730
PHONE W O R K E R S
G o o d vo ice 34 00 h r p lu s
bonuses Longwood. 688 576?__

REAL ESTATE
SALES PEOPLE
H igh
E a rn in gs
Potential!
Modern otlice In excellent
location Complete training
program New division ol old
established firm
Call now
for
details
on
pleasant
working conditions and to
secure your future
Jim Ralferty
374 6656
R E C E P T IO N IS T - Part time for
Sa nlord chiropractic otlice
M u st have basic clerical skills
and excellent personality tor
dealing with people Experl
ence helplul but wilt train
qualified person To apply,
phone 373 3833. 10AM NOON.
R E C E P T IO N IS T
8700 week Great entry level
career I Handle front desk tor
b usy firm !

Employment
323-5176
3533 French Ave.
R e lia b le h airdre sse r needed
with clientele preferably Only
those interested In working
call: 322 8881_______________
SH EERO PERATO R
To 36.67 hour to start Day shift,
local c o m p a n y l U n lim ite d
raises, greal career I

/ f l f y Employment
f iV f l
323-5176
2323 French A vt.
T A IL O R O R S E A M S T R E S S
experienced In all phases ol
wearing apparel alterations to
work In Orange City Branch
A p p ly In person: Coston s
Laundry A D ry Cleaning, 224
S Fla. Ave., D e la n d ________
Telephone Operator Will train
E x p e rie n ce d e sired
A lta
monte Springs 834 6100______
T REE C U M B E R W ANTED
Only experienced apply. Top
w a g e s, fu ll w e e k ’s w ork
Echole Tree Service C all
323 2228___________________
W A R E H O U S E P e rso n n e l
needed. Monday thru Friday.
Benaflts. polygraph required
Apply In Person al: Parts City
D is t r ib u t io n Center, 8018
Cornwall R d _______________
W A R E H O U S E /S T O C K
HANDLER
Entry level Only hard workers
need apply. M F. 8 A M S P M .
C A L I IRON C O R P.. 600 L A K E
E M M A ROAD, L A K E M A R Y
V rA R E H O U S E
ATTENTION MENI Shipping.
Rocolvlng. Able to lift SO lbs.,
own transportation. 84.35 on
h r. P e rm a n e n t p o sitio n s.
Never a feel

TEMP PERM......... 774-1348

«

KIT 'N' C A R L Y L E ^-by Larry Wright

71— Help Wanted
D R IV E R W A N T E D
Call: C urrtlsH all
348 8284

73— Employment
Wanted
Certified N u rse 's Aide seeks full
or part time work Will live In
or out Call: 371 6137__________

91— Apartments/
House to Share
S H A R E a home with 2 other
adults 3150 a month total
373 8461
_____________

93— Rooms lor Rent
Furnished room with private
bath and kitchenette 375 per
week Includes all utilities Call
37] 863? or 371 6847___________
L O N G W O O D Large furnished,
private room with bath 358
week plus security 331 6376
S A N F O R D Furnished room s by
the week Reasonable rales
M a id service Call 373 4507
___5 7 P M 415 Palmetto Ave
T H E F L O R ID A H O T E L
500 Oak Avenue
321 6304
^ _ J fe a s o n a b lir W e e k l£ R a t e s ^

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

L A R G E 3 bdrm . 7 bath. 3375
month Take as Is 862 7628 or
423 3336_____________________
Sanford 2 bdrm . I bath, dining
room, eat In kitchen, laundry
room, large, shady, fenced
y a r d , e x t r a n i c e
neighborhood, 3423 per month
lit, last and security . 372 6607
SAN FO RD
R a v e n n a P a rk
V ery nice 4 bdrm.. 2 bath,
central alr/heat, lenced yard,
appliances Newly decorated.
No pets 3500 mo plus securl
ty. 377 7649 or 371 3176________
S A N F O R D 3 Bdrm., I bath,
well shaded, 3385 per month
Call 331 4692 or 322 7762
SOUTHERN REN TA LS
two]
Bdrm . houses (or rent. Call:
322 1469 alter 3 P M __________
S T O N E IS L A N D - E x c l u s i v e
area 3 bdrm. I 'Y baths, split
plan, L rg F la room. + living,
screen porch, garage Yard
service Included! 3650 1st.,
last, deposit. 373 7192_________
7 bdrm t 'y bath, large fenced
back yard, appliances, air
Utilities on.3400 m o -f depos
It 668 6738 between IQ A 2
3 B d rm ., ne ar sch o o ls and
shopping Call: 372 4881

A V A I L A B L E NOW

Sanford 2426 S Lake A ve (W
23th St) 7 bdrm.. carpels
drapes, appl , hook ups. C H A ,
carport 3370m o 830 0583
2 bdrm., 1 bath, appliances,
hook-ups, scroonod patio.
3380-3400.171-3753

FLEXIBLE LEASES
S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S D IS C O U N T
R A N C H S T Y L E L IV IN O IM

SANFORD COURT APTS.
323 3301
E F F I C I E N C Y G A R A G E APT.No chlldrcnipets 3150 mo •
380deposit 373 7018 _
Furn. Apis, tor Senior C illiens
318 Palmetto Ave
_ J Cowan No Phone Calls
L o v e l y 1 B d r m . - C l o s e lo
do wn t o w n 375 week p lu s
u llt IH Ie s
Securi ty deposit
3250, call 323 8637. or 371 6847
Sanford Studio, t adult, no pets,
air. quiet residential 3725
month • deposit 323 8016
1 Bdrm
Close Ini Newly
paneled 365 wk * only 350
utilities/m o *371 5880'eve
7 F it Apts Newly decorated &amp;
re a d y 1 1/ 365 wk., 1/ 387
Includes util 371 5880eve

