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                    <text>Evening

77th Year, No. 113— Tuesday, Jan u a ry 1, 1985— Sanford, Florida

Herald

(U S P S

481 280)

Price

25

Cents

P aulucci D o n a tes 60,000 Pizzas To H om e Town
Dy Rick Brunson
H erald S ta ff W rite r
While the mercury hovered around 80 degrees
Monday back at his Sanford home, frozen food
mogul Jeno Paulucci stood In bclow-zero
temperatures In Hlbblng. Minn., passing out free
pizzas to about 200 people In the economically
depressed village.
It was purt of Pauluccl's effort to help relieve
the hunger and hopelessness In the town where
he grew up. according to Jim Tills, president of
JFP Associates, a Paulucci company.
Tills said Paulucci donated 60.000 pizzas.

valued nt about $80,000. to the Arrowhead
Economic Opportunity Agency, a food bank In
northeastern Minnesota. The agency delivered
the pizzas to 16 of Its distribution centers, which
will give 10 small pies to about 4.500 families.
The area, known as the Iron Range, was
blighted by the last recession and has never
recovered. Unemployment Is high because the
demand for steel, the mainstay of the area. Is
down. Some Iron-ore plants have shut down and
others have cut production back drastically.
Tills said, and the 10.000 residents of lllhhlng
have been hit particularly hard.
"Those people arc In quite desperate need.

Their food shelves are bare.” he said.
Tills said Paulucci. whose father was an ore
miner, hojwd that the giveaway would Inspire
other Minnesota businesses to do the same. In
1981. Paulucci donated about $300,000 worth
of food to food banks, with much of It going to
northeastern Minnesota.
His sister. Elizabeth Hclfrtch. also of Sanford,
said today "It was Just like Jeno" to give away
the food. Mrs. Hclfrlch wept as she received
word of her brother's deed.
"I'm In tears right now. Hlbblng really means
a lot to both of us.” she said.

Cufrq Hatch Gunman

No Traffic
Fatalities
In Seminole

H ija c k e d J e t
B a c k S a f e ly

10 D i e O n S t a t e R o a d s
From S ta ff and W ire Reporta
No traffic fatalities were reported In
Seminole County by early today while
the New Year holiday death toll In
Florida reached 10 and nationwide
climbed to 218. less than predicted.
Seminole County officials reported
eight DUI arrests since Saturday. The
official four-day holiday ends at mid­
night. During the four-day Christmas
holiday 34 DUI arrests were made In
Seminole County.
The National Safety Council pre­
dicted up to 450 people would die on
the nation's roads this weekend, which
sturted Friday at 6 p.m. During the
Christm as holiday weekend. 540
deaths were reported, exceeding the
NSC's prediction by 70.
According to United Press Interna­
tional. California lopped the nation
with 28 deaths: Texas followed with 23
deaths; Michigan had 11; Florida.
Illinois and North Carolina 10 each;
Kunsas, Ohio and Tennessee 9 each.
Nationwide, hazardous road condi­
tions caused by freezing rain and snow
kept many New Year's rcvelcre home.
Travelers' warnings for freezing rain
or snow were posted In Nebraska. Iowa.
Wisconsin. Kansas and Illinois. Winter
s to rm w a tc h e s w e re Issu ed In
Oklahoma. Michigan. New Hampshire
and Maine.
With the turn of the year, laws In
several states hiking drinking ages and
Instituting tougher drunken driving
penalities went Intoclfect.
A r iz o n a , N e b ra sk a and S ou th
Carolina toasted 1985 with higher
drinking ages, and other laws being
considered were bans on tavern "happy
hours" modeled after the nation's first
such law In Massachusetts, where open
champagne bars of past years were
prohibited this New Year's Eve.
1-awmakers said the new bills were a
response to legislation signed by Presi­
dent Reagan July 17 to reduce federal
highway aid to states that refuse to
raise the minimum drinking age to 21.
The measure would affect Florida. 26
other states and the District of Col­
umbia. which have not raised drinking
ages. It also provides for Increased
federal highway funds to stutes with
mandatory sentencing laws for persons
convicted of drunken driving.
Proposals or plans to Increase the
drinking age to 21 are expected In
Florida Alabnma. Mississippi. Virginia.
Connecticut. Hawaii. New Hampshire.
Maine, Massachusetts. Minnesota, and
New York for 1985 legislative sessions.
Masssachusetts' happy hour ban.
which took effect Dec. 10. prohibits
cut-rate prices and Inducements to
drink like bcer-guzzling contests and
events offering free drinks.
Proposals to clamp down on happy
hours — or eliminate them entirely —
come up for consideration this year In
See DEATH, page 2 A

Paulucci. chairman of Paulucci Enterprises,
formerly based his pizza-making operations In
Duluth. Minn. In early 1984. he moved It to
Casselberry to be near Ills Sanford home. He still
owns the house where he and his sister grew up
In Hlbblng.
Mrs Hclfrlch. once a secretary and treasurer
for Chun King, a Chinese food company
formerly owned by Paulucci. first came to
Sanford 28 years ago to buy celery for the
company.
“ I liked It so much I stayed and convinced my
family to come here."

ttortkj Photo by Orifory Oohm

T h e

F ir s t

L a d y

Checking In to the maternity ward girl was the first child born in
at Central Florida Regional Hospi­ Seminole County In the new year.
tal at 9:35 a.m. today was the as The couple said they had plenty of
yet unnamed daughter of Robert names in mind for a boy, but were
and P e a rl K ey of Altam onte caught short for a girl's name. The
Springs. The 7-pound, 9V2-ounce Keys have two other children, boys.

Paul's Skin Grafts Begin
CINCINNATI (UPI) — Doctors Monday
removed deud skin tissue and began
the first of many skin graft operations
on Paul Jewel, the 11-year-old boy who
was burned over 60 percent of his body
Christmas Day after a booby-trapped
air hose exploded.
Paul, o f the Lockhart area near
Orlando, was In ‘'critical, but stable"
condition following the surgery at
Shrlncrs Burns Institute In Cincinnati.
Skin used In the grafting wus front
cadavers, said Instutute spokesman
Sandy Shackelford.
Similar operations are to continue
over the next several weeks. Although
the boy's body eventually will reject the
cadaver skin. It will temporarily protect
his body from Infection until his own
skin can be grafted.
Monday's skin grafting was the boy's

first surgery since Ills right leg was
amputated Just below the knee Satur­
day. Doctors said there was so much
dead tissue In the leg that it Jeopardized
Ills chances of survival.
The leg was nearly blown off by the
explosion, which caused second- and
third-degree burns over 60 percent of
his body. The bomb, hidden In a
coin-operated compressed air pump at
an O rla n d o c o n v e n ie n c e s to re ,
exploded when the hoy was airing up a
bicycle tire.
"Fin pleased with Paul's progress
and treatment." the boy's mother.
Stnda Alsept. said after Monday s
surgery. " I ’m a.oO very touched by the
outpouring of love from people for
him."
See PAUL, page 2A

NEW YORK (UPI) - The 198 passen­
gers and crew of an American Airlines
DC-10 hijacked to Cuba by a prisoner
who outwitted Ills three guards ended
their ordeal today with a safe lauding at
John F. Kennedy Airport
Authorities said American Airlines
flight 626 touched down at 1:58 a.m. —
nearly eight hours after the Jet was
hijacked as It flew from St. Croix.
Virgin Islands, to New York.
The passengers, none of whom were
Injured during the ordeal, were allowed
to pick up their baggage and leave the
facility after being briefly questioned by
the FBI.
Most were composed as they left the
American Airlines terminal, although
one woman broke down and began to
cry after she picked up her baggage.
The plane, carrying 185 passengers
and 13 crewmembers, departed the
Virgin Islands at 3:51 p.m. for u lllglit
to Kennedy Airport.
It was about an hour from New York
when the prison er. Iden tified as
Ishmael All La Beet, one of five blacks
convicted In the 1972 sluylngs o f eight
people at the fashionable Fountain

Valley golf course in St. Croix, over­
powered and disarmed Ills guards and
diverted the plane to Cuba. Authorities
said the plane was diverted about 6:17
p.m.. when It was In the vicinity of
Charleston. S.C.
Roger Myers, a Federal Aviation
Administration spokesman In Atlanta,
said the aircraft landed at Jose Marti
Airport In Havana. Cuba, at about 8:28
p.m. Monday and was allowed to depart
lor New York at 11:13 p.m.
LaHcrl. who had been sentenced to
eight consecutive life terms and was In
the Virgin Islands lor proceedings In a
civil suit, remained In the custody of
authorities In Cuba.
Passengers aboard the plane said
they first learned a hijack was in
progress when they heard a commotion
to the rear of the plane, turned around
and saw a large black man with a beard
pointing u gun on the three Virgin
islnnd marshatH who had been guard­
ing him.
T h e y s a id th e p r is o n e r w a s
handculTed when he was brought on
the plane hut that his guards removed
Ills hnndeulfs after he sal down.

Bomb Rips D .C . A bortion C lin ic
clinics In Pensacola.
At least two dozen abortion facili­
ties were attacked across the nation
In 1984.
P o lic e said the w alls o f the
Washington center were damaged

W A S H IN G T O N (U P I ) - An
explosion ripped through nil abortion
clinic early today, causing extensive
damage to the center's walls In the
third attack on arcu abortion facilities
In two months, police said.
The bomb exploded at 12:10 a.m.
today at the Hlilcrcst Women's Surgl-Center In the nation's capital,
police said. No Injuries were reported.
Authorities said there was no
Immediate link to the bombing und
the Christmas Day bombings of three

Pansacola bomber linked to
‘secret' group, Story, 4B
extensively and windows across the
street from the center were blown
out.

Subway Vigilante Faces Attempted Murder Charge
CONCORD. N IL (UPI) — A former
mugging victim who confessed to being
the "D e a th W is h " vlgllu n tc was
charged with the attempted murder of
four teenagers he allegedly gunned
down In a New York subway Dec. 22 lor
harassing him.
Bernhard Hugo Goetz. 38. of New
York City, a self-employed engineer,
was held on $500,000 ball until Ills
arrulgment Wednesday. He also was
charged with unlawful possession of a
weapon.
Goetz walked Into the Concord police
station about 12:30 p.m. Monday and
said he was sought by New York
authorities In the shooting of four

vouina on a New York sunway train.
Concord Police Chief David Walchak
said.
Goetz made a statement to police on
the shooting Incident, but officials
refused to disclose the contents ol the
statement or why he ended up In New
I lampshlrc.
Police said Goetz was expected to be
extradited later tills week. New York
Chief of Detectives Richard Nlcaslro
said Goetz would waive formal extradi­
tion hearings In New Hampshire.
The four teenage victims were shot
and seriously Injured Dec. 22 on a
Manhattan subway. They had harassed
the man and demanded $5 from him.
The man then reportedly said. “ I have

five dollars for each of you." drew a
pistol anil fired.
The shootings set ofl a wave of
controveisy. with thousands of New
Yorkers supporting the gunman as a
hero like the Charles Bronson character
In the movie "Death Wish."
Goetz had been assaulted on Jan. 21.
1981. on the Lower East Side by three
youths who tried to rob Ills coat and
ripped It. Nlcaslro said.
One person was arrested In the
mugging but further details of Hie
crime were not Immediately available.
The subway gunman wus believed
armed with u silver .38;callber revolver,
police said.
The conductor of the trull) told police

the man said he was not an ofllcer and
that he was not licensed to carry a gun.
then Jumped off the train and disap­
peared.
Ills four victims, all have arrest
records ami three were carrying
sharpened screwdrivers, remained
hospitalized Monday In good to critical
condition. Doctors say one ol them Is
paralyzed from the waist down.
On Monday, several members of the
civilian crime patrol the Guardian
Angels brought a souvenir screwdriver
and $5 In quarters to one of the Injured
teenagers so he would not have to "beg.
mug. borrow, or steal again," said the
group's leader. CurtisSllwa.

Bhopal Victims Haunt Union Carbide Workers
TODAY
....2A
... 6B
4B 5B
6B

Deaths.

.... 6B

E d ito ria l.... ...... 4A
F lo rid a ...... ....... 2A
Horoscope... ...... 6B
H osp ita l..... ...... 2A
N ation....... ....... 2A
People....... ...... IB
Sport$
5A.6A
T elevision....
W eather..... ...... 2A

Today
Hall Mary quarterback Doug Flutle
begins his final college game today as
the Cotton Bowl begins at 1:30 p.m.,
televised on channel 6.
Democrats make their New Year's
resolutions, page 4A.
L m

m

w

m

m

b

W hat Can You Say To Them Now ?'
questions Irom lamlly and friends.
By Dennis C. M ilew ski
•Some are ashamed of their com­
DANBURY. Conn. (UPI) - Union
Carbide hired a public relations firm pany's role In the devastating acci­
to salvage Its corporate Image after dent. which claimed more than 2.500
the chemical disaster In Bhopal. llvcsand Injured thousands more.
When asked what he would say to
India, but employees of the company
say that won't help them face their the people of Bhopal, one Union
‘ Carbide employee said. ” 1 probably
friends and neighbors.
Since the deadly gas leak Dee. 3 at would be ashamed It Is so very sad.
Union Carbide's Bhopal plant, there What can you say to them now?"
The young executive and two
have been bomb threats and protests
at the firm's world headquarters, Iricnds on their lunch hour appeared
which employs 3.000 people In sub­ uncomfortable when asked by a
urban Danbury about 50 miles from rc|&gt;orlcr If they worked for Union
Carbide.
New York City.
"There Is a hesitation." one worker
Employees of Union Carbide, a $15
billion firm perhaps best known for finally said. He eould not wait to tell
his blends when he Joined Union
Its "Eveready" batteries and "G lad"
trash bags, say It Is hard to deal with Carbide eight months earlier, but
the death ami suffering, the endless now "the reactions arc different."

“ It depends on who you talk to,"
said Ills co-worker, who has spent
eight years with the company.
The third employee refused com­
ment and all declined to identify
themselves except to say they were
"lower administration workers.''
They sat ulone at the dark bar.
away from a noisy lunch time crowd
at Thursday's Restaurant near the
huge company complex hidden by
thick trees.
Attempts to lulk to employees
about the tragedy are difficult. Secu­
rity has been tight since the accident
and Union Carbide refuses to allow
reporters past the field-stone gate.
There was u minute of silence ufter
news of the deaths In India reached
Danbury and reports that employees

wept. Company Hags llew at half­
stall Employees started their own
relief funds for the victims and all
Christmas und New Year's parlies
were canceled.
"It Just didn't seem right to cele­
brate after such a calamity," said one
of the workers.
"W e are all concerned about the
people of Bhopal. Whether It was
Carbide's fault or not, the people
deserve to lie compensated and It
should be substantial." he added.
"T h e image will go down for a
while." one worker said "T h e cor(Miration Is too big to go bankrupt.
But If It turns out that Carbide
messed up — then It will get a little
shaky."

�I

2 A --E v r n in q H e ra ld . Sa n ford . F I

—

—

—

Altamonte Police Subdue Burglary
Suspect; Officer Punched In Face

T u e sd ay, J in . I, IM S

—

—

I

NATIO N

ALBANY. N.Y. (UP1) — Police began ticketing people for
not wearing their seat belts today as New York became the
first state In the country to fine people for not buckling up.
Several arrests were reported statewide, Including a
Vermont woman who was arrested at 12:15 a.m. In
Whitehall. Washington County.

An Altamonte Springs man who fought
olllccrs who found him inside a Icnccd
construction site has been charged with
battery to a police officer burglary and
grand theft.
According to a report by the Altamonte
Springs police, they received a tip around
11:15 p.m. Sunday that a man was Inside
the site al Monterey North Apartments.
One officer reported that he saw a man
holding a large silver object, hop over a
fence at the site then disappear. After
notifying his partner that there was some­
one in the area, the olflcer located the man
on the ground near a fence, A circuit
breaker box, taken In the burglary, was next
to him. the report shows.
The officer ordered the man to get up and
lace the fence. But as the man turned to
lean on the fence, he punched the officer In
the face breaking the officer's glasses.
The man. a plumber who is 6-foot-1 and
weighs 195 pounds, then broke away from
the officer's grip and lied only to be caught
momentarily, and after a brief struggle
placed under arrest.
In the second tussle, the same officer
received a cut on the left elbow requiring
four stitches.
Before the suspect was taken to Jail he
began to complain of nausea and said it was
mused by drug use. He was transported to
Florida Hospital — Altamonte where lie was
treated.
David Christian Lokcy. 23. of 512 Boxelder. was being held in the Seminole
Counlyjall in lieu of $10,000 bond.

Betty Shufell. 30, of Rutland. Vt„ was slopped by state
police on Route 4 and issued a ticket for seat belt violation,
authorities said. Police said they did not know If Schufcll
was the first to be charged under the seat belt luw.

HOT RODDING
A Casselberry man stopped in connection
with racing on the highway was arrested for
giving the officer a false name.

IN BRIEF
Party And Golf Completed:
Reagan Turns To Foreign Affairs
PALM SPRINGS. Calif. |UPI) - With two days of golf and
a black-tic New Year's Eve party behind him. President
Reagan turned his full attention today to foreign affairs,
particularly to dealings with the Soviet Union.
He was scheduled to meet today with Secretary of State
George Shultz. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and
national security adviser Robert McFarlanc to reach final
positions for the resumption of arms control talks with the
Soviets next week.
Shultz will be going to Geneva. Switzerland, for two days
o f preliminary talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko.
lie will meet with Reagan again Friday In Washington for
what could be final marching orders.
Shullz was reported to have been arguing for a broad
approach to the arms talks, hoping to offer Reagan's
vaunted $26 billion "Star Wars" space defense system for
the agenda.

Seat Belt Citations Issued

At the strike of midnight. New York became the first
state in the nation to fine motorists and front-scat
passengers $50 for not wearing scat belts.

...Death
Continued from page 1A

FLORIDA

Florida, Alabama, Arkunsas,
Connecticut. New Hampshire.
Pennsylvania and Rhode Island.
Those arresleJ for DUI during
the New Y e a r w eeken d in
Seminole Count v arc:

IN BRIEF

—Bill Dcfec. 29. of Oakrldge
Motel. "10. Fern Park, at 8:10
p.m. Saturday after his car was
seen weaving on and off U.S.
Highway 17-92, 1-ongwood, He
was also c h a rge d with
possession of less than 20 grams
ofmarttuana.

Federal Judge Stands By Order
Blocking Refugees’ Deportation
A federal Judge is stnndlng by his order to block the
deportation of more than 2.700 undesirable Cuban
refugees despite a Justice Department claim thul the order
threatens un agreement between Cuba and the United
States.
U.S. District Judge Marvin Shoob said Monday he would
not lift hta Oct. 15 order that blocks ttie mass deportation
of the Marie) boallift Cubans, lie said he blocked the mass
deportation because each refugee was entitled to u hearing
lo determine If he Isellgiblc for |&gt;olll(cnl asylum.
The Justice Department said the judge's refusal to lift the
order threatens a deportation agreement reached Dec. 14
between Cuba and the United States. Under the agree­
ment. the 2,700 refugees, 1.500 of whom arc In a federal
prison in Atlanta, would be returned to Cuba because the
immigration and Naturalization Service says they arc
cither criminals or mentally unstable. In return for the
deportation, the United Slates would resume processing of
visas from Cubans.
The normal processing of visas from Cuban applicants
was suspended following the Maricl boallift In which
129,000 Cubans fled to Florida,
The Justice Department has appealed the ruling to the
U.S.Circuit Court of Appeals.

—Margaret W. Carr, 44. of 1410
Hilltop Road. Casselberry, at
2:18 a.m. Sunday on 17-92 near
Dog Track Road after her car

★ Fires
* Courts
★ Police
A sheriffs deputy reported that he was
conducting a traffic investigation about
people racin g near Dew Drop Cove.
Casselberry. When he asked a man in the
area who was racing with other drivers what
Ills name was he said Joseph Vincent
Derose. A Florida idcnliflraiiou card the
man had showed that was not his real
name.
Arrested for obstruction with false In­
formation. driving without a driver's license
and racing on the highway was Vincent
Antony Clabattonl. 31. of 517 Dew Drop
Cove.
OBSCENE DISTURBANCE
An Altamonte Springs man who caused
such a vocal disturbance that residents of
live apartments gathered to watch him
scream and holler was arrested for disorder­
ly Intoxication.
According m an Altamonte Springs police
reiKirt. an officer responded lo 725 Hidden
Lake, in reference to a disturbance. The
Incident occurred at I 01 a.m. Sunday.
At the address, the olflcer spoke with a
woman who said a man she Identified as her
boyfriend had casued a disturbance but had
left, the report shows. While the officer was
talking with the woman, a man approached
ihem anti said, "Here I am. I'm the one."
With dial, the officer reported, the man
started to call the woman vulgar names and

drove off the road several times.
—Dawn M. Ylngst. 28. of 270
W y m o re R oad. A lt a m o n te
Springs, at 2:31 a.m. Sunday
near Hallmark Furniture, state
Road 436. She was stopped by a
Casselberry officer after radar
detected her car travelling 66
mph In a 45 mph zone.
—Ruben Pruitt Williams. 24, of
I 157 Vienna Drive. Casselberry,
at 1:20 a.m. Sunday on Lake
A vc., one-half m ile cast of
Casselberry, after his ear was
seen crossing the centerline sevc ra I t i m e s on S c m l n o l a
Boulevard.
—Gordon Francis Cartwright,
28. of Orlando, arrested 11:30
p.m. Sunday on 17-92 after his
car was seen making a U-turn on
the grassy median of 17-92 and

COLOGNECAPER
An Orlando man who tried lo shoplift two
hollies of cologne from an Altamonte Mall
shop has been arrested for retail (heft.
An Altamonte Springs police report shows
that a woman at the Shoppers Drug Mart In
I he mall saw a man put two $21,50 bottles
o f Aratnls cologne down the front of the his
pants.
An officer was called, the man stopped,
and the cologne recovered.
Arrested for ihe fragrant violation was
Bobbv Cox. 42. of Orlando. He was being
held in lieu of SlOO bond in Ihe Seminole
County Jail.

Dog Track Road.
— Ronald Allan Copp. 19, of
1106-B c o u n ty Road 427.
Longwood. arrested at 10:35
p.m. Monday nfter 1'ds car was
seen speeding on U.S. Highway
17-92 In Seminole County.
— Robert Lynn Surchcr, 30. of
Orlando, arrested at 10 a.m.

Monday nfter his enr was seen
cutting off traffic as he passed
vehicles on state Road 434,
Longwood. He was also charg-d
with driving without a license.
—Ramon Alberto Reynoso. 21. of
Deltona, on Tuesday after his car
was seen traveling 60 mph In a
45 mph zone on 17-92. Sanford.

...Paul

R e w a r d s f or i n f o r ma t i o n
leading to the arrest and convic­
tion of the person who placed the
bomb exceed $17,000, No sus­
Continued form page 1A
pects have been arrested In the
An Orlando radio station has incident, but police continue to
raised more than $50,000 for piece together fragments from
Jewell's family. Monday an Or­ the explosion In hopes of identi­
lando area nightclub unveiled a fying the bomb's maker. The
new mobile home It will give reconstructed bomb will be sent
Paul's family. «
to the FBI In Washington.

WEATHER
N A TIO N A L REPORT: Snow
and freezing rain ushered in the
New Year from New Mexico to
New York, coating streets with
sheets of Ice suited for skuting.
not driving. Downtown parlies
were canceled, revelers stayed
home and disabled cars littered
roads. Four people were swept
away Monday by Texas Hoods
spawned by 8 inches of rain.
Tornadoes caused $4 million In
damage, injured 38 people and
knocked out power to 20,000
others in Houston's suburbs,
where outages continued today.
Tornadoes touched down Mon­
day in East Bernad, Crystal
Be ac h . Manvel, Baytown.
Sweeny. Laporte and Pasadena,
w h e r e the w o r l d - f a m o u s
"G ille y 's" nightclub was hit.
Pasadena police said (he twister
caused up to $4 million in
damage and sent 38 people lo
hospitals. Heavy snow and high
winds extended today from

Union Raps Give back Extension
MIAMI 1UPI) — The leader of Eastern Airlines* largest
union strongly criticized Chairman Frank Dormun's
announcement that he was extending wage cuts into 1985.
saying Borman betrayed Eastern's employees and resur­
rected labor "wurfare."
The move by Borman Monday to extend the 1984 Wage
Investment Program came as a shock to Eastern
employees, said Charles Bryan, president of Eastern's
16.000-mcmbcr machinists' union.
The wage concessions were due to expire at midnight
New Year's Eve. but Borman said In a company-wide letter
Monday morning that the 18 to 22 percent pay cuts will be
continued because the company can't afford the $22
million a month It would cost to reinstate the salaries.

AREA DEATH S
K ATH ER IN E W. BURLEIGH
Mr s . K a t h e r i n e W i l s o n
Burleigh. 87. of 919 E. Second
St.. Sanford, died Saturday at
Ihe Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Born Sept. 11. 1897 in
Milton, Pa., she moved here in
1965 from Miami. She was a
member of First United Method­
ist Church, Sanford. A retired
telephone service representative,
she was a m em b er o f the
Telephone Pioneers of Miami
und the Sanford Garden Club.
Survivors include a sou, Clif­
ford D., Lakeland: brother John
W. Wilson, Gainesville; three
grandchildren and six great­
grandchildren.
Brlsson Guurdluu Funeral
Home, Sanford. Is in charge of
arrangements.
HENDRICKS 8. BRIGGS
Mr. Hendricks S. Briggs. 74, of
707 Pennsylvania Avc., Alta­
monte Springs, died Sunday at
home. Born July 7. 1910 in
Kansas City, Mo., he moved to
A lta m o n te S p rin g s from
Philadelphia, Miss., In 1950. He
was a retired salesman and uu
Episcopalian.
Survivors include his wife.
Henrietta: two son&amp;v-Charles S..
S ew ell. N.J.. Hendricks C..
Altamonte Springs; daughter,

A c tio n R e p o rts

hollered o b s c e n itie s
The officer told him to quiet down.
because a crowd was beginning to congregate, but the man continued his foul
tirade.
Arrested for disorderly intoxication was
Tony Collinl. 21. of 844-D Orlcnla. Altamonte Springs.
STOP LEADS TO AR R EST
A man whose Florida driver license was
suspended six times was arrested after he
was stopped for riding a motorcycle while
not wearing headgear.
A deputy reported thaj he stopped the
man for operating a motorcycle while not
wearing a helmet. The incident occurred at
10:30 a.m. Sunday on Mullet Lake Park
Road.
While the man had a valid New York slate
driver license, a computer check showed he
had his Florida license suspended six times
lor failure to appear In court on irafTlr
charges.
Arrested was Steven M. Davidson. 23. of
Frcdonia. N.Y. According to the arresi
repori. Davidson works in Sanford.

Cheryl Havel. Rapid City. S. D.;
five grandchildren.

rial Chapel. Orlando, is in charge
of arrangements.

B aldw in -F airch ild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, is In
charge of arrangements,

Funeral Notice

BERNARD KINDM AN
Mr. Bernard Klndman. 63. of
9 13 Ga z e l l e Tr a i l . Wi n t e r
Spr i ng s, di ed Sat ur day in
Houston. Texus. Born Aug. 12.
1926 In New York City, he
moved to Winter Springs from
there. He was uu automotive
design consultant and attended
the Congregation o f Liberal
Judaism. He wus u Mason and a
veteran of World War II.
Survivors include his wife,
Shirley: son, Mitchell, Winter
S pr i ng s ; mo t h e r . Frieda,
Hollywood; two sisters. Hariett
Berman. Miami. Edith Bergman.
Boynton Beach; two grand­
children.
Beth Shalom-Goldstein Memo-

Kansas to Minnesota and easl lo recovered. Power was knocked
Michigan. Freezing rain, som- out to* the San Jacinto monu­
limes mixed with snow and fog. ment. the Battleship Texas and
Iramed the snow in the Rockies, •as many us 20,000 people in
the southern Plains. New York Pasadena and Deer Park, said
and New England. Floods swept Graham Painter, a Houston
through Hannibal. Mo., and flash L i g h t i n g a n d P o w e r Co .
Hood watches and warnings spokesman. Painter estimated
were posted In northeast and several thousand people In
Pasadena began the New Year
north c e n t r a l New York,
southern Missouri and southern without electricity.
and central Illinois. Forecasts of
A R E A READINGS (9 a.m.);
snow and rain In Tulsa. Okla..
temperature: 66; overnight low:
forced s|X)nsors lo cancel the 6 4; M o n d a y ' s h i g h : 8 1 :
annuul "First Night" downtown
barometric pressure: 30.22: rela­
celebration, which usually at­ tive humi di t y: 93 percent:
tracts up to 10.000 people. In winds: southeast at 9 mph;
Colorado, an accident alert was sunrise: 7:18 a.m.. sunset 5:40
Issued in the Denver area.
p.m.
W E D N E S D A Y TID E S :
Numerous car crashes also were
Daytona Beach: highs. 7:29
reported In the Midwest. But
police In Iowa. Missouri and a.m., 7:43 p.m.: lows. 12:43
a . m . . 1:32 p . m . : P o r t
I l l i noi s said they b e lie v e d
h i g h w a y c o n d i t i o n s had
persuaded many celebrants lo
s l a y at h o m e . In T e x a s ,
authorities searched today for a
father and two daughters, ages 3
and 2. who were swept away by
Central Florid* Ragienal Hospital
lloodwatcrs. Jim VVulf. police
Monday
chief In Sablnul. drowned In the
ADMISSIONS
CanethlaC
Brown,
Lake Monro*
floods and his l&gt;ody has been

BURLEIOM,MRS. KATHERINE M.
— Funeral services lor Mrt Ketherln*
Wilton Burltigh, 17. ol » l » E Second St .
Senlord, who died Saturdey. will b* held *1 11
■ m Thursday *1 th* Britton Guardian
Funeral Horn* with Ilx Rev l to King
olflclallng. Burial will b« In Ev*rgr**n
Cemetery Frl*ndt may call at th* lun*r*t
horn* on W*dn*tday 2 1 p m Britton Funeral
Horn* a Guardian Chapel In cherg*

E v e n i n g H e r a ld
tUSPS 411 210)

T u e sd a y, J a n u a ry 1, 1985
V o l, 77, N o. 113
Published Dally and Sunday, **c*pt
Saturday by Th* Sanford Herald.
Inc. 100 N, French Av*.. Sanlord,
Fla. i m i .
Second Cists Pottage Paid at Sanlord,
Florida 22221

r SEMINOLE MONUMENT CO.
DISPLAY/SALES

Horn* Delivery; Week, l l . l t ; Month,
14.71J 1 Months, 114.25; 4 Months,
127.00; Year. 51l.0«. By Mall; Week
II.
50; Month, 54.00; 5 Monthi,
III.
00; t Monthi. 151.50; Year,

2208 W. 25th St.
Sanford, FL 32771

lag oo

3 2 3 -5 6 8 5

Phona (505) M i J ill.

I

Canaveral: highs. 7:21 a.m..
7:35 p.m.: lows. 12:34 a.m.. 1:23
p.m.: B a yp ort: highs. 11:43
a.rn., 1:58 p.m.: lows, 7:13 a.m.,
7:05 p.m.
B O ATIN G FO R EC AST: Si.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Southeast wind around
15 knots through Wednesday.
Sea 3 to 5 feet. Partly cloudy
with widely scatlercd showers
mainly Wednesday.
A R E A FO R E C A S T : Today
mostly sunny and warm. High In
lower 80s. Wind southeast 10 to
15 mph. Tonlghl fair except late
night fog. Luw in low 60s. Wind
light and southeast. Wednesday
partly cloudy with a slight
chance of showers. High In low
80s. Wind southeast 10 to 15
mph. Ruin chance 20 percent.

HOSPITAL NOTES
DISCHARGES
Irving I. Chase, Sanford; Janice C. Cowl
Sanford; and Lewis E Hubbard. DeBary

ALL
PROCEEDS FROM
TOES.. JAN. 1
PERFORMANCE WILL BE
PRESENTED TO THE STATE
UNIVERSITY’S COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP
PROGRAMS.
I NIGHTLY (EXCEPT SUN.) 7:30 (Door Open* 6) I
|Matin— &gt; Mon., Wad., S&gt;t 1:00 (Door O p»n » 11:45)

SANFORD ORLANDO KENNEL CLUB
FOR CLUB H O U SE R E SE R V A T IO N S CALL 81)1-1600
N O R T H O F O R L A N D O . J U S T O F F H W Y. 17-92
301 D O G T R A C K R O A D , L O N G W O O D
S O R R Y , N O M IN O R S

\

,
I
1
'j
I
I

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Jan, 1, 1985—3A

H i g h - l e c h , S e rvic e s W ill L e a d Industrial G r o w t h
WASHINGTON (UPI) — High technology nnci
services will continue to lead (lie nation's
Industrial growth ui the New Year and some basic
Industries such as autos and steel are making
modest recoveries, the government said Monday.
The Commerce Department released parts of
I lie 1985 edition of Its annual "U.S. Economic
Outlook." giving the past performance and
prospects for the coming year o f 350 American
industries.
The main conclusion to he drawn tram the

report, said Lionel Olmcr, undersecretary for
international trade. Is that, "Change Is the only
constant In our economy. The United States has
an Incredibly dynamic economy In which ad­
justment Is a process from which no Industry is
exempt."
O f all the Industries surveyed, 209 arc
manufacturing Industries. The report said 177 of
these arc expected to increase their output In
1985. the rest to slay the same or decline. But In
the majority of cases, growth rates are expected

to Ik 1 below the past year of rapid recession
recovery.
All the broad service categories. Including
Information processing, transportation, wholesale
and retail trade, hotels, banking, education and
health are expected to grow In 1985 and on
through 1990.
Service Industries, which range from high-tech
research to hamburger stands, have grown from
6-1.6 percent of the gross national product in 1972
to 68.3 percent in 1983 and have been the biggest

source of new |obs.
Industries projected to grow fastest in 1985
Include many high-tech fields such as semi­
conductors and electronic computing equipment.
Others such as space equipment and missiles
reflect major government buying.
For some others, such as steel and other
primary metals, relatively high percentage
growth rates are somewhat misleading because
they represent recovery from recent, very de­
pressed levels.

■ i

0/aoau 9teu t W ear
HAPPY
NEW .
YEAR

H A P P Y
N E W

Y E A R !

v
4 J
is t r o :

1985

appreciate your
patronage and the many
new friends.
From
Dldn Chu and
Mel Chin Liu
We

."‘ i
.‘ *\ Y \
-**

H&amp;M

Restaurant

H op e y o u re jum ping
w ith joy tins N ew
YWu. looking forward
to hearth and p io v
penty in 1985

AAA EMPLOYMENT

2016 S French Ate.

322-5020

A n o th e r y e a r Is b eg in n in g
. . . . we h o p e it's a g re a t
one fo r all o u r c u sto m e rs.

HAPPY

Bettrly and Colleen

2523 French At*.

323-517^^^

1 £ l N J G Ihi

GRAHAM’S
Secretarial Services
"You name i t . . . i’ll
I’ll typ
type It "

IT ’S T IM E TO W ISH YOU

3 2 3 -8 0 3 8

AMW NEWnm
Beat o f tu ck to ail our
frien d s and clien ts.

m i!
Time to rrtg in the N e w \fear with kits of good
wishes to e l o f o i* wonderful friends and perrons

A &amp; G A R T S &amp; C R A F T S S U P P L IE S
W il d e r A c c o u n t in g &amp;
In c o m e T a x S e r v ic e
2923 8. Orlando Dr.

2950 S. Orlando Dr. (Zayras Plats)
323-4560
Geneva L. Spaulding

323-1040

-4/w

• m
O'
I

HAPPY NEW YEAR

p eace

* !
We'te making a wish for all our wonderful customers
that the coming y e .r wil! be filled with the very best!

Best Of Luck
The COSTANTINO’S

i

From The Staff

From the Accounting A Tax Offices of

S T E N S T R 0 M R E A LT Y

TONY, LOUISE &amp; STACY

CO LBERT and SHALETT

2S65 Park Ate.
SanUid
322-2420
and

LAKE MONROE INN
HWY. 17/92 ON LAKE MONROE

Here it it ... the Newiearl He hope iou ndh tnjot it and
find uh ten in ill tour endenon!

VVV- ask for Peace and Harmony as the gifts
o f the coming year for everyone.

A joyful New Year's greeting to all of our
wonderful friends and customers.

101 E. 1st St. Suite 602

b*

901 W. Lake Mary Bird.

322-3104

Lake Mary, Fla.

322-5721

321-2720

V ii V 6

HAUE A
WflPpy

1985
fp u a t

T fJ u A e *

A

7 (/ &lt; X H &lt; U n fcd
Good luck, health and prosperity art our withes lor

'H e w

* V E K R '-

the New Year to all our customers

From A ll The
DAVIDSON'S AND EMPLOYEES

We can't tell you how much you
mean to usl Thank*!
S ta te

Of

DAVIDSON'S TREE
FARM INC.

R e p r e s e n ta tiv e

B o b b y B r a n tle y , P a t t i,
^

Lenny &amp;

B o b b y J r.

f

32S ORANGE BLVD., SANFOBO

B e s t W is h e s F r o m
H a n k G a lla g h e r C F a m ily

FRONTIER CA TTLE COMPANY
2700 S. Sanford Ate.

321 5761

Time to ring in with our best wishes for
the coming year.

151CARDINAL
M0UCHMES MCOflPOFlAmi

t
h

v (»

£&gt;X

323-1125

i

�I

\
Evening Herald
(USPS 411 110)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305 322-2611 or 83) 9993

Tuesday, January 1, 1985—4A

DICK WEST

Let 'Em Eat Peanut Butter

Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Malvln Adkins, Advertising Director

WASHINGTON 1UPI) - "USDA Seeks Com­
ment on 1985 Peanut Program” reads a caption
of an Agriculture Department news release.

Home Delivery: Week. $1.10: Month. $4.75: 3 Months.
$14.25; 6 Months. $27 00; Year. $51,00. Bv Mall: Week.
$ t 50; Month. $0.00; 3 Months. $ IH.OO; 6 Months. $32.50
Year. $60 00

When the government seeks anything. 1
comply. If It calls me to military service. I go. If
It wants more taxes. 1 pay. So 1 have no
hesitation about commenting on the 1985
peanut program.

How Much
Freedom ?
The clash of conflicting rights In a
democratic society Is chronic and. often
enough, without any "solution" other than
deft compromise. A case in point: The elusive
balance between essential government
secrecy, the rights of a free press, and the
public’s right to know what Its elected
representatives are doing.
*
This messy dilemma came up again
recently when The Washington Post disclosed
the classified purpose and a number of details
of the next mission for the space shuttle
Discovery. On Jan. 23. Discovery is to lift the
Pentagon's newest and most sophisticated
reconnaissance satellite Into orbit over the
Soviet Union. Part of the 8300-mllllon
satellite’s purpose Is said to be monitoring
Soviet missile tests to determine If the Soviet
Union Is abiding by terms of the SALT II
treaty and other arms-control agreements
with the United States.
An obviously angry Secretary of Defense
Caspar Weinberger accused The Pos' of "the
height of Journalistic Irresponsibility." And
Mr. Weinberger suggested that publication
had damaged national security. The Post's
executive editor. Benjamin Bradlce, disputed
that, saying that the newspaper had deleted
details It knew the Pentagon considered
sensitive. Mr. Bradlce described the article as
nothing more than "a careful review of what
Is known about the upcoming shuttle
launch."
It Is difficult to know for certain whose
version Is closer lo the truth. Most informa­
tion about U.S. intelligence satellites,
especially concerning their precise capabill-'
ties, has been very closely guarded. And for
obvious reasons. The more the Soviets know
about American "spy” satellites and their
capabilities, for example, the easier it might
be to disguise cheating on arms control
'agreements.
Conversely. It Is probably also true that
much of what The Post published would In
time have been deduced by the Soviets once
the satellite was in Its fixed orbit, 22.300
miles above the Western regions of the Soviet
Unton.
Beyond the disputed specifics of this
particular incident lies a much larger, more
troubling Issue. Who decides if the publica­
tion of classified information would, in fact,
damage national security? Ceding unques­
tioned authority to government Invites the
sort of political abuse of the classification
system experienced during the Johnson and
Nixon administrations. But who elected Mr.
Bradlee to decide how much the Soviets
should be told about a satellite obviously
Important and perhaps critical to the security
of 240 million Americans?
The Associated Press, NBC News, and
Aviation Week A Space Technology magazine
all knew details of Discovery’s classified
January mission. But each complied with a
Pentagon request to withhold the story so
long as others did likewise. Mr. Bradlee
decided that The Washington Post need not
comply. The First Amendment protects that
decision and precludes the sort of prior
restraint — l.e. censorship — Inherent in
Britain's Official Secrets Act.
Well and good. Britain Is an admirable
democracy, but Its press Is less free than
many Americans imagine. Keeping the press
free on this side of the Atlantic will be easier if
that press is also consistently responsible.
And given the world's obvious dangers, we
think that press responsibility requires ac­
cording the Pentagon the benefit of the doubt
on classification matters absent any compel­
ling reason to do otherwise.

BERRY'S WORLD

good m o rn in g ; w elcom e

TO THE FIRST FOOTBALL
GAME OF THE
NEW YEAR...

Frankly. USDA. 1 regard what you call "the
minimum Commodity Credit Corporation price"
for 1985-crop additional peanuts as Ill-advised.
I do wish, however, that the government
occasionally would invite me to comment on
something a bit more significant than peanuts.
War and peace, maybe. 1 have some swell
comments I have been saving up for those
topics. Or perhaps the USDA might like me to
comment on a new type of beetle trap.

These traps arc baited with non-toxic oils
laced with artificial sex scents. Amorous Insects
theoretically fall Into them and suffocate.
My comment comes In the form o f two
questions: 1) What about beetles that have
sexual hang-ups? In other words, beetles that
don’t respond lo conventional lures? 2) Are
special traps, equipped with sex counsellors or
therapists, provided for them?
Another program 1 am prepared to comment
on Involves space trash.
Yes. USO fans, the high frontier Is being
littered with the residue of old rockets and other
kinds of man-made debris. So an aerospace
consultant has proposed converting a NASA
satellite into an orbiting trash can with robot
arms to clear away the clutter.
My comment here Is to question whether that
concept Is adequate. If there really are upwards

or 50.000 man-made objects, some as small as
marbles, whirling through space as a threat to
latter-day explorations. It may lake more than •
an orbiting trash can to dispose of the rubbish.
;
Now’ back to the peanut program and why I
consider It Ill-advised:
You say. "The 1984 additional peanut support
level was 8185 a ton and the CCC sales price for
export edible peanuts was 8425 a ton,”
Isn’t keeping the support price of 1985-crop
additional peanuts at the former level going to
encourage a lot of farmers to grow additional
peanuts In the hope of getting them accepted as
"export edible?"
You don’t have to be a peanut farmer, or an
arithmetic student, to see there Is a lot of
difference between 8185 and 8425.
I say. let’s design government programs that
are more peanut wise and less spacey.

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

EDWARD J. WALSH

Respect
For The
Truth

The Big
(Liberal)
Press
For years, conservatives have
criticized harshly the persistent
liberal bias of the major press. The
major media’s coverage of Interna­
tional news, from of the Vietnam
War to the Nicaraguan revolution to
the U.S. Incursion In Grenada In
late 1983 has Included articles and
TV news reports that were viciously
anti-American and fawnlngly proSovlet.
President Reagan’s consistently
high approval ratings with the
public seemed for a while to have
(aught the press that leftwing liber­
alism Is no longer convincing In the
United States. There have been
some recent signs that the editorial
writers of the New York Times, The
W ashington Post, Th e Boston
Globe, and the television networks
were backpedallng.
Still, the fundamental world view
of the major press Is that America Is
obligated to spend Its capital and
energy in solving the world's pro­
blems.
That ugenda Is currently In disre­
pute In the United States. But yet
the Big Press Is the Big Press. The
flavor of Its editorials and com­
mentaries Influence profoundly the
nation's policies, domestic and
foreign. And since access to the Big
Press Is the first step to Influence,
policymakers have lo figure how to
take that step.
In recent weeks, a few otherwise
sensible conservatives have tried to
have both access to the major press
and Immunity from the barrage of
abuse they level at conservative
views. Newt Gingrich of Georgia and
Sen. Barry Goldwatcr have both
fallen Into this trap. Gingrich, a
bright young man In the realm of
economics, decided that his probusiness v Ic w b on tax policy would
get better play If he echoed liberal
condemnations of the Reagan Ad­
ministration's approach to South
Africa.
Likewise, Sen. Goldwatcr earned
liberal congratulations for himself
and horselaughs for pro-defense
conservatives by telling President
Reagan that he should get rid of the
MX missile
History teaches that the liberal
agenda, as advertised by the Big
Press as compassionate and "m od­
e r a t e " u su ally produces U.S.
weakness. Third World victimiza­
tion. und Soviet successes. Con­
servatives. especially congressmen
and senators should have learned
that lesson by now. They should
oppose that agenda, rather than
support It by default. In exchange
for seeing their names In print.

WASHINGTON WORLD

Movement's Children
By David Law sky
WASHINGTON IUPI) - Disparate .
as they arc. Ronald Reagan and
Rosa Parks serve as reminders of
the seminal role the civil rights
movement, of all things, had in
politics that were played out in
1984.
In a sense. Parks ts the woman
who started It all. She refused to
move to the back of a bus In 1956.
as blacks were then required to do
In Alabam a, touching o ff the
Montgomery bus boycott led by the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. that led
to the civil rights demonstrations of
the next 10 years.
The civil rights movement spread
to electoral politics at the 1964
Democratic National Convention
when the Mississippi Freedom
Democratic Party challenged the
seating of an all-whllc delegation.
Sen. H u b ert H u m ph r e y , who
wanted to be the vice presidential
nominee on a ticket with President
Johnson, worked out a compromise
with the help of a young colleague.
Walter Mondalc.
While the Democrats were meet­
ing In Atlantic City, students In
Mississippi were In the middle of
"freedom Bummer" to help Inte­
grate that state. The seriousness of
their commitment was underscored
by the murder of three civil rights
workers there.
When some of the students re­
t u r n e d to the U n i v e r s i t y o f
Calilornla In the fall of 1964 they
brought with them the tactics and
commitment they had learned and
led the first major student de­

monstrations of the 1960s, the
Berkeley Free Speech Movement.
Californians, who had shown
doubts about civil rights by approv­
ing an Initiative to bar fair housing
laws, were equally repelled by
student protests. In 1966. a political
newcomer ran for governor and
promised to do what Gov. Edmund
G. Brown Sri could not: control the
student rebellion. Voters bought It,
electing Ronald Reagan as governor.
Reagan kept his commitment,
calling out the National Guard to
battle Berkeley students and regain
"People’s Park" In 1970. Police and
guard weaponry killed one person
and blinded another, but People’s
Park still exists.
Other lib era tion m ovem en ts
beyond those of the students drew
their rhetoric and Ideals from the
black movement In the late ’60s.
Hlspanics. Chinese, American Indi­
ans und, most successfully, women,
begun movements of their own.
T h e c i vi l r i g ht s m o v e m e n t
spawned the Civil Rights Act of
1964. Riots In Los Angeles and
Detroit that followed were answered
by the Wur on Poverty. But the war
on poverty was soon overshadowed
by the war In Vietnam and the
Democrats were defeated In 1968.
The election of Richard Nixon led to
W atergate and the reaction to
Watergate elected Jimmy Carter.
Against that background. Rosa
Parks was suddenly In the news
again after all these years. She was
one of those arrested at South
A f ri c an E m bassy p ro te sts In
Washington.

Public service In this country
offers few rewards. Those who take
up major appointments In the
federal government generally find
their tours of duty very expensive.
Government salaries don’t cover the
tremendous expense of living In the
nation's capital.
One of the worst drawbacks to
public service Is the torrent of abuse
and denigration to which officehold­
ers are subjected. I was reminded of
that recently when 1 read that
Senator-elect Albert Gore. Jr. called
Secretary of Defense Caspar Wein­
berger the "worst Cabinet member
In modem history." Mr. Gore, who
had Just returned from a visit to the
Soviet Union, was angry with Secre­
tary Weinberger for not proposing
even deeper cuts In defense spend­
ing, Only days before. Mr. Wein­
berger had agreed to 88.7 billion In
cuts, hardly a miniscule amount.
W hi l e a c ert ai n amount o f
partisanship Is Inevitable In political
life, there should be some respect
for the truth. Mr. Gore totally
Ignored the truth.
What has been Mr. Weinberger’s
r e c o r d ? It Is a r e c o r d o f
extraordin ary accom plishm ent.
When he took over his duties at the
Pentagon, the U.S. defenses were at
low ebb. Under President Jimmy
Carter. America's armed forces ex­
perienced a terrible deterioration.
All that has been repaired under
Mr. Weinberger’s direction of the
Defense Dept. The services have
been strengthened. New weapons
program^ are In place. Morale has
In crea sed t r e m e n do u sl y . T he
n u c l e a r d e t e r r e n t has b ee n
strengthened by the placement of
cruise missiles In Europe.
One wonders whether Senatorelect Gore would dare compare Mf.
Weinberger's record of success with
the record of former Secretary of
Defense Robert Strange McNamara
In President Johnson’s administra­
tion. Mr. McNamara's testimony In
the Westmoreland libel case re­
vealed that Mr. McNamara decided
In late 1965, while he was Secretary
of Defense, that the Vietnam War
could not be won militarily. This
c o n fir m s what Sen. Strom
Thurmond said at the time, namely
that Mr. McNamara was fighting a
"no-win war."
A new "peace" campaign Is In the
works. The aim of this compalgn Is
to stop America’s rearmament. The
unfair charge against Secretary
Weinberger has lo be seen In this
light. Shame on Mr. Gore!

JA C K ANDERSON

Democrats: Much Resolve For '85
W A S H I N G T O N - For those
expansive souls who dream of
political power. 1984 was a conten­
tious year of accusations and ora­
tions. o f fatuity and futility.
Some politicians were catapulted
to high office; others were driven
from pow^r. As the year faded,
liberals were In decline and con­
servatives In ascendance. It Is only
filling that the battered Democrats,
many of them atiU sulking In their
hideaways, be given the first word
In 1985.
I had my reporter Jim Zlans call
all the prominent Democrats he
could locate and find out what
resolutions. If any. they had for
1985. Just how heartfelt some of
their responses were. I’ll leave up to
you to decide. Here arc the replies of
those who have taken the pledge —
any pledge:
— Rep. Monts K. Udall. Art*.: "In
recent years I have endorsed Ed
Muskle. Mo Udall, Ted Kennedy and
Walter Mondale for the presidency.
In light of that record. I resolve to
start In 1985 to campaign for
George Bush. Jack Kemp and How­
ard Baker for president."
— Presidential candidate Walter
Mondale: "T o sf&amp;nd more time with
my family.”
— Vice presidential candidate

t
4

Geraldine Ferraro: "Here are my
New Year's resolutions for 1985:
Find a Job, lose 10 campaign
pounds, spend more time again
with my family, speak out on the
Issues, work for the future of my
country and my party — and make
this the last Ume this year my name
shows up In your column."
— House Speaker Thomas P.
O’Neill: "T o make sure that Presi­
dent Reagan keeps his campaign
promise on fairness."
— Senate Minority Leader Robert
Byrd: "I resolve In the year ahead to
help Senate Democrats chart new
c o u r s e s lo m e e t t o d a y 's
challenges."
— Sen. Alan Cranston. Calif.: "My
resolution ts to help the Democratic
Party — which Is showing Its age as
the world's oldest political party —
think young." On a personal note,
the bald. 70-year-old fitness en­
thusiast said, " I resolve to stop
spending so much time at the
barber shop, to cut my work day
doiyn to 24 hours and my work
week down to seven days, and to
cut four seconds off my 60-yard
dash, or get them to reduce It to 56
yards."
— Sen. Ed want Kennedy, Mass.:
"M y wish Tor 1985 Is for a bilateral,
verifiable nuclear arms freeze."

— Democratic National Chairman
Charles Manalt: "T o continue re­
vitalizing the world's most enduring
political party with policies that
respond to the broadest crosssection of Americans."
— Sen. Lawton Chiles. Fla.: "For
the Democratic Party In 1985,1long
for leadership reflecting the wisdom
of Solomon, who found a way to
deal with disagreeing factions (a
mother and would-be mother) ao
that the best Interests of the en­
dangered party (the baby) were
protected."
— Sen. John Glenn. Ohio: "|
resolve to do everything I can to
help the Democratic Party again
become America's majority party.
Philosophically, that means com­
bining compassion with common
sense to move my party toward a
more centrist position. Politically. It
means adjusting our programs
without abandoning our princi­
ples."
— Rep. Steve Solarz. N.Y.: "In
spite of our recent electoral reverse,
I hope that the party resolves to coe
being the parly o f peace and
prosperity, that the party stands for
what is good about the United
Stales."
— Gov. Richard Lamm, Colo.:

"T h e Democratic Party needs more
than a resolution for New Year’s. It
needs a resolution which will carry
It Into the next century. And that
resolution should be to reshape
Itself. First, we need lo be a
wealth-creating party that olfers
economic growth as well as a strong
social agenda. Second, we need to
learn the hardest lesson of all —
how to say no to your friends. And
finally, Democrats should take the
lead In reforming the systems, like
Medicare and Social Security, that
they had the foresight to Initiate.”
— Mayor Ed Koch. New York City:
“ T o c o n t i n u e s p e a k i n g out
ontroverslal Issues, even If It Is not
politically helpful to m e."
— Mayor Dianne Fclnstcin. San
Francisco: "In 1985 the Democrats
should stop talking and listen. Both
parties tend to listen moat to their
own voices. It Is possible that In
1984 we listened too much to our
own rhetoric, and not to those who
really count: the people who do the
voting."
Sen. Gary Hart, Colo.: "A s a
Democrat. I Intend to help my parly
regain Its Identity as the party of
Justice, equality and opportunity —
the party that can offer new and
relevant approaches to today's pro­
blems.”

�SPORTS

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Jan. I

I

" , e Holds Breath
During Grade Check
By Bam Cook
Herald 8porta Editor
The day of decision comes Wednesday for
coach Bill Payne and his Seminole Community
College Raiders. Don't check the schedule for any
big game. Don't peruse the roster for a
Georgetown transfer.
Wednesday's "G-Day" is much more impor­
tant. That Is the day that Payne checks the
grades to sec how many of his players will suit up
T h u r sd a y night when the Raiders host
Melbourne's Patrick Air Force Base. Tip-off is
7:30 p.m. at the SCC Health Center.
"Grades are always a question when you deal
with Junior college kids." said the third-year SCC
coach Monday. "It's the 'Hold-Your-Brcath Time'
of the year."
Payne said he is mostly worried about his
sophom ores. " W e have several that arc
borderline." he said. " I ’m only worried about one
freshman. All the other should be fine."
Although the semester may claim one or two
Raiders. Payne Is quick to defend SCC's attitude
on academics. The school has one of the highest
— if the not the highest — graduation rale for
basketball players among the nation and Payne
said he knows why.
"Our kids take good classes," he said, implying
that basket weaving and pumpkin cutting arc not
among the clrrlculum. "W e don't Just run them
through here to keep them eligible. We don't Just
keep them for two years. We make them lake
good classes."
As strange as it may seen, however, a few
academic casualties would probably help the
Raiders more than hurt them. Payne said one of
his biggest problems has been getting everybody

playing time.
"T h a i’s my fault," Payne said, "1 recruited too
many kids of the same ability. When there's 12
minutes left and most teams are wondering what
offensive they should run. we're worried about
who we're going to play."
Payne, however, said since he has gone with
the best seven or eight performers, the Raiders'
game has improved. "I'm real happy with the
way we have played the last four games." he said.
"Th e playing time of some guys has been hurt
because there are seven or eight guys who have
been playing very well and doing the Job. We've
got logo with them."
The Raiders are coming from a spill In the
Brevard Tournament where they finished second.
In two BUperb performances, SCC belted Indian
River and then had top-ranked Miami Dade North
on the ropes before letting it slip away In
overtime.
Payne's sophomore point guard came In for
special praise after that one. "Mike Tolbert Just
had a tremendous game against North." gushed

J.C. Basketball
Payne. "He's playing like he did in the beginning
of the year."
Tolbert Is pressuring Mike Landed for his old
Job but Payne said If the grades allow all to play,
he will start Landed, Llnny Grace, Greg
"Skywalkcr" Bates. Slim Johnson and Kenny
Edwards.
Edwards, a 6-4 swingrnan. also burned up the
gym at Cocoa. Kind of shy about putting It up. the
George Gcrvin look-alike was coaxed out of his
snell by Payne and assistant coach Dean Smith
against Dade North.
"W e've been trying to get him to shoot the ball
all year." said Smith. "When we finally did look
what happened." Edwards hit 11 of 15 floor
attempts for a career-high 25 points.
The Raiders complied a 9-5 mark during the
first half of the season. Payne said he feels that
his group "can play with anyone In the division,"
but he did place the Raiders below Daytona
Beach, Lake City and Florida Junior College
when ranking the Mid-Florida Conference.
"R ight now. those three have to be the
favorites." said Payne, whose Raiders qualified
for the post-season tournament last year but were
upset by Valencia, costing them a spot in the
state tournament. "I still think the winner of the
conference will lose two or three games, so
everybody's got a chance."
As the former Seminole High coach looks at the
1984 season, he sees a quick start, a lag and a
fast finish. "Everybody was excited at the
beginning of the year and we really played well,"
said Payne. "Then, that Lake Sumter game really
shook us up."
The Raiders lost on an Incredible batted tlp-ln
from the free throw line. It was the first time in
the history of the school that SCC had ever lost to
Ihe Leesburg school.
"W e floundered around for two weeks looking
• for something wrong." continued Payne. "There
wasn’t anything wrong. We were Just pluylng
badly."
Payne said the season turned around when the
Raiders went to Tampa (Temple Terrace) for a
game with Florida College. SCC lost and Payne
said he pulled his team off the floor because the
officials let the game get out of hand.
"W e came out of that place fighting mad." he
said. "1J Just pulled everybody together. We've
haven't had a poor game since then. That's the
best thing that could have happened to this
team."
RAIDER RAP — Another good thing should
happen Thursday when Sanford’s Calvin "K ik l"
Bryant becomes eligible. The former Seminole

H*raM Photo by Tommy Vlncont

SCC's Brent Baird pulls a rebound away from Florida College's Brian Newton.
sophomore Is a pure shooter and Payne said he
will be a big help against the zones his team has
been running confronting.
. "Klki has look good playing with the second
team In practice." said Payne. "I'm anxious to get

him In there and see what he can do."
Bryant graduated from Seminole two years ago.
hut sat out last year with "basketball burnout."
Now. all he wants to do Is burn out the nets,
according to Payne.

N ailbiting Time Fo r Top R a n ked Brigham Young
Sooners, Huskies
Shoot For Top Spot

Upset Minded LSU
Battles Cornhuskers

MIAMI (UP1) - Oklahoma's
Barry Switzer and Washington's
Don James would rather let the
rulings decide ihe national
championship than have a
playoff game with top-ranked
Brigham Young.
The coaches of. respectively.
No. 2 Oklahoma and No. 3
Washington believe the winner
o f tonight's Orange Bowl has u
chance to unscut BYU In the
final rankings, which will be
rcleuscd Wednesday.
"I have never advocated or
supported a national champion­
ship p la y o ff." Switzer said
Monday. "I'v e never seen a
system for Ihe national champi­
onship playoff that I like. I don't
want to di srupt the bowl
games."
"I'm also against a playoff
system." James said. "S o I have
to accept the present system,
which Is a voting system with
th e U P I C o a c h e s and A P
writers."
Swi tzer, Jam es and BYU

NEW ORLEANS |UPI| - Al­
though tonight's Sugar Bowl
doesn't have the acclaim of some
(d its recent predecessors.
Nebraska Coach Tom Osborne
thinks It may Ik* one of this
year's better bowl matchups.
No. 4 Nebraska, bidding to
lintsli In the top 3 nationally for
the third year In u row. goes Into
ton igh t's Sugar Bowl game
against No. 12 LSU us a solid
lavorlte. Nebraska can count on
Its 15th consecutive top-IQ
finish.
The Cornhuskers haven't been
national champions since 1971,
losing their best shot last year
when Miami beat them 31-30 In
ihe Orange Bowl.
Nebraska. 9-2. was No. I and
apparently headed for another
title shootout In tonight's Orange
Bowl before u 17-7 loss to
Oklahoma in the final regularseason game sidetracked the
Sugar Ikiwl express. The Cornhuskers' other loss was a 17-9
upset at Syracuse.

Orange Bowl
Coach LaVcil Edwards arc all on
UPl's 42-man Board of Coaches.
Switzer hopes all the national
title talk won't distruct Ihe
Sooners tonight.
"I am concerened about the
Interest created by 'who Is No.
1?."' Switzer said. "W e were In
the same situation here in 1977.
Nobody is talking about playing
Washington, a fine football team.
"It was like that in 1977 and
we got our butts whipped by an
18-polnl underdog. I'll take a
one-point victory and don't give
a damn about the polls."
Oklahoma came Into the Or­
ange Bowl ranked Bccond In
1977. expecting to move up after
Notre Dame upset top-ranked
Texas in that afternoon's Cotton
Ikiwl. But Arkansas shocked the
Sooners 31-6. paving the way for
Notre Dame to win the national
title.

There Is much speculation
about what type of victory is
needed to lift the Orunge Bowl
winner over Brigham Young,
width held u 24-polnt lead in the
lust r a t i n g s and d ef e a t e d
Michigan 24-17 Dec. 21 In the
Holiday Bowl.
A blowout Tuesday night
would help the winner In the
ratings, but that Is unlikely In a
matchup o f two strong defensive
teams. Offense often Impresses
observers more, and neither

Orange Bowl team can match
BYU's nation-leading attack.
But James thinks votes can be
Won with defense.
"I think If It's good football,
that should be taken Into ac­
count.'* he said. "You can get
some really easy scores In this
game and I don't think that
necessarily makes you a better
team."
Besides. Janies said he isn't
taking a low-scoring game for
granted.

Sugar Bowl
Osborne notes l hut In four
previous meetings with LSU. in
which Nebraska has a 3-0-1
record, the biggest (mint spread
was only five points — the
Cornhuskers winning 17-12
when they first met 14 yeurs ago
III the Orange Ikiwl
"I'v e ulwuys had a greut deal
o f respect for LSU looibull." said
Osborne. "W e've never lost to
them, hut every game has been
very close and most of them we
hail to come from behind."
Last lime, two years ago In the
Orange Bowl, the heuvilyluvored Cornhuskers had to rally
for u 21-20 victory over the
Ik-ngals.
"There's been a lot said about
us not making it track to the
Orunge Ikiwl this year and not
having u shot at the national
chumplonship." said Osborne.

Collins: Charity Nights Don't Effect Public's Wagering, Payoffs
By Phil ‘Boomer* Deal*
Special to tha Herald
LONGWOOD — When SanfordOrlando Kennel Club chairman of the
board Jerry Collins was serving his
constituents four terms In the Florida
Legislature, one of his favorite projects
was to make dog-gone certain a bill he
Introduced to allow the pari-mutuel
wagering Industry to have scholarship
and charity performances passed.
Collins, as he has been In numerous
ventures, got the bill passed back In
1949 and the various tracks had the
option o f sponsoring charity and
scholarship nights since 1950.
Since that time, nearly $18 million
dollars have been raised in Florida,
thanks to those early efforts of Collins.
"T h e Idea behind all o f this was to
put something back In the community
like we like to do." Collins was saying
the other afternoon from his office at
SOKC. “ And this Is a way for us to
help people, especially out younger
people who will be our future leaders
In this country.
"1 made the bill for charities and

scholarships permissive, not man­
datory. but you can see a lot o f these
people at the different tracks have
adopted my Ideas. Not only In Florida,
but all over the country."
With those continuing thoughts in
mind. Collins has once again sched­
uled five charily and scholarship
programs for this season at the
Sanford-Orlando Kennel Club.
It all gets underway tonight when
the State Board of Regents Scholarship
Program will be the benefactor. On
Jun. 8 it will be numerous charitable
organizations throughout Central
Florida that will receive th* proceeds
from the evening's performance.
Seminole Community College will be
the recipient on Jan. 15. followed by
Lake Sumter in Leesburg. Brevard
Community College In Cocoa and
Orlando's Valencia Community Col­
lege on Jan. 22 and the University of
Central Florida of Orlando on Jan. 29.
".These are five of the evenings of
which I am most proud." said Collins,
"because that's when we really can
help one another out. On those nights.

Pari-mutuels
the charities and schools will be
receiving all the profits from every­
thing.
"And it won't elTect the public's
wagering and payoffs at all. That’s one
of the misconceptions we've tried and
tried to explain for many years. The
method of wagering and payoffs isn't
effected In any way, so we hope the
people will especially help us support
all of these fine programs on these
special nights.
"This Is the best thing we've done
for racing, the opportunity to pay our
pan to the communities. This is the
best relationship we have with the
public, so you can be sure we'll
continue to participate in full force."
In 1983-84. SOKC did $1,400,000
dollars o f business on charity and
scholarship nights, with a percentage
going to he special programs.
Keeping In mind that Ihe charity and
s c h o l a r s h i p p e r f o r m a n c e s ar e
permissive and not mandatory. Collins

is somewhat bothered by the fact that
some racing establishments have done
away with the special projects.
Stressing the point, Collins Il­
lustrates that In 1974. $949,801 was
collected statewide, compared to a
disappointing $172,776 last year.
"When we hit that peak, we were
really on the w ay." Collins said "But
since that time, some people have
done away with It. And. 1 strongly say
that's not right. If tracks. Ihe dogs,
horses and Jal-alal would participate,
their business would Increase. I'm
telling you, it happened before and
look at what some people arc doing
right now.
"That's why we're hoping to do
more, much more this year. I'm going
to keep after them, you can bet on
that.
"That way. If they all participate and
wr raise this money that's needed to
help the people and the communities,
we won't have things happen like
happened this year at (University of)
Florida. Maybe there wouldn't be all
those violations If they had more

money for the scholarships and chari­
ties.
"That's what we're working for. And
we're going to continue doing It, I
won't let up as long as we're in this
business."

RECORDS. RECORDS. RECORDS SOKC's beginning of its 50th anniver­
sary celebration last Wednesday night
was Indeed a cause for celebration as
SOKC established records for both
attendance (6,834) and pari-mutuel
wagering handle ($560,981) for one
performance.
T h e 50th anniversary opening
highlight occurred In the Grade A
5-16ths of a mile 12th race when
Zodiac Kennel's "Crime Pays" did Just
that after making a strong finish and
paying ofT backers to the tune of 15-1
odds.
As for Ihe overall upcoming season
which runs through May 2. Collins
projects the pari-mutuel windows will
handle in excess of $60 million "in a
cakew alk" Including charities and
scholarships. That's up from $56
million-plus during 1983-84.

�X

F ive S ta r Race
R esu m es W ed n esd a y

SPO RTS
INBRIEF

By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports Writer

Flutie Loads Up For Finale,
BC Faces Houston In Cotton
DALLAS (UPI) — The Boston College Eagles meet the
Houston Cougars In the 49th. Cotton Bowl today and
although Helsman Trophy winning quarterback Doug
Flutie has shown he can work wonders on the football field,
he cannot do much about the weather.
Fluff*. who during his four years at Boston College
became the first passer In NCAA history to throw for more
than 10.000 yards, will be trying to throw for a few
hundred more In the Eagles’ third consecutive bowl trip.
But to do so he will have to overcome some more of what
has become almost traditional Cotton Bowl weather.
Temperatures were forecast to be around the freezing
mark at kickoff and winds were expected to make It feel a
lot colder. Ice and snow, however, were not In the forecast.
It was six years ago that one of the worst Ice storms In
Dallas history all but paralyzed the city on New Year’s Eve
and brought about a below-zero wind chill factor for
Houston's meeting with Notre Dame.
That game, however, turned out to be one of the most
exciting Cotton Bowl games ever — as Joe Montana
brought Notre Dame back from a 22 polnt. fourth-quarter
deficit to a 35-34 victory on the contest’s final play.

B y a rs Bucks For Rosy Future
PASADENA. Calif. (UPI) - With Doug Flutie graduating
and likely to be pro-bound. Ohio State's Keith Byars may
own college football In 1985. And his reign could well start

today.

_

.

Byars, the runnerup to Flutie In the Helsman Trophy
balloting, will try to make an early statement In the Rose
Bowl as the fifth-ranked Buckeyes face No. 14 Southern
California. KIckofT Is 5 p.m. EST.
Gametime will not come too soon for Byars, who led the
nation In rushing and scoring. He's tired of talking about
the Helsman — and finishing second-best.
“ I don't want to be rude, but can we get off the Helsman
subject, he asked. " I ’m not embarrassed by It. but it's over.
"And I don't get a vote. My vote Is 11 games of good
football "
,
The Junior speedster is going for "good game No. 12
today.
.
"Th e main rcaron I came to Ohio State was Tor the
opportunity to go to the Rose Bowl." Byars said. "So now I
want to make the most of It.
"1 grew up thinking the best college football Is played In
the Rose Bowl. I wanted to be part of It then. I've been told
as long as 1 can remember that the Rose'Bowl Is the
granddaddy. that It’s like no other bowl game. I'm out here
to see that, to see what It's all about."
Byars has had little but the game on his mind for weeks.
In fact, he vowed to pass up tourist trips to such places as
Universal Studios and Disneyland because "I don't like
Mickey Mouse. I'm here to win a football game."

TEMPE. Arlz. (UPI) - What
happens when a rcsistablc force
meets a movable object?
The answer to that may de­
termine the outcome of today's
Fiesta Bowl between Miami and
UCLA.
It is generally agreed that the
Hurricane offense, which
averaged 30.5 points a game
under the direction of sopho­
more quarterback Bcrnle Kosar.
will continue to light up the
scoreboard. What remains to be
seen Is whether the muchmaligned UCLA offense can
duplicate that feat against a
slumping Miami defense.

Miami's offensive power with our
own." said Bruin Coach Terry
Donahue. "W e have to match
some of thut output and produce
The UCLA offense has never some first downs, yardage and
been able to shift Into high gear points of our own If UCLA Is
this season, scoring Just 25 more going to stay rlose and make It a
points than their opponents. The competitive game.
"I don't think you can go In
I Sill-ranked Bruins have also
and
ask your defense to make It
scored four fewer touchdowns
thun their opponents and given a low-scoring game and say.
up more points than they scored 'Hey. we're going lo play It 7-6 or
through nine games. Placcklcker 10-7 and expect to win."'
L e e . a s e c o n d -te a m AllJohn Lee accounted for 44
America who set a new NCAA
percent of UCLA's scoring.
"T h e key to our football game standard for most field goals In
probably rests somewhere In the Ihc season and tied Ihe record
area of trying to match some of for most field goals In a game.

Fiesta Bowl

Kirsten Dellinger
...Top notch transfer
has been the Hawks most
versatile player In the early
going of the season as she is
among the team leaders In
scoring, rebounds, assists and
steals.
Lake Howell's Junior varsity
goes up against Oveldo Thurs­
day at 6 at Lake Howell High.
O v ied o 's Lady Lions. 2 9
overall, open Orange Belt Con­
ference play Thursday at H as
they host Bishop Moore's Lady
Hornets Leading the way for the
Lions Is senior center Mary
Lokrrs who Is among Seminole
County's leaders In scoring and
rebounds and Junior point guard
Natalie Barth, one of the leaders
In assists. Oviedo's conference
chances got a boost with the
return from knee surgery of
|unlor guard-forward Stephanie
Nelson, one of the most versatile
players In the county.

said the only objective is to Ix-al
the I3th-rankcd Hurricanes.
"W e'll do whatever It takes to
win.” he said. "It doesn't really
matter. If we need 11 Held goals,
we'll lake that."
Meanwhi l e. Mi ami Coach
Jimmy Johnson still hasn't fig­
ured out what caused Ills de­
fense to give up H9 points In two
games, lint linebacker Bruce
Fleming blames a lapse In con­
centration.
"W e know we have more
potential than what we showed
the last two ballgamcs." Fleming
said. "W e're not changing much
at all.

200 Entries Expected For Asphalt World Series
I

*

Bjr John Darveau
Special to the Herald
NEW SMYRNA BEACH — The
official entry list for the Feb.
8-16. 19th Annual World Series
of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at
New Smyrna Speedway now
Includes .135 drivers from all
over the United States and
Canada and a grand total of well
over 200 entries Is expected lo
be reached by.race time.
Two of the most recent entries
came from drivers who made It
to the winner's circle during the
1984 Series.
Mike E ddy o f M idla n d .
Mlch.won two features, scored
four top five finishes and ended
up third In the late model point
standings behind champion Dick
Trickle and speedway regular
David Rogers.
Chargin' Charlie Jarzombek of
Baiting Hollow. N.Y. who drove
the Ernie Wllsberg Cavalier, was
among ghe fastest and most
consistent open wheel entries.
He took one feature win and
finished second to Richie Evans
on the first three nights of the
Series.
Wlseco Pistons Inc. of Mentor.
Ohio became the first firm to Join

Walker Leads 'Cats
Past No. 11 Kansas

*

_

land, I Phil Wtlpert, Edgewater. V Jack
P o r t e r , w h o had b ee n
Hackney. Korone. 10 Joe Middleton. So
challenging Keene since lap II . Daytona Lap Leaden Jack Cook I 10
found himself In the lead on lap Daniel Keene: II 11 LeRoy Porter 14 100
THUNDERCARS
36. At half way. Greg FrocmFailed Quainter Dave McCabe. Cocoa.
mlng seemed ready to take the Mil lec
leader. But Porter soon pulled
Flrit heal II lapt) I Mark Sills. Orange
City
away and went on lo win.
Second heal ( I lapt) I. Eddie Perry.
F r o c m m l n g was s ec o nd,
Tllutvllle
followed by Jimmy Sills, Buzzy
Feature 110 lapt) I Mark Slllt. Orange
Berry and Bruce Lawrence who City; 1 Howard Bragg. Apopka. 1 Jett
Blehr. Deltona. 4 Tommy Pallerton. Scot
went down a lap after being ttmoor. S Cranny Talroe. Ormond Beach. 4
Mike Barfield. Daytona Beach; 7 Cary
helped Into a spin.
Mark Sills scored his second Pallerton. Scolltm oor; 4 Hal Perry,
Tllutvllle; ♦ Eddie Perry. Tllutvllle; 10
Thundcrcar win In a row, with Randy Smalhert. Lake Mary
Howar d Bragg. J e ff Blehr.
S T R E E T STOCKS
Flrtlheaf (4 lapt) I. Ben Booth. Deland
Tommy Patterson and consis­
Second heal (4 lapt) 1. Ted Mltchem.
tent "Granny" Tatroe rounding Sanford
out the top five.
Feature (IS lapt I I Bill Klnley. Olteen. 1
Street Stock State Champion Lance Smith. Satellite Beach. ) Ben Booth.
Deland. 4. Ted Mltchem. Senlord; 5 Timmy
Bill Klnley took another win. Todd. Orlando; 4. Jeff Monroe. Orlando..7
besting Lance Smith. Ben Booth. Benny Clbton. Ocoee; I Mark Swan. Jlggt
Junction; t John Hack. Orlando; 10 Junior
Ted Mltchem and Timmy Todd.
Sanford Lap Leaden Lance
The top five Four Cylinder Slmmont.
Smith: 12. Bill Klnley: I I . Lance Smith
finishers were Bobby Sears. * I) Bill Klnley 14 IS
FOUR CYLIN DERS
Richard Newton. Billy Hoovcn.
Flrtlheaf 14lapt) I Bobby Sean. Otteen
Curtis Miller and Bill Martin.
Second heal (4 la p tII Sieve Thompton.

Auto Racing
the World Series contingency
program, with Kendall OH. the
Skoal brand of U.S. Tobacco and
the Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company also participating.
For m ore Info, write the
speedway at P.O. Box 1097. New
Smyrna Beach. FI. or call (904)
427-4129.
In Saturday's action, current
track champion LcRoy Porter
drove the Lewis Green Firebird
to victory In the second annual
"R e d E y e" 100 Late Model
C h am pion sh ip on Saturday
night.
Fastest qualifier and pole sitter
Jack Cook, whose crew had the
new car dlaled-ln perfectly,
turned fast time and led for the
first ten laps, with 1984 ALLPRO rookie of the year Daniel
Keene right 011 his back bumper.
At that point, an errant lapped
car crowded Cook. The pair
make contact and Cook hit the
wall. Keene then took over the
point till lap 35. when he was
sidelined by mechanical pro­
blems.

LATC MODELS
F u lf il Qualifier Jack Cook. Ormond
B*#ch, II 41 mc
Second Annual "Red Eye" 100 Late Model
C ham plonthlp (Show ing d riv e r and
hometown )-l. LeRoy Porter. Orlando. I
Oreg F room mlng. Orlando, J. Jimmy Sllla.
Ocoee: 4. Butty Berry. Orlando. S. Bruce
Lawrence. Deland; a. Duka Southard. New
Smyrna Beach. 1 Oayle Loveledy. Lake

Sanford
Feature (IS laptl I. Bobby Sean. Otteen.
2 Richard Newton. Otteen. 1 Billy Hooven.
Orlando. 4 Curflt Miller. Sanford. S Bill
Marlin. Santord; 4. Keith Perry. Tllutvllle; 7.
Jeff Beau. Cocoa; I John Centner If.
Tampa; V Jerry Symont. New Smyrna
Beach; 10 Nick Perry. Tllutvllle Lap
Leaden: Billy Hoovan I 2 Bobby Sean

•M

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FOOTBALL

H i * - wcpxa cangt cm* i#*t
downed Montana St.73-70. and
LEXINGTON. K&gt;. |UI'1| b*»&gt;c*&lt;«fiitiiai
IS 4 I* - »flH | C ««fl »«V4 4**'
Kansas had managed Jusl one Southern U. beat Texas-EI Paso
UClAiFUUI
victory In Ihc previous 16 meet­ 84-75.
I I* - RCFXi C*** Iw I**
ings will) Kentucky but. with
U SriM till n OM SUM1*1)
At Seattle. Clay Damon's 17- III
Kansas ranked No. i 1 nationally
I 4 m - K I U ( 4 kg. 0 «*f» b u
foot
Jumper
broke
a
55-55
tie
Ihls season, this lime figured lo
0MM*i4itiiln •MMfivisillU
w i t h 2 :31 l ef t to g i v e
I 4 4■ - »»r»l CuMf*.
If*
be different.
U v M M U m ilt U n NWrau 1411 III
Washington
Its
victory
over
It wasn't.
The Jayhawks led by 6 points Lamar. Damon s basket came
NHL
wllh five minutes remaining, bul after forward Paul Fortier, who
led
the
Huskies
with
18
points,
HATIOSAl »0CIIT IIA4UI
Kenlueky's Kenny Wulker keyed
■ III! ClillMllt
a 10-2 run and the Wildcats lied the score. The victory was
nwa wtMH
Washington's
17th
straight
at
■ L T Ft 44 4A
went on lo a 92-89 victory a(
II 4 1 4 W 117
•MM***
Freedom Hall. Walker scored a home and raised the Huskies' r» i«4i '4« I
II 1 1 47 117 W
a ii i &lt;1 in I#
career-high 36-polnts and hit record to 8-2. Lamar fell to 4-6 kv IU4K4WI
14 17 i n in in
4.&lt;W|k
iwo free throws wllh five sec­ for the season.
11 '1 1 1* III &gt;44
NT Itafrt
II 1 4 4 III 14
Nt* 7*wr
onds left to seal the victory.
44mmOtvaa*
At Stockton. Calif.. Andy
•'I don’ t think we ll play
n
t 7 a im m
■Am*mi
against many players better Franklin equaled his career-high
14 U 1 II U4 ns
OvftoM
It 14 1 1 14 Ml
lhan W alker." Kunsas Coach wllh 27 points and the Universi­ Qwtotc
mu i v a n
l«iP
Larry Brown said. "Kentucky ty of Pacific withstood a late rally
1) 17 1 1 l« ID
KorlMrJ
to
defeat
Montana
State.
The
C
o
A
g
O
o
e
came out much hungrier and
NvtNOkrtMa
triumph
improved
the
Tigers'
more agresstve."
■ L 1 F*. OF SA
17 U | V IS IS
Kentucky Coach Joe U. Hall record to 4-5 while the Bobcats CtoCJfl
fell
to
3-8
with
their
fifth
loss
In
a
a u i s ■&gt; is
U LM
agreed.
0*r*t
ii a i » is t«
UdMUgl
"What can you say. I can't row.
II 1* 1 S is 14
Tumi
i i » ii m in
believe he played like that for 38
At El Paso. Texas. Byron
minutes.” Hall said. "It was a
» 7 I 14 IS 117
Itmmtm
Gabrel scored 27 points and
II 14 1 41 IUI4
a*w*4|
supergame."
a a ) ii n u
cmm
The victory, the Wildcats' James Lee had 22. helping
II U 1 S Ml M
Im bgw
Southern
University
to
an
upset
i n 1 s is si
third straight. Improved their
Tmcivw
AMwTOmWi
record lo 4-4. Kansas fell lo 8-2 o f UTEP. The Jaguars. 7-2.
IvAMi UrmJtrwft
and had a six game winning surged to a 40-27 lead at
MWmFLDWWHW
halftime.
UTEP
pulled
within
OMHtlNNMWil'Ml
streak snapped.
Omni L NT IMWl )
In other games. Washington 7 1-67 late In the game but could
l i i i l r r i liati
get
no
closer.
(ASTIM1ST)
defeated Lamar 64-59, Pacific

l

the varlsty at 8.
Lake Brantley. 9-2 overall and
3-0 In the conference, received
clutch performances from Its
starting five In Its upset of
DeLand at DeLand. Senior
center Kirsten Dellinger, a trans­
fer from Pennsylvania. Is coming
off three outstanding games In
the Lady Hawk Tournament
where Lake Brantley won the
consolation title after losing to
Seminole by two points In the
first round.
Senior forward Michelle Brown
was one of the top all-around
players In the Lady Hawk while
Junior point guard Sherry "Ic e "
A s p Ie n d i s p l a y e d fine
ballhandling skills along with
her deadly outside shot. Senior
guard Kim Lubenow also shot
well from the outside and senior
forward Cammle Twaddell pro­
vided Inside strength.
The first week of 1985 will be
a busy one for the Lady Patriots.
A f t e r W e d n e s d a y ' s g a me .
Brantley travels to Apopka for a
6 p.m. game Thursday and to
Orlando Friday night at 7 for a
non-conference battle with Colo­
nial.
Lake Mary's Lady Rams also

UCLA G ears Up For Hurricanes, Kosar

Diehard Virginia Eats Peach

A T I . A N T A t(UPI)
lJ P Il —
id h t in a o
ff th
e u
rfle to
a m b le ,
ATLANTA
- FFighting
off
the
urge
to ggamble.
Virginia Coach George Welsh settled for the "sure" field
goal and his defense made It pay off with a 27-24 Peach
Bowl victory over Purdue.
With the game tied 24-24 midway through the fourth
quarter Monday, the Cavaliers faced a fourth down with
less than a yard to go for a touchdown. Welsh's first
Instinct was to take a chance on the six points.
"Then, with a few more seconds to think about It. 1 felt
we didn't want to come away without putting points on the
board," he explained. "And with the score tied. If we got
the almost-sure three points, it would put the pressure on
them."
Virginia took a delay penalty to get a better angle and
Junior Kenny Stadlln kicked a 22-yard field goal with 7:17
left to play. Still, comerback Ray D9ly had to pick off a Jim
Everett pass at the Cavaliers' 15-yard line to stifle the last
Purdue threat with 4:56 remaining.
"When you get a chance to go ahead, you've got to go
ahead and make them beat you." said Welsh. "Daly's
Interception was the key. obviously."
It was the third Interception by the Cavaliers and second
by Daly, the game's outstanding defensive player. Virginia,
playing In Its first bowl game ever, also recovered a fumble
as It shut down the potent Purdue passing game after
trailing 24-14 at Intermission.
"1 said before the game that turnovers would be the
difference and they were." said Purdue Coach Leon
Burtnett. " I f we played each other 10 times, we'd probably
split five and five."
Everett, who completed 22 of 42 passes for 253 yards,
put the Boilermakers ahead with touchdown tosses of 23
yards to Steve Griffin. 17 yards to Jeff Price and 12 yards
to Marty Scott. Purdue also got a 24-yard Mike Rendtna
field goal in building the 10-polnt halftime edge.

Basketball

The race for the Five Star
C o n f e r e n c e t i t l e for g i rl s
basketball resumes this week
with the key matchup being
Sem inole against DeLand
Thursday night at Seminole
High.
Seminole, the fourth-ranked
team In the state (4A). stands at
10-2 overall and Is tied with
Lake Brantley for the Five Star
lead at 3-0. The Lady Semlnoles
lost a heartbreaker to Orlando
Evans In the championship
gam e of the Lady Hawk
Christmas Tournament this past
Saturday.
Thursday's game, which gets
underway with Junior varsity
action at 6 followed by varsity at
7:45. will be an Important one
for DeLand If It Is to keep pace
with the frontrunners In the
conference. The Lady Bulldogs
are 2-1 In the Five Star after a
loss to Lake Brantley. Should the
Bulldogs fall two games behind
It would be hard for them to
catch up.
The Lady Patriots will look to
stay unbeaten In conference play
W ednesday when they host
Daytona Beach Mainland's Lady
Bucs. Action at Lake Brantley
High starts at 6:15 with the
Junior varsity game followed by

engage In a pair ol Five Star
Conference games this week.
The Rams. 5-5 overall and 2-1 In
the conference, host Apopka
Wednesday at 6:15 and travel to
Daytona Beach Friday (4:45) to
take on Seabreeze.
Lake Mary may be considered
a dark horse In the conference
rare but they could be conten­
ders with consistency. The lardy
Rams are also hoping to get
senior sharpshooter Andrea
Fennlng back to make their
chances even belter. Fennlng Is
recovering from a knee Injury
that- has kept her out for the
early part of the season.
Lyman's Lady Greyhounds.
1-H overall and 0-5 In the Five
Star, look to snap a seven-game
losing streak Friday when the
host Mainland at 6:30. Junior
forward Kim Forsyth has carried
most of the offensive load for
Lyman but point guard LaTanya
Johnson Is starting to come
around.
Lake Howell s Lady Silver
"'Hawks. 4-7 overall an 1-3 In the
Five Star, look lor their second
conference win Thursday when
they host Spruce Creek at 8
(varsity only). Patti Rac Is the
Lady Hawks' leading scorer as
she hit for double figures in both
Lake Howell's games In the Lady
Hawk tourney. Jolee Johnson

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8

Memories
birthdays

Check these prices:
alt long sleeve blouses.
20 percent off: twopiece suits marked
down to $32.99; Missy
skirts your choice for
$ 1 2 . 9 9 ; l a r ge size
skirts your choice for
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buy two. 25 percent
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Camgaar- IK

find a large selection of
lovely party dresses
and gowns in the lalesl
fashions from which to
c h o o s e and e v e n
tailored suits.
Jerry and Sharon
Koni ng opened the
Blgger/Belter shop a
year ago and since
then have expanded
their Inventory lo In­
clude missy petite.

misses and Junior sizes s u pe r b u y s . " said
and later added Jerry's Jerry, "W e won't buy
$7.77 Shoes. The store anything unless it's a
h a d c o m p I e t e i y good value to the citschanged in ltie last lomcr. Wc carry brand
lliree months. Custom­ name items from well
ers who have been here established firms and
lately will be pleasantly designer clothes."
surprised not only with
Slim &amp; Sassy/ Bigger
lhe store, bul changes A Belter is open Mon­
In the First S treet day through Saturday
shopping area as well.
from 9:30 a.nt. to 5:30
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AREA

fnd»! t»&gt;» tu t H Te*tf» ind 8
fitter ctrtifud t&gt;r tte Natonal Hta&gt;ia| Aid Scent) mil te at Item otUn
Is psftem tte tab
A*)0te &gt;kt Hat bsubk teamq or
.adcntaadiA| a Mtcono ts ter* a tat
»na| tte lata) ilactroac tqvpmtnt ts
dsttimins hit si tei porticotas tau
I tatfont mould te * a teann| tat at
kast ones a ww it tteft it t*i tranbl*
at all tetrrni cltait) [*a p#opH tow
•taiuii 1 tearing aid Of that (ho Km
t e i told nothin! could b* dote te
Item can find sot about tte tatstt
msthodi si hoaraii cornctem

V o lk s h o p t e c h n ic ia n W illia m " H a r r y " W ilk is o n t r ie s out
V W R a b b it .
214 Palmetto Avc.. has
an exhaust system
s p e c i a l for ail
Volkswagen "bugs."
Call or come by as
prices vary depending
on the make of car.
The mechanics at
V o l k s h o p are
specialists in these
makes and have many
years experience. All of
their work is guaran­
teed.
Volkshop specializes
In engine In engine and
trans-axle rebuilding
fo r T o y o t a s and

Daisuns as well as
VWs. T he y also do
l ub rl cal l o n and oil
change and repairs on
brakes, front ends,
t r a n s m i s s i o n s and
exhaust systems.
If your VW Is show­
ing Its age the folks al
Volkshop can c o m ­
pletely recondition and
refurbish your old VW
"b u g " from the ground
up for only a fraction of
what a new car would
cost. T hi s includes
tires, paint Job. new

engine

and

Volkshop Is open
Monday through Fri­
day. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
To make an appoint­
ment for your car. call
3210120.

JIM LA S H ’S
BLUE BOOK CABS

Tte hot htstini tat dll te p *« Hondai this Fiids) -tha m l si tte
Cataterrj sifts sad MoM d it tte
Stated teaton Cal tte witor btw
ate arrant* te m appomtmsnt or Dtp

VOLKSHOP

SpDdtlliing In Sorvlco A Parts For
V.W/a, Toyota and Oatsun
(Cornar 2nd A Palm.no)

* It f*/ CMNMKI

214 S. Palmetto A vb
SAN FO RD

3114130

HEARING AID CENTERS
iCDCO DISCOUNT
DRUGS

2701 S. Orlando Dr.
Sanford •
323-5702
120 S. Hoy. 17-92
Casselbtfry
8348776

FLU* £
I TAX A YAC

CA R N IV A L
H 't In
Saifo rd

M

brakes.

If you are one of
those car owners who
would rather do it
yourself, you will find
quality Treuhaff and
Bosch parts. Continen­
tal belt* and hoses, and
Caslrol motor oils for
Toyotas, Datsuns and
V ol ks wa ge ns .

w i w u u A a m ■AArniwr aaou s n r e m - s m

PHONE
I II MafMlta. laalar.

J e r r y a n d S h a ro n K o n in g , o w n e r s of S lim a n d S a s s y /
L ig g e r a n d B e t t e r a n d J e r r y ' s S h o e s.

II your car Japanese
import is suffering
from the mid-winler
blahs, there's no need
lo commit harl-karl.
Jus t b r i n g l l ' t o
Volkshop In downtown
Sanford and they'll
soon have It running
like new. Do it now and
lake advantage of the
January specials.
Owner Marvin Wrlghl
and his experienced
crew of technicians are
offering free inspection
an d e s t i ma t e s of
exhaust systems and
brakes on all Toyotas
and Oatsuns al ong
with the muffler and
brake specials.
Also this month
Volkshop, located at

ttetraw hm—c tab *4 bt | mm Int

O P EN 24 H O U RS

I n l t i O r 'i
V II

They can fit sizes
from 5-52 and half
sizes from 14V4-32W.
Now more than ever
with the Slim At Sassy
specials and the Bigger
N Better bonanza you
can find better values
on b e t t e r q u a l i t y
merchandise there.

* &lt;teOrinp Htma| 14 On 116* $
OUnds Of Stated (Herd)} ontj) tad

*7m )

c u 8 TRUCK CAM CtNTtl

Slim &amp; Sassy/Bigger &amp; Better
Fashions Has Fantastic Sale

1?0S Hwj 1M I Cwelteff). Hand*).

P

A D V E R T IS IN G

Volkshop Specializes
In VW s. Datsun, Toyotas

I mage

CONSIGNMENT CLOTHING
iTth at. a 17-02 1 M - 9 4 S 1

• T O R I W I D I C ilA R J k N C I

SEWING MACHINE
6 VACUUMS

(With Coupon)

Ei pires Jan 5. 1965

Mh ST. A NWY. 17 92 3 2 3 - 7 2 7 2 SANFORD
Glau TM taf- Alto Datatog- Fafcrte Pntoctfcs

USED

F R I I

A d v e r t is e r

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

Even If have a larger
figure, there is no
reason to settle for
som ething shapeless
and unattractive. At
Blggcr/Bettcr vou will

STOREWIDE
COLORED TAG SALE

S S 2 » 1 0 *M

MOIL-FIL
8-5:30

PACKAGING
CUSTOM BOXES
FOAM MOLD
SYSTEM
GIFT
WRAPPING
SHIPPING
PACKAGING
SUPPUES
FRUIT ORDERS

Caaftaltal Dawatava Ucatlaa kramt Tte Carnar Frpa Patt Offka.

319 W. 13tli ST. SANFORD

•Y QUAKER STATE*
LIFETIME WARRANTY
FOR NEW AUTOS
3,000 MILES OR LESS

Sanford

MONDAY—FRIDAY 8:10-5:30
SATURDAY 8:0912:00

322-3315
322-7642

P h i l i p s

LICENSED

9 AM • 5 PM 3 2 2 -9 5 0 5
A F T E R 5 PM 3 2 2 -8 3 2 4

SANFORD

FREE ESTIMATE
NO OBLIGATION

•

HUNT BROTHERS
C H A T T A H O O C H E E DECKS

T E L 322-8711
607 W. 25th ST.

Sanford

R IV E R R O C K S T O N E

DIANE GILLMAN

H e•r a ld
MOVE

BUSINESSON

W h et t ie r you are
petite or full-figured
you can be dressed In
f l a t t e r i n g f as hi ons
when you shop at Slim
A Sassy/ Bigger fit Bet­
ter at 212 E. Firs! St.,
in downlown Sanford.

LUNCH SPECIALS
LUNCHEON
m
BUFFET
“

W hy do you continue to gain weight, even
when you continue to eat less? 339-5554
123-2735

R e sta u ra n t

BREAKFAST SPECIAL
ONLY 89*

CdTIFIEOClIlKAl COUNHIOI

471 Lake Mary Bird.

• PUT rOUK

NOW 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE TOO
S.R. «
111 S. SANFORD AYE.
LAKE MART
SANFORD

Or. Richard Michael

E v e n in g H e r a ld

CotE 322-2611 Howl

FLOWERS FOR EVERT
OCCASION AND BUDGET
'~Wt Welcome Commercial Accounts"

VERY UTTii MARKUP-LOW P M U ' 4 ^ '
LAVAWftY-WE O C im *
~ U" M
COtfSKimENTS WUCOMi
O PEN ; DAYS A W E^ K I I M M I

Prepared by A d ve rtisin g Dept, of

T S

M L II

6

�-BusinessReview

Prepared by A d v e rtisin g Dept, of

E v e n in g H e ra ld

Herald Advertiser
A D V E R T IS IN G

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Cate 322-2611 Mom!
• PUT rOUR BUSINESS ON TH[ WOVE .

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

I

Tuesday, Jan. I, l t d — )B

A MINISTRY
OF

m H O U SE

MIRACLES
KITCH EN OPEN 11 A.M. - 9 P.M.
STEAK
SUNDAY

JANUARY
6-9, 1985
SANFORD
CIVIC CENTER

SA LA D A

F IN D E R P O O D S

HEAR

4 lo #|, 0 pm

ROXANNE

&amp; 7Hu&lt;}U 7VaA r W
M-S 11 AM to 2 AM
SUN. 1 PM • 12 PM
8 SOUTH HWY. 17-B2

BRANT

C A SSE LBER R Y

401 I. SEMINOLE BLVD.
SANFORD

«

./ STONE WORK *
Jf/,STONE FRONTS............................... FIREPLACES
MOBILE HOME SKIRTING
PATIOS

The Cut /hop

ONLY FOR THOSE WHO CARE ABOUT THEIR HA,

We Are Pleased To Have

6 2 9 -9 0 7 0
B la ir In s u r a n c e
A gency ow ner
G e n ie B la ir a n d
son S te v e ,
o ffic e m a n a g e r .

CORONADO
STONE PRODUCTS OF CENT. FLA.
-wmui

BARBARA HITTELL

t

2714 S. Orlando Dr. (Hwy. 17-02)

Formerly ol Corrlna'i Beauty Salon
A Member Of Our Staff

J

2557 PARK DRIVE
SANFORD, FLORIDA 32771^

/£

a r »^ a r M l *»■ C . I

331-2887
321-CUTS

Connie Dye Owner

minor repair* • yard work * window cleaning

G
Com ploto
8

H a p p y Die m Ytvir
To

Hume M u ln le n a n to Servtco

.

O ur Frien d s
A n d Customers

■j M ; -

'U t / W o r A

COMTAY CLUB NURSfRYand GARDEN CENTER

BOB CULLUM

321-5850

Personalized Service
At Blair Insurance
Sieve Blair, office manager o f the Blair
Insurance Agency, says the agency's business
philosophy goes out on every letter — "Personal­
ized service Is our business."
"Our clients are like a family lo us," Blair says.
That personal touch, combined wlih the agency's
.'«) years of experience Is what makes the Blair
Agency a solid Insurance agency its customers
can depend on.
Blair has 18 different companies they deal with,
he said, enabling the agency to shop around for
the best deals, tailored to the needs of their
customers.
The agency was founded by Blair's mother.
Genic Blair, in Sanford 27 years ago and she
remains actively Involved in all aspects of its
operation. Considered an expert In the Insurance
Held. Mrs. Blair was for a time the only woman
licensed In both real estate and Insurance In the
slate early In her career in Sanford.

Sanford’s &amp; Lake Mary’i
New est Garden C o n f e r
• T REES
• HANDING BASKETS
• PATIO PLANTS • MULCH
• SH RU BS
• BEDPING PLANTS
• LAN DSCAPE A SOD INSTALLATION

WE WISH OUR FRIENDS &amp; CUSTOMERS
LAWN A CARDEN
CENTER
2400 W. 25th SL
Ph. 321-2525
Santard
iA A N A R H H R jn W H R A A A A A A A A A N A

j 25" STREET

The Blair Agency will) offices at 25I0A Oak
Avc.. Sanford, sells personal Injury protection
insurance, but recommends liability insurance as
well.
Blair said IMP. as It is commonly called. Is
cheaper Insurance hut Is "self-centered protection
which provides nothing for your fellow man."
Liability, which he said provides belter cover­
age for all concerned In an accident situation, Is
made more affordable at the Blair Agency.
Blair said he also specializes In helping drivers
who have trouble gelling Insurance due to loo
many tickets or accidents.
Let me have all the had drivers I11 Sanford."
he says. "I will help them out."
But drivers with lough records aren't the only
ones who will benefit from Blair Agency services.
Drivers wilh stainless histories will like the
services and the savings they gel at the agency.
Blair said.
They will like dealing with tlie Blair Agency
siaff. which Is trained and educated lo give their
clients Ihc best service. And because the agency
isn't u high volume agency. Blair says It treats
each customer I11 a special wuy.
" I f I service my accounts honestly and
properly. 1 don'i have lo worry about money,
itclng honest is my profit 'in the community.
You're not going lo find anybody more honest
from 9 to 5 than right here." he says.
Call Blair at 323-7710 or 323-3866 and
compare.

27J2 Country d u b Rd. Sanford
(W ell 20th St.) Ph. 32J-2B62

LICENSED - IN SU RED

JANUARY

CLEARANCE

ACI AUTO

SIZES 5-52 A 141V32Vi

R A ttA V O *

SAVE
UP TO
Exqulilla Form Bra* A
Glrdles-Chle Jaans-Drasaes
Gown* Panla Skirls Blaute*
Briefs All S iz e s B u y 2 Q e t 1 F R E E

75%

I AD I A T O IS , il l m c c a l l « v -

t t

LOUISE BRUCE
TO OUR STAFF

SFICIAL
(town ornrt

$9 O f f
L O U ISE BRUCE

FRI„ SAT. A MON.
Good Thru Ja n . 14. 1983

H a ir ‘N ’ P la c e
TEL 323-8950
503 French A v r
Sanford

Presents:

BAYHEAD PET HOSPITAL &amp;
HEALTH CENTER

( I I I LasVegas 1984

H.P. KORNICK D.V.M.
MON

f

^
lllQ t i *
wJ t j
,

THRU THURS 7 P M - lO P M
SAT 1 P M - 5 PM

900 l a k . Mary Blvd.
Sanford, Fla.

•

3 2 2 -8 8 0 3

Sanford Plaza

in storeT aI ric ‘sale“

15% Off “tVSB

A L A N ’S ? ^

There's one simple source
(hr taking care of your
business and j**rsonnl
financial needs. Call

V IC A R N ET T
h m i i l ttuerUl H u m

T*»M M U M »*«ru«*«

321-5210

I
e

Ltfir rl I .ll'allii -illlig (%I&gt;ei.Fjfor SrIMt r AVBtldhl e
000 C709
2559 FARR DRIVE I

LO N G W O O D , FLA.
(305) 862-1600 .

• « B e a R e « B e « e « p e « e « a e « e e e 66

Mon. - Fri.l:OOAM •4:00 PM

•WEIGHT CONTROL
• SMOKING CONTROL • PAIN CONTROL
• ELECTRONICi TRADITIONAL ACUPUNCTURE

GREEN’S House Of Beauty

EUNICE G. MAYO, M.D.

* * LON

(3 0 5 ) 3 2 1 -2 5 5 7

HOURS

non THRUTHURS 1004 00 Se-nw, »®1 00

GET READY FOR THE HOLIDAYS
WITH THAT NEW LOOK

^

£

$ 4 0 0

8,

STEAK AND EGG
SPECIAL

u m PU2A

itM m

Hal Wilton

Paul Blglln

MG. S3S

NOW $25 us*

ELASTA CURLS

HAIR CUTS
$ 6 .0 0

★

DAY &amp; NIGHT GRILL
JUNE h TINA POKZIG Ownrre

Ph. 323-6728
1200 Freeck An. • Saaferd

snM

mUMom. iiMwm1 oawrr

Btautiful
Wrought Iron
Fumlturo

Don M y e rs
gktut.
FRAMED MiROOM IN STOCK
&gt;l( A Fnntfi As m
IM M F L V n

FREE S P IN A L E V A LU A T IO N
WARRIM SIGNALS Of HACKED NERVIS
t FreTu.nl He.J.che*
2
3
4
5
6
7.

Low Back or Hip P8in
O lM inetl or L o u ot Sleep
Num bnett o l Hand* or Faal
Nervou.nees
Hack Pain or Stllfna*a
Arm and Shouldar Pain

fiahdtei lecMtc Fatart Aaetyia, FU
*U88 t»L SkerUei Twt Start kmtat

MO -0 1-4

5

M IN S A BOY S

fed 1*6 Wrtk Dae*.
■i«( u'tti uiomt Cf-t- rimo. Nec-r.l h.wi. t-.m s -’ 'omstm
UKlr MIM.’ 0. M K r a w i t» uniltt &gt;oa m i 0M&gt; « » « U»— »
’o. n unwiii m u «H.»wg u akiurti w « M »— « * nm »

Ok
'H uv
S t t 04 *7oi€&amp;

RELAX0RS

2

CAREFREE CURLS

4lrp.fl lit,. 4 17-42 SMl.rd

SERVED ANY TIME)
Urrkt Witt A Smik Ahtjii

tiara from liyrt PUtt)
HOURS
MON.-FRi. 8 • 5:30
SAT. 8 • 4:00

RtC. S4S

UNISEX

REG. SSS NOW $40 4SDUf REG. 185 NOW $45 ua»

•2.95
MARKET

PERMS

NOW $

A&amp;

mi

ZW

49 0 N. 17-92
Next Tq Soblk'i Sub Shop

• GENERAL PRACTICE

2927 Hwy. 17-92
321-0351
321-0352

323-2280

Large Selection of Material
Quality Wdrkmamhip
Free Estimates
Free Pickup
And Delivery

A ttention *

10* T-| &gt;.) I M M I IIUMl’ OI 0* n4,nHk&lt;

M0 UF

WALA INS WELCOME

MERCEDES-BENZ &amp; BMW OWNERS

WE SPECIALIZE
IN THESE CARS &amp;
OTHER FOREIGN
CARS
WE ALSO OFFER FREE PICKUP A DELIVERY

IMPORTED CAR SERVICE
LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF 25th ST. AND THE
OLD LAKE MARY ROAD. IN THE SECURITY IN­
DUSTRIAL COMPLEX BUILDING 112.

322-7665

‘ tnwpency Only: 10-1874

C e n te r M ill

CONTACT 10YCE
Sanford, Fla.

• FURNITURE • BOATS • CARS

(305) 321-2360

AUTO PARTS
UNLIMITED

e.« Round trip regularly scheduled
I lights via American Airlines
• Accommodations at the Las Vegas
hoisi ot your choice.
* piu# much much more

DAVE’S UPHOLSTERY

|ANTIQUE SATINS .Frare 12.S5 Yd.
BROCADES........fr*« SB.SS Yd.
COTTONS......... frern S4.75 Yd.
|SOME FABRICS............ ft* Yd.

I ANPirnA*AM**** 11%V* W
tP*tom*0«f I**"**CM***-"

TO U R IN C L U D E S

r

VACCINATE YOUR PET NOW

GENERAL &amp; PREVENTIVE
CARE CENTER

STATE

T he num ber
yo u n e ed fo r
y o u r f in a n c ia l
n e ed s.

i a n f OND

cfmiH 10% DISCOUNT

“ “

2640 H IAW ATH A A V E. &lt;17-92) SA N FO R D

Welcome

in f j j ,

OPEN MON. THRU FRI. M
SAT. I l l
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
1DAY SERVICE

SU m &amp; S&lt;U44f! ‘S u ffe r &amp; ‘S tttv i
212 I. 1»t ST. DOWNTOWN SANFORD

o w n er

III FRENCH A V I.

bLAIR AGENCY

Across From G.O. RiUys
1015 S. HWY. 17-92
LO N O W O O D , FLA.

693-6699

WE
PURCHASE
MORTGAGES...
AND MAKE FIRST
AND SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS

SP EC IA LIST S IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22't FILED
ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, M O TO RCYCLES
HOMES, R EC -V EES
Sw ing Sanford lor 27 Y iv t
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 9-5

“CALL BLAIR AND COM PARE”

Family Credit Services, In c

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
OF CHIROPRACTIC. INC

323-7710 or 323-3866

A 104. Jury li CASGeorgia Corporation

SAM to 8 t* *1 7 D.|*V a VWrk IbS Or. a i r .,i
Uli s AiWFOMi mnil
,Am')HD
SAhtORO mi ii.J
.. j... it-,
. » ah OkrASLHJs.voielr

Comer ol S. Park Ave. A Oak

K 8 1 0 A O A K A V E . SA N FO R D
ITTVt BUI2

0*( A A 4*4. NEAP IT 87
&gt;• The Part Seven thefting Clr.
F I 177*4

CALL
KENT RICHTIR, MGR.

831-3400

�\

4B — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Jan. 1, IW

legal Notice

Abortion Clinic Bomber Suspect
May Be Part Of '
' Group?
F’ ENSACOLA (UIM) - A U.S. magis­
trate revised to sel bail Monday for a
21-year-old construction worker ac­
cused of bombing three abortion clinics
and federal agents said they had
evidence a "secret organization" existed
lo carry out the terrorist acts.
Matthew John Goldsby. 21. was
ordered held without bond at the
Escambia County Jail after one federal
agent said Goldsby admitted bombing
three abortion clinics under the cover of
fog and darkness on Christmas Day. and
one of those three exactly six months
earlier.
Magistrate Robert Crongeyer sched­
uled a bond heating for Jan. 7. but said
there was "strong evidence" Goldsby
had committed "acts of extreme vio­
lence."
Crongeyer said he "can't take the
chance of releasing the defendant."
"W e do have some evidence of a
secret type organization" being Involved
in the bombings, said Robert Hoffer Jr.,
an agent with the Treasury Depart­
ment's Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and
Firearms.
But Hoffer said he would "rather not
get Into that" at this time.

Assistant U.S. A t t o r n e y Susan NovCrongeyer. "People arc being
spoken to at this very moment" about
the bombings. She agreed Hoffer should
not be questioned further about the
secret organization.
Another ATF agent. Morris Pelham,
said Goldsby "told us that he had
bombed all four clinics."
Pelham said Goldsby felt he could
stop abortions with such acts.
"H e felt like what he was doing was
worthwhile." Pelham said. " If he saved
one life It would be worthwhile. He felt
God's law was the law he had to follow,
and not man's law."
Goldsby. 21. of Cantonment. Fla., was
arrested Sunday by agents who raided
his home and searched his car. Agent
Dan Conroy said officials seized "a large
quantity of evidence coinciding with
evidence found at the four bombing
sites."
"I think we can call these fairly
sophisticated bombs.” Conroy said. He
said each bomb was about 12 Inches
long and 6 Inches In diameter and used
an explosive black powder.
lim in g devices were used to sel off
ihc bombs. Conroy said.

a t n y to ld

He would not say If other suspects
were b ei ng sought, or what led
author!! ies lo Goldsby.
All three clinics had been picketed by
abortion foes for more than a year.
There were no injuries In any of the
bombings, but extensive damage was
done to the buildings. The clinics were
operated by Dr. William Pcrmenter. Dr.
Bo Bagenholm and Linda Taggart,
director o f the Ladles Center, which was
b o m b e d t w i c e — J u n e 25 and
Christmas Day.
The Christmas bombings, detonated
over a 15-minute span, occurred about
3:30 a.m. Pensacola was shrouded In a
thick fog at the time.
Both Taggart and Bagenholm said
they plan to reopen their clinics, but
Pcrmenter said he would not stay In the
abortion business.
"Nobody will rent to you. nobody will
sell to you." Permenter said. "It ruins
their Insurance. It's astronomical."
Since 1982. federal agents have In­
vestigated 29 bombings and arson
attacks on abortion clinics around the
nation — 24 of them this year. The ATF
has made arrests In 12 o f those
Incidents.

CALENDAR
Bank Seminole County
Central Florida Blood Branch, 1302 E. Sec­
Bank Seminole County ond St., Sanford. 11
Branch. 1302 E. Sec­ a.m. to 7 p.m. Florida
ond SI., Sanford, 9 H o s p i t a l - A l t a m o n t e
a.m. to 5 p.m. Florida Branch. 601 E. Alta­
H o s p i t a l - A l t a m o n t e monte Ave., 11 a.m. to
Branch. 11 a.m. to 7 7 p.m.
S an f o r d J a y c e e s .
p.m.
Sanford
Klwanls Club, noon. 7 : 3 0 p .m. . J a y c e e
b u i l d i n g . 5th and
Sanford Civic Center.
Casselberry Rotary French. Sanford.
Sanford A A. 1201 W.
brenkfast, 7:30 a.m.,
C a s s e l b e r r y S e ni o r First St.’. 8 p.m., open,
Center. 200 N. Lake speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m..
Triplet Drive.
Financial advisory closed. First United
service for senior citi­ Methodist Church.
O vereaters A n o n y ­
zens available by ap­
poi ntment. I p.m .. mous. open. 7:30 p.m.
C u s s cl b e rr y S en io r C o m m u n i t y Uni ted
Center. 200 N. Lake M e t h o d i s t C h u r c h .
H i g h w a y 17-92.
T r i p l e t Dri ve. Call
Casselberry.
831-3551. ext. 264.
FRIDAY, JAN. 4
Medicare help for se­
Central Florida Blook
niors. 10 a.m. until
noon. Casselberry Se­ Bank Florida Hosplnior Center 200 N. lal-Altamonte Branch.
601 E. Altamonte Ave..
Triplet Drive.
Ba.m. to 5 p.m.
Casselberry.

WEDNESDAY. JAN. 2

T H U m SD A Y. JA M . I

Central Florida Blood

O p tim is t

C lu b

of

South Seminole. 7:30

a m .. H o l i d a y Inn,
Wymorc Road. Alta­
monte Springs.
Weklva AA (no smok­
ing), 8 p.m. Weklva
Presbyterian Church.
SR 434. at Weklva
Springs Road. Closed.
L o n gw o o d AA. 8
p .m .. R o l l i n g Hills
Moravian Church. SR
434, L o n g w o o d .
Alapon. same lime and
place.
Tanglcwood AA, 8
p.m ., St. Ri chard' s
Episcopal Church.
Lake Ho we ll Road.
Alanon. same time and
place.
Sanford AA Step. 8
p.m., 1201 W. First St.,
closed.

SATURDAY, JAN. 8
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.,
1201 W. First St. open
discussion.
S an for d W om ens*
A A. 1201 W. First St..
2 p.m.. closed.

Casselberry AA Step,
8 p.m.. Ascension Luthcraji Ch ur c h .
OverbroOk Drive.

mous. 7 p.m.. 1201 W.
First St.. Sanford.
§anford Big Book
AA. 7 p.m.. open dis­
cussion. Florida Power
and Light buliting. N.
Myrtle Avenue. San­
ford.
Alanon meeting. 8
p.m.. 1201 W. First St..
Sanford.

Rebos and Live Oak
AA. noon. Rebos Club,
130 Normandy Road.
Casselberry (closed).
C lean A ir A A for
n o n - s m o k e r s , fi rst
floor, same room.-same
place and time.

SUNDAY, JAN. 6
Bridal fashion show
In R obin son 's A l t a ­
monte Mall. 1 p.m.
Special guest will be
well known designer
Jan Kostrobola. Door
pri zes and r efr esh­
ments.
Florida Symphony
Orchestra performs for
Festival Concert Series
at R o l l i n s C o l l e g e
K n o w l e s Chapel . 4
p.m. sp o n so red by
Bach Festival Society.
N a rc o t i c s

An on y-

IN THE SERVICE
ANTHONY TRUMAN
Airman First C lan Anthony Truman, ton
at Joseph and Margaret T rumon of XU
Village Lon*. Wlntor Park, hot boon deco
rolod with tht Air Fore* Achlovomont Modal
at Mountain Homo Air Fore* Bot*. Idaho.
Th* Achlovomont Mod*I it awarded to
airman lor accomplithmont, morltorlout
torvlct or sett ol courage.
Truman It a malarial lacllltlot specialist
with th* 344th Supply Squadron.
ANTHONY I.S H IR IN O
Stall Sflt. Anthony E . Shlrlng, ton ot
M arian J . Tylar a l *01 San Laandro,
Casselberry, wat on* ol th* wlnnort In
William Toll !*.
William Toll, th* Air Fore* sponsored moot
hold ovary two yoort. hott*d by ttw Tactical
Air Command, wa* conducted *1 Tyndall Air
Fore* Boo*. FI*. It mooturoo th* ability ol
dSht*r unltt to accompli ah ttwlr air-to-air
Intercept mltilon in a roalltllc combat
environment.
Tn* moat damontlrat*d the c*pabllltl#t ol
weapon* tyitam i and protowlonal com
polonce ol crows.
Shlrlng It an avionic* lott technician with
th* 33rd Component Repair Squadron at
E f tin Air Fare* Bet*. Fla.
JOSEPH I . HEARN III
Air Fore* Raaarvo Ma(. Jotoph E . H**rn

III, ton ot rtllrod Air Fore* Col. Jotoph E .
and Ellioboth E . Hoorn of 300 Royal Palm
Court, Longwood. hat bean decorated with
th* tacond award ol th* Meritorious Service
Medal at Lackland Air Fore* Bat*. T a u t.
Tn* Meritor lout Service Medal It awarded
apaclflcally for outitandlng non-combat
mar Itor lout achievement or tar vie* to th*
United States.
Haem It commander ol th* MSOth Be tic
Military Training Squadron.
RONNIE W. BOWMAN
Arm y Spac. 4 Ronnie W. Bowman,
grandson ot William S. and Carey Smith ot
Rout* I, Oviedo, hat bean awarded th* Good
Conduct Modal at Fori Bragg. N.C.
Th* award wat presented lor exemplary
conduct while In th* actlv* tarvlc* ot th*
United Slates.
Bowman Is an Intelligence analyst with th*
Und Airborne Division.
ROT O. LANIRR III
Newly promoted Copt Roy 0 . Lanier ill,
eon ol Roy O. and Opal M. Lon tar ol 37* Mead
Orly*. Ovlado. has bean decorated with th*
U L Air Force Commendation Medal at
MecDIII Air Force Bat*. Fla.
The Air Fare* Command*non Medal It
awarded to the** Individual* who demon­
s tr a t e o u tstan d in g a c h ie v e m e n t or

mar Ilor lout tarvlc* In th* performance ol
thalrdullasonbahallof tha Air Fore*.
Lanier It an aircraft malnlananc* officer
with th* 74th Tactical Training Wing.
H* It a 1N0 graduate of tho University ol
Central Florida.
TATSUYA T. HOFMANN
Spac. * Taisiya T. Hofmann, tltpton ot
Richard R. Hofmann ol Geneva, hat baan
decorated with th* Army Achievement Medal
at Camp Zama, Japan.
Th* Achievement Mad*I It awarded to
toldltrt lor accomplishment, meritorious
tarvlc* or act* ol courage.
Hofmann It an edmlnltfratlv* specialist
with Headquarters. U.S. Army Japan

DAVID L.BUTLIR
Matter Sgt. David L. Butler, tqn ot Lloyd
Butler ol 111 Tangerine Drive, Sanford, hat
baan decorated with th* second award of the
Air Force Commendation Medal at Tyndall
Air Force Bata, Fla.
Th* Air Fore* Commendation Modal It
**ord*d to those Individual* who demons t r a t a o u tsta n d in g a c h la v a m a n l or
morltorlout tarvlc* in ttw parformqnca ot
ttwlr duties on behalf ol th* Air Fores.
Butler It a munition* lytttm t specialist
with th* m t h Equipment Malnlananc*
Squadron.

1100

Arolyn B True, atal lo Equity
Dev Group Inc., Lott 1-11 A.
13 30, blk 1, Crystal Lake Winter
Homat. 174.700
FL. Heritage Land Dev lo
Cynthia L Baker, g Roy W.
Smith Sr., Un. B. Bldg. I. Oak
Harbor Sac. 1, t».000
J. Neal W it* to John P.
McDowell g Gulthan B. Singh.
LtO II. Spring«rood. S44.000
M*r|orl* 0 .0 . Lalnhart to
Jest* F. Hugglnt A Wf Barth*
L.. W ]ig of S UO of NEW of
N E '« ol Sac. 10-11-11,1 14,000
Danny L. Carroll A Wt
Virginia to Norman B. La Point
A Wf Cathy. Lot m Woodcratl,
Un. 7.171,000
Commonwealth Homes Carp. A
Lk Florence Prop. Lot IA

Pal lean Bay, Mt.fQO
Robert E. Pott* A Wf Delia to
Leroy A. Wood A Wt Helen V .
Lt I. Blk C, Brantley Shore* 1st
Addn. 430.400
Rolling wood Dev. te Robert A.
Flther, Lt A Blk I. North
Orlando Rancho*. Sac. *, 4* 7.000
Roger A. Orltfln A Wf Paulin*
to Jam#* T. Harvey A Wt
Margaret, Bag. W line ot EV* ol
NW I* ol SWt* ol Soc M i n i

tin, *111,000

Grovor J. Carter A Wt Ruth to
Ruth E. Rootor. L I 0. Blk B.
Eaitbrook t/d Un. 7,104.700
Jarwt M. Brown to Janet M.
Brown A David L. Boyd Lott 4 A
7 n *r «. Blk 14, Tratfordt Map
ol Sent..1100
Spring wood Village Apt. Carp,
to Anthony G. Barbuto A Wf
M arl*. Un. 13J H Sprlngwood
Village, Cond. S3*. 700
Kata PoiiKaf, lo Klmborly
Nixon. Hornet!te 110 Semlnot*
. 471.100

M enu
SCHOOL MENU
Wednesday
January 2
Entree
Pizza
Green Beans
Chilled Peaches
Milk
Express
Pizza
Hamburger
-J
I lotting
Tator Tots/French
Fries
Fruit
Juice
Milk
Secondary — Orange
Juice Bar

Thursday
January 3
Entree
Hamburger/Bun
Vegetable Mix
TalerTola
Apple Crisp
Milk

Eapreaa
Hamburger
Chlx Panic
Tater Tots/French
Fries
Fruit
Juice
Milk

Thtodor* A. Koatuilk A Wt
R om to Wayne Oarrkk, Lt 40 Lk
Sylvan E t l t , 110,000
John L. Jonas to Thelma L.
Clontt. Sec 14 A 17 A It A all of
Sac. MW. of St. John* River etc..
In Twnp. IIS ., Rng* 33 East,
4747.700

Medylln L, Johnson to Locklo
Cenlr., Inc. Beg. NE cor. of Lot
X etc.. 1100
Batty Emmons to Michael
Emmons, L I t, Blk B, Like
Brantley Islat. 2nd Addn. 435.000
Jamas L. Mill* A Wt Christina
to Edward A. Pulliam A Wt
Phyllis Y.. Lot U . Blk O. North
Orlando Tarr., Sac. 1 Un. I,

441.000

RKC Enterprises Inc. la
Jam ** L. Braflald. Un. A, On*
Douglas Place 11. Cond. 4304,000
Nancy Plank A Hb Ronald J.
te Roger A. Strong A Wf Andrea,
Lei 103. Lake ol ttw Woods
Townhouse Sac. A S43J700
Kannaty R. Bachttl to Paul T.

Ciaplg* A Wt Berber* K . Lt 7,
Blk F. Seminole Sit**. 477.700
Garner Hlton ate. to Jack M.
Smith A Wf Laurel A.. Lot 7
Bear Lake* Hit , S47.700
F L Fad to Dorothy D. Valla,
Lt If Woodbrldg* at ttw Spring*.
Un III. 1100.000
Tom Kwangho Oh. to Tom
Kwangho Oh. Grace A Albert,
Jt. ten. Un 117. Escondido. Cond.
Sac. V II, 1100
Andtn Group of F L. te
Mohammad S Uddln. Lt 130
SunrlM Un. Two D. 474.000
Ralph E. Dlckorholl to grace
R. Malle A HB. Herald J , Lt 430
Frank L. Woodruff t/d ol Lands
So.. Sent.. 4100
Harold Malta A Wf Groce R. lo
Jam** D. Dukas, Lois 430. 431,
43A 434. Frank L. Woodruff t/d,
S IA M
HeroM Malta A Wf Grace R. ta
Jamas O. Dukas Ltt 433 A 437.
Frank L. Woodruff t/d. I40.0M

D o o n e sb u ry
ROY.m BEEN YOUm/KKHR
AAHt&amp;HHT iViaeWPkK
io m ia m s w risom n jN .
v w w e tu

Flerlda Statutes If7.1*4
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX D EED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Thomas G. A or
Mary L. Welsh th* holdar ol tha
following cartlllcatet hat filed
tald ctfllllcatat lor a tax deed
to b# Issued thereon. Th* cartlllceta numbers and years of
Issuance, ttw description ot th*
proparty, and th* namat In
which It wat attested are at
lot lOWt:
Cart Iflea I* No. 374.
Year ol Issuance If 71.
Description of Property: LOT
M HOLDEN R EA L ESTATE
COMPANYS ADD PB I PG tf.
Nam* In which attested
Williamson Pratton Heirs
All at tald property being In
ttw County ot Samlnola. State ol
Florid*
Unless tuch cartlllcata or carlillcattt thall b* redeemed ac­
cording to law th* property
described In tuch certificate or
cartlllcatet will be told to th*
highest bidder at th* court house
door on Ih* 4th day of February,
1P45 at 11:00AM.
Dated this Mth day ol Da
camber. Iff*
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Backwllh, Jr.
Clark ol Circuit Court
oI Samlnola County, Florida
Cheryl Grtar
Deputy Ctark
Publish: January 1st, Ith. Mth A
77nd, IfU.'
D E d l4
F tarIda Statute I lt7.244
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FON TAX D E ED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Janet L. Sharp th*
holdar ol ttw following certifi­
cates hat filed tald carllllcaltt
tor a tax dead lo be Itsuad
thereon. Th* cartlllcata num­
ber* and years ot Issuance, th*
description at ttw property and
ttw namat In which It was
aisastad ar* as follow*:
Cartlllcata No f t ;
Year of Issuance Iftl.
Description ot Property: L E G
LOT M ILES S W LY 41.7 FT)
BLK B M ER ED ITH MANOR
NOB H ILL SEC P B fP G 17.
Noma In which atte ste d
Meredith Enterprises. Inc
All ot said proparty being In
the County of Samlnola, Slat* ol
Florida.
Uniat* tuch carllflcata or carlltlcetat shall b* redeemed ac­
cording lo law th* property
described In tuch cartlllcata or
cartlllcata* will b* sold ta ttw
highest bidder at th* court house
door on ttw 4th day of February.
IfU at II :M AM .
Dated this 14th day of Dacamber. 1N4
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Backwllh, Jr.
Clark of Circuit Court
ot Samlnola County. Florida
Ctwryl Greer
Deputy Ctark
Publish: January 1st, Hit. Mth A
22nd. IfU .

DEB-15

OEB-10

DEB-14

Manager’s Special

NOTICE UN 03R
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
Nolle* It hereby given that ttw
undtrslgfwd. desiring to engage
in butJrwtt under th* llctmout
name ol Sanford Industrial Park
at S.R. 437 and S.R. 437, San
ford. Semlnot# County, Florid*.
Intend* lo register ttw tame
nam* with ttw Clark el ttw
C ir c u it Court ol Seminole
County. Florida.
Kayet Seminole Industrial
Park Investor*. Ltd.
By Key** Realty
International, Inc.
Managing Garwral Partner
By: Fred Stanton Smith
President
Attorney lor Applicant
Fried lander A
Atioclalet. P.A,
Suit* 3001
MB N. Bltcayne Blvd
Miami. Florida 33131
By: Richard E .
Dautch, Jr. Esq.
Publish January 1. A IX M.

v iy .

U H -a m /W A R -

w

fT5, A

m w K / R io ia r

H

P0UM! JteWERGNEN

Shopping For A
New
OrUsed Car?

BOVRC- /
Yau c m aTwajre B a d the
te at deal* la tha Ir a q lag
Haraldt ClaeefOed eaci/on.
Rood Fridaj t fre e fag Herald
for Ufa Beat aatoctJena.

Evening Henrid
SM Nertk Trench As enne

II

r r-

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 tint*..................67C g lino
HOURS
3 conmutlvf times 61C a line

S.30 A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thm FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

7 consecutive times 52C a Una
10 censacutlv* times 44C a tine
Contract Rates AvsiUble
3 Lines Minimum

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

71— Heip Wanted

27— N ursery &amp;
Child Care
E x p a rlo n c a d M other w ill
babysit In my horn* Fenced
backyard 221b*7t
FOR DUALITY CH ILD CA RE
With an Edacettanal Praeram
Call 133-4414

mil Babysit

JrunjhomrjMM**^

INS.

Frid ay
Jan u ary 4

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
BARNEY. fT$ M.SOITIS.
MZRKXIRKK HOklAKYOU,
* \ K m * H F n H RHXT60CPT0
V
5&amp;Y0UA6AN

O EB-fl

Flerlda Slatutss Iff. 744
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX D E ED
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , that G to rg * A/or
Dorothy Bernes tho holdar ol ttw
following cartlllcata* hat Iliad
tald carillkatat lor a tax dead
ta b* Issued ttwreon. Tha certlll
cat* numbers and years ol
Issuance, th* description ol ttw
property, and th* namat In
which II wat assessed ar* at
follows:
Carllflcata No. 1107.
Year of Issuance 1077.
Description e l Prop erty:
LOTS 71 + 71 FROSTS AOO TO
ALTAMONTE PB I PG M.
Name In which atte ste d
Dunklin E. M. Hairs.
All ol said property being In
ttw County of Samlnola, Stale ol
Florida
Unless such certificate or car
title*tat thall b* red**mad ac­
cording to law ttw property
described In tuch cartltkata or
certificate* will be told to ttw
highest bidder at th* court house
door on th* 4th day ol February,
IfU *111:00AM
Dated this Mth day ol De­
cember, ifte
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clark ol Circuit Court
ot Samlnata County, Florida
Cheryl Greer
Daoutv Ctark
PuMIth: January 1st, Ith, Mth A
Und. IfU.

Legal Notice

REALTY TRANSFERS
Alexander C. Rlvara A Wf
M ary to Michael A. Rlvara. E
JO’ at Lot 1 1 E W ot 10. Blk *
Tier I. Tratfordt Map ol Sent.

School

Florida Statutes IT7.144
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX D EED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that E. Lamar i/o r
Janet L. Sharp ttw holdar ol In*
following certificate! hat filed
tald cartlllcatet lor a tax deed
to be Ittutd thereon Th* certlll
cat* numbers and years ol
Issuance, th* description of th*
property, and tha namat In
which It wat attested * ,* at
fotlows:
Certificate No. 14
Year of Issuance Iff).
Description of Property: LOT
7 COLONIAL ESTA TES PB If
PGN.
Nome In which a llo tte d
Smith Earl M. A Ruth A
All ol tald property being In
th* County of Seminole. Stato ol
Florida.
Unltu such cartlllcata or car
llflcatot than fa* redeemed ac­
cording to law th* property
described In tuch certificate or
certlllcattt will b* told to ttw
highest bidder at ttw court bout*
door on th* 4th day of February,
IMS al 11:00 A M.
Dated this Mth day ol De­
cember, I fee
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Ctark ol Circuit Court
ol Seminole County, Florida
Cheryl Greer
Deputy Ctark
Publish: January IH .tth. Mth A
72nd, IfU

33— Real Estate
Courses
SOS M. BALL JR.
SCHOOL OF R I A L ESTATE
333 4111 or 373 7144

61—Money to Lend
B utlnett Capital Sio.oco to
41,000.000 and over. P. O Box
3413. Winter Pk. Fla 327*0.

71— Help Wanted
ACCOUN TS R E C E IV A B L E
CLERK- Strong background In
payment posting to computer
lyttam t with amphailt on
proof process Mull b* wall
organlitad with good ctarlcal
skills.
O E N E R A L A C C O U N T IN G
CLER K - Good organliatlonal
and communication skill*. Ttw
Individual w* ar* soaking will
hev* dally contact wlfh glass
and aluminum vendors. Alto,
you will be. required lo fll*. do
tom* typing, and required lo
fill In at racaptlonlit and
Courltr, at needed. If you
hav* that* skill* contact:
Harcar Aluminum Products Ca.
11*1 Cornwall Rd.
Acrylic Applie*tori na+ovd fo
apply protective coaling on
cart, boats and planet. U to
111 par hour. W* train. For
work In Sanford area call
Tampa A13 *047171,

Attention Locals
Bartandtrt waitress**. A but
wantau ■lor Sanford* newest
nightclub- S LIC K S . Pleat*
call: 113 *730 tor Interview
i and t mil
IM M ED IA T E O PEN IN O for
tarvlc* technician with on* of
Florida's Oldest Patf Control
Campania*. No experience
necessary |u*t a d tilr* fo
advance and a willingness to
work. Paid training program,
company benefits. Insurance
and vehicle provided If Intertiled, opply at: Spencer Petl
Control. 2742 Park Dr . San
ford.
No phone call* gleet*.

Legal Notice
Florida Statutes 1*7.144
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX D EED
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Janet L. Sharp ttw
holdar ol ttw following ctrflll
cat** has Iliad said carllflcata*
for a fax dead lo be Issued
thereon. Th* cartlllcata num
bars and yaors ot Issuance, tha
deterIplIon of Itw property, end
th* namat In which It was
atsattad are as toitaws:
Cartlllcata He. 771
Yaarof Issuonca lt*3.
Description of Proporty: L E G
THAT PT OF LOT *7 DESC AS
B EG 307.4 F T S OF INT S R/W
YOUNG RO A E R/W MOSS RO
RUN E XI0 FT S 14* 4 F T W 300
FT N 14*4 FT TO B EG BLK O
D R M ITCH ELLS SU RVEY OF
THE L E V Y GRANT PB IP G S.
Name In which attested Hunt
Gary D. A Iran* J.
All ol said property being In
th* County ol Samlnola. Slat* ol
Florida
Uniat* such cartlllcata or car
tlflcetat thall be redeemed *c
cording lo taw th* property
described In tuch certificate or
certlfkata* will be told ta th*
highest bidder at ttw court hout*
door on ttw em day of February.
If U a l 11:00 AM .
Datad this leth day of Dacamber. IS04.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Backwllh, Jr.
Clark of Circuit Court
ot Seminole County, Florida
Cheryl Greer
Deputy Ctark
Publish; January 1st. tth. Mth A
Und. IMS

D tB -M

€

CALL TOLL m u
1URAM1-IUI

6

HAPPY NEW YEAR!
START OFF THE NEW
YEAR WITH A
"NEW JOB"
OVER .00 LISTINGS
OPEN WEDNESDAY
SEE YOU 8:30 AM.
AAA EMPLOYMENT

323-5176
Career Opportunity. Will train.
Outstanding Income Call
311 3*13 between * A 1._________
CASHIE R/HOSTESS
And AM waitress. Fin* dining
restaurant. Apply In parson
107 Dalton* Inn.

★ ★ ★ ★
CORRESPONDENTS
WANTED
To writ* a weakly column
from your horn*. Qualifications:
A not* for newt, a flair for
writing, a good speller and know
bow lo type Call Oorlt Dittrich.
Th* Evening Herald, 333 2*11,
attar 3 p.m.

★

★

★

★

Debery Manor now hiring axp*
rltncod or certified nurses
Side*. All thlfft. Apply'*!: 40
N Hwy 17 *3. DeBery. or call
444 4434 EOE
DISHWASHER
Mature. Apply In parson. M F,
1-4p m. Deltona Inn.
Orlver/Cel lector. Musi hav*
knowledge ol Sanford are* A
Valid Florida llctnt* 131 7*44
EAT YOUR V E G E T A B L E S
Brush your taalh
And read your
WANT AD S
____
E x p e rie n c e d C a rp e n te r A
Driver. Alto various dull**
Honest, hard working, willing
to travel. Call 331 17*0, ask for
Mrs. Jonas.
AVON BEA UTY COMPANY
Full- pari time. Pay Xmas Milt.
Call Immad. )13 SIIS-1J1 ISIS.
AVON EARNIN8S WCWtll

OPINTBRRITORIBtNOWIII

311-3711 a r l l l *47*
Cap* Canaveral firm expanding
In Samlnola. I workers pro
duclng, 4 more needed. S370
P/T. *450 full time. Career
oriented people Only over II
Full training
311 1707. before*.

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION
OF PARTNERSHIPANO
TERMINATION OF
IN T ER ES T IN
FICTITIOUS NAMED
BUSINESS
P L EA S E TA K E NOTICE that
Geoffrey P. Jonas. Jr. has
withdrawn from th* partnership
ol L A L E N T E R P R IS E S at a
partner on ttw 1st day of Da
camber, IN*. Presentment of
demands for payment ol any
debt* Incurred by tald L A L
E N T E R P R I S E S a lt a r O*
camber I. 1*04 should be mad*
to John H. Wkbelnt. 21* Can
dec* Drive. Mailland, Florida
31711.
/*/ Geoffrey P. Jones. Jr.
Subscribed end sworn to b*
for* m* this 1st day of Da
exmber, 1N4
/*/Marilyn J.Matfws
Notary Public
My commission expires
March IX IfU
Publish December II, l(, 24,
ltt* A January t, IfU.
DEA 41
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Nolle* It hereby given that th*
undersigned, pursuant to ttw
" F ic titio u s N airn Statute''
Chapter MS Of. Florida Statute,
will register with ttw Ctark ol
ttw Circuit Court, In and tor
Samlnola County, Florid*, upon
receipt ol proof ol ttw public*
lion ol this nolle*. Ih* fictitious
name, to wit: "Carefree Florist
A Garden Center", under which
ttw undersigned It engaged In
bull nets at jjy ; French Avenue,
Sanford. Florid* 32771.
That the party Interested In
said business enterprise It at
toilowt: P Y L E P R O P ER T IES.
INC., a Florida corporation.
P Y L E P R O P ER T IES . INC.
By: Allan R. Pyl*
President
Dated at Son lord, Samlnola
County, Florida. December It.
IN*.
Publish January 1, A IX H.
INS.
D EB-lf

%

�At

KIT N’ CA RLYLE ^by Larry Wright

71— Help Wanted

71— Help Wanted

FRONT DESK CLERIC
F r ljn d ly , nea*. personable
Apply In person, M F, 10 a m
In I p m Deltona inn__________
IM M EDIATE OPPORTUNITY
W# now hove an opening in oor
Classified Advertising De
partmenl Qualifications are:
excellent typist, pleasant tele
phone volte, good common
cation and some accounting
This Is an excellent opportunl
ly tor the right person Send
resume to Mr Adkins c/o
Evening Herald P O Bo« I»J7
Sanford, Fla J i m 1457, or
stop In and till out an
application._____________________
LABORERS- Strong reliable,
general laborers needed Im
mediately Dltterent locations
Phone and transportation a
must Never a fee Apply
Kelly Services, 1J0I Maitland
C e n te r P a r k w a y • w e
Maitland
MO raw
LABORERS
ASSEM BLERS
WAREHOUSE W ORKERS
assignments available In San
l o r d . L a k e M a r y an d
Longwood area.
No lee
Ablest Temporary Service
n i IS O ________________
LABORERS
ASSEM BLERS
W AREHOUSEW ORKERS
Assignments available In San
l o r d . L a k e M a r y an d
Longwood aroa.
No lee.
Ablest Temporary Service
I I I 1*40________________________
Make SS working at home I Rush
SASE to D B JSI« S Santord
Ave , Sanford, Fla. 33771
MANAGER TRA IN EE
Sales background, previous
management helptul. with a
good drivers record Able to
communicate with the Public.
Apply ISSi Orlando Dr. Zayres
Shopping Cenler. 377 5000
Mature Individuals needed as
companions for the elderly. T
L C , Inc 37! 10SJ/JI] 1770
Night Auditor, Experience pret
arable Will train. Full lime
position. Apply In person No
phone calls please. Days Inn.
1 4 and St Rd 44_______________
Nurses aides wanted 7 3 shift.
Must be certl lied or experl
enced. Apply In person at
Lakevlew Nursing Center Tie
E. Ind St. Santord._____________
Orlando Based Company
seeking a lew good people to
t r a i n In b a th ro o m r e ­
modeling. II you have erperi
ence In palnl spraying, tile
repair, or looking tor a good
trade, we are looking for you
Good payl Good benefltsl
Valid Florida Drivers License
and vehicle required.
Call Mr. Miller 373 MIS

NOTICE

141—Homes F o r Sale
Oltlee/Clerleal person needed
lor busy Santord office Dulles
Include typing, tiling 1 gener
al oftlce Experienced persons
•Pt'“Y *o 500 W Fulton St
Santord 172 *441 EOP
Part time waitress Friday A
Saturday evenings Apply
Mon . Tues. or Wed t l l i i n
Must be 75 or over. Buck's
Restaurant 1770 S Santord
Ave__________________________ ___
PHONE C L E R K
Several Positions F/T and P/T.
Ektra Xmas tt To 55 00 P/H
Plus Bonuses No Selling
Apply Associated Contractor's
7700 FRENCH A V E ___________
RECEPTIO N IST
Type, phones, general oftlce
Good meth skills. Permanent
position Never a Fee

TEMP PERM 774-1348
Secretary. Part time 3 days
Typing, good phone voice
Salary open May lead to full
tlma job 373 3400_______________
S a c r a l a r y / R e c e p t io n is t .
Longwood area Pleasant
telephone voice Bookkeeping
background h a lp lu l. I S,
Monday thru Friday I14MI1
The Best "HOUSE C LEA N ER "
Is a Went Adi
Call Classified 377 7411
Wanted Part lime
Person lo help In Circulation
Department afternoon hours
For more Information call
__ Tony.A4on Frl 3 5pm

THURSDAY 7 M i
SUNDAY 7 M i.
GAMES SIS-S40-SSO
JACKPOT S250

TEMPLE SHALOM

Saturday M I P J i
Wednes day M I P J i

USUSSSO
2 1250 Jackets

Attractive 2 Bdrm , 1 both house
In nice section ol town. Com
plete with most major appll
a n c ii
R e la r e n c e s . and
minimum 4 months lease re
qulred Cell 323 1235 aller 4
PM lor appointment__________
• • • IN DELTONA • * *
• • HOMES FOR REN T e •
_________ e • 574-143* e e_________

S7S0mo AM4(47

Will share 7 bdrm home ISO a
wjek plus deposit pays all.
777 *410

93— Rooms for Rent
Christian hostel
TV, kitchen, laundry, maid, bus,
*45wk up 433 5444. 473 3410
Christian Hostel
TV, kllchen, laundry, maid, bus.
345 wk up 473 5441.473 S4I0
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rales
Maid service Cell 323 4507
$ 7 PM 415 Palmetto Ave
SANFORD. Reas weekly a
Atenthly rates Util. Inc, eft.
500Oak
Adults I *41 7141

I Bdrm I or 7 Bath Condo’s
Prlvat* Patio A Carport
Washar/DryarHook up
Baautltul Country Setting
Senior citiens discount
371 1*11
Huge Brand New 7 Bdrm . 3
Balh private apartment with
large rooms Carpets, country
kitchen, appliances 5475
Very Plush I 333 074*

raWAT MINT 7 P J I
U V U B -I1B B
12} U S B JACBPOTS

NEW apts close to shopping end
major hwys Gracious living
In our 1 A 7 Bdrm apts that
oilers:
e Garden or Lott Units
• Washer/Dryer Hook Ups In
our 2 Bdrm apts
• 2 Laundry Facllltias
• Olympic Sire Pool
e Health Club with 2 Saunas
• Clubhouse with Fireplace
• Kitchen A Game Rm
• Tennis. Recquetball,
Volleyball.
• 4 Acre Lake on Property
• Night Patrol 7 Day s a Wk
O P E N ? DAYS A W EEK
1*00 W til St. In Sanford
331 4770 or Orlando 445 043*
Equal Opportunity Housing
2 Bdrm Adults only No pets,
3370 per mon or 3*0 per wk .
security dep 47* 00*5 days or
337 1047 or 377 0757 nights

SI Johns River Large country
home, fireplace, non smokers

Cantetbury*t (hi Crossing

OF CASSCUURY

NEAR LAKE MONROE
NOW LEASINGI
SANFORD LANOI'.G APTS.

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E Airport Blvd
Ph 373 4470 Efficiency. from
3750 Mo 5% discount lor
Senior Cltlten*________________

KIWANIS C U II

SPACIOUS 4 Bdrm., 1 balh
homo with family room, largo
gome room, loti ol storage,
fenced hack yard. 1*5.444.

91—Apartm ents/
House to Share

99—Apartm ent*
Unfurnished / Rent

DoJidda, F I

SANFORD

635 West 25th Street

Private Cottage 1 bdrm., lovely
decor, m aintained lanced
yard! 323 *017

Eip.- Call Ralph 331 *743

RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS
I5 K Ridgewood Ave. Ph JIJ 4470
1-3 41 Bdrm* from S310

Kenmer# Parts, Servlet
Used Washers 33144*7.
MOONEY A P P L IAN CES
•R EN TTO O W N e
Color T V s . stereo*, washers
dryers, retrlgeralor, freezers,
furniture video reeorde-s
Special 1st weeks rent **c
Alternative TV A Appl Rentals
Zayres Shopping Center
_____________ 333 5444
Subtract Those Things
Gathering Dust "Ad" Dollars
To Your Income________________
THE uTED STO R E
Furnituroandappllonces
Com* in and see
• lie E. Ind Street 331 445* •
WILSON M AIER FURN ITURE
111 315 E FIRST ST
377 5477

KISH REAL ESTATE

BLOCK &amp;BRICK MASON

I 7BS CMcai
ICaner PreeMi

imuft vm\tt i urnMn i%»nrt ai rm

★ LANDLORDS *
Tired ol the headaches? Let us
manage your rental pro
parties Professional low cost
service 371 3*33Call anytime
United Sales Assoclalei. Inc.
Prep. Mgmt, Dlv., Realtor
Near 17 *7, I new reconstructed
7 bdrm . 113 bath *525 mo
Flrsl. last, security 14* 4*45
NEW, Beautiful Townhouse. 7
bdrm . !'•&gt; baths, vertical
b lin d s , a ll a p p lia n c e s ,
washer/dryer, sauna. S. pool!
345 4333_________________________
New 7 A I bdrm , 7 bath, CHA,
carpel. 7 car garage, complete
lawn care 5500 A *400 monthly
plus 3300 deposit. No pets.
321 4374,_________________________
Nice 3 Bdrm . t balh, big yard.
3430 month 3300 damage
37! 144* Open on Jan lit,
Santord 7 bedroom, I bath,
r c lr lg e r a t o r . s ie v e , a ir ,
lanced S373 Call 331 OBJ*
Santord Sanora South 3 Bdrm.,
3 bath, lanced yard, kennel, 3
car garage, 377 JI4!or
_____________ 373 340*_____________
Santord 4 bdrm., 3 balh*.
Contra! air, llrtplaca. 1400
mo 47* QMS, 447 3*33___________
Tuscawllla 15 min. from San
lord. TOWNHOUSE 3 master
bdrms . 2 baths, pool, lacuitl,
sauna. Iannis, January V»
prlca.3525 373 7014____________
3 Bdrm . I Bath 1775 a month
ttso damage deposit Call
4*51)7*_________________________
7 Bedroom House
1375 month. *300 deposit.
Call 371 5*44 Evenings

107-M obile
Homes / Rent
Lake Model Mobile Home, nice
ly lurnlshed on Golt Course.
Rent by week, or sell lor **00
down. 31*5 per month Owner
financing Adult*, no pat*
37* *41lor 271 *3*7_____________
Sorrento Kids and pots OK. 7
Bdrm. I acre Needs work.
53504** t i l l

117— Com m ercial
Rentals
SPACE FOR REN Ti oftlce.
retail, end warehouse storage
___________Call 177 *403

121—Condominium
Rentals
NEW, Btiulilul Townhouse 2
bdrm*., 2W baths, all appll
ances, washer, dryer. Sauna.
Pool I 345*311___________________
The Spring*I 1 bdrm , 1 bath. All
•menllie* 1*00 per mo *11
OKI. or 447 J*3J

3 BDRM.. 7 bath. den. large
kitchen, lets *1 cabineti, heat
pump. E C U heals w afer,
thermo windows, lots al cedar.
35*.*04.

R E A L T O R 321-0041

141— Homes For Sale

141— Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY

By Owner- 3 Bdrm . I Balh
Detached garage with utility
room Mayfair Section near
old H o sp ita l W a ll/w a ll
carpet central heal A air
L a r g e tre e sh ad e d lot
Hamilton Elem. School Oil!
P rlc a 1*1.500 Assum able
175.000 113%. Phone 323 7*4*.
alter* 10pm tor appoint
By owner 3 bdrm., 3 bath
Many axlra* VA. FHA or
Conventional 370 000 377 *144
CA SSELB ER R Y 1 Bdrm., IV*
bath ham* overlooking Lake.
Large perch, with spa. Owner
financing. Call ter details.
S40'l.
WALL ST. COMPANY..-Ml-30*1
For Sal* by Owner. Sanford
Nice I Bdrm. home with
living, dining room, paneled
' lamlly room Workshop. C*ll
331 IIP* 144.*00 Firm._________
NEW SM YR N A B EA CtT~ 4
Bdrm., It* Beth 3*0 Fact
Item OCEAN I 34* ,000.
Baachsld* Rtally, REALTORS
*04 417-t ill. Open 7 Oayil
NEW SM YR N A BEA CH - 4
Bdrm . 11* Bath so* Feet
from OCEANI 34*.000.
Baachsld# Realty, REALTORS
*04-417-1111, Opan 7 Days I
SANFORD CHARMER I bdrm .
I bath, 7 car garage Only
332.000 Landstock Brokers
_____________ 345 17*7_____________
Santord By Owner I Beautiful
home beautiful vltw, Lak*
Monro* 7 bdrms, 3 baths,
lush tropical enclosed pool
Hug* lot with well A sprinkler
s y s te m . C o m p le te ly re
modeled throughout New
kllchen. appliances, draperies
* root I 317V.OOO For ep
polntmenl call 377 7*1*
Santord 104 Locust Ave New
CB Home. I bdrm.. t bath,
cantral heat A air, carpet, all
appliance*. Move In todeyt
345.000 terms.
327 154*. or 773 5134
IC R T O B E L IE V E
Check the features. 3 Bdrm , 3
bath, shady lot. hug* great
room with co iy fireplace,
pool, lop location Priced to
3*11 354.500 Call now TO S EE
You'll b* glad you dldt

CALL BART
R E A L ESTATE
REALTOR
333-74**

••STEMPER AGENCY INC.**
LA K E ASHBY- Double Wide
Mobile Home on 73 acres,
lenced with barn. Bring your
hoc**! Only 133.000
SANFORD Mobil* horn* with
additions 3 Bdrm , 1 bath,
lencad. two utility sheds
Country living, yet close In
*33 000
SANFORD Large home with
llra p la c*. In ground pool,
guesl collage You finish and
save Price reduced I
Only *43.300

COLOR TELEVISIO N
RCA 21" Consol* color televl
sion Original prico over saoo
Balance due 1234 00 cash or
lake over payments 370 per
month Still In warranty NO
MONEY DOWN Free home
trial Noobllgatlon

ttatfo*

15 T M f t l I I M m i MCI

Lie. Real Estata Broker
1*4* Santord Ave.

321-0759 E v e 322-7*43

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo

HALL

ttairv me

7%
"7

All YOU NflO
TO KNOW
IN Kf*l ESTATE

STENSTROM
REALTYeREALTOR
Sanford's Salts Leader
WE LIST AN D SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY
ATTRACTIVE 7 Bdrm.. 1 balh
ham* In Weedmtr* Park.
Fireplace, new cabinets, large
screened perch, large corner
let. *44.544
DOLL HOUSE I Bdrm., 11* belli
heme with many cabinets.
Cent, air, and haat, kitchen,
breakfast bar, Insld* utilities
3S4.V0*
ADORABLE. 4 Bdrm.. I bath
home completely refurbished,
spill bdrm. plan., aitr* large
m a ste r b drm . ce u ld be
metherin lew quarters. Cent,
heal air, cabla, utility ream.
154.544
BEAT THE HEAT « Bdrm., 1
balh hem* with spilt Bdrm.
plan eat-ln kitchen, peel utility
roam, cable. Lake M iry
S ch a a l di s t r i ct
L a rs*
a s s u m a b le m o r t g a g e ll
351,teo
U N D ER CONSTRUCTION 1
Bdrm. I balh home with eel in
kllchen greet room with brick
llroplaco, cent. hoot, ilr , brick
end ced ar exterio r may
chaas* yaur awn calor*.
sat.54*.
W ILL BUILD TO SUIT! YOUR
LOT OR OURSI EXCLU SIV E
A G E N T F O R W IN SO N O
DEV. COHP , A CEN TRAL
FLORIDA L EA O ER I MORE
HOME FOR LES S MONCYI
CA LL TOOAYI
oO EN EV A OSCEOLA RD.o
ZON EOFOR M OBILES!
3 Acra Country tract*.
Wall treed *n paved Rd.
14 % Dewn. I I Yrt. at17%l
From 311.5*41
If you aro looking tar a sue
ctsslul carter In Real Esloto.
Slenslrom Ratify It looking
tor you. Call Lot Albright
la ity *1 I I I 1474. Evenings
I I I 3441.

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420
1345 S. Park, Santord
*41 Lk. Mary Elvd. Lk. Mary
Your Horn* It Full ol Hidden
Dollars. Turn Idlt Homs Into
cash lost with a Want Ad
Dial 177 1 4 1 1 . ______________
4 REPOSSESSIONS In Orlando
Irom S 77.500 lo 551.730 Low
cash down. Lake Mary Rtally
REALTO R................. 1717144

SANFORD spacious home In
excellent neighborhood, walk
lo Drug and Crocary store
Owner will hold for 30 yrt. al
11% with sulllclen l down.
STl.tOO

T u e s d a y , J a n . I , 1*11— I B

2 3 1 -C a rs

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

JY1

LUXURY APARTMENTS
Family A Adults Section
Poolside, I Bedrooms.
Master Cove Apartments.
I l l 7*00
____ Open On Weekends.

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

A LLA R E A S
Furnished, and unfurnished, t.
3. 3. A 4 bedrooms Kids. pets.
3700 and up 33* 7700 Fee 375
SavOn Rentals Inc Realtor
E F F IC IE N C Y
No pets, no kids 3735 month.
3700demage I I I 144*
Furn. Apts, ter Senior Cltlient
31* Palmetto Ave
J. Cowan No Phone Call*.
Lovaly efficiency apartment,
perfect lor mature single
person. Private entrance
C o m p le te p r iv a c y . Inc.
utilities 375. a week plus 3150
security deposit Call 323 776*
or JIJ *432
Lovely efficiency apartment,
perfect for mature single
person. Private entrance.
C o m p le te p r iv a c y . In c .
utilities 373. a week plus 1150
security deposit Call 323 224V
or 373 *437._____________________
SANFORDCOURTAPTS.
Studio Apartments
I bedroom apartment
1 Bedroom lurnlshed apt
2 Bedroom apartments
Senior cltlten* discount
Flexible leases
773 3301
I here's Only two things
A Fella’ can trust:
His mothar A want ads I

2IMUr»L,l

Lovely 1 Bdrm apt Wall to wall
c a rp a l, scree n ed porch,
downtown area 1700 sec do
posit Renl 575. week plus
Utilities Call 723 *432 or
___ __________331 4*47
_________

73— Em ploym ent
Wanted

97—Apartm ents
Furnished / Rent

KNIGHTS OF
COLUMBUS

Evening Herald. Sanford, F I.

99—Apartm ents
Unfurnished / Rent

^^all^iT^ljea^Daj^ormjh^^
CLOSE TO LA K E MONROE
Extra clean ham* on hugt loti
Now root I Now carpet! Ouiet
area and country atmosphere.
Only S5I.S40
CALL HAI L

189—Office Supplies
/ Equipm ent

B id Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
'72 Ford Truck
'71 Maverick
'71 Cutlass

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S, S inlord 321-4075
Debary Auto A Marin* Sales
Across the river, top ol hill
17a Hwy 17 n Debary 44* 154*
DON'T SPIN YOUR W H EELS
Gel going with a
Herald Want Ad 377 7411
For Sal*
1*73 BuiCk Skylark
Convertible 323 7*43

D IS C O U N T
AUTO
SA LES
'77 Chrys. Cordoba 5504 dwn.
‘71 MG Midget Only 1444 Own.
'74 Merc. Couper Only *404 dwn.

WE FINANCE
1541 French Ave.............375 )345
Mercedes 740 D 13 Beautiful
black with camel leather int*
rlor 73.000 ml. Perfect condi
tionl 51* *00 323 7414

••USED CAR ••
••YEAR END**
CLEARANCE
EVERYTHING
REDUCED

EX E C U T IV E wood Mies dtti
and chairs, (tike new' 3130
set. ; tile cabinets tiom UO.
oak table 350: . loveteat 340;
dividers 350 each; mlsc 47*
5*44 or 47* 13*1

LA RO E B E A U T IF U L YARD
Detached screened porch, and
wood docking comos with this
1 Bdrm. homo. Gorgeous oak,
weeping willow, and many
shad* treat. 17,144 dawn, S144
Mo. PITI 121)%. No quail
lying. 144.*04.
CALL HALL

195—M achinery/Tools
Give Up Gardening?
Sell no longer needed tools
WITH HE RALO WANT ADSI

GORGEOUS AZALEAS Oaks,
and Palms surround this com
plotoly lurnlshed 1 Bdrm.
home on hsige lot In conve­
nient location. Single car
gar*g*l Only 31t.*00.
CA LL HALL

1154 dwn.
*t44dwn.
SI* dwn

SAVE
BOB DANCE DODGE
Hwy 17 *1.........................371 7734
WE FINANCED
WE BUY CARS!

199— Pets &amp; Supplies
AKC Beagle lor sal* Male. 4
month* 3,15 Call 311 34»*
Ask tor Cathy______________
Free Doberman cross lo good
home Mel* Docked till.
377 3445
Irish Setter and German Shep
herd Free lo good home
L o v a b le and g raat with
children 323 753*or 373 5540
Yorkl* male, AKC papers, ig
mo* old A tiny Toyl I ' j lbs
1150 or best otter Owner
allergic 323 07*4

W* NEED LISTINGS

323-5774
1404HWY 17*2

151— Investment
Properly / Sale

New Dupleies-2 bdim.-2 bith
211— A ntiques/
Collectables

NIc* Well located
Bargain I ....... .........
4** 1H1

153—AcreageLots/Sale

Ocala Antiques Show
January 4.5.6.
City Auditorium

OSTEEN 5 A lots U000 down.
Terms Lok* Privileges No
mobiles Kerry I. Drrggors
Realtor 14* 1*22. ___________
Osteen 10 acres toned mobiles,
nursery + planted pasture
Only Slid mo with 1x000 down.
O. Jeffery Oerland, Realtor.
_____________ 331*44*
Somlnol* Woods Executive
homo silos, 15 acrot. By
owner. Call Or Undo Itt 1070
Aller 5 PM

Frl Sal llno on to»P M
Sunday II noon to 5 P M

Admission 92.50.
[nine show with ad 92 00

The Chapman Shows
213—Auctions
F o il ESTATE
Com m ercial or R aild an tlal
Auctions A Appraisals. Call
Dell s Auction 373 5470

155— Condominiums
C o -O p /Sale

OK Corral Used Car* 111 1*11
1*74 V ista C ru iser Station
Wagon Loaded with equip
menf Immaculate condition
On* previous owner 5150
Cash 33**411
74 Capri Ghla excellent condi
lion, new paint SHOO Reason
3rd car I Call 373 77**
'74 Capri Ghla ticelltn l condi
tlon. new paint. 51500 Reason
3rd car! Call 373 134*

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
B u se s/ V a n s
1*31 Chevy High Tap with New
Conversion. Fully equipped,
lew milts. Only 311.573.
BY FREN CH IE
FR EN C H IES CUSTOM VANS
175* N. Hwy 177*1, Longwood
373 *137............................ 33* 47*3

'74 Ford Pick-Up. Runs Good
Call 333 IIM atter 5.
’?* GMC Sierra Classic *&gt; ton
pickup Loaded Extra clean
3354 down Monthly payments

237— Tra cto rs and
T ra ile rs

219—Wanted to Buy

~ * R ED U C ED TO 344.000 *
Priced to tell now I 7 Bdrm
Townhouse Condomlnum. *11
W 25th St Professionally re
decorated All new cenl heat

Babyt Beds, llre lleri, Clethes,
Playpens. Etc. Paperback
Beaks. J7J 4J7? - 311 *St4
Paying CASH lor
Aluminum, Cans. Copper.
Brass. Lead. Newspaper,
Glass, Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool. *11W 1st
I 5 00 Sat * I 313 1100

_^ndehi *ppll*ncei&gt;J74&gt;*l*^_
157-M obile
Homes / Sale
Buying er Selling
A Mobile Heme*

Ford Tractor 4 cyl. Hydraulics
Engln* good shape Three
Implements also 31150 firm
Chip 371 1400
1*71 Deull Tractor 4004 Runs
good 31300 333 247*
Trailer I X 40 31000 Firm
Optional room addition con
silling bed. balh. living SXXJO
Both lor 33500 You have to
move 173 147*after* 00

223—M iscellaneous

Grifonr Mobil* Homes

Elec concrete miser,Ilk* new
1150 Gasoline driven air com
pressor |I50 Chip 333 7400
MAKE A "SPLASH" with Cash
Irom Want Ad* II Sail those
"Unused" items 1h# EASY
way Call Classified 372 2411
Satellite TV Systems
Complete All you need 100%
Financing No money down
31 344 00 Universal IJI 5744

Area's Larges! Re Sale Dealer
Many avallabl* In Local Parks
EASY FINANCINQ..341-J33 57*4

159— Real Estate
Wanted
Prlvat* party needs
1 e r ) bedraem home.
121 4441

243—Junk Cars
BUY JUNK CARSA TRUCKS
FromllOlo &gt;50or more
Call 371 1414 J23 4317
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A
Used cars.trucks A heavy
equipment 177 5**0______________
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS AUTO PARTS 7*3 4505

CONSULT OUR

BUSINESS SERVICE USTING

CA LL ANYTIME
REALTOR »l-4*tl

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

WE N EED LISTIN O SI

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

&amp; M ?
323-3200
DRIFTWOOD V ILLA O E
ON LA K E MARY BLVD.

NOW H IRIN G!

D .A .V .A .

m

Outstcirulmq Opportunity I m

E X P E R I E N C E D CA S HI ER S,
GAS A T T E N D A N T S AND
FAST FOOD PREP ARA TI ON
( */ / &lt;’ c D o / ) C E N T E R S

IT

I M PA
■ PAYS US
MM JACHPBT
UTS
IACRPST
CKAPTU

6 l O C A T I ONS IN SEMINOLE C O U N l V

MU

• A ulo / Truck Refueling
• F u ll L in e C o n v e n i e n c e S t o r e s
• Fast Food K itc h e n s
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CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT

•
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•

f tied Chicken Suhs Donuts

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
M U MUMMY
• Adult A Family
Sections
* W/O Connections
• Cobl# TV. Pool
* Short Term Leases
Avollabl*
1, Z. 1 It. Apts., I h . fJL
flWB ' 3 N

1505 W. 25th t t

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Accounting A
Tax Service

950 OFF
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V\ FAMILIES WELCOME

Af' PLH A! ION IN PERSON
N I .tuifl Ave S.inltml

1

■ip. Handyman, Rat. Rallabl*.
Fra* E ll. most any job Ball

B A S SOD SA LES Comm. R**.
St Augustin* A Bahia
3400 S Sanford Av* 331 *173
Christian Brat. Lawn Service
Complete Lawn Car*
Rea tenable Rales 333-4401
Lawn Maintenance
Landscaping Bush Hog Mowing
34* 50*5
_____

Building Contractors

TOWER S BEA U TY SALON
FO R M ER LY Harrlatt's Beauty

CO M PLETE BLOG. SERV ICES
•fesidential / Cammtrclal
New Work ar Re mode ling
Wholesale Matal Buildings

Jjrvln£MJd^l*iJUAjRHJOr^

Cleaning Service
MAIDS To Order
For complata guaranteed satis
taction In your horn* or otllc*
cleaning, plu* SJ cash rebate,
call 33* 0400 NOW I

Electrical

Health &amp; Beauty

Home Improvement
Canter's Building A Remodeling
He Job Too Small
111 Burttn Lana, Sanlerd
_____________ 311-4431______________
Fans la Ftn ctt, Cabinet! t*
Cam m adas. F a i r e r ic a s .
*4^ 7 M **M *av# m att*2 ^ ^

Home Repairs

Fr*^l1lm*t*^j^^»111^7l7J

CA RPEN TER
Repairs and
remodeling No |ob loo small.
Call 373 *445.____________________
Maintenance ol all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
and elactrie 373 4034

General Sarvlcas

Landclearing

Professional Chair Calnlng
and ruth saal weaving Reason
able grlcaa. Call M3 4A47.
Rebuilt KIRBY/ lllt.M A HR
Guar Anlead. Kirby Co
714 W. HI 51 371 *440

C A R U T H IR IT R U C K IN O
Fill dirt and land clearing

DON'T SPIN YOUR W H B ILS
Get going withe
Herald Want Ad 373 1411

m -u n

Lawn Service

^Ralas^lTIOIjrCal^nytlm^

Price*. Me jek lee large
er la* small-14hr. Mnrict.

VILLAGE

Handy Man

For Small but Inett*! Monthly
computer lied financial slat
lement. Quarterly return*.
H3 0*a0 Ask tor Frank III

Ovality Work at AttardaM*

Top S a l a r i e s
F r e e L if e &amp; H o s p i t a l i z a t i o n
2 P a id V a c a t i o n s E a c h Year
P r o ! it S h a r i n g P lan
Other B e n e f i t s
M AM
AT

Tht Bast "HOUSE CLEA N ER"
Is a Want Adi
C a llC la ssllla d in T ill.

________14F-3000.________
OENEVALANDCLEARINO
Lot andLand clearing.
1111dirt, and hauling
Call la* m o o r 14* 3/51
LANDCLEARING
F IL L DIRT. BUSHOGGING

CLAY 4 SHALE 1171433

Masonry
B EA L Concral* 3 man qualify
operation Pallot. driveways
D a y s lll 7111 Evas 317 IMI
CONCRETEAN DSTUCCO
All photo*, licensed and Insured
Free Esllmates John 345 *117

Nursing Care
LPN will 4ll with your elderly or
disabled relative In your home
weekdays. Hour, day. Exp.
Rataranca*. 331 111*___________
OUR R A T ES A R EL O W ER
Lakevlew Nursing Center
f If E Second St.. Santord

1114707

Painting
Painting Interior/ Exterior
P A P E R IN G .............DRYW ALL
Rataranca* 4 Reasonable

VERY RELIABLE *04 174113*
BAT YOUR V E G E T A B L E S
Brush your teeth
Andraad your
WANTADS

0

♦

Painting
Responsible Man and halpar will
point your Horn* or Butlnati
•Ic. Give your problems lo ut
WE CA RE. Quality work. 10
yrt. oxp. JV 1047. Lie. coni.

Plastering
• A L L Ptiases of Plastering *
Repair, tlucco. Hard Coat.
Simulated Brick. I l l 5f*l

Plumbing
Rapalr-RamadallnB
E i perfence 4- Reasonable
Fro* Est. Call 71)44*4

Tree Servlet
JOHN A L L IN S LAWN 4 T R E I
Tree removal and trimming.
Law Prices I Fire wead m-siga
E C H O L S T R E E SER V IC E
Fra* Estimate*) Low P rk ts l
Llcemed/lntured/ 77)777*
"Let the Prefesslenalsdalt".
ST U M P O R IN O IN O
F ro *
estimate* I 373 277* day or
night I Echols Tree Service.

Upholstery
F U R N IT U R E R E FIN ItH IN O .
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•
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a b le R a le s
U p h o lste ry
s e r v ic e a v a ila b le . F r e e
estimate* 323 5733. evening*
333 4*17

.

�Tuttdsy, Jan. 1, ItM

iB—Evening Herald, Sanford, El

by Chic Young

Walking Is Fine, But
Work Other Muscles

DEAR DR. LAMB — How walking on the level. That effort
much exercise should a normal, will Increase the size and
healthy peison do each day° I strength of the muscles over the
realize that a person should start front of your thigh, but once you
with a little and gradually add have walked these hills for
more, but when should there be awhile, there will be no further
increase.
a leveling of!?
You can work your heart a
Walking Is a favorite with me.
I am a 45-year-old female and little harder by Jogging, but
each day I try to walk four to five unless that Is your goal. It has
miles, which takes approximate­ few advantages over walking.
ly an hour to an hour and 10 Most people can walk so much
minutes. When 1 first started. 1 longer than they can Jog that a
walked a short distance on flat long walk Is usually morc efPIP YOU MISS
IT'6 OMLY H.-30. YOU
W HAT
areas, then added distance and fectlve In using calories. Jogging
OUT OH A FEW
KEEP ASKING ME THAT
T IM E
some rather steep hills. How a mile will usually use about
MINUTES OF
S IT *
much more distance should I
HAPPY HOUR t
add? Arc the hills good or bad?
YeSTERPAY?
3 Secretary's erWould it be better If 1 Jogged
A C R O SS
Instead of walked? I really do not
wish to build up my leg muscles.
4 Permeates with
1 Pecans
I only want to keep them firm.
liquid
5 Star
My upper arms are not so firm.
9 Cry of a lamb
5 Insect egg
What exercise do you recom­ 12 California
6 East
mend for flabby upper nrms?
7 Animal doctors
county
D E A R R E A D E R - C o n ­ 13 Irritated
8 Espert
gratulations for developing a 14 Abate
9 Enticing
go o d w a l k i n g p r o g r a m . If 15 Of two groups 10 Down with (Ft.
by Art Sansom
THE BO RN LOSER
everyone walked four miles a
2 w d s)
17 Chat
day, we would have far fewer
' 60U . Y . I
fWHAjy€lSK3WAPH.EA^iaMAMP ^ ftt SORRY, HE SENATOR MS
11 French cleric
18 Stir the fire
medical problems. There Is no
w an euew know
lM ED KlUfcCCM.
16 Biblical brother
TO
TD 6EUSDR LAUIEKSOILA^,
definite answer as to how far you 19 Embrace
20 Harangue
v HE WteAWlto.
21
Madras
hemp
should walk. For most people,
22 Hinge points
four miles a day should be 23 Three (pref |
24 Farewells
24
College
degree
adequate. However. If a person Is
25 Pastoral deity
(abbr)
able to walk farther and wants to
26 Striped fish
27
The
two
lose excess body fat. then the
28 Pastime
together
longer the distance, the greater
30 Inner (comb
the benefits. How much you 29 To the
form)
sheltered side
should do depends a lot on your
31 Mild oath
32 Pulled (si)
goals.
33 Boat parts
Walking will not build up the 34 Picnic
trunk muscles or the arm and 36 City in Oregon
shoulder muscles. While you get 37 Songstress Lee 1 2
3
a lot o f benefits, including 38 Large knife
AS A
PO YOU '
eliminating excess body fat. you 39 Cush's son
12
MATTER OF
A5VW" ANY
cannot strengthen, firm or 41 Oeity
FACT. I OO.
CU*e
FOX
it
0ECAUSS y W C A A
enlarge muscles you don't use.
in s o m n ia r
jo e U tA v r
42 College degree
Add exercises that use the rest
(abbr)
IB
o f your body, using small
44 Actress
weights or any device that
Redgrave
P ry e
enabl es you to work your
r pee*
46 Gndder’s bane
muscles
against
resistance.
CALLING
£vexvON£.
Stretching exercises, to maintain 49 Poetry foot
_ e e e e ie r
your flexibility, should also be a 53 12. Roman
54 Peachlike fruit
part of your program.
Your leg muscles will not get 56 Highway curve
any larger If you walk still 57 Outer (pref)
farther. Muscle size depends on 58 German
by Howie Schneider
negative
contracting against resistance.
EEK A M EEK
Repeating the same exercise 59 — depee
47
«e
over and over, as In walking. Just 60 Average (comp
[
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M E N T O N H O W fTS G 0 M U A J 1 A M IC E D A Y
SCIENTISTS C A N 'T A G R EE O N
durance capacity, not Its size or 61 lath
E N D T H O U G H ...
J
*•
strength.
HCW TH E UNIVERSE B E G A N
The hills arc fine, since you
gradually trained to be able to
walk up them. That does make
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MR. M EN A N D LITTLE M IS S

in which
A ^ Y T H lH G
might happen

D ear D i a r y ,
This is the
beginning of a
wfiole new .year

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60 A ^ B A P .'V e y O N E O F
THE5E NlEWALL-PUffffcSE
MULTIVITAMINS,

FOR
PLANTS.

|gq66'ftMMAff|

By Jam es Jacoby
Just to see how your declarer
play Is going to be In the new
year, use your thumbs to cover
the East and Wes t cards.
Partner's Jump to three spades
was a limit raise, not completely
forcing, but since your hand was
worth a sound opening bid, you
were happy to bid the game.
The contract Is certainly OK
and probably hinges upon a
heart finesse, but let’s see how
the defense develops.
The opening lead Is the king of
diamonds, which holds the trick.
N e x t c o m e s the q u e e n o f
diamonds, which Is overtaken by
East with the ace. making your
Jack good. Now the six of hearts
Is led by East. What's your
pleasure?
If you went up with the heart

ace and tried to ditch dummy's
other heart on the Jack o f
diamonds, go right to the foot of
the class. As you can sec If your
thumbs have now gotten weary.
West started with K-Q doublcton
of diamonds and will trump your
Jack with the lowly six of spades.
Subsequently you will have to
lose a heart and your contract.
There is really no reason to
assume a silly mistake on the
part o f the opponents. West
could certainly have led a small
card In diamonds to his partner
at trick two If he had one.
Credit East with a good de­
fensive play. He gave you. the
declarer, an option In the play
that can result in your going set
in a contract that will almost
always be made when the king
of hearts Is In the East hand.

P»si
I’ i u

J*
Pau

Pm *
Pau

Opening lead: 4 K

HOROSCOPE

ARE Y 00

THAT m i SOME NEW V EAR'S
CELEBRATION L A S T ^ / J^

jrOING TO
G ET JP
TOPAV?

NOMW-ROFm
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I NOT FEELING)

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HAVetoJOfttPEftEP
'__ PBFECTING?___ ✓

H) C O M PE R E ?
ittr lH P S IK lfe j

put out effort.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Today. If you discuss something
you believe In with an associate
whose outlook Is limited and
TO UR BIR TH D AY
negative. It will Instill self-doubts
JA N U A R Y 2. 1988
This coming year you arc In you.
A R IE S (March 21-Aprll 19)
likely to do things on a much
grander scale than you have In Beware of tendencies today to let
the past. This will be true of both opportune developments slip
your business and social Inter­ through your fingers, cither
because o f you r own careests.
C A PR IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan. lessness or that of an associate.
TAU R U S (April 20-Mr.y 20)
19) Even though you may be In a
gregarious mood today, being at Disagreements will not be rea gathering where there Is some­ solved today If you close your
one present you don't like could mind to the other guy's point of
spoil your fun. Your Astro-Graph view. Remember there are two
predictions for the new year can sides to every coin.
help guide you to happier tomor­
rows. Mall $1 to Astro-Graph.
Box 489. Radio City Station.
New York. NY 10019. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Your luck and good looks will
carry you only so far today, so
don't rely too heavily upon them
to achieve your alms. You must difficult to get along with today

60AAY TO TH06E PEOPLE
KEEP YOU ARE YOUR C~
WAITING- CHILPAEN? L ,

NO- THEY'RE NOT
VERY NICE, ANNIEMY FAULT, I'M gr
AFAAlP- THOR
MOTHER m S AN I
m s e l - &amp; z^

ru a r
[mEPiC

THEY 5EEMEP
HINP O'
UPSETWHAT Pl(7
they m rr? -

Use your churtn and humor to
smooth over the rough spots.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
may be deprived of success
today If you lack consistency,
Don't call It quits Just because
the going gets a little tough.
V IR Q O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
M on itor you r c o n v ersa tio n
carefully today so that you don’t
unintentionally say something
harsh thal could ofTend your
listeners. T h in k before you
speak.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Prudence Is required today if you
hope to get proper mileage out of
the resources you have on hand,
Avoid temptations to splurge.

�</text>
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                    <text>—

77th Year, No. 114—Wednesday, January 2, 1985—Santord, Florida

—

Price

25 Cents

S e m in o le T o

327 D eaths N ationw ide
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer

See TOLL, page 2A

481 2e0)

$650,000 At Stake

County Escapes
Roads Carnage
No tralTIc falalltlcs were reported
early today In Seminole County as the
four-day New Year holiday ended,
although eight deaths were reported In
the central Florida area and 21
slatcwldc. according to the Florida
Highway Patrol.
Nationwide, the New Year’s holiday
traffic death toll stood at 327 as bitter
weather plagued motorists at the close
of the long weekend that began 6 p.m.
Friday and ended midnight Tuesday.
Of the eight deaths In central Florida,
two occurred In Orlando, two In
Daytona Beach and four In Brevard
County, according to Sgt. Art Brown.
FHP public Information officer.
Brown said two of the eight deaths
were alcohol related.
During the four-day period, officers
made about 35 DUI arrests In Seminole
County. 12 by the FHP. Brown said. In
the seven-county central Florida area
covered by the patrol, troopers arrested
85 people for driving under the Influ­
ence. he said. The FHP division of
central Florida covers Seminole. Or­
ange. Lake. Brevard. Osceola. Volusia,
and Flagler counties.
Brown said about 50 percent of the
traffic fatalities In Florida during the
four-day holiday were alcohol-related.
The Influence of alcohol In half the
holiday accidents In Florida Is higher
than the Influence of alcohol In traffic
fatalities throughout the rest of the year
In the state. Brown said.
During the year. 40 percent of the
traffic fatalities In Florida Involved
alrohol. he said adding that about 50
percent of the accidents nationwide
Involve drinking.
Though the holiday season ended
without a fatality In Seminole County,
there .were 42 traffic fatalities In the
county during 1984. Brown said.
In 1983 there were 26 traffic-related
deaths In the county, he said.
“ I would attribute the Increase to the
population growth primarily and to the
high tourist count. Seminole County Is
growing by leaps and bounds." Brown
said.
In the seven-county area covered by
the patrol In Central Florida, the traffic
death toll for 1984 was 480. up 64
deaths from the 1983 count of 416.
Nationwide, New Year's Day. travel­
ers' warnings for freezing rain or snow
were posted Tuesday In Nebraska.
Iowa. Wlscjnsln. Kansas and Illinois.
Winter storm watches were Issued In
Oklahoma. Michigan. New Hampshire
und Maine.

(USPS

B uck O d d s

For

B lo c k G r a n t
By Donna Estes
Herald Staff Writer

H*r*M

Sy O rrgory 0«hni

'S hooting' Speeders
“ Can you shoot people with It?" E ric Curtis, Sanford M iddle School
7th grader, queries Seminole County Sheriff's Deputy Paul Schuck.
Schuck was checking for speeders with his radar gun at the 25 mph
school zone on French Avenue this morning as students returned to
school after their winter holiday.

C A D D F o u n d e r O n S ta te P a n e l
The founder o f a child support
enforcement group active In Seminole
County has been appointed by Gov.
Bob Graham to the Florldu State
Commission on Child Support.
Marge Van Brackle of Ormond Beach,
founder and president o f Children
Against Deadbeat Dads, Joins the
commission charged to determine the
state's effectiveness In securing support
and parental Involvem ent for all
children.
The committee's report and recom­
mendations are to be made Oct. 1. The

new commission Is required by the
Federal Child Support Enforcement
Program.
Meanwhile. Dick Batchelor, vice
chairman of the state council of the
Governor's Constituency for Children,
will be guest speaker at CADD'a 7 p.m.
meeting. Jan. 10. at Orlando's Bureau
of Recreation. 649 W. Livingston St.
The meeting Is open for residents of
Seminole and Orange counties who are
Interested or are having problems with
collecting court-ordered child support.
— Donna Bates

Proxmire: Lay
Off The Limos
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. William Proxmire.
D-Wls., says government spending could be cut
$3.4 million annually by putting the brakes on
chauffeur service for many administration of­
fic ia ls . In clu d in g budget d ire c to r David
Stockman.
"I huve repeatedly urged this administration
and its predecessor to simply abide by the law.
which restricts the use of door-to-door chauffeur
service to the president, heads of Cabinet
agencies, diplomatic personnel and several desig­
nated officials." he said.
"Yet. since my first survey of this practice In
1977. the number of pampered officials has
continued to climb until my 1982 survey showed
a minimum of 190 federal employees receiving
such coddling."
Proxmire said at an annual cost of $32,000 for
each chauffcured official. "This taxi meter rang
up a bill of $3.4 million for the taxpayers In 1982
alone.
"How can this administration ask Congress ...
to cut nutritional supplements for poor, pregnant
women at the same time that the taxpayers
chaufTeur high federal officials who can well
afford to drive their own car to work?"
Proxmire said a General Accounting Office
ruling In 1983 holds all federal officials account­
able for strictly adhering to the law on chaffcured
limousines as of Jan. 3. 1985.
The Wisconsin senator said he Is writing to the
heads of all Cabinet agencies to make sure that
past exceptions are eliminated.
"T h e time to put the brakes on this illegal
practice Is long overdue." Proxmire said.

Although the chances of Seminole
County receiving a Community Devel­
opment Block Grant of $650,000 from
the state "are slim.” according to a
county planner, a public hearing on an
applications for the funds Is scheduled
for 7 p.m.. Thursday, at the County
Services Building In Sanford.
Planner Anthony VanDcrworp said
Seminole County will be competing
with 130 small cities and counties In
the state for a piece of the money and
only 10 to 25 projects will be funded.
If a grant Is approved for Seminole
County, however, the money will be
used to provide paving and drainage In
the Roscland Park area, east of the
Sanford city limits.
The Seminole County Community
Development Block Grant Citizens'
Advisory Task Force Is holding the
public hearing on the application for
the proposed projects. VanDcrworp
said. The hearing Is a requirement of
state law to assure that no persons will
be displaced from their homes as a
result of the Improvements.
Specific projects In Roseland Park
between Celery Avenue and state Road
46 Include the paving of seven streets.
North. Burrows. Hugh. Third. Second.
South and Roseberry Lane, and con­
struction of a closed drainage system
for the area.
The dirt streets now drain Into open
ditches, he said.
The county will have to acquire
through purchase or donation 3.7 acres
within the area for a drainage retention
pond and a 25-fool half right-of-way on
South Street.
Roseland Park Is northw est of
Midway, another community plagued
with drainage problems.
The $650,000 Is budgeted as follows:
$162,478 for drainage Improvements:
$209,444, p avin g Im provem en ts:
$60,000, engineering: $2,000. property
appraisal and $40,000, administration.
Members of the task force arc:
Carlcton Edge, Rev. Andrew Evans.
Dorothy Norris. Ethel Mason. Bonnie

Brown. Christine Watkins and Deacon
Dell.
VanDcrworp says while "chances of
gaining the grant appear slim, there Is
a chance."
The grant application is directed to
the Florida Department of Community
Affairs under the Commercial and
Neighborhood Revitalization category
of the Small Cities Community Devel­
opment Block Grant Program. All of the
grant funds would benefit low and
moderate Income families, the applica­
tion says.
The Roseland Park area was chosen
by the special committee for the
Improvements because the available
grant money Is sufficient to do the
entire project there and thus solve the
drainage problem. VanDcrworp said.
Since the application can show that a
drainage solution would be provided,
the Roscland Park area has a better
chance In the statewide competition for
the grant.
The grant funding available Is not
sufficient, he said, to solve severe
d rain age problem s In areas like
Mldwuy. The estimated cost of provid­
ing u drainage solution In Midway Is $3
million and to do even the smallest
sub-basin there would cost about
$800,000. he sutd.

S t ill T im * To

Post 20t Letter
First class postage for a I os.
letter will go from 20 cents to 22
cents February 17. There’s still
time to get In on the lower rate.

Tumor Shrivels; Firefighter Back On Job

Friends 'Gave Him The Edge'
By Rick Brunson
Herald 8taff Writer

H«r«M Plwt* by Ortgory 0«Sni

Harvey’s Hopeful
Long w ood C it y C o m m is s io n e r H a rv e y
Smerllson, bones up on the city codes In
preparation for tonight's special meeting at
which he Is expected to be named m ayor by
the five-m em b er board. Follow ing the
swearing In of commlssloners-elect L a rry
Goldberg and P erry Faulkner at 7:30 p.m.
at city hall, the com m ission will select
m ayor and deputy m ayor and adopt rules of
procedure.

Four months ago 22-ycar-old
Seminole County Firefighter
Frank Kucera faced a uncertain
future. Growing In Ills chest was
a massive tumor, tangled around
his heart and lungs, threatening
his life.
Last week. Kucera and his
doctor had to squint at an X-ray
to find what was left of It.
After numerous gut-wrcnchlng
chemotherapy treatments, the
tumor had shriveled to such a
small size, It was not seen on the
X-ray. Kucera said.
Kucera. overjoyed at the news,
didn't waste time. He called his
battalion chief ut county fire
station 35 and said he wanted to
return to work.
After Chief Joseph Wallers
had Kucera checked out by a
department doctor, the young
firefighter was back on the
tanker truck, riding calls with
the company.
He Is still not completely out of
danger and must continue his
trea tm en ts until February.
Kucera said doctors told him the
cancer could return and that he
must have regular check-ups for

Frank
Kucera

years to come.
But he Is still ecstutic about his
progress. Most of his brown hair,
w h ich he lost due to the
chemotherapy, has grown back.
Ills weight is also hack up —
from 155 pounds to his normal
180.
"I'm starting to gel a belly
now," said Kucera. who Is also a
part-time police officer for the
Longwood Police Department.
"I'll have to start working nut to
gel rid o f It."
He said he has been sustained
through the ordeal by the love of
family and friends and his own
plucky attitude. Nevertheless It
has been a long four months.

S e c o n d S u sp e c t J a ile d In C lin ic B o m b in g s
PENSACOLA (UPl) - Federal agents have
arrested a second suspect on charges of bombing
four Pensacola-area abortion clinics — three of
them Just 15 minutes apart eurly Christmas Day.
James Thomas Simmons. 21. Cantonment,
was arrested and charged Tuesday with violating
federal gun control and explosives laws and faces
a hearing today before a U.S. Magistrate.
Simmons was charged with the Christmas Day
bombings and a June bombing at an abortion
clinic Just two days after federal agents arrested
21-year-old constru ction w ork er Matthew
Goldsby. also of Cantonment, on the same
charges.
No one was Injured In the Christmas Day
blasts, but they caused more than $400,000 In
damages. One of the clinics bombed Christmas

If a grant it approved for
Saminola County tho monay
will bo utod to provide
paving and d ra in a g e in tho
R oseland P a rk a re a .

Day — The Ladles Center — had also been
bombed last June.
Federal agents said Goldsby confessed to
detonating pipe bombs at the abortion clinics,
which had been the frequent target of peaceful
picketing by anti-abortion groups.
Goldsby told agents he was heeding the law of
God rather than the law of the U.S. Supreme
Court, which legalized abortion In 1973.
Goldsby Insisted he had acted alone, but agents
believed others might be Involved after finding In
Goldsby's house some T-shirts with the words
"Protector of the Code." along with a mask-llke
emblem.
"It means Mr. Goldsby may have belonged to
something." said Jack Klllorln. chief of public

afTalrs for the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol. Tobocco.
and Firearms. "W e ’re loooklng to sec If one or two
other people assisted hint at some point.
"Th e entire significance of "Protector of the
Code" Is not entirely clear." Klllorln said. "But
it's not a name that appears In relation to
anything but the bombings by Goldsby."
ATF agent Dan Conroy, who Is directing the
bombings Investigation, said he did not believe
Simmons or Goldsby might be connected to other
bombings of abortion clinics around the nation.
Earlier Tuesday, a blast lore through an
abortion clinic In Washington D.C. That brought
the number of bombing or arson cases Involving
abortion clinics across the nation to 30 since
1 9 8 2 -2 4 of them In 1984.

Doctors told him In September
his heart was enlarged. He
complained o f chest pains one
day while fighting a fire, so his
superiors sent him to a doctor
who took X-rays and said he
probably had a heart murmur.
"Th ey thought my heart had
enlarged. Actually. It was the
tumor next to my heart that was
so large."
After he learned of the tumor.
Kucera und Ills mother. Mary,
went to a cancer specialist In
Rochester. N Y After examining
him. the doctor (old Kucera he
had a year to live.
T h e y r e tu r n e d to t h e ir
Longwood home and he started
the treatments.
Losing his hair and weight —
In addition to being constantly
nauseous — was demoralizing,
he said. But he decided to busy
himself to keep his mind off his
Illness. He started hellcopter­
fly in g lesson s b ecau se he
believed he would be around
long enough to sec the day when
the fire department would get a
helicopter, and he wanted to be
able to operate It.

See FRIENDS, page 2A

TODAY
Action Reports ..... 2A
Bridge............ ..... SB
Calendar........ ..... 5A
Classifieds..... ...6,7B
Aiiilra
fin
Crossword..... ..... SB
Dear Abby..... ..... 2B
Deaths........... ..... 2A
Dr. Lamb......
Editorial........ ..... 4A

Florida.......... .......3A
Horoscope.... ...... SB
Hospital....... .......3A
Nation........... .......2A
People............... 1,2B
Sports................ 6-SA
Television.... .......3B
Weather....... .......3A
World............ ......?A

M issing Eastern A irlines let found In
Ancles, south of L a Paz. Story, 6B.

t
.1

�3A— Evening H erald. Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 3, l f »

NATION
IN BRIEF
Trade Issue Highlights
Reagan -Nakasone Meeting

i

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPI) — In his meeting today with
Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhlro Nakasone. President
Reagan hopes to persuade Japan to open talks on chipping
away trade barriers now frustrating U.S. exporters.
The two were meeting In Los Angeles, a session
requested by Nakasone and the fifth In two years between
the leaders of the two largest exporting countries In the
world.
American officials said Reagan would urge Japan to take
some sort o f action, probably a formal set of talks on
specific problems, but would not "get tough" with
Nakasone.
Rather than pressure Japan to further limit exports of
cars and steel to the United States — Issues already under
discussion — Reagan was expected to urge Nakasone to
drup a myriad o f regulations and tariffs that work to keep
competitive American products out of his country.
Of particular interest to the United States are Japanese
barriers on the Import of American computer software,
telecommunications equipment, forest products, tobacco
and other farm products.

To Buy Or Not To Buy?
WASHINGTON lUPl) - Would-be buyers
of houses and cars will have to wait and sec
what Interest rates will do In 1985 because
there Is more disagreement than usual
among the experts.
Interest rates are at the mercy of an
unusually large number of Imponderable
factors, mainly the price of oil, sentiments of
foreign Investors about the dollar. Federal
Reserve policy and the strength of the
economy, analysts say.
"Th ey may very well continue on a roller
roaster downward ride.” Commerce De­
partment chief economist Robert Ortner
said. That means Interest rates could well go
up again as the roller coaster climbs the
heights then perhaps drnp lower than their
current level some time In the future.
Year after year of large deficits In the
federal budget and trade balance have
finally turned foreign Investors Into a major

factor Influencing U.b. Interest rates. Al­
though they arc still pumping money Into
the American economy, they would be
sorely missed If they started taking money
out.
The capital that foreigners provide. at­
tracted by high Interest rates and U.S.
growth prospects, helps finance the amount
of spending Americans do In excess of what
they produce.
"Foreign Investors, at the moment, are
the biggest cloud on the horizon." Ortner
said.
In his last speech of 1984, FcUcnJ Reserve
Board chairman Paul Volcker described It a
little differently. "W e are addicted to foreign
borrowings to reconcile our deficit."
Another cloud looks much the same yet
has a subtly different composition. It Is the
level of anxiety In the financial markets
generated by the amount o f foreign in­
vestment and the distortions being caused

by the high budget deficits.
The worries themselves could force
long-term rates up In the coming year,
analysts say. as lenders tack on a larger
uncertainty premium to their rates.
Conventional mortgages, with a fixed rale
for 30 years, averaged 12.7 percent at year's
end and are likely to fall further In 1985 If
only because they take a while to catch up
to the rest of the money markets.
The bench mark prime rate charged
customers by commercial banks fell to an
18-month low of 10.75 percent.
The Fed's discount rate the banks
themselves have to pay — the only rate set
by a government entity and not the market
for money - was pegged at 8 percent In
December, a six-year low.
Then around Christmas the short-term
rates suddenly stopped falllii^' adding even
more unwelcome uncertainty to the 1985
outlooks of the professional forecasters.

Interior Chief Clark Resigning
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UP!) - Interior Secretury William
Clark, a "God-fearing Westerner" who loyally went to
Washington at the request of his friend Ronald Reagan, has
resigned to return to his California ranch.
The White House said Tuesday night Clark, 53. who took
over the Interior Department 15 months ago from the
ousted James Watt, asked Reagan to let him leave the
Cabinet "In two or three months" because his work was
completed.
Clark will be the second Cabinet official to leave the
administration. Education Secretary Terrel Bell said In late
November he would leave his post to return to private life.
Clark, the lawyer son of.a California police chief who
wears cowboy boots with his dark pin-striped suits, told the
president he wanted to go home to his 888-acre barley and
cattle ranch In central California.
White House spokesman Peter Roussel said the ad­
ministration had not yet chosen a successor for Clark. The
post traditionally Is held by a Westerner and The
Washington Post reported in today's editions that possible
replacements are Energy Secretary Donald Hodel. Sen.
Paul Laxalt. R-Nev.. Rep. Dick Cheney. R-Wyo.. and Rep.
Manuel Lujan Jr.. R-N.M.

Beware Of Fatty Foods
WASHINGTON (UPI) — "Eat a bagel Instead of a Danish"
Is one suggestion a consumer group ofTers to help New
Year's dieters stay away from foods containing hidden fat.
The group also recommends popcorn over peanuts and
glngersnaps Instead of chocolate chip cookies, and fruit
and vegetables Instead of most anything.
Public Voice for Food and Health Policy, a consumer
research and education organisation, says dietary fat
should be cut to reduce calories and to lessen the chances
of heart problems and other major diseases.
Public Voice, in particular, warns against foods contain­
ing hidden fat and recommends cutting down on Its major
sources, such os luncheon meats; milk and cheese
products; peanuts and other nuts: doughnuts, cookies and
cake and mayonnaise and salad dressings.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Priest's Murder Aimed
A t Discrediting Jaruxelskl?
TORUN, Poland (UPI) — The trial of four secret
policemen charged in (he death o f a pro-Solidarity priest
could reveal the crime was aimed at discrediting Polish
leader Gen. Wojctech Jaruxelskl, court sources say.
Three officers accused o f killing the Rev. Jerxy
Poplelusko In October and a colonel charged with aiding In
the crime were to return to court In the northern city of
Torun today. The trial began Dec. 28.
The court sources said Tuesday one o f the defendants,
Col. Adam Plctrusxka, 47, might give testimony In the next
few days linking himself with hardline elements In the
Polish government that engineered the plot.
Observers have said a Moscow-backed faction within the
Communist Party had ordered the priest's death to
discredit Jaruzelskl, whom It considered too soft on the
outlawed Solidarity trade union.

Lebanon Moves To Secure Road
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — The Lebanese army ordered
Its security forces to begin the first phase of an operation
today to reopen a key coastal road that links Beirut to
Israeli front lines in southern Lebanon.
The Cabinet, meanwhile, meeting for Its weekly session
today was expected to discuss ways to end protests by
relatives of Lebanese missing In nine years of civil war,
official sources said.
The demonstrators, who blocked roads between the two
halves of Beirut for (he sixth straight day Tuesday, have
vowed to continue their protests until the fate o f 2,000
kidnap victims was publicized. Most are believed to be
dead.
Despite New Year's Day fighting that reportedly left one
person killed and 12 wounded, army commanders ordered
the reopening of the coastal highway leading to Israelioccupied southern Lebanon under a month-old Syrianbacked plan.

U.S. Embassy Attacked
TOKYO (UPI) — A leftist group fired three small,
homemade rockets at a U.S. consulate south of Tokyo
Tuesday but a U.S. embassy official reported no Injuries or
damage In the New Year's Day attack.
The rockets were fired at the consulate at Kobe, 220
miles southeast of Tokyo. Two o f the homemade devices
exploded, police said. A third landed near the consulate but
did not go off.
The consulate was unoccupied at the time o f the attack
and no one waa Injured, an embassy official said.
The Chukaku-ha — which translates as "middle core
faction" — telephoned the Kyodo news agency and said It
fired the rockets to protest the summit meeting between
President Reagan and Prime Minister Yasuhlro Nakasone.

H»r»M Photo Sr Orogory Gohni

Sobering Reminder
F o r New Y e a r's revelers who m ay have had too much to
drink and then got behind the wheel, this display at M ik e's

Flna station on U.S. Highway 17-92 In Casselberry was a
graphic rem inder of what could have happened.

C o u p le C h a r g e d W it h C h ild A b u s e
An Orlando woman and a
L o n gw o o d man h ave been
charged with child abuse and
c o m m i t t i n g a le w d a n d
lascivious act In the presence of
the woman's 6-year-old daugh­
ter.
Altamonte Springs police re­
port arresting the pair Monday
after being called to the Day's
Inn on Wymore Road by two
private detectives who had been
following the woman at the
request of her husband. ,,
The girl's father. Juan Fouces
of Orlando, who is separated
from his wife, hired the de­
tectives because he was con­
cerned about the child's welfare,
a police report said.
The private eyes told police
that at about 9:30 p.m. Monday
the couple checked Into the
motel with the girl and left her
alone In the room, the report
said.

A c t io n R e p o rts
★ F ire s
★ C o u rts
★ P o lic e
Rehabilitative Services counsel­
or.
The girl claimed that her
mother had sex with the man as
the child watched from a bed
beside the couple's in the motel
room on Sunday evening, the
police report said.
Paloma Marie Fouces, 26, of
Orlando, was being held In the
Seminole County Jail today lieu
o f $8,000 bond. Steve Raymond
Felices, 33. o f 132 Wisteria
Drive, Longwood. was released
on $5,000 bond and Is scheduled
to appear In court Jan. 21.

The detectives told police the
TIE THEFT
trio had also been at the motel
A Casselberry man charged
Sunday night. Police knocked on with trespassing and grand theft
the door of the room and got no after reportedly stealing railroad
response. They entered the room tics In Lake Mary has been
using a key provided by the released on $500 bond.
motel manager and found Va­
Lak e M ary p o lic e re p o rt
nessa Fouces alone and asleep. searching for and not finding the
The child was awakened and suspect after being dispatched to
taken Into police custody, the Seaboard Coastline property on
report said.
Tilton Road at about 12 p.m.
When the couple returned to Monday.
the room at about 11:56 p.m.
The officer returned to the site
they were arrested, the charges at about 2:10 p.m., spotted a
stemming from their leaving man with a pickup truck and
Vanessa alone and from state­ trailer which held nine railroad
ments she reportedly made to ties, a police report said.
police and a state Health and
T ies had reportedly been

stolen from the same site on Dec.
24 and w ere sold to J&amp;W
Landscaping for $5 each. They
are valued at $15 each, the
report said.
Larry Dee Suggs, 20, of *200F
Georgetown Drive, was arrested
at 2:14 p.m. Monday.

the 7:15 a.m. crash which oc­
curred when June F. Boyles, of
230 Ib is R oad. L on gw ood .
tu r n e d th e bu s le ft o n to
Longwood Lake Mary Hoad from
cou n ty Road 427, s h e riff's
spokesman John Spolski said.
The driver of the 1973 Quick
SCHOOL BUB CRASH
Involved- In the crash. Keith
D epu ties say a S em in o le Roger Tinker of 105 Bums St..
County school bus driver will be Longwood. received bruises to
charged with failure to yield his head, but was not hospi­
after making a left turn In front talized. Spolski said.
o f o n c o m in g t r a f f i c n ea r
Tinker’s car was totaled and
Longwood where the bus col­ there was minor damage to the
lided with a car today.
bus. Ms. Boyles was not Injured,
No youngsters were Injured In he said.

...Friends
Continued from page 1A
W hen he w a sn 't k eepin g
himself occupied, hls friends
from fire stations across the
county, as well as the Sheriff's
Department, kept him hotfooting
around town to see movies and
to eat out. They also raised
$3,000 at a bowling tournament
fo r h is m e d ic a l e x p e n s e s.
Another woman at the county
courthouse raffled a Cabbage
Patch doll for $700 and gave him
the money.
Mrs. Kucera said her son’s
friends gave him the edge he
needed to beat hls Illness.
"Thank God for the friends
we've had," she said.
Walters said he Is glad to have
Kucera back on the job, adding
that hls presence was sorely
missed.

AREA DEATHS
NORA LEE BURCH

RUTH L. DePOY
Ruth Leona DePoy, 67, of 342
N. Credo St.. Longwood, died
Tuesday at her home. Bom Feb.
12. 1917 In Willow. Okla.. she
moved to Longwood from Peoria,
111. in 1969. She was a retired
food service dietitian, a Protes­
tant, and a member of the
AARP.

Cox-Parker Guardian Funeral
Home, Winter Park, Is In charge
of arrangements.