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
Late Model air conditioned on
goll course, super clean A
r e a d y . R e n t a d u l t s 55
o r / o l d e r . o r / s e l l 3500
dwn /low monthly No pets
339 9618. or 323 9383
_
I A 7 bdrm. Trailers- Highw ay
427 Weekly rates 3130 depos
It Lease required 788 9317
1 B d rm . C a m p e r- Ut i l i t i es
furnished 383 a week, plus
deposit 373 4878

113— Storage Rentals
Mini Warehouses
330 A Up ................... 121 0420

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
B A M B O O C O V E A P T S.
300 E Airport Blvd.
1 Bdrm.. 1 Bath........... 3100 mo.
2 Bdrm., t Ba th........... 3171 mo.
P H O N E ...................... 121 6481

FRANKLIN AR MS

117— Commercial
Rentals
Retail A Otlice Space 300 up lo
7.000 sq It also storage avail
able 377 4401________________
S a n lo rd 7 u n im p ro ve d lots
Zoned C 7. W. M alictow skl,
R E A L T O R ..............122 7181.

1120 Florida Ave.
323-6650
1 bdrm . I bath
3315 M o
2 bdrm , I f ; bath
1350M o
E a c h apartment has patio or
batcom y overlooking cour*
yard All appliances, laundry
room, and pool.______________
LAKE M ARY/SAN FO RD
• I 4 2 Bdrm luxury apis
• Next lo M a y la lr Goll Course
• Convenient lo I 4
• Country living with city conve
mence
• M o d e 's open dally. It 5
D O R CH EST ER SQUARE
__
1314131___________
M A R IN E R 'S VILLA G E- I
bdrm 1110. 2 bdrm 3160 and
up! Adults only 173 6670______
S A N F O R D 2’ bdrm , I bath
M ove now. pay no rent ‘til
Novem ber 3150 discounted
B r it is h A m e r i c a n Real t y,
631 U 75._____________________
S A N F O R D D U P L E X 3 bdrm .
la un d ry room, private
backyard. 3150 per month.
377 0782. 327 0345. Or 373 3711

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
MOVE IN SPECIAL!
$299.00
• FA M IL Y A ADULT •

2 BEDROOM.
Call............................331 2170
S M A L L A P A R T M E N T - N ice
area 3780 Includes all Call
a I ter 4 pm 331 3350___________
S O U T H E R N R E N T A L S 1 and 7
Bd rm apartments for rent.
Call 322 1466 after 3 P M
Spacious Apartm entsLaketront. pool, tennis, adults,
no pets, laundry Starling at
3303 a mo Call 131 0742 la see.
1 and 2 bdrm A lso furnished
efficiency from 375 week. 1250
deposit No |iets Call 323 4507
5 7 P M 415 Palm etto_________
2 bdrm
I ' j bath newty re
modeled Private backyard
3400 m o plus 3400 security
deposit 321 0715______________
388 For 1st m onths rent with
approved credit 1.2.3 B drm
R ID G E W O O D A R M S
2580 Ridgewood Ave.
Sanford Call
.... 323 6420

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
FREE MONTHS RENT
ON ANY 1 YEAR LEASE,
On these
All New Award Winning

2 Bdrm., 2 Bath Patio Homn
Netiled In quit! country sotting.
Near shopping and schools.
Minutes front
Downtown Orlendo via 1/4.
CH EC K T H ESE FEATU RESI
• Frost Froo Refrigerator
• Garage
• Attic Storage
• W asher/Dryer Connections
• Soma Units with Fam ily Room
O N S IT E M A N A G E M E N T !
Children A Pots Welcomo
Senior Citlions Discount I

CANTERBURY VILLAS
321-3827
• • • IN D E L T O N A o o e
e e H O M ES FOR R EN T o e
_______* e 174 )414 e a_______
Lake M a r y
Super clean. 3
bdrm. 2 bath w llh fam ily
room, on quiet street 3330 mo.
H D Really. Inc .R E A L T O R S
830 8800___________________
Lake M a ry
Deluxe Collage,
a ir/h e a l. private, shaded,
remodeled 3300 mo 322 8347

S A N F O R D Brand new. 2 bdrm ,
2 '7 bath S365 mo 862 2679. or
473 3336_____________________

SIN G LE STO R Y
LIV IN G
Lease Terms to Fit
Your Needs!
Furnished or Unfurnished.
Carports........... Private Patios
Lush Landscaping.Pols.Children
W ATER BEOS A CCEPTED !

Call.......... 321-1911
125— For Lease
H i Aero Industrial Sit* - For
leaso or sale. 1 Buildings, total
ol 5300 sq.ft. Fenced and
private.322 4734

141— Homes For Sale
C O U N T R Y W ID E R E A L T Y
Reg. R.E. Broker......... 1218711
670 Hwy. 4)3, Osteon, Flo.
Extra Nlcol 1 bdrm. 2 bath,
e a t In K it c h e n , c e n t r a l
alr/haat, carpet, fans, fenced.
311 &gt;415/ Don, Eve 177 79)9
T U S C A W IL L A A R E A - 4 bdrm.,
2's bath. 7 story. 7.200 sq ft.
Reduced to S93.000 Appraised
al 1101.300 13.000 down to
qualified buyer. Owner des
perate. 488 0098. Principals

onlv--ii

m

■
i

iti \i n

H I M T o il
W E HAVE RENTALS!
R E N T TO O W N I &gt; bdrm. H i
bath home, family room, lrg.
lanced yard I Move In now!
E-Z terms. Owner llnanclngl
341.808
ST. J O H N S A V E . I Oorge«us 4.73
acre Hematite. Close to St.
J o h n s R iv e r . C o m p le te ly
fencedl in area at expensive
homotl Unbelleveably priced I
318,008
W E N E E D L IS T IN O S I

323-5774
14«4HWY.17-n

JAMES LEE

1Pair Minature Goats
C A R R IA G E C O V E
M O B IL E H O M E P A R K
New A resale Contact:
Gregory Mobile Homes
313 5200

C a ll: ........................ 371 1664

Bid Credit?
No Credit?
W E FIN A N C E
NATIONAL AUTO SALES

203— Livestock and
Poultry

323 8915

.