She Is survived by her sister,
Mrs. Abble Bailey. Longwood.
B aldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Forest City, Is In charge
of arrangements.

m id m orning kxtsy. In H r^ o h r m o rk .lt
Chong. throughout Mw doy P r in t do not
Includ. r . 1.11 m ortvg/m orkdopo

SM
Atlantic Sank................................34
BarnaN Sank.............................a m
Flrsl Fidelity SAL........................... »
Florida Power

Aik
MV*
*)H
ft.

supermarket manager and a
Baptist.
Survivors Include his wife,
Winifred; daughter. Maureen
Marshall. Winter Springs; two
brothers, Josclyn. New York
City. Gladstone, Montego Bay.
Jam aica; tw o sisters, Rose
Bowen and Myrtle Hill, both of
Kingston: one grandchild.
B aldw ln -F alrch lld Funeral
Home. Forest City. Is In charge
o f arrangements.

Con tinned from page 1A
California topped the nation
with 45 traffic fatals. Texas
followed with 31.
Florida 21.
Michigan 19, New York. North
Carolina. Illinois and Georgia 12.
The National Safety Council
estimated up to 450 people
would die on the nation's roads
during New Year's holiday, the
same estimate given during the

OSWALD H. DIXON

A Light.....................
MW 44th
Fla. Progress. ............................»W f l h
Freedom Sovlngt................. ....... KR. II Va
MCA...........................................14Vs JJ
Hugha* Supply............................. I7la 17*
M o rrlio n 'i............ - ................. . I4H 17
NCR Carp............. - ......................74 Ml*
Plotter..................................... XSW *»»
Scatty*-................ - ................. isu in*
Southeast Bank............................SSI* B h
Sun Banks.................................. I»* X&gt;H

p r r ln r i

Rut

the

Christmas weekend death toll
surpaased the council's estimate
by 70.

E iv n in g H erald
I US PS

4*1 110)

Wednesday, January J, IM S
Vol. 77. No. 114
Published Daily end Sunday, escept
Saturday by The Sanford Herald,
Inc. Me N. French Ave., Sanford,
Fla. 11771.
Secend Class Peslaga Paid at Sanford.
Florida 11771
Heme Oellveryi Week, St.It; Month.
54.75; 3 Months, 114.15; » Months.
117.00; Veer. tSI.OO. By M ail: Week
51.St; Month, 54.00; 1 Months.
510.00; 0 Months, 512.50; Veer,
544.00.
Phene 12*5) 2121*11.

Mr. Oswald H. Dixon. 72. of
601 Orchid Lane. Altamonte
Springs, died Friday at his
home. Bom Jan. 7, 1912 In
Kingston. Jamaica, he moved to
Altamonte Springs from New
York In 1977. He was a retired

STOCKS
H m m quoit Hon* provMW by m .m b*rt of
MW N tH on*l A u o clo tlo n o l S o cu rlh n (Meiers
representative In S rd M W p r in t »t ol

...Toll

-C h r is tm a s

Mrs. Nora Lee Burch, 84. of
1660 Tuskawilla Road, Oviedo,
died Tuesday at Am ericana
Health Care Center, Winter Park.
Bom Oct. 9, 1900 In Columbia.
Ala., she moved to Oviedo from
Wauchula In 1940. She was a
homemaker and a Methodist.
Survivors Include two sons.
Travis K., Winter Park, and
Ward, Oviedo: four brothers.
Horace A. Ward. Jacksonville.
R ob ert W ard, S y lv a , N.C.,
Lomax Ward. Headland. Ala.,
Royce Ward, Mississippi; sisters.
Mrs. Cornelia Eubanks, Panscy,
Ala., Mrs. Pearl Smith, Cot­
tonwood, Ala.; three grandsons;
eight great-grandchildren.

spirit" of the firefighters wht
rallied behind their company
tanker man.
"W e're hoping and praying for
hls continued recovery." Walters
said.
Meanwhile. Kucera doesn’t
show any signs of planning ta
slow down. He spent New Year's
Eve patrollng the streets of
Longwood In a police squad car.

THE BEST PROTECTION
AGAINST INTRUDERS!!!

mmm
I N I I . tOtfc ST.
SAMFOtO. FLA.

FREE
ESTIAAATES

-323-2600

�FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Disabled Ex-Cop Fasts
To Gain Pension Benefits
PORT ORANGE |UPl| — A 33-year-old fanner policeman
disabled In the line o f duty has been fasting since Nov. 28
to persuade Daytona Beach officials to pay him the pension
benefits he believes he deserves.
Jeff Amscl. who I- Irlnklng only distilled water, has lost
36 pounds In his 3g days of fasting, but there Is no sign of
reconciliation on either side..
"I'll fight them to my last living breath," said Amsel.
The four-year veteran of the Daytona Beach Police
Department has been unable to work since suffering
Injuries to his spine, arm. head and back during a scuffle
with a burglar In March 1982.
Amscl, the father of four, did not retire Immediately
because he hoped surgery and rest would permit him to
return to work. But he has little use o f his right arm and
suffers from frequent headaches and severe back pain.
The delay In retirement Is the source of the Impasse.
Amsel was Injured while covered by one pension plan for
police and firefighters. But he didn't retire until August
1984, which was 1V5 years after a later pension plan
drastically reduced benefits.
Amsel contends he Is entitled to the benefits of the old
plan, the city says he retired under the new plan and must
live with It.

Bowl Fireworks Burn 10
MIAMI (UPI) — At least 10 people were reported Injured
In a fireworks display during Tuesday night's Orange Bowl
game halftime festivities.
Joe Dalman said those Injured received minor bums
when something went wrong with the fireworks launching
at the annual bowl game.
"W e don't know If it was a miscalculation or a
malfunction," Dalman said.
Four victims were treated and released at Jackson
Memorial Hospital shortly after the Incident.
Three victims were being treated at Cedars Medical
Center. A nurse said one suffered chest bums and one
suffered hand burns She believed the other person received
a back bum. At least two of the patients were from
Oklahoma, the nurse said.
Dalman said one o f the victims refused treatment, one
reported to a stadium aid station and one victim was
unaccounted for.

FHP To Crack Down
On Drug Smugglers

V ILLA G E 323-5454
F L E A M ARKET

323 5454

where the molotlsts .ue sus­
pected of being smugglers;
— And the assign m en t o f
Trooper Barney "T h e Nose"
Stallworth, nationally known lor
his ability to snlfT marijuana, lo
a popular drug-smuggling corri­
dor near Pensacola.

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — A
1984 anti-drug program that led
to nearly 2.000 arrests will be
put on the road this year as
specially trained stale troopers
and canines are dispatched to
crack down on marijuana and
cocaine traffickers.
Sixteen drug-sniffing dogs will
be assigned to ride In Florida
Highway Patrol cars this year
and the troopers will patrol the
slate’s major drug smuggling
routes.
Col. Bobby R. Burkett, patrol
d i r e c t o r , a n n o u n c e d th e
crackdown after analyzing the
results of a one-year pilot pro­
gram that represen ted the
patrol's first entry Into the an­
ti-drug fight on a wide-scale
basis.
The experiment, begun In
January 1984 under Burkett's
orders, led to 1,919 drug-related
arrests by troopers and the
seizure of nearly $35 million
worth of marijuana, cocaine and
other Illicit drugs. Both numbers
far exceed comparable FHP fig­
ures for past years.
"It's been a tremendous suc­
cess, We have even surprised
ourselves," Burkett said. "It has
also rekindled the enthusiasm ol
many of our troopers. There's
been a tremendous boost In
morale."
The pilot program included:
— T h e t r a in in g o f 1,300
troopers In seaich and seizure
procedures, drug Identification
and other skills related lo drug
arrests;
—The training of 11 FHP pilots
lo recognize marijuana fields as
they conduct their routine aerial
patrols:
—The assignment of specially
trained dogs to four troopers lo
help detect drugs In vehicles
stopped for traffic violations

NATIONAL DEPRESSION GLASS SHOW
TO BE HELD HERE

FRI.-SAT.-SUN. - JANUARY 25-26-27, 1985

1500 S. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD

OPEN WED.-FRI.-SAT.-SUN - RAIN OR SHINE

IT’S NOT TOO LATE TO
REGISTER FORTERM II AT
SEMINOLE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Opportunity
T h e r e
in

a r e

o p e n in g s

in d u s t r ia l

p e r s o n a l
in

th e

a r e

Wednesday, Jan. 2, !» U — 1A

a n d

a n d

in

s e r v ic e

b u s in e s s

a v a ila b le

c r e d it

e n g in e e r in g

p u b lic

S .C .C .

c o lle g e

in

p r o g r a m

p r o g r a m

s c h o o l.

b o t h

c la s s e s ,

S o m

d a y

e

a n d

s ,

s ,

in

a n d

c la s s e s
e v e n in g

s c h e d u le s .

FOR ENROLLMENT INFORMATION CONTACT THE ADMISSIONS OFFICE

SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Sanford, Florida 32771

(305) 323-1450 or 843-7001

An Equal Access/Equal Opportunity Community College

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT; Nearly
300,000 customers In Michigan
were without power today in the
wake of a New Year’s Day storm
that spewed snow and Ice at the
Midwest, while snow In the
southern Plains triggered acci­
dents (hat shut down six in­
terstates. Ice, rain and up to 19
inches o f snow Tuesday blacked
oul more than 330,000 custom­
ers In Michigan, Illinois and
In d ia n a . T o d a y In lo w e r
Michigan, 200,000 Consumers
Power Co. customers and 70,000
from Detroit Edison were sllll In
the dark, utility officials said.
Consumers Power crews worked
ull night to repulr power lines
that snapped when Tuesday's
rain froze. Detroit Edison crews
were given the night ofT bo they
could get some sleep after
working 16-hour shifts. In the
southern Plains, snow fell today
from New Mexico to southwest
Missouri with 5 Inches on the
ground In the Texas Panhandle.
The snow also reached Into
eastern and central T exas,
dusting Dallas with 2 Inches.
Chain-reaction accidents In­
volving as many as 30 cars
forced the Texas Department of
Public Safety to close sections of
MO. 1-20.1-30.1-35 and M O. An
accident on Highway 360 left
hundreds o f cars stranded.
Blowing snow and Icy roads also
closed schools and colleges.
Among major employers. Texas
Instrum ents canceled some
shifts, adding an extra day of
vacation for 25,000 workers. An
86-mlle section of Interstate 40
In Oklahoma, the state's major
cast-west route, was closed
Tuesday after sheets of Ice sent

cars sliding Into ditches. State
officials said they expected to
open the road today — too late
for holiday motorists who filled
motels on both sides of the
closed section. The New Year's
Day storm spread snow and rain
In New England today, after
tying up traffic on the ground
and In the air across the
Midwest.

AREA READINOS (9 a.m.):
temperature: 68; overnight low:
6 5 ; T u e s d a y 's h ig h : 8 2 ;
barometric pressure: 30.19; rela­
tiv e h u m id ity : 97 p ercent:
winds: southeast at 9 mph;
sunrise: 7:18 a.m., sunset 5:41
p.m.

THURSDAY TIDES;
Daytons Beach; highs, 8:11
a.m., 8:24 p.m.; lows, 1:25 a.m..
2:14 p.m.; Port Canaveral:
highs. 8:03 a.m.. 8:16 p.m.:
lows, 1:16 a.m., 2:05 p.m.;
Bayport: highs. 12:25 a.m..
2:30 p.m.; lows, 7:51 a.m., 7:38
p.m.
B O A TIN G rO R E C A S T t St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Southeast wind 10 to 15
knots through tonight becoming
south to southwest Thursday.
Sea 2 to 4 feet. Partly cloudy.
Widely scattered showers.
A R E A FO R E C A S T : Today
partly cloudy and warm. High in
lower 80s. Wind southeast 10 to
IS mph. Tonight partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Low In 60s. Wind
southeast near 10 mph. Thurs­
day mostly cloudy with a 30
percent chance of showers. High
near 80. Wind south 10 to 15
mph.

COUPON
REDEMPTION:
;------------ c o u p o n

Cdfltrdl FtarMd NagWnal Haapttal
TuatdJ,
ADMISSIONS
Vanlord
Rabacta R. Adamt
TarrIL Roland

O IIC H A R O tt
Raymond J . Dowaon. San lord
Rabacta L. Jornlgan, Lata Mary
Mary M. Sllvdrtaon. Oranga City
Sharrl K. Hot*, and baby girl, Sanford

322-8311
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U .S .D .A . C H O I C E
BEEF

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Arm You Thinking of Upgrading
Your Prosont Hooting I Air System7
Why Not Call Now For A Homo
Survey On How You Con Boat The
High Cost Of Energy?

--------------C O U P O N --------------

2 8

SUPERMARKETS

STEAK

YOU CAN TRUST!

---------- C O U P O N ------------ ------

I FLORIDA GRADE

PARK AVI. A nil) ST.. SANFORD
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SANFORDAVE. AT SIRST., SANFORD
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Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

LI. 1 5 *

l.

39*

H

I E

PARK AND SHOP SELLS.
ONLY U.S.D.A. CH O ICE
G O V ’ T. G R A D E D B E E F (

7

�Evening Herald
(USPS 411-210)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Wednesday, January 2, 1985—4A
Wayne D. Doylt, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Molvln Adkins, Advertising Director

Home Delivery: Week. SI. 10: Month. $4.75; 3 Months.
$14.25; 6 Months. $27.00; Year. $51.00. Bv Mall: Week.
$1.50: Month. $6.00; 3 Months. $18.00; 6 Months. $32.50Year. $60 00.

Telephone
Anniversary
I t ’s b e e n a y e a r s in c e th e te le p h o n e
com pan y w as split up. and h ere’s what there
Is so far to show for It: A great deal o f
con su m er confusion, accom panied by the
c r e a tio n o f a b o o m in g n ew te le p h o n econsultant Industry; poorer service, unm iti­
g a te d b y a ll the fa n cy n ew eq u ip m en t
available; sligh tly low er long-distance rates,
but h igh er local rates that m ore than m ake up
for the d ifferen ce for most phone users.
A fter one year, there's still nearly universal
telephone service In the country, but the
trend Is aw ay from that, with basic-service
charges rising. And the Federal Com m unica­
tions Com m ission Just added to the Increas­
in g cost by decidin g to tack a $1 per month
access charge onto all telephone bills starting
next June and a 92 charge the year after.
T h e re ’s probably no one to blam e for the
m ess. P rob a b ly It w ou ld h ave occurred
even tu ally In an y case. Once the decision was
made to allow A T &amp; T to com pete In the
developm ent o f high-tech com m unications —
and how long would it have m ade sense to
keep A T &amp; T o r Its com petitors out o f this
field? — all the rest followed.
If A T &amp; T was to com pete fairly, It couldn't
be allow ed to hold on to Its vast m onopoly
profits from basic telephone services, an
advantage no potential com petitors could
com e near to m atching. And once A T &amp; T ’s
high-tech equipm ent and long-distance busi­
nesses w ere separated from Its basic tele­
p h o n e b u sin ess, th ere w a s no w a y to
m aintain the subsidies for basic service that
those hlgh-proflt businesses used to provide.
T h e re w ere probably better w ays to phase
In these changes. But even tu ally there would
h ave been no w a y around things like the new
access charge. G iven the techn ology and the
com p etitive m arket that now exists, the
biggest long-distance users and providers are
capable o f sim ply bypassin g local telephone
networks. A n d w h en ever It Is cheaper per call
for them to build their ow n system s than to
pay the local n etw orks for use o f local
telephone lines, they w ill. O nce they do. the
cost o f local service w ill h ave to go up, to
cover the full expense o f m aintaining local
lines. T h e on ly w ay to prevent or forestall that
Is to keep the price o f long-distance calls
below the level at w hich bypass system s
m ake sense — w h ich m eans raising the basic
charge o f m aintain in g local lines. One w ay or
the other, local custom ers w ould even tu ally
h ave to pay a greater access charge for
m aintain in g local lines.
Confusion w as sim ilarly unavoidable. A s
soon as th e re w a s c o m p e titio n . It w as
Inevitable th ere w ou ld be va riety in both
products and services. A s soon as there w ere
c o m p e tito rs , c h o o s in g a m o n g th em and
coord in atin g b etw een them was bound to get
com plicated.
T h e benefit the genera) public Is eventually
supposed to gain from all this Is considerable:
T h e n ew com petition Is supposed to bring
lo w e r costs, faster Innovations, Im proved
econ om ic grow th and greater efficien cy In the
lo n g run. But If there are — one yea r into the
process — precious few signs that that's
w h a t's happening, th ere's also precious little
to be done about It. O th er than lobbyin g for
sm ooth er transition rules and for special
program s to help poor people as telephone
coats rise, one can o n ly w a it and hope that it
w ill all turn out to h ave been worth It.

Please Write
Letters to the editor ere welcome for
publication. All letters must be signed and
Include a mailing address and, if possible, a
telephone number. The Evening Herald
reserves the right to edit letters to avoid
libel and to accommodate space.

Real Help For Crime Victims
WASHINGTON — ’ 1 will never forget being
raped, kidnapped and robbed at gunpoint." a
witness told the President's Task Force on
Victims of Crime. "However, my sense of
disillusionment of the Judicial system Is far
more painful."
These words have been echoed by countless
victims o f crime who. after surviving brutal
attacks, turned to the government for aid and
comfort, only to find little of either.
Last year approximately 6 million people were
the victims of violent crimes. Sadly, more than
half of them refused to report the incident, many
because they observed that a system designed
to help them often doesjust the opposite.
Those who did come forward frequently found
themselves embroiled In lengthy court proceed­
ings that cost them time and money and
sometimes —, In the case of violent-crime
victims — left deep psychological scars. Little
wonder, then, that there Is a growing consensus
that something has gone wrong with our Judicial

process: The criminal has had all the rights, the
victim none.
Believing that something must be done for the
victims o f crime. President Reagan organized a
Task Force on Victims of Crime In 1982. One
year later, the panel Issued a report that called
for the enactment of a Victims of Crime Act.
The proposal, which Reagan signed into law
In October, creates a general Treasury fund of
up to 9100 million a year to both compensate
and assist the victims of crime. Grants from the
fund will be awarded to state and local
vlctlm-ald programs — half for victim com­
pensation and half for victim assistance.
Forty states operate programs of basic com­
pensation for medical expenses, stolen or
damaged property and wages lost due to court
appearances. The new program will offer funds
for other assistance and. It is hoped, will
encourage creation of similar programs in the
remaining 10 states.
Now. If you are thinking that no matter how
worthwhile this program Is. this is no time to be
dipp in g Into Uncle Sam 's d eficit-ridden

treasury, you can relax. All revenues for the
Victims' Fund will come from federal criminal
fines, forfeited appearance bonds and other
collateral, plus other seized criminal assets.
Federal revenue from fines and forfeited bonds
alone amounted to $78 million last year.
The new program also gives U.S. attorneys
the authority to seek any "literary profits" of a
federal criminal whose crime resulted In physi­
cal harm to others. Death Row killers who write
books about their exploits may find their
royalties going to their victims' families.
Moreover, by disbursing the funds through
existing state programs, additional federal
bureaucracy Is minimal.
Assistant Attorney General Lois Herrington,
who chaired the President's Task Force and
helped push the victims’ assistance bill through
Congress, says the program Is long overdue.
Without the cooperation of victims In report­
in g crim es and te s tify in g against their
assailants. It Is Impossible for society to hold
criminals accountable. Mrs. Herrington told my
assistant, Joe Martin.

EDW ARD J . W ALSH

SCIEN CE WORLD

Volcker
Adjusts
Dials

They
Set
Fires
By Elisabeth Pennlsl
UPI Science Writer
NEW YO R K (U P I) W hite,
middle-class boys motivated by cu­
riosity, anger or frustration set
nearly a third of the nation's fires, a
California sociologist says.
Two out o f every five arsonists
apprehended are under 18 and
almost 90 percent are white, said
Wayne S. Wooden, associate pro­
fessor at California State Polytech­
nic University In Pomona.
A disproportionate number of the
young white ftre-starters are from
families with Incomes o f 925,000 or
more, he said.
For them, "It's a means of striking
back without physically confronting
your enemy." he said In a telephone
JE F F R E Y H A R T
Interview. "It gives them a sense of
power."
Children of lower socioeconomic
status release aggression by fight­
ing, swearing or name-calling —
things their middle class suburban
peers are taught not to do. said
WASHINGTON, D.C. There to a
Wooden. So aggression to let out
stench of Munich tn the air In our
through arson.
nation’s capital as we approach the
According to the FBI Uniform
second inaugural of Ronald Reagan,
Crime Report program, 6.457 out of
and Reagan supporters have a
17,203 people arrested for arson in
strong sense o f sell-out. The drift of
1983 were 18 or under In 1983. That
American policy seems to be going
represents the highest percent of
against everything they thought
Juveniles Involved In any of the
Reagan stood ror.
crimes reported to the FBI.
Is this our p resent Munich
Writing In the December Issue of
agenda? Throw away Star Wars for
Psychology Today, Wooden said
the sake o f cosmetic Soviet con­
young arson ists' com prise four
cessions at Geneva. Cut a deal with
groups, with varying but Identifia­
t h e c o m m u n i s t r e g i m e In
ble emotional characteristics.
Nicaragua, according to which they
About 15 percent are children
promise, ho ho ho. not to Interfere
ages 4 to 8 who start fires accidently
with neighboring countries. Over­
while playing with matches and
throw the Pinochet regime in Chile.
who tend to strike out at things
Purge from the administration any
close to them — their mother s
officials who believe In the policy
clothes, their beds, their sister’s hair
goals Reagan has stated over the
— Wooden said.
years.
A second group, which made up
In 1938, at Munich. Great Britain
about 40 percent o f the children in
and France committed suicide.
his study, set fires as a cry for help,
They had a huge strategic asset In
he said. These children are 8 to 12
Czechoslovakia, which possessed a
and usually have problems at home.
tw o -m illio n -m an-ready -to-flght
Another 35 percent are teenagers
army, and perhaps the best muni­
who are acting out feelings o f
tions Industry after Krupp. In a
aggression and set fires at schools In
spasm o f frtvolousness. Neville
defiance o f authority.
Chamberlain threw It all away at
T h e fo u rth g ro u p In c lu d e s
Munich. With that Czech army on
children any age who are mentally
hto southern border, there 1s no way
disturbed.
that H itler could have moved
Wooden said (Ires are not as
against France,
feared as they once were. One
In Washington today another
possible reason for this to that safety
Munich seems to be in the works.
education used to warn children
Just as the Nazi war machine was
strongly about the dangers o f play--— overrated ing with matches, but such In1938. so, today, the possibility of a
doctrination to not given as widely
Star Wars defense against incoming
now.
missiles Is being underrated by

Stench Of Munich
alleged authorities — who arc will­
ing to He outright In order to Junk
the Idea.
You begin to wonder whether
M argaret T h a tch er, the "Ir o n
Lady," suffered brain damage when
the Irish Republican Army blew up
her hotel.
When the Soviet number two.
Mikhail Gorbachev, visited London
and lost no time attacking Star
Wars, Thatcher began m aking
noises about not putting the arms
race Into space — thus preempting
the entire negotiation and offering
Gorbachev exactly what he wanted
free of charge. She modified all of
this after a couple o f hours with
Reagan at Camp David, but the
smell of sell-out remains strong.
One wonders whether Thatcher
asked Gorbachev when the Soviets
are going to stop funnelling money
to Arthur Scarglll's striking mine
workers.
We now being to see the real
meaning o f the forthcoming exit of
Jeane Kirkpatrick from the Reagan
administration and the meaning of
the "Christmas purge" o f Reagan
appointees at the State Department.
The George Shultz State De­
partment to clearly preparing for a
re-run of our triumphant foreign
policy in Iran and Nicaragua, where
we e x c h a n ge d the Shah and
Som oza for the Ayatollah and
now com­
plete with the largest military force
in the region plus thousands of
Cuban and East European advisors.

By late December, the economic
forecasts for 1985 arc Just about all
in. Almost uniformly, the pro­
fessionals see moderate real growth
In the range of 3 percent, with
unemployment staying roughly at
the current level. Although Alan
Greenspan, former chairman of the
Council of Economic Advisers says
"Optimism is a misreading o f the
tacts," his firm secs 3.8 percent
growth and 7 percent unemploy­
ment.
The most prominent news about
economic forecasting in the past
year has been how wrong It has
been. The council predicted GNP
growth for 1983 of 1.4 percent.
Instead. It soared 6.4 percent.
As usual, the economy's perfor­
mance this year will probably come
In somewhere between bullish and
bearish — modest growth, stagnant
unemployment, and little change In
Interest rates.
Most Americans have already lost
interest in the budget und tax
battles still to be fought in Congress.
Instead, the performance of the
Federal Reserve In regulating the
nation’s money supply Is getting all
the attention. Two years ago. the
Fed was crucified for recession,
when It reduced money supply
growth to a near-standstill. When
recovery arrived In late 1982. the
attacks turned to praise. Today, all
look 'o Fed chairman Paul Volcker
to keep the nation prosperous, as if
he sits at some all-powerful econom­
ic console, adjusting dials. "Fine
tuning." writes Llndley H. Clark, "Is
back."
There Is som ething ominous
about the crediting of such vast
power to the Federal Reserve. Mr.
V o lc k c r 's en o rm ou s gra sp o f
monetary Issues merits enormous
Influence — so he has It. But there
arc lim its to tin k e r in g . Our
reasonably low Inflation rate of 4
percent is affected by factors other
thun monetary growth. In response
to high U.S. Interest rales generated
by the Fed. foreign capital has been
flowing Into this country, augmen­
ting dom estic Investment, and
keeping the dollar strong against
competing currencies. But will In­
flation remain In Its place when the
dollar grows weaker? How long can
U.S. Industry sustain recovery —
even with lower Inflation and lower
Interest rates — when Americans
continue to purchase foreign goods
priced artificially lower by our
strong currency? A strong dollar
and low Inflation is a two-edged
sword.

JA C K ANDERSON

A Very Bad Year For The Mob

BERRYS WORLD

A WOftlP BEYOND YOt* EXPERIENCE,
BEYOND YOUR. IMA&amp;INMlON.

F

DONALD

i e

C4Mt,*a

i T

WASHINGTON - Tonight, while
millions o f American families cele­
brate their hopes for a brighter new
year, the champagne will be a little
flat for the "fam ilies" that make up
the Cosa Nostra underworld.
If they're at all realistic, mobsters
from boss to button man will be
toasting each other, not with " Auld
Lang Syne." but with a mournful
rendition o f "Those Prison Walls
Are Breaking Up That Old Gang of
Mine."
The numbers alone are enough to
chill any underworld festivities: In
1981 there were 515 convictions of
organized crime figures-, in 1983,
there were 1,331, And many of
those convicted were high-level mob
bosses, like Carlos Marcello o f New
O rlean s. Frank B a le s trie rl o f
Milwaukee. Russell Bufallno o f
Pennsylvania. James T. Llcavoll of
Detroit and Eugene Smaldone o f
Denver. ("There goes Frank, there
goes Jim....")
But even the Impressive figures
don't tell the whole story. As FBI
Assistant Director Oliver "Buck"

Revell told my associate Tony
Capacclo. mob bosses can often run
their family crime businesses from
their prison cells. So the Justice
Department has been indicting the
entire leadership on grounds that
the "fam ily" itself constitutes a
criminal enterprise.
This n ot only cripples the organi­
zations' tight administration, but
allows the government to seize bank
accounts and other assets that keep
the criminal cartels functioning.
This tactic has been used In Los
Angeles. Denver, Cleveland and
Milwaukee.
The latest chapter In the govern­
ment's war on organized crime to
due to unfold on Wednesday (Jan.
2) when a federal Judge in New York
will act a trial date for nine Indicted
members of the Joseph Colombo
fam ily. Even though the 100member crime group declined in
influence after the 1971 gunshot
wounding of Colombo and his death
in 1978. the family to still regarded
by law enforcement experts as
perhaps the third strongest of New

York City's five crime families.
T w o o f the Colom bo bosses.
Carime Perslco and John "Sonny”
Franzesc. are already in prison, and
the latest indictment names Persico
on bribery counts stemming from
his current tour In the federal pen.
Here are some other develop­
ments In the new year that should
mule any merrymaking by the
Colombo crime family tonight:
— On Jan. 28. Martin Hodas. a
family associate known as Times
Square's "K in g o f the Peep Show."
will be sentenced for his role In an
attem pt to flood Canada with
hardcore pornographic video tapes.
— Gerry Langella. whom the
G-men have identified as the boss of
day-to-day Colombo operations,
faces charges that he conspired with
a concrete-workers' union ofllclal to
extort 10 New York area Arms of
amounts ranging from 9700 to
929.000 since 1981.
— T h e crim e fa m ily 's legal
adviser, or "consigUerl." 79-year-old
Thomas "T h e Old Man" DiBell*. Is
charged with extorting 9800 per

home Irom the MJR Construction
Co. at the Driftwood Landing devel*
opmcnl In Atlantic Beach. N.Y.
— A Colombo "cupo," John J.
DcRoss. 1s accused of using his
position as an official of two restau­
rant workers' union locals to extort
money from such Big Apple restau­
rants as Cafe Zlegfeld on West 45th
Street and Clro's at One Llncolp,
Plaza.
— Frank "Bcanaie" Melll. a family]
"soldier." has been charged for hto:
role In the alleged fencing of 92.2
million in stolen Arncx watches and
9700.000 worth of Oriental art?
objects stolen front the Robert]
Ellsworth Gallery tn Manhattan&lt;
— Another family capo. Benny;
Alol. has been charged with loan-!
sharking — charging the owners of
Sylvie's clothing store In New York
City 2 percent weekly interest on 4
950.000 loan. This shylock activity
Is said to have occurred in 1982;
w h ile A lo l w a s b e in g g lv d jf
930.595 99 in gambling credits add
freebies by Atlantic City casinos.

�Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Congress Convenes

Wednesday, Jan. 1, I H S - S A

D e fe n se Sp en d in g , Budget Cuts Top The A g en d a
Steve Oerstel
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
9 9 th C o n g r e s s c o n v e n e s
Thursday In a ceremonial ritual
of bipartisan pomp that masks
the legislative wars over budget
cuts, defense spending, the MX
missile and civil rights soon to
consume Capitol Hill.
At noon, the banging of the
gavel will bring to order the
Senate and the House, breaking
the months-long stillness o f the
two chambers and marking the
opening of the first session of the
99th Congress.
For one day. and one day only.
Congress will dispense with poli­
tics and partisanship In a festive
display of fellowship as House
members and new senators take
their oaths o f office.
Mandated by the Constitution
to begin deliberations on Jan. 3,
Congress will, as usual, get off to
a slow start — waiting for the
In a u g u r a tio n o f P re s id e n t
Reagan Jan. 21. the State of the
Union Address and the sub­
mission of the president's fiscal
1986 budget.
T h e S e n a te c o u ld g e t
embroiled In a dispute with the
White House quickly — as soon
as Reagan submits the nomina­
tion of top presidential aide
Edwin Meesc as attorney gener­
al. Although cleared of wrong­
doing by a special prosecutor,
Meese still faces some opposi­
tion.
But even before Congress
meets Thursday, the outline of
the year ahead has taken shape
— and It portrays what could be
a fractious relationship with
Reagan as he begins his second
term.
There Is no Indication that
Congress, with Democrats firmly
in control of the House and
Republicans with a weaker ma­
jority in the Senate, la prepared
to give Reagan an extended
" s e c o n d h o n e y m o o n " to
steamroll his programs on Capi­

tol Hill.
In contrast to 1981-82 when a
friendly Congress gave Reagan
sizable cuts In the budget, a big
buildup In defense spending and
an across-the-board slash In tax­
es, the 99th Congress will offer
stlfT resistance on many fronts,
very much as In 1983-84.
But Congress and Reagan
share one overriding concern —
reducing the federal deficit now
projected to be about $200
billion for the coming years. The
issue Is certain to dominate
throughout the session.
The details of the administra­
tion's proposed budget cuts —
which may Include a partial or
total freeze on spending — will
not come to Capitol Hill until
near the end of the month.
But the price Congress Is
certain to demand from Reagan
in return for holding down the
costs o f domestic spending Is a
deep cut In military spending,
far more than the administration
has Indicated It will propose.
Even as the battle of the
budget opens. Reagan will get
quick notice from Congress on
where he stands on two other
major Issues: the MX missile and
m ore aid for the guerrillas
fighting the Sandlnlsta govern­
ment In Nicaragua.
By the end o f February, Con­
gress must act on additional
financial aid for the rebels and
by late March, whether to build
21 MX missiles.
The MX missile, which sur­
vived in the Senate last session
only with Vice President George
Bush's tie-breaking vote, now
appears in even more Jeopardy.
In c o m in g A rm e d S e r v ic e s
C om m ittee Chairm an Barry
Goldwater, R-Ariz.. has come out
Against production of the missile
and Senate Democratic leader
Robert Byrd of West Virginia
appears ready toswltch his vote.
Congress earmarked $14 mil­
lion In aid for the Nicaraguan

rebels, subject to approval by the
Senate ",nd House sometime
__

A N A LY SIS
after Feb. 28^ and there Is no
Indication the House — which
this year votes four tim es
against the cut-down aid — will
back off.
Without question, Congress

will again mount major drives to
pass two bills that failed to meet
the adjournment deadline —
reform of Immigration laws and
a package of civil rights bill.
Congress also must deal with
an omnibus farm bill, a series of
environm ental measures, in­
creased aid to Israel, federal aid
to highways and a variety of
programs due to expire unless
they get new authorization.
The administration’s proposal

for tax reform and demands by
conservatives for constitutional
amendments for school prayer
and abortion could crop up but
are more likely to be raised
during the pre-election 1986
session.
The Democrats will open the
session with their leadership
intact. Speaker Thom as P.
O’ Neill of Massachusetts. House
Democratic leader Jim Wright of
Texas and Senate Democratic

leader Byrd.
But the Republicans, with the
exception of House GOP leader
Robert Michel, are going with a
new tram.
The Senate's new majority
leader Is Robert Dole of Kansas,
the assistant majority leader Is
Alan Simpson of Wyoming and
there are new chairmen o f the
A rm e d S e r v ic e s . F in a n c e .
Foreign Relations and Com ­
merce committees.

CALENDAR
THURSDAY. JAN. 3
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m. Florida HospitalAltamonte Branch, 601 E. Alta­
monte Ave., 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sanford Jaycees. 7:30 p.m..
J a y c e e b u ild in g , 5th and
French. Sanford.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St..
8 p.m.. open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed,
Flist United Methodist Church.
Ovcreatcrs Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m. Community United
Methodist Church. H ighway
17-92, Casselberry.

FRIDAY, JAN. 4
Central Florida Blook Bank
F lorid a H o s p lta l-A lta m o n tc
Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave..
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
O p tim is t C lu b o f S o u th
Seminole. 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymorc Road. Altamonte
SpringB.
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8

p .m . W e k lv a P re s b y te ria n
Church. SR 434. at Weklva
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 A A Step. 8 p.m., 1201
W. First St., closed.

SATURDAY, JAN. B
Sanford AA. 8 p.m., 1201 W.
First St. open discussion.
Sanford Womens' A A. 1201
W. First St., 2 p.m.. closed.
Casselberry AA Step, 8 p.m.,
Ascension Lutheran Church,
Overbrook Drive.
Rebos and Live Oak AA. noon.
Rebus Club, 130 Normandy
Road, C a sselb erry (closed).
Clean Air AA for non-smokers,
first door, same room, same
place and time.

REALTY TRANSFERS
to Martha E. Dillon, ' t Ini A V id o r P. Haney
Andan Croup ot F L to John F. Cooper l Wt
A W l F«rn E. V» Ini.. LI }. Blk C. Country
Allton, Lot 1)7 Sunrlta Village Un. 4. (5t. 100
Club Manor gn 1 .04 000
W illiam T Prott, J r to Arnlo Sager,
Jam#, J. M cLaughlin A Lilli# lo O d ll H
Irutle* From HE Cor. ol S E 1, ot SW'e Sec
Richmond A A llta D. McKlnn#y, Tr , LI 7 Id#
1*11 M. 1X000
ol Wlndior, (10.000
Erm « 0 Dangleman to Loon E Colo A Wl
Edward F o rr t t l A W l Dor#«n lo Dor##n H
Edna S. W 100' o l E MO’ ol N 1(1’ ol NE'-t ol
J4Wi+«4 (#&lt;. j j - io-t i . *1*
______________- E o t m L -Lo t-L Blit 0. North Orlando T trr.
Sec I. Un. 2,1100
John V Bono A Wl Darcy J to Tarranc# W
H arry V. Kohn to H arry V. Kohn A Wl
Saltbury A Wl Shalla C . Lot 10 C ry tla l Lk
Luclanna. L o lt l. Sunrlta Un Ont. (100
Pork. 1)1,000
Th# Ryland Group Inc lo G«n#ral Horn#,
L tw lt Inv Co. ole lo Edwin F. Meyer III A
F L Incl L o ll M 10*. A 117 1(7. 0##r Run. Un
Wl Victoria G . U n 07 24*4. Ph I. (04.100
* B. ,10( 000.000
Vlniclo Pollno A W l M ary lo David M
Edward T Curran A Wl Mar (or I# lo M.
Taylor A Wl Edna G . Lot 11. Blk K. Carriage
Timothy Dunn. B#g 1(0’ W ol SE cor Lot 4.
H ill Un 1. (15.000
C o ll Court* Addn CB. (51.*00
Bruda Dev to Joteph R Yorty A Wl
Sunnlland Corp lo Wilbur V. Small A Wl
Patricia C. LI II Golden Grove. 1*1.000
Gladyt. Lot 22. Palm Hammock Allotmanl.
Evello N M artinet A W l Eva to John
(11.400
Campbell A W l Ferlld la A.. Lot » . Ileidale
W illard Magnett. Jr. lo Larry L E l,w ick A
Manor. (57.500
Wl Branda. Llo 74. So Plnecratl 2nd Addn.
Michael R W ellingto n A W l Jennifer to
(1
1
.000
Alfred D Jackion A W l Earnetlina. Lot ■ A S
Coa Corp lo Jam *t G Shelley A Wl
7 o l 7 Blk I, Fair view. (11.100
Paulin* E Lt a* Weklva Cov*. Pn. One.
Penelope A. M ercler lo John E Cochran.
(145.000
Lot 1. Blk A. Spreading Oak VIII. (100
W illiam A. Llndgrtn A Wt Eleanor loGlann
Thomei Welch A Gretchen lo B rian A.
A Bill* A Wf Son11*. Lot 151. Bal Air* Hills,
Welch. T r„ Un. S4. Caplitrano. cond . 1100
Un. Two. (70.500
Madcap Prop lo Robert E. O’ Reilly A Wl
B elly E. Slchel lo Thomat B. M orb ltiar A
marlanne Un. U S A U F , Summit Village Un.
W
l Margaret L.. Lot 111. Deer Urn, Un. 1 100
1.(100
K ir in McDonegh. lo Eileen P. Lorenc*. Lot
Claude W Bate* A W l Kathleen to E a rl D
14. Weklva Cove. Ph. Two. it* .*00
George A W l Opal. Lt 5, Blk II, rtpl. part ot
Lena B Jonet lo Lana B Stallworth, L lo M
Towntila Worth Chuluole. (17.000
Orange E tlatet. (100
Thome, Pwrdon. repr etl Opal O ’ Donnett

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SPORTS

*A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan.

7 ,1*85

Huskies Derail Oklahoma’s 'Bandwagon'
MIAMI (UPI| — In a fitting cap to the
1984 season, no team came out of the
th e Jan . 1 B ow l ga m es as an
overw helm in g choice as national
champion.
No. 3 Washington's 28-17 victory
over No. 2 Oklahoma In the Orange
Bowl Tuesday night made the Huskies
the c h ie f com petition for No. 1
Brigham Young In the final ratings,
which will be released todav at 6 p.m.
EST.
But the Huskies might not have won
Impressively enough to overcome the
120 points separating BYU from
Washington when the regular season
ended.
The Huskies. 12-1. finished their
best season ever with several upbeat
notes. Jacque Robinson gained 135
.yards on 28 carries to become the first
‘ running back to crack 100 yards
against Oklahoma this season, and
: deposed quarterback Ifu g h ^ ^ ^ ^ n
‘ came back to lead a fourth-T^WBK
rally.

But the game — which featured nine
fumbles, four Interceptions and a
15-yard penalty against a mascot —
wasn't becoming of a national cham­
pionship battle.
"W e're No. 1." Washlngtoh Coach
Don James said. “ We've got my vote.
All I was worried about was a 1-point
victory."
Washington Is one of six teams
which were ranked No. 1 In this
upset-filled season.
Oklahoma Coach Barry Switzer
agreed that Washington should have
earned Its first national title Tuesday
night.
"Washington's a better team than
BYU. I guarantee that." Switzer said.
Switzer. James and BYU Coach
LaVell Edwards all vote In the UPI
Coaches' ratings.
Mlllen. who started the first eight
games, entered the game after Paul
fttcum threw three Interceptions and
lost a fumble through three quarters.
Mlllen capped hu second series with

O ran ge B o w l
'Washington's a
battar ttam than BYU,
I guarantor that.'

— Barry Sw itzer
u 12-yard touchdown pass to Mark
Pattlson. Pattlson's catch In the left
comer o f the end zone finished a
74-yard drive to give Washington a
21-17 lead. Tim Lashar's 35-yard field
goal had given Oklahoma the lead
three minutes earlier.
"It's been a couple of months since I
lost my Job and It never leaves the
back of your mind how frustrated you
are with yourself." said Mlllen. who
i omplcted two of four passes for 41
yards.

The Sooncrs. 9-2-1. had a 22-yard
field goal by Lashar nullified with the
score tied 14-14 1:02 Into the fourth
quarter. Oklahoma was penalized five
yards for having a player with an
illegal number on the interior line and
the Southeastern Conference officials
tacked on 15 yards when the Sooner
Schooner came onto the field.
The subsequent 42-yard field goal
try was blocked by Tim Peoples.
Switzer was Just as upset at the
Illegal number penaly as the one called
on the red-and-whlte horse-drawn
covered wagon.
•Before the game, we asked the
officials If every player (with nonInterior line numbers) had to report In
directly and they said 'naw. we're not
going to be that strict. W e’re going to
be good guys.'" Switzer said. "Then
•) \ ■ !!i
:ivus twice. Don't tell us
one thing and then do another.
"A n d If they don’t want our wagon
on the field tell, them before the game

Sugar

Cotton
Less-Than-Super Flutie
Leads BC Past Cougars
DALLAS (UPI) - Doug Flutie
has been such a perfectionist
during his career at Boston
College that coach Jack Blcknell
has had to remind him of
something every now and then.
"W e tell him that he Is allowed
to be less than super some­
times." said Blcknell.
In his last game In a Boston
College uniform Flutie was. In­
deed, less than super Tuesday.
But It made no difference to
the Eagles who put together a
record-setting offensive produc­
tion anyway In the 49th Cotton
Bowl game.
With Flutie struggling In the
wind and near freezing tempera­
tures which made the day a test
of survival for the 56.522 fans,
the ' ghth-ranked Eagles abandoneu their normally potent air
game tn favor of their generally
overlooked running attack and
fought off the Houston Cougars
and came away with a 45-28
victory.
The Eagles thus produced
their first post-season victory In
•44 years.
"It was not one o f my better
;days by far." said Flutie. a
•landslide winner of the Helsman
.Trophy this season who In his
;four-year career became the first
;NCAA quarterback to ever throw
(for more than 10,000 yards.
; "T h e Important thing Is the
(win and this win fulfills the goal
(that the team and myself set
going Into the season." he said.
I " T h is last gam e Is extra
^special and It will stick with me
Uhe rest of the my life."
1 F lu t ie th r e w fo r th r e e
■touchdowns In the first half as
Boston College rolled to a 31-7
advantage.
But by late In the third
quarter, the Southwest Confer­
ence co-champlon Cougars had
climbed to within three points of
the lead.
Houston, which finishes the
season 7-5. appeared ready to
finish ofT Its comeback since
Flutie was on his way to a
second half performance that
Included Just two completions In
13 throws for 14 yards and two
Interceptions.
But the Eagles' running game,
with Troy Stradford and Steve

‘don't come on the field.' That s a
school tradition. They've done It for 50
years.”
"They don't belong on the field, but I
w ouldn't have penalized them.
James said of the Sooner Schooner.
Following Pattlson's TD. Oklahoma's
Buster Rhymes fumbled the kickoff
out of bounds on his own 2. Sooners
quarterback Danny Bradley's pass was
Intercepted by linebacker Joe Kelly on
the next play and Rick Penney scored
from 6 yards out two plays later to
make It 28-17.
"W e beat Oklahoma by enough
points." Fenncy said. “ I Just don't sec
how they can deny us (No. 1)."
Washington moved to a 14-0 firstquarter lead on Stcuro's 29-yard pass
to Danny Greene and Robinson's
1-yaid run.
Oklahoma came back In I he second
quarter on a 1-yard run by Bradley and
a 61-yard Bradley strike to Derrick
Shepard on the final play of the half for
a 14-14 tie.

Sundberg Hurls 3 TDs
To Swamp LSU, 28-10

F o o t b a ll
Strachan le a d in g the w ay.
finished off Houston's hopes.
While Flutie was throwing for
his second lowest production of
Ihe year with 180 yards on 13
completions in 37 attempts,
Stradford was running for 198
yards and Strachan for 93 more.
Despite being outgalned by his
teammate. Strachan was voted
the game's most valuable of­
fensive player.
The Eagles' 45 points and 533
total yards were both Cotton
Bowl records.
"There are many games that
are not a Flutie show." said
Blcknell. "W e have a lot of good
p la y e r s on o u r t e » m . "
Boston College seemed ready to
produce a 70-polnt afternoon
early In the game after Flutie
quickly hit Kelvin Martin with a
63-yard scoring pass and then
threw an 8-yard touchdown to
Stradford fora 14-0advantage.
Houston then got a Cotton
Bowl record 98-yard klckofT re­
turn from Earl Allen for a score
but the Eagles came back with a
31-yard field goal by Kevin
Snow, another Flutie touchdown
pass o f 13 yards to Gerard
Phelan and a 2-yard scoring run
by Strachan.
The Cougars started their rally
late In the first half with a
15-yard touchdown throw from
Gerald Landry to Larry Shep­
herd and kept It going In the
third quarter with a 2-yard
scoring run from Frank Tate and
a 25-yard Interception return for
a score by Audrey McMIlltan.
Those last two touchdowns
came only a minute apart und
put Houston very much In the
game.
The Cougars regained the ball
and quickly broke u big play
down to the Eagles' 30-yard line.
But that play was called back by
a clipping penalty and Houston
never again threatened.
Instead. It was Boston College
grinding out the yards on two
drives that ended In a 4-yard
touchdown run by Strachan and
another of 18 yards by Strad­
ford.

Herat* Pttolo by SoflnW Wlaboldt

W illie Richardson gets a good look at the action.

Lake Mary Teams
Host Blue Darters
B/BaaCook
Harold Sports Editor
Three county basketball
teams get a head start on the
rest w h en th e y hit the
hardcourt tonight on the first
day back from the holiday
break. Two o f those teams —
Lake Mary's Lady Rams and
Lake Brantley's Lady Patriots
— were In action at the Lady
Hawk Invitational last week.
The other. Lake Mary's boys,
competed In the Oviedo Out­
look Tournament two weeks
ago.
Both Lake Mary teams
stumbled In the first round

B a s k e t b a ll
and then came back to play
w e ll In the c o n s o la tio n
bracket. The Lady Rams
were massacred by Winter
Park before bouncing back to
thrash Lyman and lose a
close one to Lake Brantley.
Lake Mary's 5-4 boys lost
to tournam ent champion
Edgewater before taking care
of Lake Brantley and South
Sum ter for a fifth place

B«e TONIGHT. Page 7A

Lee's Dream Field Goal Stifles 'Canes
TEMPE. Arlz. (UPI) - To UCLA's John
Lee. his game-winning, last minute field
goal In the Fiesta Bowl was a "dream."
To his teammate, quarterback Steve
Bono. It was a satisfying end to his collegiate
career.
But. to the Miami Hurricanes, the 39-37
loss before 60,310 fans Tuesday was Just
the third straight disappointing defeat for
the defending national champions.
Lee's third field goal of the contest, a
22-yarder. came with only 51 seconds
remaining and marked the third time the
15th-ranked Bruins had come from behind
In the game.
The field goal, a chlpahot for the recordbreaking Lee. climaxed a game highlighted
by one big scoring play after another. It
came Just 2:07 after 13th-ranked Miami
took a 37-36 lead on a 3-yard touchdown
pass from Bernle Kosar to Melvin Bratton.
UCLA won Its third New Year's Day bowl
game In three years after two Rose Bowl
victories and ended with a 9-3 mark. Miami
dropped to 8-5.
Lee. a Junior who set an NCAA record this
sea«on with 29 regular season field goals,
said he wasn't worried about the gamewinning kick.
"There's no reason to put pressure on
yourself." Lee said. " I f I do the same aa in
practice. 1can't mlsa. If I did mlaa the kick. 1

:d A

F ie s t a B o w l
was going to dig myself a hole and crawl
light through It.
Bono, credited by Bruin Coach Terry
Donahue with "on e of (his) greatest games."
said he and his teammutes reached their
goal.
"W e knew we had to kiep the ball In our
hands and out o f Bemle's hands." Bono said
of his Miami counterpart, the focus of al1the
pre-game hype.
"W e knew we had to score every time we
touched the ball." Bono said, "That didn't
happen, but we came close.
"I can't end up a career better than this. It
was Just a m atter o f putting things
together."
The Hurricanes, who ended the regular
season with two-point losses to Maryland
and Boston College, again were stunned.
"In the last three games. I've seen a lot of
things happen to this team ." Kosar said. "I
think the three straight losses have been
very disappointing to the team, but I'm
confident the program will bounce back.”
Miami Coach Jimmy Johnson looked
back at the Maryland game and said his
defense "seemed to lose confidence" after
that.

k

a a»- V- A- +

The Hurricanes have given up 128 points
In their final three outings.
B ono and K o s a r each th re w tw o
touchdown passes and the unheralded Bono
nearly matched the Miami quarterback
statistically.
Kosar completed 31-of-44 passes for 294
yards while Bono hit on 18-of-27 for 243
yards.
On the game-winning drive. Bono com­
pleted 3-of-3 passes for 53 yards. 28 coming
on a sideline catch by Mike Sherrard.
But Bono was not the only unexpected
hero for UCLA as freshman tailback Gaston
Green was named the game's top offensive
player, gaining 144 yards on 21 attempts
and scoring twice In the first half.
One of his TDs was a Fiesta Bowl-record
72-yard scamper that started the Bruins on
the road back from a 21-7 second-quarter
deficit.
"I knew If our offensive line would bjock
well. 1would have a big game." said Green.
Green was In the lineup because o f a
broken leg suffered by the Bruins' top
rusher. Danny Andrews. In the final regular
season game.
In the first half. Miami scored on a 34-yard
run by Darryl Oliver, a 48-yard pass from
Kosar to freshman Brian Blades and a
68-yard punt return by Eddie Brown.

NE W O R L E A N S (U P I) N eb rask a 's C ra ig Sundberg
believes In the power of prayer.
The senior quarterback. In
danger of missing what he fig­
ured would probably be his last
football game because of flu.
recovered In time to be named
Most Valuable Player In Tuesday
night's Sugar Bowl. Sundberg
threw three touchdown passes
und ran for another to lead the
4th-rankcd Cornhuskers to a
28-10 victory over 12th-rankcd
LSU.
"It was very Important for me
to play." said Sundberg. who
r c g u ln c d th e s t a r t in g
quurterback role for the first
time since mldseuson. " I prayed
all day — and the Lord healed
me.
The favored Cornhuskers were
trailing 10-0 before Sundberg
wakened their slumbering of­
fense In the second quarter.
He set up his 31-yard screen
p ass to D ou g D uB ose for
Nebraska's first touchdown wllh
a nifty fake; pul Ihe Cornhuskers
In the lead with a 9-yard run
m id w a y th rou gh Ihe third
quarter after falling to find un
open receiver-, then applied Ihe
coup dc grace with touchdown
passes of 24 and 17 yards to
light end Todd Fraln within a

F o o t b a ll

*'l Just didn't feel like we had
anything to be proud of in the
first half." said Osborne. "W e
were being oulhlt and outh u s t le d . W e Just lo o k e d
lethargic."
Bui Ihe Nebraska defense
showed In Ihe second half why II
was ranked No. 1 In the nation
during a 9-2 campaign.
In th e f i r s t h a l f . L S U
quarterback Jeff Wlckersham
connected on 17 of 25 passes for
212 yards. In the second.
Nebraska limited him to 3 of 12
for 9 yards and Intercepted him
three times.
In all. Nebraska made five
Interceptions and a fumble re­
covery and wllh Ita offense
winding up with 423 yards leff
no doubt It Is entitled to wind up
among the nation's lop 10 for
the 15th year In a row.
"W e'll Just have to wult and
see." said Osborne. "The polls
depend on how people vote. I
Just hope we end up pretty good
— second or third. We could
huve a slight chuncc to win It. It
would be great If wc backed In."
Wlckersham. who led LSU to
an 8-2-1 regular season, hlnmcd
—rww . . . im m - -.Tim u i ll ir u — ftTHTT niinscll lor his second half perquarter.
formancc.
"I thought that up until 3
LSU drove from Its 28 to the
o'clock that It was very doubtful Nebraska 8. then settled for a 37
whether he could play." said yard Ronnie Lewis field goal to
Nebraska Coach Tom Osborne. take a 3-0 first-quarter lead. The
"But. as long as he told me he next lime the Bengals had the
could pluy, he was going to ball, they marched 72 yards with
start."
Dalton Hilliard going the final 2.
S u n d b e r g s t a r t e d In putting them up by 10 In less
Nebraska's first five games but than 17 minutes.
lost that position to Junior Travis
But two other scoring efforts
Turner for the remainder of the went awry.
season. Osborne felt he earned
The first time, midway the
another chance after he com­ second quarter, they gave up a
pleted 7 of 10 passes for 171 28 yard field goal for a penalty
yards In the loss to 2nd-rankcd that gave them u first down at
O k la h o m a th u t d r o p p e d the Nebraska 6 — and. after
Nebraska from No. 1 to No. 4 getting one foot from the goal
and knocked the Cornhuskers tried another field goal, which
out of the Orange Bowl. The Lewis missed.
favored Cornhuskers looked Hat
Then. In the closing seconds of
In the (lrst quarter when they the third quarter — while down
gained only 29 yards and al­ only 14-10 — they drove to the
though they trailed only 10-7 at Nebraska 2 only to have Lewis
hulftlme. the Bengals had out- miss another sharply-angled
gained them 291-141.
field goal Iry.

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�Evening H erald, Sanford, FI,

SYSA BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
STANDINGS
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Wednesday, Jan, J, tVBS—7A

P eterso n Leads M ilw e e W ins
Strickland's 32-Point Parade Can't Stop Lakeview March
Valeric Peterson pumped in oO point* m two
^ames over the weekend to lead Milwee Middle
School's eighth grade girls team to a pair of
victories In Seminole Youth Sports Association
(SYSA) basketball action.
Peterson pumped In 28 points in Milwec's
42-11 thrashing of Tuskawllln and she poured In
22 In a 32-26 victory over Teague.
The highest point output o f the opening
weekend of play came In a losing effort as Leticia
Strickland funneled In 32 points In Sanford
Middle's 49-39 loss to Lakeview.
Strickland's scoring parade wasn't enough to
overcome Lakcvicw’s balanced attack though.
Tara Jackson led the way for the Mustangs with
12 polnt5 while Nicole Mitchell and Belinda
Anderson added 10 each and Aretha Riggins
tossed In nine.
Milwee also came away with a pair of victories
In sevenlh grade girls action, outscorlng Its
opponents. 85-15.
Tiffany Durham connected for 20 points and
Tammy Hudson rilled In 18 In Milwec's 54-6
trouncing of Tuskawllla on Saturday. Hudson
came back to hit 15 points In a 31-9 win over

S Y S A B a s k e t b a ll
Teague on Sunday.
Teague took the early lead In the eighth grade
boys standings with a pair of close victories over
the weekend.
Jeff Engle tossed In 16 points and James Morse
added 14 as Teague edged Rock Lake, 50-49.
Kristopher Wlnningham led Rock I.ake with a
game-high 18 points and Alex Blrle contributed
10: Teague came hack on Sunday to pull out a
35-33 victory over Milwee. Engle's 15 points led
the way for Teague. Mickey Whlltlngtnn had 10
for Milwee.
Milwec's seventh grade boys picked up two
victories, 60-11 over Tuskawllia and 35-24 over
Teague.
Sanford Middle used 14 points by Willie "Sugar
T e x " McCloud and 12 by Reginald "Cheese"
Bellamy to trounce rival Lakeview, 78-48.
Lake view's Jerod Jones had 12 points to lead the
Mustangs. — Chrla P later

The Lady Rams should line
up w ith C o u rtn ey H all,
A lle e n P a t t e r s o n . K im
Averlll. Liz Stone and Larra
Hall.

...T o n ig h t
Continued from 6 A
finish.
L a k e M ary e n te r ta in s
Apopka tonight. The girls’
game begins at 6:15 p.m. and
the boys tip-off at 8 p.m.

High Scho.4. The Lady Patri­
ots had two ai-tournament
selectionr In the Lady Hawk
In v ita tio n a l in M ic h e lle
Brown and Kirsten Dellinger.
They are Joined in the start­
ing five by Sherry " I c e "
Asplcn. Kim Lubcnow and
Cammlr TwaddclI.

Tonight's other game pits
L a k e B r a n t le y a g a in s t
Mainland at Lake Brantley

Citrus Bowl Tennis Highlights Holiday Schedule
Tennis fans In the Central Florida
(area received a belated Christmas gift
If they attended any of the Citrus Bowl
Tennis Tournament held this past
[week at the Orlando Tennis Center.
Starting the day after Christmas and
Inlshlng up last Monday, this annual
lollday even: se'„ms lo get better and
:tter every ycir. The event started In
1980 and was then called the Tangcrle Bowl Tennis Classic. Of course, last
rear, the entire package was changed
from the Tangerine Bowl to the Citrus
&gt;wl.
I say Citrus Bowl package because
'from Dec. 8th through Dec. 31st the
Citrus Bowl Sports and Activities
Jommlttee ofTers a wide variety of
irtlng events. From the half maraion and the Rugby Tourney, to the
tiling Regatta and. of course, the
football game.
The holiday season Is Jammed with
tournaments and games of all types
and levels. I personally think they
saved the best event until last. But I'm
slightly biased. To be honest with you.
though, the tennis tournament this
year was extremely well organized,
highly competitive and the caliber of

tennis played was really outstanding.
Dr. Ed Roger, who Is Ihc backbone of
this huge tournament, and who has
been In charge since Its Inception, was
the tournament director. His tourna­
ment release was host pro Joe Csandll.
Csandll does a great Job and Is very
e x p e r ie n c e d , h a v in g b een th c
tournament director at the State
Junior College Tennis Tournament for
many years.
Some of the lop umpires In Florida
were also on hand, most notably were
vetcrcns Jan und Bill Enos. This
husbund and wife duo are two o f the
best In this area — If not (he nation.
They bring u great deal of pro­
fessionalism lo the event and help
keep things running smoothly.
Competition was held In men's and
w o m e n 's c o lle g ia te s in g le s and
doubles. Men’s and women’s open
singles and doubles and men's and
women's club singles and doubles.
Prize money was offered In the open
division and this division attracted
some really top players from Florida or
well as many fine players from all over
UieU.S.
In the men's singles (Inal Andy

Larry
Castle
Herald Tennis
Writer
Burrow of Miami defeated Joey Rive of
Palm Springs and Florida Slate Uni­
versity 7-6, 6-2. Burrow was a stand­
out college player at the University of
Iowa and Rive plays # 1 for FSU. this
year. Rive Is also the current Florida
intcr-Colleglate singles champion.
Burrow collected 9250 for his win and
Rive garnered $150 for being runnerup.
In the open doubles. Gene Dcsduncs
and Rick Davidson of Miami defeated
Rive and John Vinson In the finals.
In the women's college division
singles on unseeded player. Moron
Bollegraf, from Indian River Communi­
ty College and Holland defeated *1
seed Mary Dlnneen In the first round
and went on to win the championship
with a hard fought three-setter over

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TO

that was there. Sixty-four players were
In the singles draw and some really
great players did not even get past the
first round.
The final four read like a who's who
In college tennis. No. 1 seed Bobby
Blair o f the University or Arkansas. *3
seed Shelby Cannon o f the University
of Tennessee. *5 seed Necvet Dcmlr of
South Florida and former *1 player at
Seminole Community College, and
Richard Schmidt of Arkansas and the
*6 seed.
In the hard fought sem ifinals.
Cannon beat Dcmlr 7-6, 7-5 In a truly
great match and Schmidt upset *1
seed Blair 6-2. 6-4. In the finals. Shelby
Cannon played an almost perfect
match to defeat Schmidt 6-3. 6-3. The
southpaw Cannon played superly all
over the coaBt and appears destined to
make his mark In pro tennis.
This writer, for one. has not seen a
better run or more entertaining tennis
tournament tn a long time. From day
one the Citrus Bowl offered quality,
excitmcnl und a wide variety of tennis
talents and skills to enjoy.
It should be bigger and belter than
ever next year.

No Cereal Again
For Loser Big 10
i - BRA KES^

PASADENA, Calif. JUPI) -Why—dun i—rttg TT71 lootoall ~
teams cat cereal for breakfast?
U - E l. T O Y O U R
Because they keep losing the
io in A r y
t A U jQ E T
bowls.
L IN E .
YOU
C A M 'T S E E T V H *
A semi-funny Joke. Unless you
ao A 4 X T H E
happen to be a football fan of
PRO O R A
M ich iga n , M ich iga n S ta te .
PAL, T O C H E C K
YOU
A N Y
Wisconsin. Purdue, and now,
T IM E
T H f
Ohio State, which became the
10th Big Ten team In the last 11
years to drop the conference
baton tn the Rose Bowl.
T h is y e a r , 1 4 th -r a n k c d
Southern Cal took its turn,
h a n d in g th e fift h - r a n k e d
Buckeyes a 20-17 loss In Tues­
IT I) 01 t
U 0 40 I
day's 71st renewal of the Rose
M a i
14 S OF IS Bowl, making the Buckeyes the
LA 0(444*1
m
a ii
fifth of six Big Ten bowl teams to
go home a loser. Only Iowa's
iiaiNMiu
th u m pin g o f T e x a s In the
4N0404*0 111, 4vtia*0 HI
M | M | | i| Af 4ft | | . | |
Freedom Bowl preventing a Big
U IT W k H T)
Ten sweep.
DkN*0NpaJpitT.T0* ■)
OMl(t0*10444.) 0|tt.
USC's victory was keyed by a
Q i &lt;0«0 0 O ifrtlt T 0 * a.
pair of TD passes by Tim Green,
F-m m ii H VaAtatCitr I 0 * 0
two .51-yard field goals by Steve
0440010 Dam*. 4 .0 * 0
40144404it 0 laaffla V 0 * &lt;
Jordan and a swarming Trojan
defense that put the clamps on
L A 0(44010 MOm M i a *V*
burly running back Keith Byars
Otdtttl Lm JVRn*.m0F
and forced the Buckeyes to
1 ^ 0 0 0 l a M i Halt. 4104
‘
U ~
throw 37 passes, about 36 m ore'
than they would have liked to
have thrown.
NHL
The Big Ten champions ended
NATIONAL N O C IIT L I A 4 V I
their season at 9-3, as did the
V l l t t C l* l4 &gt; 4 l( 4
Pac-10 champion Trojans, who
* l 40. NT (A rebounded from a sorry 4-6-1
II IM 10
n h
campaign In 1983.
ti i n h i
ti iri ta
NT
Byars, runnerup to Doug
Fill
0 (IT in Flutle In the Helsman Trophy
n nr m
NT
n in ui balloting, carried the ball 23
times for 109 yards, 41 less than
im in
II I
04 ll) his season average. After a
un
in in
0H
50-yard romp on the third play
10 10
00
o
f the game, the Trojans shut
10
IM
a it
him down, holding him to 59
yards on 22 carries.
• L T F A D S t
IT I, I P IM 10
"W e gave Byars some respect,
0 10 10 but he hadn't played the Trojans
0 Ul HI
0 10 (0 this year," said USC comerback
II 1U U) Tom my Haynes, who had two
interceptions.
With the ground attack dying,
quarterback Mike Tomczak then
had to go to the air, a place the
ground-oriented Buckeyes enjoy
iL t a M M l
as much as a duck enjoys the
C a lp ri L I M n I
0 4 &lt; * 4 lA * l‘ i l i a i l
desert. He finished with 290
UN li o n t m
yards, including a Rose BowlH*1W40Qu*K.l0|"(
N T. M t * A n 0 O * r a L I .0 | 0
record 172 to freshman Cris
V n ca r* * 0 N T A j ^ n T 0*44
Carter, but threw three costly
F lM t t . N T r a K I 0 * *
Interceptions.
''mCmmU I i *
A H K lM K I V l*
"W hen we made them throw,
we had them where we wanted
O004H*Miiir4
NMnNCU LM.H04
them," said USC Coach Ted
V0anw0NM0FMr.0M(
Tollner.
"W e had them playing
4 M M N M l0 C 0 |n .4 IM «
0A04M4 1 0 1 0 A«plK4lM*
catch-up.”

----------

e ts T PcwveXe
( n q iM T R t N

MEN/ YOU
TO

Rita Wlnebargcr of the University of
South Carolina.
In the w om en 's club division,
Kristen Longm lre defeated Peggy
Davis 6-3, 6-2. In the women's club
doubles Posscr and Fowler defeated
Schwank and Hubbard 6-4, 6-1. All of
these ladles are from the Orlando area.
In the men's club singles. Bong
Imperial of Orlando was far and away
the class of the field as he wcnl
through the entire tournament without
losing a set.
Naturally, the showcase event In tills
tournament was the men's college
division. Players from all over the U.S.
competed In this event. Many un­
iversities brought full teams and.
Indeed, some of the big names in
college tennis were these. Perennial
powers Arkansas. Clcmson, T e n ­
nessee, South Carolina. Auburn and
Houston all brought several players.
Most college and universities In Florida
sent players and our local college
power. Rollins, had several players
who made a really fine showing.
The tennis was played on a very
high level and one could not help at
being amazed at the dep|h o f talent

Cr

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W e d n e sd ay, Ja n . 2, 1985

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT M ONDAY 8 A.M. •5 P.M.

y

The annual pre-Christmas
Tourney, round-robin series of
games kicked o ff the third
season of play for the Inter­
County Basketball Association.
O n ly a h a n d fu l o f te a m s
participated as most spent their
lim e practicing and getting
ready for the season-openers on
Saturday and Sunday with
games scheduled for both Lake
Howell and Oviedo high schools.
Four teams played In the
varsity boys' (8th grade) division
with the South Seminole Bob­
cats coming out as champs.
T h ey defeated the Jackson
Heights Lions 47-35 In the
o p e n e r a n d to p p e d th e
Tuskuwllla Warriors. 58-26 In
the championship game.
W illy Daunlc. the tourney
MVP. led South Seminole In
scoring in both games with a
consistent 14 average. He also
had 8 assists 9 steals and 16
rebounds In the two games.
Curtis Robbins scored 9 against
the Lions, Larry Watkins 6.
Danny Rubin 6. Brad Bolton 6
and Billy Slegrlst 6. Donovan
Williams led the Lions with 10.
C h r is K c w l c y an d R ic k y
Hampton had 7 each. Matt
Blanton 6.
F o llo w in g D au nlc In the
Tuskawllla game were Rubin 12
(on 6 for 7 shooting In the first
half). Watkins 12. Bolton 8.
Robbins 6 and Ron Roux 6.
Steve Johnson led the Warriors
with 12. Lance Pruitt had 6.

B a s k e t b a ll
In another first round game.
Tuskawllla defeated the Jackson
Heights Knights. 45-21. Johnson
threw In a tourney-high 17. Dave
R a m e y s c o re d 12. W a y n e
Sclover and Tommy Binkley had
4 each. Krafg Zch and Gary
Blocker 3 apiece. Andy Barth led
the Knights with 11. Tyronnc
11Ini had 6. Tracy Childers 3.
In a girls exhibition, the South
Seminole Kittens nipped the
Jackson H eights Scorpions.
14-12. Erica "Raising" Cain led
the Kittens with 7 and handled
the ball with perfection. Brlgctte
Szobur had 3. Stella Chestnut
and Jennifer Waters 2 each.
Bridget Jcnncrelle topped the
Scorpions with 6. Cheryl Buntz.
Michelle Wynn and Anna Hollis
all had 2 each.
(u JV boys action, the Jackson
Heights Lions only played one
game and won that. 35-19.
behind the scintillating speedy
play of Donovan Williams (he
will also play on the varsity
I e v c 11. T h e lo s in g S o u th
Seminole Tomcats were led by
Robbie "G ulliver" Crager with
10 points and 18 rebounds.
Tlteron Perkins add 5 (all In the
last period). Corey Riggins 2 and
Seth Rubin 2.
In another JV game, the
Tomcats came back to topple the
J ack so n H e igh ts W ild c a ts.
34-21. It was Crager dominating
again, with 16 points and 12
rebounds. He also blocked a pair

I

321-2398

FWCtS cooo
IAN. 2 TO JAN. •

I

1500 F R E N C H A V E .

Chris Wcstbury scored 14 for
the Wildcats. Jim Morris added
the other 7. Co-MVPs In the JV
division were Williams of the
Lions and Crager of the Tom ­
cats.

.). v ots. Chuckle Atkins scored
6. Rubin 4, Perkins 4. Rhys
Daunlc 2. Cade Reaves 2. Atkins
chipped In with 5 assists — he
and Reaves and Kenny Kroog
had 8 steals among them.

E l
t L

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D a u n ic 's A ll- A r o u n d P e rfo rm a n c e Earns M o s t V a lu a b le P la y e r
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LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI) G uillerm o Vilas says his
victoriou s match against
Yannick Noah was close only
because his opponent was
lucky In the beginning of
their battle In the $1.3 mil­
lion Challenge of Champions.
Vilas, who defeated Noah.
5-7. 7-6, 6-4, In the opening
round o f the tournament
Tuesday night, said that once
his luck began to sour he
began to play a crisper game.
Ivan Lendl breezed to a 6-4,
6 - 4 v i c t o r y o v e r V ita s
Gerulaltls In the other firstround match.
He Is grouped with Lendl.'
N oah and V ila s In the
round-robin format while the
other four-man group con­
s ists o f J oh n M cE n roe.
J im m y C onnors, J im m y
Arias and Johann Kriek.
In today's matches: Con­
nors takes on Arias. McEnroe
meets Kriek and Gerulaltls
plays Vilas.

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RELSKA
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J i m m y C o n n o rs p l a y s
J im m y A ria s today In the
Challenge ot Cham pions.

WINE

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PEOPLE

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 2. I f l J - I B

Cook O f The W eek

Working Mom Shares Recipes
With Today's Woman In Mind

HeraM PHeto by Brenda Lawn

Sarah Evans prepares quick, delicious m eals accented with
a variety of color, texture and flavor.

By Brenda Low e
Herald Correspondent
With time being at a premium
for today's woman, who often
balances a career with home life.
It's a treat to find new recipes for
quick, but delicious meals.
T h is w e e k 's cook. Sarah
Evans, who Is a wife, mother and
executive assistant, shares reci­
pes which are tailor-made for
today's busy woman. A variety
o f color, texture and flavor
accents these offerings.
Sarah, who recently returned
to Sanford from Naples. Is mar­
ried to Ron and they have two
sons. Ronald and Scott. Also a
very Important member of the
family Is "B aby." their lively
lhasa-poo.

Although Sarah has lived In Involved In decision-making and
several places In Florida. San­ some of the experience of buying
ford has always been "hom e." and selling. Besides. It can be
Her husband's job Involved Just plain fun!
When she Isn't busy with work
transfers to St. Augustine. Spr­
ing Hill, and most recently to or family activities. Sarah says
Naples. But Sarah adds that she that she enjoys painting In
Is happy to say this time Sanford watercolors, oils and acrylics.
Her favorite subject Is butterflies
will be their permanent home.
with baby animals a close sec­
Since quality time with her ond.
family Is Important to Sarah, she
To keep their home running
Is always trying to think of
s m o o th ly. Sarah says that
creative ways to Initiate projects everyone pitches In and helps
In which every family member with a little bit of everything,
can participate. One of her
including kitchen duty. She Is
favorite ways Is to have a yard
preparing her sons to be profflsale. This enables them to sell
elent In the kitchen as well as
their handcrafts and various
with the other many tasks to be
accumulations, but It also gives
done. Husband Ron helps out
the children a chance to be too. Sarah says that his specialty

Old Age Doesn't Have
To Be An Affliction
DEAR ABBT: My dear de­
parted mother, who had a won­
derful sense of humor, gave this
to me:
A SENIOR CITIZEN S LAMENT
Thought I'd let my doctor
check me
'Cause I didn't feel quite rite.
All those aches and pains
annoyed me.
And I couldn't sleep at night.
He could find no real disorder,
but he wouldn't let It rest.
What with Medicare and Blue
Cross
It wouldn't hurt to do some
tests.
To the hospital he sent me.
thought I didn't feel that bad.
He arranged for them to give
me
every test that could be had.
I was fluoroscopcd and
cystoscoped,
my aging fram displayed.
Stripped upon an Ice-cold tabic
while my gizzards were Xrayed.
I was checked for worms and
parasites
for fungus and the crud.
While they pierced me with
long needles
taking samples of my blood.
Doctors came to check me
over.
probed and pushed and poked
around.
And to make sure I was living,
they wired me for sound.
They have finally concluded:(their results have filled a
page)
What I have will someday kill
me.
my affliction Is old age.
(A u th or unknown)
I REMEMBER M AM A

DEAR REMEMBER! What an
amusing poem, but old age
never "killed" anybody. Unfor­
tunately, some doctors still
equate aging with Inevitable
mental and physical decline.
Dr. Robert N. Butler, former
director of the National Institute
of Aging, tells the story of a
101-year-old man who com ­
plained to his physician about a
pain In his left leg.
"W ell." said the doctor, "what
do you expect at your age?"
The man replied. "But doctor,

Dear
Abby
my right leg Is also 101. and It
doesn't hurt a bit."
Apropos aging, I have Just
com e up with a wonderful
handbook titled "Help Yourself
to Good Health." compiled by
the National Institute on Aging
— a part of the Department of
Health and Human Services,
whose secretary Is Margaret M.
Heckler.
._
This excellent hundbook will
be a godsend for people 60 years
old and older.
Some chapter titles: Accidents
and the Elderly; Aging and Your
Eyes: Arthritis Advice: Cancer
Facts for People Over 50; Con­
stipation; Dealing With Diabetes;
Hearing and the Elderly; Urinary
Incontinence: What to Do About
the Flu: Prostate Problems: High
Blood Pressure: The Safe Use of
Medicine by Older People; Senili­
ty. Myth or Madness?: A Healthy
Diet: How to Find Good Medical
Care: Protection Against Crime:
Sexuality In Later Life: and
more.
It Is written In large type In
simple language that everyone
can understand. It contains a
w e a lth o f In fo r m a tio n fo r
everyone over 50 who wants to
live a long, healthy and In­
dependent life.
It Is absolutely free — Includ­
ing postage!
For your book, write to: Pfizer
P h a rm a ce u tica ls. P.O. Box
3852-DA. Grand Central Station.
N.Y. 10163. Ask for the book
Dear Abby mentioned for older
people. (A postcard will do.)
Please print your name and
address clearly. And don't thank
me. thank the National Institute
on A g i n g a nd P f i z e r
Pharmaceuticals, which funded
this fine project.
P S. This offer Includes our
Canadian neighbors.

DEAR ABBY: 1 am getting
murrled soon, but there Is one
thing we cannot agree on. I want

Chronic Lung Disease Seminar
Dr. Ross B. Armour will dis­
Dr. Armour's topics will In­
cuss "Chronic Lung Disease” at c lu d e the p h y s io lo g y and
a free public program at 7 p.m. structure of the lungs — what
Jan. 10 at the West Volusia they do and how lung function Is
Medical Services building. 1681 evaluated. He will talk about
treatment and answer questions
Providence Blvd.. Deltona.
' The speaker Is an Internist on at the end o f the one-hour
the staff of West Volusia Memo­ presentation.
rial Hospital which sponsors
The program will be repeated
monthly programs as part of an
at the hospital In DeLand at 7
o n g o in g h e a lth e d u c a tio n
p.m. Jan. 24.
service.

my fiance to wear a wedding
band after we arc married. He
says he will not wear one
because he docs not care for any
kind of Jewelry.
I notice he always wears a
wrlslwatch. He says he "needs"
to wear one so he won't be late
for court or business appoint­
ments. (He'sa lawyer.)
I told him that he "needs" to
wear a wedding band so women
will know that he Is a married
man.
Am 1 wrong to Insist he wear
one?

ANONYMOUS BRIDE

being unrealistic. A wedding
ring will not stop your husband's
circulation — no mutter now
tight It Is. Back off. A wedding
band docs not u faithful husband
make.

PEPPER STEAK
1 small onion, chopped or
strips
I green bell pepper, slleed In
strips
I red pepper, sliced In strips
1 pound sirloin or round steak,
cut In strips
1cup beef bouillon

SeeCOOK, 2B

LEE M E A T S
27th ST &amp; 17 92

^PH. 323-0180

-

SANFORD

PINE CREST SHOPPING CENTER (NEXT TO JEWEL T)
OPEN MON.-THURS. 9 6, FRI. 9-7, SAT. 9-6
CASH A CARRY - WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS
PRICES GOOD THRU JAN. 9
U S. CHOICE

BONELESS

CALIF. CHUCK ROAST

LEAN

HOT OR MILD

a

C Q

199

ITALIAN SAUSAGE . . . 1 „
FLA. PREMIUM

!•

1
SPARE R I B S . . .
159••
1 59
QUARTER PORK LOIN 1
29
COUNTRY SA U SA G E. 1

CHUCK R O A S T .............
EXTRA LEAN

HOMEMADE

’

™

69

BONELESS

ii

COUNTRY STYLE

II

SLICED

A

FRYER LEG QTRS. .
FLA

-

A

C

.. O X

^

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WHOLE FRYERS . . . . . 0 3 .

LEAN AND MEATY

BONELESS

a

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PORK SHOULDER ROAST 1 ,?

FROM OUR DELI

.1

LEAN

DEAR ANONYMOUS: You're

is barbecue sauce ami lliut he
has developed a "state of the
art" style at the grill.
Whether you are an active
career woman or a busy home­
maker. Sarah's recipes will help
you get out of the kitchen faster
to enjoy some quality time with
your family. Following are some
of her favorites:
.

HOMEMADE

.I

FRESH (TASTES UHL LOBSIERl

MONK F I S H ...............

2

99
.1

DRESSES
&gt; SK IR TS
• BLOUSES
• SWEATERS
• PA N T SU IT S
• COATS

LADIES’ SHOES
DRESS OR CASUAL

20% 50%

OFF

OPEN EVERYOAY EXCEPT M ONDAY 8 A.M. •S P.M.

321-2398
M .P .O .
321-2398
C H E E S E S T O R E Y S .
In R e a r O t V illa g e F le a M a iS e t

8 A N F O R D FLA.

1500 F R E N C H A V E .
M PW TU

BIG EYE or
BABY SWISS
CHEESE

218 E. First St.
Downtown
Sanford

322-3524

•W•• ^ ^ •« «« «

�\

I B — Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. J, I f l l

30 minutes. Serve.
ANGEL F L A K E BISCUITS
5 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon soda
1 cake yeast
3 tablespoons baking powder
V« cup melted shortening
2 cups buttermilk
W cup warm water
Add yeast to warm water. Mix
dry Ingredients: add buttermilk,
shortening and yeast. Mix well.
Place on floured board and
knead. Put In plastic bag and
store In refrigerator. When
needed. Just pinch off dough and
place In pan In 350° oven for
25-30 minutes.
S TR A W B E R R Y DUMPLINGS
Vi cup sugar
4icup water
Vi teaspoon vanilla
1 cup sifted (lour
2 tablespoons sugar
I tablespoon sugar
1Vi teaspoons baking powder
Vi teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
Vi cup milk
1 pint strawberries (2 cups, or
any frozen berries)
In saucepan, combine Vi cup
sugar and water. Bring mixture
to boiling: reduce heat and
simmer uncovered 5 minutes.
Stir In vanilla. Sift flour. 2
tablespoons sugar and baking
powder and salt together. Cut In
butter or margarine till mixture
Is crumbly. Add milk and stir
Just till well combined. Place
berries In a 1Vi quart casserole
pan: pour hot sugar mixture
over. Immediately drop dump­
nng d0Utfh In 8-10 spoonfuls
n
\/rr
r r lm
over
berries.
Sprinkle the remalntng 1 tablespoon sugar on
dumplings. Bake In hot oven
450° for 25-30 minutes or until
dumplings are golden brown.
Serve warm from casserole. Top
with scoop of vanilla Ice cream
or whipped topping. Serves 4-5.
CHILI RICE BEAN SOUP
Good with ch efs salad and
hard rolls or toasted French
bread.
W cup long grain rice
2 tablespoons mlnccd onion
2 Vi cups beef bouillon
1 (15Vi ounce) can chill with
beans
Add rice and onion to bouillon
In sauce pan. Bring mixture to a
boil. Reduce heat. Cover and
cook gently until rice Is tender,
about 18 m inutes. R em ove
cover. Add chill. Return to a boll
Reduce heat and simmer 15
minutes longer. Serves 4.
RO N'S B-B-Q B AUCE
Vi cup butter
, 1 very small chopped pnlon
(optional)
Vi teaspoon seasoned salt
V4 cup Worcestershire sauce
2 tablespoons vinegar
V4 cup water
Bring Ingredients to quick boll.
Turn down the heat and simmer
for 15 minutes. Can be used on
an y kind o f m eat, but Is
especially tasty on chicken.
(Note: Taste for saltiness before
baBtlng meal. If It’s too salty,
add a little extru water.)

...Cook Of The Week
C o n tin u e d F r o m I B
4 tablespoons Heinz 57 steak
sauce
•2 tablespoons cooking oil
meat tendcrizer
cooked noodles
Sprinkle tendcrizer on steak,
set aside for 5 minutes. Heat oil.
brown steak strips to desired
brownness, remove to serving
dish. Cook In same oil the onions
and pepper til tender. Add
bouillon. 57 sauce, stir til mixed
and heated well. If a thicker
sauce Is desired, add diluted
cornstarch (V* cup water and 1
tablespoon cornstarch). Cook
until sauce bubbles. Return
9 te a k
to sauce, sim m er 10
minutes. Place on warm stove
until noodles arc prepared. Serve
sauce over hot buttered noodles.
CHOP SUET BAKED DISH
1 pound ground beef
onion (If desired)
1 can chicken rice soup
1 cup raw rice
I can chow mein vegetables or
1 cup finely chopped celery or
both
'*•./* cups water
3 tablespoons soy sauce
Brown ground beef and onion.
Put Into a greased baking dish
and add balance of Ingredients
except vegetables. Bake 1 hour
at 325°. Then stir In chow mein
vegetables. Sprinkle with I can
chow mein noodles (or serve on
the side to be used as desired).
Bake Vb hour more.
P U M PK IN C A K E RO LL
Beat 3 eggs on high speed for 5
minutes. Gradually beat In 1 cup
granulated sugar. Stir in Vi cup

pumpkin and 1 teaspoon lemon
juice. Stir together 44 cup (lour,
1 teaspoon baking powder. 2
teaspoons cinnamon. 1 teaspoon
ginger.
teaspoon nutmeg and
Vi teaspoon salt. Fold Into
pumpkin mixture and spread In
a greased and floured 15x10x1"
pan. Top with l cup finely
chopped walnuts. Bake at 375°'
for 15 minutes. Turn out on
towel sprinkled with powdered
sugar. Roll like Jelly roll, starting
at narrow end. Leave rolled until
cooled, then unroll.
F illin g : C o m b in e 1 cu p
powdered sugar, two 3-ounce
packages cream cheese. 4 teas­
poons margarine or holler, Vi
teaspoon vanilla. Beat until
smooth: spread over cake and
roll up again. Chill before slicing.
Serves 8-10.
CROCKPOT SPICY
BRAISED HAM
2-216 pound smoked boneless
pork shoulder butt
2 cups water
6 whole cloves
1 bay leaf
4 whole pepperrorr.-1
1 stalk celery, cut up
1 carrot, pared and sliced
P la c e a i r In g r e d ie n ts In
crackpot. Cover and cook on low
for 6-8 hours, or on high for 3-4
hours. Drain and serve.
S ervin g suggestion: S lice
cooked ham about W thick:
place In shallow baking pan.
Cover with glaze of 10-ounce Jar
of currant Jelly (or apple). 3
.jaMcspooiis fresh horseradish.
ier aman.
and Vi tea sp oo n prep
C p f lr ^ Q
mustard which has been heated
until Binooth. Bake uncovered

For children of all ages

W ith $5 off you can
brag about the p rice too.
NowOnly

$7195

With Coupon (Reg. *12.95)

Present this coupon 1o our photographer with 95c deposit |
on your pottrail package One coupon per family. Not
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thefo
lfer.Po
seso
urseleclio
valid with
any other
otter.
Poses
our
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t l sitting
fee for each additional subiect in same portrait. Offer
I
valid only on dates and at locations listed

W

—

Reg. price

”

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W ED N E S D A Y , JA N U A R Y 2 THRU
S U N D A Y ,J A N U A R Y 6
DAILY: 10 a.m. •0 p.m.
SUNDAYS: 12 noon •5 p.m.
3101 Orlando, Sanford

T H E P O R T R A IT P L A C E

Florida Wines Debut
At Village Festival
LAKE BUENA VISTA. Fla. The Wines of St. Augustine will
be the first Florida winery
participating In the four-year
history o f the Village Wine
Festival, set for Jan. 11-13 at the
Walt Disney World Village Con­
ference Center.

w in e con su m p tio n , behind
California and New York." he
explains. "California has 750
wineries. New York has 75
wineries. Florida had four small
wineries.

The year-old Tampa winery
will be among a prestigious
group of 60 domestic and in­
ternational wineries participat­
ing In the fourth annual festival,
regarded by wine Industry
spokesmen as Florida's biggest
showcase for premium wines.
Participants typically will pour
tw o p rem iu m v a r ie ta ls or
sparkling wines each day of the
festival.
The Wines of St. Augustine
will showcase Its Pale Golden
Cbaryne and Mimosa — both
produced from FU
oranges
rather than grapes.
"W e expect people to have
some doubts about wine made
from 100 percent oranges." says
S t. A u g u s tin e w in e m a k e r
Edward Gogel. "Once they taste
the product. It will eliminate the
s k e p t ic is m . It ta s te s lik e
grapes."
The Pale Golden Charyne.
Gogel says, has the charac. lerlsllrs of delicately blended
chablls and rhlne. Mimosa Is a
blend of sparkling orange wine
and orange juice described as
"festive, hearty."

"W e have the people, we have
th e c l i m a t e . .. w h y n ot
wineries?" he asks.
Ironically. Gogel says, the first
bottle of wine produced In the
U n ite d S ta te s w as In St.
Augustine. Fla. That historical
point tying winemaking to the
Sunshine State became the basis
for naming the Tampa winery
The Wines o f St. Augustine.
Village Wine Festival hours
are: Friday. Jan. 11. 7-10 p.m.;
Saturday. Jan. 12. 4-7 p.m.: and

Further Information Is avail­
able by w ritin g to Special
Events. Walt Disney World
Village. P.O. Box 35. Lake Buena
Vista. FL 32830.

WE
PURCHASE
MORTGAGES...
AND-MAKE-E1RS1L
AND SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS

Gogel, a 51-year-old Chicago
native who began his winemak­
ing career with Mogen David
shortly after graduation from
DcPaul University In 1956. says
his work with orange wines grew
out of simple logic: "Florida is
sunshine, and Florida Is oranges.
Why not develop a product
taking advantage of that?"
Gogel says that challenge grew
out o f an even more basic
challenge: convincing Investors
to back a F lorid a w in e ry .
"Florida Is third In the nation In

Sunday. Jan. 13. 1-4 p.m.
Tickets ($20 per session) are
available at Guest Services nnd
Village Spirits In Walt Disrvy
World Village. Hours are 10 a.m.
to 10 p.m. daily. From outside of
Greater Orlando, tickets may be
p u rc h a s e d by te le p h o n e
(305/828 3058) using American
Express or MasterCard. Ad­
mission includes a complimen­
tary Festival wine glass and
guide. All wines represented at
the tastings will be available for
purchase.

F a m ily C redit S e rv ic es. Inc.
A subsidiary cl CAS G eorgia Corporation

fir

ON S.R. 434, NEAR 17-92
In Th« Park Squara Shopping Clr.
Longwood, FL 32750

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

W td n s td a y. Jan. J, i o n — IB
7:00

TONIGHT'S TV

6:00

_

O ® ( 1 ) 0 ® 0 NEWS
TO (35) JEFFER50NS
f fi (10) MAC NEIL / (.EMBER
NEWSHOUH
tB (I) WELCOME BACK, K O n E R

6:05
H i LUCY SHOW

6:30

9:30

CD(10) A.M. WEATHER

0

® ITS YOUR MOVE

7:30

10:00

0

TO (35) TOM AND JERRY
(10) SESAME STREET Q
(8) VOLTRON, DEFENDER OF
THF UNIVERSE

® ST. ELSEWHERE
CD O HOTEL
51 t*S) INDEPENDENT NEV.'O-----OB (8) POLICE WOMAN

AND

s

CD (10) LIU A portrait ol worldrenowned pianist LA Kraus, who
rebuilt her career after spending
World War It in a Japanese prison
camp

7.05
TO GOMER PYLE
® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Featured Kermy Rogers and Dolly
Parton, evangelist Ernest Angley
( 1 ) 0 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(LI O 1100.000 NAME THAT
TUNE
OH (35) BENSON
O) (81 ALL IN THE FAMILY

7:35

8:00

(1981) Burl Reynolds. Rachel Ward
A vice cop uncovers hlgh-levet gov­
ernment corruption while investi­
gating the murder ot a call girt (R)

9:00
® FACTS OF LIFE

f f l O DYNASTY Blake receives an
untimely telephone call. Krystle
Informs Steven about Daniel ■ con­
nection with her family f J
O (35) CHILOREN BETWEEN LIFE
AND DEATH
( 0 (10) FROM VIENNA: THE NEW
YEAR S CELEBRATION IM S From
Ihe museums and palaces ol Vien­

•

11:30

.

9:05
TO MOVIE

12:00

10:00

TO MOVIE "The Deadly Affair '
11967) James Mason, Simone Sig­
nore!

O ® LOVE CONNECTION
3 ) O HOUR MAGAZINE (MON.
WED-FRt)
CD O COTTON BOWL PARADE
(TUE)
TO (35) BIO VALLEY
0 (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
CD (6) MAYBERRY R.F.D.

12:30

10:30

12:05

0

0 ® SALE OF THE CENTURY

® LATE NIGHT WITH OAVtD
LETTERMAN Scheduled sei thera­
pist Or Ruth Westheimet
(0)(35|F-TROOP

0 (10) J-Z-1 CONTACT (R) q
(D (8) REAL MCCOYS

® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(MON. WED-FRI)
CD O MOVIE The Lieutenant
O ® TOURNAMENT OF ROSES
Wore Skirts" (19561 Tom Ewell,
PARADE (TUE)
■Sheree North.___________________
-tf&gt; - O PRfCE « RIGHT (MON.
(35) GUNSMOKE
WED-FRI)
(8) THE AVENGERS
GD O tr iv ia t r a p
TO (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
1:10
CD 110) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
( E O MOVIE "The Double Man"
0 ( 1 ) IRONSIDE
(1967) Yul Brynner. Britt Ekland

2:00

11:35
TO ALL IN THE FAMILY
AFTERNOON

6:00

P NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE

12:00

MORNING STRETCH
EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
(35) QOOO DAYI
TO NEWS
(f)(6) JIM BAKKER

0 ® MIDOAY (MON. WED-FRI)
(D O NEWS (MON. WED-FRI)
( D O NEWS
:1V (35) BEWITCHED
CD 110) REAL THMG (MON)
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
0 (10) MYSTERY1 (WED)
(10) NOVA (THU)
(10) WONDERWORKS (FRI)

6:30

® NEWS (MON. WED-FR1)
' l l O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
CD 0 ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

§

(8) FAMILY

(35)POPEYE
FUNTIME

12:05
TO PERRY MASON

6:45

) O EYEWITNESS OAYSRCAK
) 110) A M WEATHER

"In parachuting, waiting Is the
hardest part.” says Skydive
Class President Merv Moss,
shown dangling by all fours from
a tree where his chute Is en­
tangled. "Sometimes It takes
hours fur those strin gs to
break."

® ANOTHER WORLO (MON.
WED-FRI]
( 7 ) 0 ONE LIFE TO LIVE
TO (35) ANOY ORIFFITH
0 (10) MAQIC OF FLORAL PAINT­
ING (FRI)

2:30
m o CAPITOL (MON. WED-FRI)
TO 131) GREAT SPACE COASTER
0 ( 1 0 ) PLAY BRIDGE (MON)
( 10) MARK RUSSELL (TUE)
(10) MAGIC OF WATERCOLORS (FRI)

S

3:00
O

® SANTA BARBARA (HON,
WED-FRI)
O PEACH BOWL (MON)
Q GUIDING LIGHT (WED-FRI)
O OENERAL HOSPITAL
(35) BUGS BUNNY
_ (10) FLORIDASTYLE
0 (8) VOLTRON, DEFENDER OF
THE UNIVERSE

3:05
TO FUNTIME

3:30
(35) SC006Y OOO
(10) MISTER ROOERS(R)
0 ( 6 ) INSPECTOR GADGET

3:35
TO HECKLE AND JECKIE

4:00
O

® UTTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE (MON. WED-FRI)
RITUALS (WED-FRI)--------MERV ORIFF1N
(35) SUPERFRIENDS
110) SESAME STREET q
(6) HEATHCUFF

8

4:05
TO FUNTSTONES

O ® SCRABBLE (MON, WEDFRI)
® O TOURNAMENT OF ROSES
PARADE (TUE)
“ 0 RYAN'S MOPE
(10) FLORIDASTYLE

MORNING

Novcllo. 41. grew up In Lor­
raine. Ohio, and lives In the
Marin County town of Fairfax,
where he works on creative
projects between trips to Los
A n g e le s and New Y ork to
perform. To do the yearbook
takeoff. N o v ello called the
C a lifo rn ia S h eep A d v is o ry
■Council, which suggested con­
tacting Tomales High.
In the book, one horned ram
facing a microphone Is identified
as Principal Raoul V. Weavers.
Nearby, a ewe typing letters ts
tagged as secretary Beverly
Stlcmmel. There arc mug shots
of 10 woolly faculty members
and profiles of the senior class
engaged in various activities —
• including skydiving.

2:00

0

11:30

2:20
TO MOVIE Best Friends" |197S)
Richard Hatch. Doug Chapin

FAIRFAX. Calif. (UPI) - Don
N ovcllo, the chain-sm oking
priest known as "Father Guido
Sarducci" of the old Saturday
Night Live shows, has led a
sheepish existence of late.
He even learned to tell one
b-a-a-a from another while
herding sheep around a high
school In the small Northern
California town of Tomalcs —
all. of course. In the name of art,
or at least entertainment.
" I turned Into a shepherd,"
Novello said. "A t first It was
hard remembering who was who
and what sheep did what. They
all have their own personalities,
you know."
He took the sheep Into the
school cafeteria, classrooms, the
gymnasium, and the football
field to be photographed for a
t o n g u e - in - c h e e k s e n io r
yearbook.
" T h e r e 's som eth in g very
funny about sheep." said Nov­
cllo. "Pigs, you couldn't get to sit
up. Cows are too big. With
sheep, once you set them up.
they stay put."
Instead of students pictured In
various school activities, the
sheep were substituted In what
turned out to be a hilarious
lam poon o f classroom life
published as the "Shellvilic High
School Blade." (Collier Books,
New York. $6.95).

1:30
O ® FIESTA BOWL (TUE)
® O AS THE WORLD TURNS
(MON. WED-FRI)
t i l O CO n O N BOWL (TUE)
TO(35)QOMERPYLE
0 (10) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

11:05
TO CATLINS

(II) (35) RHODA

Father Sarducci
Herding Sheep

T:U5
TO MOVIE

11:00

0

1:00

0

(10) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE
(THU)
0 110) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)
0 ( 8 ) MOVIE

9:30
0 X MORK ANO MtNOY
CD (6) HERE'S LUCY

QD O MAGNUM. P.L
Q THE SAINT
( J il BENNY HILL
(6) KOJAK

8:05

CD o MOVIE Sharky't Machine"

9:00
) FACTS OF LIFE (R)
I DONAHUE
I MOVIE
1(35) WALTONS
J&lt; 10) SESAME STREET q
CD (81 PARTRIDGE FAMILY

® TONIGHT Host Johnny Car­
son Scheduled Suianne Pleshelte.
James Gtlway
(3) O TAXI
(!) O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
TO (35) SC TV
CD |S) TWILIGHT ZONE

TO CO LLE G E BASK ETB A LL
Auburn at Kentucky

8:30

8:35
TO I LOVE LUCY

11:05

TO ANDY GRIFFITH
O ® COL LEO E CHEERLEADINO
CHAMPIONSHIP In Honolulu.
Bruce Jenner and Morgan Brittany
co-host the Division I competition
among Ihe seven squads vying lor
championship honors
--------( f t Q -CHARLES IN CHARGE.
CD O FALL OUY
(U) (35) AFRICA: CONTINENT IN
CRISIS
(D (10) AIR FORCE ONE: THE
PLANES ANO THE PRESIDENTS
Jimmy Stewart narrates a history of
the "Hying White House" Irom
FDR's secret Casablanca trip dur­
ing World War II to President
Reagan's journey to Ihe People's
Republic ol China
0 ( 8 | MOVIE The Picture Ot Dori­
an Gray'' |1945) Hurd Hatheld.
George Sanders A man remains
eternally young while Ins portrait
shows the eltecl ol Ihe years

8:30
(35) PINK PANTHER
_ (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
2 ! (8) "RADY BUNCH

0 ® (D Q (D O n e w s
(Hi (351 BIZARRE
flD(10| DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE
0 ) (8) NIGHT GALLERY

7:30

8:05

TO BEWITCHED

11:00

0

i

6:00

(35) WOODY WOODPECKER
(8) INSPECTOR GADGET

TO WORLD AT WAR

1914

( 7 ) 0 JEOPARDY
i t (35) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT
€D &lt;10) ALISTAIR COOKE'S AMER­
ICA
01(8) ONE DAY AT A TIME

1:00
O ® DAYS OF OUR LIVES (MON.
WED-FRI)
O ALL MY CHILDREN
(35) RHODA
(10) THE STORE (WED)

7:35
TOlDREAMOFJEANNIE

ITT)(35) BOB NEWHART

7:00

0

7:15

10:30

0 ( 4 )JOKER S WILD
Q j O P M MAGAZINE An tnltrview with lutlvof Jackie Collin*
( Hollywood Wives (. Ihe oolcome
ol psychic prediction* made lor

0

(35) FUNTSTONES
(10) FARM DAY
0 ( | ) heathcuff

(II WORLD AT WAR

6:35
BURNETT

na. Waller Cronkiie hosts a concert
ol music and dance featuring
Strauss walltes and polkas per­
formed by Ihe Vienna Philharmonic
conducted by Lorln Mauel

10:05

0 ® NBC NEWS
( 1 ) 0 CBS NEWS
(Z) O ABC NEWS □
TO (35) ALICE
(B (810000 TIMES
(Q CAROL
FRIENDS

® TOOAY
O CBS MORNING NEWS
O GOOD MORNING AMERICA

(D O YOUNG ANO THE RESTLESS (MON. WED-FRI)
~) O LOVING
6(35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

12:30

O (D SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
(MON. WED-FRI)

4:30
0 ® ROSE BOWL (TUE)
L£ 0 DIFF'RENT STROKES
(WED-FRI)
TO (3S| HE-MAN AND MASTERS
OF THE UNIVERSE
0 (l|FAT ALBERT

4:35
TOm u n s t e r s
5.00
O ® ANYTHING FOR MONEY
(MON. WED-FRI)
® O THREE'S COMPANY (TUEFRI)
0 LET'S MAKE A DEAL
(35) DUKES OF HAZZARD
(10) MOVIE
(l)VEQAt

By Joan Hanauer
UPI TV Reporter
NEW YO RK (U P I) - R e ­
member (he $6 million dollar
man? Well, now there's a televi­
sion scries built around a $3
million motorcycle.
The name of the motorcycle —
and of the show in which It stars
Is "Street Hawk.” Irjiremicrcs
on ABC Friday at 8:30 p.m. In a
90-mlnute special form, then
Rocs to Its regular hour format at
9 p.m.. the following Friday.
The scries could also be called
"Son of "Knlghtrldcr." which is
the name of the NBC series
about a supercar. That vehicle Is
named Kit and It talks with the
voice of William Daniels. The
motorcycle in "Street Hawk" is
silent except for the "varoom "
normal to the breed and the
screech of brakes necessary to
motorized mayhem.

W eath erlron O n t r a l
A ir C o n d illo n a r/H c .1 Pum p
TOon'l L a i You Down

The supcrcycle can be con­
trolled from a room that, as one
character describes It. looks like
the bridge of the Enterprise in
"Star Trek." The inach/ne is
ridden by Rex amlth as an
e x - m o t o r c y lc c o p w ith a
busted-up knee who Is testing
the machine for the federal
government — and also aveng­
ing the m urder o f his cop
partner.
For all practical purposes, the
machine is the star of the scries.
It goes Into "hyper thrust" for
supers peed, which is not quite
as fast as a speeding bullet. It
has u vertical lift capability that
doesn't quite leap tall buildings
In a single bound. It Is armed
with a htgh-encrgy^pamcle beamgun for which James Bond
might give up his license to kill.
It also can stop on a dime.
The man in the saddle wears a
specially molded suit and shiny
black face musk so that he can't
be recognized ut the scene of his
heroics — from which he skids
away be lore he can be thanked,
along the lines o f "W ho was that*
masked man?"

OPEN EVERYDAY EXCEPT M ONDAY 8 A.M. •5 P.M.

M E A T

S A N F O R D FLA.
YOUR CHOICE

FRESH m m

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59

GROUND
CHUCK

PIGS FEET,
PIGS TAILS,
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$ 1

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QJoe's

LO BSTER H O USE &amp; A N N E BONNIE’S TAVERN
2508 FR EN C H AVE. (Hwy. 17-92) SAN FO R D

'
✓

EARLY BIRD SPECIALS
ARE BACK

BUSINESS PERSON’S
LUNCH

K

Y
1'
Y

P R IM E RIB, F L O U N D E R
SEAFO O D S A M PLE R
S M O T H E R E D C H IC K E N

Y

Lunch Incluttot chotct ol our polHot* chore*
ol **ltd. cM c* ol tn u r*g*tabi*. hoi br**d

K

"Street Hawk" Is geared to
appeal to the little boy In all of
us. For the big people, there's
always "Dallas."

4:30 P M To 6:00 PM
P R IM E RIB, F L O U N D E R
C L A M STRIPS
O R F L O U N D E R P A P O L L IT E
Ctrly Bird* Sp*cl*lt Inctud*. Conch chowder
or trwnch onion toup. tu *«J pot*10 or FF. Inch
g*id*n m ltd or col* $l*w. hoi br**d 1 bull*r

* 4 .5 0

O N LY

J

X

•

O ln ors C lu b

O N LY

* 5 .9 5

A m e rica n E xp re ss

•

m

Y?

C han ge y o u r main course
to FAMOUS RECIPE ”?

FRI CIS GOOD
IAN. 2 TO IAN. 1

In R e a r O l V illa g e F le a M a r k e t
1500 F R E N C H A V E .

M A R K E T

1500 F R E N C H A V E .

5:30

321-2398

321-2398

In R o a r O l V illa g e F le a M a rk e t

® PEOPLE'S COURT (MON.
WED-FRI)
fl) Q M*A*8*H(TUE-FRI)
0 ) 0 NEWS

5:35
TO LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

M .P .O .

321-2398

5:05

0

201m m

TR A N E

0

TO BRAOY BUNCH

M .P .O .
M A R K E T

KING MACKEREL STEAKS
DRESSED DRUM
SHARK STEAKS
OCEAN PERCH FILLE
DRESSED WHITING
™

ir jF lo y d T h — t f |
W H ATEVER THE
TEM PERATURE

8

O PEN EVER YD AY E X C E P T M ONDAY 8 A.M. •5 P.M.

321-2398
F IS H

H ere Com es
'Street Hawk'

SA N FO R D , FLA.

W e r e a lly d o c h ic k e n r ig h t..* a n d a w h o le l o t m o r e , t o o !

S iz e u p F a m o u s R e c ip e ® to w h a t y o u ’ve b e e n g e ttin g ;
y o u 'll c h a n g e y o u r m a in c o u r s e a n d y o u r s id e d is h e s , to o .

L*.

WHY? JUST READ THIS:
Our Famous Recipe * Is pressure cooked to give you a belter lasting, tender and
moisl--yet not greasy-chicken with just the right amount ol crlsplness.

w r

-,

FRESHEST SALADS IN TOWNI...LARGER SERVINGS TOO!

.. .

Compare our homemade salads-made fresh every day In our own kltchen-to
others. Compare Ihe 16 oz. portions of salads lhal we serve, to the higher unitpriced 12 oz. salads that others serve.
«

m

LOWER PRICES!
Belter laste, larger portions, fresher flxins-all al a lower prlcel

SHRIMP, FISH, DINNERS or LUNCHES
W ith sa la d o t your ch o ic e .

C o m
w e

Chicken,
Spaghetti &amp;
Salad Buffet
ALL YOU C A N EAT
O N LY

$
m

3.39

s

* M r* t it

p a r e

s a y

t h a t

t h a t k e e p s

F a m o u s

y o u

c o m

t h e r e a s o n

R e c ip e ®

in g

“h a s

t h e

w h y
t a s t e

b a c k .”

'd m o u s
COUNTRY CHICKEN

WEDNESDAY
FAMILY SPECIAL

|c o u p o n |

Three Piece Chicken
Dinner
1 pm *. *1 **re»n
I h m 6 k i m &lt;CS— &gt;m CMc a m .
"»■»« fowclw c* **«»», two
*w*»ng&gt;«l tut *t*tt*ui
mu *
and a Hot. kw* M a rt.

8 ptiKMR

Eight Piece
Thrift Pack
PgMtUl R$CI0** 1

■ l i i d ,tu&gt; ct n iM K a n m
raS lt d

pM&gt; K

m

I

$ 0 3 9

where the chutee is ywirs. s ¥
Ph. 322-9212
2501 French Ave.
Sanford

f o r y o u r s e lf a n d a e e

COUNTRY CteCHM

SANFORD
ISOS French Are.
(Hoy. 17 II)

CASSELBERRY

41 M. H*y. 17-03
111-0111

COUNTRYCMCMN.
SANFORD
1005 French Are.
(Hwy. IT-03)
32S-3SSO

CASSELBERRY
41 N. Hwy. 17 03
0310151

» •*' y U.SI *Y

�4 B — E v t ntng H .r .ld , Sznlord, F L _

Wednesday, Jan. 3, IM J

Butter Cookies With Old - Fashioned Flavor
Although the holidays arc
over, delicious old&lt;fashlr&gt;ncd
cookies arc popular year-around.
T ' i c following recipes f o r but­
ler cookies have been kitchentested by the American Dairy
Association:

MINCEMEAT POIN8ETTIA8
Yield: 40

G en tly press Into frosting.
Carefully turn over. Frost top of
cookie.

WALNUTS DROPS
Yield: approx. 8 dozen

1 cup (2 sticks) butter
1Vb cups firmly packed brown
sugar

2 cSki&gt;

2 teaspoons vanilla extract
3 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
Vb cup dairy sour cream
44 cup chopped walnuts
Colored sugar
Cream butter in a large mixing

1 cup (2 sticks) butter
1 package (8 oz.) cream cheese
2 tablespoons sugar
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups all-purpose Hour
2 teaspoons baking powder
Vi teaspoon salt
Mincemeat
Candled cherries, cut In half
C ream b u tter and cream
cheese In a large mixing bowl
until light and fluffy. Beat In
sugar, eggs and vanilla. Com­
bine flour, baking powder and
salt. Stir Into creamed mixture
to form stiff dough. Cover and
chill. Preheat oven to 375° F.
Using one half of dough at a
time, roll out to Vb-inch thick­
ness on a lightly floured surface
In form a 1 5 x 1 2-inch rectangle.
Cut Into 3-tnch squares. Place on
lightly buttered cookie sheets.
Cut with sharp knife dipped In
flour from comers of each square
halfway to center. Place I teas­
poonful o f mincemeat In center
of each square. Bring every other
point o f dough to center, pinch
to hold In place. Press a candled
cherry half In the center of each.
Bake 12-14 minutes. Cool on
wire racks.

ANISE BUTTER COOKIES
Yield: spproa. 6 dozen
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
Vb cup sugar
Vb teaspoon crushed anise seed
14 teaspoon salt
214 cups all-purpose flour
Granulated sugar
Red and green candled cherry
halves
Cream butter In a large mixing
bowl Gradually add sugar and
beat until light and fluffy. Blend
In anise and salt. Gradually add
flour. Chill for case In handling.
Preheat oven to 375° F. Shape
Into balls 44" In diameter; roll In
sugar. Place on unbuttered
baking sheets. Flatten with bottomm of glass dipped In sugar to
make V4" thick. Decorate with
cherries. Bake 12-15 minutes, or
until lightly browned around
edges. Remove to wire rack to
cool.

Preheat oven to 375° F. Cream
butter and sugar until light and
fluffy. Add egg. milk, chocolate
and vanilla; mix well. Add com­
bined dry Ingredients and nuts
to creamed mixture; mix well.
Drop rounded teaspoonfula of
dough on unbuttcred cookie
sheets. Bake 10-12 minutes or
until set. Cool. For frosting,
combine butter, sugar, vanilla,
two tablespoons milk. Add choc­
olates mix unt) smooth. Add 1 or
2 additional tablespoons milk, as
needed, to make Icing a desira­
ble spreading consistency. To
assemble, lightly frost flat side of
cook ie. A rran ge fiv e pecan
halves to form head and legs.

MADELEINES
Yield: 4 dozen

1 rup sifted all-purpose flour
Vb teaspoon salt
4 eg#*
1Vb teaspoons each; vanilla
extract, grated lemon peel
4b cup sugar

See COOKIES, SB

PRICES &amp; COUPONS EFFECTIVE THURS, JAN. 3 THRU WED., JAN. 9.1985. WE REDEEM FEDERAL FOOO STAMPS.

FLORIDA PREMIUM GRADE

Fresh Fryer
Thighs or
Drumsticks

REGULAR MINI MARSHMALLOW OR LITE

SAVE 50*
PER LB

12
COUNT

U S .D A TOP CHOICE

Pantry Pride Sattines

BONELESS EYE
WHOLE

FLORIDA PREMIUM GRADE

Fryer W in g s .........

Round
Roast

U A O A TOP CHOICE STAS. K.C, STEAKS OH

Eye Round Steaks

French’s Mustard
Ragu Spaghetti Sauce

UJR QOVT. INSPECTED
GRAIN FED
WESTERN PORK

CUMBCTLWm (U P SMOKED OH

Prllsh S a u s a g e .........

Dfnty Moore Beef Stew

nmNQ

Chicken G iz z a rd s . ,*u

Quarter
Pork Loin

CENTER CUT SLICES

Smoked H a m ............
U A O A TOP CHOICE

Clorox
Bleach

Boneless Rump Roast
JX S Q Z U

Great
Ground

Sandwich S te a k s __
U SO A. TOP CHOKE CUBED

Chuck Steaks ...«£SK

MARKET STYLE

ONE

M

UMIT-1 WITH A *10.00 OR MORE FOOD ORDER

3 LBS &amp; O VER

Ivory S o a p .................
1LB

June Boy Sweet Relish

NwUiwii Napkins............... 79

SAVE 40*
PER LB

IN S T O R E D E LI/B A K E R Y
j

V

GALLON

5 LBS
A OVER

Sliced

Sweet’N Low
Sugar Substitute
SAVE 44*

DAIRY/DELI

« TH£ DEUBAKERY STORES ONLY

100
COUNT

HALF POUND
STORE SLICED

All Meat
Bologna

79*

HAN

Frosting:
Yield: 1H cups

Pecan halves

of white dough and one of green.
After twisting them together,
form Into circle on the baking
sheet. Brush with egg while and
sprinkle with green sugar. Use
cinnamon candles for garnish
and bake the same as the candy
canes.

S A V E $1.30
PER LB

2 tablespoons milk
2 squares (1 oz. each) un­
sweetened chocolate, melted
Vb teaspoon vanilla extract
144 cups all-purpose flour
1Vb teaspoons baking powdc t
14 teaspoon salt
Vb cup chopped pecans
3 tablespoons butter, softened
3 cups tided confectioners'
sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3-4 tablespoons milk
2 squares (1 oz. each) un­
sweetened chocolate, melted,
cooled

1V4 cups (2Vb sticks) butter

of dough. Divide the other half
Into two parts. Tint one part
light green and the other light
red with food color. Keep dough
chilled for ease In handling.
Preheat oven to 350° F. For
candy canes, roll with hands one
teaspoonful of white dough and
ou cu f led Into strips atout-feur
inches long. Place strips side by
aide and twist together lightly.
Carefully put on unbuttered
baking sheets and curve the top
down to form a handle. Brush
with egg white and sprinkle with
red sugar. Bake 10-12 minutes.
For wreaths, roll one tcaspoonful

Bottom
Round

PECAN CREATURES
Yield: approa. 8 dozen
Cookies:
44 cup (1 Vb sticks) butter
1 cup sugar

CANDY CANE AND WREATH
CO0KIE8
Yield: 4-5 dozen

1 cup confectioners' sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Vb teaspoon almond extract
3Vb cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
Red and green food color
1 egg white
Red and green decorating
sugar
Cinnamon candles
Cream butter In large mixing
bowl. Gradually add sugar and
beat until light and fluffy. Beat
In egg and flavorings. Combine
flour and salt: gradually add to
creamed mixture. Set aside half

U.S.D A TOP CHOICE

APRICOT STRIPS
Yield: 36
3% cups all-purpose flour
M cup sugar
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon grated lemon peel
1Vb cups (3 sticks) butter
W cup water
V4 cup fresh lemon Juice
1 can (12 oz.) apricot pastry
filling
Vb cup chopped candled red
cherries
Preheat oven to 400° F. Com­
bine flour, sugar, salt and lemon
peel. Cut In butter until mixture
resembles fine crumbs. Combine
water and lemon Juice; add to
dry Ingredients. 1 tablespoon at
a time, mixing well after each
addition. Shape dough Into a
ball. Cut Into three equal pieces.
Roll out each piece on a lightly
floured surface to form a 12x5"
rectangle. Mix pastry filling and
cherries. Spread V* of Ailing in a
b a n d t h r e e in c h e s w id e ,
ifeVtgthwtsc down center of each
piece of dough. Fold over one
Inch o f dough on each aide of
Ailing. Brush dough lightly with
milk and sprinkle with sugar. If
dcalrcd. Bake on unbuttered
cookie sheet 18-10 minutes or
until pastry is done. Cool. Cut
Into slices one Inch wide.

bowl. Add sugar, eggs and vanil­
la; beat until light and fluffy.
Combine flour, baking powder
and salt. Blend Into butter mix­
ture alternately with sour cream.
Stir In nuts. Cover and chill
dough. Preheat oven to 350° F.
Drop dough by rounded teas­
poonfuls Onto buttered cdOttle
sheets. Sprinkle with colored
sugar. Bake 10-12 minutes.
Remove from cookie sheets to
wire racks to cool.

B o ile d H a m
TANDY 1TOWI *
V

. . .....................* £ £ 1 . 3 9

F o r k C h o p
nU A UR ■ IMU1
E g g

D in n e r . . ^

1

, 0

...

R in g G la z e d

............... 4

King Size
White Bread

Orange
Juice

0

R o ll

S u b R o lls
MMZ rlta n UMLY

PANTRY PRIDE

T R O P C A N A 100*/. PURE
G O LD N 1 PURE

S lic e d P r o v o lo n e
—
* £ £ 1 .6 9
UUH P M M A
B a k e d B e a n s .....................- c S S
.9 9
WTTMTWO VEQETA* B A A SOU

FOX 1 . 0 0

ll
» M

D o n u t s . . dozen 1 . 7 9

Oscar
Mayer
Franks

SAVE 3 0

1602

2002
LOAVES

3 / «l«

LAYfft 'CAKE

G e rm a n

C h o c o la t e . . .

*ch3 . 7 9

1602 LOAF
FRESH BAKED

Italian
Bread

69*
I

F re e C h in a
In fo im a tio n
WE WILL NO LONGER
ISSUE BONUS CERTIFICATES.
BONUS CERTIFICATES WILL BE
REDEEMABLE THRU JAN. 19,1905.

i

�... Cookies
Continued From 4B
Vi cup (1 stick) butter, melted
and cooled
Confectioners' sugar
Preheat oven to 325° F. Brush
Madeleine pans well with melted
butter and dusj well Ith flour.
Combine flour” and salt. Beal
eggs, vanilla and lemon peel
until light and lemon colored.
Gradually add sugar and beat
until light and llulTy. Fold In dry
ingredients. Add melted butter:
mix carefully but thoroughly.
Fill Madeleine pans 44 full. Bake
about 15 minutes or until lightly
browned. Cool In pans on racks
about three minutes; remove

cloves, allspice
Vi teaspoon each: baking soda,
salt
Add water to apricots and
currants. Pour brandy over fruit:
cover and let stand overnight.
Preheat oven to 325* F. Cream
butter in a large mixing bowl.
Gradually add sugar and con­
tinue beating until blended. Beat
In eggs. Combine flour, cin­
namon. cloves, allspice, soda
and salt; gradu ally add to
creamed mixture. Blend in fruit
mixture. Place midget foil bak­
ing cups on a Jelly roll pan. Drop
one rounded tablespoon of mix­
ture Into each cup. Bake 25-30
minutes or until wooden pick
Inserted In center comes out
clean. Remove to wire rack to
cool. Before serving, dust with
confectioners' sugar.

cakes from pans and cool on
racks, shell side up. Just before
serving, dust with confectioners'
sugar.

BRANDIED APRICOT
TEACAKES
Yield: approx. 5 dozen
Vi cup boiling water
1 p a c k a g e (6 o z .) d rie d
apricots, chopped
1 box (10 oz.) currants
1cup apricot brandy
Vi cup (1 stick) butter
IV* cups firmly packed brown
sugar
3 eggs
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon each: cinnamon.

Evening H erald, Senford. FI.

For smaller teacakes
without baking cups, use but­
tered 144" muffin pans. Drop
one tablespoon mixture Into
m u ffin p an s. B ake 15-20
minutes. Yield: 6-7 dozen.
N o te :

beat until light and flufTy. Beat
In egg and vanilla. Combine
flour, baking powder and salt:,
gradually blend into creamed
mixture to form a stiff dough.
Stir In nuts. Divide dough Into
thirds. Add chocolate to one
third. Add food color and cher­
ries to second third. Leave re­
maining third plain. Shape each
color into a roil 14 inches long:
flatten to a width of lV i". Place
layers one on top of the other.
Press lightly. Cut Into two equal
pieces, each 7x1 V i". W rap
tightly In waxed paper. Re­
fr ig e r a te s e v e ra l hours or
overnight. Preheat oven to 375°
F. Cut dough into Vi»" thick
slices: place on unbuffered
cookie sheets. Bake until lightly
browned, about eight minutes.

NEAPOLITAN COOKIES
Yield: about 8 dozen
44 cup butter
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 V* cups all-purpose flour
1Vi teaspoons baking powder
Vi teaspoon salt
Vi cup finely chopped nuts
1 square (1 oz.) unsweetened
chocolate, melted
Few drops red food color
V* cup chopped maraschino
cherries, drained
Cream butter In a large mixing
bowl. Gradually add sugar and

t i j r

cPfide

MANUFACTURER’S

COUPONS
StrawBerries

GOLDEN GRAIN

Macaroni
&amp; Cheese
PINT
SAVE 19"

85*

REDEMPTION RU LES
V W * w |*l d o u b t s tO o c o u p o n v . l u t o n t i l m a n u f a c t u r e r c o u p o n ,
fc x M am tn B lo c k s i o a p t t o b a c c o a n d c t o a ra tta a N o r a in c b a c k a
°* a u b a P t u O o n . 2 T h a c o u p o n v a tu a c a n n o t a . o a a d B O ' a n d
tota f r a d a m p o o n c a n n o t a x o a a d tfta c o a t o f th a Ita m 3 W a w ill
O o u b ia o n ty th a Brat c o u p o n o n th a m a m a Ita m A n y a d d it io n a l
c o u p o n s o f Ilka l a m t w u i b a r a d a a m a d fo r f a c a v a tu a o n ly

^■
Will
SCCW O t b
U l n
o t d
O l i h l A ffree
n u i rcw
a r -n o t
&gt;■ W
W §i w
in accept
but
not
doubte
o uKpWo nMs A Jto w e ncen
BiCCept rebate c o u p o n s 8 Pan&amp; y Pride store c o u p o n s are not
Included in thle offer. 0 Saiee
------- tax m u tt be paid acco rd in g
Id state law

FRESH FLORIDA

WASHINGTON EX-FANCY
RED OR GOLDEN

Green
Cabbage

Delicious
Apples

$1.69

2 PINTS FOR

17*

PER
POUND

69*

PER
POUND

7.250Z
ONE GALLON

White Springs W ater............ 2/*1
STRAWBERRY

Sm uckers Preserves .

1AQZ

1.59

;

g

FRESH

Hungry Ja ck Potatoes

GEORGIA

39*

Cello 2
I Carrots JK, 1

NST ANT MASHED

|

Sweet 2
Potatoes !§

ttoz 1.19

BUNCH

p
FRESH
4
| Jumbo . 1
! Broccoli *
j
FRESH
&lt; Assorted

4/$l

10.75OZ

M

Baking
Potatoes JH

89*

Campbell’s
Tomato Soup

r
k

m

UMIT-4 WITH A $1000 OR MORE FOOD ORDER

20OZ PKG.

Eating
Pears

or

99*

1
1

79*
$149
PER POUND

WESTERN O'ANJOU

Greens 1
TURNIP- OOLLAROS.
KALE
MUSTARO

(
b

&gt;9C

HUNKSO CHUNKS

Jim Dandy Dog Food

uu3.99

ALL FLAVORS

Noodle R o n !..............

.69

sez

TREE SWEET

.89

Grapefruit J u ice...........
SANDWICH

Nabisco Oreo

ZM3Z

2.09

FROZEN

H E A LT H &amp; B E A U T Y A ID S
36 COUNT

2&amp;OZ FROZEN

Alka
Seltzer

SW ANSONS

Chfac
Nibbles

"SgM

Sugar
5 LB
BAG

C h ic k s

120Z FROZEN

6.4-OZ

$

2

Crest
Toothpaste

4 9

Dipsters

REG, MINT OR G£L

$129

24-OZ

LMINUTE MAID

Scope
Mouthwash
PANTRY PRIDE

5 LB FROZEN

«

2 49
24 COUNT

Advil
Tablets

WINE &amp; BEER
Polo
Brindisi

$ |4 9

12-OZ FROZEN

UMiT-1 WITH A $10 00 OR MORE FOOD ORDER

SECO BIANCO OR
ROSSO BIANCO

$ J9 9

TABLETS

SWANSON'S

Pantry Pride

$199

$J99
12 COUNT

Actifed
Tablets

.750 M L

$ J 4 9

Schaefers
Beer
REGULAR ONLY

EM I

20c O FF &amp; m

6 PACK
12-OZ CAN

Sealtest

SAVE TIME AND MONEY ON QUALITY

HWOtttUHNfi
EFFECTIVE THRU JAN . A 1

0 3 ?

OUR REG. PRICE
O F PHOTO R M S H M a
110,136 OR 136
COLOR PMNT FILM.

LEAV1 AND FCZ W T O * COLOR
FftWTS AT STORE OFFICE

P e p s i Cola,
D ie t P e p s i,
Mountain D e w
or Pepsi F re e
(REGULAR OR SUGAR FREE)

Cream
HALF GALLON- ALL FLAVORS
IMT-1 COUPON P W (TIM GOOO THRU WED, JAH A

_____ I OOLBfft 0U1 TO 04* LOW f
I KJL010 H A L M M0T I

Cool completely on wire racks.

CHRISTMA8 CUTOUTS
Yield: about 4 dozen
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
1V* cups confectioners’ sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
V* teaspoon almond extract
2Vi cups all purpose flour
1 teaspoon each: baking soda,
cream of tartar
Red and green food colors OR
paste colors
Cream butter In a large mixing
bowl. Gradually add sugar and
beat until light and flulTy. Beat
In egg and extracts. Combine
flour, soda and cream of tartar:
blend Into creamed mixture.
Pinch off Vi dough: tint It red
with food color. Tint remaining
Vi of dough green with food
color. Cover and chill doughs.
Preheat oven to 375° F. Roll out
green dough on a lightly floured
surface to Vi" thickness Cut
with floured cookie cutter to
form Christmas trees und with
floured donut cutter or two
crinkled biscuit cutters to form
wreaths. Roll out red dough on a
lightly floured surface to I t "
th ick n ess. Cut w ith sm all
floured cookie cutter to form
stars. Place starts on trees and
wreaths to decorate. Curefully
transfer to ligh tly buttered
cookie sheets with a wide metal
spatula. Bake 7-8 minutes. Cool
on wire racks.

BUTTERSCOTCH GRAHAMS
Yield: 30

GOOD THURSDAY, JAN. 3,1985 ONLY.
GROCERY
FRESH FLORIDA

Wednesday, Jan. 2, IM S—JB

J

I rm RBXY TO LJtfT OUArtTma

12 PACK
120Z CANS

30 grahum cracker squares
Vi cup (1 slick) butter
_ Vi cup firmly packed brown
sugar
Vi cup chopped pecans
Preheat oven to 350° F. Break
graham crackers In half and
place close together on baking
sheet. Combine buiter and sugar
in a 1-quart saucepan: stir over
low heat until butter and sugar
are melted. Stir In nuts. Drop
mixture on cruckers; spread
mixture slightly. Bake eight
minutes. Let cool five minutes:
then remove from pan to wire
rack to cool completely.

FRUITED SPICE BARS
Yield: BO bare

Bars:
1 package (H o z .) cream
cheese, softened
Vi cup ( I stick) butter
1V* cups firmly packed brown
sugar
V* cup honey
Irg S
2 cups all-purpose flour
1Vi teaspoons baking powder
Vi teaspoon salt
1V4 teaspoons cinnamon
44 teaspoon nutmeg
1 cup each: pitted chopped
dales, chopped mixed candled

fruit
Vi cup golden raisins
Icing:
IVi cups sifted confectioners
sugar
2 tablespoons milk
Vi teaspoon vanilla extract
Preheat oven to 350° F. Bea
cream cheese and butter untl
flufTy. Add sugar and beat untl
light and fluffy. Beat In hone.*
and egg. Combine flour. bakln|
powder, salt and spices. Mix V
cup flour mixture with fruit: tos
lightly to coat fruit. Add re
m a ln ln g flo u r m ix tu re h
creamed mixture; mix well. Sti
In fruit. Spread evenly in but
tcred and floured 15x1014" Jell,
roll pan. Bake 30-35 minutes a
until golden. Cool on wire rack
For frosting, combine all Ingrt
dlcnts and mix well. Drizzle ovc
top of cookies. Cut Into bar
before serving.

CARAMEL 8PRITZ
Yield: approx. 8 dozen
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
Vi cup firmly packed brow
sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon maple flavoring U
vanilla extract
214 cups all-purpose flour
V* teaspoon salt
Preheat oven to 375°F. Crea:
butter In large mixing bow
Gradually add sugar and bet
until light and flufTy. Beat In eg
and maple flavoring. Beat wcl
Gradually add dry Ingredient
mix thoroughly. Press doug
through cookie press onto ui
buttered baking sheets, uslr
any desired patterns in cook
press. Decorate as desired. Bai
8-10 minutes or until llg)
golden brown. Cool on wire rack

COCONUTTY BUTTER BALL
Vi cup butter or margarine
2 tablespoons confectlone
sugar
Vi teaspoon vanilla
1 cup all-purpose flour
lVi cups (about) angel fla
coconut
Cream butter. Add sugar at
vanilla: beat until light at
flufTy. Add flour all at once, a:
blend well. Mix In 4i cup o f ti
coconut. Chill 15 minutes: th*
shape into 1-lnch balls. Roll
remaining coconut and bake i
ungreased baking sheets at 354
for 15 minutes or until light
browned. Cool on racks. Makes
dozen cookies.

Ths Indians o f th s C arib­
bean w o u ld n o t s a t tu rtls s
fo r fsar such a d ls t w o u ld
m aka thsm itu p id .

-

■ .

.

„

�l

r

A B — Evenin g H erald , Sanlord, FI.

W ednesday, Jan. I, 1N5

tegol Notice

Former County Commission Chief
Fined $250 For Reckless Driving
A former Seminole Counly Com­
mission chairman charged with driving
under the influence and driving with a
suspended driver's license has pleaded
no conU-t to a reduced charge of willful
and wanton reckless driving and been
fined $250.

Sid Vihlen Jr.
...originally
c h a r g e d with
d ri v i n g under
the Influence

Sidney L. Vlhlcn Jr.. 43. of 670 Vihlcn
Road. Sanford, was arrested Sept. 27
after he attracted the attention of a
Florida Highway Patrol trooper who
reported seeing the former commission­
er travelling east on Interstate 4 at H5
mph.
According to court records, Vlhlen's
blood alcohol level was 0.06 when he
was stopped, less than the 0.1 which Is
considered legally under the Influence.
According to the arresting officer.
Vlhlcn. who was carrying a passenger.
Catherine M. Marble, of Minnesota,
"w as passing vehicles using both Inside
and outside lanes."
As the trooper pursued Vlhlcn IV*

miles west of Lake Mary. Vlhlen's c*r
reached a speed of 115 mph. according
to the arrest report.
The trooper reported fo rcin g Vthlen to
stop by pulling his patrol car tn Imnt
Vlhlen's vehicle and slowing down
cause the "defendant to put on hts
brakes hard and stop "
The trooper reported that Vihlen*

eyes were "bloodshot and glassy" and
that there was a "strong odor of
alcoholic beverage on his brealh."
Vihlen. who served on the Seminole
County Comc'lNdon from 1970 until
1976 when he unsuccessfully ran for
Congress w as also charged with driving
with a suspended license.
Countv Judge Alan lllckey dismissed
the Utlet rivalge alter Vthlen entered
the plea Nov 5
According to wvut records. Vthlen has
been slopped 11 times by police for
UwRVf tnhaetton* since 1977. The stops
inchhfe mne Hops tor speeding In four
FVwfcta counties, live DUI charge, und
one M r Saving an obscured tag on hts
vehicle Sk\ viavs W-kur he was stopped
m SAnwvde Cwuntv on the DUI charge
Se wa* tvketevi tn Volusia for siwetllng.
jwwevtwvfi to vvvut revotvis
v W v * have been Issueti twice for
\iS&gt;rn* at vest tor tatlure to pay traffic
ftnes. »v*ui revwrvUsbow

—Deane Jordan

Plane Down
U.S. Ambassador's Wife Listed As Passenger
LA PAZ. Bolivia (UPI) R escue team s stru ggled
through fog and freezing
temperatures today to reach
aircraft wreckage believed to
be (hat of an Easlcrn Airlines
plane missing In the rugged
Andes Mountains south of La
Paz.
" I t a p p e a rs II Is the
wreckage o f the Eastern
plane." said Jock Barker, a
spokesman for the Federal
Aviation Administration In
Atlanta.
An FAA spokesman In
W a s h i n g t o n s a i d (h e
agen cy’ s com m unications
center had been Informed.

p resu m ab ly by B ollvln n
authorities, that aircraft
wreckage had been located
a p p ro x im a te ly 50 m iles
southeast of thr Bolivian capllal but there was no con­
firmation It was the Eastern
Jet.
The Ikiclng 727. carrying
al least 33 p eo p le but
perhaps us many as 41 —
Including the wife of the U.S.
Ambassador to Paraguay and
six other Americans — was
last In contact wlih La Paz' El
Alio airport less Ilian 11
minutes before it was due to
land Tuesday night.
An Eastern o ffic ia l In

Bolivia. Gonzalo Fcrruflno.
said heavy cloud cover made
II difficult to use planes to
conduct air searches for
wreckage, and the search
was therefore limited to a
number of Jeeps and other
land vehicles.
He said seven Americans.
Including Marian Davis, the
wife o f U.S. Amhnssador to
Paraguay. Arthur Davis, were
on the list of 31 passengers
aboard the plane.
Fcrruflno said 31 passen­
gers and 10 crew members
were oil the Jetliner, but an
E a s te rn o f f i c ia l at th e
a irlin e's headquarters In

Miami said the (light carried
25 passengers and eight crew
members.
Five of the crew aboard the
Jet. an Eastern official In
Chile said, were Chileans.
The flight. Eastern 980
bound ultimately for Miami,
left Asuncion Tuesday even­
ing and the last radio com­
munication was registered 11
minutes before It was to land
at El Alto airport. Eastern
com m u n ication s d irector
Paula Musto said. There was
no Indication al the time that
anything was wrong, she
said.

J a c k s o n T o T r y A n d F r e e U .S . H o s t a g e s In L e b a n o n
NEW YORK IUPII - Civil righls leader
Jesse Jackson, who heads to Rome
today to pray for world peace with Pope
John Paul 11. says he wants to arrangc
thc release of three American men
kidnapped In Lebanon last April.
Jackson spoke at a Harlem memorial
service Tuesday held for Jerry Levin,
51. the CNN Beirut Bureau chief;
WtUtam Buckley, 55. a U.S. embassy
political officer, and Benjamin Weir. 60.
a Presbylerian minister.
The three men were kidnapped In
Beirut last April, and Jackson said
Tuesday he Is willing to go lo the MiddleEast. al a later dale, to bargain for their
release.

"W e don't know specifically who Is
holding them or where they arc,"
Jackson said. "It Is inappropriate to go
to Lebanon and Syria now."
Little has been heard of the men since
their abduction last April by unknown
gunmen, hut Jackson — who won the
release of downed Navy filer Robert
Goodman from the Syrians last year —
said he believed the missing men were
sttlt alive.
"On bchulf of the Levin and Weir
fumllles w e ’d like lo express .our
tremendous gratitude to Rev. Jackson."
said the wife o f the missing CNN
correspondent. Levin's wife attendrd
the service al the St. Charles Catholic

Pro-Abortionists
To Fight Bombings
WASHINGTON IUPII - A New Year’s Day
explosion at an abortion clinic In the nation's
capital has sparked the Planned Parenthood
Federation to find a way to fight back against
what they call u "reign of terror."
The Hlllcrest Women's Surgl-Ccnter In
Washington was empty when a blast ripped
through the clinic, collapsing the celling and
sending debris flying into the air. No Injuries
were reported In the 12:10 a.m. explosion.
It was the third abortion facility bombed In
thr Washington area in two months and It Is
the eighth such blast In two years. No one has
claimed responslbllty for the blast, police said.
Officials rushed to condemn the blast.
Washington Mayor Marlon Barry called the
terrorists "deranged" and called on the "Jerry
Falwells of thr world to condemn such
activities."
Faye Wattleton. president of the national
Planned Parenthood federation, culled on
President Reagan to put law-enforcement
agencies behind "seeking out. arresting and
curtailing" participants In abortion clinic
bombings. There have been at least two dozen
such attacks across the country In 1984.
"This senseless attack of a Hlllcrest abortion
clinic und counseling service Is further evi­
dence of terrorist activity by a small group
determined to force Its will upon the American
people." she said.
Roscanne Wiseman, executive director of the
Waahlngton-arca Planned Parenthood federa­
tion. said pro-abortion groups will meet this
week to build a strategy to prevent and fight
against the terrorist aetlvlty.
Police said there was no Immediate link of
yesterday’s blast to the three Christmas Day
bombings In Pensacola. Fla., nor to the seven
other bombings In the Washington urea.

Doonesbury

Church in Harlem along with about 300
other people.
Jackson, the unsuccessful candidate
fo r th e D e m o c ra tic p re s id e n tia l
nomination last year, said he was not
visiting the pope to enlist his help In
(Indlng and freeing the missing men.
" I have reason to believe the mission
Is morally the right thing and practically
the feasible thing." he said.
Jackson said, “ At this time a year ago
Lt. Robert Goodman was captured there
and once we found out appropriate
sources to communicate with, we made
a moral appeal to break the cycle of pain
... and we would like to do that In this
Instance as well."

S h u ltz G e t s F in a l P la n s
F o r U p c o m in g A r m s T a lk s
P A L M S P R IN G S .
Calif. (UPI) - President
Reagan has defined the
mundatc Secretary of
State George Shultz
will have next week In
pursuing new negotia­
tions with the Soviets
on, defensive weapons
and offensive nuclear
arms.
During a New Year's
Day summit with his
senior national security
advisers at the 200ucre estate of publisher
W a lte r A n n c n b c rg .
Reagan made final de­
cisions that will guide
Shultz In his talks with
Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko
Monday and Tuesday
I n G r n e v a .
Switzerland.
The specifics were
kept secret, but the
basic elements were
consistent with signals
that emanated from
the administration In
recent weeks.
While administration
officials described the
strategy for Geneva as
a con sen su s o f In ­
tensive Inter-agency
deliberations, the recommendatlo-ns
forwarded to Reagan
appeared to only paper

over substantive and
unresolved differences
between hardliners at
the Pentagon and their
less-rlgld counterparts
at the State Depart­
ment.
Among the principal
U.S. objectives, officials
said. Is a resumption of
formal arms control
negotiations under two
distinct headings: one
dealing with defensive
w eap on s, In c lu d in g
anti-satellite systems
and R eagan 's "S ta r
Wars" missile defense
proposal, and the other
focusing on Intermedi­
a t e - r a n g e n u c le a r
missiles and strategic
arms.
S ep a ra te n e g o tia ­
tions on Intermediateand l o n g - r a n g e
systems were brought
to a hall In late 1983
by a Soviet walkout.
Adm in istration o f­
ficials said the U.S.
position, If successful,
could lead to a re­
s u m p t io n o f f u llfled ged negotiations
over the next three
months and said the
.United States Is pre­
pared for an early re­
turn to the bargaining
table.

Lego! Notice
IN T H E e n t t U i t COURT
FO R SE M IN O LE COUNTY.
FLO R ID A
PR O B A T E DIVISION
Fll* Number 74 712 CP
Division Probate
IN RE: ESTA TE OF
H ER SH ELS. H ALSEY.
Detected
NOTICE OF
AD M INISTRATION
The ad m in istra tio n o l the
e i i a t e o l H E R S H E L S.
H A L S E Y , d e t e s t e d . F ile
Number I t 111 CP. It pending In
Ihe Circuit Court lor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo r id a , P r o b a ta
Olvlslon, the eddrett ol which It
Seminole Counly Courlhouto.
Sanlord. F lo rld o J i m . Tho
n a m e an d a d d r a t t o l lh a
perianal repretanlallva and the
personal representative's a t­
torney are tet forth below
A ll Inleretled per von t are
required lo Ilia with Ihe court
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FR O M THE D ATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE: III e ll clalm t
egelntt the etlafe end 111 any
o b le ttlo n by an I n t e r f ile d
person lo whom notice w et
melted that challenges the valid
Ity ol Ihe w ill, the qualifications
ef the personal representative,
venue, or |urltd!ction of the
court.
A L L C LA IM S A N D O B JEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Date o l tho first publication of
this notice ol administration:
January I. IMS
Personal Representative:
W ILM A I H A L S E Y
eat North Waymen Street
Long wood. Florida 22777
Attorney lor Personal
Representative:
DOUGLAS STENSTROM ,
Esquire
STENSTROM . M dN TO S H ,
JU L IA N . C O LB E R T
A W HIGHAM , p .a .
p .o Bon m o
Sentord, Florida 22771 11)0
Telephone K l / D l - l i n
Publish January l. t . IMS.
D EB 11

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT. IN
AN D FO R S E M I N O L E
COUNTY. FLO R ID A
C I V I L A C T I O N NO
14 ISIS CA Of E
A D A M F BUTCH and E U L A C
BUTCH, h it wile.
P le ln lllls.
vs C A R L K E IT H B L A K E L E Y
end A N G E L A C B L A K E L E Y ,
his wife. ASSOCIATED D RY
G O O D S C O R P O R A T IO N , e
V ir g in ia C o rp o ra tio n d .b /e
R O B IN S O N S OF F L O R ID A .
FE D ER A T ED DEPARTM ENT
STORE'S. INC . a Oelewere
corp . d b i B U R D IN ES OF
F L O R I D A , and J O H N
LAM BKE.
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO C A R L K E IT H B L A K E L E Y
PSC Boa 2114 A PO San Fran
d u o CA *4244
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IFIED that an action to
foreclose Agreements lor Deed
on the following property In
Seminole County. Florida
That part ot Lot f. Block B at
T R IP L E T T L A K E SHORES as
recorded in P le l Book I. Page
II. ot the Public Records of
Seminole County. Florida Lying
N ot Oak wood Drive as de
u rib e d In Official Records Book
IIS). Pages 204 end 203, Public
Records ol Seminole County.
F lo rid a , end S o l S E C R E T
L A K E SHORES at recorded In
Piet Book 21. Paget f ) and f).
P u b lic Records o l Seminole
Counly. Florida
L ES S Begin at the SW corner
ot Lot Ik. S E C R E T L A K E
S H O R E S , th e n c e ru n N
t n i i j " F along the S line ot
Lot 14. 12100 feel to the SE
corner of Lot Ik end the N‘ ly
right ol way line ol Triplet Lake
Drive being a curve concave
S ly having a radius ol k U U
feet: Ihence Irom a tangent
bearing ol S tt*})00" W run
30 00 feet along the right ol way
line end curve through a central
angle ol 02-2C22" to a point on
the curve, thence N 77*0700' W
104.20 feet to the Point ol
Beginning
A L S O LE S S
Begin at the SW corner ol Lot
14. S E C R E T L A K E SHORES,
thence run S’ly along the W line
of Lot f. Block B. T R IP L E T
L A K E SHORES, to the N ly
right ol way line ol Oak wood
D rive as d e l ,-lbed In Olflcle!
Records Book III). Paget 204
end 201 thence ETy along Ihe
N ’ly right ol way of Oak wood
Drive 14 00 leal. Ihence N E 'ly to
e point on Ihe S line of Lot IS.
S E C R E T L A K E SHORES,
thence W 'ly along the S line ol
Lots IS end 14 104 00 teat to the
P o ln lo l Beginning
hat been tiled against you end
you ere required to serve a copy
o l your written delentet. It any,
to It on JA M E S A. BARKS, ot
S H IN H O LS E R . LO G A N .
M O N C R IE F A N 0 BARKS. At
torneyt tor P la ln tills. Post Ot
Ilea Box 722*. Sanlord. Florida
22772 2277. and tile the original
with the Clerk ol the above
Court on or before January 21.
IMS; otherwise, a Judgment
may be entered against you lor
the re lie f demanded In the
Complaint
W ITNESS my hand end Ihe
oltlcla l seel ol this Court, on this
17th day ol December. IM4
A R T H U R H B ECKW ITH , JR .
CLERKO F
T H E CIRCUIT COURT
By: Marge Lewis
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December If. 74. 1M4
A January 2.7. IMS
O E A (4
IN THE CIRCUIT COUNT FO R SE M IN O LE COUNTY,
F LO R ID A
PR O B A T E DIVISION
File Number M 711CP
Oivltleo Probe It
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
V IO LE T LOUISE COHEN.
Deceased.
NOTICE OP
AD M INISTRATION
The e d m ln ltlre llo n o l Ihe
e sle te ot V I O L E T L O U IS E
COHEN, deceased. File Number
14 711 C P. Is pending In the
C ir c u it Court lo r Sem inole
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , P r o b e le
Division, the address ol which It
Seminole Counly Courthouse,
Sanlord. F lo rid a 22771. The
n a m e an d a d d re s s o l Ihe
personal representative end the
personal representative's at
lor nay are sal forth below
A ll Inleretled persons ere
required to tile with the court
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
F R O M THE D ATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE: (II ell claim s
egaintl lha estate and 12) any
o b |a c llo n by an I n t e r f ile d
parson to whom notice was
mailed that challenges the valid­
ity ol the w ill, the qualifications
ol the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ol the
court.
A L L C LA IM S AND O B JE C
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FO REVER BARRED
Date ot the first publication ol
this notice ol administration:
January I, IMS.
Personal Representative:
J E W E L L CRAIN
1274 Richmond Or.
Melbourne, F L 77713
Attorney tor Personal
Representative
DOUGLAS STENSTROM.
E S Q U IR E o t
STENSTROM , MclNTOSH,
JU L IA N . C O LB E R T
A W HIGHAM . P.A.
P.O. Box 1)20
Sanford, F L 22777 1330
Telephone: 207/171 1171
Publish January 1,7.1M1
D E B 17

€

•/T ' i

6

CALLTO LL FR EE
HMA-MI-1I2I

ShoppingFor A
NewOr UsedCar1
r*M C M alw ays H ad U N
A m ! de a ls fa Ik e C v e a ta f
H e r a ld ’s C la s s ifie d e e c lle .i.
H ead F r ld i/ 'e E v e n in g H e ra ld
/n r I be A nal se le ctio n * .

Evening Herald
V

JL

ijN ■ * x ^ * &gt; * 7 I

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sem inole
322-2611

O rlan d o - W in ter P a rk
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
LJOII DC
M U U Ka
8:30 A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

RATES
1 t iin o .$7® • fin*

3 conwcuUiio time* 61C a lino
7 consocuttoo tlm is 52C ■ lino
jq

consecutive timos 46C a lino

Contact Ratos Available
3 Lines Minimum

DEADLINES
N oon The D ay Bef or e Pu blication
Sunday • N oon Friday
M o n d a y - 11:00 A .M . Saturday

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care
E x p e r ie n c e d M o t h e r w i l l
babysit in my home Fenced
beck yard 1210477.
FOR Q U A LIT Y CH ILD CA R E
With an Educational Program
Call 1)2*424
____

Will Babysit
In my home. 221-7441

33— Real Estate
Courses
B O B M . B A L L JR.
SCHOOL OF R E A L ESTATE
32) 411(0022 7164

Al— Money to Lend
B usiness C a p ita l 1 ) 0.000 lo
11.000.000 end over P O Box
)41) Winter Pk. Fla, 2)770

71— Help Wanted
ACCOUNTS R E C E IV A B L E
C L E R K Strong background In
payment posting to computer
systems with emphasis on
proa I process M usi be well
orgenliied with good clerical
skills
O E N E R A L A C C O U N T IN G
C L E R K Good organlrational
and communication skills. The
Individual we era seeking w ill
have daily contact with glass
and aluminum vendors Also,
you will be required lo file, do
some typing, and required lo
f ill In as racep llonltt end
Courier, as needed II you
have these skills contact
Harcar Aluminum Products Co.
1171 Cornwall Rd.
A cry lic Applicators needed to
apply protective coaling on
cars, boats and planes SS to
l i t per hour. We train For
work In Sanford area call
T e m p a (l) M4 71SI

Attention Locals
Bartenders, waitresses, A but
wanled lor Senlords newest
nightclub S L IC K S Please
cell: 222 7720 tor Interview
between 1 end S this week.

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business al 471
SR 4)4. Suite 1)7. Altamonte
S p rin g s . S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Florida 2)714 upder Ihe fictitious
name ol A L T E C H 2000 INC
D B A DR DOUGH B A K E R Y
L A B , end lh a l I intend lo
register said name w llh Ihe
C le rk ol the C irc u it Court,
Seminole Counly. Flo rid a In
accordance wllh the provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes,
•o w il; Section 143 07 Florida
Stalutes 1737.
/t/ K A lien Gebherd
Publish December 12, 17. 24,
1774 A January 2. IM3
D E A 44
NO TICE llF S H E R IF F 'S SA LE NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtue ol that certain
W rit ot Execution Issued out ol
end under Ihe seel ol the County
C o u rt o l Sem inole C o u n ly ,
Florida, upon e final judgement
rendered In the aforesaid court
on the 17th day of November,
A O IM4. In Ihel certain case
entitled. Atlantic National Bank
o l Florid*. Plalntllt, —vs— J O
David E A Elaine D. Bernier,
Defendant, which aforesaid W rit
o l Execution was delivered to
m e as S h e riff of Sem inole
County, Florida, end I have
levied upon the following de
sc rib e d p ro pe rty owned by
Oevld E. A Elaine Bernier, said
p r o p e r ly b e in g lo c a te d In
Seminole Counly. Florida, more
p a r t ic u la r ly d e s c r ib e d as
follows
One 1771 Pontiac Gran Prlx.
B l u e In C o l o r ID r
2J37A4A 230437 being stored el
A lta m o n te Tow ing S e rv ice .
Altamonte Springs. F lor Ida
end the undersigned as Skier Ilf
ot Seminole County. Florida,
w ill el 11:00 A M on Ihe 24lh
day ol January, A D. IMS. oiler
lor sale and sell lo the highest
bidder, lor cash, subject to any
and ell existing lain*. el Ihe
Front (West) Door al the slaps
o l the Seminole County Court
house In Sanlord. Florida, ihe
above described personal pro
parly
Thai said sale Is being made
•o satisfy Ihe terms ol said WHI
ol Execution
. JohnE Polk, Sherlfl
Seminole County, Florida
To be Advertised January 2. 7,
14,1). with the sale an January
74. IMS
D E d 27

71— Help Wanted
AVON B E A U T Y CO M PA N Y
Full - pert lim e. Pay Xm as bills.
Call Immed. 712 3717-117-1721.
AVON EAR N IN O S WOWIII
O PE N T ER R IT O R IE S NOW111
111 2333or 7110437
B U B B L Y P E R S O N A L IT Y !!
FU N JOB111 Fu ll lim e end part
lim a available Phone expert
enceheiptul
17) 0447 Ask lor Joyce
Cape Canaveral firm expanding
In Seminole ( workers pro
doting, 4 more needed 7330
P/T. 7430 lu ll time Career
oriented people Only over II
Full training
______ 111 3707, belore4
Career Opportunity W ill train
O utsta nding Incom e, C a ll
111 27)1 between! A I._______
CA7HIER/HOSTESS
And A M waitress Fine dining
restaurant Apply in person
10 3. Deltona Inn,___________

★ ★ ★ ★

CORRESPONDENTS
WANTED
To write a weekly column
Irom your home Qualifications
A nose lor news, a fla ir lor
writing, a good speller end know
how to type Cell Doris Dietrich.
The Evening Herald. 372 1411.
alter I p m.
★

★

★

★

Debary Manor now hiring expe
rl*nced or certified nurses
aides. A ll shifts. Apply at: 40
N Hwy 17 72, DeBary, or call
64( 4414 E O E ______________

DISHW ASHER
Mature Apply in person. M F,
I 4 p ,n Deltona Inn
D riv e r/ C o llic to r. M ust have
knowledge of Sanford area A
V alid Florida license 313 7M4
E A T YOUR V E G E T A B L E S “
Brush your teeth
And read your
W ANT ADS
E x p e r ie n c e d C a r p e n t e r A
Driver. Also various duties
Honest, hard working, willing
to travel Cell 321 1740. atk lor
M rs Jones
FRO NTD ESKCLERK
F rie n d ly , neat, personable.
Apply In person, M F, 10 e m
lo I p m Deltona Inn________

Legal Notice
U N IT E D ST A TES DISTRICT
CO U R T M ID D L E OISTRICT
OF F L O R ID A O R LA N D O
DIVISION
CASE NO: 14 t » Civ O rl II
U N I T E D S T A T E S OF
A M ER IC A .
Plaintiff.
vs
L U C IL L E W ILKINSON.
Defendant
O R D E R FOR S ER V ICE BY
PU BLICA TIO N
On motion and aflldavll ol
plaintiff in the above entitled
cause by Lynne L. England. Its
A ssista n t U nited States A l
torney. In action against the
defendant, L u cille Wilkinson,
and lo enforce a lien upon reel
properly situate In this District
end d e u r Ibed i s follows
Lot ). end Ihe North 10 feel ol
Lol 4. Block 4. A L L E N S FIRST
ADDITION TO WASHINGTON
HEIG HTS, according lo Ihe plel
thereof as recorded In P le l Book
3. Page 23. ol the Public Records
ol Seminole Counly. Flo/ide
end It appearing to the Court
that Ihe defendant, Is not an
inhabitant ol nor found within
the Stele ol Florida and has no I
vo luntarily appeared herein,
end that personal service upon
her is not practical because her
residence end whereabouts ere
unknown. It Is
O R O E R E D th a t L u c ille
Wilkinson, appear or plead to
the complaint herein within 20
days ol the last dele of publlee
tlon and In default thereof the
Court w ill proceed to the hear
ing end adjudication ot this suit
as It Lucille Wilkinson hod been
served with process In the Slate
ol Florida, but only to the extent
provided lor by Title 21, Untied
Stales Code. Section 1433. It Is
lurtner
O R D E R E D that notice ol this
order be published by the United
Stales Marshal In a newspaper
o l g e n e r a l c ir c u la t io n In
Seminole. County, Florida, once
e week lor si* 14) consecutive
weeks, commencing within 20
days Irom Ihe dele ol this order.
DONE A N D O R D E R E D el
Orlando. Florida, this 4th d a / e l
December, 1774
G Kendall Sharp
U N IT E D STATES DISTRICT
JU D G E
Publish December 17. 17. 17*4.
January 7.7,14.23,1743
DEAD

�K r r 'N' C A R L Y L E &lt;?by Larry Wright

71— Help Wanted

71— Help Wanted

IM M E D I A T E O P E N IN G lor
service technician with one ot
Florida's Oldest P e lt Control
Companies, No experience
necessary |uit a delire to
advance and«a willingness to
work Paid training program,
* company benefit!, Insurance
and vehicle provided It Inter
eited. apply at. Spencer Peit
Control, ISM Park Dr . San
lord
No phone c a ll! pleaie.

S e c r e t a r y 7 R e c e p t io n is t .
Longw ood are a P le a sa n t
telephone voice Bookkeeping
b a c k g ro u n d h e lp fu l. I I .
Monday thru Friday *34 3411,

IM M E D IA T E O PPO R TU N ITY
We no* have an opening In our
C la ssifie d A d v e rtisin g De
partment Qualifications are
excellent typist, pleasant tele
phone voice, good common
cation and some accounting
This Is an excellent opporlunl
ty tor the right person Send
resume to M r Adkins c/o
Evening Herald P O Bov u s;
Sanford. Fla
12773 US;, or
stop In and fill out an
applicat io n ___________
Make St working at home! Rush
SASE to D B m e S Sanford
Ave.. Sanford. F la 3 3 7 7 1 __
Mature Individuals needed as
companions lor the elderly T
L C , Inc M I 1093/373 2770__
Night Auditor. Experience pref
erabte W ill train, Full time
position. Apply In person No
phone calls please Days Inn
1 4 and SI Rd as____________
Nurses aides wanted 7 1 shift
Must be certified or evperl
enced Apply In person at
Ik k e v ie * Nursing Center (Ik
fc IndSI Sari lord
O lflce/C lerlcal person needed
ter busy Sanlord office Dulles
Include typing, tiling A gener
al oltlce Experienced persons
apply to S00 W Fulton St
Sanford 377 3*41 EO F
Orlando Based t mpany
seeking a tew good people lo
t r a i n In b a t h r o o m re
modeling It you have evperl
ence in paint spraying, tile
repair, or looking lor a good
trade, we are looking for you
Good pay! Good benefits!
Valid Florida Drivers License
and vehicle required
Call M r M ille r 37) 7015
Part lime waitress. Friday A
Saturday evenings A pply
Mon , Tues. or Wed 9 t l a m
Must be IS or over. Buck's
Restaurant IIM S Sanford
Ave___________
Secretary Part lim e 3 days
Typing, good phone voice
Salary open M ay lead to full
time |Ob 171 7600___________

73— Employment
Wanted

BLOCK 1 BRICK MASON
... Evp.- Call R#i»*i III * ;«

91— Apartments/
House to Share
SI Johns River Large country
home. Ilrtplace. non smokers
3250 mo 6it I U 1 ____________

93— Rooms for Rent
Christian HoiMI
TV, kitchen, laundry, maid. bus.
343 wk up 423 34** 423 *410
SAN FO RD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rates
Maid service Call 373 4507
5 7 P M 4IS Palmetto Ave
S A N FO R D . Reas weekly A
Monthly rales Util. Inc ell
300 Oak
Adults I *41 7333

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
A L L A P r *.
Furnished, and uf.i». ..ished. I,
7. 3, &amp; 4 bedrooms Kids, pets,
3700 and up 33* 7700 Fee37Sr
SavOn Rentals Inc Realtor
E F F IC IE N C Y
No pets, no kids 3735 month
ITOOdamage 322 1*89_______
Furn. Apts, lor Senior C itlie n i
311 Palmetto Ave
J Cowan No Phone Calls.
Lovely efficiency apartment,
perfect lo r m ature single
person. P riv a te entrance.
C o m p le t e p r iv a c y . Inc
utilities 37S, a week plus 51S0
security deposit Call 373 7239
or 373 9332 ____________
Mobile home. I bdrm . private
lot. adults only No pets Ref
3030 Magnolia Ave Sanlord
S A N FO R D C O U R T A PT S .
Studio Apartments
l bedroom apartment
I Bedroom furnished apt
2 Bedroom apartments
Senior citizens discount
Flevible leases
_______
373 3)01
^
i

SURVIVED THE NEW YEAR?
R U READY TO START
WITH A "NEW" JOB?

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

AAA EMPLOYMENT

BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E Airport Blvd
Ph 373 3420 Efficiency, from
3250 Mo 3% discount lor
Senior Citizens_____________
Huge Brand New 3 B d rm , 7
Bath private apartment with
large rooms Carpets, country
kitchen, appliances 3473
Very Plush I 377 0739
Lovely 1 Bdrm apt Wall to wall
c a r p e t, s c re e n e d p o rch ,
downtown area 3700 sec de
posit. Rent 373 week, plus
utilities. Call 77) 93)7 or
371 3947__________
LU XU RY APARTM ENTS
Fam ily B Adult! Section
Poolside. 7 Bedrooms.
Master Cove Apartments.
I l l 79*0
_____ Open On Weekends._____
RIDGEW OOD ARM S APT S
2SOC Ridgewood Ave Ph 111 3470
1.7 B 3 Bdrm s Irom 3310
’ SAN FO RD

CAN FIND YOU
THE BEST
IN TOWN!

323-5176
M E D IC A L R E C E P ......... SIMSTwo openings Medical knowl
edge a plus Answer phone
and set appointments Great
opportunity!
R A D IA L D R ILL O P E R ...tetlM
Company needs Immediately.
Has to know “ Taps" And
"D rills ". Evcellent benefits.
O F F IC E ASSISTANT......... IIM
Greet clients General office
skills wtlh accurate typing
Local company
W IR E PER SO N ...............tu SKO
Able person needed here Read
schematics and run conduit.
E lectrical background a plus
A D M IN IIT. ASSIST........ 37M +
Outgoiung professional person
wins
General oltlce back
ground Typing, phones Great
boss
ACCOUNTS M A N A G E R ..........
T R A IN E E ...........................SIM
Three openings Outgoing per
sonallly Oeal with the public.
Good with figures
BAB Y SIT TER
Great opportunity lor housewlta.
one or two children. Light
meals, light housekeeping
IN S T A L L E R S .... ............. 31M +
S e v e r a l o p e n in g s
T r im
carpentry a plus Evcelienl
opportunity lo learn a trade

NEW JOBS DAILY
Discounted lae 2 weeks salary.
Franchises available
Law. SI.M Registration Fee
______ 1321 French Ave.______
The Best "HOUSE C L E A N E R "
Is a Want Ad I
Call Classllied 377 2*11.
Wanted Part time
Person to help In Circulation
Department afternoon hours
For more . information call
Tony, Mon F rl 3 1pm .
W AREHO U SE
L ilt SO lbs, must have car.
needed Immediately. Perma
nent position. Navar a Fee

TEMP PERM 774-1341

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

EXPERIENCED CASHIERS.
GAS ATTENDANTS AND
FAST FOOD PREPARATION
S LOCATIONS

107— Mobile
Homes / Rent
Lake Model Mobile Home, nice
ly furnished on Goll Course
Rent by week, or sell for 1*00
down. 1193 per month Owner
financing Adults, no pets
339 93)3 or 333 93*3__________

117— Commercial
Rentals
SPACE FOR RENT: oltlce.
retail, and warehouse storage
Call 333 4403

121— Condominium
Rentals
NEW, Beautiful Townhouse 7
bdrms , 2 'i baths, all appli
ances. washer, dryer Sauna.
Pool I 333 *133
The Sprlngsl 7 bdrm . 7 bath. A ll
amenities 3300 per mo 311
0M5. or 347 3933

H I — Homes For Sale

fflAlfT iftt
11*1101
IS t t m l inirriNf l

SANORA Large and Levely 3
Bdrm., 1 bath, cathedral cell­
ing) CH B A l Fam ily ream I
Obi. geragel Community peel
Call vsq vlcbl
C A L L H A LL
A F F O R O A B L E and no quali­
fying. 7 bdrm. home In nke
areal Fenced I Oreat ler In­
vestors. 313,9M.
C A L L H A LL

RE NEED LISTINGS

323-5774
_______ 3303 HWY 17 97

COUNTY

• A u to / T ru c k R e fu e lin g
• F u ll L in e C o n v e n ie n c e S to re s
• F a s t Fo o d K it c h e n s
Top S a la r ie s
F re e L ife &amp; H o s p ita liz a tio n
2 P a id V a c a tio n s E a c h Y ear
P ro fit S h a rin g P la n
O ther B e n e fits
M AM
A P P L K a I IO N in t'l H M j N
A t ZUZ N l . i i m - l A r e
S .tn liw il

BATEMAN REALTY

By owner: 1 bdrm . 3 bath
Many extras VA. FH A or
Conventional 370.000 313 1133

L A K E ASHBY- Double Wide
Mobile Home on 71 acres,
fenced with barn Bring your
horses Only 333.000
3AN FO RD Mobile home with
addition! 1 Bdrm , 3 bath,
fenced, two u tility iheds.
Country living, yel close In.
331.000
SANFO RD Large home with
fire p la c e . In ground pool,
gueil cottage You finish and
save Prlcereduced!
Only 347.SCO
SAN FO R D spacious home In
evcellent neighborhood, walk
to Drug and Grocery store
Owner w ill hold lor 10 yrs al
11% w ith su fficie n t down.
371900
C A L L A N Y T IM E
R EA LT O R 111 4991
WE N E E D LISTINGSI
MOST FOR THE M O N E Y
1 Bdrm , 1 bath Condo includes
pool, club house, appliances,
etc. Convenient living at a
bargain. 3)3.000

CALL BART
R E A L ESTATE
REALT O R
&gt;17 7491

t'M TK I)
SALKS

ASSOCIATKS
IS*

REALTOR

321-38.1.1
194 W. Lake M ary Blvd.

New B rick Duplex- Positive
cash llow l Assumable mortg
371.300 Make oiler 171 313)
Treed- 4 pie. lol 177’ X 177' with
sewer Asking 314.900 )11 3*33
Duplex Lots- Perk Ave and Oak
St
Re ady lo bu i l d
114.900 .................171 33)3
C O M M ER C IA L PR O P E R T IE S
Sanlord- Grocery Store with gat
bar 3145.000
Lake Mary- Oltlce/ Commercial
building 3*3 000
Langwood- Hwy 434 exposure
near Springs Plata 3117.000

1 BDRM.. 1 bath. den. Urge
kitchen, lets el cabinets, beef
pump. ECU heal* water,
thermo windows, lets el cedar.
SIM M .

R E A L T O R 321-0041

&amp;

! # .?
323-3200

DRIFTW OOD V IL L A O E
ON L A K E M A R Y BLVD .
Sanlord *03 Locust Ave New
C 9 Home 1 bdrm.. I bath,
central heat B elr. carpet, e ll
appliances. Move in lodeyl
343.000 terms
373 ISU. or 377 313*

★

J

3 U N M bVPU I
FAM ILIES W ELCO M E

i•

323-2920

*0 *3 .1

D ELTO N A Atlord4ble living In
this 1 lidrm ., 1 bath home.
Tastefully decorated Immac
ulate Large lot ottered at
379.900

A KC Beagle lor sale Male a
months *125 Call 3213*99
Ask for Cathy______________
Dog Obedience T ra in in g , 3
wyeks 3)0 Start Jan 5th
10 30 A M T ra c k in g and
Boarding available Ability
Kennels Osteen 323 2720

Mercedes 240 D *3. Beautiful
black with camel leather into
rlo r 23,000 mi Perfect condl
tlont 3)9,900 322 ISU________

The Best ' HOUSE C L E A N E R "
Isa Want Adi
C all C a t . * edJ22 73lt
Free Doberman cross to good
heme M ale Docked ta ll
322 3445
Irish Setter and German Shop
herd Free lo good home
L o v a b le and g r e a t w ith
children 37) 7539 or 32) 5540
Yorkle male A KC papers, 10
mos old A liny Toy! J ' j lbs
3150 or besl o ile r Owner
allergic 323 0794

IU T0U HELD 10 (NOW
IN REAL ES1ATE

STENSTROM
REALTY»REALTOR

O S T EE N S A lots 31000 down.
Terms Lake Privileges No
mobiles Kerry I Dreggors
Realtor 349 5973.
Osteen- S acres high, dry,
cleared on hardroad frontage
t ml Irom stores 33000 down
3344 mo By Owner I 33) 9040
Sem inole Woods E xe cutive
heme sites. S i acres By
owner Call Orlando 177 7970
A lte rs P M

SN U G G LE U P 7 BROM . 1 bath
home In Rosecourt, fireplace,
paddle Ians. Cent, air and heat
and more. Ul.000.
UNIQUE 5 bdrm., 1 bath home
en 3.77 acres. Large country
eat In kitchen, brick fireplace,
peddle Ians, french dears.
&gt;115.000.
W ILL B U ILD TO 5UIT! TOUR
LOT OR OURSI E X C L U S IV E
A G E N T F O R W IN S O N O
D EV. CORP.. A C E N T R A L
FLO R IO A L E A O E R I M O R I
HOME FOR LESS M O N E Y I
C A L L TOOAYI

It you ere looking lor * suc­
cessful career in Real Estate,
llenstrom Really Is looking
ler you. Call Lee Albright
today at 111 1470. Evenings
III 1M1.

CALLANYTIME

322-2420
1335 S. Park, Sanlord
301 Lb. M ary Blvd. Lb. M ary
Your Home is Full ol Hidden
Dollars Turn Idle Items Into
cash last with a Want Ad
D ial 777 7311
___________
3 REPOSSESSIONS In Orlando
Irom 1 37.500 to 353,750 Low
cash down Lake M ary Realty
R E A L T O R ..... ...........171 7144

★

OPU UTWttAY
• Adult A Family
Sections
• W D Connections

• Cable TV. Pool
■ Short Termleatet
Avol table
1,1,1 1». M b, 1 Ir. T-M.

Ft*. * 1 9 9

ISOS W. 25th SL

CLEARANCE
EVERYTHING
REDUCED

SAVE

BOB DANCE DODGE
Hwy II 97......................223 77)0
WE F IN A N C E D
WE BUY CARSI

FOR ESTATE
C o m m e rc ia l o r R e sid e n tia l
Auctions &amp; Appraisals Call
Pell &gt;Auction 323 5320_______

Gregory Mobile Homes

217— Garage Sales
Big yard sal*I 1TO Shannon Dr
Sat Jan Sth, 9 4 p m Dishes,

^dryefOurnllureBjnore^^^^
219— Wanted to Buy

Private party needs
Jo r J bedroom heme.
32) 4441

B a b y : B eds, S tro lle r s . C lo th es.

181— Appliances
/ Furniture
Kenmore Parts, Service
Used Washers. JIJ 0497.
M O O N EY A P P L IA N C E S
4 R EN T T O O W N •
Color TVs . stereos, washers,
dryers, relrlgerator. Ireerers,
turnilure. video recorders
Special 1st weeks rent 99&lt;
Alternative TV A Appl. Rentals
Zayres Shopping Center
III 5000
Subtract Those Things
Gathering Dusl ''Ad'" Dollars
To Your Income
THE U S ED S T O R E
Furniture and appliances
Come In and see
•119 E 2nd Street III 4459 •
WILSON M A IE R FU R N IT U R E
111 315 E FIRST ST.
__________ 377 5*23__________
5 piece Colonial bedroom set
Single B double chests 1
94utchespU)Sdesk_*fillU^^

Playpens, Etc. Paperback
Books 72) 3)77 III 1504
Paying CASH lor
Aluminum. Cans, Copper.
Brass. Lead. Newspaper.
Glass. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool. 913 W 1st
8 5 00 Sat 9 1373 1100

223— Miscellaneous

B 3 9

OK Corral Used Cars 323 1921
1974 V is ta C ru is e r Station
Wagon Loaded with equip
ment Immaculate condition
One -previous owner 3150
Cash 3)9 93U
73 Capri Ghla excellent condi
tlon. new paint 3)500 Riason
3rd car I Call JJJ ;;s9

235-Trucks/
Buses / Vans
1912 Chevy High Top with New
Conversion Fully equipped,
low miles. Only 312.575
BY F R EN C H IE
F R E N C H IE S CUSTOM VANS
1750 N Hwy 17/92, Longwood
373 011?.........................3)0 4795

7 4 Ford Pick-Up. Runs Good
Call 377 3154alter 3.
CM C Sierra €!a**k Vi ton

pick up Loaded Extra clean
I3W down Monthly payment*
699 oeoo or 699 0900

237— Tractors and
Trailers
Ford Tractor 4 cyl Hydraulics
Engine good shape Three
implements also 11350 Mrm
Chip 373 3400
_____
1971 DeutJ Tractor 4003 Runs
good 33)00 37) 7479
Trailer 3 X 40 11000 Firm
Optional room addition con
slsling bed. bath, living 33000
Both for 33500 You have lo
move 333 7479 alter a 00

Dog Obedience T ra in in g . 3
243— Junk Cars
weeks 3)0 Start Jan Sth
10 30 A M
T ra c k in g and
B U Y JU N K CARS B TRUCKS
Boarding available Ability
F rom 310 to 150 or more
Kennels. Osteen 323 2270
Call 371 U74 313 4317
Elec concrete m ixer,like new
3)50 Gasoline driven air com TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk B
Use J c srs trucks B heavy
pressor 3150 Chip 373 7300
equipment 133 5990
M A K E A "S P L A S H "with Cash
Irom Want Ads II Sell those WE P A Y TOP D O LLA R FOR
JU N K CARS AND TRUCKS
"Unused" Items the EASY
CBS A U R O R A RTS 793 4505
way Call Classllled 322 2311
S ail Mite TV Systems
Complete A ll you need 100%
Financing No money down
1 9 8 4 cT « " cT1i
31.3M 00 Universal 3)1 5744

231— Cars

1979 1EEP
« U I—It

*9999
1977 GREMUN
Lo-MIUs

183— Television/
Radio / Stereo

BidCitdlU
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
•77 Ferd Truck
'71 M averick
'71 Cull* i t

COLOR T ELE V IS IO N
RCA 15" Console color televl
slon Original price over saoo
Balance due 31**00 cash or
lake over payments 370 per
month S lill In warranty NO
M O N E Y DOWN Free home
trial Noobligallon
Cal 1343 5394 Day or night

3134 dwn.
SlOOdwn.
33* dwn.

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
I I 20 S. Sanford 321-4075
Oebary Auto B Marine Sales
Across Ihe river, lop of hill
174 Hwy I? 97 Debary 441154*
DON'T SPIN YOUR W H EE LS
Get going with a
Herald Want Ad 317 3*11
F or Sa le
1977 Buick Skylark

189— Office Supplies
/ Equipment
E X E C U T IV E wood sales desk
and chairs, (like new) 3150
set, ; tile cabinets from sso
oak table 350: ; loveseal 540
dividers 350 each: mlsc 419
5444 or 479 1392_____________

C o n v e rtib le

113 7947______

D ISCO U N T
AUTO
SALES
'77 Chryt. Cordoba 3509dwn.
'71 M O Midget Only 3400dwn.
‘ 73 Merc. Cnuger Only 3*00 dwn.

195— Machinery/Tools

WE FINANCE

Give Up OardeningT
Sell no longer needed tools
W IT H H E R A LO W A N T A D S I

*1295
1977 PACER

*1295
1977 FORD

1595

Granada

1979 CHEVETTE

*1295
1971 VW

*595
SAN FO R D
M O T O R CO
AMC

JEEP

SO* S F r e n c h Av«
111 43*3

13*1 French Ave.... ........337 1335

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

HELP ★

We need Licensed Real Estate
Sales People. Mere werk than
' we can hand It I W ill train
newly licensed. A ttra ctiv e
commission splits. Call HI3*33 ler contldenlUl Interview.
NEW S M Y R N A B EA C H - 4
B J r m . I '! Bath 3M Feel
Irem O CEANI S49.M0
Beachitde Realty, R EALT O R S
3*4-477-1111. Ojp*n7 Da f t I
NEW S M Y R N A B EA C H - 4
B d rm . I ' i Bath 3M Feel
frem OCEANI 349.M*.
Beechtide Realty. R EALT O R S
9*4 437-1313. Open 7 Pays!
SAN FO RD C H A R M E R I bdrm .
I bath, 1 car garage Only
171.000 L in d stock Brokers
__________ 341 3717__________
Sanford By Owner I Beautiful
heme beautiful view. Lake
Monroe 3 b d rm s. 1 baths,
lush tropical enclosed pool
Hug* lot with well B sprinkler
s y s te m . C o m p le t e ly re
modeled throughtoul New
kitchen, appliances, draperies
+ rood 3179,000 For ep
poinlmenl cell 177 74U.______

The !*th Annual Jansen Dyer
Antique Show B Sale Jan 4.5
3 3 F rl 3 10p m . Sat 1 9 p m
Sun 1 5 p m Admission 31 50
with this ad

Buying or Selling
A Mobile Name?

159— Real Estate
Wanted

IN V E S T M E N T P R O P E R T Y 7
Bdrm., I bath and I bdrm., I
bath duplex, comfortable and
quiet area, large fenced yard,
new roof, possible owner If
nanclng. 344.500.

Admission J2 50
Entire show with ad $2 00
The Chapman Shows

213— Auctions

WE LIST A N D S E L L
M O R E HOMES THAN
AN Y O N E IN NORTH
SEM IN O LE COUNTY

A D A P T A B L E 1 Bdrm , 1 hath
duplex, eat In kitchen, wood
floors, porch. Includes garage.
Investment. 343.500.

F rl Sat 1 2 n o o n lo 9P M
Sunday t l noon to S P M

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

Sanford's Sales Leader

SUPER STARTER HOME )
bdrm., I bath home en corner
lot. Eat in kitchen, large yard
with shade trees, wall, wall
carpel, and more. 331.SOO.

Ocala Antiques Show
January 4.5.6
City Auditorium

e R E D U C E D TO 340.000 e
Priced tu sell now! 3 Bdrm
Townhouse Condominum 113
W 75th St Professionally re
decorated A t'« e» £ e n * heat
andatr,applls
&gt;U3)I3
Sandlewood Condominiums
Airport Blvd t Bdrm . 1 bath
117.000 Call 333 7397

Area's Largest Re Sale Dealer
Many available In Local Parks
EASY FIN ANCIN G 305 32) 5200

USED CAR YEAR END

211— Antiques/
Collectables

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

LISTFOR L E S S *

GENEVA GARDENS
SHENANDOAH•
VILLAGE
M0 OFF
SECURITY

231-Cars

W E W IL L LIST, A D V E R T IS E ,
S E L L YOUR HOME FOR 4%.
W HY P A Y M O RE?

321-3833

SPACIO U S * Bdrm ., 1 both
heme with fam ily ream, Urge
game roam, left el s ler age,
fenced beck yard. 393.M0.

321-0759 Eve 322-7643

Hidden la k e Vine's 1 bd rm .
s p lit p la n on c o rn e r lot.
• G E N E V A O SCEOLA RD o
A s s u m a b le . F H A m o rtg .
334.900
3711*3) Z O N E D F O R M O B ILE S !
3 Acre Ceuntry tracts.
Well treed en paved Rd.
Country Heme nestled In orange
70% Down. 10 Yrs. * tl!% t
grove Sparkling clean Only
From 313,3001
343.000
I l l 1*31

f\Wrt\&lt;«\T!t 3 » \l» tX lM iftlltlil

KISH REAL ESTATE

Lie. Real Estate Broker
144* Sanford Ave

••STEMPEB AGLhCY INC.**

F R E E C O M P U T E R IZ E D
M a rk * ! A n a ly s is *f your
heme. Why pay m art?

F n e d C h i c k e n S u i t s D on ut* *

•
•
•
•
•

Low down payment, affordable
monthly 3 bdrm , plus fam ily
room Call owner 393 l i l t

O n tu K .

CENTERS
IN S E M I N O L E

141— Homes For Sale

Pool Heme- 3 bdrm .1 lull bath.
Fla. Rm . bar/pallo Great
Area 344.000
331 3*32
W A LK TO L A K E MONROE- 1
B d rm ., 1 balls. H al lu b l
Fireplace! CH and A. family
rm l S l i l l screened botenlcal
gardensl Dreams de cense
true I Only llll,9 M .
C A L L H A LL

t«ft****«A

141— Homes For Sale

By Owner- 1 Bdrm . t Bath
Detached garage with utility
room M ayla lr Section near
o ld H o s p it a l W a ll/ w a ll
carpet, central haat B air.
L a r g e t r e e s h a d e d lo t .
Hamilton Elem School D ili
P r ic e 331.300 A ssu m ab le
133.000 *'*% Phone 17) 79*9.
a lte ra 30pm lor appoint

HALL

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

153— AcreageLots/Sale

G

W e d n e sd ay , Ja n . 2, l?9 S — 7B

141— Homes For Sale

W A LL ST. C O M PA N Y 111 5005
For Sale by Owner Sanford
N ice 1 B drm home with
living, dining room, paneled
tam llv room Workshop Call
373 110* 344 900 Firm

LANDLORDS *

(35 Wtst 25th Stm t
e • e IN O E L T O N A e a e
e • H OMES FOR R E N T e e
e e 1731314 e e _____

O utstanding O pportunity fo i

'//&lt;■ &lt;

★

Tired ol l he headaches? Let u l
m anage y o u r re n ta l pro
parties Professional low cost
service 371 3*11 Call anytime
United Sales Associates. Inc.
Prop Mnm l P iv ,b e » lto r
Near 17 97. I new reconstructed
3 bdrm , It* bath ISIS mo
First, last, security 349 4933
NEW, Beaut 11ul Townhouse. 1
bdrm .. l i t baths, vertical
b lin d s , a l l a p p lia n c e s ,
washer/dryer, sauna. S pool!
343*133_______________ ____
Nice l Bdrm., I bath, big yard
3 0 0 month. 3300 damage
377 1439 Open on Jan 1st_____
Sanlord 1 bedroom, I bath,
r c t r lg e r a t o r . sto v e , a ir ,
fenced 3373 Call 111 0*19
Sanlord Sanora South 3 Bdrm ,
7 bath, fenced yard, kennel, 1
car garage. 317 3147 or
__________ 371*409__________
Sanford 4 bdrm , 1 baths
Central air. Ilreptac* 3300
mo 471 QMS. 347 3973________
Tuscawllla 13 min Irom San
lord. TOWNHOUSE 7 master
bdrms., 3 baths, pool, jacuiti.
sauna, le n n li. January &gt;»
price 3333,173 7014_________
7 Bdrm . I Bath 3173 a month
1130 damage deposit Call
393 1179___________________
3 Bedroom House
3373 month. 3300 deposit
Call 331 39** Evenings.

Private College I bdrm , lovely
d e cor, m a in ta in e d fenced
yard I 373 MI7

NOW HIRING!

(

Attractive 1 Bdrm „ 1 bath house
in nice lection ol town Com
plele with most major appli
an ces
R e fe r e n c e s , an d
m inimum 3 months lease re
quired Call 173 1113 after 4
P M tor appointment________

N E A R L A K E MONROE
NOW LEASIN O I
SAN FO RD LAN D IN G APTS.
N EW apts close lo shopping and
major hwys Gracious living
In our I B 7 Bdrm apts that
oilers:
e Garden or L o ll Units
e Washer/Dryer Hook Ups In
our 7 Bdrm apis
e7 Laundry Facilities.
eOlym pic Site Pool,
e Health Club with l Saunas
e Clubhouse with FIreplace
e Kitchen B Game Rm
e Tennis. Racquetball.
Volleyball
e 4 Acre Lake on Property
e Night Patrol 7 Days a Wk
o pen ; daysaw eek
1100 W 1st St in Sanlord
371 3710 or Orlando 345 0339
Equal Opportunity Housing
1 Bdrm Adults only. No pets.
1370 per mon or 3*0 per wk.,
security dep 379 0035 days, or
777 1037 or 317 0757 nights

E v e n in g H e ra ld , S an ford , FI.

103— Houses
UnfOrnished/ Rent

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

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
For Smell businesses Monthly
computerized llnanclel &gt;t*t
lenient Q u a rte rly returns.
333 0940 A ik lor Frank III.

Building Contractors
C O B tP lE T E BLDO. SE R V IC E S
RettdenlUl / Com mere 141
New Werk or Remodeling
Whole sale Motel Buildings
Serving M id. F U . 343 (144/ Orl.

Cleaning Service
M AID S To Order
For complete guaranteed M ils
lection In your home or oltlce
cleaning, plus 35 cash rebate,
cell 11* 0*00 NOW I

Electrical
Quality Werk *1A Her da Me
Prices. He |ek tea Urge
at too sm a ll-14 hr. service.
Free E stim ates.............371-7171

General Services
Professional Chair Coining
and ruth seat weaving Reason
able price* Call 3713*47
EAT YO U R V E O E T A B L E 1
Brush your teeth
And reed your
W ANTADS

General Services
Rthsiill K IR B Y / It 19,90 A up
Guaranteed Kirby Co
714W 1st St 371 5440

Handy Man
■ xp. Handymen, Ref Reliable
Free Est most any job Besl
Rales 331 c u t Celt Anytime

Health &amp; Beauty
TOW ER S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harriett s Beauty
Nook 319 E 1st St 333 5743

Home Improvement
TaMieTTtoluug^RtmedeMng
No Job Too Small
311 Burton La no. Sanford

__________1713377__________
Fans t* Fonces, Cabm tls I*
C o m m o d e s . F a ir p r lc a i,
99* 773 *3*3. Uav* massage

Home Repairs
CARPENTER
R epairs and
remodeling No |Ob too small
Call 131 9445_______________
Maintenance of all types
Ca.'penlry. painting, plumbing

^^*nd*t*Clrl^73fOJ^__

Landclearing
C A R U T H E R S T R U C K IN O
F III dirt and lend clearing
349 5000

Lawn Service

Painting

O E N E V A LA N D C L E A R IN G
Lot end Lend clearing,
lilt dirt, end hauling
Cell 349 5910or 349 5753
L A N D C L E A R IN G
F IL L DIRT. BUSHOGGING
C L A Y 1 S H ALE 771 3433

Painting Interior/ Exterior
P A P E R IN G
D R Y W A LL
References B Reasonable
V E R Y R E L IA B L E 904 771 3379
Responsible Men and helper will
paint your Home or Business
etc Give your problems to us
WE C A R E Quality work. 70

y^^p)2M 0*^U ^ont^

Lawn Service
B A S SOO SA LES Comm. Res.
SI Augustine B Bahia
3*00 S Sanlord Ave 371*173
ChrlstUn ire s . Lawn Service
Cemplet* Lawn Car*
Reasonable Re U s 111*4*1
Lawn Maintenance
Landscaping Bush Hog Mowing
349 5095

Masonry
B E A L Concrete 1 men quality
operation Patios, driveway*.
Day* 311 7313Eve*31?1371
CO NCRETEANDSTUCCO
A ll phases, licensed end Insured
Free Estimates John 74* 9117.

Nursing Care
L P N will sit with your elderly or
disabled relative In your home
weekday*. Hour, day Exp.
Reference* 171 3119________
OUR R A T ES A R E LOW ER
-akevlew Nursing Cenier
9 IIE Second St.. Sanlord
311*707

Paper Hanging
Plastering
• A L L Phases of Plastering*
Repair, Stucco, Hard Coat,
Simulated Brick 711 5993

Plumbing
B«p*ir-Ben&gt;»d*llp|
Experienced-Reasonable
Free Est. C a t l W ****

Tree Service
JOHN A L L E N S LAW N A T R E E
Ti e* removal and trimming.
Lew Prices I Firewood. 11ISM*
ECHOLS T R I E SE R V IC E
Free Estimates! Low Prtcesl
Licensed/insured,' 323 7219
" L e i the Professionals do It",

Upholstery
F U R N IT U R E R E F IN IIH IN O
Reasonable Rate* Upholstery
s e r v ic e a v a ila b le
F re e
estimate* 377 37*3. evenings
173 *917

�BLONDIE

•B— Evening Harald. Sanlord. FI.

by Chic Young

W ed n ttd iy, Jen, 2. I W

Prostate Surgery Saps
Fertility, Not Ability

Dr.

Lamb

DEAR DR. LAMB - I would proven to be unnecessary sur­
like as much Information as you gery?
DEAR READER - They also
can give me on prostate surgery.
are one cause of bad breath,
Can a man still father a child used to rest a lung that had although this Is a very rare cause
after surgery? Does the type of tuberculosis by collapsing It. of bad breath. The tonsils arc'
surgery done make a difference? Many things change In medicine Just lymph glands. Removing
They say that sex Is not the as more Is learned.
Tonsils seldom need to be t h e m b e c a u s e t h e y a r e
same after It. but my husband,
"enlarged" Is seldom Justified.
taken
out. There are exceptions,
who Is 67. had prostate surgery
Scud your questions to Dr
around 15 years ago and he still though: Enlarged, chronically Lamb. I' O Do\ 1551. Radio City
Infected
tonsils
filled
with
pus­
enjoys sex Just as much. If not
like material and food particles Station. Xcw York. S Y IOOIH
more.
DEAR READER - Yes. there
Answer to Previous Puule
7 Partial
A C R O SS
are several different ways of
8 Paddle
doing prostate surgery. An open
incision may be made and the
9 Universal time
1 Siren
prostate gland removed In that
(abbr)
7 Colombia city
way. There are several different 13 Nonmetallic ele 10 Kimono sashes
operations for this approach, too.
ment
11 Long tooth
The most com mon surgical 14 Poetic loot
12 City m Italy
procedure Is the transurethral
15 Women
19 Even (poet)
prostate resection (TUPR). This
16 Creative perjon 21 Cruel perton
consists of Inserting a rod with a
22 Team*
ligh t and visu al apparatus 17 Oriental
women s
equipment
through the urethra. The end of
Quarters
23 Went by ship
the
Instalment
has
an
electric
by Art Sansom
cutting device that Is used to cut 18 Shoshoneans . 24 French women
away the Inside o f the prostate 20 Engage in
(abbr |
winter sport
gland. Some call It a Roto-Rooter
25 Harvard s rival
Job. When the hole Is made large 21 Internal organs 26 Separation
enough, the obstruction Is elimi­ 24 _
45 Spun
38 French com
28 Colorado ski
nated and the man can pass
Bvectumdge
47 lush clan
resort
39 Terw periods
urine more normally.
27 Strive
48 Nautical term
29 City in Russia
After prostate surgery, the 31 Girl
49 Leered at
42 Day's march
30 Radiation
valve mechanism that shuts ofT 32 Coronet
51 Journal
measures
the bladder, which Is adjacent to 33 Spritelike
43 Slides on snow
52 I like
34 Sgt
the prostate, usually Is damaged
35 Prevaricated
54 Entnct ta il
44 Mentally sound
37 Hall rug
and cannot close well. As a
36 "Fastening
11 11
to
•
9
7
result, when a man ejaculates,
4
S
T
3
3
device."
the semen flows backward Into
13
the bladder. He won't have the 40 Additions to
houses
normal forward emission, but he
IS
will have all of the same sensa­ 41 Petted
"
43
Compass
point
;o
tions.
IS
U
This also means that he may
46 Night (Er)
not eject enough semen ejected
47 So (Scot)
normally to cause pregnancy.
50 Porcelain clay
And In some operations, the vas 53 Unconvincingly
deferens tube, which carries
55 Coniure
sperm from the testicles to the
56 Epic poem
prostate. Is tied off. causing
57 American
sterility. This Is done to help
folksinger
protect the testicles from In­
58 Sedentary
flammation after the surgery.
Neither of these aspects of
D OW N
prostate surgery need Interfere
with a man's sexual ability or
1 Metric unit
by Howl* Schneider
enjoyment, but they do affect his
2 Amount carried
ability to father children.
'3 Sand lizard
DEAR DR. LAMB — It used to
4 12. Roman
be a common practice to have
5 Belter (comp
the tonsils and adenoids re­
wd)
moved. Was It really beneficial
. I9BS by N(A Inc
6 Cuddle
to one’s health, or has l( been

THE BORN LOSER
FORTY'S
SAKE,6GT
OUT OF
r TMAT
WINDOW'

d

EEK A MEEK

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Wamtr Brother*

BUGS BUNNY

'Th a t n ew fw is beb p iz z a b v e l o e
H AS PAST peLIVH W VJJ-

RI6HT, DOC. ON£
PEFPEEONi PIZZA
COMING UP

declarer led a heart to the king,
By Ja m e s Ja c o b y
Here It is only the second day but the ace was offside and down
of the new year, and our South he went.
How far ahead did declarer
declarer has already forgotten
his resolution about looking have to look? Not even far
enough to squint. If the oppo­
ahead at the bridge table.
The slam contract was ag­ nents' spades were 3-2, there
gressive. but on a good day It would never be any problem, but
would certain ly have com e If they were 4-1. some measures
home. Unfortunately declarer were needed.
The right play Is to play the
turned sunshine Into rain In the
play. After the opening Jack of ace of clubs at trick two. lead a
diamonds lead, things looked spade to the queen and ruff a
r o s y . A f t e r w i n n i n g t h e club low. Now play the king of
diamond. South played the ace spades. East showing out. Play a
of spades and a spade back to spade to dum m y, finessing
against the Jack, and cash the
the king.
West showed out. There was other high spade, pitching a
now nothing left to do but pick heart from the South hand. The
remaining diamond tricks will
up t r u m p s a n d r un t h e
diamonds. Late In the day. now bring the total to 12.

- lit

N O RTH

♦ AQ 105
VK965
♦ »S

♦ QJ 3

EAST

WEST
♦ J9I4
VQ1043
♦J
♦ K 1094

♦ T

V A8 7
♦ 87 54
♦87651

SOUTH
♦ K 632

♦ J2
♦ A K 0)10 6 2
♦ A
Vulnerable: East-West
D ealer South

West

NorU

Eail

Pass
Pass IV
Pass 3*
Pass
Pats
Pass 56
Pat*
Pan
Past
Opening lead: ♦ J

So*Ik

ia

!♦
4 NT
64

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...
by Bob Thav*s

I

MAY

e e t T lN S

ON

Pu t r fA\

*■—•&gt;■**-

IN

YFAP5,

L o jV

l-i*e5

by Jim D*vi*

YOUR BIRTHDAY
JANUARY 3.1985
Greater chances for success
this coming year will be In areas
w h e r e y o u a lr e a d y h a v e
e x p e r tis e , e x p e r ie n c e and
knowledge. Stay In your own
bailiwick.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Do not let your attention
wander today when working
with unfamiliar tools or materi­
als. Keep your mind riveted on
the Job at hand. Looking for
romance? The Matchmaker set
can help you In your search.
Send 82 to Astro-Graph. Box
489. Radio City Station. New
York. NY 10019.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Have fun and enjoy yourself
today but try to do so as
In e x p e n s iv e ly as p o s s ib le .
Spending lots of bread won't

— JTM

learning my

TO HA\
Y0U T

^8 H H

^ f* ^

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Give the one you love the same
mobility and Independence toduy that you desire for yourself.
Putting restrictions on him will
invite rebellion.
8AOITTARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Introducing volatile topics at
the dinner table this evening
could turn a pleasant discussion
Into a heated debate. Keep ev­
erything light.

by Leonard Starr
ThUE| PONT LIME
BEING FO O im
JNER/ I MEAN“I MR. PEERS«.

HE PIP IT 70 KEEP I OH N0 TH0SE NASTY HlCtfl
OF H 6 FROM f
getting h^

hoj

tS

17 ja g g .

V iIl s t S I
HONeYf [rtWE PLENTY OF
MONEY TO FRITTER
'
---------S i AWAY-

m

, --

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If a
friend has done something re­
cently that you have found
disturbing, bring It out Into the
open today where It can be
resolved. Don't let It fester.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Unless objectives are clearly
defined today, you will end up
spinning your wheels. Don't
decide upon one course of action
and then shift to another.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Strive to be considerate when
dealing with subordinates today.
If you are arrogant or lord It over
them, you'll create a lot of 111
will.

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

assure you of having a good
time.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Take ample time to reason your
steps out carefully today. At­
tempting to move loo swiftly In
complex situations could prove
counterproductive.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Be
safety conscious when In motion
today. Don't be In such a hurry
to get where you're going that
you're tempted to take foolish
chances.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Resist pressure from compa­
nions today to spend money you
know you shouldn't. If you give
In. you could end up regretting
your actions later.
QEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Ambition Is an admirable quality
but don’t be so eager to get to
the top today that you do things
associates might find distasteful.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Before pointing the finger of
blame at others tdoay. be certain
that It wasn't your actions that
got things all mixed up In the
first place.

.YOU GAVE
THEM MONEY

HNOW/H5
THAT? MW?

WHY? BECAUSE
I LOVe THEM,

MDLOm tf
ONES CHILPffEti
HAS NOTHING TO

ii

�Eye-Opener

Evening H erald — W ednesday, Jan. 2, 1VIS

H erald A d v e rtise r — Thursday, Jan. 1, 1MJ

Sanlord, FI.— 1C

Link Up With
Sausage For
Breakfast
Breakfast has long been con­
sidered the most Important meal
of the day. It's the early morning
eye-opener that prepares you for
the day ahead.
The addition of sausage to
breakfast will provide the nutri­
tional link to protein, vitamins
and minerals that will get you off
to a good start.
Sausage Apple Pancake Is a
light and (lufTy flapjack topped
with Juicy sausage links and
fresh sliced apples. This colorful
skllley-stylc treat Includes selec­
tions from all the basic four food
groups--flour and cereal, meat,
fruit, and milk. Other fruit. In
season, may replace the apples
to vary the taste and color of the
pancake.
Corny Link Sticks or Corny
Link Muffins will become the
main event when served with
your favorite style eggs, chilled
Juice and steaming hot coffee or
(lavorful tea. Precooked sausage
links arc baked Into the form of
sticks or muffins made from
corn muffin mix and seasoned
with herbs.
Pancakes, corn sticks and
muffins made with sausage arc
simple to prepare and require a
minimum o f Ingredients. All
three Items are suitable for
brunch as well as breakfast.

flour, eggs, cereal, sugar and
salt. Beat mixture until smooth.
In 10-Inch skillet with oven­
proof handle, or 9-Inch square
pan. place salad oil: tilt skillet to
coat bottom evenly. Pour In
batter. Arrange sausage and
apples on top. Bake In 425
degree F. oven for about 40
minutes, until pancake Is pufTy
and golden brown. Serve at
once.
• O t h e r f r u i t s , s u c h as
bananas, fresh or frozen berries,
or any well-drained canned
fruits, may also be used.
NOTES: One recipe may be
poured Into 3 small B-Inch
skillets. Reduce baking tome for
sm all s k ille ts to about 30
m in u t e s . R e c ip e m a y be
doubled.

CORNY LINK 8T1CK8
(Makes about 12 aauaage
cornbread atlcka)
1 (B - lo 9-ounce) package corn
muffin mix
1 teaspoon chopped chives
'/* teaspoon dried marjoram
leaves
12 s m a ll l i nk b r e a k fa s t
sausages, precooked and drulned
Prepare mix as directed on
package, adding herbs along
with liquid. Spoon about 2
tablespoons baiter Into each
well-greased section of cornstlck
pan. spreading evenly over bot­
tom. Place one sausage link on
lop of batter In each section of
pan. Bake In 400 degrees F. oven
for about IB minutes, until
golden brown.
NOTES: Herbs arc optional. A
favorite home recipe may be
used Instead of the com muffin
inlx.

SAUSAGE APPLE PANCAKE
(Makes 1-3 pancakes: 406
servings)
1 (B ounce) package breakfast
link sausages (or V« pound bulk
sausage, pre-cooked and broken
into pieces)
1 cup milk
Vi cup flour
2 eggs
V4 cup crushed brun cereal
(nuggets, flakes or squares)
1 tablespoon sugar
iA teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons salad oil
1 to 1V4 cups sliced apples*
Fry sausages over medium
heat for about 7 minutes until
they begin to turn golden. Re­
move sausages and drain on
paper towels. Measure 1 tables­
poon sausage drippings and add
lo mixing bowl along with milk.

S ta rt the d a y o ff w ith C o rn y L in k S tic k s o r Sausag e A p p le

PEPSI COLA
n n

i

n n

n

CAMPBELL’S

products

LOCALLY OWNED A OPERATED BY DENNIS A KATHY QRINSTEAD

TOMATO
SOUP

323-4950

10.B Oz. Can

2690 S. ORLANDO DR., SAN FO RD , FL

PRICES IN THIS AD 0 0 0 0 FROM T M U R S . JA N . 3 THRU W E O , JA N S. IM S

CORNY LINK MUFFINS
(Makes 8-12 medium-sized
muffins)
Fill well-greased muffin pans
half full of batter, described
a b o ve. Cut p reco o k ed and
drulned sausage links In half,
crosswise, and stand 2 half links
In center of each muffin. Bake as
directed for 22 minutes.
NOTE: A 9- to 12-ouncc cornbrrad mix also may be used for
Corny Link Muffins.

Pancake

OPEN: 7 DAYS A W EEK 6 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

’A
M

Sm iU

Sovuf

’'

WE W E LC O M E FOOD STAM P SH O PPER S.

PLUS B ILE . DEP.

French Are Saying
Au Revoir To Wine
made with fruit base, arc boom­
ing. Light drinks arc up to about
10 percent of the market.
In 1983. Pernod became the
first major French firm to try to
capture the low-alcohol market
with Its Pernod Light 20-percent
alcohol drink.
"W e had to overcome the
problem of the complete novelty
o f a low alcohol product." said
m a rk e tin g d ir e c to r M ich el
Bolnet. "It Is proving more
difficult than we thought."
Licorice-flavored Pernod Is
traditionally a "southern, lazy.
Mediterranean drink" but the
firm wants to develop a "young,
upwardly mobile, sophisticated
murket" for Pernod Light.
"W e arc trying lo seduce the
market away from long drinks
and spirits." Bolnet said. "But It
Is a long process developing
appreciation for a new kind of
product."
Last year Its sister organiza­
tion Pernod-RIcard burst on the
market with Brut de Pommc. a
sparkling equivalent to potent
apple elder but with less than 1
percent alcohol. Brut de Pommc
has "surpassed all expecta­
tions." with summer sales 24
percent higher than forecast,
said Denis Bcrthu. Its publicity
director.

G ro u n d

Leg

B e e f
3 Lbs. O r M o rs

Q u a rte rs
Lb.

49*

Whole Beef Loin

freezer

FILLER

45-M Lb.AVO.