213— Auctions

s
c f,
9" ,

»
141— Homes For Sale
Available Now!
No Qualifying!
No Credit check!
Owner Financing!
359.900. F i r s t 310.000 daw n
payment ge ls the house. 3
Bdrm., 2 bath block home. 19/
Hedgewood (6 mites east of I 4
or 2 m iles west of Osteen on
Doyle Rd to Citation, left on
L i g h t w o o d . r i g h t on
H e d g e w o o d ) . C a l l
C assellberry (3051 339 6005
Repossed Property In Deltona 3
bdrm ., fireplace, cathedral
ceilings, pool. A sking 355.000.
Flee! Finance Center. 322 8965

SALE BY OWNER
Re d u c e d below a p p ra isa l
Beautiful home wllh beautllul
v i e w of L a k e M o n r o e
1
Bdrm.. 3 bath, fireplace, new
appliances and rool. enclosed
tropical pool, fenced yard,
sprinkler system wllh well
M a n y extras Don't m iss see
ing this lovely redecorated
home. M u st sell Immediately!
3139.000. Cal l : 317-7616 o r
131 1333_____________________

SANFORD REALTY
R E A L T O R .................. 321-3124
Sanford- Now Duplex 7 Bdrm ,
7 bath each unit Fireplaces,
vaulted ceilings. Fully
equipped kitchens, single car
garages, m any extras, one
year builder w arranty Great
In v e stm e n t p ro p e rty
1500
M agn olia A ve 3140.000
Call............................122 1914
S A N F O R D - G re a t B u s in e s s
location, toned G C 7 3 bdrm .
1 bath, se p a ra te double
g a r a g e , h u g e c o r n e r lot.
334.500
Wallace Cress Realty Inc.
R oaltor....................... 121-8377

HI M U) AS

STEMPER
G E N E V A - Homo on 5 ocros,
toned A-t. Horses allowed.
Price reduced. Now 341,800.
S A N F O R D - 1 bdrm., t both,
concrete block homo. 1 extra
rooms, possible ird bdrm. A
don. Extra clean. Now 647.180.
2 bdrm., I both. Utility shod.
Only 317,300
II

LUXURY CONDOS
1.2.3 Bd rm . 2 bath, washer,
dryer, verllclos. retrig., dish
washer Starting at 1375
G O L D K E Y M G M T ., INC.
___________ 47) 7222____________
S A N F O R D 7 B drm . living and
fam ily room, eat in kitchen,
Inside laundry, new carpel,
p a in t a n d pool. S175 p e r
month
M E G A T R E N D P R O P E R T IE S
____________774 4054
________

231— Cars

■bTupo fkT Tpu * v

121— Condominium
Rentals
S A N F O R D
7 B d r m .
m icrow ave, w asher, dryer,
pool, courtyard W as a model
3495 per month
M E O A T R E N D P R O P E R T IE S
____________774-4034____________
LAKE M ARY
Schools, now 7
Bd rm w llh den. wet bar, pool,
clubhouse S395p«r month
M E G A T R E N D P R O P E R T IE S
_________ 774 4854___________
P IN E R IO C E C L U B

199-Pets &amp; Supplies

DOMESTIC PIGS $25

There ycu H ^ir,

STEMPER AGENCY, INC.

105— DuplexTriplex/ Rent

Furnished Studio Apartm ents
One Bedroom Apts
T wo Bedroom Apts

MAD OFFERED THEIR E-RAHD &amp; ENTePTAINMENT
until T he: advent of The David letiermanshow.

ACRES310.000.

P u b lic

w a te r .

O T H E R H O M E S . LOTS,
A C R E A G E , IN V E S T M E N T
PROPERTY

141— Homes For Sale
SANFORD/ LA KE M A R Y
Oroam
Homos
Available
Nowl AM Prices. Seminole
end Volusia Counties. Groat
Terms.
Coll
for
Free
Computer Search Today 11

323-3200

S P A C IO U S 3 B D R M . H O M E
On large shady lot of and of
street. Quiet- yet very conve­
nient. Perfect fam ily home
you will agree, at 169.800

CALL BART
R E A L ESTA TE
R E A L T O R ____________111-7488
L A K E M A R Y 3795 down 3315
per m onth m a k e s you an
owner ol a lovely 1 Bd rm , 2
bath home. Coll: 862 4134.
Will trade 37.000 equity in home
tor time share or like value. 3
bdrm. t 'y bath 3 yr old home
Closed garage. M int condition.
Call: 311-1149______________
L A K E S Y L V A N Like new. 2
b d rm ., fire p la c e , g a ra g e ,
large lenced lot. 359,800 Anna
Kelley, 349 3620 Real Estate
One. R E A L T O R S 169-6100

145— Resort
Property / Sale
N E W S M Y R N A B E A C H - Owner
will pay 14.000 closing cost on
new mortgage. Beachiide 4
bdrm., 2 bath pool home with
detached garage. Steps to
ocean and public handball
courts 366.800
Beachside Realty, R E A L T O R S
884-427-1117.......... Open 7 Days!

149— Commercial
Property / Sale
C O M M E R C IA L S P E C IA L IS T
S A L E S A N D A P P R A IS A L S
B O B M . B A L L . JR. P.A..C.S.M.
R E A L T O R ..................121-4118

153— AcreageLots/Sale
H O R S E L O V E R 'S D O N 'T M IS S
T H IS ! 5 4 acres, 3 sides chain
link fenced. 20X20 screened
building. 32X80 stable shelter.
4" well, 150 deep. All this.
844.800.

BATEMAN REALTY

C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R ..................111-4111

Lie. Real Estate Broker
2844 Sanlord Avo.

L IS T W IT H U SI

321-0759 E v e .-322-7643

14 Y e a rs In Sanford
S E L L IN G OR BU Y IN G A
M O B IL E H O M E ?
LETUSHELP!
Now O r Used
Oregory Mobile Hom os.171-5180.
1975 11 x 65 2 bdrm. 7 bath,
heat-air, 3 celling Ians. Priced
to sell! S4500 D ays 373 0608. or
eve. 349-3849_________________

Hw y 46..................... 323 2801

1978 S K Y L I N E M O B I L E H O M E
12x60 2 Bdrm . spilt plan, get
heat, central ac. shed, patio
end aw nings F a m ily section
S4.5O0 Call:J71 7679 weekdays
attar 6 P.M., all day week
ends.________________________
'84 S K Y L I N E - 74X48. 3 bdrm . 2
bath, cathedral celling, celling
fans, dishwasher, garden tub,
central alr/heat. 31.000 A take
over paym ent! 322 6406

Houseboat tor sale 76 tt F U N
T IM E . 50 hp motor, pontoons,
remodeled 54500 323 8638
15 (t. fiberglass boat 60 hp Scott
m otor a n d trlaler C lea n
A sk in g 3900 Call 668 8074
1981 Star Cralt- 1983 Su lu kl 75
H P, 1983 trailer Like new
34,200 349 5085_______________

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

B IG P O R C H S A L E ! Fri Sat .
Sun Open 8 A M 2370 S E lm
Avenue_______________

7

BRIDGES AND SON
Auction every Saturday at 7 P M

WE BUY EVERYTHING!
215— Boats and
Accessories

217— Garage Sales

219— Wanted to Buy

Ma|or A ppliances Repaired,
bought, end sold. Fully guar4 nteed. Coll: 172-4286.________
Reconditioned Appliances
Irom 383- W A R R A N T Y .
B A R N E T T S ....C A S S E L B E R R Y
8 W 3 n i ...................... 818 3431
Used Washers- Parts A Service
lor Kenm orei............. 111-0417.
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S

333:Aluminum Cans..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous M e ta ls........ G lass
K O K O M O .................. 171-1100
B a b y b e ds, c lo th e s, to y s,
p la y p e n s, sheets, tow els,
perfumes. 321 8377 122 9304

223— Miscellaneous

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
l l M t S E. 1st ST............MI-3411

A D U L T B IK E S - B ig selection
3 wheelers
Beach Cruisers,
a lso B M X
Best p ric e s A
service, too! Lifetim e war
r a n t y Bi k e H ea d q ua rte rs.
2210 French Avenue 372 4403
C arpet C lea nin g E q uip m ent
C o m m e rc ia l or re sid e n tial
use 321 6444_________________

11 Piece Living Room Group
like new 3600................323 5376

183— Television /
Radio / Stereo
C O LO R T E L E V IS IO N
R C A 25" color T V In walnut
console. O rigina l cost over
3800. Balance due 3196 cash or
p a y m e n ts i7 5 m onth. N O
M O N E Y D O W N W llh war
renty. Free home trial, no
obligation. Call 862 5394, day
or night,_____________________
G O O D U S E D T .V 'S 115 and U P
M ille r's
26190rlando Dr. Cell: 312 0352
T elevision 19 inch portable
color. Solid State. Excellent
condition 3115 Cell: 867 5960

Complete White Bam boo Dbl.
bdrm set. 3 m os old Paid
31200 A sking 3350 Sm all chest
Iree/er. alm ond/brow n top
3150 Elec clock atop a 4 shell
stand 320 904 789 6094 alter 5
E L E C T R O N I C
C A S H
R E G I S T E R - 4 station , to
d e p t ., d u a l p r i n t out,
autom atic tax
Im m aculate
condition Used only 3 mos
Com pare at 31500 Sacrifice at
3800 or best otter 305 851 7725
day or evening_______________

187— Sporting Goods

LAWSON GAS
SPACE HEATERS

1 Browning 12 Gauge Pum p 3 In
magnum. I Browning 44 Cel
Lever/Action Model 92. Cell:
322 3129.

3 sues. 100 to choose from
"B e st buy In town!” . M ake
o ile r C a ll J ohn A s h lo r d
323 3150_____________________
R E A L I S T I C 40 c h a n n e l C B
w/anlenna 7 drill presses, key
m a k in g m achine w/btanks
Alter 5, 323 8509______________

HOT W A T E R H E A T E R
Rheem. Used 4 years New
elements, 355 323 6461________

191— Building
M aterials

REBUILT KIRBY VACUUM'S
B U IL D IN O S - ell stool. 50 x 41
810,190; too x 225- 649.940;
o th e r* fro m S7.75 iq . ft.
1 291 8281 (collect)

199— Pets &amp; Supplies
O e rm a n S h o rth a lr Poin te r
Male. 17 months. Well m an­
nered and smart. 375. Cell:
122-6057or 323 4055._________
M A N D A Y C O N U R E S t pair,
I7S. M a le bird talk*. Coll;
323 5059 anytime.___________
"M o r r is The C at"- neutered,
de-clawod. friendly. 3 yr*. old.
Fret to good home! Evenings
373 2025

199.SO A U P .......... We finance!
______ Call M S 321-5440

231— Cars

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★
Hwy 92............ Daytona Beach
* * * * • Holds a • * * • •

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

Sanlord Ave.A 17th St....111 4073
DeBary Auto A Marine Seles
Across the river, top of hill
174 Hwy 17-92 OoBery 444 8348
• FUESAUTOSALES•
We buy, sell or trade!
Financing A vailable
550 Wade St......
Winter Spgs
_________ * 117-1492 * _________

★ INSTANT CASH ★
• * W E W IL L B U Y * *
* * YOUR U SE D C A R * #
a C A L L P H IL B E T T I S *
C O U R T E S Y PO NTIAC-121 7171
REPO SSESSED A U TO
’76 Olds C utlass
Best O tte r!