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9

P o ta to e s

&lt; 3 5 5&amp; 99*

H e a d s $ 1■

V irg in ia

G o ld e n

Red
D e lic io u s
A p p le s

Lykea R e g T h ick Or

Fresh
Pork
Sausage

Fresh
Beef
Liver

Lb. * 1 . 3 9

,

\W

991

USDA Choice Beef-7 Bone Chuck Roast
USDA Choice Beef (Bone im Shoulder Roast
3 19a
USDA Choice Beef, Beef Short Ribs Or

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IISAVE ON THIS W E E K ’S D O U B L E D I S C O U N T S P E C I A L S ! !

If

Sunny M orning
Large Qrede A

Eggs

W ITH 1
F ille d
D. Ole.
C e rt

Doz.

Milk

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S a u c e ........................ 2 1 * 1

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N o o d l e s .............................a o z .P k g .

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a n d

B e a n s ..................i s o « . c e n

Qravy Train • Liver, C h ick e n O r B e e t
D o g

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O r a n g e J u i c e §4 0».

F o o d ..................... . . . . 14 Ox. C a n t 9 1

F r i.k le s N e w Flavor Tune A C h ic k e n O r
S a lm o n

D i n n e r ................. o*. ca n

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Price. Ending 11MS

iiU

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Chocolate P l a ........ * 1 . 7 9
Pound C a k e .............* 1 . 9 9

1 . 3

Ctn.

m _

H yde Park B u tte rm ilk

f S 4

u, *1.99

Seeded Rye .................7 9
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8

Boiled H a m

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C o tta g e C h e e s e S ^ $ 1 . 4

3 / * 1

1. Or Um

^

Seelte.t Largs or Smell Curd
P o rk

con.

........................3 1 * 1

T rop lca n a R eco n st.

Rem an P ride C h ick e n Or

R o u n d

DELI-BAKERY

FROZEN-DAIRY

-

W ITH 1

G ro u n d

Price. Ending 1/MS

Price. Ending 1IMS

Pot P ie .

S ln g l. P ound
Freeh

U.S. »t

2 0 .4 9 *
;

GROCERY SPECIALS
22 Ox.Bottle, 25c Otl Label

C re a m S tyle Or
W h o le Kernel
L 'b b y

.

25*

■: P e l 1% P la s tic Or -----------I V ita m in D P aper C tn .
'
WITH 2
F ille d
:
d e l.
D. Die.
C e rt
•

French wine producers want
to elbow In by trying to convert
the French to another strictly
; &gt;
American Idea — light wine.

"It Is an elegant drink without
being too Intoxicating," said
Louis Halngucrlol, marketing
chief for Plerlant Imperial. He
s a id It a p p e a ls to f ig u r e ­
conscious women and men who
want to keep their alcohol Intake
down.

F rs s h

F lo rid a Prem ium
C h lck a n

C o o k in ' Q ood

"It Is sold In grocery stores
and s u p erm a rk ets, w ith a
smaller emphasis on bars and
restaurants. Already we have an
excellent level of consumer loy­
alty."

One firm. Chantovent. has Just
launched a light red wine. Moct
et Chandon. prince of cham­
pagne producers, hopes to sell 2
million bottles of Its sparkling
new white Plerlant Imperial next
year. Its sales pitch? Only 9.5
percent alcohol, compared to 12
percent for champagne or up to
14 percent for red wine.

l l i : X T I 6I P Y X

W E CAR R Y ONLY USDA CHOICE B EE F AND
F R E S H P O R K . . . NO F R O Z E N P O R K
*
WE O F F E R A FU LL SER VICE M EAT CO U N TE R W HERE
Y O U M A Y S E L E C T Y O U R IN D IVID U AL C U T S O F M E A T

O

PARIS (UPI) - They Invaded
France with supermarkets and
•'lc fast food ." they started
packaging wine In boxes, and
now. If marketing men have
their way. even the Gallic tradi­
tion of wine sipping may be
destroyed by "le long drink" and
other alcohol aberrations.
The French are selling aside
wine goblets and taking up the
range of refreshments Ameri­
cans discovered long ago.
"F r a n c e h a s . seen trends
almost exactly opposite lo what
happened In the United States."
said Olivier Desforgcs. market­
ing chief of Socletc des Vlns de
France.
"In France, the wine market Is
shrinking. Fewer people drink
wine. Those who drink It drlnkv
less."
Surveys picked up the evolu­
tion of French tastes In the
mid-1970s when there was a
dramatic drop In wine con­
sumption. In the 1950s. the
average French adult drank 53
gallons of wine a year. Now the
annual Intake Is 33 gallons.
That Is still 15 times the
American average of 2.2 gallons
and almost as much as the
world's leading wine drinkers In
Italy. But "th e French wine
m a rk e t h ere w ill keep on
shrinking." said Desforges.
Enter the salesmen.
A decade ago they peddled
w h is k e y as a fa s h io n a b le
alternative to wine. Sales of
whiskey doubled from 1971 to
1981. Whiskey was "a la mode"
for the upwardly mobile while
wine continued dropping about
7 percent a year.
Now a new trend has taken
hold. The French are trying out
low-alcohol drinks, and the ma­
jor drink companies are giddy
with delight.
Low- or no-alcohol drinks arc
the " I n " thing, said Denise
L e c le r c q - B o ls s e t. d e p u ty
director o f the government's
committee on alcoholism.
“ They are trying to do to
drinking what McDonald's did to
eating.” she said. "Th ey arc
frying to capitalize on the trend
away from wine to dethrone
Coca Cola. The trend to spirits
has been reversed."
New soft drinks, ready-bottled
mixtures o f beer and lemonade
and other low-alcohol "coolers"

9

_

B e e rB o lo g n a —
.

S w e e t P o ta to P i e . . . .

_

_

*1 » 99

n M .6 9

A u r ic c h i. t e c U l f

_ _

_

_

P ro vo lo n e............ i. * 2 . 4 9

B i s c u i t s ............ ... o i t* . 4 1 * 1
P e t R ltz Frozen • M Oz. P kg.

............ i *

_

99*

Roast Beef

. . . .

hi

*

* 1 .9 9

�\

Sanford, FI.

H e ra ld A d v e rtis e r — T h u rs d a y , Ja n . 3, lf8 S

3 C — E v e n in g H e re Id — W edn esday, J a n . 2, IM S

Gifts From Kitchen
Welcome Any Season
The hand-crafted appeal of
homemade Rifts of any type Is
partlculary sought-after In to­
d ay's m echanized and com ­
puterized society. And home­
made gifts from the kitchen rank
high with people In all walks of
life.

greased 15 x 10 x 1-Inch baking
pan. Bake at 350 degrees F. 20
to 25 minutes or until lightly
browned. Melt chocolate morsels
over hot water; carefully spread
over hot cookies crust. Sprinkle
with pistachios. Cut into 1 x
2-Inch bars. Makes about 514
dozen

Many remember the tradition
o f grandma's homemade candy
packaged In colorful tins for
gift-giving throughout the holi­
day season. Or perhaps it's the
cookie exchange ritual that
sparks reminiscences of gather­
ings of family and friends. Bowls
o f nuts In th shell for Impromptu
nibbling throughout the holiday
season Is another fond memory
for many.

CALIFORNIA PISTACHIO ICE
BOX COOKIES
14 cup butter or margarine,
softened
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 eft?
114 cups dour
14 teaspoon baking powder

14 cup chopped shelled natural
California pistachios
Cream butter and sugar. Add
vanilla and egg; blend until
smooth. Com bine flour and
baking powder; add to creamed
mixture. Stir in pistachios.
Shape dough Into 2 rolls, about
1V« Inches each In diameter.
Wrap In waxed paper or plastic
wrap: chill thoroughly. Cut Into
V4-lnch thick slices. Bake at 400
degrees F. 6 to 7 minutes or until
barely brown on edges. Makes
about 6 dozen.
Tip: Dough can be refrigerated
up lo one week. Slice and bake
as needed following directions.

P is ta c h io s im p a r t a r ic h fla v o r and c ru n c h to h om em ad e tre a ts.

The assortment of kitchen
treats presented here offer new
memory-making opportunities
In recipes carefully fine-tuned for
today's lifestyles.
California Pistachio Cookie
Bars are a two-layer bar cookie
that goes together fast. Crunchy
pistaclos decorate the top of
these rich, chocolate-glazed
cookies. Bake these when time Is
tight.

CALIFORNIA PISTACHIO
DIVINITY
2W cups sugar
14 cup each light corn syrup
and water
2 egg whites
1 teaspoon vanilla
% cup c o a rs e ly chopped
s h e lle d n a tu ra l C a lifo rn ia
pistachios
Combine sugar, corn syrup
and water In heavy 2-quart
saucepan. Cook to 260 degrees
F. (hard-ball stage): stlrJuBl unlll
sugar dissolves. While sugar
mixture cooks, beat egg whites
until stlfT peaks form. Beating at
high speed on mixer, gradually
pour sugar mixture over egg
whites. Add vanilla and beat
until candy loses its gloss and
holds Its shape. Quickly add
nuts; mix well. Quickly spoon
teaspoonfuls onto greased waxed
paper or spread In buttered
8-lnch square pan and cut into
squares. Makes about 36 pieces.

For Dessert,
Pop A Pear
In Microwave
More people are turning to
microwave ovens os the pace of
living quickens, especially dur­
ing the week.
H ere's a quick cinnamonspiced pear dessert for serving
eight or two. It takes less than 10
minutes In the microwave. The
pears also may be baked In a
conventional oven.
For added richness, serve with
whipped cream or Ice cream.

CINNAMON-SPICED PEARS
(Microwave Method)
4 Western Bose pears
V4 cup each packed brown
sugar and chopped nuts
3 tablespoons melted
butter or margarine
V4 teaspoon
ground cinnamon
V4 cup water
Halve and core pears; place
c u t - s i d e up I n s h a l l o w
microwave-proof dish. Combine
brown sugar, nuts, butter and
cinnam on; spoon Into pear
halves.
Pour water around pears.
Microwave uncovered at HIGH 6
minutes or until pears arc
tender; turn dish twice during
cooking. This kitchen-tested rec­
ipe makes 8 servings.
Conventional method: Place
pears In shallow baking dish. Fill
and pour water around pears as
above. Bake, covered, at 350
degrees 20 minutes or unlll
pears are tender. Recipe can be
halved.
Two-serving vurlatlon:
Halve 1 pear. Fill with mixture
o f 1 tablespoon each packed
brown sugar and chopped nuts,
2 teaspoons melted butter' and
generous dash ground cin ­
namon. Pour 2 tablespoons
water around pears. Microwave
on HIGH 2 minutes. Makes 2
servings.
S e r v in g T ip : S e rv e w ith
w h ip p ed to p p in g, w h ip p ed
cream or vanilla Ice cream If
desired.

700 OFF

euBLII K t E lI V t S THE SIGHT

With This Coupon ONLY

Maalox Liquid
12-oz. bol.

I

Reg. or P.E.

I
1
1
1.

Robitussin
Cough
S y ru p ,

(Effective Jan. 3-B. 1985) T

i
i

4.9-oz. Reg. or
4.5-oz. G el Pump

|
a

j
1

Colgate
1
Toothpaste 1
each for

4-oz. bot.

t

$

1

1

7

9

9

Extra Strength Tablets

1
1

Flex Net
Hair Spray
8-oz. bot.

1

Tylenol

1

1
1|

100-ct. pkg.
4

6

9

a iii iii im m i » ii m i m n n m m » n

BUY ONE ..
...GET ONE

FREE

(Regular P rice 99« Each),

c

9

H r.J

■ (30$ O ff Label), Pump !
f Non A erosol Unscented
|
f1'
or Extra Hold
l
;
1

«£|

*

$

CALIFORNIA PISTACHIO
COOKIE BARN
1 cup butter or margarine,
softened
14 cup each sugar and packed
brown sugar
le g g
V4 teaspoon brandy flavoring
or vanilla
2 cups flour
1 package (6 oz.) milk choco­
late morsels
14 cup chopped shelled natural
California pistachios
Cream butter and sugurs;
blend in egg und flavoring. Stir
in flour; mix well. Pat into

THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
THURS., JAN. 3
THRU WED.,
JAN. 9, 1 9 8 5 ...

*m&lt;t&gt;

(30$ Off Label),
Extra Body, Norm al
Dry or O ily
Balsam &amp; Protein

Flex
Shampoo
15-oz. bot.

U

1
11
3f
0i

j1

•

*a

Bic Shaver

-

«ai

■

(30$ Off Labol),
Reg., Extra Body or
Oily Balsam &amp; Protein

I
X
9

Flex
Conditioner
15-oz. bot.

1
1
1

5-ct. pkg.

too d5wGreenStamps|3
!

1.5-ox.iar,

l

Vicks Vaporub

22. (Eltacli?* Jan. I t. 19*1)

!

k t t a a a ta a o o t mm m m mmm m m m mm mmmm U

M

a i

100 ^WGreenStampsf3
a&gt;lalw||8t«S4Ma»t«|MUB*

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2.75-0*. pkg.,

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$

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9
$

200

1

5

9

1

200 B V i f s t a m p s Q
11-o*. bot., Johnion A Johnson
. Jt. 1MS)

200

Baby Shampoo

1

5

Olay Baauty Bar

9

200 &lt;4V/GreenStamps0
|U

100 J V I G r S m p l R ]

200 f ^ j m S t e m p s | ^

•■»#4av*oa*aa»«a«m

SoftADri

GreenStamnsfSl

i

24-cl. pkg., Lem on Sm ooth H aibal,
j Orange Herb or Cinnam on A pple

[ 25

(EliteU*t Jan. ye, IMS)

100 ^WGrVenStamps[ 9

200

200 [dWGrVenStamps0

[[ill]

|Upton Toa

16. (EliteIlia Jan. yt. IMM

]2.(EllacU*a Jan. I t. IMSI

I

24. (EftaclhraJan It. IMS)

200 &amp;WGreenStanipsf3

JArrid Anti-Parspirant

a#

Upton Taa

Dr. Scholl's InMlaa

4-oi. ctn, Suptr Dry or Btby Powdtr
AnU-PtitpIrtnt

u

16-ct. pkg., Amaralto Flavor or
Orange Spice

ssch, Stitt SW to BW or 7M to 11M

I (80s Oil Ltbtl) 6-ot. ctn, Light Powder]
|or E*lra Dry Hegular Scent

\

23.(Elltcll«a Jan. ye. IMS)

18. (Elitell&lt;* Jan y*. IMS)

8. (Etlacll.* Jan. ye, IMS)

| m u iwt ttv»»t it* I , H ttu «i

$

in-H bvlot a»t

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I

22 1-oi. b o i, Arm 8 Hammer F lo ra l S cant!

20-ct. pkg.,

or Original Light S ca nt

i

Acutrim

Carpat S Room Doodorbtsr I

3. &lt;tUntil.* Jan. II. IMS)

28. (Etlacll.* Jan. S-t.

200

100 ^'Stampsra

200

3-oi. bot..

O - t a iM IM M S S M y t ia t U * i

Bloody Mary M i

Aaprl Facial Scrub

4. (EliteIt.* Jan. yt. IMS)

I

32-o e . b ol., M cllhonny T abasco

2-oz. tubs, Qtntlo or Original Formula

Topol Tooth Polish

IMSI

27. (Kffgclivg Jan 3 9. 196$)

18- (EHacIlaa Jan. yt, IMS)

Lm m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m

200 ^WGreVnStamps^ j

200
Firm, SoIt or ModlumRoach Plus or Firm,]
Soft, Medium, or Child

200

I200

Roach Toothbrush
12. (Eliteli.a Jan. yt. IMSI

li^
G reenStam ps^ j
|■»!* (•»#•« M#*va*»*M•» |fl|

12-oz. D tn la l H in ts or 18-oz. O sntal
T ra tlm a n l

6-01. c tn , S ce n te d or
P o trd tr A n tl-P titp lra n l

Act

Right Guard

6. (EliteU.a Jan. yt. Itstl

200
8 -cl. P lv o l or 6-Ct. Regular

Good Nawa Raaor
7. (filacma Jan. yt. IMS)

IS lEtlatU.* Jan. y t . IMSI

any tilt pkg.,

L200

I

$2.00 Or Mora
Duracall Battarias

^5WGreVnStamps153
««•*|8««MM t N N alil a*

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4 -o i. pkg.. C h ick e n or U ve r

Bonk ara Cat Traata

28. lEltactlv* Jan. ya. IMS)
L .. . . . . . . ------ ----------

IB- ItttacU.a Jan yt. IM»)

^WGreenStampsH

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Gre*enStampsf9
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T-120

Polaroid -«—» w &gt;vn..Mn I®™’
VWao Caaaatta Tapa VHS
20 linacMa Jan. yt. IH«I

200
(4-pk.J 40,80, 79 or 100-wall

G J . Soft White Light Bulba
21. (Enact** Jan yt. IMSI

i

�Herald A d v e rtise r -

Evening H erald — Wednesday, Jan. 1, IMS

Sanlord, FI.—JC

T hursday. J«n- L

Microwave
Cook A Delicious Dinner Quick As A Wink
How many times have you
wished you could cook dinner
quick as a wink? Or needed to
prepare a nutritious meal for
your family when your heart Just
wasn't In It? Well, this recipe for
a complete Salmon Loaf Supper
from a Whirlpool microwave
oven cookbook Is Just the thing
to add a little spring to your step.

SALMON LOAF SUPPER
Total cooking time: 15 m/nutes
V* cup chopped onion

Serve salmon loaf with creamed peas.

2 tablespoons butter
2 beaten eggs
V4 cup milk
114 cups soft bread crumbs (2
slices)

2 tablespoons snipped parsley
2 teaspoons lemon Juice
1 16-ouncc can salm on ,
drained, flaked, and bones re­
moved
1 10-ounce package frozen
peas In cream sauce
1 package 1-layer size spice
cake mix
4 preheated crescent rolls
Crnned white frosting
In a mixing bowl combine the
chopped onion and butter. Place
In microwave oven.
Cook at high for two minutes
till onion Is lender. Stir In the
e ggs . m ilk , bread crum bs,
parsley, lemon Juice, and 14

B e e f ’N M o re.
Publix offers you a wide variety of tasty
meats. Beef, lamb, pork, poultry —
conveniently packaged in all different sizes.
And if you need a special cut — just ask,
we’ll be glad to help. Flavorful
meats from Publix, you can
taste the quality.

Publix
F la v’r-Lean
G o v’t.-Inspected Beef

It's the little things that
m ake the difference
at Publix.

Blade
Chuck
Roast

teaspoon salt. Add the salmon, tablespoons batter tnto each of
mix well. Shape Into 7x3" loaf . four 6-ouncc custard cups lined
Place In 8x8x2" baking dish. with paper bake cups. (R e­
Cover loosely with waxed paper. frigerate the remaining batter to
Place to the far right on the rack bake later.) Arrange filled cups
In the microwave oven. Place the to the left on the rack In the
frozen peas with cream sauce microwave oven. Cook cupcakes
mix In a I-quart casserole. Add at high for 4 minutes. Place the
water or milk and butter as crescent rolls on the bottom of
directed on the package. Cover the microwave oven, below the
andplace to the far left on the salmon loaf.
bottom of the microwave oven.
Cook at high for one minute
Cook the salmon loaf and the till the rolls are warm. Top the
peas mixture at medium high for cupcakes with canned frosting.
eight minutes. Give the saimon /Serve slices of salmon loaf with
dish a half turn and stir the peas. peas spooned over. Serves 4.
Meanwhile, prepare cake mix as
CA88EROLES AND
directed on package. Spoon 2
BAKING DISHES
A casserole Is round or ovalshaped and often has u fitted
cover. A baking dish Is usually
square or rectangular and Is
Olde Smithfield
shallow. A loaf dish Is rectangu­
lar with deep sides. Use waxed
paper or vented plastic wrap
when the recipe calls for a cover.
Many manufacturers Imprint
the volum e or size on the
container, usually on the bottom
or under the handles. To de­
termine the volume of tt\e casse­
role. measure the amount of
water It holds when filled com­
pletely to the lop. To determine
dimensions o f a baking dish,
measure across the top from the
inside edges.
Remember that If you subsi llulc a 2-quart casserole for a
2-quart baking dish. It may tie
necessary to adjust the cooking
time because the depth of the
food In .th e con ta in er w ill
change.

Sliced
Bacon

THIS AD

EFFECTIVE:
THURS.,
JAN. 3
THRU
WED.,
JAN. 9,
1985...

eatl
Webber Mild, Hot, Taste Treat
or Sage

Whole
Hog Sausage....... 1“,' *1”
Lykes Sliced American

Cooked H am ....... £1* *210
Jones Little

Link Sausage...... pi.g *22®

ISeafood I
Fresh

Whole Catfish

s r *2 ® »

Fresh

Catfish Fillets

......i r

» 4 2®

Fresh Frozen

Trout Fillets...

s r » i 4®

Peeled &amp; Deveined

Large Shrimp.

......* 7 ”

2 cups zuccitlnl. sliced Va Inch
thick
1 small onion, thinly sliced
and separated Into rings
I tablespoon butter or marga­
rine
1 tablespoon snipped parsley
14 teaspoon lemon Juice
Va teaspoon salt
Va te a s p o o n d rie d b a s il,
crushed
1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved
In 114-quart casserole combine
zucchini, onion, butter, parsley,
lemon Juice, salt, and basil.
Cover: place tn microwave oven.
Cook at HIGH for 5 minutes
till zucchini ts almost done. Add
cherry tomatoes. Cover and cook
at HIGH for 1 minute till heated
through. Makes 4 servings.

CABBAGE-CARROT TOSS
Total cooking time: 6 minutes
3 cups shredded cabbage
1 cup shledded carrots
1 medium red onion, thinly
sliced and halved
2 tablespoons snipped parsley
1 tablespoon butter or marga­
rine
14 te a s p o o n d rie d b a s il,
crushed
In 2-quart casserole combine
cabbage, carrots, onion, parsley,
butter or margarine, basil, and
14 teaspoon sail. Cover and place
In microwave oven.
Cook vegetables at HIGH for 3
minutes: stir. Cook at HIGH for 3
m inutes till vegeta b les are
crisp-tender. Makes 4 servings.

ZUCCHINI PARMESAN
Total cooking time: 10 minutes

P U B L IX R E S E R V E S TH E RIG H T
T O U N I T Q U A N T IT IE S S O U )

U.S.D.A. Choice Shoulder

Lamp C hops........

*17®

Rockingham

D elicious Tasting!
S lice After Slice....

Tops for Taste!

Onion Bagels .... 6

i0, 99*
Made Just Like Homemade, Chewy

French
Bread

Fruit B a rs .......12 tor *v®
Old Fashioned (7-Inch)

Boston
Cream C ak e........ *«h •1®“

each loaf

Roasting
C h icken ...............

IS!
Swift Premium Mild or Garlic

79*

Corned B e e f....... ST ®2»®
Louis Rich Roasted or Smoked

Turkey B re a st.... K' ®39®

R e a d y -T o -T a k e -O u t,
S o u th e rn

Pork
Loins

Fried
Chicken

i*•4 'vw?k?iji -* "*■
* ■r P•ri:
Items Above Available at all Publix Stores
with In-Store Bakeries Only.

Louis Rich

Turkey Franks.... i",!' 89*
Sunnyland Meat, Beef or Thick

Slicad Bologna .... pit: 914®
Tender Danish Filled
, With S p icy A pples

Danish
Apple
Strip

Delicious (Family Pack)

Cake Donuts.......
Delicious With Any MeaJ!

each for

for

• 1 «

Items Above Available at All Publix
Stores A Danish Bakariea.

H89

Deli.

Tasty Fresh
(Either End or Whole)

per lb.

Zucchini
M uffins.............6

ITALIAN VEGETABLE
MEDLEY
total cooking time: 6 minutes

TIPS ft TECHNIQUES

9-p c. box

$099
IDelil

Delicious Cooked Salami or

Mortadslla...........TC* 69'
Z .s t y P ick l. A Pimento Loaf or

Oliva Loaf............qur '6 9 *
Louis Rich Low Calorie
Turkey Ham or

Turkey Pastrami

6 cups sliced zucchini (about
114 pounds)
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
14 teaspoon celery salt
3 tablespoons grated
Parmesan cheese
in 8x8x2-lnch baking dish
combine zucchini, butter, and
celery salt. Cover with waxed
paper; place In microwave oven.
Cook zucchini m ixture at
HIGH for 10 minutes, stirring
e v e r y 3 m in u tes. S p rin k le
Parmesan cheese atop. Serves 6.

69'

Louis Rich Low Calorie

Turksy Salam i.... 'T " S 9 '
Great Taatingl

Tuna Salad.......... »" »1«
Hot From Tha Deli!

Chicksn
A Biscuits............ ST »2T®
Yams A Apples....
»2°®
Fresh &amp; Flavorful

Onion Rye Broad . liSi 79*
Hot And Ready To Eat!

Chill...................... ST M»®

Peeling tomatoes: In a 2-cup
glass measure or medium bowl
bring 1 cup water to boiling.
Remove dish from microwave
oven. Spear a tomato with a
long-lined meat fork. Submerge
the tomato In (he hot water; hold
to count o f twelve. Hold the
tomato under cold running tap
water; peel.
Cutting Into equal pieces:
Fresh vegetables will cook more
evenly when they are cut Into
uniform sizes and shapes. Ir­
regular-shaped pieces have a
te n d e n c y to o v e rc o o k and
become mushy In spots while
other areas may require addi­
tional cooking time.
Cooking spinach: T o cook
leafy vegetables, such as spinach
or collard greens, wash and trim
leaves. Place the greens In a
large casserole; cover and cook
as directed In your microwave
oven cooking chart. The water
that clings to the leaves will be
adequate moisture for cooking.

€

fJ L PftOM ^

CAU.TOU.mcc

149940-INI

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Sanford, FI.

H erald A d v e rtise r — Thursday, Jan. ], I t u

E v e n in g H era ld — Wednesday, Jan. 1. IftS

January Shopping Basket Full of Florida
The January fresh vegetables center comes out clean. (Custard until slightly thickened. Then
and fruit shopping basket will cups will lake 20-30 min., de­ fold In vegetables. Pour Into a
have kumquats to tomatoes pending o n their size.) Let stand 1-quart m old or Individual
from Florida. There'll be enough at least 15 min. before serving. molds. Makes about 3 cups, or 6
of everything to observe any Sprinkle top lightly with confec­ Individual salads.
SKILLET SLAW
New Year's holiday tradition.
tioners' sugar. Serve warm or
1 slice bacon
Recipe ideas capitalizing on cold, with whipped cream If
2 tablespoons onion, finely
the abundance o f Florida com­ desired. Serves 4-6.
modities In January ofTer com­ FLORIDA CUCUMBER SALAD chopped
1 tablespoon vinegar
patibility with most any menu
1 3 oz. package lime gelatin
plan. These Ideas Include:
1 tablespoon water
44 teaspoon salt
PORK CROWN ROAST
1Vi teaspoons sugar
1 cup boiling water
WITH CELERY-WILD
V4 teaspoon salt
44 cup cold water
RICE 8TUFFINO
pepper
2 tablespoons vinegar
2 cups F lo rid a c a b b a ge,
1 14-16 rib pork crown roast
2 teaspoons grated onion
shredded
(about 714 pounds)*
dash of pepper
1 small apple, pared and finely
1 tablespoon salt
44 cup diced Florida tomato
V4 teaspoon pepper
chopped
Vi cup diced Florida cucumber
2 6-ounce boxes long grain
V4 cup dairy sour cream
Vi cup diced Florida celery
In a medium size saucepan fry
and wild rice with seasoning
Dissolve gelatin and salt In
packets
boiling water. Add cold water, bacon till crisp: drain: reserve
2 cups Florida celery, sliced vinegar, onion, and pepper. Chill drippings, crumble bacon and
thin
V4 cup onion, chopped fine
B o u n c e s fr e s h F lo r id a
mushrooms, sliced
1 cup butter
THIS AD
1 teaspoon sage
EFFECTIVE:
V4 teaspoon salt
THURS.,
14 cup fresh Florida parsley,
JAN. 3
chopped
Vi teaspoon poultry seasoning
THRU
1 cup Florida pecans, chopped
WED.,
2 Florida eggs, well beaten
JAN.
9,
Parsley
1985. . .
Cherry tomatoes
Sprinkle pork roast with one
tablespoon salt and V4 teaspoon
pepper. Place roast, rlb-cnd
down. In open roasting pan;
roast two hours In a preheated
325° oven. Meanwhile cook rice
Wit* avary rod of color print filmof KodMokx t f R O
according to package directions:
FUm P u M i P
you gat two
of Q u o f c t y
set aside. Slmmer-sautc the cel­
pmli and a f PtfCfoNof d»ac of Kodafc'a colof
ery. onions and mushrooms In
• F o t l, con von sofff
butter until tender, but not
• free Mm
brown. Take off heat and add all
• TW o s o ls o f
O isofftf p rin t*
but last three Ingredients. Add
eggs slowly while continually
b e a t in g . M ix l i g h t l y but
thoroughly with rice (enough for
14 Vi-cup servings). After two
hours remove roast from oven;
Invert roast so ribs are up. Fill
cavity of roast with stuffing.
(Bake leftover stuffing In covered
greased casserole during last 30
minutes of roasting time.) Insert
meat thermometer between two
ribs Into center of meat, being
careful not to touch bone. Re­
Hefty Super Weight Steel Sak
turn to oven and continue
Trash B ags..........*2«®
roasting 45 minutes to 1Vi hours
Hefty Small Garbage
or until meat therm om eter
reaches 170* F. Place roast on
Waste Bags.........
platter; let stand 15 minutes for
Hetty Tall
easier carving. Garnish with
Kitchen B a g s ...... ®219
parsley and clusters of cherry
tomatoes. Slice between ribs to
P la stic F o o d S to ra g e B a g s
carve. Serves 14-18.
B o g g l e s ..................... . »»«. M * *
•Order a crown roast (loin
roast curved Into crown shape)
Lager or Light, In 12-0z. Cans
from your meatman several days
Old Tap Beer....... X *1"
ahead.

set aside. Add onion to bacon
drippings and cook 2 minutes.
Stir In vinegar, water, sugar, salt
and a dash of pepper. Bring Just
to boiling. Add cabbage and
apple; toss to coat. Cover and
cook o v e r m ediu m heat 5
minutes or until cabbage Just
wilts. Stir In sour cream; top
with crumbled bacon. Serves 4.

1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce
V4 teaspoon chill powder
Grate peel from oranges. Peel
2 oranges and slice Into halfcartwheels. Juice remaining
oranges to measure Vi cup. Heat
pressure cooker and add short­
ening. Sprinkle beef shanks with
salt and pepper; brown on both
sides. Combine remaining In­
gredients: pour over browned
meat. Close cover securely. Place
pressure regulator on vent pipe
and cook 20 minutes with pre­
ssure regulator rocking slowly.

BARBECUED BEEF SHANK
3-4 oranges
1 tablespoon fresh grated or­
ange peel
Vi cup fresh squeezed orange
Juice
2 pounds beef shanks
Vi teaspoon salt
V4 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon shortening
V4 cup catsup
2 tablespoons vinegar

io c m

BLEU CHEESE
STUFFED CELERY

im

carrots,

1 3Vi oz. can flaked coconut
2 cups m i n i a t u r e
marshmallows
3 tablespoons honey
Vi cup sour cream
14 cup mayonnaise
lettuce leaves
Combine carrots, lime Juice,
o r a n g e s , c o c o n u t , and
marshmallows. Combine honey,
sour cream, and mayonnaise:
mix well, and pour over carrot
mixture. Toss lightly. Serve on
lettuce If desired. Serves 6-8.

IDairyl
Breakfast Club

S pread................... b0»i 79*
Piilsbury Best Quick

Cinnamon R o lls .... c.V *149
Philadelphia Brand

Cream C h e e s e ..... .X M 49
Dairi-Fresh

Half &amp; H a lf............
Publix

“We will never, knowingly, disappoint you.
If for any reason your purchase does not
give you complete satisfaction, the full
purchase price will be cheerfully refunded
immediately upon request."
Wfe have always believed that no sale
is complete until the meal
is eaten and enjoyed.

i k

Fl ori da

V4 cupllmejulce
2 cups Florida orange sections/
chopped

Cool pressure cooker at once.
Serve meat with sauce and
orange half cartwheels.

TheRiHix

Publix
FREE FILM

CARROT AMBROSIA
3 c up s
shredded

C itru s P u n c h ....... 2*.!' 89°

*

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sliced
Natural Swiss, Provolone or

M o zzarella............ X

99*

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Mild Cheddar,
Colby Halfmoon, Monterey Jack or

M o zzarella............ vfe

*189

Dairi-Fresh Small or Large Curd,
Schmierkase or Lowfat

Cottage C h e e se . . . .

99*

cup

IFrozenFood
Florida Gold Valencia Concentrate

Orange J u ic e ....... ®139
Stouffer's Stuffed

Green P e p p e rs..... , pf;fc,199
Chef Saluto 32.25-oz. Super Deluxe
or 29.25-oz. Pepperoni

Party P iz z a ........... t5?h*349
Rich's

C offee R ic h ....... 2 c C 79*
Fleischmann’s Reg. or with Cheese

Egg B e a te rs .......

M^9

*cti».

■Frozen Seafood!
Mrs. Paul's Combination

Seafood P latte r.... X

*189

Mrs. Paul's Crunchy Light Batter

Fish F ille ts........... . X . M 89

Liptons A ssorted Soup Mix

2 packages (3 ounces each)
cream cheese
Vi cup Bleu cheese
2 tablespoons milk
About 24 ribs crisp celery.
3-4" long
Paprika
Soften cream cheese and mix
with Bleu cheese and milk. Fill
crisp celery ribs neatly with a
knife or press the filling through
a cake decorator's tube. Garnish
with paprika. Yields about 24
ribs.

8TUFFFD YELLOW SQUASH
7 m edium y e llo w Florida
squash
1 lb. ground Florida chuck
Vi cup onion, finely chopped
V4 cup celery, finely chopped
V4 cup bread crumbs
3 ta b le s p o o n s P a rm e s a n
cheese
8 ounce can tomato sauce with
mushrooms
1 teaspoon salt
pepper to taste
Parmesan cheese
Parboil squash in salted water
for 10-15 minutes or until it can
be easily pierced with a fork.
Cook; split lengthwise, scoop out
pulp and reserve. Saute meat,
onion and celery. Add chopped
pulp, bread crumbs, cheese, salt,
and pepper. Stuff shells and
place In casserole. Cover with
tomato sauce and sprinkle generously with additional
Parmesan cheese. Bake at 350°
for 30 minutes. Serves 7.

LIME PUDDINQ CAKE
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
Vi cup sugar
3 Florida eggs, separated
3 tablespoons flour
144 cups milk
V4 cup Florida lime Juice
grated lime peel of 1 lime
(about 2 teaspoons)
green food coloring
Confectioners' sugar
Preheat oven to 350* F. In
large bowl cream butter and
sugar together. Beat In egg yolks
until blended. At low speed of
mixer blend In flour. Add milk,
lime Juice, and peel. Tint with 2
drops of green food coloring to
give delicate green color. Beat
egg whites until soft peaks form
when beater is raised. Using
rubber spatula or wooden spoon,
fold egg whites into lime m ix­
ture. Turn mixture Into shallow
8Vi" baking dish or 6 small or 4
large custard cups. Set dish In
pan; pour boiling water Into pan
to depth of 1". Bake 40-45 min.
fur large dish or until golden
brown and knife Inserted In

r- i

i

Lots-A-Noodles...

X.

70°

ICandyl

Sugar Substitute

Equal Packets.....i£,V*198

Assorted Individual Rolls

Sugar Substitute

M entos................. 4 'ft* *1

Equal Packets.....*3”

Fun Size Snickers, Milky W ays or

Three Musketeers.. 7fcl *229

Ken-L ration Kibbles N Bits

Dog Food............. &amp; *489

P U P U X P I M l I V t S T N t RIG HT
T O LIM IT O U A N T I T N t S O L O .

W isconsin C h eese Bar
S lice d Natural Sw iss,
j,
Provolone or
1

Mozzarella
6-oz. pkg.

Frozen G reen Giant
Le Sueur Baby P e a s or

Mrs. Filberts
Golden Quarters
Regular

}

Margarine

!

2ejAQ
Ue

QQo
99

1 ib

ctns.

\

B

Frozen C hef Saluto
32.25-oz. Super D eluxe
or 29.25-oz. Pepperoni

Broccoli
Spears

Party

14-mc
-inch size

10-oz. pkg.

$349

99

---rf—
m i

(50c Off Label) All Temperature

Cheer Detergent.......-.v *2M
(1 5 . O il Label) All Fabric Dry Bleach

Clorox 2 ..................... v: *14B

OStNfECIANT SPRA/

Keebler 14-oz. Cinnamon Crisp
or 16-oz.

(Lim it 1 Pipit#, with O lh ir P u rc h ita p o l $7.50 or M ora,
E ic lu d ln g A ll T o b a cco Itam i)

Hunt’*

Tomato Sauce........
Van (amp*

Tomato P aste.........

d o r k

Van Camp With Tomato Sauce

39*

n -o * .

can

V

a

N&gt;

Blue Plate

Mayonnaise............

Publix Special Recipe Buttercrust
White or Wheat

lra o n x u i g o ld onus!

Bread...................W

Hunt’*

Pork A Beans.........

Honey Grahams... *£.h ®199

can halp reduce the chances of
catching colds transmitted by
surfaces ...

JX * 1 19

(Limit IPleaie, with Other Purchase* of S7.S0 or More,
Excluding All Tobacco Iteme)

Apple
Juice
64-oz. bot.

Tom ’s 7-oz. Regular, Rippled or
6.5*0z. Sour Cream A Onion

*|49

•319

Heinz Sweet

Relish...............

10-O*.
!*»

69*

Potato C hips....... *»T.h 99*

Heinz Tomato

Silka, Brava or Classic

K etch u p ..............4&amp;t* *1T#

Nescafe C o ffe e .. X ®3®9

Pure Vegetable

Wesson Oil

$229

...U 0 1 D U R Q A IK IU

Lysol Spray.....

Nescafe Decaffeinated

48-oz. bot.

v • V*

Rag. or Scant II Diainfactant

Krispy Crackers..

Coffee.................
M ott’s
Regular or Natural

09*

Sunshine Reg. or Unsalted

X

84 ”

Large S ize
M ilk Chocolate, Fruit &amp;
Nut, Roast Alm ond
or Caram ello

adbury Bai
3.5-oz. bar

*

Underwood Plain, Mustard or
Tomato Sauce

Sardines..............*1X79*
C oronet
White A D ecorated

Paper
Tow els

69* 2

ler8e H
rolls

I

�Warm Up To Bowl
Of Clam Chowder
What better way to satisfy a
hungry family on a bitter cold
night than with a piping hot
serving o f homemade soup.
L ad e n wi t h a v a r i e t y of
nutritious Ingredients, this reci­
pe for good, old-fashioned New
Englnad Clam Chowder was
d e v e l o p e d by t he H o me
Economists at Kitchen Aid using
their large capacity food pro­
cessor. The weather aside. It's
also a good recipe for a busy
cook, because It can be prepared
ahead In Just a few simple steps.

,

3 medium potatoes, peeled
and cut Into 1-Inch pieces
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
1 cup water
2 cans (6V£ or. each) minced
clams, with Juice
4 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine. melted
6 tablespoons flour
4 cups milk
1 teaspoon salt
W teaspoon pepper
Position metal work blade In
work bowl. Add onions and
pulse 7 to 8 times to coarsely
chop.
Melt butter In a 4-quart pot
over medium heat. Add onions
and saute until tender. Add
carrots, potatoes, and water.
Cook until vegetables are tender.

NEW ENGLAND CLAM
CHOWDER

2 small onions, quartered
3 carrots, peeled and cut Into
1-Inch pieces

Herald A d v e rtise r -

E v e n in g H e ra ld — W ednesday, Ja n . 2, I f ! !

T h u rid a y , Jan. 3, I f lJ

Doctor Practices
What She Preaches
About in Cookbook

C h o w d e r p e rfe c t fo r cold night.
about 15 to 20 minutes.
Stir In clams with Juice. Com­
bine butter and flour to make a
smooth paste. Slowly add flour
mixture to pot. stirring con­

stantly. Add milk. salt, and
pepper. Reduce heat and cook
until soup thickens, stirring
constantly.
Yield: 10 to 12 servings

NEW YORK (UP!) - Nutri­
tionist Dr. Mary Winston the
other morning drank a tall glass
of orange Juice, spooned "little
shredded wheals" into a bowl
and poured on skim milk, then
munched toast spread with “ less
than a teaspoon of margarine."
That's her usual breakfast.
For lunch. Dr. Winston said,
she eats almost anything that Is
n ot f a t t y , f r i e d or h i g h
cholesterol. And dinner'?
"The main course is fish or
chicken and. on occasion, red
meal with all Ihc fat cut off.
"I prefer a fish dish."

Reg. or Light
(Plus Tax &amp; Deposit)
Diet Rite Cola, Reg. or
Sugar Free RC 100 or

Old Style
Beer

RC Cola

12-oz. cans, 6-pk.

$-J 99

16-oz. hots., 8-pk.

$459

(Limit 4 Please, With Other
Purchases of $7.90 or More,
Excluding All Tobacco Items)—

Fo r B re a k fa s t, S n a c k s
or D e s s e rt. T a s ty

Made From Concentrate.
100'‘o Pure Publix Chilled

Golden
Bananas

O ra n g e
J u ic e

Publix
Teller

per lb.

23

half gal.

FOR 24 HOUR
CONVENIENCE
YOU CAN BANK ON.

$-149

• »1 MOST Puern I C C M O iS

r

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All P u rp o se

White
Potatoes
10&amp;
$ ^ 2 9

y

&lt;
1

(Produce

lice Cream
Howard Johnson Assorted

Florida Sweet, Juicy Seedless

White Grapefruit....5 .« 99°

Florida Fresh Tender

Green Beans.............. r 49°
Florida Sweet, Juicy Seedless

Red Grapefruit........5 .*. *1a*

For Snacks or Salads, Crisp Juicy

Ida Red Applee.......3 &amp; 99°

pint
ctn.

Ice C re a m .............

S-J29

HOW POLAROID
CAN G ET YOU
25" O FF AN YPLACE
TW AFUES.
(See Details at Store)

Serve With Cheese Sauce, Tender

Fresh Broccoli............a 89°
For Salads or Slicing, Florida (Large Size)
Tasty Tom atoes......... »' 39*
For Bolling or Slaw, Florida Firm

Green Cabbage......... 17°

SAVE $1.50, Time Zero

Top Your Salad With "Marjon" Brand

Bean Sprouts.............. ’».* 99°

Colorful Novelty _

_

Standard Carnations...

$2 "

THIS AD EFFECTIVE: TNURS., JAN. 3
THRU WED., JAN. 9, 1985 . . .

$799

Polaroid F ilm ........ »
SA V E $5.00

Polaroid One Step
6 0 0 Cam era

30G O F F

•*ch * 1 9 » 9

With Thfl Coupon ONLY
Pub lti Aulo Oflp Of Hog. Pork 100X

$ 1 .0 0 O F F

for

Colom bian
C o ffe e

With Thl. Coupon ONLY
With PurchM* 01 An,:

R o se ’, Rhine, Chablis
or Burgundy W ine

Ice Milk

$099

$499

1-lb. bog

Fam ily Pak
Fresh Meat Item

Sealtest
Light ‘ n Lively
A sso rte d

California
Cellars
3-lit. hot.

lUaul I Km , m h I, H u

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om.l hnMu, .1|?.MIt Mm,
(IMmu*. J.a. M. «»••)

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OMMPw«tMM« Mlf.M MMm*.
O a th * ... . ON T . . . . . . I t M . )
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With TMo Coupon ONLY

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With Thu Coupon
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I

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W lK o n tin Choooo Sef

Lasagne

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2-lb. to.)

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where shopping is a pleasure 7 days a week

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(■ffMlHtJsa.H.INI) T

T h e g l i m p s e I n t o Dr .
Winston’s dietary style shows
she practices Ihc low-fat. low
cholesterol diet she preaches In
the "American Heart Associa­
tion Cookbook" (David McKay.
$15.95). Over the last 10 years.
4.5 m illion Am ericans have
bought It. earning $300,000 In
royalties for the AHA.
“ The new and revised fourth
edition." out recently, contains
600 low fat. low cholesterol
recipes. Including some for
2-year-olds.
Since 1973. Dr.WInslon. Medi­
c a l P r o g r a m S c i e n c e Admlnlstator at AHA headquarters,
Dallas, and Dr. Rulhe Eshlcman.
U niversity o f Rhode Island.
Kingston. R.I.. have been ofTtclal
compilers and testers of recipes
submitted by AHA affiliates for
p o s s ib le I n c l u s i o n In t he
cookbook.
"W e want people to enjoy the
recipes and take care of their
health," Dr. Winston said.
"W e want healthy eating lo be
a happy thing the whole family
can enjoy. We don't want eating
healthy lo be drudgery. The
recipe selection reflects that
point o f view.
"Our philosophy Is that food Is
something lo enjoy. It Is not a
philosophy of deprivation. You
start out wilh these recipes und
gradually you're down to 4-to-6
ounce portions of meal and you
d on 't want those 16-ounce
steaks anymore.
"You know all along we've
always said lo try to cal more
fish and poultry and If you cal
meat, cut off the fat.
“ Many recipes In the cookbook
emphasize using meal In smaller
portions."
Dr. Antonio M. Golto Jr.. AHA
president and chairman of Medi­
cine at Baylor College of Medi­
cine and at Methodist Hospital.
Houston, said revisions In the
cookbook re flect the latest
studies on Ihc diet-heart disease
connection.
The "lalest." he said, supports
the theory that reducing satu­
rated fats and cholesterol In the
diet can help reduce an individ­
ual's risk of heart disease.
Saturated fats are found In
most animal products and some
vegetable oils, such as coconut
oil and palm oil. Cholesterol Is In
all animal products.
"Heart-healthy eating does not
have to be bland or tasteless."
Golto said.
Dr. Winston said. "Low-fat.
low-cholesterol recipes can be
Just as exciting to prepare and
Just as delicious as our favorite
recipes."
She said all the cookbook
recipes have been tested for
calorics, taste, texture, con­
sistency, appeal, case of pre­
paration and cooking time.
Expanded in the revised edi­
tion Is the section containing
lips on "eatin g healthy" fn
ethnic restaurants.
A few samples:
Chi nes e : “ Whe n e at i ng
Chinese, skip hlgh-sodlum soups
und the noodles high In fat and
calorics. If the noodles are on Ihc
table, ask the waiter to remove
them. Choose dishes that are
boiled, steamed or lightly stlrfrted In vegetable oil. rather than
sauteed."
French: "A good rule for din­
ing out In French restaurants Is
keep It simple. Steamed mussels
or a salad (with dressing on the
Bide) are (lne starters, but uvold
French otnlon soup, high in
calories and sodium. Be wary of
sauces, the heart of classic
French cuisine. Some sauces,
Including hollandalse. made
with egg yolks and butter;
bechamel, with milk, butter and
f l o u r ; a n d b e a r n a l s c . an
expanded hollandlse, are poor
choices. The alternatives arc
French wine sauces, such as
bordelalse: tasty and usually not
as high In fat or cholesterol."
Greek: " I f you're counting
calories, you may worry that
Greek food Is too oily. Seek
dishes prepared with limited
amounts of olive oil. and you'll
find many acceptable choices.
Tzatzlkl, an appetizer made with
yogurt and cucumbers. Is safe to
order, especially if the yogurt Is
the low-fat type. Pita bread Is
very low In fat.
Italian: " T o many diners,
Italian food says pasta. And
pastas are a good choice for
those on low-fat dicta, as long as
they are not filled with cheese or
fatty meat or loosed with butter
or cream sauces. Llngulnl with
white or red clam sauce Is a fine
pasta selectio n . A ccep ta b le
sauces Include marmala. made
with wine, or martnara, made
with tomatoes, onions and garlic
(no meat).'*
T h o se on a low -fat, lowcholesterol diet need not shun
steakhouses. acording lo the
AHA cookbook.

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N.

Sanford, FI.

Herald A dvarlltar — Thursday, Jan. 3, I W

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                    <text>77th Year, No. 115—Thursday, January 3, 1985—Sanford, Florida

Evening

Herald

(USPS 481 200)

Price

25 Cents

Legal Defense Fund Set Up For Former Mayor
By Rick Brunson
Branson
Herald Staff W riter
Lake Mary City Commissioner Colin Keogh set
up a legal defense fund today for former mayor
Walter Sorenson, who faces charges that he
violated state statutes by making Illegal long
distance calls on city phones, using a city car for
personal business and drawing $2,400 In
advance expense money contrary to a city
ordinance.
Keogh said about about $500 has been
pledged by city firefighters, city hall staff
members and members of the planning and

zone
board.
Thr
arrnunl
l.« Is
a Iat
Sun
Rank
InIn
Ijikc
zone
board.
The
account
Sun
Bank
Lake
Mary.
Sorenson, who faces the charges at a state
ethics commission hearing Feb. 6 at the
Seminole County Courthouse, Is In financial
trouble and cannot afford an attorney. Keogh
said.
The results of the hearing will be forwarded to
full commission which will decide on the case
by March, according lo Commission Executive
Director Lawrence Gonzalez. If the charges are
upheld. Sorenson may have to pay a $5,000 fine

;M a n , T e e n
C h a rg e d
In S la y in g

i

But Fox filed a complaint with the State
Commission on Ethics which will hold the

See FUND, page 8A

Smerilson Named
Longwood Mayor
H o w ard West of 314 B orada Road, Sanford, ponders w h af to
do w ith his holiday garbage.

Scavengers at Fault?

Trash Pileup Irks Residents
One angry Sanford homeown­
er threatened to deposit his New
Year's holiday trash and garbage
at the Sanford City Hall today
und complaints of tardy trash
pick up were received from other
city residents, .but CUy Manager
W.E. "P ete" Knowles Insisted
refuse Is being picked up by city
crews on the holiday schedule
advertised and printed on resi­
dents' utility bills.
Under the schedule, the refuse
collection crews began usual
Monday pickups on Wednesday
and are continuing to cover the
city and by Friday all holiday
trash and garbage should be
picked up. Knowles said.
Meanwhile. Howard West of
314 Borada Road In the Hidden

Lake area said he would dump
his refuse at city hall, but city
maintenance em ployees said
none was there when they came
In to work today.
West said garbage collection
service was curtailed over the
holidays to one pickup per week
and this was not sufficient,
reminding that the city refuse
collection bills to residents were
Increased by 15 percent last
month.
City refuse charges to resi­
dents were increased on Dec. 1
w h en th e c o u n ty b o o s te d
charges to the city and other
customers for garbage and trash
disposal at county landfills.
K n o w le s s a id o v e r th e
See TRASH, page 8 A

C N A Fire Injures Two; Clogs Traffic
O R L A N D O (U P I) - An
electrical explosion and fire Just
before dawn today badly burned
two men who were working on a
transformer near a restaurant on
the top floor of the 19-story CNA
building In the downtown area.
Taken to Orlando Regional
Medical Center with burns were
Jerry Troutman, an employee of
the O rlando U tilitie s C om ­
mission. and Ernest Dlnneen. an

The charges were originally made against
Sorenson In 1983 by former city commissioner
Ray Fox. After the Lake Mary City Commission
conducted an Investigation. Sorenson was
censured and the matter was dropped.

.
.
"
hearing next month.
Fox said Keogh Is entitled lo set up the fund
but added the commissioner Is only trying to
"grab headlines."
"lie (Keogh) is coming up with things lo cloud
this Issue. If Sorenson never did these things I
wouldn't have anything lo file with the
commission." Fox said.
Sorenson, who could not be reached for
comment today, has said he made the calls
between city hall and his real estate ofTlcc

Chacey Ouster Fizzles

*■

Two Sanford residents have
been charged with murder in
connection with the slaying o f a
man at a fish camp In southeast
Volusia County.
Dead Is Jeffery Neal Eckels.
26. of Rod's Fish Camp, east of
Sanford. He bled to death after
being cut on the neck with a
broken bottle during an argu­
ment at the camp located on
Mate Road 46. two miles cast of
state Road 415. according to a
Volusia County Investigators,
Eckels, who lived on a boat at
the fish camp, was dead on
arrival at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. The Incident
occured at about 2 a m.. Wed­
nesday.
Arrested by Sanford police at
4:19 a.m., Wednesday, were
Mark Lee Hampton. 27. and a
16-year-old male Juvenile, re­
ported to be Hampton's brother,
of 1904 Summerlin Ave.
The Sanford police picked up
the pair after hearing a bulletin
seek in g th eir apprehension
Issued by the Volusia County
Sheriff's Department. The ar­
rests were made after Sanford
officers stopped a car driven by
Hampton In Sanford.
Hampton and the Juvenile
have been charged with sec­
ond-degree murder by Volusia
County officials. Hampton Is
being held without bond In the
Volusia County Jail In DeLand.
The youth was turned over to
Juvenile authorities.
According to Investigators.
E ckels was k illed after an
argument about arm wrestling.
— Deane Jordan

•
■. .
.
.
and would be censured and reprimanded.
"T o walk Into that without proper legal
representation to defend yourself, there's no
way you're going to get a fair chance." Keogh
said. "T h at’s why we're helping Walt."

Orlando Construction worker.
T h e y w ere w o rk in g on an
electrical transformer when It
exploded, fire officials said.
Troutman was listed In critical
condition with second- and
third-degree burns over 80 per­
cent of his body. Dlnneen was
listed as serious with secondand third-degree bums over 30
percent of his body.
It took firemen less than a half

hour to put out the resulting fire.
It was contained on the 19th
floor.
Several streets In the area
were blocked off for nearly two
hours because of the firefighting
efforts, causing massive rushhour traffic Jams.
Power was turned off In the
office building, the tallest In
Orlando, and officials said It
would remain closed until Friday.

By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff W riter
As expected, the Longwood
City Commission Wednesday
night named Harvey Smerilson
m ayor and Larry Goldberg,
sworn In as commissioner only
minutes before, deputy mayor.
However, the ousting o f City
Adm inistrator David Chacey
failed to materialize. Chacey
submitted his resignation ef­
fective March 1. with Feb. 7 as
his last working day. Smerilson
had said he would Immediately
get rid of Chacey.
When asked after the meeting
why he took no action against
Chacey. Smerilson replied, "It
would have been highly Illegal to
do so as It was not on the agenda
for the special meeting. We're
going foreward now and so why
cause trouble? The resignation
will be taken up at the regular
Jan. 14 meeting. By then It will
be close to hta last day at work.
Feb. 7, a n d - I think we can
manage that long."
Smerilson, 42. said last week,
with the backing o f Goldberg
and Faulkner, that he would
seek the Immediate dismissal of
Chacey bringing the matter up
as an emergency even though It
wasn't on the agenda. Chacey
followed through with his pro­
mise to resign If Goldberg was
elected.
The city has already begun
advertising for Chaccy’s re­
placement even though his res­
ignation has not been officially
accepted.
Smerllson's nomination by
Goldberg was seconded by the
other newcomer to the com­
mission Peny Faulkner. Com­
missioner Ed Myers nominated
Goldberg as mayor, but not only
w as th ere no secon d , but
Goldberg asked that his name be
withdrawn. The vote to make
Smerilson mayor was unani­
mous.
A n e n g i n e e r a t M a r t in
Marietta's new facility near the
University of Central Florida.

H *ra M PtwU by J» n * C a tu lb a rry

N ew Longw ood M a yo r H a rve y Sm erilson, right, accepts
congratulations from his constituents a lte r being chosen by
colleagu es at a special m eetin g W ednesday night.
Smerilson Is beginning the sec­ attorney give the prayer at the
ond year of his first two-year begin n in g o f each m eeting.
term.
Myers suggested "It Is better to
The oath was administered by let the attorney do It as some­
City Clerk Don Terry to the two body piay offend someone else. If
new commissioners elected In the attorney does It won't offend
December. Faulkner. 40. de­ anyone as nobody wants to
feated mayor and 10-year veter­ tangle with an attorney."
an commissioner J.R. Grant for
Attired In Jeans and a plaid
the District 3 seat In the Dec. 4 s h irt, c ity a tto rn e y Frank
election. Goldberg. 45. knocked Kruppenbacher presided over
out the Incumbent Bill Mitchell the meeting until a mayor was
on Dec. 4. but went Into a Dec. elected from the five commis­
18 runoff election against David sioners. He apologized for his
R. Gunter Sr. before finally casual dress, saying that his wife
nailing down the District 5 seat.
Patsy had given birth lo their
first
child on New Year's Day
Goldberg served on the com­
and In all the excitement he had
mission from 1975-1979.
M y e r s a l s o n o m in a t e d lost his keys and couldn't get
Goldberg as deputy mayor and Into the house to change clothes.
Faulkner seconded his motion. Amy Noel was born at Florida
Hospital Orlando weighing 9 lb.,
The vote was again unanimous.
On adopting the rules and 3oz.
procedures for the city com­
A resolution was also passed
m ission. the com m issioners authorizing the mayor, deputy
changed the practice of rotating mayor and city clerk to sign city
the Invocation among the com­ checkn, which requ ire two
missioners to having the city signatures.

Lawm en Preparing Docum entation Road Is Unsafe
attorney has a
guilty to char|
influence and
accident.
Joe Flood. S
Drive, Senior
entering the .

aastoUnt state
ed he will plead
iving under the
UK“

with DU1 and leaving the scene of the
accident.
.
Flood said tbere are two reaeons

M 0 ,“

•
T're guilty and H l* Important to

Widening In Future For 17-92?
With hopes of attracting federal funds
for Improvements. Florida Department
of Transportation (DOT) officials have
asked Seminole County lawmen for
documentation showing a two-lane
section of U.S. Highway 17-92 along
Lake Monroe In Sanford to Interstate 4
Is unsafe.
But DOT trafllc operations assistant
director George Gllhooley said that
doesn't mean changes will be made.
"W e ’re waiting for a report from the
Seminole County engineering depart­
ment to see If there Is a problem. That's

the first step. It's too early to say what
If anything will be done." he said.
DOT has no costs projections or time
frame for Improvements. If they are
approved. Gllhooley said.
Sheriff's spokesman John Spolskl
said a November accident In which a
speeding vehicle flew from the roadway
and landed In Lake Monroe, killing a
33-year-old Osteen man. spurred Inter­
est In widening U.S. Highway 17-92 to
give drivers a third lane between Just
south o f the Lake Monroe Inn to 1-4.
That lane, he said, could be used as a

Seminole Eyes Site For Main Library
■ y Donna Batts
Harold Staff W riter
County commissioners are expected to make a
decision at a 2 p.m. work session Tuesday on
whether to purchase a 3.5 acre tract In
Casselberry for $300,000 for the site of the
county's main library.
Casselberry Mayor Charles Glascock today
called the site on the Oxford Road extension,
north o f state Road 436. "Ideal." considering that
a shopping center and apartment complex ate
planned for construction adjacent to the tract.
' He also noted that the Oxford Road extension
has good access from 436 because of a trafllc
control signal at the Intersection.
John Percy, county director of public services,
said Wednesday the county's library advisory

committee Is recommending the purchase.
Owner of the parcel Is a group of developers
headed by Norman Rossman. Percy said.
The Oxford Road library. If approved, would
become the county's main library and would
replace the leased facility at the Seminole Plaza
shopping center.
Percy said the tract actually contains five acres,
but only 3.5 acres are useable. The balance Is
low-ly|ng land. County-hired appraisers say the
parcel Is worth $320,000 to $340,000.
The site Is directly behind Seminole Plazd.
"It seems like a good site," Percy said.
Glascock said he will attend the workshop to
endorse the site.
"I'v e been pushing for a permanent library In
Casselberry since the county began talking about

moving the library out of Seminole Plaza."
Glascock said. "I'll do everything I can to help."
Meanwhile, county commissioners and Marna
Hunt, the owner o f a parcel Immediately behind
the Sanford library, have agreed to a $130,000
purchase price for a new downtown library site.
Percy said.
The present library building, when the new
facility la built, would be used for library
administrative offices.
A third library site, under consideration. Percy
said, has been offered to the county by the
developers of Greenwood Lakes In Lake Mary.
He said this 2.5 acre tract, offered as a gift. Is
located between the Lake Mary High School and
the proposed new Middle School X.

turn lane, or would give drivers an
escape route to avoid heud-on collisions
or a dunk In the lake.
Head-on collisions are common on
that strip of road where most sections
arc designated "n o passing" zones.
Spolskl said. The speed limit varies
from 35 mph to 55 mph and Spolskl
said Impatient drivers frequently pass
slower vehicles and run Into trouble
when facing oncoming traffic and
neither vehicle has an optional route to
take.
—Susan Loden

TODAY
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Calendar........... ,...5A
Classifieds........ 4,5B
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frn tiw n r r i ... ... ....2B
Dear Abby........ ....IB
Dssths.............. ....8A
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Horoscope.....
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---------------------- Friday----------------------R e m e m b e r woodburning you did as a
kid? This w eek's Leisure w ill Introduce
you to an a rtis t goes a step fu rth e r.*

�*A—Evening Her* Id, Sanford, FI.

Thenday, Jan. J, IN I

Reagan, Nakasone Talks End

NATION

With No Dramatic Concessions

IN BRIEF

LOS AN G ELE S (U P I) Moved by
friendship and Implicit threats of economic
warfare. President Rqagan and Japanese
Prime Minister Yasuhlro Nakasone have
agreed to "an Intensified cooperative" effort
to correct a huge trade Imbalance.
The two leaders — "R o n " and "Y asu " to
one another — capped a West Coast summit
Wednesday by pledging redoubled efforts to
eliminate friction created by a U.S. trade
Imbalance estimated at $35 billion for 1964
and even larger for 1985.
"W e agreed to work strenuously In the
months ahead to open our markets fully and
to resist protectionist pressures In both
countries." Reagan said. " I believe that we
both agree that there Is an urgent need to
work together to resolve the problems In our
trade relationship."

Dole Moves Quickly
To Reduce Deficit
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate Republican leader-elect
Robert Dole, waiting not even a day to begin congressional
efforts to reduce the deficit. Invited budget director David
Stockman to Capitol Hill today to discuss ways to freeze
federal spending.
Stockman's visit comes on the first day of the 99th
session of Congress, which faces tough decisions on how to
keep the annual deficit from swelling to *200 blllloq and
over.
A group of former chiefs of the Council of Economic
Advisors predicted Wednesday that interest rates could
quickly drop by 2 percent or more If Congress takes the
first serious steps toward reducing the deficit by half —
about $100 billion — by 1988.
The deficit is blamed for keeping Interest rates high.
Stockman has suggested budget cuts that would cut the
shortfall In half by 1988.
But President Reagan, who sends his budget to Congress
In about a month, has not agreed to Stockman's plan and
hla current budget projections for fiscal 1986 show him
about $40 billion short o f the goal.

Prosecutor: Vigilante
Was Never Threatened

Who'll. Succeed Clark?
WASHINGTON (UPI) - At least one department official
has been suggested as a possible replacement for retiring
Interior Secretary William Clark and two members of
Congress virtually took themselves out of the running for
the Job.
The White House revealed Clark's surprise decision to
leave the administration In "tw o to three months" late
Tuesday and President Reagan said Wednesday his
longtime associate wants to go back to California.
One new name suggested as a possible successor to Clark
was that of Assistant Interior Secretary Robert Broadbent.
who disclaimed any knowledge of being under consid­
eration.
One o f those mentioned for the Job earlier. Sen. Paul
Laxalt. R-Nev., was all but counted out after an aide said he
had turned down similar "opportunities" In the past and,
"There Is really no reason to believe he would change his
mind.”
Another possible candidate. Rep. Manuel Lujan Jr..
R-N.M.. the ranking GOP member of the House Interior
Committee, said he was "really not Interested" In the
Cabinet post.

Implant Search Unsuccessful
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) — Doctors have so far come up
empty in their search for the world's next artificial heart
recipient, while Bill Schroeder exercised more than most
Americans In his stroke recovery program.
Linda Broadus at Humana Hospital Audubon said no list
had been kept of the people and doctors calling Audubon
with candidates to be the third mechanical heart recipient
but added all Individuals are moving through a screening
process.
Doctors had Indicated tests and Interviews of Implant
candidates would begin immediately alter the new year.
"But there Is nobody In the hospital that is considered a
viable candidate that is being tested further,” she said.
Broadus said Schroeder's chief surgeon. Dr. William
DeVries, will not perform another Implant unless
Schroeder remains In stable condition and a patient is
found who meets the rigid guidelines set by the New York
Medical Association.

D igging his spikes Into the pole
to m a in ta in his balance, Ron
P rescott of O rlando ap p ears to
be c re a tin g a colossol "c a ts In
the c ra d le " as he reaches out to

re p la c e the fe e d e r lin e th a t
d irects T V signals to a custom ­
e r's home on Cherokee Lane,
L a k e M a r y , fo r O ra n g e Sem inole C ablevlslon.

CONCORD. N.H. (UPI) Bernhard Goetz has no re­
m orse fo r s h o o tin g four
teenagers on a subway and Is
anxious to stand trial In New
York for protecting himself,
his lawyer says.
But a New Hampshire pro­
secutor said there Is no evi­
dence that Goetz was ever In
fear o f his life when the four
youths allegedly harassed
him for $5 and said there
were "in d ica tio n s o f pre­
meditation" In the shootings.
"Mr. Goetz has very great
faith In the American legal
system and feels the legal
system will take care of him,"
said lawyer Normand Jac­
ques, who represented Goetz
Wednesday when he agreed
to return to New York.
Jacques said Goetz told him
he "had been accosted In the
subway, but he didn't feel he
did anything wrong. He feels
he'll be vindicated by the
court system."
But a N ew H am p sh ire
assistant attorney general
said Goetz indicated to Con­
cord police he had not felt
threatened by the youths In
the Dec. 22 Incident. There
were "In d icatio n s of pre­
meditation" In the shootings,
said Andrew Isaac.
Isaac would not be specific,
but there were reports Goetz
w a s wearing a bullet-proof
vest when the shooting oc­
curred.
" I didn’t see anything to
Indicate Goetz was In fear for
hts life afth e time," Isaac told
the court of Goetz's statement
to Concord police. "I believe
he Indicated ... that at no time
did he feel threatened by
deadly force."
, Isaac later told reporters
that there was no statement
“ from Mr. Goetz saying. 'I did

It deliberately."’
"But as a prosecutor there
are elements that I would use
to argue premeditation." he
said. "In my opinion ... there
Is nothing In the statement (to
Concord police) to mitigate
his guilt."
New York police said the
four teenage victims — three
of them carrying sharpened
screwdrivers In their pockets
— were shot and seriously
wounded on a subway after
approaching a man and ask­
ing him for $5 Dec. 22.
The man reportedly said, "I
have $5 for each of you."
drew a gun and fired. Three of
the victims were shot In the
back and one In the chest,
police said.
Two of the victims remain
hospitalized, one paralyzed
from the waist down, doctors
say.
A N ew Y o r k p o lic e
spokesman said Goetz told a
subway conductor after the
s h o o tin g s th a t the four
teenagers were "trying to rip
him off."
Goetz. 37. a self-employed
engineer from New York City
who surrendered to Concord
p o lic e M o n d a y , w a iv e d
extradition Wednesday and
told a state District Court
Judge he wants to "get this
over as soon as possible."
The tall, clean-shaven sus­
pect spent the night in a
county Jail outside of Concord
on $500,000 ball and Is to be
picked up New York d e­
tectives today.
Police received thousands of
calls from New Yorkers who
hailed the gunman as a hero.
He was dubbed the "Death
W ish" vigilante after police
likened Goetz to the character
In the Charles Bronson movie.

Rescuers Set Out To Recover Plane Crash Victims

IN BRIEF
Jackson #Pope To Discuss

LA PAZ, Bolivia (UPI) — Mountaineers set
out today on a 314-mlle climb up a
snow-capped Andean peak to recover bodies
of 29 people from the wreckage of an
Eastern Airlines plane that slammed Into
the mountainside.
Bolivian officials said the Red Cross has
organized a rescue team of mountain
climbers to reach the wreckage — at an
altitude o f 19.600 feet — but It would take
them 2Vt days to reach the site, described as
nearly Inaccessible.
The wreckage wus discovered Wednesday
— 21 hours after the Boeing 727 Jetliner
disappeared Tuesday night during Its
appruuch to La Paz's El Alto airport, the

'Great Issues O f The Day'
ROME (UPI) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson arranged to meet
with Pope John Paul II today to discuss "the great issues of
the day" such as apartheid In South Africa, peace In
Central America, hunger and nuclear disarmament.
The former Democratic presidential candidate, who
arrived In Rome Wednesday, was also seeking contacts
with Moslem guerrillas to win the release of four Americans
kidnapped in Beirut.
Jackson, who secured the release of U.S. airman Robert
Goodman from Syria last year, declined to disclose who he
was meeting about the kidnapped Americans but said he la
"available to try and help gain their release."
The pope agreed to receive Jackson In the second
audience he has granted the Baptist minister.
" I am here to talk to the pope about the Issues gripping
the world that we both have In common." Jackson. 43. told
UPI Wednesday. "A n d I expect to gain from his wisdom."

highest commercial airport In the world.
There were no signs of survivors.
Eight Americans. Including the wife of the
U.S. ambassador to Paraguay, were among

the 29 people aboard the plane — Eastern
Flight 980 from Asuncion. Paraguay to
Miami with an Intermediate stop In La Paz.
It crashed Into 21.120-foot Illim ani
Mountain — one of the highest peaks In the
Andes — about 50 miles southeast of the La
Paz airport.
Bolivian Aeronautics Minister Gen. An­
tonio Am ez said the Jet had descended from
25,000 to 18,000 feet and was heading for
the airport shortly before It dlsapparead. He
said lightning may have prompted the pilot

to veer northeastward — toward the Andes.
The plane carried 10 crew and 19
passengers. Including Marianne Davis, the
wife of the U.S. Ambassador to Paraguay
Arthur Davis Jr., and seven other Ameri­
cans.
The Red Cross Bald helicopters would take
the climbers as far as up the mountain as
they could. Rescuers said the crash may
have triggered a minor avalanche that
would make the search for bodies more
difficult.
The wreckage was discovered at 4:30 p.
EST Wednesday during an air search
Eastern and government officials.

Man Who Couldn't Afford Cigarettes Robs Station
A bandit who couldn't afford a
pack of cigarettes robbed a
S an ford s e rv ic e station at
knifepoint and drove his car Into
a post os he made his getaway,
deputies reported.
(.armour A. Phillips, assistant
manager of the Imperial station
on state Road 46 at Interstate 4.
told deputies the man entered
the station at about 10:40 p.m.
Wednesday.
The robber apparently didn't
have enough cash to pay for
cigarettes he ordered. He went
outside to his maroon. 1982 or
‘ 84 Audi or BMW and returned
with a knife, a sheriffs report
said. He held the knife to
Phillips' throat and demanded
ull the cash from the register, the
report said.
Phillips handed over about
$60 and the bandit fled west on
state Road 46 after driving his
car Into a cement pole In the
parking lot. deputies reported.

Top Officials Linked To Murder
TORUN, Poland (UPI) — Tw o of four secret police agents
standing trial for the murder o f the Rev. Jerzy Popleluszko
have linked high-ranking; o
officials
f
to the plot that resulted
|n the proSolldarlty’ priest's/
priest's death.
Their trial, which began Dec. 27, was to resume today in
the northern city o f Torun with testimony from Lt.
Waldemar Chmlelewakl.
During Wednesday's session, Chmlelewakl, 29, became
the second defendant to testify that the secret operation
resulting In Popleluszko's death last October was approved
by high-ranking police officials.
Lt. Leszek Pekala. 32. who last week testified the
operation was planned by high-ranking officials, Wednes­
day said he heard his boss. Capt. Qrxegori Ptotrowski, 29.
talking to Col. Adam ptetruaska on the telephone about It.
Pekala. Chmlelewakl and Ptotrowski. charged with
Popleluszko's murder, have confessed to kidnapping him
Oct. 19 and beating and strangling him. His body was
found Oct. 30 in a river reservoir outside Torun.

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than suggested by the limited progress
achieved after four previous meetings In thr
last two years.
U.S. and Japanese officials said Nakasom
pre-empted Reagan on the trade Issue b&gt;
plunging Into a review of recent market
opening steps, especially with the Impend
Ing break-up of the government-owned
telecommunications system, and promising
hla personal involvement In future negotia­
tions.
Of primary interest to the United States
are telecommunications, electronics, pro­
cessed forest products and medical supplies.
Including pharmaceuticals. The official said
Reagan underscored the Importance of eadh
In talks characterized as more detailed than
those normally held between two heads of
government.

The talks lasted less than three hours and
sent Nakasone home — with a two-day stop
In Hawaii — hopeful that his Insecure
p o lit ic a l b a s e In T o k y o has b een
strengthened by his demonstrated ability to
deal with Reagan.
Reagan flew back to Washington, ending
his six-day California holiday vacation, with
promises from Nakasone that may help fend
off pressure to fight Japanese trade barriers
with a dose o f American protectionism.
Reagan also got a welcomed pledge of
allied support for his arms policies in
advance of renewed talks with the Soviet
Union next week In Geneva. Switzerland.
While the talks failed to end In dramatic
announcements of concessions by either
side, the two leaders capitalized on their
personal rapport to paint a brighter outlook

!»W

SPEEDER WITH DRUOS
A Florida Highway Patrol
trooper who caught up with a
Texas man after a 100 mph
chase on Interstate 4. Lake
Mary, charged the man with
possession of methaqualone and
possession of a controlled sub­
stance while operating a motor
vehicle.
The arrest was made at 6:15
a.m. Tuesday and the trooper

Action Reports

the case at 5 p.m. Tuesday at the
Sanford police station.

BURQLARIES Ik THEFTS
Mickey Mouse, Huey and De­
wey Duck. Pluto, Goofey. Charlie
A Courts
Brown, Snoopy. Lucy, a couple
o f Smurfs. Santa Clause and an
★ Police
Orange ghost disappeared from a
Christmas display in the yard of
also determined the man was Ken Joseph. 38. o f 2113 Win­
wanted In Tampa, a police report nebago Trail, Casselberry.
said.
The characters, which range
Twenty-three methaqualone
In height from two to four feet
tablets were found hidden In the
and have a total value o f $1,200,
man's sock and over $5,000
were stolen Monday or Tuesday.
cash and a .44-caliber, loaded
Deputies report finding one of
handgun were also found In his
the figures broken and stashed
possession, the report said.
Steven Darrell Gregg, 30. of
Pasadena. Texas, was being held
In lieu of $5,000 bond.
SURRENDERS
A 25-year-old Sanford man
turned him self Into Sanford
police claiming he burglarized a
Sanford church taking a $250
Centrel Ftortd* Ru tom l Heteftel
television, police report. The
ADMISSIONS
man was charged with burglary
Sanford:
and was being held in lieu of
Herbert Fraley
$5,000 bond.
Clarence R. Johmen
RoMtt* N. Modi lor
T h e R e d d ic k M e m o r ia l
JotophlneJ. Roundtree
Church, 3155. King Road, was
VlraE. Tucker
burglarized Monday or Tuesday,
M erita L Gerrl». Or lendo
Eleln# H. Harden, Sorrento
according to a report pastor
DISCHAROES
John James Llgon. 49. of Winter
Ne telle H. Cornerman. Deitone
Park, filed with sheriffs depu­
KlitanC. Veelthta. Longwood
ties.
Hat** baby girl.]
, Santoro
BIRTHS
Darrell Anthony Johnson of
Roy end Eleln* H. Herden. e baby flirt,
2590 Frog Alley, was charged In Sorrento

★ Fires

HOSPITAL
NOTES

In a boat at 2114 Wlnnegago
Trail.
;
Patricia Ann Murtagh. 22, df
2575 state Road 436 *109.
Winter Park, reported to depu­
ties a thief who entered her
home through a window took
$600 and an $80 check between
Dec. 27 and Tuesday.
A thief took two leather coati,
a mink cape, a mink Jacket and h
$340 television from the home of
Mercedes Brlster. 45. o f 2590
Frog Alley. Tuesday, according
to a sheriffs report.

E v r n in g Hcm Jd
(USPS 4ii n ot

Thursday, January 3, IW
Vol. 77, No. IIS
Pvbll*hed Defly end Sunday, • «
Seturdey By The Sen tord Her
Inc. M * N. French Aw*., Sent
Fie. 11771.
Second C lew P e ite «e Feld el Sentoi
F tor Ido M m
Heme Delivery: Week, i l. ie i Month,
M .lli 1 Month*. SU.lSj * Month*.
S17.Ni Veer. U1.ee. $y Moll: Week
•1 .M l Menth, ie.ee: 1 M on th*,’
ltS .N i t Month*. S il.lS i V e e r ,1

Phene (MS) 111-1*11.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Jan. ), IMS—1A

twin
sheet

Colorful coordinates.
* Reg. 8.99. Laurie coordinates. Dacron*
polyester/cotton sheets; flat or fitted.
Comforters with A stro fill* polyester,
polyester/cotton back.
Reg. j
Twin co m fo rte r........................... 40 00 2
* Standard pillow c a s e .............. 9 99
Pillow s h a m .................................. 20.00 1
Not shown:
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Full c o m fo rte r...............................50.00 3'
Queen and king sizes also on sale.

20% to 50% o ff
All blankets and pillows.
Choose from ultralight synthetic pillows. Plus
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Reg. Sala
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Bath coordinates
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25% o il bath coordinates of DuPont*
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* B a th tu b m a t..............................10 00 8.99
Sale prices on towels, sheets, blankets end pillows
effective through Saturday, January 19th.

Reg. 8.99. Flower Grid coordlnates. D acron* polyester/cotton
sheets; flat or fitted. Bedspreads
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Twin bedspread....... 35.00 24.99
Standard pillow
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Queen, king and full sizes also
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S a le

12.99

Reg. $16. Plain Pockets* Jeans of hearty
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men's sizes.

25% o ff

20% o ff

All her basics and more.

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Save on the regular prices of our entire line
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on sale at our giant semi-annual eventl

Our very own pantihose of nylon/Lycra*
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Reg
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Regular size pantihose................ 2 50
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20% o ff
Leotards and tights.

r m

Find short sleeve or tank style leotards. In
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Reg. Sale
Striped tank le o ta rd ......................14.00 11.20
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Coordinating stirrup t ig h t s ....... 4.50 3.60

i

tale prices effective through Saturday,
January 8th, unless otherwise staled.

Store Hours
Monday Thru Saturday
9:30 to 9:00
Sunday 12:00 to 6:00

Sanford Plaza

Sale 3 for 6.99
Men’s cotton briefs.
Reg. 3 for $8. The best In basics. Cool and
comfortablal Combed cotton in white only.
Cotton crewneck T-shirts.
Reg. 3 lor $10 Sale 3 for 6.99
tale prtcea on his and her beaks effective through
Saturday, January 12lh.

�.r

\

E v e n in g H e r a ld
( usps a i- iu )
‘
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Thursday. January 3, 1985—4A
W «yn« D. Doyle, P ubllihor
T h o m e* Giordano, M anaging Editor
M elvin Ad V im , Advertising D irector

Home Delivery: Week. $1.10; Monlh. $4.75; 3 Months.
$14.25: 6 Months. $27.00; Year. $51.00, By Mall: Week.
$1.50; Month. $0.00; 3 Months. $18.00: 6 Months. $32.50
Year. $60.00.

Weinberger's
No-Secret Secret
T o hear Defense S ecretary Caspar W ein ­
berger tell It. yo u 'd think that the W a s h in g to n
P o s t's d ecision to publish details about
J an u ary's space shuttle cargo had im periled
the security o f the nation. T h is Is "th e height
o f Journalistic Irrespon sibility," W einberger
declared, w hich "c a n on ly give aid and
com fo rt to the e n e m y.”
T h a t's a grave charge but the facts do not
support It. W h a t's goin g on here has m ore to
do with Pentagon politicking and m edia­
bashin g than w ith keepin g vital secrets.
T h e re ’s no doubt that the Pentagon has a
legitim ate — and pow erful — Interest In not
disclosing m atters that It regards as critical to
the nation’ s defense. But the broad descrip­
tion o f the forth com in g shuttle mission as
published In the Post, Including Its orbit and
general purpose but not Including sensitive
detailed inform ation, poses no threat to
national security. Once the A ir Force an ­
nounced earlier this year that It would be
sen ding a payload beyond the space shuttle's
lo w o rb it. It w a s easy en ou gh for the
scien tifically Inform ed to p uzzle out the
nature o f that payload.
O n ly three categories o f m ilitary satellites
operate at such high orbits, and on ly one.
electron ic Intelligence satellites, have ever
generated such high-level security concern.
T h o se facts — and considerably m ore — have
a lrea d y been published in the technical
literature. A n d as Sen. Daniel P. Moynlhan,
the form er vice chairm an of- the Senate
Intelligence C om m ittee, pointed out. Pen­
tagon spokesm en have said at least as much
In open testim ony.
A ll that m akes the cause o f Secretary
W ein b erger's pique the topic o f considerable
speculation. T h e re ’s Inform ed conjecture that
the A ir Force m ay have prom oted this fight.
In order to secure the funding It needs to
launch this n ew generation o f spy satellites
on Its ow n — Independent, that Is, o f the
National Aeronautics and Space Adm inistra­
tion 's space shuttle program .
S om e W ashington insiders have also sur­
mised that W ein b erger m ay h ave seized the
occasion to take on the press. In hopes o f
w in n in g n ew popularity for h im self and his
budget. E vidence fo r this hunch com es from
the com m en t o f Fred Ikle, undersecretary o f
defense for p olicy and the most vigorous
prom oter o f n ew secrecy m easures w ithin the
departm ent. W ein b erger’s real concern. Ikle
sa id , is " p r o c e d u r e s ," — m e a n in g the
W a s h in g to n P o s t's
defiance o f a general
adm inistration adm onition not to publish —
and not the substance o f the disclosures.
A ll o f this Is o f m ore than passing concern.
F o r I f the th e s a te llite Is p art o f the
adm in istration 's S tar W ars planning, as som e
people suspect It Is, then Its launching Is a
m atter o f the highest public Interest. But even
If old-fashioned space sp yin g Is all the A ir
Force m eans to accom plish, there's no reason
to keep that fact out o f the press. Such
Inform ation Is hardly Ukelu to surprise the
S oviets, w h o have been k now n to read
te c h n ic a l J ou rn als, fo llo w c o n g re s s io n a l
h earings — even k eep a w atchfu l eye on the
doin gs at C ape Canaveral. Had this Inform a­
tion rem ained unpublished, the on ly group
that w ould h ave been left uninform ed would
have been the A m erican p e o p le ..

Letters to the editor arc welcome for
publication. A ll letters most be signed and
Include a mailing address and. If possible, a
telephone number. The Evening Herald
reserves the right to edit letters to avoid
libel and to accommodate space.

BERRYS WORLD

\

DICK WEST

If Shakespeare Had Only Known
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A major textbook
publisher Is reported to have edited out some of
William Shakespeare's best-known. If raun­
chiest, lines from copies of plays sold to Virginia
high schools.
Maybe the editors felt obliged of protect young
minds from pollution by Elizabethan smut. But I
am wondering how censorship might effect the
continuing controversy over the banning of
certain sugar substitutes.
As I was browsing through a recent Issue or
the magazine "Dynamic Years." my attention
was arrested by a literary truism: "Shakespeare
did not have to contend with" such terms as
"sugar-free and low calorie.”
"H ow true!" you must concede o f that
observation. Shakespeare did Indeed live before
the days o f sugar substitutes. Although his
works are heavily laced with references to the
real thing, of aspartame and saccharin he says
nothing.

Would the play about King Richard II have
achieved the same degree of literary eminence
had Shakespeare written: "Your fair discourse
hath been as artificial sv/eetners...?
Or would the Immoral Bard have achieved
Immortality had he. putting words In Hamlet's
mouth, have obliged the Melancholy Dane to
mutter. "W e do low calorie o'er the devil
himself?"
I think not. My gut feeling Is that the Avon
dramatist would have Invented more deathless
prose than that devised by admen for tbe
makers of sugar-free products.
After all. It was Shakespeare who wrote that
"yon thin grey lines that fret the sky are
messengers of the day." A copywriter for a
modem advertising agency might simply note
that "dawn Is breaking."
That Shakespeare was hung up on sugary
•(:hrases Is apparent to even a casual admirer of
i.ls works. "Sweet are the uses of adversity." he

wrote at one point. And at another. '^Sweets to
the sweet.'
But what words might he have employed If
science and textbook publishers had known
then (circa 1600) what they know now (circa
1985)?
Would he have sipped "llte " beer, covered his
toast with a "dietetic" spread or munched "low
sodium" peanuts?
Not for a minute, or however long It takes to
stir a cup o f kindness sweetened with products
from which the sucrose has been removed.
Shakespeare, perforce, would have come up
with his own warnings and admonitions.
"Yon think grey canapes that fret the hors
d'oeuvre table are messengers of obesity,” he
might have written.
Certainly nothing as unpoetlc, and unpolltlc.
as "too many cocktail party tidbits will make
you fat."

A N TH O N Y

JEFFREY HART

Union
Carbide
Trapped
Is It culpable to allow the natives
to run a plant In a Third World
country?
Is It negligence even If the law In
that country requires It?
Should American companies In­
vest In Third World commercial
operations, providing Jobs, when
they do not have effective control of
the plant?
These questions arise In the wake
of the Insecticide plant disaster In
Bhopal. India, the legal conse­
quences of which may wreck the
Union Carbide corporation.
Union Carbide owned 51 percent
of the Bhopal plant, the maximum
under Indian law. but such nominal
majority ownership did not mean
control. Though the facts In the
matter have been lost amid media
coverage of death and suffering, the
plant In Bhopal was designed In
India and entirely staffed by Indi­
ans. This was legally obligatory
under Indian law, unless the Ameri
can company could demonstrate In
court that the local personnel re­
sources were unavailable. Safety
planning at the plants was also
entirely In Indian hands.
Why should American Investors
suffer? After all. they merely put up
the money.
Union Carbide has been trapped
between Indian requirements of
local operation and the perversities
o f American liability law.
The older concept o f liability has
now been replaced by the far more
punitive standard o f "strict liabili­
ty." which, according to the ruling
of American courts, makes Union
Carbide liable even If the accident
turns out to have resulted entirely
from employee negligence. Union
Carbide would have been vulnera­
ble even If the plant had been blown
up by Sikh terrorists.
According to court rulings over
the last 10 years, a corporation can
be vulnerable to a suit when It owns
only a piece o f an operation. Union
Carbide owns hair of the Bhopal
plant, the rest being owned by
citizens of India. No one Is talking
about suing the latter.
Interestingly enough. Melvin Belli
and the ambulance chasers are not
talking about suits in Indian courts.
They are going to represent Indian
clients In American courts, because
o f the features o f American liability
law noted above. Indian liability law
does not provide the name Juicy
opportunities. If a’ wheel falls o f an
Air Indian Jet airliner and crashes
through the roof of your house you
would wait n long time In Calcutta
to collect a single rupee.

HA

A nother
Good
Y ear

The g rin d jury called on your fake credentials — they
said take two Indictments, they'll see you In the slam m er

WASHINGTON WORLD

Hart Staff's SOS
By Steve Gerstel
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gary Hart
ran a presidential campaign based
in part on new Ideas for a new
political generation that succeeded
far beyond the predictions of the
so-called experts but. eventually,
fell Just short o f a nomination.
Along the way, Hart's candidacy
attracted a loyal coterie of followers
— the men and women who tolled
In that campaign.
So. It la not surprising that new
Ideas are still germinating In the
minds of the Hart foot soldiers
although the Hart candidacy Is, at
least for now. little but a fading
memory.
One Idea that has surfaced Is SOS
(Share Our Strength), which comes
from Bill Shore. Hart's legislative
aide and a top campaign staffer. It
came to him when the headlines
first discovered, long overdue.' the
mass famine In Ethiopia.
Shore's Idea Is to create a network
of restaurants around the country to
contribute money to help alleviate
the current crisis In Ethiopia and to
keep them contributing to relieve
hunger In all parts of the world.
Four former Hart staffers enlisted
— Joann Shepherd, Debby Shore.
Laura Quinn and Beth Scott. They
have opened an ofllce near the
Capitol for the non-profit, bipartisan
SOS.
Hart has signed on as a national
co-chairman.
Senate Republican leader-elect
Bob Dole has been asked to serve as
a national co-chairman and Sen.
Nancy Kassebaum o f Kansas Is
another candidate.
Although the first mass mailing
Just went out. SOS already has
s e v e n r e c r u i t s — t h r e e in
Washington and one each In Pit­
tsburgh. Berkeley. Denver and
Houston.
The Idea Is uncomplicated: Res­

taurants will be asked to contribute
$500 a year to become members of
SOS. Those who give $1,000, socalled Founding Fathers, will get an
additional helping o f publicity.
in return, they gel a logo sticker
fhan can be placed in the front
window of the eatery and literature
describing the programs which the
restauranteer can distribute to the
diners.
Public figures, politicians and
entertainers. Shepherd says, will be
recruited to do public service an­
nouncements advertising SOS and
restaurants that are participating.
The Idea o f involving restaurants,
who derive their m oney from
diners out. to help the hungry may
have been tried In the past. But
certainly not on the scale that the
former Hart staffers are attempting.
Even more salutory. Is SOS's
Intention that the money be "dis­
tributed In a direct pipeline to the
most efficient and effective existing
organizations that provide Im­
mediate relief as well as Implement
long-term development programs to
tackle the root causes of hunger and
malnutrition both In the United
States and abroad."
That means no new bureaucracy,
national. International, private or
c h u rc h on to p o f th e m a n y
worthwhile agencies trying to cope
with the plight of hunger.
SOS thinks that If only 5 percent
o f America's restaurants chip in
$500 tax deductible dollars a year,
$10 million could be raised. Shore.
In hls letter, asking restaurants to
Join, says that $15 million to $20
m illion a year "Is probably a
realistic goal."
If Shore's estimates are correct or
even If they are somewhat high,
SOS should make an Impact. If It
works. SOS will be a welcome
fallout from the Hart candidacy.

The American people are very
fortunate that they have had the
collective stamina to deal with
enormous problems over more than
200 years — civil war, world war,
and depression. The social changes
o f the past 20 years also have been
immense, Imposing heavy new
pressures on families and communi­
ties.
The year 1984 was a very good
year. As we look back oil It. we
realize that economic prospects
brightened. The country recovered
Its nerve In International affairs.
Unity was restored to a significant
degree.
Now we face a new year. If we are
realistic, we recognize that we shall
be confronted by problems, some
leftover from last year and some
newly emerging difficulties.
The United States bears heavy
burdens because of Its role as leader
of the free world, a role It can't very
well abdicate.
The problem-ridden nations of the
Third World, angry at America's
abundance, are envious of the good
life In the USA. Not a few of these
nations, or their leaders, would like
to punish us for our well-being. We
also continue to face a dangerous
situation with respect to our most
formidable, aggressive foe. the Sovi­
et Union.
Everyone worries about the state
of the economy. We live In a time of
International economic warfare and
vast technological changes that we
don't understand to the fullest. As a
result, the United States will be
wrestling with economic and tech­
nological problems for years. It will
take all our resourcefulness as a
people to maintain our vaunted
standard of living.
The world Is now full of Industrial
or Industrializing nations, and they
want an ever-largcr piece of the
American market. Neither the ad­
m inistration nor Congress has
addressed this situation with the
seriousness and urgency that Is
required.
Happily, 1985 promises to be a
year In which social tensions will be
minimal. The country doesn't have
the Internal stresses that were so
evident In the Vietnam War years.
The public mood Is such that It
seems likely that the American
people would support more vigorous
moves In Central America, if these
become necessary.
All In all. 1985 promises to be
another good year. There’s every
reason to believe that the American
people and their representatives wl|l
be able to handle the problems that
arise.

JACK ANDERSON
|

W here Timely PAC Cash M ad e Difference
WASHINGTON - There is an
untold story buried In the records of
the 1984 election campaign. These
records show what happened In the
final week o f most close congressio­
nal campaigns.
"It's not the amount of money
you g e t . " a v e te ra n s en a to r
explained. "It's when you get It."
Polls arc taken to Identify why and
where a candidate is weak or strong.
Then he must have enough money
to focus the final advertising blitz
where It will do the most good.
Last-minute donations, therefore,
can make the difference between
winning and losing a close race. The
unsentimental professionals, who
run most political-action commit­
tees know they can gain a can­
didate's gratitude and Increase their
leverage with him by slipping him a
bundle o f cash during the crucial
last days before the vole.

•Seventeen years ego, he was Just a BABY.
Now, he's watched m ore than 15,000 HOURS
O F TV."

JL

The PACmen's strategy is clearly
Illustrated by the right closest
House campaigns last fall. In all but
one race (where a final determina­
tion awaits a recount), the candidate
who got the most last-minute.

special-interest money won the
election.
Herr's the rundown on the eight
campaigns:
— In southern Indiana. R e­
publican challenger Richard D.
McIntyre defeated the Incumbent
Democrat. Rep. Frank McCloskey.
by 34 votes — pending a recount.
McIntyre had $28,776 cosh on hand
as he moved Into the (Inal two
weeks of the campaign. This was
boosted the last minute by $40,750
in PAC money. $4,000 of It from
milk producers. McCloskey had only
$1,965 cash on hand but got a
last-m inute shot-ln-thc-arm o f
$23,500 from PACs. Including
$7,000 from the campaign chest of
Shoo-In Democrats.
— In Idaho, history professor
Richard Stallings unsealed the
Republican incumbent. Rep. George
Hansen, by 133 votes. Hansen's
main problem was hls conviction for
financial-disclosure violations. But
the flow of late cash to Stallings
clearly helped. With only $360 on
hand shortly before the election.
Stallings got $27,000 from PACmen
who smelled the scent of victory.

Hansen had $3,151 in cash but
could raise only v$7.500 more from
the PACs.
— In North Carolina. Republican
J. Alex McMillan owed hls 321-vote
squeaker over challenger David
Martin largely to Ronald Reagan's
coattails. But could he have pulled It
off without the last-minute Infusion
of $25,750 In PAC money? It's a
question that Martin — who could
scrape up only $2,000 in late PAC
funds — must still be asking
himself.
— In Utah, a strategist for Re­
publican winner David Monson told
my reporters Tony Capaccio and
Scott Barrett candidly that the
$46,800 In last-minute specialinterest money hls candidate got
"was the margin, no two ways
about It." Monson edged Democrat
Frances Farley by 472 voles: her
last-minute PAC money, mostly
from unions, came to $35,930 —
not bad. but not good enough.
— In Pennsylvania. Incumbent
Rep. Bob Edgar barely fended off
the challenge of Republican Curt
Weldon. Edgar's 481-vote margin

might be traced to the $15,000 1
last-minute PAC money he raiser
which was $3,000 more lha
Weldon got.
— In Michigan. Rep. Dona]
Albosta lost to Republican Bl
Schuette by 1.314 votes. Alboal
raised only $14,000 In last-mlnui
PAC money, which was slgnll
can tly less than the $ 2 0 .3q
Schuette got from the PACs.
— In Illinois, former Rep. Ke
Gray regained hls old seat by 1.37
votes over Republican Randy Pa
chett. with the help or $34,275 I
last-minute donations from latx
P A C s. T h o u g h P a tc h e tt ha
$40,000 cash on hand compared I
Gray's $2,125, he could raise onl
$16,500 In late PAC donations.
— In North Carolina, where R
publican challenger Bill Cobey be:
Incumbent Ike Andrews by 2,66
votes, the winner collected $26,50
In last-minute PAC money. Inclu:
Ing $5,000 "out o f the blue" froi
the fu n d a m e n ta lis t C h rls tla
Voters’ Victory Fund. Andrew
raised only $9,000 from the PACs I
the waning days o f the campaign.

�Evening Herald, Sanford. Ft.

Experts Say Women's Mental
Health Needs Being Ignored
By D’Vern Cohn
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Twenty years
after the birth of the modern-day feminist
movement, many therapists lump women
Into traditional categories and ignore their
real mental health needs, according to
e x p e rts c o n v en e d by the A m erica n
Psychological Association.
Psychiatric training has not changed to
reflect the new thinking about women's
roles, and many therapists have yel to
recognize women have different mental
health needs from men. the panel said.
"W om en's mental health needs dltTer
from those o f men for complex and largely
unknown reasons." said Nancy Felipe
Russo, the association's administrative of­
ficer for women’s programs.
"Gender and sex-role stereotyping have
affected mental health research, training
’ and service delivery." she told a recent
press briefing. "A s a result, mental healthrelated research and services have not been
appropriately designed to address the
mental health concerns of women."
The association convened a conference of
experts to ponder the problems in the field
of women's mental health.
Among the differences they discussed:
Women show higher rates of depression and
phobias, while men show higher rates of
anil-social personality and alcohol pro­
blems: and women, even more than men,
have the highest rates o f mental disorders at
ages 25-44. *
• Women are three times more likely to visit
mental health clinics than men, although
tome experts believe that is because women
are more willing to seek help.
Psychotherapist Linda Silverman King
said many therapists use a double standard

for women, presuming they (ft into a passive
stereotype and seeing something wrong II
they are aggressive.
Therapists are more likely to prescribe
drugs for women, who get 73 percent of
psychotropic drug prescriptions. King said
that may show therapists want to treat the
symptoms of women's problems, not their
eauses. and are trying to get women to
"adjust" to roles that do not fit them.
Dr. Elaine Carmen, a University of North
Carolina psychiatrist, said women have up
to a one in four chance of being raped and
up to a one in three chance of having been
sexually molested In childhood, yet thera­
pists often do not ask their patients whether
they were abused.
By not asking about the experience, the
therapist Implies that it has nothing to do
with the patient's current mental health
problem, she said. In fact, she said, her own
study of psychiatric patients at one North
Carolina hospital found almost half had
histories of sexual or physical abuse.
"It is safe to say more people have abuse
histories than hear voices." yet therapists
arc more likely to ask about voices, she said.
The traditional view is that the focus of
therapy should be entirely on the patient,
not on the outside world. But critics say that
places the blame for mental health problems
solely on the patient.
"W hat therapists nerd to do Is pay
attention to social realities for clients,"
Carmen said. "There may be sonic very
good reasons why the patient Is in pain and
suffering."
The Issue of women's differences has been
percolating through the mental health
community for a decade or more, but the
panel said change lias been slow.
"Th ere’s been an unprecedented outpour­

ing of new knowledge aboul wom en."
Carmen said, "(but) most o f tt hasn't been
Integrated Into what wc teach psychiatrists.
It's still women's Issues, as opposed to what
we teach psychiatrists."
Women seeking a good therapist should
ask tough questions, and be satisfied with
the answers, before beginning treatment.
"Women do have to be very active on
their own behalf when entering a therapy
relationship." King said.
Among the questions she and other
experts suggested:
—What constitutes a mentally healthy
person?
—What are proper roles for men and
women? (King said she believes a therapist
should have "n o preconceived notions.")
—What arc the goals o f therapy? A patient
should beware of a therapist who wants to
talk down to them, rather than getting them
actively involved In solving their own
problems.
—Does the therapist have strong feelings
on any mental health issue? One therapist
said she Immediately makes It clear to her
patient* she does not approve of spouse
abuse.
—Does the therapist think biological
factors are solely to blame for mental illness,
or can it result from social and environ­
mental factors, too?
The Federation of Organizations for Pro­
fessional Women publishes a booklet.
"Women and Psychotherapy: A Consumer
Handbook." that Is designed to help women
And a good therapist.
The booklet costs $5. Checks should be
made payable to FOPW and sent to: FOPW
1825 C o n n ec tic u t A v e .. S u ite 403,
Washington. D.C.. 20009

W hite Suprem acists Plan Governm ent O verthrow
• MONTGOMERY. Ala. (UPI) Investigators say documents
from a c o m p u te r n etw o rk
operated by a white supremacist
group contain plans for a terror­
ist revolution to overthrow the
United States and Canadian
governments.
Authorities said the docu­
ments were obtained from a
te le p h o n e -lin k e d c o m p u te r
network operated by the the
Church of the Aryan Nations, an
Idaho group suspected of killings
and robberies In the Northwest.
The group is also known as the
Church of Jesus Christ Chris­
tian.