.................. 322 8965

T R A D E '47 F O R D R A N C H E R O ,
good cond., lor ty or *&lt; ton
pickup 373 4917, Ext. 14,
V W Bug- ‘74 Convertible- Good
c o n d i t i o n i n s i d e A ou t .
33400 830 8394,al ler 8 pm______
1983 Trans A m White, Loaded
Good condition 27,000 ml.
P rice 38.000 or assum e 73
payments ol 3370 00 mo Ph
365 7474 or 371 8709
*79 Olds Cutlass Supreme- 7
door, loaded Sm all V 8 3450
down
C H IC O A T H E M A N ......499-0900
’80 M E R C U R Y C A P R I- Blue.
2 door, 4 speed 37.700. 834
0971
81 Plym outh Horlien 4 door, ac.
am fm radio, standard, runs
good, reliable transportal Ion
asklfiQ 32400. Call: 323 8856

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories
Rebuilt Autom atic Trans 3150
or can pull A rebuild yours
3775 Steve: 371 6836

235— Trucks /
Buses / Vans
1984 Chevy - 70 Van
Like new, low milage
317.500........................ 322 5751
•1 1
D O D G E C U S T O M IZ E D
VA N - Complete. 32493.
C H IC O A T H E M A N ......499-0900

237— Tractors and
Trailers
1511. Scotty trailer. Good Condi
(ton A sk in g 3000. Call: 3711666

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
1980 Y am aha X J 650 M a x m u m
Shalt Drive, vetter (airing. K g
accessories, great bike, 31200

orotl*r86Y71*4^^^^^^^
241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

Globe 10 ft. camper
Asking St.800
Call: 122 1119.
G o C a r t - L ik e new w ith
Kewesakl engine with positive
traction.
W as 8750 asking
1250. Call: 349 3187 Before 10
A .M .o ra ft» r4 P M ._________
30’ T*rry Travel Trailer 1979
Modal- Sett contained, loaded
with extras, 36.#00. M a y be
seen by appointment. Call:
323 9017.
70 T R A V E L T R A IL E R - 24 ft.,
soil-contained w llh awning.
Good cond., 33500 349-3877.

Every Thurs. Nile at 7:30 P M

* W here Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell! *
For more details
1-904-253-0111

243— Junk Cars
TO P Dollar Paid for Junk A
Used cars,trucks A heavy
equipment. 372 3990.

CONSULT OUR

A ll T0U H M D
10 KNOW

^

Tuesday, Oct. IS, IMS— SB

157— Mobile
Homes / Sale

EE££NTLy USCcVefcGb TrtAT

ANIMAL

C M 6 HAVE A HIGHLY t tV E U ftb SENSE OF HuAfc*?
frfc CEKTOEIES.CATS W Ef£ TtW JfjHTlb BE HOMELESS,
Bur ir afpemsx ThatT his was b ec/wse no owe

_________R E A L T O R _________
3 Bdrm , Patio and den, fenced
yard, no pets F irst and last
required Call: 323 1302

SANFO RD
I Bdrm , apt 3765
month. 3300 deposit. Refer
ences required Call : 668 4801

EvtnlUfl Herald, Sanford, FI.

—i

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

IN RLAl ( S I A M

STENSTROM
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

REALTY—REXLT0R
Sanford*i Sales Leader

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H O M ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
C O M F O R T A B L E 2 B d rm ..I
both, peddle fans, now corpol,
sun dock, fenced roar yard,
convenient to town. 841,300.
E N J O Y L I F E I 2 Bdrm., 2 both,
Eat-In kitchen, dining room,
lor relaxing swim In the area
pool or ploy some tennis.
136.300.
C O O L D O W N ! 4 Bdrm., I bath.
Spilt plan, central air and
haal, 17x11 pool, 21x8.1 cov­
ered patio, possible In-law
quatori. 366.380.
L A K E F R O N T P A R A O IS E I 1
B d rm .,Its bath, (Ire p la c t,
split plan, separate fam ily
room, icra«n porch ovar look­
ing lake. 3111.000.
H A N D IC A P P E D E Q U IP P E D 1
Bdrm,, Ity bath, ovar 1304 iq.
ft. on S acreai. formal dining
room, tcraonad pafio wllh
kitchen pats thru to pool area,
fireplace. 8141,100.
W IL L B U IL D TO S U IT I
Y O U R LO T OR O U R SI
E X C L U S IV E A G E N T FOR
W IN S O N O D E V . CO RP., A
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A L E A D E R I M O R E H O M E FOR
L E S S M O N E Y ! C A L L TO
DAYI
• G E N E V A O S C E O L A RO.O
Z O N E D F O R M O B IL E S I
I Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
10% Down, to Yrt. at I2 % t
From H i . 3081
If you a r t la c k in g far a
su ccessfu l career in Real
Estate, Stenstrom Realty Is
leaking lor yau. C a ll Loa
Albright leday a l 121-2410.
E v o n lo g in i- n t l.

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
REMODELING SPECIALIST
We Handle
The Whole B a llo t Wax

B. E. LINK CONST.
322-7029
Financing Available

Appliance Repair
Allans Appliance Service
24 hr. Service .N« Extra Charge I
17 Yr. E x p ....648-3441,....374-8411

Carpentry
A ll type* ol carpentry A re­
modeling. 27 yrt exp Call
Richard Grose 121-5971.

JUST O E N IE S
Professional cleaning
C a ll ...............................

Electrical
Anything Eiectrlcal...Slnt919701
Estim ates....34 Hr. Service Calls
Tom ’s Electric Service-.332-1739
D A S Electric..............323 4030
New A remodeling, addltloni.
Ians, security lights, tlm eri
plus all slsc. services Quality
Service-Licensed A Bonded

CAR PET SALES

General Services
IRONING or WASHINGDone In m v home......... 143-91*7

Carpentry....Painting....Repairs
Lawn W ork.Total Maintenance I
C all J im ............4*7 7919 attar 4

A IN S T A L L A T IO N S - Call 311
SS37, alter 4 P M ____________
Wholesale Prices Installed by
Dealer. Semple* to your door I
Call: Bill M c C a rty ....... I l l 9037

Cleaning Service

CettaB*TaraTnrr!r!!!!rMM!30
Lie. Insured, Bended.

C A L L A N Y TIM E

118 per hear, *11 domestic (the
Cunningham end W ilt Horn*,
ottice, or apt. cleaning. Daily,
weakly or monthly. Extremely
reasonable. 11173) 4________

322-2420

Head Carpal Ctaaning. Uvlng,
Dining Roam A Hall 339.88.
Safa A CKilr, *31.331 33*8

2345 P A R K A V E .......... Sanford
H I Lb. M ary Blvd.......Lb. M ary

A ll around h tlp a rl........ 323 9069

HOUSECLEANING-

Painting

G E N E V A L A N O C L E A R IN G
L o fL a n d cle a rtn g ..... Fill dirt
Topsoil Ponds
Drain ditches
Site Preparation Call. 149 3920
T H O R N E L A N D C L E A R IN G
• F IL L D IR T ............ C L A Y •
• S H A L E A H A U L IN G ..123 34)3

C U N N IN G H A M A N D W IF E
Inter/Exterior/Prestura Wash.
330 A up ................ 331-7314

Home Improvement
earner's Building A Remodeling
No Job Too Small
S U Burton Lana, Sanford
311-6411
Ma|or a r ............. Miner Repairs
Additions ............ Quality Werbl
Reasonable ...............Free Est.l
Licensed ...................... 321-M SI

Home Repairs
CARPENTER-

R e p a ir s and
remodeling No |ob too small.
Call: 1119643.

WILLIS HOME REPAIR
Remodeling...... Additions..... .A
A ll Typos R o p a ln l ....... Insured
No |obtoo»mail ............ 331-7744

Painting....... Any W allcovering
Vinyl Flooring Ret A Retonabla
Very Reliable....313-49)7 Ext. 39

•

Landscaping

Paper Hanging

HAULING....FHI Dirt...Top Soil

N A L W illpeparing G als
Free E s t ....... W ork G uaranteed
774 17*8...................... 131 9)21

Sand.......... Call 343-1146 altar 1.

Lawn Service
LAWNS MOWED 4 TRIMMED

Handy Man
Carpet/Floor
Coverings

Landclearing

Cleaning Service

Spring Yard Clean-ups...121-19S1

Quality Lawn Cart
At Affordable P rices 321 4973

Masonry
(A N Y T H IN G IN C O N C R E T E I
Free Estimates Cladly Given!
B E A U M O N D E Const. Co.
"W e A r* The B e st"...... i l l 1*42
Complete Concrete Companyl
Bast Quality tor Less Money 1
Commercial A......... Residential
24 Y rs.Exp ................. Free Est.
Reatenablel ................. 121-718*
Greenlee a Sens Masonry
Quality at resonabl* prices
Spaclallllng In Ftreplacei'Brlck
Cal!'
................101-311-8714

Nursing Care
J A N IS ’S A L T E R N A T IV E
S E N IO R C A R E
24 Hour loving car* for senior
cilliens Fam ily anvilonment
and homo cooked meets,
call: ......................... 343 714*
Lovely room lor tlderly lady.
Must be ambulatory and non
smoker. 788 7903
O U R R A T E S A R E LO W E R
Lakavlew Nursing Center
9lt E. Second It., Sanlord
311-4707

Secretarial Service
C U ST O M T Y P IN G - t ig or sm all
assignment*. Call: D.J. E n ­
terprises. ( M l) 133-7*93.

Tile
Ceramic A Quarry Til*. ..Marble
Work....New Jobe, Repairing, or
Remodeling!...Licensed Builder
Free Estim ates......14 Yrt. Exp
• • C a ll n i - i l M e *

Tree Service
A ll Tree Serv.4-........ Fire weed
Weodsplltsr far hirer
Call After 4 P .M ...........313 9088
A L L E N 'S T R E E S E R V IC E
You’ve Celled the RostNow Call fha Bast I
P A Y L E S S I ................ 331-S ill
E C H O L S T R E E S E R V IC E
Fraa Estimates! Law Prices I
Lie...IM...Stump Grinding,Taal
311 2319 d ayarn lta
"L e t tha Professionals da It".

Well Drilling
S A V E M O N E Y ! I Shallow Walls
tor lawn, pool, garden, ale.!

BUSH SHALLOW WELLS
Lie ......Reasonable..... 333 0657

�• •

BLONOIE

* B - E y g n fl Herald, Sanford, F.'.