T h e M o n tg o m e r y J o u r n a lA d v e rtis e r reported Wednesday
that the "Aryan Nation Liberty
Net" also had messages crit­
ic izin g fed eral w elfare and
foreign-aid programs and warn­
ing that "social experiments"
have undermined U.S. society.
“ We shall fight! We shall not
allow ourselves to be enslaved as
those in Russia. Am i yourselves!
Liberate Canada!" one message
read.
Another computer network
message listed enemies of the
white supremacist movement
and warned they "shall sufTcr
the extreme penalty when lawful

government Is restored upon
this continent."
One of the “ enemies" singled
out was Montgomery attorney
Morris Dees, who filed suit
against the Ku Klux Klan on
behalf of black marchers In­
volved in a 1979 shootout with
robed Klansmen in Decatur, Ala.
"According to the word of our
God. Morris Decs has earned two
(2 ) death s e n te n c e s ." one
message said.
Dees, who heads the antt-Klan
group called Klanwatch. said
evidence indicated the most mil­
itant members of Klan. neo-Nazi
and other white supremacist

CALENDAR
THURSDAY, JAN. 3
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m. Florida HospltalAltamonte Branch, 601 E. Alta­
monte Avc., 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
. Sanford Jaycees. 7:30 p.m..
J a y c e e b u ild in g . 5th and
French. Sanford.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St..
8 p.m.. open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed.
First United Methodist Church.
Overeaters Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m. Community United
.Methodist Church. H ighway
17-92. Casselberry.
FRIDAY, JAN. 4
Central Florida Blook Bank
F lo rid a H o s p lta l-A lta m o n te
Brunch. 601 E. Altamonte Avc.,
9a,m. to5p.m .
i O p tim is t C lu b o f S o u th
.Seminole, 7:30 a.m., Holiday
.Inn, Wymore Road. Altamonte
Springs.
Weklva AA (no smoking), 8
p .m . W e k lv a P re s b y te ria n
Church. SR 434, at Weklva
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
JV. First St., closed.
SATURDAY, JAN. 5
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. 1201 W.
First St. open discussion.
Sanford Womens’ AA. 1201
W. First St.. 2 p.m.. closed.
Casselberry AA Step. 8 p.m..

Ascension Lutheran Church.
Overbrook Drive.
Rebos and Live Oak AA. noon.
Rebos Club. 130 Normandy
Road. C a sselb erry (closed).
Clean Air AA for non-smokers,
first floor, same room, same
place and time.
SUNDAY, JAN. 8
B r id a l fa s h io n s h o w In
Robinson's Altamonte Mall. 1
p.m. Special guest will be well
known designer *Jan Kostrobola.
Door prizes and refreshments.
Florida Symphony Orchestra
performs for Festival Concert
Scries at Rollins College Knowles
Chapel. 4 p.m. sponsored by
Bach Festival Society.
Narcotics Anonymous. 7 p.m.,
1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.,
open discussion. Florida Power
and Light bulltlng, N. Myrtle
Avenue. Sanford.
Alanon meeting. 8 p.m.. 1201
W. First St.. Sanford.
MONDAY, JAN. 7
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. 601 E. Alta­
monte Ave.. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Bowling league for mentally
handicapped. 4-5:45 p.m.. Alta­
monte Lanes. 280 Douglas Ave.
Call 862-2500 for Information.
Vietnam Veterans o f Central
Florida. 7:30 p.m. VFW Post
2093, 4444 Edge water Drive,
Orlando.
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 Anony-

Rebelt: Death Squads Still A t Work
United Praia International
Leftist Salvadoran rebels say
President Jose Napoleon Duarte
Has failed to keep his pledge to
eradicate rightist death squads
and charge that paramilitary
groups killed nearly 2.000 civil­
ians last year.
In Honduras. Nicaraguan re­
bels formerly financed by the
CIA Wednesday, dismissed as
"communist propaganda" re­
cent charges that they were
committing atrocities against
the c iv ilia n p o p u la tio n o f
Nicaragua.
The Salvadoran guerrilla news
agency NOT1SAL said 1,973
civilians were killed by death
squads In 1984. some 670 of
them since Duarte took office
June 1.
Duarte has repeatedly pledged
to eliminate the death squads.

blamed by human rights groups
for most of the 50.000 deaths
since the start o f the 5-year-old
civil war.
"A fter six months o f govern­
ment by his administration,
human rights violations con­
tinue." NOTISAL said. "In six
months of his rule he still has
not sent a single member ac­
cused o f belonging to those
organizations to court, as he
promised when he took power."
The Catholic Church said last
week that 3,891 civilians died in
the civil war last year, killed by
the army, death squads and
rebels.
T h e re was no Im m ediate
comment from the government
or the U.S. Embassy, which says
that death squad activity has
been curtailed.

mous. 8 p.m., closed. Apopka
E p is c o p a l C h u r c h . 6 15
Highland.
Al-Anon Step and Study. 8
p.m.. Casselberry Senior Center.
200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m., closed.
1201 W. First St.
Fellowship Group AA. senior
citizens. 8 p.m., closed. 200 N.
Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
TUE8DAY, JAN. 8
Re bos Club AA. noon and 5:30
p.m.. closed. 8 p.m.. step. 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos Club. noon,
closed.
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 essia h L u th e ra n
Church, 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road.
Overeaters Anonymous, open.
7:30 p.m.. Florida Power &amp;
Light, 301 S. Myrtle Avc.. San­
ford.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch. 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.tn.
to 7 p.m. Florida HospitalAltamonte Branch. 601 E. Alta­
monte Avc.. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sanford Lions Club. noon. 1-4
Holiday Inn.
Sanford Toastmasters. 7:15
a.m., Season's restaurant. 2565
S. French Ave.
Lake Monroe Chapter of the
American DlabeleB Society. 7:30
p.in.. Central Florida Regional
Hospital cafeteria. Sanford. Open
to all interested in Diabetes.

PUBLIC
NOTICE
T M II. M m * M m Wi M
Ii m n w M

IM itc l

an tppUciUon • « Con«umpl,,«

WMi H I but

groups had begun a system of
terrorism and violence against
their opponents.
"Th e Klan as we have known
in the past is a thing of the
past." Decs said. "These people
are a coalition o f the kind of
warped Green Beret returnees
from Vietnam. neo-Nazis and the
more youngish Klan leaders nol
satisfied with marching up and
down the street und burning
crosses.
"These people are more dis­
ciplined." he said. "T h ey are
much, much smarter. They are
highly trained In all kind of
tactics and much better armed."
D^cs said he doubted the
groups would ever succeed in
their goal to overthrow the
government, but "they're going
to hurt some people in the
process. They already have."

Thursday, Jan. 3, I W l - i *

Ready To Soar
V e te ra n Scoutm aster Ted D an iel of Boy Scout Troop 341,
C a s s e lb e r r y , p re s e n ts his la te s t E a g le S co u t, T im
Scarborough, 14, a model of an eagle like he presents to each
of his boys who a tta in the highest ran k In scouting. An eighth
g ra d e r a t South Sem inole M id d le School, T im is the son of
T im and D a rlen e Scarborough.

A TTEN TIO N V E T E R A N S
Who Have
Honorably
Served Their
Country
In Time
Of War
Or Peace
TV ,
Because o f the lack of adequate burial space and the
distan ce to a N ation al C em etery, you m ay be e lig i­
ble to re c e iv e V eteran s Burial B en efits in a Local
C em etery.
If you are an honorably discharged veteran , you are
e lig ib le to apply.
Spaces arc lim ite d and w ill be allocated on a firs t
com e, fir s t served basis.
T«
Ytur
An4 Priority CrrtKkilt
Al No Cut Or Obliiillon nil Out Coupon Bobu And Mill To:

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�X

SPORTS

Ston e, Tw addell Spark G irls To Wins
By Chris Pieter
Herald Sports W riter
Every team In Seminole County has two or
more players that usually share the spotlight.
What every team would like to have Is someone
who can step out of the shadows and Into the
spotlight. So when the leaders are bottled up
defensively, plagued by foul trouble, or Just
having an off night, there will be somebody else
to rely on.
Two such players are Lake Mary's Liz Stone
and Lake Brantley’s Caml Twaddell. Both came
through with their best performances of the
season Wednesday night to help lead their teams
to Five Star Conference victories.
• Stone, a 5-3 senior guard, gave Lake Mary
the additional outside shooting touch It was
looking for Wednesday as she scored 14 points,
Including 6 of 7 shooting from the door. In the
Lady Rams' 82-35 trouncing of Apopka's Lady
Blue Darters.
• Twaddell, a 5-8 senior forward, was the
dominant figure Inside Wednesday as the host
L a d y P a tr io t s p ou n d ed D ayto n a Beach
Mainland's Lady Bucs, 51-23. Twaddell had
season high's In both scoring (14 points) and
rebounds (15) as Lake Brantley kept Its unbeaten
conference record Intact.

I

Lake Mary Improved to 6-5 overall and 3-1 In
the Five Star. The Lady Rams take on a tough
conference foe In Datyona Beach Seabreeze
Friday at 4:45 at Seabreeze. Lake Brantley, which
now stands at 10-2 overall and leads the
conference with a 4-0 record (Seminole Is 3-0).
hits the road the rest of the week as the Lady
Patriots travel to Apopka tonight and Orlando
Colonial Friday.
In Wednesday night's action at Lake Mary
High. Stone had the hot hand In the first half as

Prep Basketball
she hit 5 of 5 shots, all from the outside, to help
Lake Mary roll up a 36-13 halftime lead after
leading by seven. 13-6. after the first quarter.
Along with Stone, senior point guard Kim Avcrlll
and senior center Courtney Hall also had 10
first-half points.
"L iz (Stone) shot really well tonight." Lake
Mary coach Bill Moore said. "It's something we've
been looking for from Liz. I've always felt she is
an excellent outside shooter and I hope this gives
her a little confidence."
Hall led the Lady Rams with a game-high 16
points and 10 rebounds while Avrhll and Stone
connecled for 14 apiece. Avcrlll also handed out
nine assists and had six steals. Aileen Patterson
had another fine game Inside with nine points. 11
rebounds, five steals and four blocked shots.
Larra Hall, a senior guard, contributed seven
points and five assists.
Lake Mary's second quarter explosion. In which
It outscored the Lady Darters. 23-7. paved the
way for Moore to clear his bench in the second
half. And the the Lady Rams received outstand­
ing performances from Its second unit led by
junior guard Heather Lecklc.
Leckle, a standout on last year's Junior varsity,
had her best varsity game with 10 points.
Including 4 for 5 from the free throw line, and
four steals.
"Heather (Lecklc) went In and gave us some
good, aggressive play." Moore said. "That's what
you look for from players coming off the bench."
Lake Mary's second team ployed most of the
fourth quarter In which the Rums outscored

Apopka. 25-6. Providing solid play off the bench
along with Leckle were Sloan Stewart, Cynthia
Patterson. Terri Reynolds and Anquenette
Whack.
Michelle McKinney led the Darters with 12
points before fouling out and Donna Burkhead.
who transfered to Apopka from Lake Mary, added
nine.
APOPKA (111 — Brytnl 0. Burkhtad t , Damp* 4. Garcia 0.
John ton 4, LewItO . Me K Inna? II. Parramoro I . Patarton J. Roblnton
0, Stafford0 Total! l i l t 11
LAKE MARY (111 - Averlll 14. Cartaf 0. C Hall II . L Hall 1.
Lecklt 10. A . Pattarton t , C . Pattarton 4. Reynold! 1. Stewart 2,
Slone 14. Wade 2. Whack 1 Total*: 22 I I 1111
Helttlm# — Lake Mary 14. Apopka 11. Foul* — Apopka It . Lake
Mary i l . Fouled out — McKinney, Parramora Technical — none A
— 250

In Wednesday's game at Lake Brantley High, a
third quarter surge lifted Lake Brantley to Its
fourth straight conference victory. Lake Branlley,
which held a 20-10 halftime lead, outscored the
Lady Bucs. 10-7, In the third quarter to take a
39* 17 lead Into the fourth.
The Lady Patriots turned In a brilliant
defensive effort as Mainland scored less than 10
points In all four quarters.
"When you play defense like that you’re going
to win." Lake Branlley coach Renny Betrls said.
"It was our best defensive game o f the season."
While 6-1 senior center Kirsten Dellinger had
Just four points. Twaddell took over Inside and
dominated the boards.
"Th at's her best performance since she's
played for m e." Betrls said of Twaddell. "She put
on a rebounding clinic tonight."
Twaddcll's 14 points and 15 rebounds were
lioth game highs. Her presence Inside took on
added Importance since Junior forward Angle May
sat out with an Injured ankle. May Is expected to
be out the rest o f the week.
Twaddell and Junior point guard Sherry "Ice "

Lady Seminoles
Tackle Gordon,
DeLand Tonight
Sanford's Lady Seminoles look
to keep pace with Lake Brantley
atop the Five Star Conference
standings tonight when they
host preseason conference favor­
ite DeLand. Junior varsity action
starts at 6 followed by the
varsity at 7:45.
Seminole, the fourth-ranked
team In the state (4A), stands at
10-2 overall and 3-0 In the Five
Star. Lake Brantley leads by one
, half game with a 4-0 conference
; mark.
Senior forward Mona Benton Is
S em in o le C o u n ty 's lea d in g
scorer with 240 points In 12
games for an average of 20.0.
Benton, who also averages 9.1
rebounds per outing, la joined In
the starting lineup by guards
A n d ell " S o u l " Sm ith (11.1
points per game) and Temlka
A le x a n d e r (1 0 .3 ). fo rw a rd
Catherine "K itty " Anderson (8.6
points. 12.0 rebounds) and
center Beatrice Smith.
DeLand comes In with a 7-2
record overall and 2-1 In the
conference. The Lady Bulldogs,
the defending 4A state champi­
ons. are coming off a 20-polnt
defeat at the hands o f St.
Petersburg Gibbs. Leading the
way for DeLand Is 6-1 AllAmerica senior center Bridget tc
Gordon and senior point guard
Robyn Swartz.
. In other girls action tonight,
Lake Brantley travels to Apopka
(varsity only, 6 p.m.). Lake
H ow ell hosts Spruce Creek
(Varsity only. 8 p.m.) and Oviedo
hosts Bishop Moore (varsity
only. 8 p.m.)

HflMliniS .a.a................. a...... o
Dellinger, Laka Brantlty ... ...II
A ' Pallerton , Laka M ary ...
Anderton , Samlnola...........
L o ktri , Oviedo ...................
Fortyth , Lyman ................. ... 1
Brown, Laka Brantley ....... ...13
Benton, Seminole................
C . Hall. Laka M ary ............
Redway , Oviedo .................
Re* . Laka Howell............... ...It
J . Johnton. Lak * Howell.... ...11
ilnvtnft* L ym an ..................
Twaddell, Laka Brantlty ...
Shaw. Laka Howell............
M ay . Laka Brantley ........ ..

n

no
*s
ttt
*0
41
*3
72
S4

A

to
9.2
14

IS
14
1.2
2.9
1.1
4.1
1.4

AVO .
4.4

17
S3
4i
10
2*
J*
t*

47
41
40
17
11
1.1
1A

Stool* ................................... ... 0
Brown, Lak* Brantl«y...... ......12
J . John ton . Lak* Howell ......11
Ltw l *. Lak* Howell.......... ...... It
A . Smith, Seminole ........... ......13
Aver III. Lak* M ary .................. It
Benton, Seminole..............
12
Aleiender , Seminole........ ......12
Fortyth , Lyman ................ ....... 1
R a t , Lake Howell........... ...... II
Andtrton , Seminole_____ ......13
Atplen . Laka Brantley ..... ...... 13

s

SI
54

HerelS h a d fcy S rigery O th u

Brinkman's American Way
" T h is Is th e A m e ric a n W a y of c a llin g a s trik e ," A m erican
League c re w c h lel Joe B rin k m a n tells his N ational
L eag u e c o u n te rp a rt Steve R lp p le y . B rin k m a n , who
operates Joe B rin k m a n 's U m p ire s School, joined forces
w ith F lo rid a B aseball Schools' Wes R in ker for a tw o -p art
c lin ic last w eek a t Sanford AAemorlal Stadium . R in ker
said four m o re schools a re planned for negt w in ter a t the
stad iu m . Both schools a re m oving to* Cocoa w here
B rin k m a n w ill begin conducting classes fo r 117 fu tu re
m e n In b lu e .

AVO .
ii
14
14
10
10

M
1.7
14
14
2.1

M

Tolbert's Loss
Hurts Raiders
•y ta aC e o k
H i n l d Sports Editor
If It’s any consolation for
SCC’s Mike Tolbert, he departed
the Raider basketball program
with his beat effort.
Tolbert, who coach Bill Payne
singled out for an "outstanding
game" In an overtime loss to No.
1 M iam i D ade N orth , was
dropped from the squad Wed' nesday for falling to achieve a
■3.0 grade point average for 12
' hours o f work.
"That going to hurt." said
Payne about the loaa of hla
sophomore guard. "W e don't
; have a point guard now. Mike
;L*ndell is hurt. His knee Is
1 lulling him but he's going to try
(jutd play."
( : T o lb e rt, w ho open ed the
£season In the starting lineup, but
(W as beaten out by Landell
(m idway through the first half of
the season. Tolbert, who played
(h la prep ball at Orlando Oak
(R idge, was averaging 4.1 points
'a n d 3.8 assists while iplaying
*
20
minutes per g Ante

&gt; 10SI.

HalMlma — Laka Branllty 20. Mainland 10 Fouli — Mainland IS,
Lakt Branlley f Fouled oul — non* Technical — non* A — IJO

Basketball
86-72 Five Star Conference vic­
tory before 250 fans Wednesday
night at Lake Mary High.
The victory Improved the 7-4
Blue Darters to 3-1 In the
c o n f e r e n c e . A ll t h r e e —
Mainland. Seabreeze and Lake
Mary — have been big wins. The
lone loss was a two-pointer to
8ee IMPROVED, Page 7A

kl
M

r

M iller's 9 Assists Help
Rams Ease By Darters

12 0
10.7
*.»

70
74

If

MAINLAND ( 22) — H kklty 10. Irving 2. Ktm m tr 4. Perry 3.
Robertionl T olilt II 1223
LAKE BRANTLEY (III - Atplen 12. Brown 7. Dellinger 4. Gordon
0. Hogan 2. Lubenow 4 . Steggt 0. Thomat 4. Twaddell 14 Total* : 23

By 8am Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Willie Richardson pleaded the
whole first half with the officials
to call a few fouls. When he
finally got his wish In the third
quarter, his Lake Mary Rama
couldn't have thrown a baseball
Into a backyard.
Such Is lire against the new.
Improved Apapku Blue Darters.
Coach Earl Stokes' Darters used
their superior. quickness and
some horrendous foul shooting
by Lake Mary to post an easy

AVO .
u .i
ti.t

Awarill, Lak* M ary ............
Barth , Oviedo ....................
Nation, Ovlodo.................. ..... 7
Brown, Lak* Brantley ......
Atplen . Lak* Brantley ...... ..... 13
Benton. Seminole ..............
L . John ion , Lyman ......... ..... •
A . Smith, Seminole............-----11
Alexander. Seminole .......
.13
Lubtnow , Lak* Brantlty ... .....12

44
40
40
14
12
24
13
11
14
17

Asplcn keyed Lake Brantley's thlrd-quarlcrj
surge. Asplen ended up with 12 points and a!
game-high seven assists. Senior forward Mlchellcj
Brown added seven points, seven rebounds and!
four steals. Dellinger added eight rebounds.
Gall H lck ley's 10 points were high forj
Mainland.
Like Lake Mary, the Lady Patriots also received;
strong play from Its second team. Leading the;
way was sophomore guard Ashcly Thomas with
six points. Michelle Hagan. Cindy Staggs and
Andrea Gordon also played well ofTthe bench.
Lake Brantley looks to slrcnglhcn Its chances
In the Five Star Conference with the return of
Junior forward Kim Wain, one of the team's top
rebounders a year ago. Betrls said Wain should be
ready to play In two weeks.

Lake Mary Misses Chance,
Falls To Improved Apopka

AV 0 .
20.0
1* . |
114
144
14.1
14*
140
14* . IJ.S
110
110
122
11.3
113
ll.l
134
103
114
f.J
9,j
105
102
14
M
10
M
10
2.4
52
f)
2.4
M
7.3
143
121
144
12*
7*
111

Cam m ie T w a d d e ll ’
...15 re b o u n d s &lt;

F ree Throw s?

Compiled by Chet* Fitter
*************************** 0
TP
BarUon. Sem inole ............... ...13
340
LoA* f «. O v M o ............ ......
Dellinger, Lak* B ranllty .. ....11
C . Mail, Laka M ary ...........
A . Pattarton . Laka M ary .......10
Avtrllt , Lak* M ary _____
A . Smith, Seminole...........
Al* a* nd* r , Samlnola........
Brown. Lak* Branlley ......
R a t , Lak* Howell.............
And* rion , Seminole..........
Atplen . Lak* Brantley ......
J . John ton, Lak * Howtll.... ...It
Helton, Oviedo...................
Barth . Oviedo...................... ...1J
Lubtnow, Lak * Brantley ...

L is Stone
...8 o f 7 shots

By Chris Plstsr
Herald Sports W riter
Terry “ The C at" Miller, a
freshman point guard, used his
b a llh a n d iln g w iz a rd ry and
scoring punch In the fourth
quarter to help Lake Mary's
junior varsity overcome a sec-,
ond-half comeback by Apopka's
JV Blue Darters as the Rams
held on for a
64-56 victory
Wednesday night al Lake Mary
High.
Miller poured In a game-high
19 points and dished out nine
assists as the JV Rams Improved
to 6-1 for the season. While
Miller was the dean of the
backcourt Wednesday. Roosevelt
Gaines and Oscar Merthle pro­
vided the Inside strength. Gaines
pumped In 14 points and ripped
down 13 rebounds and Merthle
connected for 15 points and
grabbed eight boards.
Lake Mary built an eight-point

Basketball
lead, 19-11, after one quarter
and Increased It to 15, 39-24. by
halftime. But the Darters came
out firing In the third quarter
and outscored the Rams, 16-5, to
pull within four. 44-40, going
Into the fourth quarter.
Lake Mary goes for Its seventh
win Friday at Daytona Beach
Seabreeze In the second game of
a triple header. The girls varsity
team s squ a re o ff at 4:45,
followed by boys JV at 6:15 and
varsity at 8.
APOPKA (Ml — Damelt 19. H a rrltl , Lowery
4. Muttelwhlto 10. Smith 5. Mack 5. Hardwick
14. Total*: 2014 30 M
LAKE MARY (44) - Miliar It . Gain* * 14.
Marthi* IS. Gibb* 4. Napoli 2. Sutton 4.
Stewarl 1. Orawdy 1 Total* 31 23 37 M
Halttlm* — Lak * Mary 3t . Apopka 24.
Foul* - Apopka 2S. Lak* Mary l » Fouled out
— non* Technical — non*

History: UNLV 142, Utah State 140 In 3 OTs

Mike Tolbert failed fo make
grades and will be lost fo
Seminole Community College
for the season.
A lon g with Tolbert, three
other players arc questionable
for tonight's 7:30 game with
Patrick Air Force Base at the
SCC Health Center. Starting
guard Kenny Edwards, backup
c e n te r W illie S tro th er and
backup guard Scott Hughes all
have one Incom plete grade.
They must have the "1" changed
to a passing grade before they
are eligible, according to Payne.

United Press International
Put the University o f Nevada-Las Vegas on
a basketball court and points spill out like
coins from a slot machine.
On Wednesday night In Logan, Utah,
there was a Jackpot of aorta as UNLV
defeated Utah State 142-140 In triple
overtime In the highest scoring game In
college basketball history.
The 282 total points scored erased the
NCAA mark o f 275 set nine years ago when
UNLV defeated Hawall-Hllo 164-111.
Two other records were broken In the
game lasting more than three hours; Utah
State's 140 points was the most by a losing
team, and UNLV's 93 points In the second
half waa the most In a half.
"It was the most Incredible game I've ever
been Involved In." said UNLV Coach Jerry
Tarkantan, whose 600th career victory was
overshadowed in the scoring carnival.
"W e beat them on a night when they were
Just outstanding. How we came from six
points down (In the third overtime) was a
miracle. The odds against coming back had
to have been a million to one. I've never
been through a game like this."
UNLV trailed 140-134 but blanked the
Aggies the final 3:47 as Utah Slate missed
live straight free throws and three shots
from the floor.
Fred Banks of UNLV hit a 3-polnter with

Ai4h&gt;.-. -» /»•

College Basketball
three seconds left In regulation to force
overtime at 116-116. A layup by Banka with
23 seconds left In the first extra period tied
U 126-126. bringing a second overtime.
Richie Adams scored 37 points. Banks 31
and Armon Gilliam 27 for UNLV. 7-2. For
Utah State. JefT Anderson had 37 points.
Vince Washington 36 and Greg Grant 31.
Washington, however, missed hla laat 14
shots.
"It was a classic and we were Just on the
wrong end o f It." Utah Slate Coach Rod
Tueller said. "It was defense, or a lack o f It.
that lost It.”
In another wild game, Derrick Gervln
scored 51 points In Texaa-San Antonio's
101-91 home victory over Baylor. Gervln.
brother of NBA star George Gervln. hit
22-of-32 shots and 7-of-8 free throws while
grabbing 18 rebounds.
In the Top 20. No. 1 Georgetown downed
Seton Hall 73-56: No. 4 St. John's beat
Connecticut 57-51: No. 5 Syracuse lost to
Vlllanova 82-70: No. 8 Southern Methodist
stopped Rice 66-57: No. 12 Indiana routed
No. 17 Michigan 87-62: No. 15 Louisiana
State took Georgia 79-74: and No. 16.
Maryland edged North Carolina State 58-56.

Al Landovcr, Md.. David Wingate's 17
points carried Georgetown. 12-0. In a Big
East opener. Seton Hall's Andre McCloud
had 20 points^
At Hartford, Conn., Walter Berry had 15
points and 12 rebounds and powered St.
John's In the second half of the Big East
game. BUI Wennlngton added 18 for the
Redmen. 9-1, while Earl Kelley scored 14 for
&gt;Connecticut.
At Philadelphia. Vlllanova sent Syracuse
to Its first loss with Dwayne McClain scoring
21 points and teaming with Gary McLain In
a second-half surge of the Big East meeting.
Rafael Addison's 21 points paced the
Orangemen, 8-1.
MCDOWELL LEADS GATOR WIN
Eugene McDowell scored 24 points and 13
assists to lead the Unlvealty of Florida to an
84-70 victory over Tennessee Wednesday at
Gainesville's O'Connell Center.
The lead changed hands 12 times during
the game, with Florida leading 30-33 at
halftime. Midway through the second half
Florida went ahead 39-38. then scored 13
straight points. Tennessee Tailed to score
from the field for more than seven minutes
during the stretch, and never managed to
recover.
Anthony Richardson led Tennessee with
20 points.

k-

�Thurvdfty, Jen. I. 1W3—7A

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

SPO RTS

A D is p u te d T ru th :
C o u g a rs A r e N o . 1

Hardy Moves Into The Limelight
MIAMI (UPI) — Injuries to two of Miami's tight ends have
put dependable Dolphin Bruce Hardy back In the limelight.
" I ’m enjoying myself this season. I think all of us arc."
said Hardy, who has had 19 catches and five touchdowns
In the last six games.
"It used to be guys Just kind o f going out and doing their
Job, hut things are getting on a roll here and you can feel
the difference."
One of the reasons for his good fortune has been bad
fortune for the other two Dolphin tight ends. Starter Dan
Johnson has been plagued with a painful rib Injury all
season and missed last Saturday's playoff victory over
Seattle with the flu.

Pro Athletes To Golf A t Disney
ORLANDO — The 18th American Airlines Golf Classic,
the premier athlete tournament In the country, will be
played Jan. 30-Fcb. 2 at Walt Disney World's Magnolia
Course, announced tournament chairman Thomas G.
Plaskctt.
Plaskett. senior vice president of marketing for American
Airlines, said this will be the ninth venue for the unique,
International 54-hole tournament. The last Classic was
contested al the Walkoloa Beach Golf Course in Kona.
Hawaii.

Altamonte Registers Saturday
The Altamonte Springs Little League will be holding Its
final registration on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Eastmontc Civic Center.
New players need to bring a birth certificate and name
and policy number o f your hospitalization coverage. All
children must be accompanied by an adult.
The Altamonte Springs Little League has programs from
T-Ball through Senior League for children from 6-15 years
of age. For further Information contact Jim Hovls at
831-1843 or Judy Christian at 327-1231.

The Cougars received 28 first place votes and
579 points from the 40 coaches who participated
In the final balloting to beat out Washington for
the top ranking.
Washington, which defeated Oklahoma In the
Orange Bowl and finished with an 11-1 record,
received 11 first place votes and 561 points.
Two coaches did not participate In the final

...Im p ro ve d
C o n t in u e d f r o m

8A

DeLand. Lake Mary fell to 4-5
and 2-2.
"W e ’ve definitely Improved.”
said Stokes. "W e're a lot better
than when we played In Sanford
Ipresrason tournament). "W e
played ratty In the first half
tonight but we started playing
ball In the second half. We've
Improved our physical game a
lot. We don't loose our cool
anymore when It gets rough."
And It was rough at times —
especially Inside. Lake Mary's
D o n a ld G ra y s o n and J e ff
Reynolds used good positioning
and some football muscle to
push the Rams to an 11-5 lead
midway through the first half.
Grayson had all nine of his
points In the first quarter but
Apopka came back In the latter
stages behind Earl Clayton to
cut the lead to 15-14 at the end
o f eight minutes.
Apopka took control of the
game Immediately In the second
quarter as It farced four Lake
Mary turnovers and sprinted to
nine straight points and a 23-15
lead. C la yton scored on a
three-point play and then added

W

_
\ajitvi TW t bftc
aTRftlOMT ftNO T
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balloting as Ken Hatfield of Arkansas and Bobby
Collins of SMU could not be reached.
"I'm not sure I would say I'm surprised."
Huskies Coach Don James said when Informed of
the final ratings. "I thought we would get more
votes from the (UPI) coaches lhan from the (AP)
writers. But l‘ m not going to Jump off the 19th
floor. I have respect for (BYU Coach) Lavell
Edwards and his program. We'll Just let the chips
fall."
Washington has a chance for some sort of
retribution next season when the Huskies play
the Cougars the second weekend of the 1985
season.
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a nice tlp-ln for the final five.
Reynolds, who finished with
14 points and seven boards,
trad ed b askets w ith K eith
Johnson and Clayton over the
next four minutes but the Rams
could get no closer than eight
points.
As an omen of things to come.
Lake Mary missed three straight
one and ones when It had a
chance to cut the margin below
eight points. In the final 1:25,
though. Reynolds scored, then
stole the ball and fed Byron
Washington for a basket. Junior
Chris Jackson offset a bucket by
Kcnl Elmore with a sky tip to
pull Lake Mary within 37-29 at
halftime.
Lake Mary hud Its chance to
get back In the game when the
officials whistled Apopka for six
straight fouls to open the second
half. Each time the Rams trailed
by Just eight but Matt Newby
and Daryl Merthle could convert
Just 1 of 2 and Ray Hartsfteld
missed both of his. The Rams
converted Just 18 of 33 free
throws as Apopka committed 33
fouls to Lake Mary's 12.
"T h ey started calling them In
the second half.", said Rich­
ardson. "But we couldn't make
the free throws. We're Just so
Inconsistent. But we did push

Lloyd Wall was seven runs
hatted In short of winning the
triple crown for the Sanford
Men's Softball Association's Fall
League.
W all, who played on the
leu gu e c h a m p io n and u n ­
defeated Tim Raines Connec­
tion. led the loop In hitting with
a .613 average and In home runs
with five. He was second In RBIs
with 14. Teammate "Steady"
Eddie Jackson led the league In
ribbles with 20. Jackson also led
in runs scared (16) hits (21) and
was third In batting average
(.583).
Session Tim e's Ernest Shuler
was second in batting (.591) and
third In homers (three).

N‘ *

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the ball up court like 1wanted us
to for the first time all year. W e’ ll
be there by the end of the
season."
But not by the end of the third
quarter. Apopka continually
forced Lake Mary Into turnovers
and raced up the floor for easy
layups. When Mike Lowinan
slam dunked after a steal,
Apopka took a 61-47 bulge into
the fourth quarter.
Hartsfleld. who finished with
18 points, hit a three-point play
with 5:42 left to pull Lake Mary
within 15. but two more turn­
overs and layups by Ralph
Shuler put the game permanent­
ly out of reach.
Clayton led Apopka with 16
points while Elmore udded 13.
Shuler and Darryl Bowens each
had 10. Jackson was also In
double figures for Lake Mary
with 10. Merthle. averaging 22
ppg. took Just nine shots and
made three for seven points. He
collected three rebounds while
handing out five assists.
APOPKA (14) —Rlc* I, Shuler 10, Johntort
ft. Lawman (. Bowant 10. Elmora 1), Clayton
V*. Jamat 1. Hardwick0. Totali: It 0 1104.
L A K E M A R T I n ) - M e rthle 7. H a rtifle ld
II , C ie m le |e w ilil 0. Newby 4. C ra yto n t.
R eynold! 14. W lllli 4, Jackeon 10. W athlnglon
4. T o ta lt : I t I I M 71

Halftime — Apopka 17, Lake Mary Jt.
Poult —Apopka M. Lake Mary II. Fouledout
—none. Technical —none. A —1J0.

Wall Ju st M isses
Softball's 'Triple'

Ploy Better Golf with JACK N1CKLAUS

County BM Xers *
O utride O rlando
S em in ole C ounty BM Xers
finished off 1984 with some big
wins over the Orlando riders
Saturday night at Barnett Park
In Pine Hills.
Danny Lom bardi, o f Lake
Mary, has had a pretty remark­
able yeartn BMX. His first place
finishes far out number any
other finish he's had. He was no
different In the 13-novlce class
this past Saturday. He brought
home another first place. Lornbatdl also raced the open class,
which is novice and experts
combined, and placed third.
Eric Lucia, o f Lake Mary,
placed second In the 9-novlce
class. Eric's older brother Scott,
who races In the 13-novlce class,
finished off with a fourth place.
Scott also raced the open class,
and placed fifth.
Ten-novice BMXcr Tim Pink
cruised to a second place finish
for the night.
Another 13-novlce racer Is
Todd Fink. This tough competi­
tor has nlso been consistent this
year. 11c placed second right
behind L om b ard i Saturday.
Another rider who has kept
consistent during the year Is
Ronnie Brewer. Ronnie, who
races 13-expert. Just turned
expert this year.
Saturday night he raced both
13-expert and the open class,
and placed third In both. "I
would huve hud first in 13expert, but In the third moto I
slid," said Ronnie.
Although Jay Staley raced this
weekend. It was not at Gordon
Barnett Park In Pine Hills. Jay
was finishing off 1984 at an NBL
national In Montgomery Ala. Jay
raced both 7-cxpcrt and open,
but only made the main In
7-expert class. He placed second
In all of his molos, qualifying
him for the main. Unfortunatlg,
he slid In the main and could
only place sixth.
In other action at Barnett Park
Saturday, the Bicycle Connec­
tion team came away with three
first-place finishes. Mark Kock,
17-crulscr, Jason Hefftngton,
14-novice, and Susan Koch.
12-girl, all crossed the line ahead
o f thereat.
n
David Sanborn. 14-cxpert,
earned a third plucc while Andy
Doering. 13-novlce. picked up a
fifth and J.P. Adam. 13-novlce.
came In sixth.

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NEW YORK (UPI) — With the college football season
over, the seniors can start learning how much they arc
worth. The U.S. Football League gave them an Idea today
when It opened Its third annual draft.
The draft, which has two phases, the open section and
territorial section, was held at the Grand Hyatt Hotel and
began at 10 a.m EST.
Blmlngham. the champions of the Southern Division,
held the No. 1 pick In the open draft. The Stallions secured
the first pick when they traded quarterback Reggie Collier
to the last-place Washington Federals (now Orlando
Renegades) last season. Birmingham Coach Rollie Dotsch
said he had two options In the open draft.
"You could pick a big-name guy. but then you're talking
about spending a lot of money, " he said. "T h e other route
is to draft someone we realistically have a chance to sign.
"These are the arras we're looking for help In. and In no
particular order.” Dotsch said. "There are 84 schools on
territorial lists. That's 350 players not available In the open
drait. So that reduces the draftables by a whole lot."
Teams are allowed to protect 25 players In the territorial
draft. The territorial selections were announced during the
first round of the open draft.

NEW YORK (UP1) — Some may dispute It. but
Brigham Young University Coach Lavell Edwards
doesn't Care. His Cougars arc No. I and no one
can take It away.
BYU, which posted the only perfect record
among major college football teams, Wednesday
was named 1984 national champion by the
United Press International Board of Coaches.
Many critics thought BYU. with its powder puff
schedule, didn't deserve to be No. 1. But no one
could dispute the Cougars' 13-0 record. Including
a victory over Michigan In the Holiday Bowl, and
that undoubtedly was the major reason most
coaches decided to reward the Western Athletic
Conference school with Its first national champi­
onship.
"I think the team handled the pressure well,"
Edwards said. "W e were always having to defend
our ranking.
"It's strange. As long as we were No. 3. 4th or
5th. nothing was said. Everyone felt comfortable
with that. But as soon as we were ranked No. 1. a
lot of people became uncomfortable."

*3T

Birmingham Has 1st Selection
As USFL Draft Opens Pro Wars

Herald BMX
W rite r

o

INBRIEF

Christy
Davis-

^

I H O

�\

V
r-

•A —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Jan. ), m s

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Stano: No Proof Murder
Occurred, No Execution
TALLAHASSEE fUPI) - The Florida Supreme Court has
scheduled oral arguments for next week to consider a claim
by self-confessed mass murderer Gerald Eugene Stano that
he should not be electrocuted for one o f the slayings
because the state never proved a murder occurred.
However. In a brief tiled with the court, the state says
there Is more than enough evidence to establish that Cathy
Lee Scharf. 16. o f Titusville was murdered In Brevard
County In 1973 and Stano did It.
Pathoglsts were unable to state an exact cause of death
and Identification was made by dental comparisons and
Jewelry.
“ The state has failed to rule out accidental, natural or
suicidal cause of death (In the Scharf case) and has failed to
establish that the cause of death was by the hands of
another," Stano's defense lawyer wrote.

Rape Victims1Needs Considered
CLEARWATER (UPI) — The emotional needs of rape
victims will be considered along with their medical needs
under a county-sponsored rape Investigation program
going Into efTect next month.
The medical examiner's office, already loaded down with
autopsies and other medical needs, will no longer examine
rape victims as has been the practice.
Instead victims will go to one of three health department
clinics In the county — at St. Petersburg. Clearwater or
Tarpon Springs — where they will be examined by a
three-member team consisting of a doctor specializing In
gynecology, a nurse and a counselor trained In the legal,
medical and emotional aspects of rape.
In the past, rape victims have complained of having to
wait hours for medical examinations and when they did
see a doctor the examination was cold and Impersonal and
their emotional needs were Ignored.

Storm 'Opened Eyes'
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Massive shoreline erosion
caused by Florida's Thanksgiving Day storm has "opened
the eyes" o f many coastal residents, a state beach
specialist says.
The Department o f Natural Resources said Wednesday It
Is still receiving applications for emergency beach
reconstruction work from landowners trying to protect
structures threatened by the massive erosion caused by the
' storm six weeks ago.
Nearly 300 emergency permits have been requested.
The storm battered the state's East Coast from the
Georgia line to south Palm Beach County, swelling tides as
high as 12 feet above normal. Nine counties suffered
significant damage.
"There will be a natural recovery but the problem Is It
(the sand) all doesn't come In at the same places and It all
doesn't come back." Paden Woodruff of DNR's Division of
Beaches and Shores said.

W eath er
NATIONAL REPORT: Winter
Storms In the Midwest and
Southwest have left 18 people
dead. 250.000 without power
snd covered highways with
carpets o f Ice.
. AREA READINGS (9 a.m,):
temperature: 68; overnight low:
63; W ed n esd a y's high: 82;
barometric pressure: 30.10; rela­
tive hum idity: 100 percent;
winds: southeast at 8 mph;
sunrise: 7:19 a.m.. sunset 5:41
p.m.
*. FR ID A Y TIDES: Daytona
Raaclu highs. 8:52 a.m., 9:05
p.m.; lows. 2:07 a.m.. 2:54 p.m.;
f o r t C anaveral: highs. 8:44
Jt.m.. 8:57 p.m.; lows. 1:58 a.m..
3:45 p.m.: Bayport: highs, 1:01
a.m., 2:59 p.m.; lows. 8:26 a.m..
8:10 p.m.
*
; ROATINO FORECAST: St.
‘Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Southeast wind 10 to 15
k n o t s b e c o m in g s o u th to
southwest around 15 knots to­
night then west to northwest 15
t&gt; 20 knots Friday. Sea 2 to 4
to
feet today and 3 to 5 feet tonight
n crea sln g o ffsh o re Friday.

Scattered showers and a few
thunderstorms mainly north
part ending Friday.
A R E A FORECAST: Today
mostly cloudy. Scattered show­
ers and a few thunderstorms.
High around 80. Wind southeast
to south 10 to 15 mph. Rain
chance 50 percent. Tonight
mostly cloudy. A 40 percent
chance o f showers. Turning
cooler with low In the 50s. Wind
mostly southwest 10 to 15 mph.
Friday cloudy but becoming
partly cloudy. A 20 percent
chance o f morning showers.
Cooler with high in the 60s.
Wind northwest 15 to 20 mph.
EXTENDED FORECAST:
Cloudy and cool north and
central with showers ending
Sunday. Partly cloudy and warm
south w ith a few ah ow era
through early Sunday becoming
fair and cooler Sunday and
Monday. Highs upper 50s north
and mid 60s central Saturday
through Monday and upper 70s
south Saturday then lower 70s
Sunday and Monday. Lows near
40 north and lower 50s central
Saturday through Monday and
near 70 south Saturday night to
upper 50s Sunday night.

million, and the American Medi­
cal Association and the National
Education Association, which
both laid out about $2 million.
Two years ago only seven PACs
gave more than $ 1 million.
plus recipients of special Interest
Fourth biggest giver In 1984
money: Rep. Phil Gramm, now was the National Association of
the freshman GOP senator from Home Builders. Five unions —
Texas, got nearly $1.4 million; the Auto Workers. Machinists.
and Sen. Charles Percy. R-lll., Letter Carriers, Seafarers, and
defeated for re-election, collected Food and Commercial Workers
S I.2 million.
— were the next largest contrib­
Their Democratic rivals. Lloyd utors. with political gifts ranging
Doggett who lost in Texas, who from $1.4 million to $1.7 mil­
received $810,000. and Rep. lion.
Paul Simon, the senator-elect
Altogether PACs gave a total of
from Illin ois, who received $104,372,229 to candidates for
$904,000. were among the top the House and Senate with more
dozen Sennte recipients.
than $76 million — 73 percent of
Seventeen PACs spent more the total — going to Incumbents,
than $1 million on the election, the report said. In 1982 cam­
led by the National Association paigns. PACs gave $84 million
of Realtors, which spent $2.5 and In 1980. $55 million.

PACs Gave Out Record
$104 Million Last Year
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Con­
tributions to 1984 House and
Senate races by special Interest
political action committees hit a
record $104 million, with the
bulk going to Incumbents and
winners, a study by a Ralph
Nader group says.
The report released Wednes­
day by Public Citizen's Congress
Watch, based on reports filed
w ith the Federal E lection s
Commission, showed 95 can­
didates got $200,000 or more
from PACs. Four years earlier
only five contenders got that
much or more.
There were two $1 million-

S tra y

M is s ile

S p a rk s

P ro te s t

OSLO. Norway (UPI) - A
sea-lau n ch ed S o vie t cruise
missile roared over Norway and
Into Finland, shaking houses
and o ffic e b u ild ings before
crashing harmlessly In Finnish
Lapland, officials said.
N o r w e g ia n o ffic ia ls said
Wednesday they would file a
protest with Moscow over the
v io la tio n o f th eir airspace.
Finland, a non-aligned nation on
the Russian border, has not
Indicated If It will also file a
protest.
The Defense Ministry said
W edn esday radar operators
tracked the short-range cruise
m issile fired from a Soviet
warship In the eastern Barents
Sea as It streaked through
strategic Norwegian airspace
and Into Finland.
Norway Is a member of NATO
military wives and an estimated 56.000 Flori­
and Its territory Is the northern
dians might be eligible to apply for benefits under
flank of the Atlantic alliance.
the new program.
Experts speculated that a
Jeanne Buchan, a divorced military wife who
technical fault made the missile
lives In Cocoa Beach and lobbyist for National
go astray during a test firing and
Action for Former Military Wives, praised the
that Soviet technicians were
modification but cautioned only p "nominal
unable to steer It away from
number" of women will be eligible because of the
Scandinavia.
law’s stringent qualifying criteria.
Norw egian Suprem e Com ­
The law stipulates that ex-wlvcs must have m ander Gen. F redrlk Bullbeen married to their military spouses for at least Hansen said he did not believe
20 years and have served at least 20 years of the Incident was a Soviet move
active duty with them. In addition, their to test NATO preparedness along
husbands must have a 20-year service record In the 124-mlle Sovlet-Norweglan
the military.
border.

A First Step For Ex-M ilitary Wives
By United Prese International
New legislation enabling thousands of former
wives of military personnel to become eligible for
various military benefits Is only the first step
toward parity. Florida supporters said.
The new legislation Is modification of the
Former Spouse Protection Act that went Into
effect Wednesday and offers former military
wives a chance to regain their military medical
benefits and some base privileges.
The retroactive modification covers women
divorced before the original act went Into efTect
Feb. 1. 1983 and could affect 800.000 women
nationwide.
Florida has the thlrd-largest number of ex-

...F u n d
Continued from page 1A
because It was necessary to
maintain his business. He also
admitted to using a city car
while making trips on city and
personal business at the same
time. As for the expense money.
Sorenson said It was coming to
him anyway but he neglected to
read the ordinance and follow
the proper procedure for getting
It.
K eogh ack n ow led ged that
Sorenson "really screwed up."
but said the city commission's
censure was enough punish­
ment for a man who served Lake
Mary 10 years. Sorenson was
mayor that long before being
beaten In the last election by
banker Dick Fess.
"I take a look at the number of
hours Walt gave Lake Mary.
Whenever Lake Mary needed

Walt, he was there." Keogh said.
"His Job sulTered and his family
suffered, mainly because he was
there for th ecltv."
The Issue has become a matter
of "persecution not prosecu­
tion." Keogh said, because Fox

...Trash
Continued from page 1A
Christmas and New Years holi­
days city employees were given
Monday and Tuesday of the past
two weeks off as holidays the
same as employees of many
businesses.
"T h e crews are doing five
days' pickups In three." Knowles
said.
Meanwhile there might be
another culprit — scavengers.
There have been recent reports
of scavengers raiding garbage
cans at homes and apartment

Women Suspected In Abortion
Bombings Released To Moms
PENSACOLA (UPI) - Two
women accused of helping bomb
four abortion clinics were re­
leased In their mothers' custody,
but a Judge denied ball to one of
two men who confessed to plan­
ting the explosives on order from
God.
"(to one can guarantee us that
God will not give him such a
calling again." said U.S. Magis­
trate Robert Congeyer. explain­
ing Wednesday why he had

has a personal grudge against
Sorenson stemming from an
argument the two had when Fox
was a commissioner two years
ago.
But Fox said: "1 have no
vendetta against the man. But I
don't like him."

He added that by filing the
complaint with the ethics com­
mission he was "doing Keogh's
Job." He said by washing Its
hands of the matter, the city
commission did not fulfill Its
duty to the citizens of Lake
Mary.

complexes In the early morning
hours on garbage pickup day
looking for salvagablc Items.
In some Instances. It has been
reported scavengers leave the
garbage strewn about on side­
walks. streets and lawns.

should be warned they are
trespassing and then the police
should be called If they do not
cease.

Assistant City Manager Steve
Harriett and City Attorney Bill
Colbert agree residents In these
Instances have a remedy.
Colbert said until garbage and
trash Is picked up by city crews.
It remains the property of the,
residents as long as It Is placed
on their private property. In
these Instances, scavengers
1100 FRENCH AVE.
MNF03P, FL

If scavengers leave garbage
strewn about so that It can be
blown by the wind, they are
guilty of violating the clty.code.
Colbert said, and If charged and
found guilty can be punished by
a $500 fine or 60 days In Jail or
both.
Harriett said residents do not
have to watch helplessly as
scavengers rummage through
their garbage. He advises them
to call the police.

322-7953 I

refused ball for James Thomas
Simmons.
Simmons' wife. Kathy Sim­
mons. 18. and Kaye Wiggins. 18.
of Pensacola, surrendered to
federal authorities Wednesday
morning on charges of conspira­
cy and aiding and abbetting the
bombings.
The fourth defendant. Matthew
Goldsby. 21, were ordered to
appear In court Jan. 7.

D O N ’T
M IS S

T O T A L IN SU RA N C K
REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

F U R N IT U R E &amp; A P P L IA N C E

■AIVUkM CASUALTY

c o a rm

AREA DEATHS
MARGARET A. BIELDC
• Mrs. Margaret A. Biellk. 79. of
801 Sweetwater Blvd. South,
Longwood. died Wednesday at
0outh Sem inole Com m unity
Hospital. Longwood. Bom Dec.
;14. 1905 In Pittsburgh, she
moved to Longwood from there
In 1964. She was a retired
hospital dietitian.
! Survivors Include a daughter.
Janet Pltschman, Longwood;
Son, Elmer. Pembroke Pines; two
brothers. Ernest Schlndehette,
Pittsburgh, Martin Schlndehette,
PaUn Harbor; slater, Mildred
Bruce. Cumberland, Md.; five
‘g r a n d c h ild r e n : f iv e g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B aldw ln -F alrch lld Funeral
Home, Forest City, Is In charge
o f arrangementa.
RUBY C. PETTY
Mrs. Ruby C. Petty. 84. o f 989
O r i e n t s A v e . , A lt a m o n t e
Springs, died Tuesday at Florida
N ospltal-A ltam on te Springs.
Bom August 27. 1900 In Meridi­
an, Miss., she moved to Alta­
monte Springs from
Birmingham. Ala. In 1973. She
w a s a h o m e m a k e r an d a
m em b er o f E n sley B aptist
Church. Birmingham.
• Survivors Include a son. Rob­
ert H., Fern Park; two grandghlldren; two g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
I Pine Castle Memorial Chapel

-A ft »• to • W. '«

‘

Funeral Home. Orlando. Is In
charge of arrangementa.
ISAAC "IK E " SANDERS
Mr. Isaac "Ik e " N. Sanders. 86.
of 2545 Park Drive, Sanford,
died W ednesday at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. Bom
April 20. 1898 in Sawtella. Miss.,
he moved here In 1966 from
Memphis. He was retired from
the Federal Reserve Bank of
Memphis. He was a Methodist.
Survivors Include hla wife, Car­
rey S.; one daughter. Mary
Lucille Ervin, both o f Sanford;
two grandchildren; two great­
grandchildren.
Oaklawn Funerl Home. Lake
Mary. Is In charge o f arrange­
ments.

F u n B ro l N o tlc s ________
MNOiai.MS."IKI"
-C ravM M t m tv lest tor Mr. I im c “ Iks"
Sandtrt. M. ol 1MI Park Drlva. Sanlord, who
dtod Wadnaaday, will ba hald Saturday at 1
p m. a! Oaklawn Mamortal Park wttft ttw
Rav. Ralph Fry officiating. Vlaitatlan tor
family and frlanda will ba Friday M p.m.
Oaklawn Funaral Hama/camatory/ftowor
•hop — a hill aervica funaral homa. Laka
Mary. In charge

SEMINOLE MONUMENT CO.
D IS P LA Y /S A LE S
22M W. 25th St.
Sanford, FL 32771

IN S U R A N C E A O N N C Y me,
413 W. First St.

Pfc. 322-5762

William H. “Bill” Wight C.P.C.U.
President

Sanford
Robert E. "Bob" Kama
Vico Praaldent

(r Wehelpfamiliesrecover from
alcohol anddragdependency.
Alcoholism and Drug Dependency are
treatable illnesses. You can get help for
yourself or for a family member. Call the
Helpline, TO D A Y.

18- H

O U R

S U P ER
SA LE!

Erie MacDonald understands
You can reach him at
2 5 2 -H E L P or through the toll
free helpline:

1-800-ALC0H0L
■ H u m a n a H o s p ita l
D a y to n a B o a c h

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
9 a.m. ’TIL 6 p.m.

400 North Clyde
Morns Boulevard
Daytona Beach, F L 32020

3 2 3 -S S S S

30 • 6 0 • 9 0 DAYS W IT H N O F I N A N C E C H A R G E !

•• *•

l&gt;» k„

�lrrrB itV Lt: &gt;
iL T m m iM m n # m
.ho s u p e r '
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TWO H A N D LE KITCHEN
FAU C ET

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In clear, brown or paintable white
10.3 fl. 02.

Triple plated chrome finish. 8" on
centers. No. 9210.
H

a
Week!
Open Sunday

0a.m.’til6p.m.

W HEELBARROW

10 amp burnout protected
[ motor, double insulated
construction. No. 559.

Wms 77.95

W

s 0 (/i

3

Real wood backing. 3.0mm
harvest planked panel, «

4 cubic foot capacity.

4' Fluorescent
SHOP LIG H T &lt;5
Includes two
4 0 watt tubes.
No. S L240-KL
R«g. 11.88

CScoSG

In green, cocoa, Mexican orange,
and blue-green. 12' width
■

■

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Scotty*

Scotty*
No. YLR20.

Your Choice f
■oa wyftth C o u p o n

7BC

Coupon Eapica# Jan . S

Scotty's Coupon

(

Scotty’s Coupon

I

Scotty's Coupon

V

I

�E m w m

[blp I

• . ss
Gallon

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Gallon White
Reg. 4.49

M O B IL
P A IN T

Colors
Reg. 4.99

p"d i l A i

Professional C o a tin g s

_ IN T E R IO R
P r o fe s s io n a l

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House
Paint.

C o a tin g s

in t e r io r

M U K Q ff
s e im
# 3 0 ACCENT BASE
2 8 9 -3 0
•3 0 Fl O Z 13 75 O l

WHITE 290-17
1 Gallon

Lufkin

base

TUFTTONES CARPET

s s a r,

Provides adequate space for top
and bowl.

3.785 liter*

Combines cleaner, defoamer, odor
neutralizer, static control agent, and a
brand-new soil retardant called
No-Soil™ that protects carpet from
dirt and spills. 64 fl. oz.

100% nylon level loop. In gold, earth
and green. Foam bkk. 12' width.

Level loop commercial texture. In
tweeds. 1 2 'width.

Scotty*
Choose from household,
automotive or plumber's
4.5 fl. oz.
y
Your Choice

/

BLUE LUSTRE

r-

WATER HEATERS

Accent VINYL SHEET
FLOORING

Forecast Vinyl amgoteum
SHEET FLOORING

It's the lightest, most flexible, easiest
vinyl flooring to install. Ask your ^
Scotty's salesman about our
'Goof-Proof' guarantee.

Cushion-backed. No-wax. 12‘ width.

W

M

I

f

^
( I

399

Sq.Yd.

^

Double element 1 Vi" foam
^
insulation. 4 5 0 0 watts. Recovers
18V4 gallons per hour.
K O O fl
30-gallon,
No. TF5-30-2CRS

|

^
^

Reg. 6.99

Cbngoleum :

TWO HANDLE
LAVATORY FAUCET
Triple plated chrome finish. For
lavatories with 4" centers. Pop-up
included. No. 9620 __
^

•

•

T Reg. 136.95

Synthetic Turf
RUNNERS

40-gallon,
No. TF5-40-2CRS

In blue/black, brown/tan,
green/black or lawn green.

In six charming colors. Urethane back

Your Choice:

Your Choice:
52-gallon,
No. TF5-52-2CRS

OAK TOILET SET
No. TS033.

Lafayette Water Saver
CLOSET COMBINATION
Grade 'A' first quality. Uses 50%
less water than other —
—
unit*. (Lesa seat and
^ 1
supply.)
U *
No. W S 1100/1000.

HEATER TIMERS
125 volts or 250 volts.

Your Choice:

TEMPEST TORCH KIT
Includes fuel cylinder, standard
pencil point burner and burner
valve assembly. No. LP-5555.

CLAW HAMMERS
Fiberglass handle with No. 8001
A /F curved d a w or No. 8003 A /F
ripping claw.

i

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�A L K A L IN E
B A TTER IES

duraceDLv

'C \ 'D' and *AA' (twin
pack) or 9-volt (single
pack).
Your Choice

Siliconized
SU PER KO RKER

SCOTTLUBE
Penetrates deep to
protect your tools and
keep them working
smoothly. 9 oz. aerosol
can.

Interior/eK*erior use. In
white. 10.5 fl. oz. cartridge

Was 2.49

Your Choice

SPRA1

RICAN1

Clear Gloss
Finish

R ID -A -R A T K e n C O
Ready mixed, easy to use.
Use indoors and outdoors.
16 oz., No. 930. ^
Was 2.89
4m F

sco rn s

SALE PRICE
LESS MFG’S
MAIL-IN REBATE

Deluxe 32 gallon
rectangular trash can
with wheels.
No. W B326.

^

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PADLOCK
Exclusive piercing 85 decible
solid-state alarm. 6 ft" diameter,
2" deep. No. 4002.

M a s te n

Double wall construction.,
Stainless steel outer casing, case
hardened steel shackle. 1 ft"
case. No. 1500-D.
/lim its

ROUND POINT
SHOVEL
No. IFPAR243.

BRENTW OOD
S T O R A G E BUILDING
No. BW54.

OAn

LAN TER N

EM ERGENCY '
U6HT

Comes with one 6-volt
lantern battery. No. DFL

Comes with one 6-volt
lantern battery.
No. DFE.

~ Gallon

Kenco*

49-PIECE SOCKET SET

FIRE AWAY®
10-B:C FIRE
EXTINGUISHER

1 / 4 ” a 3 / 8 ”. No. 11-HM 49.
10* x 20'. Super strong 2
mil.
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Effective on gasoline,
oil, kerosene, grease,
and other flammable
liquids. Coast Guard
approved Range: 13
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Expanded polystyrene insulation
in 3 /4 " x 1 4 ft" x 48 " sheets,
R -2.82.*
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P E R M A -R -F O A M

PRICES GOOD THRU JANUARY 9
Opan Sunday from 10:00 a.m. IN S:00 p m.

In white and colors,
12 oz. net weight.
-OPEN TIL 0 PM
SANFORD
700 French Am
Phona 333-4700I

I

I

I

�\

PEO PLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Jan. 3, I f t l - I B

Finding Lost Loves
Eye's Investigative Specialty Is Bringing People Together
Bj Sheila Orlaaett-Welah
Special To The Herald
LOS ANGELES. Calif. (UPI) - Finding "lost
loves" Is the real-life business o f Southern
California private eye Lloyd Shulman, the man
whose unusual 25-year-career Inspired a televi­
sion series.
Like actor Tony Franclosa. who plays attorney
Gary Maxwell on the network’s new Saturday
night series "Finder of Loot Loves." Shulman
reunites people long separated.
However, Shulman does not smash bad guys or
break down doors.
He claims to have located from 40,000 to
50.000 people since he decided to make It his
Investigative specialty In 1960.
Shulman said he was contacted about a year
ago by 20th Century Fox studio personnel who
had heard of his unique operation.
"T h ey said they thought I'd make a good
subject for a television show. 1 said. ’ Let’s do It.’
He Is under contract to the studio as technical
consultant, but all the story lines are fic­
tionalized.

"I sat down and told them about a lot of my
cases, so they’d know what I do. Their writers
take care of the rest."
Although Shulman said he finds someone every
day of the year, the holidays are particularly
busy.
"People start thinking a lot ... In many cases,
stubbornness and pride played a big part In the
separations." There was the former Marine drill
sergeant who told his son to hit the road If he did
not like the rules. The boy did and. 20 years later.
Dad wants him home.
"Stubborn people say stubborn things. They
think someone will be gone a week, not 15 or 20
years."
There was the mother who criticized her
daughter's long-haired boyfriend Just once too
often back during the hippie generation. "She
slammed the door on her mother that night and
never came back. Flficen years later, the mother
asked me to find her. They were reunited right
here In my office but neither one of them could
remember the name of the boy with long hair and
dlrtv fingernails."

Shulman routinely reunites families split by
divorce and custody disputes. In a highly
publicized recent case, an Orange County woman
was reunited with the mother and brother she
had not seen In 29 years.
"Oh. I love these cases. People hug and kiss
each other. Then they hug and kiss me.
Shulman’s favorite cases always have an
element of romance, and Valentine's Day brings
clients out of the woodwork.
"Guys begin to think about old girlfriends.
They decide they want to send her a dozen
roses." he said. "H e doesn't care Is she’s married
or If she’s a grandmother. He Just wants her to
know that he remembers."
In one case, a young man and woman met on a
merry-go-round at an amusement park and were
separated when the man went off to World War II.
After the war. each got married to someone else,
turn divorced. In the 60s. "I gol them back
together and their romance rekindled." said
Shulman."As far as I know they’ re still together.”
He wants the world to know there Is a detective
In Southern California who wants to find the

person they love.
"H alf the time, it Isn’t even hard. I Just helped a
man who had been looking for his kid brother 25
years. I found htm In two days.
"Every time I see a skid row bum 50 years old
or younger. I think. ’ Now there’s a little mother
somewhere looking for you.’ Those arc the tough
ones to solve, people who don’t have a home but
are too ashamed to go back to the old one."
Shulman Is considering organizing a missing
persons club Just to get the word out.
"I Just want people to know that they don’t
have to be rich. I do what 1 do because I love It. It
makes me feel good.
"Back In the ’30s. as a youngster, I listened to
the radio program "Mr. Keane — Tracer of Lost
Persons" and thought It would be the greatest
thing to bring families hack together again.
"B y accident. I became an Investigator, then
later decided to specialize In missing people.
"Before, when I did divorce and theft cases,
people didn’t always love me. Sometimes they
even came after me with tire Irons. Now they
want me to be In their weddings. It’s great."

Imagination Goes Wild For
Widow Longing For Romance
! DEAR ABBTi I was a happy,
respectable wife for 40 years,
and now I’m a lonely, respect­
a b le w id o w . I w o rk , Join
women’s clubs, do good works
and spend a lot of quiet evenings
watching television.
Do you know what I would like
better than anything on earth?
I’d like for my phone to ring
right now. and hear a male voice
say. "M l be by In 15 minutes to
take you to dinner and a movie
— then we’ll go to my place and
spend the night."
In other words, at this late
date. I’m plain boy crazy — more
boy crazy than I ever was at 15.
Please tell me. Dear Abby. do
other widows have this pro­
blem?
V ery often when I see a
nice-looking older man on the
street, I wonder what It would be
like to go out with him. And
more.
My Imagination Just goes wild.
I'm really ashamed of myself.
Please tell me. am I normal?
What’s wrong with me? Do other
widows have this problem?
YOUNG AT HEART

want her friends to know.
ALONE IN FLORIDA

Dear
Abby
right through my blue Jeans,
shirt and underclothes.
My question; Arq these clothes
safe to wear? I'm afraid they
may be contaminated or radioac­
tive because they were X-rayed
through. If these clothes are
contaminated. I won't hesitate to
throw them away. I haven’ t
worn them since I was X-rayed.
DUMB QUESTION
DEAR QUESTIONi There are
no "dum b" questions. Just un­
informed people who never learn
because they're afraid o f ap­
pearing "dum b."
* •
The clothes you wore while
you were X-rayed are safe to
wear. The rays from an X-ray do
not remain In the clothing.

D E A R ABBYt This Is Tor
"Mrs. L. In Old Bridge. N.J." and
DEAR YOUNOi Nothing Is thousands of others who think
’ ’ w r o n g " with you. Y o u ’ re beer Is harmless.
normal, and you need not be
My wife had surgery for a
ashamed o f yourself. You're gallbladder problem. Immediate­
longing for some romance In ly after the operation, the sur­
your life, and you're fantasizing.
geon summoned me by Intercom
Other widows have the same to the operating room. He asked.
p ro b le m , and so do som e "W h y didn’t you tell me your
divorcees and married women.
wife Is an alcoholic?"
And lest -you think this pro­
1 replied, "I didn't know she
blem Is for women only. I assure was. Although she consumed
you that men also hunger for four or five six-packs a week. I've
romance.
never seen her Intoxicated.”
The doctor said. "Beer Is as
DEAR A B B Y i What I am alcoholic as hard liquor If one
about to ask you may sound consumes enough of It. Your
dumb, but I have to ask It wife's liver Is so bad, had I
regardless.
k n o w n , I w o u l d n 't h a v e
Recently I went to a chiroprac­ performed the surgery. She has
tor because of some back trou­ only a few months more — at
ble. The first thing the doctor did best."
was take a lot o f X-rays. I never
Ten days later she died. I
liked X-rays; I’m afraid of the learned too late how "harmless"
radiation. Anyhow, he X-rayed beer Is. No name, please. I don't

‘Ten Women'
A rt Exhibit

DEAR ABBY: Five months
ago I gave birth to a beautiful
little girl. My husband and I
couldn't be happier.
U n fortu n a tely, she has a
rather conspicuous strawberry
birthmark on her forehead. The
doctor said It will gradually fade
and disappear entirely by the
time she is 3 years old. Although
I’d rather she didn’t have It. the
birthmark doesn't bother me:
I'm Just thankful she's healthy.
V.’hat docs bother me Is that
every time I take her out. at least
three strangers ask me what Is
"w ron g" with her. It's obviously
a birthmark, and I think It’s very
rude of people to ask.
I came up with what I think Is
a pretty good answer:
. .
Stranger: "W hat's wrong with
your baby'/"
Me: "Nothing. What's wrong
with you?"
Please let me know If you
think this Is ull right, or do you
have a better answer?
NEW MOM
D E A R M O M : T h o se w ho
would ask a stranger, “ What's
wrong with your baby?" are
curious and Insensitive and
don’t realize they're being rude.
Simply say. "It's a birthmark,
and the doctor says It will
disappear by the time she's 3."

The accom panying painting
by M o n a J o rd a n w ill be
Included In "T e n W o m en " In
a r t a t th e S a m p s o n A r t
G a lle ry , Stetson U n iversity,
D eL an d , fro m Jan. 7-13. The
public Is Invited to the e x h ib ­
ition during g a lle ry hours:
S aturdays, from 10 a .m . to 4
p .m .; Sundays, 1 to 4 p .m .,
and w eekdays, 10 a .m . to 4
p .m . A reception, open to the
public, Is scheduled Jan. 6,
fro m 5-7 p .m . The 10 F lo rid a
a rtis ts showing th e ir w orks
In the colorful exhibition a re :
M o n a J o rd a n , Jan e In g ra m A l l e n , L o u is e C h e r w a k ,
N an cy D lllen , L iz Hanson,
P a t Jo slln , Susan M a r tin ,
E llen P la n k e y and T y S tu art.

Rollins Registration To Begin
Registration for Rollins College evening classes
begins Jan. 14 and continues through Feb. 4.
Adults interested In enrolling for a full credit class
should visit the Division of Continuing Education
office at the comer of Lyman and Knowles
Avenues In Winter Park, or call 646-2232.
More than 60 classes will be offered during the
term that begins Feb. 4 and concludes May 18.
All Rollins College credit classes are taught by
full-time Rollins faculty members or by selected
experts from the professional community. Classes
are scheduled during late afternoon and evening
hours for the convenience of people who work.

Socials Highlight
Chapter's Season
As 1984 drew to a close,
members o f Preceptor Delta De­
lta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
toured the Henry S. Sanford
Library-Museum before meeting
at the home of Viola Frank.
Also, Margie Belne assisted at
the Antique Country Fair at
Lake Plneloch Village In Or­
lando. which Is a benefit for the
T h r e s h o l d S c h o o l for
b e h a v lo r a lly d y s fu n c tio n a l
children, as one o f the chapter's
service projects.
Members and husbands cele­
brated the season with a dinner
pdrty at the Langford In Winter
Park on Dec. 6 when they were
entertained with songs by Chuck
James.
Those attending were: Helen
and Don Hamner. Viola and
Dickie Frank, Leasle and Joe
Pauline. Betty and BUI Jack.

Linda and Wayne Keeling. Kitty
and Buddy Corley. Susan and
Rex byrd, Wanda and Frank
Hubbard, and guests, Joyce and
Gordon Btaaen.
Wanda Hubbard's festively
decorated home was the setting
for members' Christmas Grcenle
Party on Dec. 11. A variety of
hors d'oeurves prepared by
members were served and a
mixture o f beverages prepared
by the hostess, and gifts were
exchanged.
Members present were: Kitty
Corley. Lessle Pauline, Eve
Rogero. Linda Keeling. Margie
Belne, Susan Byrd. Marlon
Farella, V iola Frank. Helen
Hamner. Betty Jack, and Phyllis
Senkartk. Ellen Keefer was In
the hospital and was unable to
attend.

SEMI-ANNUAL

SHO E SALE

LADIES' SHOES wmnm N O W
THE

9 ( m s r come
NATURAUZER.

Candles

Shoe

renaljo

Marshmallows

MEN’S SHOES f S U f ^ S i M O W * I 4 “ . » 1 0 * ~
Bill Bass
Freeman

CHILDREN’*

i

shoetsmbAnwa
Allen Edmonds

MU i BMTS

SPORT SHOES

ftSften?*
Grandparents arc Bill and
Marianna Clarke. Tampa, and
Irene Johnson. Worcester. Mass.
Marie Johnston of Tampa is
the great grandmother.

All major academic areas are represented In the
Spring Term schedule. Among the classes being
offered are: Industrial Organization. Interviewing,
Southern Writers. Introduction to Jazz Dance.
History of China, International Marketing. Princi­
ples of Investments. College Algebra. Federal
Income Taxation and Personnel Management.

NOW IN PROGRESS! G R EA T S ELEC TIO N S ! G R EA T SAVINGS!

10-50% O f f

NEW ARRIVAL
Jennifer and Alton Drake o f
Casselberry announce the birth
o f their daughtr. Mercedes Ann.
on Dec. 28. at thg Physicians
Birthing Center. Longwood.

SHOE
STORE

Many adults choose to enroll at Rollins to earn a
college degree while others attend selected
classes to satisfy peraonel or career-related goals.
Program advisers are available to discuss varied
options.

Dingo

asM e
i$

Wlnthrop
Rand

H u sh

R ip p le */

2 0 -9 0 %

OPP
Qconvwsa

SHOE

208 E. FIRST ST.
Downtown Sanford
3 1 1 -0 1 0 4

M M .- I 1 M H . S M T .

****

Bata

Candies

Pro-Kads

STORE

M M JI
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�2B—Evening Hersld, Sanford, FI.

BLO NDIE

Thursday, Jan. 3, IfiS

by Chic Young

DEAR DR. LAMB — I’m 65
and have a heart problem. I am
under the care of two doctors.
One says I should have a bypass
and the other says I should wait
awhile. I'm taking InderaJ and
Dllatrate-SR.
My heart rate Is only 45 to 48,
which seems rather slow, and It
seems I'm always gasping for
breath. Would a faster heartbeat
give me more oxygen so I can
breathe better? I keep waking up
at night gasping for air, so I
seldom get a good night's sleep.
Also, would a pacemaker help
me?
I seldom have any pain. The
only thing I have Is this short­
ness of breath, and my chest
feels as If It has weights on It and
around the heartbeat area.
DEAR READER — Your letter
disturbs me. Your shortness of
breath could Indicate congestive
heart failure. Waking up breath­
less at night may be what
doctors call paroxysm al
nocturnal dyspnea; It usually
means that fluid Is accumulating
In the lungs because the left side
o f the heart Is not beating
strongly enough. I hope you
have talked to your doctors
about this. If you have con­
gestive heart failure, you need
something to help eliminate so­
dium — a low-sodium diet and
possibly som e m edicin e to
strengthen your heart's contrac­
tions. The weight on your chest
Is angina heart pain.
The slow heart rate may be
caused by you r m edicines.
Beta-blockers like Inderal. which
neutralize the action of adre­
naline. often cause the heart to
beat more slowly.However. It la
Important that you find out Just
what the cause of your slow
heart rate Is.
Beta-blockers like Inderal may
make congestive heart failure
w o r s e . T h e i r a c t i o n In
neutralizing adrenaline causes
this. Therefore, you need some
clear answers from your doctors.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
enclosing a clipping that de­
scribes Motrin os a time bomb.
Recently I had a severe pain In
my left arm and was found to
have arth ritis o f m y neck.
Motrin. 400 mg., was prescribed.
DEAR READER - Prescrip­
tion M otrin (gen eric name;

by Mori Walkar

BEETLE BAILEY
W H A T '5 T H E X

Lack
OfBreath Sign Of
Congestive Heart Failure

A B IT I S T H E

P IF F E K E N C E ^ S M A L L E S T
B E T W E E N B IT S I A V i O U H T Q F
A H P B Y T E S '? y IN F O R M A T IO N
I H T H E B IN A R Y
SYSTEM

T H IS C O M P U T E R H A S A N
0 - B I T P R O C E S S O R . 6 B IT S
E Q U A L S A B Y T E . 1 0 2 4 B YTES
E Q U A L S A K IL O B Y T E , IO O O
K IL O B Y T E S A
M EGABYTE

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sanaom

AS A IWJJEDOKIDMER, I AM OLLllfc
TDU PERSONALLY 1 D ^ YXK AOONT

IS OCRCRAWM N W AWXWT OFffc.

ARCHIE

by Bob Montana
tVBLL , PEOPLE WITH
S U P E R IO R IN T E L L E C T U A L

CAAAEIUTieSy AS I
HAVE. USUALLY
ADI/

EEK A MEEK

by Howl* Sclmeldar

Ibuprofen) Is 400 mg., and the
Ibuprofen products Advil and
Nuprin, which are available
without a prescription, are half
t h a t s t r e n g t h at 2 00 mg.
Motrin's actlre quite similar to
those o f aspirin. As the news
story you sent me said, Motrin
has been prescribed In the Unit­
ed States since 1974. It has not
been shown to have created a lot
o f kidney disease or other new
medical problems.

However, story makes a good
point. Many people who take
these medicines (Advil. Nuprltk
Tylenol and aspirin) do not need
any of them.
Send your questions to Dr.
numb. n o . Ho\ 1551. H.idlo City
Station. Sew York. S.Y. 10019. ;

Answer to Previous Puule

ACROSS

4 Munc syllable
5 Kick type
t Chert by
6 Civil War
pictures
general
9 Drink
7 Concerning (2
13 W e ird n e u
w d *)
14 Talking bird
8 Greek letter
15 P o u a ti
9 Small duck
16 Egyptian quean 10 Cable
o( denies
11 Author of
17 Enargy units
"Picnic"
18 Compaia point
12 Uttqr brokenly
19 Marriage vow
20 Billowy
(2 w d t)
eipsnte
2 0 U ie a broom
21 Two quartet*
21 Elaborate poem
22 Apothecary *
22 Down (pref)
weight
23 Cut into ih e e ti
26 Radioactive ele­ 23 Pintail
24 Hsather
ment
25 Division
38
31 Candy flavor
preposition
32 Genetic
39
material (abbr) 26 On*
27 Modern fabric
41
33 Pan time
28 Suffix
42
34 Grafted. in
29 Prod
43
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44
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35 Object
32 Fkit Iasi
36 Carrie* with
difficulty
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person
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lawmaker
15
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40 Granite State
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41 Good (Fr)
42 Slippery
46 Sound of
24
21
21
contempt
47 Navy ahip
11
prefix (abbr)
5 0 Skirt
14
51 Threihold
52 Kentucky blue
17
grais
53 Addict
54 Ocean
56 Peer
44
42
43
43 |
57 Netting

DOW N

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2 Shaped with an
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31

45 dess'/ fabric

Calligrapher's
need
Money (si)
Codon parts
Self satisfied
Mona
Don Juan's
mother
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47 Capable of (2
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WIN AT BRIDGE
i
By James Jacoby
In these precarious times,
there's nothing w rong with
guaranteeing a contract. If
you're playing the hand, ask
yourself how you can go set.
Then ask yourself what you can
do about It.

by Hargraavas A Sallara

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

Declarer played the 10 of
hearts from dummy, holding the
trick. Next came the queen of
clubs, and East discarded a
diamond. West was able to make
two club tricks, and South could
not dcvfclop more than eight
tricks. Certainly the hand was
unlucky. Pour outstanding clubs
very seldom divide 4-0. but at a
slight sacrifice of a possible
overtrlck. declarer could have

provided for any club distribu­
tion.
All he had to do was win the
first heart lead In his hand and
play a low club toward the
dummy's Q-J. It Is then easy for
him to make four club tricks,
and It Is Immaterial how they are
divided. He does sacrifice an
overtrlck when East started with
king and one club or king and
two small clubs. Giving up that
possible overtrlck is cheap In­
surance.
Here is what your thought
process should be; “ I might go
set If the clubs are divided 4-0.
What can I do about It?” Once
you get that far. you will wind
up making the hand.

NORTH

. .
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♦ 917

VK 101
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EAST
♦ K 653 I

WEST

♦ Q10
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¥ 54

♦ K 108 J

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SOUTH
♦ AJ 4
¥AJ9

♦ A 10 5
♦ A9 8 4

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Wesl

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East

So* Ik
14

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Past

2+
Pass

Pats
Pass

3 NT

Opening lead: ¥3

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

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ThAv&lt;S l* J-M

by Jim Datrls

your Image.
n K M
(Feb. 20-March 20)
Today If you're buying some­
thing for the home It's best to
YOUR BIRTHDAY
a v o i d fa d d is h t y pe s of
JANUARY 4 . 1 M B
merchandise. Goods o f this Ilk
You're likely to experience will quickly lose their charm.
stronger feelings o f Indepen­
A R U M (March 21-A^rll 19)
dence this coming year and this Improper planning today could
could prove to your advantage. cause you to retrace your tracks
However, don’t be too hasty In and perhaps even create com­
disbanding previously helpful plications that can be avoided.
alliances.
Take things a step at a lime.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 32-Jan.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
IB) Should you have to tackle an Continue to be realistic regard­
uncertain task today, make sure ing your finances and resources.
you have competent helpers who Do not make expenditures to­
can supply the know-how you day, hoping you'll be able to'
tack. Major changes are In store cover them at a later date.
for Capricorns In the coming
OBMDVI (May 21-June 20)
year. Send for your Astro-Graph You will be ineffective today If
predictions today. Mall $1 to you try to do too many things at
Astro-Graph, Box 489. Radio one time. Review your program
City Station. New York. NY and take all o f the non-essential
10019. Be sure to state your Irons out o f the fire.
zodiac sign.
CANCKR (June 21-July 22) If
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) you fall to keep pace with your
The most effective way to Im­ responsibilities today there's a
press others today Is Just by good chance they will gang up
being yourself. Pretending to be o n y o u a n d e v e n t u a l l y
something you're not will harm
overwhelm you.

ANNIE
TUMBLEWEEDS

by T. K. Ryan

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Try not
to make waves with your peer
group today by bucking the will
o f the majority. Introducing
divisive suggestions could spoil
everyone's fun.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In
competitive situations today, do
not make the mistake of un­
derestimating your adversaries.
If you take too much for granted,
you might be tripped up by your
own ego.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Size
up situations carefully today
before making a Judgment. Thjp
Is not the time to Jump tp
conclusions on sketchy In­
formation.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 23)
Normally you're a rather shrewfl
shopper, but today you might tap
more Intrigued by price than
q u a lit y and buy In fe rt d j
merchandise.
i;
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Associates will be disen­
chanted with you today if ydu
behave too Independently In
situations that call for coopera­
tion and teamwork.

by Ltonard Starr

�V

Evening HinW, Sintord, FI.

TONIGHT'S TV

Despite W hat TV Suggests
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★

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★

★

★

VIDEO

RADNOR. Pa. (UPI) - Televi­
sion news falsely causes many
people to believe most crimes
are violent and that crime rates
are rising, an expert says.
Criminologist Georgette Ben­
nett writes In the current Issue of
T V G u ide magazine that studies
Indicate heavy television viewers
"are the ones most rattled by the
myth of a crime explosion."
Bennett, host of the syndicated
radio show "Crime Line." says
sporadic TV viewers "tend to be
less fearful."
Only 10 percent of all crimes
are violent but 10 percent of
network and 20 percent of local
news time Is devoted to crime
stories, most of them violent, she
s a ys In the R ad no r - ba s ed
publication.

The emphasis occurs despite
statistics that show crime rates
fell In 1982 and 1983. she says.
"Ironically, It's those least at
risk who fear crime the most."
Bennett says. "T h e little old lady
next door Is not the one most
likely to be beaten or mugged.
It’s the young black dude on the
other side of town."
Bennett says media coverage
o f child abuse at day-care cen-

Pia Zadora
Has Baby Girl

*
&gt;

B U S IN ES S P E R S O N ’ S
LU N C H

&lt;
'
^

PRIME RIB, FLOUNDER
SEAFOOD SAMPLER
SMOTHERED CHICKEN

.

Lunch inctudo* chore* o / our potto**, chore*
o l aNad. cM c* o t Mad vagtraMa. hot brood

NEW Y O R K (UP'l) Pla
Zadora had a "tough tim e" of It.
but qftcr 20 hours In labor the
actress gave birth to a baby girl
who "looks Just like her" and
both mother and baby arc fine.
The baby, named Kady Zadora
Rlklls — her first name laken
from the c haracter Zadora
played In the movie "Butterfly"
— weighed In at 7-pounds 10ounces when she was born
shortly after 2 a.m. Tuesday at
Manhattan's Lenox Hill Hospital,
said Tlno Barzle, Zadora's man­
ager.
A hospital spokeswoman said
mother and daughter were doing
well.
The 28-ycar-old actress went
Into labor and was rushed to the
hospital at 6 a.m. Monday.
Barzle said Zadora had a "tough
tim e" giving birth and went
through 20 hours of labor.
"She was a little whipped, but
she's feeling much better to­
day." Barzle said Tuesday.
"T h e baby looks Just like her:
She has her nose, her Ups, the
same shaped head.”
Barzle said Zadora's husband,
m illio n a ire businessm an
Mcshulam Rlklls. 60. was with
her during the delivery.
Rlklls has three other children
from a previous marriage but
this is Zadora's first child. Rlklls
and Zadora have been married
for eight years.
Barsle said Zadora should be
out qf the hospital by Thursday
and plans to return to work
"Im m ediately."
Zadora has appeared In such
films as "Butterfly" and "Th e
Lonely Lady."

★

★

ters has led legislators "to give
priority to day-care centers
rather than the home." where a
high proportion of child abuse
occurs.
Similarly, reports on crime In
affluent neighborhoods have
caused fortunes to be invested In
security for upscale communi­
ties while "the really vulnerable,
low-income neighborhoods are
left unprotected." she says.

LOBSTER HOUSE A A N N E B O N N IE 'S TAVERN
2508 FRENCH AVE. (Hwy, 17-92) SANFO RD

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i l l l l l T l i i i l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l i m

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WE ARE NOW F U LL SERVICE DININ6

2400 S. French Avs.
Family Dfnlng
Sanford, Fla.
Carry Out l Delivery
____ I I

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it iqmm oofI mnni mumn

LARGE PIZZA

% X -L A R G E PIZZAw

ith Cheese A 2 Items

Alexander Goodbuddy On WCPX
Alexander Goodbuddy's Good
News Magazine Show will be
prem iering
on
WCPX
channel 6 on Saturday, January
19at7:30a.m.
For the next 13 weeks. Alexander will be taking children on
a tour o f theme parks and
historical sites all over the
country In an exciting magazine

blossoming television Industry.
Later this month. Alexander
will attend the National Assoclat»°n of Program Television Exccutlves (NAPTE) In San Francisco and negotiations with dlstributors and television groups
should place Alexander Goodbuddy's Good News Magazine In
national syndication by spring.

IN VHS OR BETA
FOR RENT OR SALE
★

Thunder, J«n. I, 1W-3B

Six Luncheon
Features From

amous

★

Your

C h o ic e

WE
PURCHASE
MORTGAGES

( l i r i s f o*s
I n mil \
It &lt;"sf n ii rn n l
e

549 L A K E M A R Y B LV D
DOWNTOWN SANFORD
1 0 7 W E S T F I R S T ST
M .„

•&gt;. *. AM h PM
S .l / I M k P M
Sun 7 AM l PM

I Mil, I «s1 01 I 4

Mim thuo. h AM 'i I'M
•n A S.l I, AM 10 PM
SuihU, 'AM
I PM

373 -5 62 5

3 2 2 -3 4 4 3

1) Two Piece Chicken Lunch
2 PIbcbb of golden brown Lh 'i " Famous Recipe*
Country Chicken, mixed, (No Substitutions Please)
your choice of two of our delicious side Hems, and a
fresh, hoi, homemade butler tealln biscuit.

2) Country Fried Steak Dinner
TWo Lee's" Famous Recipe* Country Fried Bleaks,
choice of two of our delicious side Hems, and a
, hoi, homemade butler taslln biscuit.

K

3) Liver Dinner
Vi pint o l Lee's" Famous Recipe" livers, yout choice
of 2 of our delicious side Items, snd a fresh, hoi,
homemade butter taslln blecult.

4) Gizzard Dinner
Vi pint of Lee's" Famous Recipe* gizzards, your cho­
k e of 2 o l our delicious side Items, and a trash, hot,
homemade butler taa tin biscuit.

5) Chicken
Sandwich Platter
A Lea's" Famous Recipe* BBQ Sandwich and your
choicd of 2 ol our dallclous side Items.

6) Vegetable Plate
TRY

OUR
f AMOUS
GYRO
ANDWICH1

,'N I I AkIIMS III
HANU UIPP1 U
l ( | i HI AM 1 tO M lK I
L • I A k ls H A M l&gt;
\
IIIH YPI I lA l
i \ 01 1 A SHIN S
I I

II

Your choice of any four of lha following: com on the
. c o b , slaw, baked beans, potato salad, mashed
potatoes and gravy, green beans, or rad baans and
rice. Also Includes a fresh, hoi, homemade butter taetin
biscuit
Offer good from 10:30 s.m. Ul 3 p.m. daily except Wad. A Sun.
BANF0R0
CASSELBERRY
I French Ave.
41 N. Hwy. 17-B2

• 1U U IIN I
III I I I A I I SSI N
* A k 1 f INA »s
M ADI fO U K lif W

O u r I mu hc*on Spc»c i«ils
Kt»e»|is ^ o u ( omiiKt Bai K

•e is

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*•

4B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Jan. 3, IM S

legal NoticcT

Trial Date Set In Dramatic
Crash Which Left Man Dead

a point ol beginning 1.000 00 feet
South of IS* Intersection ol IS*
Easterly right o f way ol Sanford
Avenue and Ih* Southerly
right ol way ol Sliver Lake
Road, thence run N0O*ll‘04"E
A February 11 trial date has been over and left the road, striking a along said Easterly righto! way
ol Sanlord Avenue t.000 00 feet
set for a pickup truck driver charged Pontiac. The the bed of the truck to the Intersection of Ih*
with the DU1 manslaughter of an ripped off and flew over the roof of Easterly right of way ol Sanlord
Orlando man.
the car. The truck then flipped and Avenue and IS* Southerly
right of way of Silver Lake
David Eugene Megahee. 22. of spun over the Pontiac, throwing Road, thence run S0t*ST'0)"E
Orlando, was taken Into custody Dec. Magahee out of the vehicle. As the along the Southerly right of way
13 after a warrant was Issued for his truck slammed to a halt. Kendall was of Stiver Lake Road 1171.10 teet.
thence run S00*1)04"W parallel
arrest by the -State Attorney's Office. thrown out. Kendall died shortly to the Easterly rlghtof way ol
He Is charged with the death of afterwards at Winter Park Memorial Sanford Avenue 1.000 00 teet,
thence run NlrtSTOTW parallel
Darren Kevin Kendall. 22. of Orlando. Hospital.
to the Southerly right of way ol
Megahee was hospitalized at the Silver Lake Road 1171.10 teet to
Kendall, passeqger la Megahee's
truck, died shortly after a four-vehicle Orlando Regional Medical Center. Six the Easterly right ol-way ol
accident Aug. 19 on state Road 436 other people Involved In the accident Sanford Avenue and the point ol
beginning.
near Oxford Road. Casselberry.
received minor Injuries. According to
SECTION 1; Thai upon this
Megahee's arrest followed a lenghty court records. Magehee has been Ordinance becoming effective,
homicide Investigation Into the ac­ unemployed since the accident the property owners and any
' resident on the property d*
cident by the Casselberry Police because of Injuries.
scribed herein shall be entitled
Records show that because of the to all the nght» and privileges
Department.
A c c o r d i n g to c o u rt records. extensive Injuries Megahee and and Immunities as are Irom
lima to time granted to resi­
Megahee's truck was westbound on Kendall received, the police In­ dents and property owners ol
SR 436 when It crossed the median vestigated the accident as a traffic the City ol Sanlord. Florida, and
and started traveling westbound In h omi ci de b efo re Kendal l died. as further provided In Chapter
171, Florida Statute*, and shall
the eastbound lane. The Incident Megahee was unconscious for several further
be sub|*ct to the re
occurred at about 1:43 a.m. and the days after the accident and It was sponslbllltle* of residence or
subsequent accident stopped trafTlc difficult for the police to decide that ownership as may Irom lima to
lime be determined by the
he was the driver, the records shows.
In both lanes for about two hours.
governing authority ol Ih* City
The case Is scheduled to be tried ol Sanlord. Florida, and Ih*
According to the court records, the
truck drove over a Caprts, (lipped before Seminole Circuit Judge Robert provisions of said Chapter 171,
Florida Statute*.
over on Its side and skidded along the McGregor.
SECTION 1: If any section or
— D eane J o rd a n
road. It then struck a Bulck. rolled
portion ol a section ol this
ordinance proves to be Invalid,
unlawful, or unconstitutional, It
shall not be held to Invalidate or
Impair the validity, lore* or
effect of any other section or
part ol this ordinance.
PORTLAND. Ore. (UPI) - Bud of Incumbent Frank Ivancle was
SECTION 4: Thai all ordl
greeted
by
the
media
as
a
new
era
In
nances or parts ol ordinance* In
Clark, a tavern owner known for his
conflict herewith, be and the
"Whoop! Whoop!" campaign cry and city government.
same are hereby revoked.
his "Expose Yourself to Art" poster,
SECTION S: That this ordl
The "Expose Yourself to A rt" nance
shall become effective
rode a bicycle to his Inauguration and
poster, featuring Clark holding open Immediately upon Its passage
took pictures of photographers taking
his raincoat and supposedly flashing and adoption.
pictures of him.
A copy shall be available at
Clark. 53, who garnered more than a nude statue in downtown Portland, the Office ol Ih* City Clerk lor
all person* desiring to examine
was
famous
even
before
Clark
began
50 percent of the vote In a primary
the same.
election In May, had never held his campaign. The poster has become
All parties In Interest and
cllltens shall have an opportuni­
political office and his stunning upset a collector's Item since.
ty to be heard al said hearing.
By order ol the City Com
mission of the City of Sanlord.
Florida.
AOVICE TO THE PUBLIC: II
a
person decide* to appeal a
N O T IC E O P A P U B L IC
decision
mad* with respect to
HEARINO TO CONSIDER THE
any matter considered al Ih*
AD O PTIO N OF AN O R D I­
above meeting or hearing, he
NANCE BY THE CITY OF
A Longwood couple arrested after a moving
may need a verbatim record bl
SANFORO. FLORIDA.
the proceedings, Including the
company tipped off Seminole County sheriffs
Notlc* I* hereby given that o
testimony and evidence, which
Public Hearing will be hold ol
deputies that the pair had Illegal drugs were
record Is not provided by the
tho Com min ion Room In IS*
sentenced to 30 months probation each.
City ol Sanlord. (FSMS0I0S).
City Moll In IS* City of Sonford.
H. N. Tamm, Jr.
Mark Barry Falber. 33. and Brenda Susan
Florid*. *1 7:00 o'clock P.M. on
City Clerk
January 1*. ItSS. to consider tS*
Falber. 34, o f 162 Dartmouth Lane, were
Publish: December N. &gt;7, 1SS4
adoption ol on ordinance by IS*
sentenced by Circuit Judge Robert B. McGregor
4 January], 10. l*ts
City of S«nlord. Florid*, a*
DEAN
who advised them to avoid drugs during their
folic •*:
ORDINANCE NO. I7U
probation.
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
They could each have received up to a year in
C IT Y OF S A N F O R D .
FICTITIOUS NAME
the county Jail.
F L O R ID A . TO A N N E X
Nolle* Is hereby given that I
WITHIN THE CORPORATE
According to court records, workers for Action
am angaged In business at
A R E A OF THE C IT Y OF
Inlarstat* M all. Altam onl*
Center Moving Co. moved the couple from 899
SANFORO. FLORIDA. UPON
Springs. Samlnol* County,
Llttlebend Road. Altamonte Springs, to their
ADOPTION OF SAID ORDI­
Florida under the fictitious
NANCE. A PORTION OF THAT
Longwood address on May 30.
n a m a o t ‘ ' B R U C E
CERTAIN PROPERTY LYINO
WESTCOTTS GREAT AMER­
Falber reportedly liked the work of the two
BETW EEN S ILV E R LAKE
ICAN HOT DOG AND DRAFT
moving men and asked each of them If they
DRIVE AND NORTH WAY
BEER EMPORIUM", and that I
AND BETWEEN SANFORO
wanted to partake In the use of some marijuana
Intend to register said name
A
V
E
N
U
E
A
N
D
M
R
L
L
O
N
with the Clerk at the ‘C irc u it
or cocaine. Both men declined. Falber reportely
V I L L I A V B M U li « A I O
Court. Seminole County. F lo rid a
" snorted" some of the cocaine In front of one of
PROPERTY BEINO SITUAT
In accordance with the pro
ED IN SEMINOLE COUNTY.
the movers. The men also noticed various drugs
visions of the Fictitious Nam*
FLORIDA. IN ACCORDANCE
In the furniture they moved.
Statutes, to-wll: Section SS5 0S
W IT H THE V O L U N T A R Y
Florida Statutes l*S7.
The couple pleaded no contest to the charges
ANNEXATION PROVISIONS
BRUBRENLYN. INC.d/b/a
OF SECTION 171 04*. FLORIDA
Oct. 15.
BRUCE WESTCOTT'S
STATUTES.
PROVIDING
FOR
In other court action, an Oviedo man who (old a
GREAT AMERICAN
SEVERABILITY. CONFLICTS.
HOT DOG
sheriffs deputy he "wanted to go to Jail." had his
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
AND DRAFT BEER
WHEREAS. IS*re Sat b**n
request fulfilled and spent 30 days In Jail before
EMPORIUM
IIl*d with IS* City Clerk ol IS*
being sentenced for disorderly Intoxication.
By: David Bruce Westcott.
City ol Sanford. Florida, a
President
Robert James Conley. 43. of 217 Elm St., was
petition containing IS* nam*t ol
Publish December 11. 70. 17.
IS*
property
owner*
In
IS*
are*
sentenced Wednesday by Judge Wallace Hall to
1*04 a January 1.1*05.
described S*r*ln alter request
30 days In the county Jail. He was given credit for
OEA-4S
Ing annexation to IS* corporal*
the 30 days already served.
are* ol IS* City ol Sanford.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
Florida, and regun ting to b*
According to his arrest report. Conley was
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
Included th*r*ln; and
ordered twice on Nov. 13 by a sheriffs deputy not
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
W HEREAS. IS* Properly
INAND FOR
to stand In the right lane of U.S. Highway 17-92
Appraltar ol S*mlnol* County.
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
Florida. Saving certified ISat
at Park Avenue. Sanford. During the first
FLORIDA
there l* on* owner In IS* area lo
confrontation, Conley moved but when the officer
OENERAL CIVIL DIVISION
be anneaed. and ISat laid pro­
CASE
NO.
S4-SMS-CA-04-P
checked the area several minutes later he was
party owner ha* ilgned IS*
IN REi Tha Marrlaga of
Petition tor Annexation; and
back In the roadway.
BAR BARA JOAN DUPRE.
. WHEREAS. II ha* teen da
Petlttoner/Wlto,
Conley refused to leave the road where cars
termlned that IS* property d*
were swerving around him. according to the
s c r ib e d h e r e in a ft e r It
ROBBY WAYNE DUPRE.
reasonably compact and con
report. The deputy said that as he pulled Conley
llguout to IS* corporal* era** of
off the rood, he poked the deputy In the chest and
NOTICE OF ACTION
IS* City of Sanford, Florida, and
YOU ARK NOTIFIED that an
said he wanted to go to Jail.
II ha* further bean determined
action for dissolution of mar­
lhal IS* annexation of said
A charge of resisting arrest without violence
riage has teen tiled against you
property will not result In IS*
was dismissed.
by your wife. BARBARA JOAN
Croatian of an enclave; and
DUPRE. In addition lo roWHEREAS, IS* City ol San
guesting tho dissolution of mar
lord. Florida. I* In a position to
rlogo- ite Petition roguesI* that
provide municipal service* to
tha primary place of residence
IS* property described herein,
of Ih* child bom af tho mar­
and IS* City Commltston of IS*
r ia g e , RO BB V W A YN E
City ol Sanford. Florida, deem*
D U PR I, JR., te awarded to
II In IS* test Interest of the City
your wit*, and further, that
to accept sold petition and to
there
te an ogultabl* distribu­
Villa*
PS.
IV.
Wingfield Dev. to Strathclyde
annex said properly.
tion of tha assats of the mar­
Homs* Inc.. LI II. WVwftoM
MUSS
NOW. THEREFORE. BE IT
riage and an apportionment of
CIIro Pofrotovm Cory, to
Rm w v s .P S .II. u USS
ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE
tho debts Incurred during Ih*
Corns** Cm Wo*S Cantor Cory..
Aylesbury Moms* Cory, to
OF THE CITY OF SANFORD.
marriage. You or* regulrod to
Ptrctl of lotto In NEW of loc
C A . Herrington 4 Wf Jonot
FLORIDA;
sorve a copy of your written
i»u jsaotc.sn.tss
Anno. Lt II. Wefclv* Covo. Ph.
SECTION 1: Thai IS* pro
defense*, II any. to the action on
Jooops p. im u m x a Wf
T w o .v t.N 0
party described below situated
Petitioner's attorney who**
Joonno to RumoII I . Moor* a
lo rlo A. Clear* a Hereto
In Seminole County. Florida, b*
name and address Is N. La*
Wf Janice, Un. tpt Bldg MO
Torry to Baird I . Roconor a Wf
and IS* same I* hereby annexed
Sasser. Jr., P.O. Box 0I41C,
Altomtnto Villa** I. Cond.
Botty J.. LI IIS. Woklve Cm *.
to and mad* a part ol IS* City at
Orlando. FL SMO. on or bolero
PSOno.tlU.lSS
Sanford. Florida, pursuant to
Ih* 15th day of January. INS.
Citrus Slot* Builder*. Inc. to
Joeaphln* WSIIItor a Hv.
IS* voluntary annexation pro­
and III* Ih* original with Ih*
Pout M. Bowd B Wf Jonot I . LI
Ro%S to TSomoo A. AMU. Ir.. LI
vision* o l Section 171.144.
Clark of this Court, either bolero
4*. WlnffloM Marts. *00.000
n (to t* i i n a on o&lt; i s a t u ‘
Florida Statutes:
service on Petitioner's attorney
Joan R. Burton a Wf Motel
of vocotod CSrooy Av.. BIS II.
A parcel of land In IS* SWI* *f
or Immediately thereafter;
J* to Lynn R. Burtoff a Wf
Twa. l iO w to i Homo*.
the SW U ol Section 7. Township
otherwise a lodgment will be
Jonot ML. Copo Conovorol. Tr.
10 South. R ang* 11 East,
entered to Ih* relief demanded
I l l , O.P. Swop* Block MomRkSar* 0 . Randall Jr a Wf
Seminole County, Florid*, being
In Ih* Petition.
mock. SMS
Sw*an to J«#m H. Reynold* a Wf
more particularly described a*
RoipS
S.
Andwton
a
Wf
Witness my hand and seal of
CSrlttlno S . N r of Lt II. oil of
tallows: From the SW coraar of
this Court this 11th day at
Yoimdo to Donald MofcSIck a
a a s i* of n an ss. saniondo
IS* SWU ol IS* SWI* ol Section
December, 1*04.
Wf Ritecco, L* 11. Bh B.
•So suburb Boowf.. MUSS
7, Township » South rang* II
(SEAL)
Swoofwotor Ook* loc. I. SI1SJSS
H. Minor B Won* of PI. to
East. Seminole County. Florida,
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Lory Ook*. Ltd. to Oon R.
Ronold I. Brtoord a W ISirloy.
thence run N o r jr o t * E along
Clark of Ih* Circuit Court
Kotlor a Wf IdllS B. Un 1141.
Lf n. Tutkewlll* Point. SSUSS
IS* South line af said SWI* of IS*
Lory Ook* Cond.. SSUSS
By: Margo Lewis
RCA to Alary C. aCmnoll. LI
SWI* to 00 teet to a point an the
Deputy Clerk
OCI Prop. Inc. to Oregery I .
44. HlddMi U VIIloo. PS. IV.
Easterly right-of-way af Sanford
Publish
December IX JO. 17,
Loo a Tommy L. Loti 7, a a f.
S4MSS
Avenue, thence run NG0*irU"E
4
NVt
of
vocotod
oMoy.
Bk
*.
1N4
4
January X INS.
RCA to Bonnto J. Moc Quorrto
along sold Easterly rlghlof way
OCA 14
Townolto of Oonovo. SUSS
4 O P. Oordnw. Jr. Lt 4B.
Of Sanlord Avenue 1041)0 feet to

Offbeat Mayor Sworn In

Moving Experience
Led To Probation

legal Notice

REALTY TRANSFERS

D o o n esb u ry
rM A F M D H O O tS
H B *.S R .E U B O M R
CHUKATlCNHAve

w m arneac.
^ _____

legal Notice
NOTICEOFA
PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER THE *
ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE
BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA.
Notlc* I* hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at
the Commission Room In the
City Hall In the City of Sanlord.
Florida, at 7:00 o'clock P M on
January 14. INS. to consider the
adoption of an ordinance by Ih*
City ol Sanlord. Florida, till* ol
which Is as to’tows:
ORDINANCE NO. I7J4
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D .
FLORIDA. AMENOING ORDI
NANCE NO 1510. SECTION 10.
T O D E L E T E T H E RE
QUIREM ENT OF A SEPA­
R A T E A U D IT R E P O R T ;
P R O V I D I N G FOR
SEVERABILITY. CONFLICTS.
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
A copy shall be available *1
Ih* Office of Ih* City Clerk tor
all persons desiring to examine
the same.
All parlies In Interest and
dtliens shall have an opportuni­
ty to be heard al said hearing.
By order of the City Com­
mission ol the City ol Sanford.
Florida
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: It
a person decides to appeal a
decision mad* with respect to
any matter considered at Ih*
above meeting or hearing, he
may need a verbatim record of
the proceedings. Including Ih*
testimony end evidence, which
record Is no! provtdsr* hy the
City of Unford. IFS Jos.: ‘5).
H.N.Tamm.Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: January). IfU
DEB 10

NOTICEOFA
PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER THE
ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE
BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA.
Notlc* Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will te hald at
the Commission Room In tha
City Hall In Ih* City ol Sanlord.
Florida, al 7:00 o’clock PAA on
January 14. IMS. to consider the
adoption ol an ordinance by the
City ol Sanlord. Florida, title ol
which Is as follows:
ORDINANCE NO. 17M
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R O .
F L O R IO A . C L O S IN G .
VACATING. AND ABANDON
ING A PORTION OF WEST
FOURTH STREET LYING BET W E E N P O M E O R A N IT E
AVENUE AND THE EAST
R IG H T -O F -W A Y LINE OF
JESSAMINE AVENUE RE
SERVING A UTILITY EASE
M E N T ; P R O V ID IN G FOR
SEVERABILITY. CONFLICTS.
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
A copy shall b* available al
Ih* Otllco ol Ih* City Clerk tor
all persons desiring to examine
the same.
All parlies In Interest and
cllltens shall have an opportuni­
ty to b* hoard *1 said hearing.
By order of tho City Com­
mission of Ih* City of Sanlord.
Florida.
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: It
a parson decides I* appeal a
dec Islan mad* with respect to
any matter considered at the
above meeting or hearing, he
may need a verbatim record of
Including Ih*
testimony and evidence,
rldenco. which
record Is not provided by Ih*
City ol Sanlord (FS JSS 0105).
H.N. Tamm, Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: January ). last
DEB*

NOTICEOFA
PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER THE
ADOPTIONOF
AN ORDINANCE
BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA.
Notice Is hereby given lhal a
Public Hearing will te held al
the Commission Room In tha
City Hall In Ih* City of Sanford.
Florida, at 7:00 o'clock P.M. on
January 14. IMS. to consider the
adoption of an ordinance by Ih*
City of Sanlord. Florida, title of
which I* a* follow*:
ORDINANCE NO. 17M
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D .
FLORIDA. AMENDING ORDI­
NANCE NO. 10*7 OF SAID
C IT Y ; SAID ORD INANCE
BEING A ZONING P LA N ;
SAID AMENDMENT CHANG
ING THE ZONINO OF A POR­
TION OF THAT CERTAIN
P R O P E R T Y L Y IN O B E ­
TWEEN FIRST STREET AND
SECOND STREET AND BE­
T W E E N P O M E O R A N IT E
AVENUE AND JESSAMINE
A V E N U E FRO M RM O I
(M U LTIPLE -F A M ILY RESI­
DENTIAL. OFFICE AND IN­
STITUTIONAL) DISTRICT TO
GC—1 (GENERAL COMMER­
CIAL) DISTRICT; PROVIDING
FOR SEVERABILITY. CON­
FLICTS. ANO EFFECTIVE
DATE.
•
A copy shall b* available al
Ih* Office of tha City Clark tor
all parson* desiring to examine
the soma.
All parties In Interest and
citltans shall have an opportuni­
ty to te hoard at said tearing.
By ardor of tho City Com­
mission of the City of Sanlord.
Florida.
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: If
a parson dec ides to appeal a
decision mad* with respect to
any matter considered at Ih*
above mooting or hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record of
the proceedings. Including the
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by Ih*
City of Sanford. (FSSMJI0S).
H.N. Tamm. Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: January X IMS
DEB-7

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
I 0 F C O A B L M lM &gt; T t€ P .C

P O U C t!M &gt;neM K P O U C £
A N P K H M K $ o m c £ !/e a e
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T H SCAM, SIR,

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n S K JW N O r

ABOUTM W HAPPUG TOTHESE

legal Notice
CITY OF LONOWOOD.
FLORIDA NOTICE OF PUBLIC
H E A R IN O TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF PROPOSED
ORDINANCE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by Ih* City ol Longwood.
Florid*, that tha City Com­
mission will hold a public hea,
Ing to consider enactment ol
Ordinance No. *71. entitled
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF L O N G W O O D .
FLORIDA. RENAMING SEC
OND PLACE FROM ITS IN
TERSECTION WITH COUNTY
ROAD 417 TO ITS INTERSEC
TION WITH FOURTEENTH
A V E N U E TO SE C O N D
S T R E E T : A U T H O R IZ IN G
AMENDMENT TO CITY MAP:
P R O V I D I N G FOR
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AND E F ­
FECTIVE DATE.
Said ordinance was placed on
first reading on Decomber 10.
1M4. and the City Commission
will consider same tor final
passage and adoption alter the
public hearing, which will be
held In the City Hall. 17* West
W a rre n A v * .. L on gw ood ,
Florida, on Monday. Ih* 14th
day ol January. A.D., IMS.
parlies may appear and be
heard with respect to the pro­
posed Ordinance This hearing
may be continued Irom time to
time until final action Is taken
by Ih* City Commission.
A copy of Ih* proposed Ordl
nance I* posted at the City Hall.
Longwood. Florida, and copies
aro on III* with the Clerk ot Ih*
City and same may be Inspected
0] the public.
A taped record of this meeting
It mad* by Ih* City tor Its
convenience. This record may
not constitute an adequate re
cord lor purposes ol appeal from
a decision mad* by Ih* Com
mission with respect lo Ih*
foregoing matter. Any person
wishing to ensure that an ad*
quato record ol Ih* proceedings
It maintained lor appellate
purpose* It advised to make Ih*
necessary arrangements at hi*
or her own experts*.
Date this 11th day ol D*
cember.A D 1M4.
CITYOFLONGWOOO
Donald L. Tarry
City Clerk
Publish: January J. 1M5
DEB J
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIALCIRCUIT,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. M-Uft-CA-M-P
IN REi The Marriage ol
JAMES TONY POPE.
Husband.
and
WANDA S. POPE.
Wile
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: JAM TS TONY POPE
Pott OHk* Box 70
Eller be, North Carolina JtUI
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a
Petition tor Dissolution ol Mar­
riage hat been Hied against you,
and lhal you ar* required to
servo a copy of your Response
or Pleading to the Petition upon
the Wllo's attorney. A.A. Me
Clanahan. Jr., 1M S. Park Av*.
- Suit* B. Sanlord. Florid*
11771, and til* tha original Re­
sponse or Pleading In Ih* office
of the Clerk *1 the Circuit Court,
an or Veter* the 14th day et
January. IMS. It you fall to do
to. a Default Judgment will be
taken against you lor Ih* roll*!
demanded In Ih* Petition.
DATED al Sanford. Seminole
County, Florida, this 10th day ol
December, IM4.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
By: Virginia Jackson
Deputy Clerk
Publish December t). JO. 17,
1M4 a January X IMS.
DEA55
NOTICEOFA
PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER THE
ADOPTIONOF
AN ORDINANCE
BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD, FLORIDA.
Notice I* hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be hald at
tha Commission Room In Ih*
City Hall In Ih* City of Sanlord.
Florida, at 7:00 o'clock P.M. on
January u. IMS. to consider m*
adoption of an ordinance by Ih*
City of Sanlord. Florida, till* of
which It at lot lows.
ORDINANCE NO. 1715
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D ,
FLO RIO A. ESTABLISHING
THE REQUIREMENTS AND
PRO CED URES TO REGUL A T E T H E USE OF
S A N IT A R Y A N D STO R M
SEWERS; PROVIDING FORP R O PE R DISCHARGE OF
WATERS AND WASTES INTO
THE CITY SEWER SYSTEMS;
REOULATING DISCHARGE
OF C E R T A I N W A S T E S ;
P R O V ID IN G P E N A L T IE S ;
P R O V I D I N G FOR
SEVERABILITY. CONFLICTS
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
A copy shall te available al
Ih* Office of tha City Clerk lor
all parsons desiring to examine
All parties In Interest and
dtliens shall have an opportuni­
ty to te hoard at Mid hearing.
By arder of tha City Com
mission of the City of Sanlord.
Florida.
AOVICE TO THE PUBLIC: If
a parson doddot to appeal a
decision mad* with respect to
any matter considered at the
above meeting or tearing, he
may nood a verbatim record of
Hi* proceedings. Including Ite
testimony and evidence, which
record it not provldod by tha
City af Sanford. (FSJMSieS).
H.N. Tamm. Jr.
City Clark
Publish: January X IMS
OEM

Shopping For A
HewOr Used Car?