Tu.tday, Oct, l i , i t ,5

—

S O D O N 'T WAIT/ B U S H

,

•A-

1o
'

b y C h fc YoM nfl

These A tta cks M a y
Be D u e To A n x ie ty

—, 1 ,] 1

u t a n d ®e t a Bo t t le op
T H IS l o t i o n n o w /

A *0

DEAR DR. GOTT — My doctor and vitamins. Ovulation and
Is not concerned about the menstruation are exceedingly
attacks I in having. They start In complex blo-pbysfologlcal pro­
the center or my chest as a cesses. They can be upset by nent situation in a 27-ycar-old
woman. At this point, you need
burning sensation, then spread ext reme stress, starvation,
throughout my body. After they strenous physical training and to know If you nrc ovulating. Ask
stop, a very cool, almost menthol c h e mi c a l ( h o r m o n a l ) I m • your gynecologist to outline a
program for you: tills may In­
1 0 -1
reeling Immediately follows. The balances.
3
c
l u d e bas al t e mp e r a t u r e
first one is severe: then they Just
I doubt that you have "dam ­ readings and blood tests of
by Mori Walker
sweep over repeatedly. In lighter aged" your body, because sim­
waves. Always there Is a cramp ple lack of menstruation does hormone levels. In addition, you
OKAY, BUT DON'T
or pain somewhere In my body, not ordinarily reflect a perma­ may wish to reduce your
A S K Z E R O OR
excerclse routineusually In the left wrist, just
WE'LL NEVER
prior to these attacks, and I have
GET OUT O F
ACROSS
2 Normandy
Answer to Previous Purrle
a blacking-out feeling and tight
HERE
invasion day
pain to the left of my chest.
t Elaborate poem
(comp wd )
These attacks started In the 4 Scratches
3 Grieve (obs)
hospital after a hysterectomy,
9 Strange
4 Female ruff
when an I.V. blew out the vein In 12 Oriental
5 Clothe
my left arm. They said I had
women's
6 Shoot from
"rolling veins." I would deeply
quarters
ambush
appreciate any information you 13 Tennessee
7 Loop on lace
Ford
8 Body of water
could give me on this.
9 Slimy
DEAR READER - You de­ 14 Poverty.war
agency (abbr) 10 Profound
s c r i b e a c o n s t e l l a t i o n or
15 Golf lirm
1 1 Extinct bird
by Art Sansom symptoms which are. frankly, 16 Heath plant
19 Natty (comp
puzzling, li seems to me that 17 Last letter
N
wd.)
you are suffering from a general
M
(Brit &gt;
21 Dry eyed
discharge of nervous energy of IB Concurrence
E R A SE D
23 Strong points
tile type sometimes seen In
(abbr.)
24 Lags
N
AFTER
anxiety attacks. On the basis or 20 Soldier’s
25 Fencing sword
5 d H C O U y
the information you provided. I
address (abbr.) 26 Ardor
34 Singer Ames
47 None (Scot)
cannot second- guess your 21 Steno's blunder 29 New 2ealand
35 Paid (abbr)
50 M akes pigeon
22
Infant's
outfit
doctor. One conclusion, howev­
parrot
42 Reddish dye
sounds
er. Is clear: Your symptoms have 25 Electrical engi­ 30 Grafted, in
43 Pretend (2
neer
(abbr.)
51
Biblical
king
heraldry
nothing whatsoever to do with
wds |
27 Is (Sp.)
31
British
carbine
52
Mountain
lake
44
Eat
into
"rolling veins" or the fact that
33 Period of
45 Throw
54 Oklahoma town
I.V. fluid leaked out of the vein at 28 Sweeps yard
32 Polite word
historical time
46 Squeezes out
55 Actor Harrison
the time of vour surgery.
35 Mom or dad
1
2
DEAR DR. GOTT - I am 36 Won
10
11
27-year-old female. G feet 1 and 37 Widen
by Bob Montana
12
'1
130 pounds. I feel comfortable at 38 Legislate
I M EANT M y
this weight but have not had a 39 French article
IS
&lt;e
W IF E A N D
period I n two years. I work out 40 Type measure
»O DS
'
n
10
and exercise a lot and un­ 41 Of no value
to
derstand it is common for 45 Circus shelter
women athletes to miss some 48 Over (poet)
j*
49 Glasgow
periods, but Tor this long?
■ ■
resident
JO
J1
I saw doctors who said not to
53 River in Russia
worry, and I went to herb shops
32
11
54 U S. fur
that recommended a Chinese
‘merchant
36
herb. Tahk Kucl. myrrh extract 56 Medical suffix
it
and Vitamin E. A doctor gave me 57 Monetary unit
30
progesterone; it didn’t work. The
of Japan
/»&gt; /C
same doctor prescribed provera: 58 Electric rectifier
4}
[.... .. . J
that made It come back once, 59 Hockey great
4S
40
Bobby
47
but then never again. Nothing
I 4a
_______ by Howio Schneider
60
Compass
point
has worked. What do you think I
»j
should do. and how much have 1 61 Attach
I CAW B£U D W £L v T
62
Offense
damaged mv body?
S7
A LL B Y M V S E L F
DEAR READER - First of all.
n
DOWN
b0
doctors who Icll you not to worry
are not going to bring your
1 Fumbler's
□
periods back. Neither will herbs
exclamation
&lt; e | t9 8 S b&gt; M A Inc

y

BEETLE BAILEY
A R E YOU
R E A D Y FOR
TH E B IG
M ANEUVER,
SIRT

FIR ST I V b e t t e r
IF THEMEN h a v e
ANY Q U E S T IO N S

but
see

O -iS '

THE BORN LOSER
16 THAT

WATOWEAKm
HAPfi&amp;JEPTDVCXJ*

YCU,
W IU 3 E R F C R 6 E

ARCHIE
_ w if e a n o k
C A L L VO U THE
G O EATEST

id s

w il l

1

B U T I'M
NOT
M A B H iE D

j

1

eek a m eek

OOm

fJ££D

VrKJJOUJ,

15

J

c^L \
A »aast»MA kx

to /r -

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
f*V-4v'N

SI

I'SA A
I

b e l ie v e

(Dn

LA W YE R ! J

C
^

l t

H A L F W H A T PEOPLE
X ^i
T E L L AAE /

WHAT

o

]

--------- -LI

WIN AT BRIDGE

By James Jacoby
Herr is u deal from H.W.
Kelsey'a " l o i Bridge Maxims."
by Hargraavaa A Sahara
today's maxim is a sound prlttc'lplt- of defensive play: "Work
mil what partner needs 10 have
A T A X IMGPECT&amp;RY in order lo defeat the contract."
II you waul lo take a test, cover
Hu* South and East hands and
place yourself in West’s chair.
Your p artn er’ s ihrcc-club
Jump was pre-emptive after
North’s takeout double, but that
cilrlu i slow South down. He
Jumped right to four hearts.
Your opening king of clubs
al l ows you to inspect the
by Warnar Brothara dummy while you still have the
lead. What next? The bidding
W f . L . IT S O F F TO
tells you li Is unrealistic to place
----------- M C E .
more I lia n one defensive Irlck In
the red suits in partner’s hand.

-C

BUGS BUNNY
,

X

(South hud lo have something lo
Jump to game. If partner has Just
one trick In the red suits — the
diamond are or heart king —
you still need to lake some spade
tricks lo heat the hand. The Jack
of spades In partner’s hand
would he enough, but also the
10-9 of spades will do. provided
you make the right play. You
should play the spade queen at
trick two.
Declarer Lovers with dummy’s
king. When East Inter wins the
heart king, bark comes the
spade 10 and down goes de­
clarer. No other play will defeut
the c ont r act , a l t ho ug h In
practice, declarer would be hard
put to duck a spade around to
his Jack If West plays ace of
spades and a small spade.

NORTH
♦ K 74
v a y 93

t i- u . it

♦ y .1 10 6 r&gt;

♦ 5
WEST
♦ Ay 2
V fi 4
♦ H7 4
♦ A K . 18.1

EAST
♦ 10 9 fi 3
a k 7
♦ 92
a y 1098 2

sot III
♦ J 85
V J 1(1 8 5 2
♦ A K 3
♦ 74

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer West
W rit
1♦
I 'lis

North
in»
* I' jsn

Ea»l
34
Pass

South
4a

Opening lead ♦ K

HOROSCOPE
jj-

W hot The D ay
Will Bring...

».«4t ,

FRANK AND ERNEST
by Bob Thavat
Z lE c S

Yiow

IT

‘ir&amp; stff!?
- Q

S

com e

you
W ftQ N G ?

" X P o N ’T K N O W 'W A S
THE

zl

A/V^W F/S?.
f'W U iw a

1 0 -1 5

GARFIELD
by Jim Davit
7T WE&amp;E CAWOpL&gt; BEDS TAKE.
I s o m e G et tin g u s e d t o J

i #

'

JTMRAVT5

by T. K. Ryan

THen^GoNTRa. m c e ,L \ m p
!

TAURUS (April 20-May
Being a name-dropper today \
bore your listeners. It’s best 1
to talk about hlg shots you kn
only casually hut pretend
know well.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc ;
Duties and responsibiliti
should I k * attended lo promp
today. The longer you delay, t
less likely you'll be able to 1
them done.
CANCER (June 21-July
There Is a possibility that you
he th e o n e w h o reach*
extravagantly for the cheek l
day while your dining comp
nlons fumble for their crec
cards.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) For tl
sake of expediency, you mlgl
commit yourself to do somcthlr
for another today about whir
you will liuve regrets luter. Don
make empty promises.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 21
Guard against tendencies toda
to blow small setbacks or dl
appointments out or proportlor
A poor attitude will magnlf
your problems.
**

(0-15

TUM BLEW EEDS
HI,
|

‘fWMYlDfWYiy VLIZARR

YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER IB I08B
Favorable changes are In the
wind for you In the year ahead,
although early Indicators might
look otherwise. Beginnings will
be less Important than endings.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oet. 23) Even
though there will he Indications
that your material position Is
Improving, this Is tint a time to
he wasteful. Save rather than
splurge. Major changes arc
ahead lor Libras in the coming
year. Send for your Astro-Graph
predictions today. Mull $1 to
Astro-Graph, e/o this newspaper.
Box 184G. Ci nci nnati . OH
45201. He sure to state your
zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oet. 24-Nov.22)
Allow yourself adequate time to
think your moves through to­
day. Impulsiveness will cloud
your Judgment and cause you to
make avoidable mistakes.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Loose talk on your part today
could disclose something that
should be kept secret. Don't be
the one who lets the cat out of
the hag.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. I9J
He wutchful today so that a
presumptuous, e x t r a v a g a n t
Irlcnd doesn't Involve you finan­
cially In something you've been
trying to avoid. Say no. and
mean It.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19 )
An Important objective will not
be achieved today tf you are too
lax or Indifferent. Don’t blame
clrcumst&amp;nces for vour lack of
motivation.
PI8CE8 (Feb. 20-March 20)
Keep the lessons you have
learned from painful past expe­
rience In the forefront of your
thoughts today. Old errors might
be repeated If you’re forgetful.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Take pains today not to be
careless with the possessions of
others. If you borrow something,
make certain you return it tn the
same condition you received It.

KQACHBAI&amp;...I
PBPiCAUP MY FIRST
K lL L T O r tU l

s e e if

you c n

by Leonard Starr
rich u p

JO'HSEP‘6 SCENT, SAHPIf
JJJ1 SOMETHIN'MAY HAVE
*7 HAPPENED THlM ANC?
A

--------- a m

it y t

y.

il
A
i*1* » —

NOTHIN
d is a p p e a r e d

_
? /.

(JUST

HMM. THERE'S THE

S ^ « " V8E1SHOUt‘’

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="78">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140903">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1985</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218061">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, October 15, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218062">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218063">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on October 15, 1985.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218064">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218065">
                <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;, October 15, 1985; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218066">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218067">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218068">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="218069">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