0URRESP0NSJ&amp;UTY

H o m e s H O M i!

r*b ci
Boat deal* te ib * Eraalag
MansJd** Cfaaaf/SadaocUaa.
I Friday * Evening Herald

Evening Herald
BO* X ertb I

• A^

9

*

9* f

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in o le

O r la n d o - W in te r P a rk

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1-9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
«:30 A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FtfDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Naan

1
3
7
10

RATES

lim e ................... 67C a line
contecutly* times SIC a line
consacutivo times 52C a Una
cansacwtba times 44C a line
Contract Rites Available
3 Linos Minimum

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

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Cere
E x p e rie n ce d M oth er w ill
babysit In my home. Fenced
back yard, l i t 0*70.__________
FOR QUALITY CHILDCARE
tan Educational Program
Call m-*4J4_________

Will Babysit
In my ham*. 1)1-4*41

33—Reel Estate
Courses
BOBM. BALL JR.
SCHOOLOF REAL ESTATE
)»4 1 1 lo r )2 ) 7IM

41—Money to Lend
Business Capital 1)0.000 to
11.000.000 end over, f O Box
141). Winter Pk. FI*. JJ7S0

71—Help Wanted
ACCOUNTING CLERK
Experienced In Accounts pay­
able end receivable. Type 45
wpm. accurate Permanent
position.
Hover* Fee.

TEMP PERM 774-1341

71—Help Wanted
Acrylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coating on
cars, boats and plana*. SS to
Sll per hour. W* train. For
work In Sanlord ora* call
Tampa I I ) M4-715).
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
ACCOUNTING CLERK
SECRETARY
KEY PUNCHER
WANG OPERATOR
CLERK TYPIST
CRT OPERATORS ‘
Immediate assignments avail­
able In Lake Mary and San
lord Araa. Call Ablest Tamporery Services « l )440

Attention Locals
Bartenders, waitresses. 4 but
wanted for Senfordt newest
nightclub SLICKS. Pleas*
call: )J ) 97)0 lor Interview
between 1and 5 this week
AVON BEAUTY COMPANY
Foil- pert time. Pay Xmas Milt.
Call Immed. m -S«l*-m -1«*.
AVON EARNINOS WOWIII
OPEN TERRITORIES NOWIII
S1I-S5SS ar D i-tilt
Behind on your payments? I buy
houses I Don't call unless you
need to tall Immediately, and
ar* willing to accept my small
down payment. Call
» 1 4M7.
BUBBLY P IR S O N A U TY II
FUN JOB 111 F u ll lim a and p a rt
lim e available Phone experl
enc* helpful.
m 0447 Ask lo r Joyce

ACCOUNTS R E C E IV A B L E
CLERK- Strong background In
payment posting to computer
systems with emphasis on
proof process Must be well
orgenliled with good clerical
skills

Cap* Canaveral firm expanding
In S am lnol*. I w orkers pro­
ducing. * m ore needed SIX)
P /T . W 0 lu ll lim e . Career
oriented people. Only over I I .
F u ll tra in in g .
111 1707, b e to r t«

O E N E R A L A C C O U N T IN G
CLERK- Good organliatlonol
and communication skills. The
Individual w* art tacking will
have dally contact with glass
and aluminum vendors Also,
you will be required to file, do
tom# typing, and required to
fill In at receptionist end
Courier, at needed. II you
have these skills contact:

C a r* o l * l d * r l y p a re n ts in
p riv a te home. Ligh t house
keeping. I day week, m M l*

Mercer Aluminum Products Co.
IN I Cantwell Rd.
There's Only Iwa things
A r tile ' can trust:
HI* mother 4 want -edsl

legal Notice
CITY OF LONOWOOO.
FLORIDA NOTICE OF PUBLIC
H E A R IN O TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF PROPOSED
ORDINANCE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by the City o l Longwood.
Florid*, that the City Com­
mission will hold a public tear
Ing to consider enactment of
Ordinance No *45. entitled:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C IT Y OF L O N G W O O D .
F L O R ID A . A U T H O R IZIN G
THE CONVEYANCE OF CITY
PRO PERTY TO HENRY O.
AND BARBARA E. WALTERS.
401 N I N A P L A C E .
L O N G W O O O . F L O R ID A ,
P R O V I D I N G
FOR
S E P A R A B IL IT Y AND E F ­
FECTIVE DATE.
Said Ordinance was placed on
first leading on December io,
1M4. and Ite City Commltston
will consider tamo tor final
pastag* and adoption after the
public tearing, which will be
held In the City Hall. I7S Watt
W a rre n A v * ., L on gw ood ,
Florid*, on Monday, tho 14th
day af January, A.D., IMS.
pert las may appear and be
heard with respect to the pro
pooad Ordinance This tearing
may be continued from lima to
time until final actien Is taken
by Ite City Commission.
A copy of Ite proposed Ordl
nanc* It potted at the City Hall.
Longwood. Florida, and capiat
are on file with the Clerk of the
City and tame may be Inspected
by the public.
A taped record ot this mooting
It mad* by the City tor Its
convenience This record may
not constllut* on adequate re­
cord lor purposes of appeal from
o decision mad* by Ite Com­
mission with respect to the
foregoing me tier. Any person
wishing to ensure that an ade­
quate record of tte proceedings
la maintalnad for appellate
purposes It advised to make tte
necessary arrangements af Ms
ar ter awn axpana*.
Data this nth day of D*
cambar.A.O. IM4.
CITY OF LONGWOOO
Donald L. Tarry
City Clark
Publish: January X IMS
DEB 1

Career O pportunity. W ill tra in
O u ts ta n d in g In c o m * . C a ll
M l l e u between * 4 1 ^

CASHIER/HOST ESS
And A M w aitress. F in * dining
re staurant A pply In person
IQS. Deltona Inn.____________

★

★

★

★

CORRESPONDENTS
W ANTED
To w rite a w eekly column
Iro m your homo. Q u jllllc e llo n t:
A n o t* lo r news, a fla ir for
w ritin g , a good speller end know
how to type. Call Doris D lotrlch.
The E vening Herald, m M il.
after } p n r

★

★

★

★

Debary M anor now hirin g exp*
r lanced o r c e rtifie d nurses
aides. A ll shifts Apply a t: *o
N. H w y 17 PI. DeBery, or call
«*» 441*. EOE_______________

legol Notice
lW TH E C lV C U IT COURT IN
A N D FO R S E M I N O L E
COUNTY, FLO R IO A
CASE N O .: *4 MSS CA Of
STOCKTON. W H AT LE Y.
D A V I N and C O M P A N Y , a
F lo rid a corporation
P la in tiff,
vs.

WALTER P. RUNGE and E
DIANE RUNGE. hit wile.
Defendants
NOTICE OF A C T IO N P R O PER TY
TO: E. D IA N E RUNGE. w hot*
last m a ilin g a d d r ttt and r a ti
d tn c * I t unknown
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that an action to
to ra clo t* a mortgage on the
follow ing property located In
Sam lnol* County. F lo rida:
Let t. Block B. STER LIN G
OAKS, according to tte plat
thereof, recorded In P lat Book
P aget I I and 11. Public
R acordt o f Seminole County.
F lo rid *.
h a t been file d against you and
you a r * requested to serve a
copy of your w ritte n detente*. It
any. to It. on CHARLES M .
A L L E N . JR .. Esquire, Pest Of
flee Box m i , Orm ond Beach.
F lo rid a 1)074. P la in tiff's A t
to r nay. on or b e to rt the ttn d day
of January, 1M1. end t il* Ite
o rig in a l w ith tte C lark o f Ite
Court t i t t e r before service on
P la in tiff's A ttorney, er Im m adl
atoly the rea fter; otherwise, a
default w ill be entered against
you tor the re lie f tem ended In
t t e Complaint.

WITNESS my hand and teal
i f this Court an tte llth day of
December, IM4
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. J * .
Clerk, Circuit Court
B y:/ ( / Diene K. Oakley
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December M. 17, tsfc.
January X 10. IMS
oe am

;

�v

KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE thy Lerry Wrlflhl
71— Help Wanted

7 1 -H e lp W anted

Carpenter
All types el con
•Iructlon
M u ll be te ll
motivated Cell M3 4*75

SURVIVED THE NEW YEAH?
R U READY TO S T M T
WITH A "N E W " iOB?

DISHWASHER
Mature Apply, In perton, M F.
14pm DeltonaInn._________
EAT YOUR VEOETABLES
Bruih your teeth
• •
And reed your
_________ WANT ADS_________
E x p e rie n c e d C erp en ter A
' Driver. Alto verl.'ut dutiet
Honett. hard working, willing
to travel Call Ml 1740. etk lor
M n Jonet.
E xp erien ced ta le s rep re
tentative and supervisor
willing to travel and call or\
retail stores Variety ol dutiet
Ml 1740etk tor Mrs Jonet
FRONTDESKCLERK
Friendly, neal, personable.
'Apply In perton. M F. 10 a m
•.♦■to l p m Deltona Inn_________
' Hair Stylist. Experienced with
- clientele, lor Sanlord Salon
• Salon Mi M U ______________
IMMEDIATE OPENINO lor
service technician with one ot
. Florida's Oldest Pest Control
Companies No experience
■ necessary |utt a desire to
advance and a willingness to
■ work Paid training program,
company benefits. Insurance
and vehicle provided. II inter
ested. apply at: Spencer Pest
Control. 2M3 Park Dr., San
ford
No phene calls please.
IMMEDIATE OPPORTUNITY
We now have an opening In our
Classified Advertising Do
pertmenl. Qualifications pro:
, excellent typist, pleatenMele
phone voice, good commun
cation and tome accounting
This It an excellent opportune
ty lor the right person. Send
resume to Mr. Adkins e/o
• Evening Herald P. 0 Box 1457
.-.Sanlord, Fla M77MU7. or
stop In and till out an
application_________________

Immediit* Employmtnt
Opportunity in tsUblishtd
Sanfoid Insunnc* office.
Must h m o ffic t skills
and anjoji working with
public in a professional
office atmosphere. Send
resume to P .0 .1 7 7 , Sanford.

al*

H

/

CAN FIN D YOU
TH E BEST
IN TOWN!

99—Apartm ents
Unfurnished / Rent

MEDICAL RECEP.„...... It00-f
Two openings. Medical knowl
edge e plus Answer phone
end set appointments Great
opportunity!.
RADIAL ORILL OPER ...teS2S4
Company needs immediately.
Has to know "Taps". And
"Drills". Excellent benefits.
OFFICE ASSISTANT......... SIM
Greet clients. General office
skills with accurate typing
Local company.
WIRE PERSON.............. to 1104
Able person needed here Read
schematics and run conduit.
Electrical background a plus.
ADMINIST. ASSIST........ 1200+
Outgolung professional person
wins . General office back­
ground Typing, phones. Great
boss
ACCOUNTS MANAOER..........
TRAINEE--- ---------SIM
Three openings Outgoing per­
sonality f&gt;»al with the public.
Good with figures.
BABYSITTER
Great opportunity for housewife,
one or two children. Light
meals, light housekeeping
INSTALLERS.......... ...... SIM+
S e v e r a l o p e n in g s . T rim
carpentry a plus. Excellent
opportunity to loam a trade.

NEW JOBS DAILY

LABORERS
ASSEMBLERS
WAREHOUSEWORKERS
Assignments available In San
f o r d , L a k e M a r y an d
Longwood area
No lee.
Ablest Temporery Service
Ml 3*40____________________
LABORERS- Strong reliable,
general laborers needed Im
mediately. Different locations.
Phone end transportation a
must. Never a lee Apply
Kelly Services. 2101 Maitland
C en ter P a r k w a y . I ta t
Maitland
440 2MS
Maid Once a week lor 2 bdrm
Sondlewood Villas condo Own
transportation M l 010*.______
Make SS working at home I Rush
SASE to O B 2024 S Sanlord
Ave. Sanlord. Fla M77I
Mature Individuals needed as
companions lor the elderly T
LC.lnc.2M 1002/221 277B
Night Auditor Experience prel
* erable. Will train. Full time
position Apply In person No
phone calls please Deya Inn.
I 4 and St. Rd. aa.____________
Nurses aides wanted 71 shift.
Musi be certified or expert
• enced Apply In person at
Lakevlew Nursing Center 010
E 2nd St Sanlord
OffIce/Clerlcal person
for busy Sanford office. Dulles
Include typing, filing A gener
al office Experienced persons
apply to 100 W Fulton St
‘ Sanford IM 4441 EOP
Orlande Based Company
seeking a few good people to
t r a in In b a th ro o m r e ­
modeling. If you have expert
enca In palnl spraying, tile
repair, or looking for a good
• trade, sue are looking lor you.
Good payl Good benelltsi
Valid Florida Drivers License
and vehicle required
Call Mr Miller M l 2015
Part lime waitress. Friday A
Saturday evenings Apply
Mon . Tues. or Wed &gt;11 a m.
Must be 21 or over. Buck's
Restaurant 1220 S. Sanlord
Ave.
_______________
RECEPTIONIST
Type, general office experience
Permanent position Never a
Fee.

•

AAA EM P LO Y M EN T

ALLAREAS
Furnished, end unfurnished. I,
2.1. A 4 bedrooms Kids. pets.
1200 end up. 12* 7200 Fee S71
Sev On Rentels Inc. Reeltor

323-5176

TEMP PERM 774-1341

Sales people needed tor used car
lot. Experience helpful Man
agers position available lor
right person. Call Ron MI4071
_____________
Secretary. Part time 1 days.
Typing, good phone voice.
Salary open. May lead to full
time |eb. M l 2400
S e c r e t a r y / R e c e p t io n is t .
Longwood area. Pleasant
telephone voice. Bookkeeping
background helpful. 1-1,
Monday thru Friday. &gt;144411.

Discounted lee 1 weeks salary.
Franchises available
Lew. S2.M Registration Fee
_______ 2211 French Ave._______
The Best "HOUSE CLEANER"
Isa Went Adi
Call Classified 2M 2411.
Wanted Part-time
Person to help In Circulation
Department afternoon hours.
For more Information call:
2M24II and ask lor Tony,
Mon. - F rl.l Sp.m.

73— Em ploym ent
Wanted
BLOCK i BRICK MASON
Exp.- Call Ralph MI-4741

93— Rooms for Rent
Christian Hostel
TV. kitchen, laundry, maid. bus.
M l wk up 4111441,4114410
Large room Residential
kitchen privileges. TV.
Ml 4451
Room for rent
In Sanlord. &gt;11 week
_________Call Ml WO.________
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week. Reasonable rales
Maid service. Cell M l 4107
1 7PM. 411 Palmetto Ave.
SANFORD, Reas, weekly A
Monthly rates. Util. Inc. ett.
IOOOek
Adults I Aft TM1.
Sanlord Furnished I bdrm.,
kitchen A laundry privileges.
&gt;40 week M l 1427

97—Apartm ents
Furnished / Rent
EFFICIENCY
No pets, no kids. &gt;211 month
&gt;200damage. M l I44&gt;.________
Furn. Apts, for Senior Cltliens
111 Palmetto Ave.
J Cowon No Phone Calls
Furnished Garage Apt. M l
week, utilities Included 1
adult 1st A last week M2J4I7
Large 2 bdrm., 2 bath condo
Fop c o n d it io n , n ic e ly
furnished, washer d ryer,
m icrow ave, cab le, VCR,
phone, pool. All utilities and
fees paid. Owner retains one
bdrm. and bath as occasional
office Very private. M l xxeek.
singles only. Child ok. no pets.
R e d u c e r e n t f o r lig h t
housekeeping services M l
0104________________________
lo v tiy efficiency apartment,
perfect for mature single
person Private entrance.
C om plete p r iv a c y . Inc.
utilities &gt;71. a week plus &gt;110
security deposit Call M1M4&gt;
or M l MM
Mobile heme. 1 bdrm., private
lot. adults only. No pets. Ref.
IMP Magnolia Ave Sanford
SANFORD COURT APT*.
Studio Apartments
1bedroom apartment
I Bedroom furnished apt.
2 Bedroom apartments
Senior clllions discount
Flexible leases

BAMBOOCOVE APTS
200 E Airport Blvd
Ph M l 4420 Efficiency, from
S2S0 Mo $% discount lor
Senior Cltliens______________
Huge Brand New 2 Bdrm . 2
Bath private apartment with
large rooms. Carpels, country
kitchen, appliances S421
Very Plush 1111024*
Lovely I Bdrm apt Well to well
c arp et, screened porch,
downtown oroe S200 sec de
posit. Rent S7S week, plus
utilities. Call Ml MM or
Ml 4*47
LUXURY APARTMENTS
Family A Adults Sectlen
Poelstde, 1 Bedreams.
Master Cave Apartments.
22) 7*oo
Open On Wookends.
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
214C RIdgewood Av# Ph M l 4420
__ 1.2 A l Bdrms from U U
SANFORD
NEAR LAKE MONROE
NOW LIASINOI
SANFORD LANOINO APTS.
NEW opts close to shopping end
mo|or hwys Gracious living
In our t A 2 Bdrm. apts. that
oftors:
0 Gordon or Lott Units
# Washor/Dryor Hook Ups In
our 2 Bdrm. opts
01 Laundry Facilities,
eOlympic Slit Pool.
e Health Club with 1 Saunas
e Clubhouse with Fireplace,
e Kitchen A Game Rm.
eTennis. Recquetbell.
Volleyball
* 4 Acre Lake on Property
e Night Petrol 7 DaysiWk
OPEN7 OAYSAWEEK.
1(00 W. 1st St. In Sanlord
Ml 4720 or Orlando 445 041*
Equal Opportunity Housing.
2 Bdrm. Adults only. No pats.
SM0 par mon. or MO per wk..
security dep. 42* 0041 days, or
M7 1047or M70717 nightt

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
Private Cottage I bdrm , lovely
decor, malntalned-lonced
yard I M l 1017_______________

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Attractive 2 Bdrm., 1 bath house
In nice section of town. Com
plate with most me|or appll
an ces. R e te re n c e s , and
minimum 4 months loose re
quired. Cell MS 1211 after 4
PM. tor appointment.________
e e e IN DELTONA e e e
eeH O M E S FOR R E N T e e
_______ e e 174-1414 e e_______

★

Tired of the headaches? Let us
manage your rental pro
parties Professional low cost
service. Ml M il Coll anytime
United Seles Associates. Inc.
Prep. Mgmt. Ply., Realtor
Near 17 *1. I new reconstructed
1 bdrm . IW bath. SHI mo
First, lest, security 44* 4*41
NEW. Boautllul Townhouse. 2
bdrm.. Its baths, vertical
b lin d s , a ll a p p lia n c e s ,
washer/dryer, sauna. S. pool I
141(111_____________________
Nlca 1 Bdrm.. I bath, big yard.
S410 month. SM0 damage.
M l 144*. Open on Jen 1st.
Sanlord Sonora South 2 Bdrm .
2 both, fenced yard, kennel, 2
car garage. M71142 or
___________ M l 440*___________
Senlerd- 4 bdrm . 1 baths.
Central elr, llroplace U00
mo 42* QMS, 447 MM_________
Tuscawlll* IS min. trom Sen
ford. TOWNHOUSE. 2 master
bdrms.. 2 baths, pool, lacuiil.
sauna, tennis. January to
price. U21 222 7014__________
t Bedroom House.
IMS month. S100 deposit.
Ceil Mi l*** Evenings

117—Com m ercial
Rentals
SPACE FOR RENT, office,
retail, and warehouse storage.
Call IM 4402.

121—Condominium
Rentals
N IW , Beautiful Townhouse 2
bdrms. Ito bath*, all appll
ante*, wether, dryer. Sauna,
Pool 1141 (M l_______________
The Sprlngtl 2 bdrm., 2 bath. All
amenities. 1400 per mo. *20
0001. or 447 MM

M in o t.

NO W HIRING!
O p p a i lutnly

F

mi

EXPERIENCED CASHIERS,
GAS ATTENDANTS AND
FAST FOOD PREPARATION
(

&gt;//(

&lt; &gt; /&gt;

CENTERS

5 l OC A t I O N S I N S I M I N O l f

C O lJN lY

• A u t o / Tr uck R e f u e l i n g
• Full Li ne C o n v e n i e n c e St or e s
• Fast F o o d K i t c h e n s

KISH REAL ESTATE
435IN R 2Stii Stm t
SPACIOUS * Bdrm., 2 bath
heme with family ream, large
game roam, lets ef starage.
fenced bach yard. ttj.tee.
S BDRM.. I bath, den. Urge
kitchen, lets at cabinets, beet
gamp, ECU M a tt wattr,
therm* wfwdaws, lets *1 cedar.
Uf.tW.

REALTOR 321-0041

F f m*&lt;1 &lt; h it H*fi S u bs D i h u i I s

•
•
•
•
•

MAM
Af

A P P U L A I l O N iN i ’ l HSON
N l .i i i »»*I A v r S .in te nd

s n en a n d o a h ;

V ILLAG E
A M OFF
SECURITY

Kposrr

V 2 R U M M PUL , ,
?. PAIMUEB WELCOME «
IS
It?

5

2 3 1 -C a rs

BATEMAN REALTY

EXECUTIVE wood sales desk
end chairs. (Ilk* new) 5150
sel. ; til* cabinets from S40
oak table ISO. . loveseet too.
dividers 150 tech: mlsc *2*
54*4 or 42* 12*2______________

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FIN A N C E

195—Machine ry/Tools

149—Commercial
Property / Sale

Give Up Gardening?
Sell no longer needed tools
WITH HERALOWANT ADSI

Casselberry 1 Acre Zoned PR-1,
U5 000 W Mellciowskl. Real
tor 122 7M1_________________
SANFORD Future cemmtrdal
sit*. IM ft. Irem future eemmerdel earner, near 1-4 and
St. Rd. 44. Residential new.
w ith I n c e m * t * c a v e r
expenses. IIH.SM.

m

AKC Beegl* tor sal* Mel*. 4
months SI3S Call 171 It**
Ask tor Cathy_______________
Dog Obedience Training a
weeks 510 Start Jen 5th
10 30 AM Tracking and
Boarding available Ability
Kennels, Osteen 313 2720
Irish Setter and German Shep
herd Free to good home
L ovab le end g re a t with
children M3 752* or M l 5540
Yorkl* male. AKC papers 10
mos old A tiny Toy I ) ' i lbs
S150 or best oiler Owner

153—AcreageLots/Sale

C leMNwa w

141—Homes For Sale
ly

Owner- 2 Bdrm . 1 Bath.
Detached garage with utility
room Mayfair Section near
old H osp ital. W a ll/w all
carpel. CH A A. fireplace
L a r g e tr e e shaded lot.
Hamilton Elem. School Dlst
Price 542.100 Assumable
121.000 * ‘ *% Phone 3212*0*.
after* 10 pm tor appoint___

Keyes

&lt; u w &amp; » c fx to x

323-3200
DRIFTWOOD VILLAOE
ON LAKE MARY BLVD.

H ALL
IRC

*111 TOR

u Y im iinRKRci

CLOIE TO LAKE MONROE
Extra clean heme an huge letl
New reel I New carpet I Quiet
area end cewntry atmosphere.
Only lM,ie*.
CALL HALL
LAROE BEAUTIFUL YARD
Detached screened perch, and
weed decking cemes with this
1 Bdrm. heme. Gorgeous eek.
wetping wlllew. end many
shade trees. 17,IM dawn. 11*4
M*. PITI IH*%. No quali­
fying. S44.se*.
CALL HALL
OOROEOUt AZALEAS Oaks,
and Palms surrtund this camp ltftly furnished 2 Bdrm.
heme an huge let In cenvenlenl leceflen. tingle car
gereget Only 1M.SM.
CALL HALL

323-5774
______ leotHWY 17 n

*11 tOU NMD

i :»r \

V

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

WALL ST. COMPANY...))! 5M5

y

to

snow

IN REAL (SIAM

STENSTROM

1 Brdm. Its Beth. In esc.
location Only U*.f00
CALL ON THIS ONE I

OSTEEN 5 A lots 11000 down
Terms Lake Privileges No
mobiles Kerry I Dreggors
Reeltor 54*1*11.
Osteen- 10 acres zoned mobiles,
nursery + planted pasture
Only 5250 mo with &gt;4000 down
O. Jeffery Garland. Realtor.
225 W4*
Seminole Woods Executive
home sites. 5 5 acres By
owner. Cell Orlando 277 2770
Alter 5 PM

CALL BART

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

141— Homes For Sale
For Sal* by Owner Sanlord
Nice 2 Bdrm. home with
iivr-g dining room, paneled
family room Workshop Cell
M l H0( 1*4.900 Firm________

BEST BUY IN TOWN

LAKE ASHBY- Double Wide
Mobil* Home on 2.3 acres,
fenced with barn Bring your
horses Only &gt;11.000
SANFORD Mobil* home with
additions 1 Bdrm , 3 bath,
lanced, two utility sheds
Country living, yet dose In.
111.000
SANFORD Large home with
fireplace. In ground pool,
guest collage You finish and
save*Prlea reduced I
Only &gt;42.500
SANFORD spacious home In
excellant neighborhood, walk
to Drug and Grocery store
Owner will hold lor 20 yrs. *•
11% with sufficient down
&gt;72,*00
CALLANYTIME
REALTOR 172 4*11

Sanford’s Sales Leader

WE HEED LISTINGS!____
Winter Spgs. Lakelront. large 2
bdrm., 2 bath. Fla. room, eg*
4. mini cond. loaded, hug*
high lot. fenced, tell trees.
&gt;75.000. assume *W% VA. low
payment. &gt;35.500 equity. Con
slder trad* for older, smaller
rental house 233 0104 or &gt;21
1541________________________
Your Home Is Full ol Hlddtn
Dollars. Turn Idlt Hams Into
cash last with a Want Ad
Dial M l 2411._______________
4 REPOSSESSIONS In Orlando
trom ) 77.500 to &gt;52.750. Low
cash down Lake Mary Raalty
REALTOR................ 221-714*

WE LISTANOSELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY
TERRIFICI 1 Bdrm.. I bath
ham* with arched opening at
dining room, geddl* Ians,
FPU utility reem, beautiful
hardwood fleers 1147,5(4.
JUST FOR YOUI 2 Bdrm.. 2
bath mobile homo with spill
bdrm. plan, ttf-ln kitchen,
itflllfy shed, end m erel

2M1S. Perk, Senlerd
Ml Lb. Mary Blvd. Lb. Mary

oral m u m m y
• Adult E Fomlly
Sections
• W /D Connections
• Coble TV, Pool
• Short Term le ase s
A vailable
1, 2,1 If- Apb, 2 fc- TA

3 2 3 -2 S 2 0 '

IS M W. 2 5 * I t

EVERYTHING
REDUCED

Admission $2 50
Entire show with ad $2 00.

u rn u s

The Mth Annual Jansen Dyer
Antique Show A Sel* Jen 4.5
A 4 Frl 4 10pm Sat 1 »p m
Sun I S p m Admission II 50
with this ad__________________

BOB DANCE DODGE
Hwy 17 *2..................... 112-771*
WE FINANCED
WE BUY CARSI

213—Auctions

Buying *r Selling
AMebil* Home?

217—G arage Sales

Grigory Mobil* Homes
Area's Largest Re Sal* Dealer
Many available In Leea I Parks

• l « yard sale I 130 Shannon Or
Sat Jen 5th, * 4 p m Dishes.
dryer, furniture A more______
Big Yard and Tool Sale Lots
end lots ot tools Saturday
Jen 5th
I
5 PM 1504
Summerlin Av*._____________
Over 500 pieces ol polyester A
doubleknll material Blouse,
dress, and penis length 50*
and SI a yard. Friday A
S a tu rd a y . *• f p m . 1)5
Plnecrest Dr. (behind Ih*
school I

EASY PINANCINO..MS-m-12M
For $ *l* 1*11 Westfield by
Fleetwood 17 X 45 Set up In
family park S3500 down and
assume peymenls ol 515*44
lor approx 4 yaars Musi sell
Ml 4241 alter 7 00

159— Real Estate
Wanted
Private party needs
1*r ) bedroom hem*.
211*441

219—Wanted to Buy

OK Corral Used Cars Ml 1*11
IN I VW Bug Rebuilt engine
New wide rear liras 1700
14* 5111
1*74 Vista Cruiser Station
Wagon Loaded with equip
men I Immaculate condition
One previous owner t(50
Cash M IN IS

235— T ru c k s /
Buses / Vans
IN I Chevy High Tap with New
Cenverslen. Fully equipped,
lew miles. Only 111,575.
■ YFRENCHIE
FRENCHIES CUSTOM VANS
I7M N. Hwy 17/*}. Lengweed
112*112........................ 12*47*1

7 4 Ford Pick Up. Runs Good

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

Baby: Beds. Strellers. Clothes.
Playpens, Etc. Paperback
Seeks. 111 (177 211 *5*4
Paying CASH lor
Aluminum. Cans. Copper,
Brass. Leed. Newspaper,
Glass. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool. *I(W 1st
( 5 00 Sel * 1173 1100

Kenmer* Peris, Service
Used Weshers. Ml *4*2.
MOONEY APPLIANCES
• RENT TOOWN*
Color TVs., stereos, washers,
dryers. r*t&gt;-gxrator. treeiers.
furniture, video recorders.
Special 1st weeks rent **«
Alternative TV A A apt. Rentals
Zeyres Snapping Center
__________ in te r n _________ r
Subtract These Things
Gathering Duel "A d " Dollars
To Your Income._____________
THE USEDSTORE
Furniture and appliances
Com* In and see
• II* E 2nd Street. Ml 445* *
WILSONMAIER FURNITURE
111U S E .FIRST ST
___________ 222 54M___________
5 place Colonial bedroom sel
Single A double chesl*. 1
Hutches pi us desk 4*5 1111

223—Miscellaneous

113—Television /
Radio / Stereo
COLOR TELEVISION
RCA 25" Consol* color televl
slon. Original price over M00
Balance due &gt;24* 00 cash or
taka over payments S20 per
month Still In warranty. NO
MONEY DOWN Free home
trial No obligation
Call aa) 52*4 Dav or night

Dog Obedience Training. (
week* &gt;10. Start Jan Slh
10 30 AM . Tracking and
Boarding available Ability
Kennels. Osleen 1111120
Fibreglass screening
100' of
14" and 4 (" widths Aqua end
Forest Green 114 p#r-*t) ft.
M l 4471____________________
MAKE A "SPLASH" with Cash
trom Went Ads II Sell those
"Unused” Item* Ih* EASY
way Cell Classified M ila n .
Professional type pool table I"
solid slat* table Best offer
over 1500 00 M l 4475
Satellite TV System*
Complete All you need 100%
Financing No money down
SUM 00 Universal *11 5744
Sell or Trad* Goll Club* com
plat* Minolta camera and
eccresortos Tel M l MO*
Wanted Retponslble p a rly to
lake over low monthly pay
men Is on spinet pleno Can be
seen locally Writ* Credit
Manager P O Box 4011 Ft
Myers Beech. FI*. 21*21

Cell Ml (IM after 1.
'7* CMC S ierra Classic &lt;1 Ion
p ic k u p Loaded Ext r a clean
11)0 down M onthly payments
4** 0*00 or t * * 0*00

237—Tractors and
T railers
1*71 Oeutf Trector 4004 Runs
good 12)00 M l 347*
Trailer ( X 40 H 000 Firm
Optional room addition con
slsling bed. bath, living SJOOO
Both for &gt;1500 You have to
move M l 247* after ( 00

241— Recreational
V e h ic la s / Campers
For Sale Camper shell.
Good condition M0
Call Ml 5751.
For Sal* 74 Dodge 20' Motor
Home 21( Motor Phone Ml
1*1)

243—Junk Cars
BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From n o to 150 or more.
Cell M2 1424 M l 4112
TOP Dollar Paid for Junk &amp;
Used cars, trucks A heavy
equipment. 122 M*0
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS AUTO PARTS 2*1450!

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

Accounting A
Tax Sarvice
For Small businesses Monthly
computerized financial llel
lament. Quarterly returns.

IMONGAsMo^renkllL

Building Contractors
COMPLETE BLDO. SERVICES
Residential / Cammerclal
New Werk *r Remedellng
Whalesale Metal AulMInqs
Serving MM. Fie. 541(344/ Orl.

CALL ANY TIM E

322-2420

WE FINANCE

IMI French Ave............M l I Ml
Mercedes 240 D 42 Beautiful
black with camel leather into
rlor 22.000 ml. Perfect condl
lion! SI*.*00 IM 1*1*_________

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

LUXURIOUS! 2 bdrm., 1 Mth
hem* near gelt ceurtel E lf in
kitchen with breakfast Mr,
screen pefU with a pest thru
Mr, cable, central elr and
beet, many extrasi IIIM M .

Ml-Mtl.

'72 MO Midget Only S4** dwn.
'?( Merc. Cauger Only MM dwn.

CONSULT OUR

STUNNINOI 1 Bdrm., 1 bath. 2
y * * r eld hemel Veulfed
ceilings. FPU breeklast M r
c e n t r a l e l r en d b e e f .
AssumebU PHA mertgegel
NUN.

II yeu are leaking ter a sue
cetsful career la Raal Estate,
lienstram Realty It leaking
ter yeu. Call la * Albright
Seder at 12120* Evenings

SA LES
'71Chryi Cerdeba SS04dwn

SAVE

FOR ESTATE
Commercial or Residential
Auctions A Appraisals Call
Dell » Auction 115 5470________

deceraled1144*00

aOENEVA OSCEOLA RD.•
ZONED FOR MOBILESI
I Acre Country tracts.
Well tread a* paved Rd.
MXDewss. I# Yr*. *1 ll% l
From til.lee I

—
f

D IS C O U N T
AUTO

Frl Sat 13 noon to * P M
Sunday II noon to SP M

The Chapman Shows

15 7 -M o b ile
Homes / Sale

THE SPECIALTYI 2 bdrm., I
bath hem* I Eel In kitchen.
F P L celling lent, tastefully

WILL BUILD TO SUITI YOUR
LOT OR OURSI EXCLUSIVE
A O E N T POR W IN SO NO
OEV. CORP., A CENTRAL
FLORIOA LEADERI MORE
HOME FOR LESS MONEYI
CALLTOOAYI

Debary Auto A Marine Seles
Across Ih* river, top of hill
174 Hwy 17 *2 Debary 44( (5*4
DON'T SPIN YOUR WHEELS
Get going with a
Herald Want Ad 123 1*11
For Sal*
1*72 Bulck Skylark
Convertible M l 7*41

January 4.5 6
City Auditorium

* REDUCED TO MO.toe a
Priced to sell now I 2 Bdrm
Townhouse Condominum (12
W 25th St Professionally re
decorated All new cent heal
end elr, appliances 574 (1(1
Sendlewood Condominiums
Airport Blvd I Bdrm , I bath
SJ7.000 Cell M l 21*3

tlMdwn.
tlMdwn.
154 dwn

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1 1 20 S. S(n&gt;0fd 321 4075

Ocala Antiques Show

122 1544, or 1725114

••STEM PER AGENCY IN C .**

'71 Ford Truck
'7t Maverick
'71 Cutlass

USED CAR YEAR EN D
C LEARANCE

2 1 1 -A n tiq u e s /
Collectables

REAL ESTATE

REALTOR_____________Ml 74*4
By owner: 1 bdrm, 2 bath.
Many extras. VA. FHA or
Conventional 170.000 IM (144
low down payment, affordable
monthly. 1 bdrm . plus family
room Cell owner 4*5 1111.
NEW SM YRNA BEACH- 4
Bdrm. lVt Bilh M* Ft*!
from OCEANI141.***
Machs Me Realty. REALTORS
*♦*-07-1111. Open 7 Days I
SANFORD CHARMER I bdrm .
I bath, 2 car garage Only
SM.000 Landstock Brokers.
___________14517(2___________
Sanlord By Owner I Beautiful
home beautiful view, Lake
Monro* 1 bdrms . 2 baths,
lush tropical enclosed pool
Hug* lot with well A sprinkler
system . C o m p le te ly r e ­
modeled throughlout New
kitchen, appliances, draperies
+ roof! 117*.000 For ap
polntmenf cell 177 7*14
Sanford (04 Locust / v* New
CB Home 1 bdrm., 1 bath,
central heel B al-. carpet, all
appliances. Move In today I
145.000 terms.

REALTY'REALTOR

GENEVA GARDENS

Top Sal ari es
Free Li fe &amp; H o s p i t a l i z a t i o n
2 Paid V a c a t i o n s Each Year
P i o f i t S h a r i n g Plan
Other B e n e f i t s

189—Office Supplies
___ / Equipment ___

321-0759 Eve 322-7543

7 - v ir

Thursday, Jaw. 3. IttS -S B

141— Homes For Sale

Lie. Real Estate Brekor
3440 Sanford Avt

LANDLORDS *

141— Homes For Sale

Outstanding

Evtning Herald, S«nford. PI.

97—Apartm ents
Furnished / Rent

Cltaning Service
Hood Carpet Cleaning U.mg.
Dining Room A Hall 12*00.
Safe A Chair, (11 M l 1M&gt;
MAIDS To Order
For complete guaranteed sells
faction In your hem* or office
cleaning, plus SI cash rebate,
call 11*0400 NOW I

Electrical
Quality Wart at AHerdabto
Price*. Ne (eb toe large
er toe small- 24 hr. service.

Fre^tHmato^^-^-TOTlM

General Services
Professional Chelr Cabling
and ruth seal weaving Reason
able prices Call 1214*41.
Rebuilt KIRBY/ IIl*.W A up
Guaranteed. Kirby Co
714W. 1st St Ml 5440

Handy Man

Lawn Service

Painting

Exp. Handyman, Ret Reliable
Free Est. most any |ob Be*!
Rales Ml (111. Cell Anytime

R A S SOD SALES Cemm. Re*.
St. Augustin* A Bahia
2400 S Sanlord Av* Ml (111
Christian Bros. Lawn Service
Complete Lawn Cara
Reasonable Rales 215 44*1
Lawn Maintenance
Landscaping Bush Hog Mowing
14*50*5

RespensiM* Men and helper will
paint your Heme er Business
etc. Give your problems to us
WE CARE. Quellty work. 30

Haalth A Beauty
TOWER'S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY Harriett's Beauty
Nook. Sit E. 1st St. TO 574}

Home Improvement

Masonry

Collier's Building A Remedellng
N* Job Tee Small
t i l burton Lane, Santord
M14421
Fans to Fences, Cabinets to
C em m ed ei. F a ir p rlc a t.
N + 771-4441, iaava message.

BEAL Concrete 2 men qualify
operation Patio*, driveways.
Days 111 7111 Eves. M7 IMI.
CONCRETEANOSTUCCO
All phases, licensed and Insured
Free Estimates. John MS *1(7.

Horn# Repairs

Nursing Caro

CARPENTER
Repair* and
remedellng. No |ob too (mail.
Call TO *441
Maintenance ef *11 type*
Carpentry, pointing, plumbing
end electric. M l *01*

LPN will ill with your elderly or
disabled relative In your home
weekdays Hour, day. Exp.
Reference* Ml 111*
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakevlew Nursing Center
*1* E. Second SI.. Sanlord
M l *707

Landclearing
CARUTHBRSTRUCKINO
Fill dirt and land clearing
14* 5000
O ENtVA LANDCLEARINO
Lot and Land clearing,
fill dirt, and hauling
Call &gt;4* 5*20 or 14* 1711
LANDCLEARING
PILL DIRT. BUSHOGGING
CLAY A SHALE . M3 U ll

jr^j^M7JO*7Al^enL

Painting
Painttog Interior/ Extorter
P A P E R IN G ...........DRYWALL
References A Reasonable
VERY RELIABLE *04 220)2*
EAT YOUR VEOETABLES
Brush your tooth
And road your
WANTAOS

f s%* V

Paper Hanging
PAPEiHANOINO
Any type wallcovering
Reasonable.................. M l 7S*l

Plastering
BALL Phases ol Plastering e
Repair. Stucco. Herd Coot.
Simulated Brick. Ml M*l.

Plumbing
Fra* Ett.-Cali 1

Tree Service
JOHN ALLENS LAWN A TREE
Tree removal end trimming.
Lew Prices I Firewood. I I I U M
ECHOLSTREE SERVICE
Free Estimates! Lew Price*I
Llcented/lnturtd/ M l 222*
“ le t the PreSesatowals 0* H".

* Upholstery
FURNITURE RBPINISNINO
Reasonable Ratos. Upholstery,
s e r v ic e av a i l a b l e . Free
estimates. TO &gt;70
Evenings 221017

�SB—Evening H tflM i Santord, FI.

ThurKUy, Jen. 1 .1W5

The Government Giveth And Taketh Away
Social Security Checks F a tte r, But M e d ic a re D e d u c tib le G o in g Up A g a in
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The new year will bring
fatter checks to 37 million Social Security
recipients, a bigger payroll tax bite to 116 million
.workers and higher Medicare costs to hospital
' patients.
Beneficiaries will have to calculate whether
their pensions arc subject to a first-time tax. But
pensioners who ccmtlnue to work may earn more
without losing benefits.

Among the changes coming In January^
—The 37 million old-age. disability and sur­
vivor benefit recipients will get a 3.5 percent
boost In their Jan. 3 checks. For the typical
retired worker. It will be a $15 Increase, to $449 a
month. The typical retired couple will get $26
more, or $776 a month. Cost to the Social

Security trust funds: $6.1 billion this year. The 4
million Supplemental Security Income recipients
got the Increase In their Dec. 31 checks. Cost to
the general Treasury: $205 million.
—For 120 million workers paying Into Social
Security, the tax rate rises to 7.05 percent from
1984's 6.7 percent: employers, who paid 7
percent In 1984. pay 7.05 percent In 1985. For
self-employed workers, who paid an effective rate
o f 11.3 percent In 1984. the effective rate rises to
11.8 percent.
—The maximum earnings subject to tax rises
to $39,600. an Increase of $1,800. That means
the maximum worker tax also rises, by $259.20.
to $2,791.80. It will affect about 8.9 million
workers who earn more than the 1984 maximum.

For self-employed workers, the top tax rises by
$401.40. to $4,672.80.
—The Medicare hospital deductible rises to
$400. from 1984's $356. for the 30 million people
covered by the old-age and disabled health
program. That means the deductible has risen
nearly $ 100 In two years: In 1983. It was $304.
—The monthly premium paid by enrollees In
the optional Medicare Part B. which covers
physician fees, tests and othe outpatient care,
rises to $15.50. a 6 percent boost from 1984's
$14.60.
—The government Is mailing 40 million forms
explaining that 1984 benefits arc taxable tor
upper-income people for the first time. If the sum
o f a recipient's adjusted gross Income, plus
tkx-exempt Interest, plus half his benefit exceeds

a certain base, up to half his benefits arc subject
to Income tax. The base Is $25,000 for a single
person or married people living separately for the
entire year. $32,000 for couples, and zero for
married people who lived with their spouses for
any part of the year. About 10 percent of
recipients — more than 3 million people — will
pay higher Income taxes.
—As of Jan. 1. old-age pensioners who continue
to work may earn more without losing part of
their benefit. Those under 65. may earn $5,400.
up from $5,160. Those aged 65-69 may earn
$7,320. up from $6,960. Benefits are trimmed $1
for every $2 earned over the limit: an estimated 1
million pensioners have their checks reduced for
that reason. Those 70 and older have no limit.

Delinquents
Will Learn
How To Cope
In The Woods

Florida Bar
Wants To Drop
Illegal Law
Practice Cases
By William Cotterell
TALLAHASSEE |UPI| - The
Florida Bar. argued Into " a
no-win position” by a combative
legal secretary. Is considering a
proposal to turn cases of "u n ­
authorized practice of law " over
to state prosecutors.
Bar P r e s i d e n t G e ra ld F.
Hlchman also wants to change
the name o f the offense to
"consu m er fraud." which Is
what the o rg a n iz e d legal
establishment accused Rose­
mary Furman o f practicing In
h er Northsld c S ec re ta ria l
Services. The 57-year-old
Jacksonville woman's four-year
fight with the Bar ended In
N o v e m b e r wh en Gov. Bob
Graham and the Cabinet spared
her a 30-day Jail sentence with a
unanimous clemency vote.
The Bar Board of Governors
and Its standing committee on
unauthorized practice of law will
consider Richoum'b suggestions
In meetings this month In
T a m p a and C l e a r w a t e r . If
approved, the Bar would petition
the Florida Supreme Court to
shift responsibility for UPL pro­
secution to the state attorneys.
The Bar also Is spending
$23,000 to find out why It lost
the public relations aspects of
the Furman fight, while winning
a ll th e c o u r t c o n te s ts . H e r c la im s
o f p e r s e c u t io n b y l a w y e r s w e r e

aired by the CBS News program
"6 0 Minutes" and drew na­
tionwide attention In major
newspapers and magazines.
The day before the Cabinet
vote. Graham's mall count was
473-4 In favor of clemency —
with three of the dissents com­
ing from lawyers and the fourth
from the Bar Itself.

. v M
MereMMwteSr Oregery 0«Mi

M ight As Well Be Spring
W ith tho te m p e ra tu re In the 80s on the last day of the y e a r,
F ra n k B row n and his fian cee Sharon B a k e r, both of O rlando,
and his cousin, 11-year-old M ic h e lle M a s e n h e lm e r, visiting

fro m snowy M in n eap o lis, M in n ., soaked up some w a rm
F lo rid a sun w h ile s w im m e rs en|oy the cool w a te rs at
W e k lw a Springs S tate P a rk .

9 Nabbed For Drunk Driving In Seminole

The following persons have detected her car traveling 66 28. of Orlando, arrested at 11:30 Orlando, at 10 a.m. Monday after
been arrested In S emi nol e mph In a 45 mph zone.
p.m. Sunday on 17-92 after his his car was seen cutting ofl
County on a charge of driving —Ruben Pruitt Williams, 24. of car was seen making a U-turn on traffic as he passed vehicles on
1157 Vienna Drive. Casselberry, the grassy median o f 17-92 and state Road 434. Longwood. He
under the Influence:
—Michael E. Hurley Jr.. 20, of at 1:20 a.m. Sunday on Lake Dog Track Road.
was also charged with driving
" F r o m a public relations
1003 Princess Gate, Winter Drive, one-half m ile cast of —Ronald Allan Copp, 19. of without a license.
viewpoint, the Bar was clearly In
Park, was arrested at 5:08 p.m. Casselberry, after his car was 1106-B c o u n t y Roa d 427,
a no-win p o s i t i o n . " said
Tuesday after his car was seen seen crossing the centerline sev­ Longwood. at 10:35 p.m. Mon­ —Ramon Alberto Reynoso. 21. of
Rlchman. "C arrying out the
e r a l t i m e s on S e m l n o l a day after his car wus seen Deltona, on Tuesday after his car
s p e e d i n g on E a s t b r o o k
mandate o f the Supreme Court
Boulevard at Howell Branch Boulevard.
speeding on 17-92.
was seen traveling 60 mph In a
o f Florida to prosecute un­
Road. Winter Park. He was also —Gordon Francis Cartwright. —Robert Lynn Surchcr. 30. of 45 mph zone on 17-92, Sanford.
authorized practice o f law vio­
charged with reckless driving.
lations. the Bar has been con­
—Bill Defee. 29. of Oakrldge
sistently cast by the press In the
Motel. »10. Fern Park, at 8:10
role of an Institution seeking to
p.m. Saturday after his car was
prosecute Individuals merely to
seen weaving on and off U.S.
LONDON (UPI) — Secret documents released by
The papers were released by the Public Records
protect Its own turf and main­
Highway 17-92. Longwood. He the British Cabinet after 30 years show that
Office under the rule that selected official records
tain a competitive advantage."
w a s a l s o c h a r g e d w i t h Winston Churchill was deeply worried the United
may be disclosed after 30 years. Britain has no
possession of less than 20 grams States might start a world war over Indochina In
Furman ran afoul of the Bar's
Freedom of Information Act.
UPL office by selling packets of of marijuana.
the 1950s.
According to one secret Cabinet report. U.S.
—Margaret W. Carr. 44. of 1410
legal papers for uncontested
The documents from 1954 show that Churchill
military leaders even urged a nuclear strike on
Hilltop Road. Casselberry, at was so alarmed by U.S. atomic bomb tests on
divorce, simple wills and name
China In retaliation for help to Ho Chi Mlnh's
changes, along with filing In­ 2:18 a.m. Sunday on 17-92 near Bikini Atoll In the Pacific, he urged Washington
V i e t n a m e s e r e b e l s w h o h anded French
Dog Track Road after her car to open talks with Moscow to try to prevent a
structions. She claimed she was
paratroops an embarrassing defeat at Dlen Blen
drove off the road several times.
helping the poor avoid costly
nuclear arms race.
Phu In the spring o f 1954.
lawyer fees, but the Bar argued
—Dawn M. Ylngst. 28. o f 270
"A t present some people thought that the
The 80-year-old prime minister refused to
that she counseled customers to, W y m o r e R o a d . A l t a m o n t e greatest risk was that the United States might
consider the U.S. plan, worried as much by the
conceal assets, supported perju-' Springs, at 2:31 a.m. Sunday plunge the world Into war. either through a
possibility o f nuclear war as by the fact that U.S.
near Hallmark Furniture, state .misjudged Intervention In Asia or In order to
ry and gave legal advice that
bases In eastern England made Britain a target
Road 436. She was stopped by a forestall an attack by Russia." Cabinet minutes
later cost customers high legal
for the Soviet Union, which had signed a pact
Casselberry officer after radar show.
fees to correct.
with China.
•

Churchill Feared U.S. Would Start Nuke War

By Michael Moline
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Un­
der a pilot program, the state of
Floridn will send up to 10 young
women convicted of dellquency
Into the wilderness later this
month for as long as a year In
hopes of teaching them how to
cope.
The female offenders, ages 12
to 17, will be assigned to an
encampment near Chiefland run
under a state contract by a
private agency. Outward Bound,
which has operated similar pro­
grams for dellquent and emo­
tionally troubled youths.
Outward Bound's JoAnn Pre­
ston. who Is helping design the
program, said the young women
will spend up to a year In the
wilderness, living In dormito­
ry-style tents. Besides their
schooling, they will endure long
marches and canoe trips and will
participate In community work
projects.
The Idea. Preston said. Is to
place the young women In
stressful situations and force
them to learn to work together to
cope. The hope, she said. Is that
the women will take what they
have learned with them when
they return to the real world.
You might call It a sort of boot
camp.
"Some people could equate It
to that." Preston said. "It Is very
structured. It Is very Intense. It
ts out there In the wilderness.
It's all a way of finding out who
you are.
"It Is a little society." Preston
said. "What huppeus Is the folks
are all living together and de­
pending on each other for sup­
port and laughter and they begin
to act like a small society.
"What happens Is people are
instantly confronted with the
fact that they have to take
responsibility. They can't blame
It on anyone else. They see that
they are vital to group success.
They’re an Integral pari of the
group and they're Important
peopie." she said.
Previously, the young women
would have ended up In the
Alyce D. McPherson training
school In Ocala, one o f three
such schools In the state. Pre­
ston said.
B u t th e d o o r s to t he
McPherson school close at the
end of the year. Some residents
will be transferred to the other
two schools: others will be set­
tled In halfway houses where
they will undergo supervision
while leading otherwise normal
lives, and others will enter pro­
g r a m s like the one b e i n g
established In Chiefland.

Third Drunk Driving Charge Nets Sanford Man $1,000 Fine
A Sanford man arrested July 1 for
his third driving under the Influence
offense has been fined $1,000 In
Seminole County court.
Kenneth Raybon. 52. o f 1505
Wind wood Drive, was arrested alter
his car was Involved In an accident.
Raybon. pleaded no contest to the
charge.
In other court action, the following
persons have either pleaded or been
found guilty of driving under the
Influence, or having an unlawful blood
alcohol level.
As first-time offenders, their driver's
license was suspended tor 6 months,
they were ordered to pay a $250 fine,
pay court costs of $27.50 and complete
50 hours o f community service. When
a guilty or no contest plea Is entered or
If the defendant Is found guilty o f an
alcohol-related charge, other charges
are usually either not prosecuted or
dismissed. Most o f the first-time of­
fenders are allowed to apply for
business-only driving permits.
—Jcannlce Bell Hammer. 36, o f 229
DeBora Court. Altamonte Springs,
arrested Oct. 18 after her car was seen
weaving on state Road 436. Altamonte
Springs.

—* ^ ' r r

-R ob ert William Carr. 22. of 24526
Markham Road. Maitland, arrested
Aug. 18 after his car was lnvloved In
an accident on O xford Road at
Femwood Boulevard. Fem Park.
—Michael Wilson Barrington. 21. of
Orlando, arrested Aug. 21 after hla car
was seen traveling 55 mph In a 35
mph zone on state Road 434. Alta­
monte Springs.
—Warren Douglas Sampson. 26. of
714 Florida Ave.. Sanford, arrested
Aug. 2 after hts car failed to maintain a
single lane on U.S. Highway 17-92 Just
south o f Sanford. He was fined $500
and ordered to spend five weekends In
the county Jail.
—Ernest Alfred Nelson. 65. of 521 Oak
Lane. Maitland, arrested Aug. 27 after
an Improper lane change on SR 436.
Altamonte Springs.
—David L. Jones. 33. of Clinton. N.Y..
arrested Oct. 24 after his car crossed
the centerline and hit the shoulder of
SR 436. Casselberry. His DUI charge
was amended to willful and wanton
reckless driving. He was fined $300.
—Pamela P. Fendley. 33. o f 4769
Meadowood Blvd.. Fern Park, arrested
12:03 a.m. Oct. 5 after driving her
truck without headlights on while
traveling on 17-92. The charge was
amended to careless driving and she

was fined $250.
—Dennis Cody. 24, of Lot 12. Fem
Park Boulevard. Fem Park, arrested
after his car weaved and almost hit a
van on 17-92. The DUI charge was
amended to willful and wanton reck­
less driving and he was fined $300.
—Jerry Joseph Doyle. 29. o f 388
Panama Circle. Winter Springs, ar­
rested Aug. 22 after his car wjw
Involved In an accident on Melody
Lane. Casselberry.
— T i m o t h y R a y W i c k s , 18. o f
Longwood. arrested Sept. 2 on Camelta
Drive. Longwood, after he was spotted
driving 55 mph In a 35 mph zone and
on the wrong side of the road. His DUI
charge was amended to willful and
wanton reckless driving and he was
fined $200.
—Catherine Lane Reach, 52. of 299 S.
Sunland. Sanford, arrested Sept. 21
after her car ran off the roadway and
was weaving on county Road 427.
Sanford.
—Cris Edward Havel. 34. of 1001
Espalanade Drive. Casselberry, ar­
rested Oct. 10 after his car was seen
weaving on SR 436 frpm 17-92. He
was fined $500 for his second DUI.
—Gregory Spencer Motley, 25. of
Orlando, arrested Oct. 13. after his car
was seen traveling 75 mph on In­

terstate 4 near Lake Mary. He was
fined $500 for his second DUI.
—Nelson S. Cummings. 20, of 122
Heather Hill. Longwood. arrested Sept.
20 after his car was seen traveling over
100 mph on CR 427. The DUI charge
was amended to willful and wanton
reckless driving and he was fined
$300.
—Alan Paul Frazier. 24. o f 221
Lochmond Drive. Fem Park, arrested
Sept. 21 after his car was seen weaving
on state Road 46. Sanford. The DUI
charge was amended to willful and
wanton reckless driving and he was
fined $250.
—Aubrey Lee Alley. 41. of Deltona,
arrested Sept. 20 after speeding on SR
436. Altamonte Springs. The charged
was amended to willful and wanton
reckless driving and he was fined
$300.
—Horace Monroe Canady. 30. o f
Kissimmee, arrested Sept. 20 after he
failed to maintain a single lane on SR
436, Altamonte Springs.
—George William Dando. 43. of Or­
mond Beach, arrested Sept. 3. after his
car was seen weaving on Interstate 4.
two miles north of Altamonte Springs.
He pleaded no contest to DUI.
—Rodney Lynn Forward. 30. of Or­
ange Drive. Oviedo, arrested Dec. 31.

1983. after his car car ran off the
roadway and back across the cen­
terline o f state Road 419. Oviedo. A
charge o f possession of marijuana was
not prosecuted.
—William Alan Maunz. 26. o f 491 Lake
Minnie Drive, Sanford, arrested Sept.
22 after his car was seen weaving and
traveling 20 mph on SR 436.
—Peter David Reason. 28, o f Ft.
Lauderdale, arrested Oct. 5 on state
Road 426. Oviedo, after his vehicle was
seen tavcllng 89 mph In a 45 mph
zone. The charge was reduced to
willful and wanton reckless driving
and he was fined $250.
—Mary Alice Bates. 27. o f 2051 West
Lake Brantly Hill. Longwood. arrested
Dec. 15. after her car was seen
w e a v i n g on SR 436. Al t amo nt e
Springs.
— J o s e p h F ra n ta , 24, o f 908
Montgomery Road. Altamonte Springs,
arrested Dec. 20 after his car was seen
crossing the centerline o f 17-92,
Casselberry.
—Kevin L. Murry, 24. o f P.O. Box 414.
Oviedo, arrested Dec. 19 after his car
hit a power pole on Florida Avenue at
Van Arsdale Road near Oviedo.
—Douglas Lewis. 30. of 191 Wlnsor.
S a n f o r d , a r r e s t e d D e c . 12 In
Casselberry.
—Dsaas Jordan

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Evening Herald
77th Year. No. 116-Frlday, January 4. 1985-Sanford, Florida
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Evening

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Herald

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mmmm— mmmmm— m—

481 280)

-

mmmmmmm—

Price

25 Cents

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mmmm

500 Condos On Drawing Board For Sanford
Two multi-million dollar condominium projects
with a combined total of nearly 500 units are on
the drawing boards for construction In Sanford
this year.
One containing 236 units with prices ranging
from $30,000 to low $50,000 Is slated for Airport
Boulevard while the other with 240-to-250
"lu xury" units Is planned on the former Meadors
property on the Monroe lakefront.
Eugene Chorozy. who Is Joint-venturing both
projects with Concurrent Construction, said
ground will be broken within 45 days for the first
project on a 17-acre tract off Airport Boulevard

between the county's new health center and
Mariner's Cove.
This two-story development, expected to cost
$10 million, will have 236 one. two and
three-bedroom condominium units, priced from
the $30,000 to the low $50,000 range.
He said the site plan for the development Is
expected to be considered for approval by the
city’s Planning and Zoning Commission later this
month.
Meanwhile, the planning and zoning board
Thursday night recommended approval of a

Powerful Telescope
Will Peer Into Past
PASADENA. Calif. (UPI) - Even In
an age when space flight Is a monthly
event, the Idea that you could look
through a telescope and see a candle
nickering on the moon Is almost
unbelievable, but a private $70 mil­
lion grant will give scientists an
Instrument to do Just that.
The world's largest optical tele­
scope will be built atop Mauna Kea
volcano In Hawaii, scientists an­
nounced Thursday.
The telescope will act as a "tim e
machine" because It will be able to
see deep Into space, capturing the
light sent out from stars billions of
years before It reaches Earth. The
effect will be lo see the objects as
they were then — not as they are
now.
T h e t e le s c o p e c o u ld g iv e
astronomers their best look ever Into
the far reaches of the universe and
could move science nearer to un­
derstanding the origin of life and the
celestial bodies.
The telescope will be able to look
back In time to 12 billion years ago.
which Is nearly three-quarters o f the
birth o f the universe." Dr. Marvin
Goldberger, president o f Caltech, said
at a news conference.
. &amp;|ttSSbf wJU con.truqt thc W
million observatory primarily with a
$70 million grant from the W.M.
Keck Foundation of Los Angeles,
which officials called the largest
private gift for a scientific project In
history.
Caltech and the University o f
California will, share the rest of the
cost.
The telescope on a ridge of the
volcano will be four times more
powerful than the 5-meter telescope
on Palomar Mountain in Southern
California, which la also owned and
operated by Caltech and has been the

premier Instrument In astronomy
since 1948.
It will alBO be nearly twice the size
of the Soviet Union's 236-Inch In­
strument. the world's largest.
President Reagan sent university
officials a telegram hailing the ven­
ture as one that "excites the Imagina­
tion of anyone who has ever looked
up at the sUrs In wonderment."
"It will give us new aspects about
the formation o f the galaxies since
we'll be able to get much closer to the
tim e w h en th e g a la x ie s ' w e re
formed." Goldberger said. "Undoubt­
edly we will achieve o greater un­
derstanding o f the state o f the
universe at Its creation from this
telescope."
J.B. Oke. a Caltech astronomer
working bn the design o f the tele­
scope. said the Instrument has excit­
ing possibilities.
"W e will be able to really see the
universe when the galaxies were
forming and clusters of galaxies were
forming and see how it all began and
that's very exciting."
' The Keck Telescope will comple­
ment a $1 billion telescope scheduled
to be launched Into space next year
by the space shuttle. The space
telescope will be able look deeper Into
space than any Earth-bome tele:£ope. but the Keck Telescope will be
able to study in greater scientific
deUll any objects that may have been
detected In space, Goldberger said.
There arc larger radio telescopes
that measure radio energy, but this
will be the biggest optical Instrument
and It will produce photograph^ far
blighter than any other machine In
the world, the scientists said.
The W.M. Keck Foundation, one of
the nation's largest charitable orga­
nizations In terms of total grants, was
established In 1954 by the founder of
Superior Oil.

Lake M ary To Grant Single
Garbage Pickup Franchise
company cannot raise Its rates unless
By Rick Branson
the hike Is approved by the city
Herald Staff W riter
commission.
The Lake Mary City Commission Is
The ordinance and contract are
leaving the capitalist road as far as
expected to be legally "cleaned up" by
garbage collection is concerned. In fact.
Pctrce and presented for a commission
It Intends to get off at the next possible
vote
at Its next meeting. Jan. 17.
exit.
The commission appeared anxious
After a year o f letting garbage
Thursday to get the Issue settled. Since
companies compete for the curbside
January of last year, when it embarked
trash of Lake Mary residents, the
on a free market course, the garbage
commission has decided to grant an
question has been a source of head­
exclusive franchise.
The commission agreed 4 to 1 aches and hand-ringing for the com­
mission.
Thursday to have City Attorney Robert
It has fielded complaints from cus­
Pctree and City Manager Kathy Rice
tomers all year about poor service and
draw up a contract as soon as possible.
unwarranted rate hikes from two of the
In accordance with an ordinance
companies.
allowing the city to grant a franchise to
one firm.
The commission has haggled with
The commission has yet to select a
one company In particular — Danjohn
company, but wanted to have the
Services o f Longwood — which raised
contract drawn up before hand so
Its rates from $8 to $10.50 a month. In
applicants will know exactly what Is spite of a city ordinance which said all
expected of the them. Ace Disposal
rate Increases had to be approved by
Service of Orlando, one of the four
the commission.
companies serving 990 homes In the
The experience has clearly left a
c ity , has all ready requested an
stench In the commissioners' nostrils.
exclusive franchise.
"W e've been a year cussing and
Included In the ordinance arc desig­ discussing about It." Commissioner
nated pick-up times and locations, as
See TRASH, page 12 A
well as a stipulation that says the

request from Chorozy and his partners to rezone
from agriculture to multi-family residential dis­
trict the 12.5 acre tract known as the Meadors
p rop erty alo n g U.S. H igh w ay 17-92 and
Tcrwllllgcr Lane.
Actual rczonlng will have to receive the Sanford
City Commission's approval which usually re­
quires two public hearings over a month's time.
The rczonlng received preliminary approval
from the county commission. Under state law
property cannot be rezoned. after annexation, to
a higher density until approved by the county
commission.

From Staff and Wire Reports

— Donna Bates

Florida
Fro sty
Swimsuits m ay have been
a p p ro p ria te dress tor
building a snowman In
Sanford, but unfortunately
for, left to right, B .J .
Pratt, 4, Sanford, Kristen
Dlener, 5, Sanford, and
Jonl Fleischman, 4, De­
ltona, their creation suf­
fered meltdown In just a
few hours. They built the
snowman at the G inger­
bread House Day Care
Center during the sum ­
m e rlik e te m p e ra tu re s
Th u rs d a y , but perhaps
they should have waited.
T e m p e r a t u r e s are
expected to drop into the
40s this weekend. Th e
snow came from an Ice
house.
H * » M Phot* by O r i f i r y O th iu

W idening Of 17-92 In Doubt
By Donna Estes
Herald Staff W riter
The state Department o f Transporta­
tion might take on the widening of U.S.
Highway 17-92 along the Monroe
lakefront in Sanford based on safety
reasons, but the agency will be hard
pressed to Justify the project If the
volume of traffic Is any criteria, says
Acting County Traffic Engineer Steve
Decker.
And If the highway Itself is expected
to be shown as a cause for accidents,
the proposed project Is also In trouble.
Decker says the highway was de­
signed for 10.500 vehicles per day and
the 1983 traffic count — the latest on
record — for the 3W m llc stretch from
French Avenue to Interstate 4 Is 7.961.
The section of U.S. 17-92 from the
Volusia County line to 1-4 Is somewhat
higher at 8.816.
Decker also ventures an educated
guess that a survey will show few
accidents along the section of highway
compared to the volume o f traffic or to
high trafflc/accldent sites In the county.
Ills department is now punching
county vehicle accident statistics for

1984 Into the computer and expects to
have a comprehensive report available
by Wednesday or Thursday of next
week.
The report Is Intended to show not
only where accidents took place, but
also the reasons for the accidents.
L.A. Griffin. DOT district traffic
operations engineer In DcLand. said
published reports of a traffic fatality on
the stretch of U.S. 17-92 along the
lakefront brought the highway to the
department's attention.
"W e are getting accident data and
going to plot It to see if a pattern
emerges or If traffic accidents arc
concentrated at a location. If a definite
problem Is seen, we will consider what
cun be done about It." Griffin said,
adding It would be premature to say
whether Improvements will be made to
the roadway. "This Is Just an opera­
tions study at this point."
C o u n t y E n g in e e r D ill B u sh ,
meanwhile, said the possibility of
widening the highway has been talked
about for the past 25 years and never
gotten beyond the discussion stage.
Decker said. "I really don't foresee

very many accidents there compared to
the volume of traffic on 17-92" along
the lakefront. He said the majority of
the accidents probably were at the St.
Johns River bridge and at 1-4.
DOT Traffic Operations Assistant
Director George Gllhooley said Thurs­
day he has asked county lawmen for
documentation showing the two-lane
section of the road Is unsafe. He added,
however, that this request for Informa­
tion doesn't mean changes will be
made.
"It's too early to say what If anything
will be done." he said.
S h eriff's department spokesman
John Spolskl said one possibility would
be to widen 17-92 to give drivers a third
lune between west of the Lake Monroe
Inn and 1-4.
He said the third lane could be used
as a turning lane or an escape route for
motorists to avoid head-on collisions or
a dunk In the lake.
Spolskl. noting the varying speed
limits from 35 mph to 55 mph. said
Impatient drivers frequently pass
slower vehicles and run Into trouble
when facing oncoming traffic.

M an y S ta rv in g , D is e a s e d

Israel Airlifting Ethiopian Jews
TEL AVIV - Israel has been airlifting
thousands of Ethiopian Jews, many
diseased and starvin g, from the
drought-stricken African nation In one
of the largest waves of Jewish Immi­
gration In Israeli history, officials said.
"W e have more than 10.000 Jews
from Ethiopia In Israel today." Aklva
Lcvlnaky. acting chairman o f the World
Zionist Organization, said at a news
conference Thursday.
Israeli officials said an estimated
3,000 Falashas. or Ethiopian Jews,
have been brought to Israel In the past

month, but refused to give details of the
airlift. Reports from Nairobi suggested
the airlift originated In Sudan.
The officials said disclosure of who
was Involved In the operation, the
airlift's routes, or precise number of
Im m ig ra n ts c ou ld th re a ten the
mission's continuation. Israel has no
diplomatic ties with Ethiopia or Sudan.
A Foreign Ministry official said the
black Jews are being received warmly,
but mayors of towns In southern and
northern Israel were reportedly reluc­
tant to receive more than a token

Paul Still Critical; Bomb Parts Identified
Paul Jewell of Orlando remained In critical but
stable condition today following surgery at
Shrincre' Bums Institute In Cincinnati.
I Jewell. 12. was burned over 60 percent of his
body Christmas Day in a booby-trapped air hose
bomb explosion. He underwent surgery Thursday
to remove dead skin tissue. Similar operations are
expected in the next few days but probably not
before Monday, u hospital spokesman said.
"He Is still quite III." cautioned Dr. Edward Law
o f the hospital.
: In Orlando. Investigators have made scant
progress In determining the bomb’s origin,
according to Joyce Drazen. spokesman for the

Chorozy said the county approved rczonlng
calls for 20 units to the acre which would allow
development of 240 to 250 units on the tract. He
added that the proposed development would be In
mid-rises to hi-rises.
.
While Chorozy couldn't say what the value of
this development will be. he told the planning
and zoning board the units would be "luxury
condominiums."
He said the development will be built sometime
In 1985. "Rczonlng Is the first step." he said.

Orange County ShcrllFs Department.
“ We have Identified some of the brand names of
the substances used In the bomb.” Ms. Drazen
said. But she said the Identified substances "can
be bought In almost any K-Mart slow ."
The bomb fragments were to be sent today to
the FBI In Washington for further analysis, she
said.
Ms. Drazen said a total of $17,500 has been
offered as reward money for Information leading
to the convictions of the bomber or bombers.
Of the reward money. $10,000 has been
promised by G.M. Air Vent, the maker of the air
pump the bomb was placed In. and $5,000 has
been offered by Shop &amp; Go. parent company of
the store where the air pump Wtas located. Private

pledges amount to $1,500 and Crimellnc has
offered up to $1,000 for Information. People who
provide Information to crimellnc can remain
anonymous, she said.
Ms. Drazen said the shcrllfs department has
started to distribute reward posters for the
bomber.
Jewell suffered second- and third-degree burns
over 60 percent of his body when a bomb, hidden
In a coin-operated compressed air pump at an
Orlando convenience store, exploded while he
was Inflating a bicycle tire.
The boy's right leg was amputated Just below'
the knee Saturday. Doctors said there was so
much dead tissue in the leg that It Jeopardized his
chances of survival.

number of Immigrants because of a
lack of Jobs.
Levlnsky said It cost $25,000 to
relocate each Individual. Israel Is re­
portedly trying to raise $60 million as
part of a drive In Jewish communities
mostly In the United States and Canada
to help delray the costs.
Falashas. whose name means "Im ­
m igration" In Amharlc. Ethiopia's
main language, are believed to be the
descendants of the lost tribe of Dan. one
of the 12 tribes of ancient Israel.

TODAY
Action Reports ..... 3A
Classifieds..... 10,U A
....BA
BA
Dear Abby..... ..... 9A
Deaths............ ....12A
H r L urnh
. ..... BA
Editorial........ ..... 4A

Florida...... ..........2A
Hospital..... ............ 2 A
Nation....... ..........2A
People.......
Sports........ ....... 5-7A
Television...
Weather.... ........ 12A
W orld........ ........12A

•Inside’
Pentagon to use lie detectors to screen
employees. Story 2A.

ti

�V

I

V
X

1 A — E v tw ln g H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , J in . 4, m s

NATION
IN BRIEF
Soviet Scientist Defected
For Personal Reasons: Colleague
BATAVIA. III. IUPI) — A Soviet physicist, granted
political asylum when he defected Just before his
Christmas Eve return to Russia, probably wants to stay in
(his country for personal rather than political reasons, an
associate says.
Artem Vladimirovich Kulikov, 51, was depressed about
the death o f his only child, a daughter. In a traffic accident
In Leningrad two years ago and probably did not seek
asylum for political reasons, an associate at the Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory said Thursday.
Kulikov met with Soviet Embassy officials In Washington
Thursday to assure them he was not being held against his
will, sources at the Immigration and Naturalization Service
said.
Kulikov, reportedly one o f the first high energy physicists
from the Soviet Union to defect to this country, had been
working at Fermi as part of an exchange program with
other U.S. and Soviet scientists for about three months.
The exchange program Is part of an agreement for
cultural and scientific collaboration made between the
Soviets and the United States in 1072.

Pledges O f Cooperation M ark Opening

Congress: Now Comes Hard Part
WASHINGTON IUPI] - The easy part Is
over for the 99th Congress. With the largely
ceremonial opening-day business out of the
way, lawmakers turn to such troublesome
Issues as the budget, taxes and defense
spending.
For the most part, good humor and
bipartisanship marked the first day of the
new Congress Thursday as the Senate and
House convened at midday to swear In new
members, elect leaders, adopt rules and
tend to other housekeeping matters.
House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said he
and hlsfellow Democrats would work with
President Reagan and Republicans to fight
deficits, unemployment and the threat of
nuclear war.
"N o doubt, the public will Judge the
success of this Congress by our willingness
to make the tough decisions to get our fiscal
house in order." O'Neill said after being

eleclcd lo hls final term as speaker.
The 72-year-old Massachusetts Democrat
plans to retire at the end of hls new term.
Newly Installed Senate Republican leader
Robert Dole told reporters that the budget
was "the biggest single Issue” facing
Congress and a freeze on spending Is "still
going to be the centerpiece of any deficit
plan.
The House did get Into a partisan
squabble over the seating of two members
Involved In close, yet-to-be-settled election
contests.
Both cases will be Investigated by a Housi*
committee, but the House voted to tempo­
rarily bar Republican Rick McIntyre, the
apparent winner In Indiana, while allowing
Democrat Richard Stallings of Idaho to be
sworn In.
Shortly after O'Neill was re-elected as
speaker and made hls speech to the

More Lie Detector
Tests Planned For
Pentagon Workers

Killer Executed Quietly
ANGOLA, La. (UPI) — David Dene Martin, who once told
his lawyers "walk me or fry m e." went quietly to
Louisiana's electric chair today for killing his wife's lover
and three other people.
The Pardon Board unanimously rejected Martin's final
plea after hearing hours of testimony from him, his
relatives, a psychiatrist and relatives of his victims.
Martin, 32. offered no final statement when he was
escorted to the death chamber and strapped Into the large
oaken electric chair nicknamed "Gruesome Gertie."
The former church youth counselor was pronounced
dead at 12:16 a.m, the second man executed In Louisiana
within a week and the seventh to die In the state's electric
chair since December 1083.
Martin was sentenced to die for storming Inside a trailer
at Bayou Blue Aug. 14, 1977, and gunning down two
women and two men, Including night club owner Bobby
Todd, who had an affair with the condemned man's wife.
Martin, who once told his wife "I did It for you, baby."
blamed the shootings on hls use of the drug PCP and a
series of personal tragedies. Including the birth o f a
brain-damaged daughter.

Deaver Quits , Baker In Control
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan, who wanted
hls White House team to stay Intact for hls second term, is
losing hls right-hand man, top aide Michael Deader.
Deaver, the Image Impresario who has had tight control
over Reagan's schedule for the past four years, Thursday
announced his resignation as deputy White House chief of
staff.
The White House also announced Thursday that Reagan
has resubmitted the nomination of Edwin Meesc — hls
counselor and longtime adviser — as attorney general.
The two developments raised new questions about
policy-making’ tn tne'second Reagan term, a topic that
gained new currency Just two days earlier with the
disclosure that Interior Secretary William Clark, another
member o f the "California Mafia" that accompanied
Reagan to Washington In 1981, soon will head back west.
James Baker, a Texan, emerged late Thursday as the
man soon to be In solid control o f the Whtte House once
Deaver and Meesc actually leave their Jobs.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Hawkins Bill Would Create
Radio Program For Soviet Jews
United Pres* International
Two legislators have Introduced a bill to authorize
Russian-language radio programming to Soviet Jews,
similar to Radio Free Europe and aimed at keeping contact
with dissidents and exiles.
Alarmed by what they called a dramatic dropoff In
Jewish emigration from the Soviet Union. Sen. Paula
Hawkins. R-Wlnter Park, and Rep. Matthew Rlnaldo.
D-N.J. Introduced the bill Thursday.
Radio Maccabee. to be named for Jewish historical
heroes, would direct Its programming to the Soviet Jewish
community, particularly dissidents and activists. The new
programming would /all under the auspices o f Radio
Liberty, which has been broadcasting Information to the
Soviet Union since the 1950s.
Hawkins said the bill was In response to the dwindling
numbers of Soviet Jews being allowed to emigrate In
recent years.
"Information 1s the vital link. We are here today to keep
the lines of communication open with the Jews o f the
Soviet Union." said the Florida Republican.

Justice By Phone Approved
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Florida courts, which pioneered
television in the courtroom, are moving even further Into
the electrodes age.
The Florida Supreme Court Thursday approved a rules
change to clear the way for certain court proceedings to be
conducted by telephone conference calls or other develop­
ing communications technology, such as live television
hookups.
Under the rule. If all parties in a case agree, the telephone
or other communications equipment can be used for for
motion hearings, pretrial conferences or status confer­
ences.

HOSPITAL NOTES
CaMrsI Mar RasMnal Hotpit* I
Thortdoy
ADMISSIONS

tentsr*:

Greco B. Aero*
Rhondal. Root
Carlton R. Turner
Ruth E. Buchanan, 0 * Itana
Martetl A. Johnton. Dalton*
Jacqueline B. Cilia. Lake Mary
Nancy A. Jackton. Orlando
DltCHAROCt
Santard:

'

Jo* Oav*i
John T. McCollum
Ttfrt L. Roland
William J. Taylor
ViraC.Tuckar
Elalna H. Harden and batty »lrl. lorranto
BIRTHS
Hartaan and Rhonda I. Root, a Baby girt,

Sanford

Thomaa and Laura A. Blocker, a baby girt.
Or eng* City

assembled House members, he was inter­
rupted by hls 3-year-old granddaughter.
Mlchaela. who wandered up to the podium
to see him.
The center of attention In the Senate was
83-year-old Sen. John Slcnnts. D-Mlss.. who
was wheeled Inlo the chamber less than a
month after hls cancerous left leg was
amputated.
Democratic leader Robert Byrd called him
a "shining light" and said Stennls had
returned "u n der circumstances which
would have greatly discouraged an average
Individual."_____
The symbolic’ first number. S .l, was
assigned to Dole's bill calling for cutting the
deficit to 2 percent of the gross national
product by 1988.
One of the first bills Introduced In the'
House was the Equal Rights Amendment,
sponsored by Rep. Peter Rodino, D-N.J.

H*r*M Photo bf Or*gory Oaten

Taco Tiles
Bob Zblewskl places roof tiles atop the new Taco Bell
restaurant on U.S. Highway 17-92 In Sanford as diners en|oy
their midday meal just below hls feet. While there are
certain hazards to Zblewskl's job, at least he doesn't have far
to go to have lunch.

Need A Driver's License?
Call Ahead For Appointment
ST. PETERSBURG (UPI) - A
new law requiring drivers seek­
ing Florida driver's licenses for
the first time to undergo full
testing has caused ulready long
walls to be even longer.
But officials say more exam­
iners are being added and some
people can shorten their wait by
culling ahead for appointments.
Motorists seeking to renew
their licenses or change their
name or address can call ahead
and make an appointment, as
can driver's already holding
Florida licenses, but who for one
reason or another have to take
the road test.
Had Sally Goad been aware of
that Thursday, she could have
avoided spending three hours In
llpe waiting to change the name
on her license from her maiden
name to her married name.

The nev law requires new­
comers to take the full examina­
tion — an eye test, written exam
and driving test — Instead of the
past practice of having those
with valid out-of-state licenses
take only the eye lest and road
sign recognition quiz.
Newcomers to Florida have
always had to get a Florida
driver’s license within 30 days o f
getting a Job or declaring their
residency, and the new law Is
designed to make new residents
more familiar with Florida laws.
W inter residents who live
elsewhere the rest of the year arc
not affected by the law. But
anyone wanting to vote or take
advantage of the state's home­
stead exemption law must be
residents and therefore must get
a driver's license within 30 days.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Pentagon will Increase Its use of
lie detector tests (o screen civil­
ian and military employees with
access to highly classified in­
formation In a move to "deter
and detect espionage."
At the Pentagon's request.
Congress authorized the poly­
graph examinations that will be
conducted on up to 3,500 people
this year In h test program that
could be expanded to 10,000
people later, the Defense De­
partment said Thursday.
"T h e sole purpose is to deter
and detect espionage In the most
sensitive national security pro­
gra m s," the Pentagon said.
“ Changes In the current policy
are not directed at leaks" to the
media.
The trial polygraph program
will be in addition lo other lie
detector tests the Pentagon ad­
ministers In the course of crimi­
nal and counterintelligence in­

vestigations and civilian Job.
applications for the top-secret .
National Security Agency.
It already has authority to use
lie detectors to track down leaks
to the media.
D e p u t y D e f e n s e U n - ‘;
dersecretary Richard Stllwell*
said the Pentagon conducted
23.000 lie detector tests In 1983;
and averages 18.000 polygraphexams annually.
By contrast, the Pentagon
administered 12,904 such tests
In 1980. the last year o f the
Carier.adminlstratlon.
The tightened security restric­
tions. despite their trial basis,
come against a backdrop of a
general crackdown by the ad­
m in is t r a t io n on le a k s of&gt;
classified Information and recente s p io n a g e c a s e s In w h ich
sensitive material was passed to
the Soviet Union.

Couple Sentenced For A nim al
Cruelty In Death O f Their Dog
t* JM *

K

tit I

4t lit At *

j|

S an ford c o u p le.h a s.b ee n

sen ten ced for c ru e lty to
animals stemming from the
fatal mistreatment of their
dog.
Peter and Kathleen Bukur,
o f 105 L a rk w o o d D riv e,
pleaded guilty Wednesday
and w e re s e n te n c e d by
S e m in o le C o u n ty J u d g e
Wallace Hall.
Hall gave them Identical
sentences o f one year proba­
tion, 50 hours of community
service, pay court costs of
8 2 0 0 , p a y th e d o g 's
veterinarian bills, and submit
monthly reports to the county
Humane Society.
According to court records,
an Investigator for the society
went to the Bukur'* home In
August after receiving an
anonymous complaint that a
Golden Retriever was being

being neglected and was very
sick.
Upon finding the dog In a
hole In a fallen down shed, the
Investigator reported that the
dog's condition was so deteri­
orated that It's breed was not
distinguishable. She reported
that the dog was extremely
matted, malnourished, had
swollen eyes filled with mat­
ter. protruding bones and
almost no hair.
The Sanford police were
cal'ed and the dog was taken
by a society representative to
an A lt a m o n t e S p r in g s
veterinarian.
The dog. which also had a
severe case o f heartworma,
did not respond to treatment
and was was put to sleep,
according to a spokesman for
the Humane Society.
—Deane Jordan

Driver Faces 5 Years In Vehicular Homicide
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W riter
A Sanford man Ijas pleaded no
contest to a charge of vehicular
hom'clde In connection with the
death of another Sanford man.
John Michael Fontaine. 31, of
2521 Polnstetta Ave.. entered
the plea W ednesday before
S em in o le C ircu it Ju d ge C.
Vernon Mize Jr. who set Feb. 15
for sentencing.
The plea stems from the April
11 death of Roger Riggs. 29, of
515 Elm St., who was a passen­
ger in Fontaine's car during a
one-car accident.
Fontaine could receive up to 5
years in prison for the thirddegree felony. He was originally
charged with DU1 manslaughter,
a s e c o n d - d e g r e e fe lo n y
punishable by up to 15 years,
but pleaded to the lesser charge
of vehicular homicide.
A c c o r d in g to u F lo r id a
Highway Patrol report. Riggs
was killed at 2:50 a.m. April 11
when he was crushed beneath
Fontaln's car after it left the
roadway at W agner's,-1.4 miles
east of Winter Springs on state
Road 419. Riggs died at the
scene. Fontaine was treated by
paramedics for minor injuries.
According to the FHP report.
Fontaine's 1972 Chevrolet sta­
tion wagon was speeding wesbound when It left the road at
the curve. The vehicle (lipped,
coming to rest on Its top with
Riggs under It on nearby railroad
tracks.
Fontaine was arrested Sept. 20
on a warrant Issued by the State
Attorney's Office following an
Investigation by the FHP.
In other court action, a San­

ford woman accused of wound­
ing her lover In the back with a
.22-callber gun while they were
at a Sanford cem etery has
pleaded guilty to aggravated
battery.
Bclva Luc Gean Clanton, 39.
ulso know as Belva Lue Gean
Clanton Dreggors. entered the
plea Wcdnesdasy before Circuit
Judge Robert B. McGregor who
set March 12 for sentencing. She
could receive up to a year In the
county Jail.
A ccordin g to reports, Ms.
Clanton and and Harry Dreg­
gors, 59. were at the Evergreen
Cemetery on Hardy Avenue at
about 10 p.m. Sept. 29 when
they became embroiled tn an
argument. After Ms. Clantpn
shot Dreggors. they walked to
Ms. Clanton's home at 105
Country Club Circle.
Police received a call that their
had been a shooting and when
they arrived at the address they
found Dreggors. "standing up.
walking around and bleadlng."
Dreggors was transported to
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal for a wound to the lower
back, and Ms. Clanton was
arrested for aggravated battery.

Other dispositions:
ordered to pay $175 restitution
—T a m m y W a llin g . 2 2, o f each.
Gaston. S.C., arrested Oct. 31. —Ernest Wilson, 26, of 302 Pine
1983 by sheriff's deputies near Ave.. Sanford, arrested Sept. 17
C asselberry, pleaded gu ilty by Longwood police during a
Wednesday to sale or delivery of burglary at Gulfslde Supply, 415
m arijuana. M ize sch edu led Plumosa Drive. Wilson pleaded
sentencing for Feb. 15. She guilty to burglary Thursday. He
could receive up to a year In the faces up to a year In the county
county Jail.
Jail when sentenced by Mize Feb.
—Charles Earl Crane, 21. of 601 15.
Fenton Place. »H. Altamonte —Lloyd Edgar Albritton, 42, ol
Springs, arrested Nov. 2 by Chelfland, sentenced Jan. 25 to
Altamonte Springs police, was 12 years In prison and 3 years
Judged guilty Wednesday in probation for DUI manslaughter,
county court on a charge of had hls request Wednesday for a
possession o f less than 20 grams reduction In sentence denied by
or marijuana. He was sentenced McGregor. Albritton also re;
to one year probation and or­ ccntly lost an appeal to the 5th
dered to pay $20 In court costs. District Court of Appeal to have
He could have received a year In hls conviction and sentence
Jail.
overturned. It was McGregor
—John Dale Ford Jr., 22, o f 101 w h o o r i g i n a l l y s e n te n c e d
Melton Drive, arrested Oct. 11 In Albritton — who had 10 driv­
Fern Park after he wheeled a ing-related arrests. Including
grocery store cart full of Items four DUI convictions — to the
out of a grocery store without maximum sentence allowed by
paying them. He pleaded guilty law.
Wednesday to grand theft. Mize
scheduled sentencing for Feb.
15. He could receive a year In E i r n i n g H e r a l d
the county Jail. Two men ar­
IUSPS I I I I N I
rested with Ford have already
F rid a y , J an u ary 4. Ift S
been sentenced to probation and
V o l. 77, N o. 11*
Publithad D*ily *nd Sunday, • ic tp t
S«turd*y by Th* S*nterd H*r*ld,
Inc. MS N. French Are., Sanford,

STOCKS
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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 4. m i - l A

Goodwill Expanding, Sprucing Up Collection Centers
Bjr Jane Casselberry
H erald S ta ff W rite r
Goodwill Industries o f Central
expanding and sprucing up Its act.

Florida

Is

The Sanford Goodwill store at 300 E. Third St.
has been recently renovated, existing collection
centers arc being upgrade, and new ones are
being added in Seminole County, according to the
Goodwill Industries of Central Florida’s new
president, Dennis Brice.
Renovating the Sanford store is part of the
agency's desire "...to be a part o f the revitaliza­
tion of downtown Sanford." Brice said.
Sanford Goodwill Store manager Clayton Cole
said the store has been completely painted, a new
lighting system, accoustlcal tiles and nine paddle
fans installed.
"It was kind o f run down.” said Cole, "but now
It is more like a department store. The quality
and quantity o f the merchandise has been
upgraded. There Is a great amount of clothing for
men. women and children as well as housewares
and furniture." The store Is open Monday
through Saturday from 8:30a.m. to 5 p.m.
A new larger and more attractive trailer type
collection center, which Is scheduled to be set up
at the Seminole Plaza In Casselberry next week,
will be attended seven days a week. Brice said. He
expects this to eliminate the type o f problem that
occurred this past weekend when an assortment
of donations. Including furniture, matreases. tires
and other Items, began to pile up around the
truck placed there as a Goodwill collection center.
Brice said one reason donations pick up this
time of the year Is that people donate goods to get
tax deductions.
"T h e last few days of the year we have a heavy
run with people bringing in stuff fast and furious

In the late evening and early morning and Just
dumping It," he said.
"W e are grateful for the donations as they are
essentia] to our operation." he said. "Goodwill
operates with the help of donations of goods by
the public, which are then reworked, processed
and sold through the Goodwill outlet stores to
provide Jobs for the disabled.
" I believe we are in the shopping renter parking
lots as guests and are there not only to accept
donations of goods, but to keep the area cleaned
up around the collection center as well. We are
part of the community and everything we do will
be aimed so that the community will take pride In
what we are doing," Brice said.
He said Goodwill Is planning to set up quite a
few collection centers In various parts of
Seminole County and Is looking for more
locations In order to ease overcrowding and make
them more convenient to those who donate
goods. Donors will be able to get their tax receipt
on the spot, he added.
With the area's rapid growth, there is an
accompanying Increase In the number of disabled
persons needing employment and Brice said he Is
excited about the potential o f his organization to
reach out and touch more lives of disabled
persons.
Brice came here from Texas three months ago
to head up the organization, which provides
vocational evaluation, training. Jobs, and place­
ment for the disabled. Presently half of Goodwill's
101 employees In Central Florida are from the
ranks of the disabled, but Brice said he hopes to
Increase the percentage of disabled employees.
Founded in 1902 In Boston. Mass. Goodwill is
the oldest and largest private non-profit re­
habilitative organization In the world, he said.

Denied Free Food, Man Tries
Paying With Marijuana; No Deal
»

i

J

*

A clerk at an A ltam on te
Springs food mart reported to
Seminole County sheriff's depu­
ties that he was assaulted by a
man who asked If he could pay
for merchandise with marijuana.
The clerk told deputies the
man entered Texaco Food Mart
on Douglas Road at state Road
436, at about 2 a.m. today and
wandered around for about a
hour. The clerk refused the
man's request that he give him
Items he selected. When he also
declined the man’s offer of *10
qnd some pot In payment, the
than attempted to Jump over the
dounter and threatened the
clerk, a sheriffs report said.
I The clerk grabbed a club and
ihe man's female companion,
iiosslbly his wife, tried to rest ra In him, the report said.
I When the clerk attempted to
coll the sheriffs department the
ijian pushed the disconnect
button on the phone. The
woman convinced the suspect to
leave and they went north on
pouglas Road, the report said.
; Deputies have the name of a
possible suspect, but no arrest
lias been maked. the report said.
BATTERY A ND BOOZE
j A Long wood woman who was
(bund beaten and unconscious
Wednesday was hospitalized and
blood tests showed she had
enough alcohol In her system to
kill her, according to sheriffs
spokesman John Spolskl.
: She was In stable condition
tt&gt;day and a Lake Mary man who
t*as also reportedly under the
Influence o f alcohol has been
charged with aggravated battery
lb connection with the beating.
^Sheriff’s deputy J.F. Negri
reported entering the woman's
home at the request of her niece.
Donna Lee Murphy, at about
noon W ednesday. He found
Patricia M. Cable. 41. of 495 U.S.
Highway 17-92. *1. King's Way
Apartments. Longwood. lying In
bed unconscious. Her face ap­
peared to have been beaten and
her arms were "torn up" and her
clothing was In disarray, his
report said.
.Ms. Cable was transported to
South Sem inote Community
H ospital. Lon gw ood. where
Spolskl said blood tests showed
she had a blood alcohol level of
.50 percent. A level of .10 ts
considered under the Influence
and a level of .50 ts usually fatal,
Spolskl said.
Ms. Murphy, who lives with
Ms. Cable, told deputies the
suspect had spent the night in
their home because he was too
drunk to leave, the report said.
He was there when she left that
morning, the report said.
Keller Keith King. 41. of 100
Humphrey Road, Lake Mary,
was arrested at Ms. Cable's
home at 12:59 a.m. Wednesday.
He has been charged with ag­
gravated battery and was being
h eld w ith o u t bon d In the
Seminole County Jail.
•
' OBSCENE BCUPTLER
‘.Police were on the scene at the
hbme o f Lake Mary woman
When she received a threatlng.
obscene phone call.
[The victim had complained to
Lhke Mary police that she had
been receiving such calls and
ted a suspect. A call came In
the police were questionI jg the woman and an officer
Ethe call, a police report said.
jThe man cursed and when
ppllcc warned him he would be

u

Action Reports
★ Fires
★ Courts
it Police
Jailed if he continued to cal) he
told them he would be waiting
for them at his house, the report
said.
Police went to the man's
house, where he "sprang out the
front door and ran down the
driveway cursing,” police said.
They were unable to calm the
man who made obscene gestures
and poked a lawman In the chest
with his finger, tb- report said.
Harold Samuel Nobles. 34, of
173 Crystal Lake Ave., Lake
Mary, has been charged with
making obscene phone calls,
battery on an officer and resist­
ing arrest with violence. He was
being held In lieu o f *5.000
bond.
LE A VINO THE SCENE
A Sanford woman was charged
with several traffic-related of­
fenses. Including leaving the
scene of an accident, after her
car was abandoned following a
collision with two guard posts.

Andrew Leroy Gllquest 111. 22.
were arrested at the Seminole
County Jail at 11:25 a.m. Wed­
nesday. Both were being held In
lieu o f *5,000 bond each.
HOME H AR VE ST
A 3 9 -ye a r-o ld A lta m o n te
Springs man has been charged
with possession of marijuana
after Alamonte Springs police
found a pot crop growing In his
apartment.
Detective Jim Carlin reported
on Dec. 26 spotting and photo­
graphing a marijuana plant
which was growing in an up­
stairs window of the man's
apartment.
Police armed with a search
warrant entered the apartment
with the assistance of the man­
ager on Dec. 27 and reported
finding six, four-foot marijuana
plants growing In ceramic pots.
Additional pot and partially
smoked marijuana cigarettes
were also found In the apart­
ment. police reported.
They left a copy of the warrant
In the apartment, because the
suspect wasn't at home at the
time of the search, the report
said. The suspect was arrested at
9:05 a.m. Wednesday at the
Altamonte Springs police sta­
tion.
John Walter Clark, 39, of 940
Douglas Ave. # 133, has been
released on *5,000 bond. He 1s
scheduled to appear In court
Jan. 21.

According to a Sanford police
report, a car southbound on
Mellonvllle Avenue. 100 feet
northwest o f Airport Boulevard,
CIGARETTES SWIPED
attempted to turn right and ran
Someone entered a Sanford
Into one concrete guard post,
then another.' The Incident oc­ business and stole 47 cartons of
cigarettes and one box o f snuff.
curred at about 1 a.m. Dec. 22.
According to a Sanford police
The car. a 1973 Ford, was
re p o rt, som eo n e en tered
abandoned about 1,000 feet
Seminole Petroleum One Stop.
from the scene, the record
1201 Airport Boulevard, and
shows. The two-door sedan sus­
took the tobacco Items between
tained *600 worth o f damage.
4 and 9 p.m. Saturday.
Damage to the posts, owned by
The clragettes were valued at
the city of Sanford, was set at
*450 and the snuff (7 .
*60.
Police have no suspects and
The driver went to the Sanford there were no witnesses, ac­
police station to report the ac­ cording to the report.
cident at 3 a.m.
ALTERED TITLE
A Sanford auto dealer reported
Charged with careless driving,
leaving the scene of an accident, bylng a vehicle that had an
and driving with a suspended altered title. But before It could
driver's license was Amanda Sue correct the error, the culprit had
M o r r is . 19. o f 4 4 4 0 U .S . cashed the check for the car and
disappeared.
Highway 17-92.
Steven Lash. 28. manager of
Blue Book Cars. 4114 S. Orlando
M O N f Y ORDER ARRESTS
A New Hampshire couple has Drive, told police that his busi­
been charged with grand theft In ness bought a 1984 Chevy
hatchback from a woman Friday
connection with the theft o f
about *1,600 worth o f money Just after 1 p.m.
After the woman was given a
orders from Southland Corp. of
*
2,000
check for the vehicle, the
Seminole County.
company's bookkeeper noticed
Sheriff's Sgt. Ron Oilbert re­ the title had been altered.
ported the woman took eight
By 3:31 p.m. the woman had
American Express money orders cashed the check at a Sanford
during a nine-day period while bank and was gone, according to
she worked for Southland, the the report.
parent com pany o f 7-Eleven
A p o lic e te le ty p e re p o rt
convenience stores.
showed the car had been stolen
The woman walked off the Job, In Ohio.
THROUOH THE ROOF
didn't return and was termi­
A Sanford liquor store was
nated before It was discovered
the money orders were missing. broken Into by someone who
entered the business through the
Gilbert reported.
roof.
T h e m o n e y o r d e r s w e re
According to a Sanford police
cashed at a Seminole County report, officers reponded to a
Sun Bank with the suspects burglar alarm shortly after 5
using her name and Identifica­ a.m. on New Year's Day at
tion to cash two and the man's Sunshine Liquors. 1610 W. 13th
to cash the remaining tlx. a St.
sheriff's report said.
The officers reported finding a
hole In the roof near the back
Bank employees helped link wall o f the building.
the pair to the theft. Gilbert
An inventory Is being made to
reported.
d eterm in e If a n yth in g was
Leslie Jane Bee hard. 18. and stolen, the report said.

HuraM Phut* toy O r»f«ry Guhni

Scenes like this one last weekend when
Goodwill donations piled up around the
collectio n center at Sem inole P la za ,
Casselberry, whould be eliminated with

upgrading of the site and addition of an
attendant on duty 7 days a week, according
to the agency president.

County To Provide W ater, Sewer
Service To Portion Of Lake M ary
The Lake Mary City Commission lias given
tentative approval to contracting with Seminole
County for water and sewuge service for residents
on the southern edge of the city.
The agreements were initiated in August when
the county purchased the Greenwood Lakes
Utilities sewage and water facility for $6.3
million. At that time. Greenwood's owner.
Sumner Kramer, said the only way he would sell
It would be If the Lake Mary commission
approved an expansion o f the facility's service
area. The county's purchase was contingent on
Lake Mary's decision.
The plant Is not In Lake Mary but it has the
capability to service the area of the city south of
Lake Mary Boulevard, west of Lake Emma Road
and cast of Interstate 4. Only six residents are In
the proposed expansion area but County Ad­
ministrative Asslslunl Cindy Wright said the
contracts provide service for the future growth of
the area.
While the commission approved expansion Into
Lake Mary. It Is still negotiating with Seminole
County over how the expansion will affect
revenues and who will be responsible for laying
pipes In the new service area.
In the contracts. Lake Mary retains the
exclusive right to serve the area with water. The
city will buy water from the county wholesale at
52 cents per 1,000 gallons and sell it fur *1.93.
The city wants to charge *504 in connection fees

for residents to hook up to the Greenwood plant,
but county has yet to agree with that figure.
Lake Mary will be able to charge the fees until
Its own water plant is operational within a year.
Construction on the *1.4 million plant on
Rinehart Road Is scheduled to begin In February, j
It is expected to be completed in December.
The county has agreed to provide sewer service
for the south area free of charge, with Lake Mary
charging $1.50 per 1.000 gallons. The county
also has contracted to trent sewage from
percolation ponds at the Forest mobile home park
in Lake Mary.
,
The perc ponds, acquired free of charge from J
First Federal Savings in Loan In Orlando, have j
been a headache for the commission and the |
residents of the park. Residents have complained |
that every time It rains, the ponds overflow,
Hooding nearby mobile homes with smelly
effluent.
Ms. Wright told
t u i u the
m i; v
u m iiin m iM i u
i c icounty
u u iit y ,
commission
the
would treat the sewage but may be limited by the
plant's capacity to the number of ponds It can {
handle.
{
The contracts will be taken with Luke Mary's
1» t
b le a
s s in g to the c o u n ty 's D epartm en t of
.111 •
Environmental Services. The agreements will
then be sent to the Seminole County Commission
for final approval or disapproval b y F e b . 1, she
said.
—R ick Brunson

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(U S P S 411 -3101

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305 322-2611 or 831-9993
Friday, January 4, 1985-4A
Wayne D. Doyla, Publiihtr
Thom** Giordano, Managing Editor
Malvin Adkins, Advertising Director
H o m e D elivery : W e e k , • 1.10: M onih. $4.75: 3 M onths.
• 14.25; 6 M onths. *2 7 .0 0 : Y ear. *5 1 .0 0 . Ily M all: W eek.
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Y ea r. $60.00.

Day Of
Reckoning-------The dreaded day of reckoning has come for
the Israelis, whose economy is out of control
and, indeed, bankrupt.
During the last 18 months, Israel's annual
Inflation rate has leaped from a shocking 100
percent to an incredible 1,200 percent. The
bloated $23 billion budget is being covered
largely by printing presses that have made
the shekel among the most worthless cur­
rency on earth.
Israel's dlslntegn. 'ng economy has been
made tolerable for the people by the narcotic
of an elaborate indexing system that grants
automatic cost-of-living pay raises tied to the
inflation rrfte and large-scale government
subsidies for basic commodities from food to
gasoline.
Fundamental among the reasons for Israel’s
economic disaster is socialism, with govern­
ment control or intervention in nearly every
aspect of life from housing to farming. We
observe also the results of undisciplined
appetite in a democracy where vote-counting
politicians court office with government
handouts. And, finally, Israel's wars of
survival have necessitated a military burden
that consumes 25 percent of the gross
national product, quadruple that Gf the
United States.
Israel’s weak two-party government, lack­
ing a national mandate and in office little
more than three months, has addressed the
crisis timidly. Instead of cutting the budget
by $1.3 billion as announced in September,
the Cabinet thus far has squeezed out only
$300 million. Prime Minister Shimon Peres,
reluctant to Jeopardize his rising popularity in
the polls, has done little more than pay lip
service to economic reform, let alone discuss
the hard necessity for austerity.
As a consequence, Israel has alreay con­
sumed most of the $2.6 billion in American
aid for the fiscal year that began three
months ago. Instead of biting the proverbial
bullet, the Israelis are asking Washington for
$800 million more right away and an
additional $4.1 billion for fiscal 1086. or a
total of about $5 billion.
The additional aid now being requested
adds up to about $6,000 for every family in
Israel. Such a gift Is politically unpalatable for
most Americans at a time when the U.S.
deficit Is $200 billion and drastic cuts are
being contemplated in numerous federal
programs.
Quite correctly, Secretary of State George
Shultz has advised Israel that additional aid
will depend on real economic reform and
belt-tightening. The discouraging response to
this from Israel was the mean-spirited
statement of Gad Yaakobl, minister of
economic planning: "W e don't need any
sermons, message or talking papers." he said.
"Israel does not need moral preaching..."
Secretary Shultz has wisely refrained from
prescribing to the Israelis what they must do
to be saved, except in general terms. Most
Israeli economists agree that Jerusalem must
end indexing and subsidies, enforce a $3
b illio n bu dget redu ction, and im pose,
monetary discipline by pegging the shekel to
the dollar.
The United States does not help Itself or
Israel by making Its staunch little Middle
Eastern ally an economic vassal. The latest
request for what amounts to an American
subsidization of Israeli socialism and extrava­
gance should be refused outright and. Indeed,
future financial aid should be scaled down to
zero. U.S. assistance to Israel shoud be
confined to military materiel.
Acerbic Israeli reaction to the United States
as being a hard-hearted banker Is already
poisoning the reservoir of good will in this
country. The best way for Washington to stop
that is to quit being a banker.

BERRYS WORLD

OPEC Faces Little Price Compliance
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Reports filtering out of
Geneva suggest OPEC plans to enforce produc­
tion quotas more vigorously, to the extent of
hiring outside auditors to check production and
shipping records.
But no one realty believes this will work. In a
part of the world where baksheesh Is a staple of
life, only a fool would accept the tale that
auditors and accountants will be shown or will
report accurate figures In the face of multimillion dollar bribes. The latest strategy of
Sheikh Yamanl Is bom out o f desperaUon. not
strength.
Thus even If OPEC continues to publish a
benchmark price. It will be honored almost
exclusively In the breach.
The Imminent breakdown o f OPEC pricing
discipline raises two major questions. First, how
will that affect the price o f oil, and second, what

effect will this have on the economy?
In (he most extreme scenario, oil prices could
return to pre-1973 levels In real terms, which
means about $10 a barrel. However, we would
find this extremely unlikely. At $10 a barrel,
virtually all aoures of oil discovered in the past
10 years would be unprofitable.
Furthermore, countries that were not utterly
dependent on day-to-day cash flow would
simply shut down operations at such low prices
and wait for the Inevitable rebound. Such
stories, while they are now beginning to
circulate, are little more than headlinemongering.
Instead. It ts much more likely that oil prices
will twist lower erratically.
The effect on the
economy Is more ambiguous, but In general will
not provide the boom that traditional economic
analysis would lead one to believe. The last —

and only — time that oil prices fell sharply was
at the beginning o f 1983.
This was followed shortly by a boom of major
proportions In those sectors o f the economy not
dependent on the oil Industry. However, that
surge In the economy was due to a 13 percent
growth In the money supply, the Reagan tax
cuts, and a soaring stock market, not lower oil
prices. For 1985 no such stimuli are anywhere
on the horizon.
The Fed could decide that this decline in oil
prices was the long-awaited final break In
inflationary expectations, and permit interest
rates to fall another 2 to 3 percent.
In that case, of course, the boom would
resume In full force. However. It Is much more
likely that the Fed will remain preoccupied with
the domestic budget and International trade
deficits, and keep Interest rates near current
levels even If oil prices were to move lower.

VIEWPOINT

ANTHONY

Bias
In
Teaching

Effects
Of Bad
Tax Plans

While college students are home
over the holidays, parents would do
well to Inquire Into what the young
people are learning. In some cases,
parents will be unpleasantly sur­
prised.
I thought o f this in reading an
article entitled “ Princeton's Biased
Curriculum" published in Prospect
magazine, a Journal for alumni of
Princeton University.
The author, Dlnesh f Souza, says
that "It is nearly Impossible for
students to escape the partisan
Ideology which pervades the vast
m a j o r i t y o f c o u r s e s In th e
humanities and social sciences at
Princeton." He quotes author and
economist Irving Kristol as saying
that the P rin ceto n fa c u lty is
"monollthlcally* liberal." And Mr.
DISouza states. " I am hard-pressed
to Identify five conservative pro­
fessors at Princeton."

By Robert W. Savage
In this session of tax reform, odr
leaders In Washington would do
well to look to the history of
ta x a tio n , p a rtic u la rly in New
England. The economic effects.of 9
misguided tax policy are never fully
realized until years after it Is
implemented. Over time, the con­
sequences of bad tax policy, that Is.
high taxes, are vast.
For New England, which has few
natural resources except timber, a
few seaports and some o f the
n a t i o n 's b e t t e r c o l l e g e s ,
manufacturing is critically impor­
tant. It would seem logical for state
governments to maintain an at­
tractive business climate. But tax
policy In New England, after World
War II. zapped business to pay
social programs and larger govern­
ments. During this period, biannual
le g is la t u r e s b e c a m e fu lltim e
bureaucracies. The dollars that
could have been reinvested Into
New England's Industry flew out bf
the region to the South and the
West.
Instead of tax reform directed at
encouraging business Investment,
libers) politicians prescribed
Increases to alleviate the symptoms
of the sick industries. While gov­
ern m en t program s battled upemployment. poverty and plant
closings, business got sicker. The
result was that the problem got
w orse. From 1968-1974, New
E n g la n d lo s t o v e r 2 5 0 ,0 0 0
manufacturing Jobs. Massachusetts
citizens nicknamed their state "taxachusetts," and New England's cit­
ies became some o f the poorest In
the country. By the 1970s. the
region which had Btarted the Amer­
ican Industrial revolution had lost
fully half of Its Industry.
Things began to Improve in the
early 1980s. Armed with a more
lenient* attitude towards business,
ahd with new tax laws, the New
England states fostered new busi­
nesses. But this time, the Jobs came
from high tech companies, and nqt
the traditional smokestack plants.
In Boston, where there are over 65
colleges, business latched onto the
major universities to spawn new
computer, biotech and defense
com panies.

Students at Princeton, who are
Interested in hearing more than one
side o f an issue, want more from the
university. T o this end, a group of
Princeton students have founded
The Princeton Tory . a magazine of
news and analysis which discusses
academic Issues from a responsible
conservative prospective.
Mr. d'Souza charges that "Prin­
ceton professors promote socialism
sometimes as an Ideology, but more
often as a tendency: students are
counseled to move away from free
enterprise and toward a planned
economy. Princeton professors do
not exalt the Soviet Union as a
political Ideal, but all criticism of It
must be carefully qualified to avoid
fueling 'Cold War Tensions.' and
arguments proving that the U.S.
and the Soviet Union are 'moral
equals' are regarded as Insightful."
Mr. d'Souza goes Into great detail
to substantiate his allegations. He
reviews the text* required in the
classroom. His comments on the
methods o f the faculty Ideologists
are especially instructive. " A pro­
fessor." he observes, "w ill stack his
course with textbooks promoting
leftist Ideology, and then require, for
‘balance.* a single text purporting to
rep resen t the c o n s erva tiv e or
classical liberal view: but the repre­
sentative for anti-socialist thought
will be some ridiculous or disagree­
able character."
Clearly, President Brown o f Prin­
ceton has a lot to account for. An
accounting is owed to students,
parents and benefactors o f the
university. However, It isn't Prin­
ceton alone that has a biased
curriculum or a faculty dominated
by left-leaning academics. This type
of ideologue-dominated, herd educa­
tion is commonplace at a wide
variety o f public and private col­
leges and universities.

ROBERT WALTERS

Expanding Secrecy
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The De­
fense Department has devised a
ian to deal with disclosures that It
abltu ally purchases defective
weapons at inflated costs.
But the Pentagon Isn't necessarily
going to Improve Its procurement
policies and practices to ensure that
any future weapons it buys are
reliable and reasonably priced.
Instead, It Is attempting to solve
the problem by severely restricting
public access to previously un­
classified Information about Its
chronic Incompetence.
All sensitive Information under
the department's control already Is
p ro tected by o ffic ia l secu rity
classifications such as "confiden­
tial." "secret" and “ top secret." In
addition, "fo r official use only" and
other extra-legal categories enjoy
wide popularity within the Pen­
tagon.
But even those classifications
don't provide sufficient protection
for a department whose penchant
for buying Inoperable, overpriced
weapons has become a national
scandal.
In an apparent attempt to avoid
future embarrassment, the de­
partment has established a new
security classification system, not
sanctioned by any law. It Is for use
"when there is a need to restrict
dissemination beyond the limits
provided by application of security
clearance and 'necd-to-know' con­
trols."
A recently Issued departmental
directive says. "A ll unclassified DoD
tech n ical docum en ts shall be
assigned distribution statements A.
B. C. D. E. F or X ." Only data In the
" A " category la eligible for public

S

relea se. M aterial In all other
categories can be disseminated only
wtthtn the department, to other
federal agencies or to military con­
tractors.
Covered by the new directive la
virtually every form of activity
within the Defense Department.
S im ila rly , the new secu rity
classification program Is designed to
protect Information In management
reviews, records o f contract perfor­
mance evaluation or other advisory
documents evaluating programs of
contractors.”
Because the Pentagon has linked
the new security measures to the
provisions o f a federal law re­
stricting the export of critical mate­
rials. violations of the directive
" m a y c o n s titu te " a v io la tio n
punishable by prison terms of up to
10 years and fines o f as much as
$250,000.
Thus, the new policy almost
certainly will have a chilling effect
on Pentagon whistle-blowers who
have disclosed evidence o f faulty
design, shoddy workmanship and
Inadequate field testing o f many
major weapons systems.
At the same time, many academic
analysts, private watchdog organi­
za tio n s, Jou rn alists and even
members o f Congress could be
denied access to data needed to
assess the department’ s perfor­
mance in properly equipping Its
troops.
The new directive Is described
merely as an efTort to "update
policies and procedures for marking
technical documents'* but It obvi­
o u s ly g o e s m u ch fu rth e r by
suppressing Information that ought
to be made public.

But the high tech companies have
not solved all the problems for New
England. State governments are still
too large and taxes still too high.
Some cities which were butyt around
old textile mills remain in poverty.
Many Jobs In New England are now
dependent on the defense Industry,
and thereby on the whims of liberal
Congressmen who tAge deep cuts In
defense spending.
''
When Congress reconvenes in
January, let's hope they consider
the effects o f taxation.

JACK ANDERSON

Chiles: Majority Leader In 2 Years?

RIPI RIPI GUESS WHATI ELIZABETH TAYLOR
IS GETTING MARRIED AQAINI"

A

t ■ *

W A S H IN G T O N Here are
some Items from my notebook:
— Sen. Law ton Chiles. D-Fla„
hasn't given up his hope of unseat­
ing Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va.. as
Democratic Party leader in the
Senate. Though Byrd trounced him
decisively. 31-11. in a recent vote.
Chiles has two years to marshal
support, instead of the single week
hr had this time.
insiders note that Chiles earned a
lot nf good will last fall by cam­
paigning and fund raising for col­
leagues who were running for reelection. (hough he himself wasn't.
My sources think Chiles can beat
Byrd In ‘86 — and If things go as the
Democrats are hoping, that would
make Chiles maturity leader.
—In past columns. 1 have reported
on the fanaticism and savagery of
Ethiopia's Marxist dictator. Col.
Menglstu Halle Mariam, who has
picked the country as dean as the
bones of a slaughtered calf. He has

I

diverted supplies to his army and
has squandered money for political
hoopla while his people starve.
Mengltsu has blamed everyone
except himself, particularly the
United States, for the disaster he is
presiding over. He has escaped the
International reprehension he de­
serve*. in part, because he has been
able to operate in the shadows.
Even biographical details on
Menglstu are sparse, beyond the
obvious fact that he's diminutive
|5-foot-4) and apparently a de­
dicated Marxist. U.S. Intelligence
profiles also agree that he Is ruthless
and humorless, that he probably
has taken part personally in execu­
tions and that he has used chemical
weapons against his own people.
I had my reporters Dale Van Atta
and Scott Barrett review the best
U.S. In telligen ce available on
Ethiopia — a series of secret and
top-secret CIA and Pentagon re­
ports. The documents are full of

caveats, with words like "probably"
and "most likely" betraying how
speculative the Information is.
Three top-secret reports referred
to particularly hot "Intercepted
messages.” but they gave precious
Utile hard data on what's really
going on In Ethiopia.
The Intelligence agencies know.
In general, that Menglstu. like Josef
Stalin 50 years earlier, has waged a
disastrous. Ideologically inflamed
campaign against the productive
farming techniques that might have
reduced. If not prevented, the
human cost of the current famine.
And the CIA has reported that
"m any peasants" have Joined the
Eritrean separatist rcbeUlon, led'at
first by "landlords and former
arjstocrats." because they believe
Menglstu’ s land-reform policies
have Jeopardized their livelihoods
and i heir food supplv
ThF Intelligence reports agree that
the rebellions in Erllrea and In Tlgre

provinces are costing the Menglstu
government at least $420 mllllonih
year.
The agencies also agree that the
Eritreans arc currently winning or
h o ld in g (h e ir o w n . but th at
Menglstu, wary of a nationalist coup
by fellow officers, lias shown no sign
of bel ng ope two negot tut Ions.
Reagan administration officials
used the most extravagant in­
telligence estimates available and
put the cost at $150 million. An
administration critic — using the
same Intelligence data — put the
cost at $25 million, much of which
wits (&gt;ald for by the Soviet bloc.
As for possible Soviet involvement
In Mengistu's alleged use of chemi­
cal weapons, a CIA report is charac­
teristically wishy-washy: "There are
numerous allegations o f Soviet
participation in the planning and
supervision o f chemical operations,
but c o n ffrm a to ry e vid e n c e is
fragmentary."

&lt;

-

�i

SPO RTS
B r y a n t R e tu rn s , B u rn s O u t P a tr ic k
By 8am Cook
Herald Bporta Editor
I Seminole County's first docu­
m en ted case o f “ Basketball
iB u rn o u t" re tu rn ed to the
jhardeoiirt Thursday night. He
.was still burning, but this time It
•was the nets that were scorched
•and not the Individual.
» Former Seminole High stand­
ou t. Calvin "K lk l" Bryant, one of
.the best pure shooters ever to
.'play in the county, tossed In all
•seven floor shots and added two
Tree throws for 16 points as
•Seminole Community College
buried Patrick Air Force Base,
116-74. at the SCC Health
Center before 111 fans.
"1 expected him to do well,”
said SCC coach Bill Payne about
his former prep honorable men­
tion all-stater. "But I didn't
expect him to be that awesome.
He's a rhythm shooter and when

he gets hot. look out."
B ryant, a 6-1 sw ingm an.
played his Junior year for Payne
and his senior year for coach
Chris Marlctte. He averaged 17
ppg and eight rebounds during
his senior year two years ago.
but decided against playing last
year at SCC. citing a need for a
break.
" I t was a mistake. I Just
m e s s e d u p . " said B ry a n t
Thursday night about his hiatus.
"But It’s sure nice to be back. 1
felt good out there tonight. After
1 hit the first one. I felt like I
could do it all night. Klki has
returned."
Bryant entered the game when
It was five minutes old and
burled his first attempt from
deep In the right comer. The
next time down, he tossed In a
similar 19-footcr from the left
comer. He added a 10-footer.

Basketball
scored on an offensive rebound
and dropped in a layup and a
free throw for 11 first half points
as the Raiders took a 53-34 lead
over the outmanned visitors.
SCC. w hich placed eigh t
players In double figures, opened
with a flurry as Kenny Edwards,
who led all scorers with 24
points. Ignited a 13-2 opening
blitz.
The lead ballooned to 30-14
before PARB regrouped behind
Michael "No Relation" Jordan
and James Hamilton to run off
10 points and pare the advan­
tage to 30-24. The Raiders,
however, turned it on the re­
mainder of the half, outscoring
Patrick. 23-10. to turn the game
into a shambles and post their

10th victory in lGgames.
"A fter a two-week holiday it's
good to come back with a game
like this." said freshman Rob
Brantley who scored 12 points
and had two crowd-pleasing
dunks. "W e still have to work on
our fouling shooting (12 of 24)
and develop some killer Instinct
but we have the capability of
being real good."
Thursday's debacle also in­
troduced 6-5 Brent Baird as a
point guard. "I'd never played
the point b e fo re ," said the
former Pine Hills Christian All
America. "I really enjoyed it. We
wanted to get the second half off
to a good start and we did."
Baird took over leading the
attack when the Raiders In-*
Mike Landed to a knee inU* y
and Mike Tolbert to grades.
Taync enjoyed Baird's pro­
duction. too. The Sanford soph­

omore scored 10 paints on a
variety of Jump shots, handed
out eight assists and grabbed
eight rebounds. He also looked
com fo rtab le running SCC's
transition game which continu­
ally created three-on-one or
fo u r-o n -tw o o p p o r t u n it ie s
against the slower and older
servicemen.
Greg "Skywalker" Bates, who
also had two spectacufar dunks
and eight boards, added 16
points and was impressed with
Bryant's passing and scoring.
"Klkl made a real good pass on
the out of bounds dunk." said
Bates, who led SCC with three
steals. "On the second one. I
wasn't trying to dunk but then I
ended upoverthe rim. sol did.
" I t was good to see Klkl
shooting like that because It
opened up our Inside game.
When they went out to get him.

Calvin 'K lk l' Bryant returned
to the hardcourt In style
Thursday night by hitting all
seven shots to lead SCC to an
easy win over Patrick A ir
Force Base.
we could Just dump it o ff
Inside."
Ltnny Grace, who leads the
See B R YA N T, Page 7A

Gordon Is Too
Good For Tribe

Brantley Leads 5 Star;
Johnson Twins Double
Up Spruce Creek, 51-45

Bridgette's 28 Points, Crucial
Turnover Propel Lady Bulldoas

By Chris Flster
Herald Sports W riter
APOPKA — Lake Brantley's
Lady Patriots kept their un­
beaten conference record Intact
Thursday night and. coupled
with Seminole's lost to DeLand.
took over sole possession of first
place In the Five Star with a
54-33 drubbing of Apopka's
Lady Blue DartrrB at Apopka
High.
Lake Brantley Improved to
11-2 overall with the win and 5-0
In the conference. The Lady
Patriots travel to Orlando tonight
for a non-conference battle with
Colonial. Brantley returns to
conference action Monday when
It h o s t s D a y t o n u B e a c h
Seabreeze.
The Lady Patriots totally out­
classed Apopka Thursday night
as the game was over not long
after it started. Lake Brantley
coasted to a 27-11 halftime lead
end led by 24. 45-21. after three
quarters.
Kirsten Dellinger's 12 points
was high for the Lady Patriots,
Sherry "Ic e " Asplen connected
for 11. Michelle Brown tossed in
eight and Kim Lubenow and
A s h le y T h o m a s ad d ed six
apiece.
Brown also handed out four
assists and came up with seven
steals while Asplen added six
rebounds, three assists and three
steals. Thomas did n good Job ofT
the bench with three assists and
tw o steals. Cam i T w a d d cll
played another strong game in­
side with a game-high nine
re b o u n d s w h ile D e llin g e r
grabbed Just four boards but
added five blocked shots.
Jackie Parramorc led Apopka
with a game-high 14 points and
Michelle McKinney added eight.

By Chrla Ftster
Herald Bporta W riter
c Seminole's defense did every­
thing it could In an attempt to
Im pede A ll A m erica center
Brldgette Gordon. But the Ir­
repressible DeLand senior came
through with a fine all-around
performance that Included 28
•points. 11 rebounds, four assists
and five steals.
While Gordon's greatness kept
•the Lady Bulldogs in the game
all the way. It was a pair of free
throws by senior guard Robyn
Swartz that provided the winn­
ing margin as second-ranked
(4A) DeLand edged the fourthranked Lady Semlnoles, 44-43.
Thursday night in Five Star
Conference action at Seminole
If Igh before 300 fans.
,. "S h e had a super gam e."
.Seminole coach Ron Merthle
said o f Gordon. "W e did every­
th in g we could defensively.
She'sjust a great player.”
The loss. Seminole's second In
A row. dropped the Lady Tribe to
,10-3 overall and 3-1 In the Five
Star. DeLand Improved to 8-2
overall and 3-1 In the confer­
e n c e , T h a t le a v e s L a k e
B rantley's Lady Patriots all
alone In first place with a 5-0
qonfqrencc mark.
- - H t 's still early." Merthle said.
"W e still have two conference
games with Brantley and one
more with DeLand and Lake
Mary."
‘ DeLand got off to a quick start
Thursday night as It took a 6-2
lead In the early going o f the first
quarter. Seminole senior Mona
.Benton didn't start because of a
■slight hamstring pull, but she
came In with 2:50 left in the first
quarter and hit a bank shot that
lied the score at 10-10. Shawn
Lane's layup, on an assist from
Swartz, gave DeLand a 12-10
lead at the end o f the quarter.
Gordon opened the second
quarter with a three-point play
that gave DeLand a 15-10 lead.
Seminole battled back behind
the outside shooting of Temlka
Alexander and the inside play of
;Qatherine "K itty " Anderson to
tpke a 20-10 lead with 1:10 left
In the half. The Tribe reeled off
three more points to take a 23-10
.’ i
i-j

Basketball
lead but DeLand pulled within
23-21 al the half an Gordon's
Jumper.
The third quarter was
and forth for the entire eight
minutes. But Seminole managed
to maintain its two point lead.
33-31. going Into the fourth
quarter.
Gordon knocked in another
Jumper to open the final period
and tie the score at 33-33.
Anderson then hit a layup and
Benton slithered In for a layup
that gave the Lady Seminole's a
37-33 lead. DeLand came back
to tie It at 39-39 with 2:30 left
and the Lady Bulldogs took back
the lead. 42-41. on Gordon's
three point play with 2:18 re­
maining.
Benton then made a nice move
and banked in two points to give
Seminole a 43-42 lead with 2:01
left to play. Seminole kept up the
defensive pressure but Alex­
ander was whistled for a foul,
sending Swartz to the line for a
one and one with 1:54 remainlng.
T h e s e n io r p o in t g u a rd
swished both Bhots for a 44-43
lead. DeLand, which made Just 1
of 7 free throws In the first three
quarters, made 5 of 5 from the
line in the fourth period.
Seminole then turned the ball
over with 1:45 left and DeLand
went Into the stall. The Lady
Bulldogs ran the clock down to
29 seconds before turning the
ball over to the Tribe.
Seminole called time with 21
seconds left to set up the last
shot. Seminole worked the ball
around the perim eter until
Benton drove to the hoop with
10 seconds left. But DcLand's
defense closed ofT Benton's lane
to the basket and Benton threw
the ball away trying to get it out
of trouble. The Bulldogs then
took over with two seconds left
and ran out the clock before
Seminole could foul them.
''T h ey (DeLand) overplayed
Mona (Benton)." Merthle said.

A b o v e , B e a t r ic e S m it h
senses the presence of DeLand's Brldgette Gordon as
she tries to get off a shot.
Gordon scored 28 points to
lead the Lady Bulldogs to a
o n e -p o in t v i c t o r y o v e r
Seminole. At right, a pair of
10 s — Seminole's Tem lka
Alexander, right, and DeLand's Robyn Swartz collide.

LAKE BRANTLEY &lt;M) - Atpltn It,
Brown I. Dalllngar I}. Hogan J. Lutwnow 4,
Staggt 1, Thorn** 4. TwadcNII 4. Total*: 10

1434)4

APOPKA ()1) — Bryant I. Burkhtad I,
Damp* 1, McKInnay I. Parramor# 14. Total*:
14)111)
Halttlma — Laka Branllay IP, Apopka II.
Foul* — Laka Brant lay 1}, Apopka II. Foultd
out — Damp*. Tachnltal* - Apopka coach
Carlton).

Harald Ptiato* by Bonnlt Wlahaldt

SHAW AIDS HOWELL
Lake Howell's Johnson twins.
Jolee and Kellee. were double
trouble for Spruce Creek's Lady
Hawks Thursday night as the
good-looking duo combined with
Joyce Shaw to lead the Lady
Silver Hawks to a 51-45 victory
at Lake Howell High.
Jolee Johnson connected for

See GORDON, Pag* 7A

Marlette Turns To Raines For Boost Coa°tlr
By B a a Cook
Herald Sport* Editor
D cLan d's h igh ly regarded
Bulldogs come to town tonight
and S em in o le coach C hris
Marlette Is pulling out all the
Stops for this crucial Five Star
Conference encounter.
. You may have noticed several
different visitors taking up resi­
dence on the Tribe bench during
the home games. This Is a deal
lnltitated by Marlette to get the
'faculty and community closer
Involved In the games.
'.U s u a lly , Marlette selects a
fa c u lty m em b er o r a proSem inole booster to be his
"guest coach." It's worked out
jirelty well since Seminole has
lost Just one game at home this
year.
Tonight, however, no one will
have any trouble recognizing the
guest. It will be Tim Raines.
.Montreal's flashy outfielder and
S a n fo rd '* " F a v o r it e S o n ."
Marlette said he hopes Tim can
give the boys an emotional boost

B a s k e t b a ll
to get them past the Bulldogs.
Raines will also sign auto­
gra p h s and b a sk etb a lls al
halftime Ithose little ones) which
the cheerleaders toss into the
stands.
Del .and and Seminole always
have a good rivalry but tonight's
contest should be one of the
better ones since the Bulldogs
are bringing one of their best
teams In recent years.
Marlette Is particularly worried
about two 'Dogs — 6-5 forward
Randy Anderson and 6-3 guard
Kevin Wieckcl. "W e have to
keep Anderson off the boards
and we huve to play Wieckcl
without the ball." said Marlette.
"Anderson Is really tough Inside
and Wieckcl is a great shooter.”
Marlette has been getting most
of his team’s scoring from Kenny
Gordon (14.3). James Rouse
(1 3.30 and Rod H enderson

(12.1). They are Joined In the
s t a r t in g lin e u p b y D a r y l
Williams and Rod Alexander.
Elsewhere. Lake Mary, which
was blow n out by Apopka
Wednesday, gets back Into ac­
tion tonight against Seabreeze.
Coach Willie Richardson's Ram
have had trouble getting Daryl
Merthle Into the offense.
Merthle is Joined by Donald
Grayson and JefT Reynolds along
w ith Matt N ew b y and Ray
Hartsfield in the starting five.
Grayson bad a good first quarter
against the Blue Darters and
Reynolds was the most consis­
tent Ram with 14 points and
seven boards. Hartsfield tossed
In 18 but most came during
"garbage time."
Lyman. 2-6. which has already
e n c o u n t e r e d it s h a r e o f
heavyweights, takes on another
one tonight when Mainland
comes to Longwood. "W e have
Just played a real tough sched­
ule." said coach Tom Lawrence,
w h o tic jic d o f f D e L a n d .

it
----------------------- T

Seabreeze. Edgcwater. Seminole
and Lake Mary among his losses.
"W e 'r e im provin g everyday.
Hopefully, we'll have a better
second half."
Lyman has guards Reggie
Douglas and T.J. Scpletla along
with forward Brett Marshall and
center Ralph Phllpott carrying
the load.
Lake Howell. 6-4. also has a
tough one tonight at home with
S p ru ce C reek . T h e H aw ks
whipped Mainland before break
and they have two quality big
men In 6-8 Jon Fedor and 6-10
M ark N ic h o ls . T h e H aw ks
counter with all-purpose per­
former Efrem Brooks and Scott
Andcrton.
" T h e ( O v ie d o O u t lo o k )
tournament helped us more than
an yth in g ." said coach Greg
Robinson. "Our shooting per­
centage has gone up game after
gam e."
Lake Brantley. 2-7. has gotten
good statistics from 6-8 center
Greg Courtney but coach Bob

m m*

-*•**#

SPRUCE CREEK (411 - Frott 0. Harrl* 4.
HaalhK. Thayar 11. Total* IP 7 is a*
LAKE HOWELL (111 - Coop 0, Francl* «.
Jankln* 1. J. Johnton to, K Johnton |,
Kaalon ]. Lawl* I. Ra* 4. Shaw 14, Slanlay 0.
Sthnladar 0. Schmidt 0 Total* 1) Stall.
Halttlma — Laka Howall II. Sprue* Croak
II. Fault -T Sprue* Craak It. Laka Hawaii I*
Foulad out — J. Johnaan. Ra*. Technical —
non*.

OVIEDO STARTS FRESH
Oviedo's Lady Lions put u
disappointing 2-9 start behind
them Thursday night by rolling
to a 65-21 rout o f Bishop Moore's
Lady Lions In Orange licit Con­
ference action at Oviedo High.
T h e L a d y L io n s used a
balanced scoring attack and a
devastating press to pull away
from the Hornets early. Mary
Lokrrs led Oviedo with 17 points
and seven rebounds. Natulle
Barth added 12 points and four
steals. Michelle Eck contributed
12 points and seven rebounds,
Tracy Jacobs tossed In eight (ind
Brenda Rcdway added six and a
game-high 12 rebounds. Cindy
Wood chipped In with a gamehigh five steals.
Oviedo now stands at 3-9
overall and 1-0 In the Orange
Belt. The Lions return to confer­
ence pluy Monday when the host
St. Cloud's Lady Bulldogs.
"W e got off to a really had
start this season." Oviedo coach
John Thomas said. "W e had
what I call our pitiful stage when
we couldn't shoot, dribble or
catch the ball. But I figured It
was Just a matter of lime before
we came out of It. We came out
tonight and played really well
and finally put It on somebody."
Oviedo used Its full court
pressure to build a 20-4 lead ut
See GIRLS. Page 7 A

J. Stawart, Ovlodo............. ...to
Hugh**, Ovlodo.................
wimg. Loko Branllay.......
M Stawart. Oviado ..........
Marahall. Lyman..............
f
Hodgos. Loko Brantlay......
Aa*iati
0
William*. Samlnolo...........
Sc*i*na. Lyman............... ....
Rout*. Stmlnol*..............
Juttlct, Ovlodo .............
Hill, Loko Brantlay.......... ....
Handarton, Samlnola........ ....
Brook*. Loko Hawaii.......
Andarton. Loko Howall......
....
Gordon* Somlnol#.........

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Hardwick. Laka Branllay... ....1
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).l
AVO.
Brook*. Loko Howall
2*
24
10 1.0 Row**. Samlnolo............. .
17
If
20 01 Sealotto. Lyman...............
14
14
13 Cordon, Samlnolo.............
12
14
0
2403 Simmon*. Ovlodo............ - -...10
1)
13
71 7.0
4)
4 1 NO REPORT: Laka Mary
4a 4.4 SOURCE: County caachat

P e t e r s o n s a id h is t e a m 's
rhythym Is ofT. "Our timing has
really been bad." said Peterson.
"W e Just need to gel It back In
sync and start playing as a
unit."
Courtney Is averaging 15.4

4 •# ♦—m

10 points and also had four
steals while Krllee added eight
points as Lake Howell won its
first Five Star Conference game.
The Lady Silver Hawks now
stand at 3-9 overall and 1-4 In
the conference.
Shaw, a freshman center, led
the way for Lake Howell with a
team-high 14 points and 12
re b o u n d s . S h e ro d K e e to n
chipped in with 10 rebounds.
Freshman [Milnl guard Tammy
Lewis added eight points und
two assists.

L“ d«"

CompUad hr b n Caah
Scaring
O
TP AVO.
Brook*. Laka Hawaii........... 10
111 11.1
Courtnay. Laka Bronltav..... *
l)f
IJ.4
Cordon. Samlnola................ »
121 14.1
Mottr, Samlnola................. *
122 14.1
Rout#. Samlnola................. t
120 13.3
Unroo. Ovlodo.................... 10
12* IS.f
Marshall. Lyman................ •
109 11 1
Scalatta, Lyman........ „ ...... ■
»7
11.1
Htndtrton. Samlnola..........*
101 12.1
Phllpott, Lyman................. I
tl
II S
J Stawart. Oviado.............. 10
10)
10 )
Andarton. Lok* Howall........ 10
N
M
Douglat, Lyman.................I
2)
0.4
Hugh**. Oviado........ .........-.10
•)
03
Slmmona. Oviado................ 10
40
4.0
M. Stawart. Ovlodo............. 10
M
10
Sahaand!ng
O
TP
Courtnay, Laka Brantlay...........0
Phllpott. Lyman. .......
I
Unrot. Ovlodo........................ •«
Cordon, Samlnola............ — ..
Handoraon. Samlnola................0
BoMtoy.Uha Howall...............10
Wooldrldgt. Laka Hawaii.........10

Basketball

points and 8.9 rebounds. Mark
Moser Is chipping In 14.1 per
game while David Hardwick
leads the county In steals with
3.1 per game.
Oviedo. 4-6. plays Tuesday at
home against St. ClruU.

■Apil

'—**#*-'»*•*,I .* a,

�* * — E v tn ln g H t r s Id , Ssn ford, F l . _

F rid a y , J in . 4, 1M5

Relieved

Renegades
N ab Lo m as
ORLANDO (UPI) - The Or­
lando Renegades picked Florida
tackle Lomas Brown and Ken­
tucky running back George
Adams In the United States
F ootb all L eagu e draft, and
"protected" Miami wide receiver
Eddie Brown.
All three are considered prob­
able No. 1 draft choices In the
NFL and Renegade owner Don
D lzney said after the draft
Thursday he hoped to sign at
least one of them.
In addition, the Renegades
protected territorial selections
William Perry, a defensive line­
man from Clemson, and running
backs L o ren zo Ham pton of
Florida and Greg Allen oi Florida
State.
Orlando obtained the rights to
Hampton and Allen In the com­
pletion o f a trade with the
Tam pa Bay Bandits several
weeks ago.
The Renegades seemed to be
zeroing in on Brown and Adams
as they prepare for their first

Stallions Choose Apprehensive Rice No. 1

Pro Football
*W« h a v * a chanco to sign
throo of tho host plavort
In tho country. No otnor
toam can say that.'

— Donald Dizney
season since m o v in g from
Washington.
“ We wouldn't have drafted
them If we weren't serious about
signing them." Dlzney said. "W e
know we have lo spend the
money on players to gel the fans
to the games and that's what we
want to do. If you don't sign the
top people you can't compete.
"W e have a chance at signing
three of the best players In the
country. No other team can say
that. That's strong. First, we
have to sec what we need and

SPO R TS
IN BRIEF
Howard Pumps In 22 Points
A s Atlantic Bank Triumphs
Eraklne Howard pumped In a game-high 22 points and
Brian Grayson tossed in eight as Atlantic Bank sailed to a
34-8 victory over Tip Top Supermarket in Sanford
Recreation basketball action.
Tip Top took a 4-2 lead after the first quarter but Atlantic
Bank exploded for 14 points In the second and went on to
build a 16-6 halftime lead. Howard scored 14 o f his 22
points In the second half to seal the win for Atlantic Bank.
John Jones’ four points led Tip Top.
In other action. Joseph Wiggins lit up the nets for 20
points and James Jackson poured In 16 to lead McCoy's
Cleaners to a 47-15 thrashing of First Federal.
McCoy's Jumped out to a 14-3 lead after the first quarter
nnd took a 26-5 halftime lead. McCoy 's put the game away
with 16 points In the third quarter to take a 38-11 lead Into
the fourth.
Jeff Ingram led First Federal with 11 points and Adaryl
Jones added four. 1'Lairy Lawrence contributed seven
points for McCoy’s Cleaners and Travis Perkins added four.

Double Hat Tricks Drill Kings
United Press International
. There was a time when hat tricks were commonplace for
the Minnesota North Stars. But this year, the team that
used to boast one of the NHL's most potent offenses has
had trouble scoring goals, let alone hat tricks.
Until Thursday night.
Keith Acton and Tom McCarthy each fired In three goals
Thursday night to power the North Stars to an 8-3 victory
over the Los Angeles Kings.
"W e 'v e had a terrible time scoring goals." said
Minnesota Coach Glen Sonmor. "I kepi saying we would
start scoring because that's this team’s history. We had
hoped Tommy Mac (McCarthy) would be the tonic we
needed and It looks like he will be."
The hat tricks were the first of the season for Minnesota.
It was also the third career hat trick for both Acton and
McCarthy, who each also had an assist In the game. Neal
Brotcn and Mark Napier each collected three assists as the
North Stars erased an early 2-0 Kings lead.
Elsewhere, Vancouver beat New Jersey 6-4. Hartford
whipped Detroit 6-2, Montreal tied St. Louis 2-2, and
Calgary edged Philadelphia 4-3.

Carey Doesn't Show For Soviets
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (UPI) — Rick Carey was a no-show
for the U.S. Swimming Internationa) Meet, but Dirk Richter
o f East Germany didn't let that stop him from stroking to a
new world's best time In the men's 100-meter backstroke.
Richter, ranked second in the world to Carey, finished
Thursday In 54.34 seconds, bettering the U.S. open and
meet records.
Bengl Baron of Sweden, who finished sixth behind
Richter, had the previous record o f 54.55, set In 1981.
World records cannot be set In the meet, which began
Wednesday, because It Is being held In a 25-meter pool.
Only limes recorded In 50-meter pools can be listed as
world records.
The four-day meet marks the first time swimmers from
several Communist bloc countries, Including the Soviet
Union and East Germany, have competed against United
States swimmers.
Both countries boycotted the Summer Olympics In Los
Angeles, but East Germany appeared ready Thursday to
make up for lost time.
East Germany won six events, holding a strong U.S.
team lo Just two victories. Arkansas' men's 200-meter
freestyle relay learn had the other victory of the day.

Ellis Misses Rare 4-Point Play
United Press International
Dallas forward Dale Ellis discovered — for the wrong
reason — why the 4-point play Is the rarest In pro
basketball.
With the Mavericks trailing 116-112 and Just three
seconds remaining, Ellis connected on a 3 polnt field goal
and was fouled on a true boneheaded play by San
Antonio's Johnny Moore.
With the most difficult part of the NBA's Grand Slam out
o f the wuy, Ellis needed only a free throw to tie It — but
missed — and the Spurs escaped Thursday night with a
116-115 triumph.
"You always preach that you never foul a man shooting a
3-polnter. but sometimes the best-laid plans go astray.”
San Antonio Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said. "W e dodged
a real bullet at the end."
Moore probably dodged a fine as well.
Elsewhere. Milwaukee thrashed the Los Angeles Clippers
111-87. Cleveland surprised Washington 100-93. Indiana
clipped Colden State 112-96 and Portland routed Seattle
123-89

Lo m as B ro w n , F lo rid a 's
A ll-A m e r ic a ta ck le , w as
taken on the second round by
the O r la n d o R e n e g a d e s
Thursday In the U S F L draft.
consider our situation." Dlzney
said.
The Renegades' Interest In
Adams wll) hinge partly on
Lorenzo Hampton's attitude.
Interest In M iam i's Eddie
Brown will depend on holdout
receiver Joey Walters.
" I f we can't sign Walters, then
we would have to go hard for
Eddie Brown. If wc can get
Hampton, then we wouldn't
need Adams." Dlzney said.
Lomas Brown was selected In
he second round of the draft and
Adams was selected In the third.

United Press International
J e m ’ Rice was wondering If
he'd get drafted to play pro
football. He dldn'l have to wait
very long to find oat.
The pass-catching sensation
from Mississippi Valley State
U n iv e r s it y T h u r s d a y w as
selected by the Birmingham
Stallions as the first player In the
United States Football League
draft.
"I was wondering If I was
going to get drafted." said Rice
in a telephone Interview after
being given the good news. "1
didn't get any calls (from USFL
tcams| last night. When they
called. It relieved a lot o f pre­
ssure, That's something else —
walling around to see if you're
going to get drafted."
Rice, a 6-foot-3. 215-poundcr.
caught 112 passes for 1.845
yards and 28 touchdowns In
1984 and holds the NCAA career
reception mark with 310 catches
fo r 4 .8 5 9 y a r d s a n d 51
touchdowns.
He runs the 40 In 4.58 seconds
and Is ratrd by pro scouts with
AI Toon of Wisconsin as the best
college wide receiver In the
country. Toon was protected by
the Jacksonville Bulls In the

Pro Football
territorial phase of the draft.
A m o n g the b ig g e r name
players to be chosen In the
territorial draft were: Hclsman
Trophy winner Doug Flulic and
All-America defensive back Tony
Thurman of Boston College, by
New Jersey: All-America tackle
Bill Frallc o f Pittsburgh, by
Baltimore: All-America defensive
end Ray Childress o f Texas
A&amp;M. by Houston: All-America
tackle Lance Smith of LSU. by
Portland; All-America defensive
tackle Tony Dcgratc of Texas, by
San Antonio, and All-America
middle guard William Perry of
Clemson. by Orlando.
A native of tiny Crawford In
east Mississippi. Rice didn't hurt
his chances before professional
scouts In the recent Blue-Gray
All Star Classic In Montgomery.
A l a . , as he s c o r e d tw o
touchdowns to lead the Gray to a
33-6 win. He was named Most
Valuable Player In the postseason game.
Rice's selection as the No. 1
player is sure to raise his stock
when the NFL holds Its draft

April 30.
"Now. the NFL will have to get
Into a bidding thing." he said.
"The league that offers me the
best security is where I'm go­
ing."
Rice said the negotiations
would be left to his agent.
Everett Glenn.
“ 1 don't need to be bothered
with that." he said. "I'v e got to
concentrate on playing ball. I've
really got to get back Into the
mood again, because e ve ry ­
thing's right around the corner."
The Los Angeles Express,
looking to bolster quarterback
Steve Young's receiving corps,
had tw o f i r s t - r o u n d
supplemental picks and selected
wide receivers Steve Sewell of
Oklahoma and James Mancss of
Texas Christian University.
In keeping even with receivers,
four defensive backs were picked
in the first round.
Arizona and San Antonio,
choosing second and third re­
spectively. each selected de­
fensive backs. The Wranglers
went for Tory Nixon of San
Diego State and the Gunslingers
chose Isslac Holt of Alcorn State.

Shu la Respects N e w Steel Curtain
MIAMI (UPI) — The Pittsburgh Stcclcrs'
young defense reminds Don Shula of the old
Steel Curtain. He Just hopes history isn't
ready to repeat itself yet.
"(Stcclcrs Coach) Chuck Noll had great
defenses In all those Super Bowl years.”
Shula said Thursday. "He's got a young
group now going in that same direction. I
Just hope they’re not ready for us yet."
The Stcclcrs will have to grow up in a
hurry to shackle Dan Marino and Shula's
Miami Dolphins offense Sunday In the AFC
Championship game. Marino broke passing
records for touchdowns and yardage, acro­
batic receivers Mark Clayton and Mark
Duper combined for 144 regular-season
ca tch es w orth 2,695 y a rd s und 26
touchdowns and the offensive line has
allowed Just 14 sacks.
The Pittsburgh defense gave Denver's
John Elway a beating in last week’s playoff
game. Elway had a knee, ankle and grolng
banged up before throwing an Intercetplon
to Eric Williams that set up the deciding
touchdown In Pittsburgh's 24-17 victory.
Marino said If the Steelcrs arc willing to
gamble, so is he.
"T h e Stcelers have been doing different
things since the last time we played them (a

Pro Football
31-7 Dolphins' victory Oct. 7 In Pittsburgh).
They blitz a lot more now." Marino said.
"When you blitz, you have a better chance
to make big plays but you give the olfense
more chance to make big plays."
" I don't believe that they’re not going to
blitz." Shula said. "T h ey blitz getting ofT the
bus."
Third-year outside linebacker Mike Merriweather led all linebackers with 15 sacks
this year and got Elway once last week.
Inside linebacker David Little had two sacks
last week as a replacement for Injured Jack
Lambert.
Both Merrlweather and right outside
linebacker Bryan Hinkle blitzed Elway on
Wllllamas' Inlerrpetlon. which he returned
28 yards to the 2. Frank Pollard went In
from there with 1:59 left to snap a 17-17 tie.
Merrlweather led the Stcclcrs with 98
regular-season tackles and 1lth-year strong
safety Donnie Shell had seven interceptions
and 96 tackles.
A blitzing defense Isn't the only different
look the Stcclcrs will show from their last

Payton's 'Super Run'
Scares San Francisco
REDWOOD CITY. CallL (UPI)
— H e’ s run th ou gh lin es ,
th r o u g h s e c o n d a r ie s and
through more than his share of
airports.
But Waller Paylon has never
run to the Super Bowl. That
concerns the San Frunclsco
49c rs.
"You have lo try to keep him
In the ballpark," San Francisco's
Ronnie Lott said o f Payton.
"H e's now the greatest back that
has played the game and he has
a chance for the Super Bowl.
"That makes him tougher."
P a y t o n , w h o b ro k e J im
Brown's all-time rushing record
during the season, has been
relatively overlooked Ihls week
as the Chicago Bears prepare for
the NFC championship game
against the 49crs.
The Bears' record-setting de­
fense has been the attentiongetter. celebrated for Its part In
th e e l i m i n a t i o n o f th e
Washington Redskins a week
ago. But Payton hasn't been
Ignored by the San Frunclsco
players.
"W alter Is probably one o f the
best backs I've gone against."
said linebacker Rlkl Ellison. "I
won't say the greatest, but hc'su

meeting with Miami. They have a new
quarterback In Mark Malone, wide receiver
Louis Llpps is healthy and running backs
Pollard and Walter Abercrombie have pro­
spered over the lust five games.
The Stcclcrs. who won the AFC Central
with a 9-7 record, have won three straight
for the first time this year.
"(David) Woodley started against us. but
he got hurt and Malone came on ." Shula
said. "H e 's establsdhcd h im self as a
quarterback since then. Llpps didn't play
and Abercrombie wasn't playing much
then."
Marino completed 16 o f 24 passes for 226
yards. Iwo touchdowns and one interception
In the last game against the Steelcrs. That
was a homecoming for Marino, who grew up
in Pittsburgh and starred for the University
of Pittsburgh before the Dolphins drafted
him In 1983.
"It's the AFC Championship game and
that's Important for everyone," Marino said.
"Playing the Steelcrs Is something special to
me. Growing up. I watched the Steelcrs'
championship games and I enjoyed that.
But It's been a long time, and I don't even
remember the last year the Steclera won the
Super Bowl."

win, lose A DREW
-f GpcOREJSJtSVWTrttNFLKEEDSfULL-TlH£QFFfcitLS

Pro Football
great back.
"T h e thing that wll) hurt us
the most is If be gets into the
open field.”
The 49crs know the way lo
stop Payton Is to get a lead und
force the Bears to the air.
"W e can’ t Just let them control
the ball." said linebacker Kecna
Turner.
But. for all of Payton's fancy
footwork, most believe the suc­
cess of the Bears' defense will
decide Sunday's outcome.
The names arc Hampton and
Dent, but the Redskins might
c u ll C h i c a g o 's d e fe n d e r s
Frankenstein's cousins.
The Redskins are gone, and
It's now the 49crs who must
handle the ferocious pass rush of
Dan Hampton. Richard Dent und
and an onslaught that sacked
the quarterback a record 72
times this season.
M on sters? Sun F ra n cisco
Coach Bill Wulsh won't argue.
"W e have been able to deul
with monsters before." Walsh
said. "T h ey concern us."
Chicago reached the playoffs

und upset the Redskins last
w eekend by using a " 4 6 "
alignment — four fire-breathing
linemen In three-point stance,
backed by three linebackers and
strong safety Todd Bell In the
open area along the line of
scrimmage.
The unorthodox rush elimi­
nated W ashington and has
caused the 49ers to spend hours
of practice time rehearsing their
counter of quick passes and
big-galn possibilities.
"It's different and It's very
effective." Walsh said of the
Chicago defense. "There is Just
enough difference to make It

Minnesota Stuns Illinois —
United Press International
What other schools can’t do to the Big
Ten, the Big Ten does to Itself. In Its annual
war of attrition, everyone In the conference
eventually gets to beat up on someone else.
II was Minnesota's turn Thursday night
with a 60-58 victory over No. 6 Illinois while
Michigan State got In Us licks with an 82-79
decision over No. 20 Ohio State.
The Gophers won In Minneapolis on a
fostbreak layup by Tommy Davis with three
seconds left. The llllnl claimed Davis walked
but the officials saw It differently.
Illinois led 54-43 with 5:29 left but
Minnesota tied It 58-58 with 50 seconds
remaining on a layup by Marc Wilson.
"W hen they went up by 11 we said ‘The
game's not over yet.*" Davis said. "Th ey
turned It over a few times and we were back
In II."
For the Gophers. 8-3, Davis scored 19
points while John Shasky had 16. Anthony
Welch led Illinois, 11-3. with 13.
"W c Just didn’t handle the pressure very
well at the end." Illinois Coach Lou Henson
said.
At East Lansing. Mich., the Spartans
showed some grit In their league opener.
Ken Johnson, on crutches until practice

tough to get ready for."
Joe Montana hua been the
hard-working student, hoping to
solve the riddle that brought
upstart Chicago to the confer­
ence title game.
"They do a lot o f things up
front and we arc going to have to
be ready for them." the All-Pro
quarterback said. "W c can't turn
the ball over or anything. Wc
have to keep the pressure on
them.
"They obviously are beatable.
Six learns have beaten them this
year."

UNC Tops Hatters

College Basketball
Wednesday, scored 22 points and Scott
Sktles added 21.
"H e (Johnson) came out and Jogged a
couple of laps and said. 'I think I can play,
Coach.’ " said MSU Coach Jud Heathcote.
"It didn't look like the knee bothered him at
all."
Sam Vin cen t's tw o layups put the
Spartans up 74-69 with 4:05 left. Ohio State
rallied with two minutes to go but Michigan
State converted 5-of-6 free throws to protect
its lead.
Brad Sellers led the Buckeyes. 8-2. with
21 points and Troy Taylor added 17.
Michigan State 1s 10-1.
"W e could not slop their Inside game."
Ohio State Coach Eldon M iller said.
"(Johnson) Is a big. dominant player. I think
wc could have done a better Job all around."
Elsewhere In the Top 20. No. 7 Georgia
Tech pounded Maryland-Eastern Shore
93-40: No. 9 North Carolina defeated
Stetson 85-71; No. 10 DePaul dropped St.
Mary's (Calif.) 76-53; No. 11 Kansas edged
Tcvns Southern 78-74 In nv^rtlme: and No

13 Washington beat Stanford 78-69.
At Atlanta, the Yellow Jackets enjoyed
their most lopsided victory ever. Yvon
Joseph scored 19 points for Georgia Tech.
10-1. Maryland-Eastern Shore, 1-8, shot 31
percent.
At Orlando, Brad Daugherty scored 24
points and grabbed 9 rebounds Thursday
night and No. 9 North Carolina held off
Stetson for an 85-71.
Tar Heel guards Steve Hale and Kenny
Smith each had 17 points as North Carolina
Improved Its record to 9-1.
Jay Daniels led Stetson, 4-9, with 24
points. Mike DuPont had 19 and Jorge
Fernandez 18 — 16 In the Hatters' sec­
ond-half rally.
The game was lied four times In the
opening minutes before the Tar Heels
scored 14 unanswered points and bull! a
42-22 halftime margin.
"Stetson was Impressive," said Tar Heel
Coach Dean Smith. “ We couldn’ t stop them
in the second half.”
At Rosemont. III.. Tyrone Corbin, wearing
a mask to protect a broken nose, scored 18
points to carry DePaul. 9-2. The Blue
Demons have won 33 In a row at home.

�Friday, Jan. 4, l f b - F A

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

McEnroe,
Connors
Face Off
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI) - It'll
lie a rematch o f the world's two
best tennis players tonight In the
$1.3 million Challenge o f Cham­
pions:-----John McEnroe faces Jimmy
Connors with the victor advanc­
ing to Saturday's championship
against Ivan Lendl. Yannick
Noah. Guillermo Vilas or Vitas
Gerulaltls. ESPN will carry the
McEnroe-Connors' match on a
tape-delayed basisat 10 p.m.
"Th is Isn't a Master's or a
Wimbledon but I'm going out
there to do the best 1 can."
McEnroe said Thursday night
after beating Jimmy Arias, 4-6,
6-3. 6-2. and setting up the
match with Connors.
Connors, who downed Johann
Krlek, 6-1. 6-3. commented. "1
think every time we play we go
out to try to beat each other to

H tra M Phata by Gregory Gahni

EGE, fourth from the left, is one of the successful greyhounds running for Zodiac Kennel. Zodiac had top purse at SO' C last week.

Em erson's Zodiac K e n n e l Caters To Stars
By Phil 'Boomer* Denis
Special to the Herald
About ;i year ago at this time, Lee Emerson owned a
catering business In the Central Florida area and
enjoyed placing down a wager every now and then at
dog tracks, especially the Sanlord-Orlando Kennel
Club.
When not busy catering, Emerson would spend some
of Ills time watching the greyhounds run. all the while
entertaining dreams of some day becoming an owner.
That day has certainly arrived For Emerson and his
newest stars born out of the Zodiac Kennel during
SOKC's first days of its 50th anniversary celebration
this past week.
No wonder Emerson feels he's being catered to these
days, enjoying the best of two worlds as a greyhound
kennel owner and also spending his time at SOKC.
After nine racing performances. Zodiac Kennel had the
highest purse ($8963.40| and the most successful
kennel with seven wins. 15 places and five shows In 51
starts.
"Everybody's hopes and my hopes arc coming
through." Emerson said one afternoon last week after
having four of his greyhounds cam trips to the
winner's circle, eight running In the place position and
three shows. "Everybody told me It was In the stars for
me to be In the dog racing business some day. and here
Lam.”
Since It was Indeed In the stars for Emerson, thus
cpmes the name of Zodlar Kennel, complete with
trainer "Tuckec Bob" Fraher. a person Emerson culls
"The Man" when it comes to training greyhounds.
In Initially getting Into the business, Emerson
purchased numerous greyhounds from Wayne Strong
and others from various Individuals.
After obtaining a kennel booking from SOKC director

Pari-mutuels
‘Everybody told me it
w o t in the store for
me to be In dog*
racing business som e
d ay, and here I am .'

— Lee Emerson
of racing Tom Bowersox. Emerson and Fraher went to
work and currently have 68 greyhounds ready to
compete for top honors.
Emerson and Zodiac Kennel's proudest moment thus
far came on SOKC's opening night last Wednesday
when "Crime Pays" did Just that In coming from off
the pace to win the 50lh Inaugural Feature after going
off at 15-1.
"Without a doubt, that was my proudest moment so
far.” said Emerson in reflecting upon the 50th
Inaugural Feature triumph. "Suddenly I'm realizing
I've enjoyed myself for 20 ycurs betting the dogs and
now I'm In the position I've always wanted to be In.
"Now. we hope to keep running good and getting
better. We've got a lot of ‘ hounds running now and
we re getting saimc more ready to go to post."
For now. however. Emerson’s Zodiac Kennel has
been the talk of SOKC’s opening day performances.
"T h ey sure are running right now." Bowersox said.
"In fact, they're (lying. Zodiac has good people
Involved with the greyhounds and'wc'rc wishing them
the best of luck."

PICK SIX AND BIO g — The return o f the exciting
and high-paying "P ic k S ix " with a couple ol
modifications and Introduction of the "B ig Q" have
gone over rather well during SOKC's first few
performances last week.
"W e knew the people liked the Pick Six In-fore and
the Big Q has been a popular bet elsewhere before."
said Collins. “ And the customers have shown they like
It during our first couple of shows. "
The Pick Six. hit by correctly selecting the winners
In the sixth through 11th races, two modifications
Includes a guaranteed minimum Jack pot for each card
of $5,000 and a Jackpot capping of $50,000.
An excellent example of the minimum guarantee
occurred during Saturday’s matinee. On Friday
evening, three customers each hit slx-of-slx on the Pick
Six and collected $2,257.40 apiece. When Saturday's
matinee began. Collins had again 'inserted a cool
$5,000 Into the Jackpot before the pari-mutuel
windows opened.
As for the Big Q. combining the qulnclas on the 12th
ad 13th races each performance, the last two racing
events. It has been well received by the customers and
Collins expects even bigger and better tilings once
folks become more familiar with It.
After nine performances. Carrier Enterprises. Inc. led
with nine wins while Bill Henihorn Kennel and Oxford
Kennel were next with eight each. After Zodiac's
leading purse were Mt. Hood Kennel ($7,555). Paul
Paulk Kennel ($6.246| and llenthorn ($6. 110).
Clubhouse reservations for the Sanford-Orlaudo
Kennel Club can lie made by telephoning 305-831*
1600.

Play Bettor Golf with JACK NICKLAUS
'y e

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^

is

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'W I T H I N
PUN TO

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'W O N ' T STICK
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tv iK v
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a o o o
TH E
_____
A C H IE V E .

Time

FO R
R N EW
• M C R t T .1

C o n t ln n e d f r o m 5 A

Raiders with an 16 ppg average,
tossed in 11 points In limited
duty while Jeff Day added 10 to
com p le te the d ou ble-figu re
scoring, also a season high.
Everybody who played scored.

TO

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death."

Emerson likes It that way. the Idea ol being catered
to rather than catering.

Freshman center Greg "S lim "
Johnson, who played against
several of the visitors during his
military career, enjoyed a good
night on the boards as he pulled
down 17 rebounds to go with his
lOpoIntB.
" W e 'r e still w orking and
coming on," said the 26-year-old
veteran. "Klkl was a welcome
addition tonight. He can really
shoot the ball and he showed
that tonight."
Although pleased with victory
No. 10. Slim said the Raiders

...Gordon
Continued from BA
"W e have other people that can
shoot, but we didn't get the ball
In their hands."
Seminole returns to Five Star
Conference action Monday when
It travels to Lake Howell High.
In ju n io r v a r s it y a c tio n
Thursday. Seminole played one
of Its better games of the season
but DeLand came through with
a 4 1 -3 7 v ic t o r y . Y o la n d a
Robinson's 13 points led the way
for Seminole while Debbie Lovett
added 12 points, all In the
second half.

were definitely anltelpullng No.
11. " W e play Lake Sum ter
Saturday and we owe them
one." he said. "It's not going to
be hard gelling anyone up for
that gam e." .
The Raiders, after winning
ihclr first four games, lost to
Lake Sumter on a miraculous tip
from the free throw line with
four seconds to play. It was the
first time an SCC team ever lost
to the Leesburg (school and the
setback triggered si three-game
losing streak.
PATRICK AFB (14) - Arnold A 10 0 0 II.
Cratt I F I 11. Gagum I I 0 0 10, Hall 4 1} 0 0
I Hamilton 4 14 00 12. Harpar 14 0 1 2.
Jordan 4 110 0 12. Lom4a 1 7 4 4 10. Smith 2 1
1 11. Tolali. 1414 (11 %) A II (11 %) FA.
SEMINOLE (1)4) - Edward* 111* 0 I 14,
Graca 4 10 11 II. Brantlay 11 1 1 II, A
Johnton 1100 1. Graar 1 F 00 X Bryanl F 7
2 1 14. B4lat F 12 11 14. S Johnton 4 f 2 1 10.
Baird 14 0-1 10. Day 110 0 0 10. llrolhar 0 0
I 21. Tolali: 11*1117%) 11 24(10%) 1IA
Hallllma — Samlnola 11. Patrick AFB 14.
Foult — Patrick AFB 17. Samlnola II. Foulad
out — Arnold. Gagum Tachlncal — nona A

(Eaotopt Bun.)

MATmMON. W H ). SAT. 1 P M
PLAY THE EXCITING &amp; HIGH
PAYING "PICK 6" &amp; "BIG G"
TH U R S. FREE

ORANDSTAND ADM.
FOR LADIES
Visit our two climata
jorstroiltod dubhouSMt lor
your fin« dining and
antMrtainmMnt ptMsura.
ClubhouM rosorvations
8 3 1 .1 4 0 0

Don't G«t Caught
Cold...
Wtth Yaar Farnaca Dana

Sanlord-Orlindo
Kennel
Club
North ol Orlando.

Wtoathartrors
Hast Pump/AIr Condltlonar
Ona Sytlam Cool, to
Haala Tour EnlUa Houaa

W A LL S
1007 S

Just ott Hwy. 17*92

J :

I I I 0*| T rw t M t t Lm |m*M

Sarstoid A t *.

Sorry No Minor*

Sarslord

iF G o o d ric h
Designed and engineered lor a
smooth ride and long mileage
Lilesaver XLM ' whitewall

$1^95

%%}

...Girls

BIIHOP MOOR! ( I t ) - Bradamon 1,
Rigid 4. LainFsaltar I. M&lt;Gonn 4. Senehas 1,
Womlck4. Totalt: 7 7 14 11
OVIEDO (Al) — Barth li. Boworgo* 4. Eck
11. Jacafca ». Kaltay 2. Lopart i;, Mayan 4.
Radway 4. Wood 0. Tololi: IF 11 a 41.
Halfllmo — CFvtado 14. BliFsop Moor* 4.
Foult — BJkhop Moor* I*. Ovlado 11 Foulad
out — none Tathnkal — non*

NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M.

—m

DELANO (44) - Brown 1. K. Corr 0. P
Coer 4. Gordon M, Larva 4. Swgrtt 4. Total!
1*4-1144.
SIMJNOLE (Al) - Alomondor 10. Andgrion
11, Boriton 11. Mllchtll 0. pftarpon 1, A. Smith
l.B . Smith4. W allow0 ToUli: I t s *41
Holltlmg — SamlnoJt a . OaLond 11. Fouli
— Da Land t, Saminota IS. Foulad out — none
Tachnlcal — none A — 100.

Continued from BA
the end of the first quarter and
the Lady Lions went on to take a
34*6 halftime lead.
"Early In the season we would
fall behind by so much In the
first half that we couldn't catch
up In the second." Thomas said.
"Tonight, we came out and
pressed and got off to a good
start."

McEnroe found himself down
one set and 0-2 In the second set
against Arias but he broke Arias'
serve three out of the next five
games to take the second set and
establish a momentum that
Arias was never able to reverse.
"I played better at the start
Innight than 1 did yesterday
(when he beat Krlek). but Arias
played well In the beginning."
McEnroe said, " lie surprised
me.”
Noah defeated Lendl. 7-6, 6-7.
6-1. and pul him Into a threeway lie In the battle for one of
two spots in the championship
match of the eight-man round
robin tournament.
With one point awarded for
each set win and a point for each
match victory. Noah. Lendl and
Guillermo Vilas each have four
points and Vitas Gerulaltls has
three points.
The leader after today's round
advances to the final against the
winner of the other group that
includes McEnroe. Connors,
Arias and Krlek.
Going Into late Thursday night
matches against Arias and Krlek
r e s p e c tiv e ly , M cEnroe and
Connors were lied for the lead In
their group at 3 points each.

^

■

Goodrich

1\

Muir.-fri.

FOR SIZE

155/M013

• Fu*l MVtng* with low rolling
iMUlancto compound*.
• Excellent traction, long
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unique tiead deasgn.
■ Exlta it length and •lability
*ti
itom two Reel bells, and
•tuidy, polyeater cord body.

AOk T IIU :

ms

W

&gt;1A ltT

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I I %. I IU Nt II W I . % \ N M ) I U )

3 2 2 - 7 H tO

a
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)VeJ%-

�BLONDIE

8A—Evening Hereld, Sanford, FI.

by Chic Young

Friday, Jan. 4, IMS

BEETLE BAILEY
WHAT
ARE YOU
COOK lMG

'L

THE BORN LO SER

by Art Sansom

500 WATTS, 2+BAND
BQ, OfolTAL 6YKITHE-SI7ER TOWER WITHA MICROCOMPUTER,
CCMRACT DISC
PLAYER, SUBWOOFER
WITH -SATELLITE
SPEAKERS.,,

MAM-O-MAW, WOULD X EVER
LIKE ID TEST (TOUT WITH MY
XLWPEMCE WEiK 78s 1

Ciwiiiit *«
ARCHIE

by Bob Montana

EEK A MEEK

by Howl* Schneider

TH A Ti BECAUSE THEY’RE

THEY S/V THAT THTSIWGUS“

Rmwioj is GfaowiwG.

MARGMUG AWD SlVIfJS
BIRTHTDMORt

Do You Eat O r Fast
Before Blood Test?
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
been a diabetic for IB years and
h ave had s evera l d ifferen t
doctors. Whenever these doctors
wanted to have a blood sugar
test taken, they told me to eat
my regular meal Just two hours
before they took my blood. For
other kinds of blood work, I
fasted before the test.
DEAR READER ~ It Is quite
simple: Both answers are light.
We use both the fasting glucose
levels and the level measured
tw o h o u rs a ft e r e a t in g a
carbohydrate meal or drinking
glucose water.
In the earlier stage o f diabetes,
the fasting glucose level Is apt to
be normal and the after-eating or
a fte r-g lu c o s e In gestio n a b ­
normal. That is why a test after
eating or glucose Is u better way
to find out who may have
d ia b e t e s . A s th e d is e a s e
advances, the fasting glucose
level will also become high.
Once a person has diabetes, it
can then be regulated on the
basis of either the fasting test,
the after-eating test, or both. It
depends entirely on how the
doctor wants to manage the
patient. The current thinking Is
sw in gin g tow ard m easuring
your.own blood glucose at home
with a home kit. It can be used
to determine your glucose level
at different times of the day, and
this technique Is particularly
useful in regulating the amount
of Insulin a patient may need in
.relation to what he eats. Howev­
er, there Is a normal range for
both fasting and after-eating
blood levels.
Y o u ’ ll u n d e r s ta n d y o u r
diabetes better after reading Th t
H e a l t h L e t t e r 18-10.
Hyperglycem ia: The Diabetic
Problem.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am 29
and have taken Inderal for heart
palpitations and mild high blood
pressure for two years. Are heart
palpitations anything to be
concerned about? I would like to
know more about Inderal. which
corrects the discomfort. Could It
affect an unborn child? Isn’t It
better to cleanse the body before
conception? If so. for how long?
Do alcohol and coffee fit into the
cleansing routine?
DEAR READER - It Is usually
recommended that patients not

take any o f the bcta-blockera,
such p j Inderal, "unless the
potential benefit Justifies the
potential risk to the fetus." This
means that if you can get along
without It, or If your problem
can be managed with some other
medication, that might be better.
There Is no positive proof that
the beta-blockers will cause any
problems with your pregnancy,
because no long-term study of
these drugs In pregnant women
has ever been done. When given

to animals In very large dose*
(10 times that which a patient
might be using). It can affect the
fetus.
I'd have to know a lot more
about you to Judge how Impor­
tant your blood pressure and
palpitations are.

S e n d y o u r q u e s tio n s to l)r.
I„im h. VO Ho\ 1551. R a dio C ity
S tilt toil. .Veil' York. X. Y. 10019. .
Answer to Previous Puule

ACROSS

6 Farewell
7 Weight units
1 Distinguished
B East Indian
9 Here's husband
wood
13 Intermittently (3 9 Bluish-white
w d s)
metal
14 Unused
10 Correct
15 Brother (abbr)
11 Hawaiian food
18 Vim
fish
17 SC Pacific
12 Close falcon
island
eyes
18 Wiraless signal 20 Poetic
19 Uh-huh
contraction
20 Outar
21 Dele
21 Flightlass bird
22 On edge
22 Pronoun
J*1''ooms
23 African nation
2s . .'onth (Fr)
26 Rating
25 Author of
31 Inner Hebrides
"Picnic"
Island
26 Be furious
32 Stripe
27 Classes
33 Impression
26 Idea (comb
34 Dogs
form)
35 1957 science
29 C lost
event(abbr}
30 Holes
36 Type of tide
32 Liver fluid
37 Church tower
4
1
3
3
39 Smells
40 That is (abbr)
13
41 Public vehicle
42 Hebrew letter
»l
46 Sandwich type
(abbr)
IB
47 Collage degree
(abbr)
50 Champagne
34
73
3ft
bucket
5 1 Trade
31
52 Edge
53 River in Franca
34
54 Unsound
56 Headlend
37
57 Least important

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46 Well (Let )

39 Vent

47 Gloomy

41 Explosion

48 Cone-bearing
trees

42 City of David
43 Farm measure

49 Egyptian deity

44 Wants (tl)

51 Party food

45 Irritates

55 101. Roman

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WIN A T BRIDGE
MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Hargreavee A Sellers

Y

P O M T W O RRY,
AAR.SILLY. .J05 T &lt;50
OUTRIDE AMP LOOK
AT T H E S T R E E T 5 k5H
A N P T E L L M E W HERE
TPO RE CALLIM O FRPM

/ l / V \ AT THE
CORKIER OF W A L K '
A N D 'P O fi/Y W A L K l,

by Warner Brother*

BUGS BUNNY
I M gOMWA

S E T /WYaJNl

\VAB8IT 5£A50N ISN'T TILL
SPWINJS-.r— -------------------- A

AM D

By Jam es Jacoby
A Swlsa-tcam event Is a form
of tournament bridge divided
Into matches. In each match,
two teams play seven deals
against each other. Although the
correct strategy is to bid and
play as well as possible, there
arc times when you know you're
doing badly.
On the sixth or seventh deal of
a match that's going against
you. It can be proper to bid a
very doubtful slam. This brings
us right up to the current deal.
Because South knew that his
team was way behind In the
match, he Invited slam. He did It
by bidding live hearts rather
than Blackwood. Asking for aces
really would not help him. In­
stead, he just wanted North to
look at hls hand and make a
decision. North, of course, had a

minimum, but he had plenty of
aces, and the 10 of hearts looked
good.
D e cla rer won the ace o f
diamonds, ruffed a diamond,
and passed the nine of hearts.
When East showed out. declarer
needed some more luck. A club
to the queen was followed by the
king o f diamonds (on which
South shed a club), ace of clubs
and a club ruiT.
Now came the queen of hearts,
which held, and the A-K of
spades. West had to follow. A
third spade would have been
won by East's Jack, except that
poor West had to trump and lead
away from the king of hearts to
let South make hls slam.
P.S. North-South and thetr
teammates at the other fable lost
this match anyway.

N O RTH

I -4-11

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SOUTH
♦ A K 784
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♦ 10
♦ 841
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
West North East
1*
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Pass t f
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Pass I f
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Opening lead: *Q

HOROSCOPE
FRANK AND ERNEST
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by Bob Thavee

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Thave,^ t-4 ' i j

GARFIELD

by Jim Devi*

What The Day
Will Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
JANUARY S, 1985
Although you'll be popular
with your peers this coming
year, three friendships will be of
special significance. Unique,
advantageous, alliances will be
formed with these individuals.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19} If you are having difficulty
making an Important decision,
talk it over today with friends
whose Judgment you respect.
T heir views will be helpful.
Looking for Mr. Right? The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker could
help you In your search. Send $2
to Astro-Graph. Box 489, Radio
City Station, New York. NY
10019.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
This can be a productive day for
you. provided you don’t permit
someone who has a lot of time
on hls hands to distract you from

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

« t T » T ,M 6 N ,
1HE ENEMY

APPRGACHBSi

' WtoUU? SOMEONE PLEASE SCRATCH M/
N O tttfW SO R W O U S , IF IS0W7CH
|TI MJ6HTPOKE A FIN6ERIAI MV EYfe.

m gm sa m m

IM Y
.w o u L P r r w

WELL, PEOPLE pEACT IT

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Doing things for others will afford you
true pleasure today, especially If
those you're trying to help a r e j
relatives or family members.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22V
You'll be happier today If your?
plans include some type of groupInvolvement. Don’t be a loner — get out and s o c ia liz e wltftS
friends.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Cd-'.
recr and financial objectives caht
be fulfilled today, but you'ibl
going to have to work hard fdrt
what you hope to attain. SdtS
your sights and get going.
;;
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) AjJ
situation similar to one thafci
caused you a problem in the past
may crop up today. This time,
however, you'll dispatch it with
rase.
J
8AQITTARIUB (Nov. 23-Ded.
21) Keep your eyes peeled far
opportunity today. You might be
able to fit yourself Into some­
thing good that another already
has going.
!

by Leonard Stait*
'EM

ODPLY10 YOU
NERVOUS,
WIEN YXI POSSESS tnars M Y !
6REAT hCAlTh. p f

your duties.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Social activities that offer a
degree of friendly competition
are apt to be the ones that will
please you the most today.
Tennis, anyone?
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Give family-oriented activities
p rio rity today o ver outside
diversions with .friends. Keep
loved ones who share your roof
uppermost in your mind.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Friends and associates will be
exceptionally responsive to your
ideas and suggestions today.
Since your words carry so much
weight, be careful what you say.
OEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your overall financial prospects
look encouraging today, yet you
must guard against loss through
carelessness.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
P r o je c t s or v e n tu r e s you
personally direct have good
chances for success today. Don't
let your leadership be diluted by
an Ineffective committee.

�PEO PLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 4, IW J -f A

Gardening

E n jo y G i f t P o in s e ttia s F o r S e a s o n s T o C o m e
If you received a potted polnsetta for Christmas,
your enjoyment of this attractive plant needn’ t
end with the holidays. Don't throw It away! With
a little extra care (and a bit of luck) a gift
polnsettla's life can be extended for many seasons
to come.
All too often, we give up on potted poinsettias
once they’ve lost their colorful bracts. It’ s
relatively easy to save poinsettias from one
Christmas to the next by planting them outdoors
in you landscape.
; Poinsettias are especially sensitive to extremes
of heat and cold, as well as sudden temperature
changes. While you are enjoying your potted
specimen In your home, keep your plant away
ffbm hot air vents, cold windows, and doorways
where temperatures fluctuate rapidly. Avoid
qverwatertng. A thorough soaking about once a
week should be sufficient. And. keep the
polnsetlla In a brightly lighted area — never In
direct sun.
Once your polnsetlla starts to fade after the
holidays, you can prepare It for the big move
outdoors. You’ll have to hold the plant In a
protected area until the danger of frost has
passed. During this period, the polnsetlla should
be allowed to dry and become domiant. Water It

Alfred
Urban

Horticultrlst
323-2500
Ext. 181
only occasionally — Just enough to keep It from
completely drying out.
When you're ready to plant It outdoors, you
should carefully consider Its placement relative to
the amount o f light It will receive In the area
where you want to set It. Poinsettias are "short
day*’ plants. This menas they will set flower buds
In the fall only If the dally period o f light they
receive Is relatively short. If you plant It where It's
exposed to extra light from a porch, window, or
street lights, it mav never bloom.
In late winter or early spring, after the
blooming period Is over and the danger of frost
has passed, all poinsettias should be pruned back
to within 12 to 18 Inches off the ground. If by
chance they’ve frozen, you may have to cut even
lower to get Into live wood. To avoid legginess
and insure compact plants at flowertnu lime

you'll need to prune several times during the
growing season. Each time new growth reaches a
length of 12 Inches, cut or pinch II bark, leaving
four leaves on each shoot. This should be'
continued until about Sept. 10, but no later.
Poinsettias begin to set buds as the days become
shorter, pruning after September 10th may
reduce llower production.
Poinsettias grow in a wide range of soils —
sand, muck or clay. But. they do need fertilizer.
Apply a complete, balanced mix. such as a 6-6-6.
three times a year. Begin when growth starts In
the spring, again In June, and finally In late fall
after the bracts begin to show color. This last
application will help promote large, showy,
colorful bracts. Apply about one-and-a-half
pounds o f 6-6-6 per 100 square feet of garden
area each lime you feed them.
Other gift plants you may have received, such
as azalea, begonia, or ch-vsanthrmum can las’
well Into the New Year. If given a little tender
care. too. The three most Important things to pay
attention to are temper&amp;turc. water, and light.
Most flowering house plants need a fairly cool,
but not chilling, temperature. Keep these plants
away from any heat source. However, be careful
not to expose the plants to cold drafts. A

prolonged ch iller sudden change In temperature
will cause some plants to lose their leaves.
Be careful with the watering. Your enthusiasm
lo lake good care o f yout gift plant can easily lead
to overwatering. This cause more damage to
plants ■ an Just about anything else. Remember,
roots need air, as well as water. Too much water
can literally drown plant roots. Apply Just enough
to thoroughly soak the soil. Then, don’t water
again until the soil Is almost dry. If the soil feels
damp, don’t add water.
Be sure your plant gels enough light. Some
plants do well In artificial light, but most do well
with as much natural light as possible. An cast
window Is best so the plants catch the early
m orning sun. W ith Insufficient light, the
blossoms won’t last long and the plant will begin
to drop Its leaves.
After the danger of frost has passed, any of
these gift -’lants. Just like the polnsetlla. mav be
planted outdoors in the garden to give you many
seasons of blooming delight.
Keep In mind these basic facts about how
temperature, water and light can affect your
holiday gift plant’s health, and you should be able
to keep them looking attractive for some time to
come. Happy New Year and Happy Gardening!

Dina Caballero, Careful Woman Not 'Paranoid Dummy'
Dear
J.R. Sexton Wed
Abby
In Home Rites
Dina Caballero and J. Ron
Sexton, both of San Diego,
Calif., were married Dec. 31,
|.*** at 2 p.m., at Jhe hone of the
bridegroom’s mother. Mrs,
J e a n e t t e M a r tin , 1699
Pendleton, Deltona.
The bride Is the daughter
o f Mr. and Mrs. Jacinto
Caballero, Warden. Wash.
Carrying bone-colored. Vic­
torian pink and blue poinset­
tias, the bride chose for her
vows a bone-colored brocade
gown complemented with a
hat and veil.
Her only attendant was
Melanie A. Sexton, daughter
o f the bridegroom, who wore
a bone-colored waltz-length

gown and a floral headpiece.
Toby O. Sexton, the bride­
groom’s son, was best man.
A reception was held In the
home following the ceremo­
ny.
After a wedding trip to
D a y t o n a B e a c h , t he
newlyweds arc making their
home In Savannah where the
b r i d e g r o o m Is E q u a l
Employment Manager. U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers.
T h e b r id e Is f o r m e r l y
D ir e c t o r o f L a b o r n ad
Em ployee R elations with
Naval Electronic Systems
E n gin eerin g C enter, San
Diego.

jW elcome Wagon Asks

Newcomers To Coffee
The Welcome Wagon Club of
Seminole County Invites women
who have recently moved to the
county to Join Its social club.
Monthly luncheons and special
Ipterest groups are among the
activities scheduled for the 200

members.
The club will hold a mem­
bership coffee on Jan. 9. For
Information on the coffee and
club, call Ellen Angcrm an,
8 6 2 - 5 3 1 3 , or A u d r e y
Karawandy. 831-2745.

Who's Cooking?
The Herald welcomes suggestions for cooks of the week. Do
you know someone you would like to sec featured In this spot?
The Cook o f the Week column is published every Wednesday,
j Novice cooks and ethnic cooks, as well as experienced cooks
and master chefs add a different dimension to dining. Who Is
your choice? Maybe it’s your mother, father, brother, sister or
friend.
Submit your suggestions to Doris Dietrich. The Herald
PEOPLE editor. 322-2611.

DEAR A BB Y: You be the
Judge: Last night about 7 p.m. I
was relaxing In my tub when my
doorbell rang. I wasn't expecting
anybody, but I got out of the tub.
wrapped a towel around me and
peeked out my front window to
see who It was. I saw a kid about
18 or 19 years old, holding a
box. 1 assumed he was selling
something, so I said nothing and
went back to my tub because I
was not about to open my door
to a stranger.
The next morning my boss
called me In and said, "Yester­
day I asked you If you were
going to be home that evening
and you said yes. so how come
you weren't home?" I told him I
was home. Then he told me he
had sent his son to my house
with a fruitcake his wife had
made for a Christmas gift, but
nobody answered the door.
I told'him the truth — that I
was home, m y doorbell rang and
I saw a kid on my porch but
didn’ t want to open my door to a
stranger.
He said his son drove clear
across town for nothing: then he
called me a "paranoid dummy."
He really hurt m y feelings.
Abby.
Was I wrong to do what I did?
Or was m y boss wrong for
chewing me oul? No name or
town, please. I need this Job.
BEING CAREFUL
DEAR CAREFULi Orchids to
you for being careful, and a
wilted weed to your boss for
chewing you out. He should
have told you that his son would
be delivering a gift to you about
7 p.m. Nobody should open his
or her door to a stranger.

should make his olflce hours
between 3 p.in. and 9 p.m. plus
all day Saturday. That way. no
school is missed and everyone Is
happy. Simple, no?
BILL McC. IN LEXINGTON
DEAR BILL: Simple, yes.

barter system. W e’re together
because we love each other, and
sex Is a natural expression of
that love — not a demand or a
payment.
Are heterosexuals missing
something?
GLAD I’M QAY

D E A R A B B Y : F irs t on e
my practice Is totally limited to grandma says, "Marriage Is the
children and adolescents. If 1 price a man pays for sex, and
were to follow your recommen­ sex Is the price a woman pays
dation. I would have to schedule for marriage."
all my patients between the
Then another grandma says,
hours of 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. dally. "Men give love in order to get
Obviously, this Is impossible."
sex, and women give sex in
order to get love — and marriage
Abby. that dentist missed the
has nothing to do with It."
obvious solution. Where is it
My lover and l cannot marry
written in concrete that 5 p.m. Is
quitting time? A dentist whose because we are both men. Our
practice Is limited to children relationship is not based on the

D E A R G L A D : N ot a ll
heterosexuals are missing some­
thing. Nor arc all homosexuals
together because they love each
other. All generalizations are
flawed. Including tills one.

Problems? W hat’s' bugging
you? Unload on Abby. P.O. Box
38923. Hollywood. Calif. 9Q03H.
For a personal reply. ■please
enclose a st amped, s^lf
uddressed envelope.J

5555555555555555555555555555555

STORE
WIDE

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DEAR ABBYi A further word
about taking children nut of
school for dental appointments:
You recommended against it.
and I agree wholeheartedly.
(Teachers can’t teach absent
students any more than dentists
can treat absent patients.)
Then "Frustrated D entist"
said; “ I am a pedodontist, and

G IR L SCO U TS

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U J4W IW I
M.ON T H R U PHI 9 A M 5 I'M . S A T . 9 A M - I PM
CloM-d W e il A i I I’ M • C losed LaM Sal. O f T h e M onth

J A M .4 - M
tiTwj ousex

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�I8A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 4, Itu

legal Notice
SECTION *•*}*
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIOS
CITTOF LAKE MARY
WATCH SUPPLY WELL
Him* *1 Project: City of Laka
Mary. Florid*. Water Supply
W*ll, Contract No I.
Location: Tho proioct It
located within Sac I ton 4. TJOS.
R10E. City of Lako Mary.
Seminole County. Florida
Description at Work: All work
of tha Project than bo con
itructod In accordance with the
Drawlngt and Specification!
prepared by Camp Dretter A
McKee Inc . Environmental
Englneen Tha work will be
awarded and constructed. It
award It made, under one Con
tract. Bids shall be submitted
tor telling, delivering and In
Mailing all materials and pro­
viding the required plant and
labor tor the work ol:
Drilling two pilot boreholes,
drilling two full tiled boreholet.
providing and tatting eating and
grout, performance ol a step
drawndown pump test, Install
Ing two deep well turbine
pumps, and related work to
complete two water supply wells
of approximately 500 feet depth.
Including moblllraton and de
mobllltalion ol plant and labor
and cleon up.
Bids: Sealed bids must be
received by the City Clerk, City
Ol Lake Mary. Florida either by
mall or hand delivery, no later
than 4:04 p.m. E .S.T . on
Thursday, January Jl. IHJ at
tha following address:
By mall to
City Manager
City of lake Mary
P O Box r o
Lake Mary. Florida Sires
or
Hand da 11very to:
City Manager
City of Lake Mary
151 County Club Drive
Lake Mary. Florida
Any bids ottered or received
after the abort lime will not be
a c c e p te d u n der any
Circumstances and will be re­
turned unopened to the sender.
Opening and Reading: Tha
bids will be publicly opened and
reed aloud al approilmately
7:10 pm E.S.T. on Thursday,
January 11. INS In tha City of
Lake Mery City Hall. Lake
Mary. Florida
Bidding Documents (Project
Manuel): The Prolect Manual
will be available lor purchase
and review at:
Camp Dreseer A McKee Inc.
Environmental Engineers
1731 Maitland Center Parkway
Maitland. Florida 17751
Phone: IM5) asp US].
A payment In cash or check
payable to Camp Dresser A
McKee Inc.. In the amounl ol
ISO 00 will be required for each
complete Bidding Document
I Project Manual I . This payment
represents reproduction costs
and It non refundable
Bid Security: Bid security In
the amount ol 5% of the Bid
mutt accompany each Bid in
accordance with the "Instruc­
tions to Bidders "
Bid Withdrawal: Bid shall not
be subject lo withdrawal for a
period ot ninety (14) calendar
days attsr the Bid opening,
■icept as provided In the In­
structions to Bidders
Fertermence and Payment
Bands: Upon award ol the
centred, the Successful Bidder
shall tatcute separata "Per
larmanca" and "Paym ant"
Bonds in substantially the form
contained In the Bidding Docu
ments, each In the amounl of
one hundred percent (100%) ol
tha total contract amount.
Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the Bonds must comply strictly
with Section 155 05 ol Florida
Statutes
Federal Cantract Require
ments: The contract awarded at
a result ol this Advertisement
lor Bids It eipeclsd to be funded
In pert by a loan from Iha U.S.
Farmers Home Administration.
Neither the United Stales nor
any o4 Its departments, agencies
or employees Is or will be party
to this Advertisement tor Bids
or any resulting contract.
Bidders must comply with tha
President s Executive Orders
Nos. 1I14A and 11175 which
prohibit discrim ination In
employ man I regarding race,
creed, color, sex, or national
origin. Bidders must alto submit
a certification ol prior work
under Executive Order No.
11140. A Compliance Statement
term Is Included In the Project
Manual.
Award, Waivers and Ralection
el Bid: A tingle Bid shall be
submitted lor the Work The
con lro ct w ilt be ewardad
pursuant to tho requirements ol
applicable stole and taderal
laws and regulations To the
extent permitted by such laws
and regulations, the City oi Lake
Mary rotor vet the right:
a. to reject any or oli Bids.
b. to waive any Informality or
Irregularity In arty ltd received.
c. to accept the Bid deemed by
the City ol Lake Mary to be the
moat advantageous to Its Inter
asts.
Dolialtlanst Terms used In
this "Advertisement tar Bids'
which ere defined In the Bidding
Documents shall have tha
meanings assigned la thorn by
tho Bidding Documents
D ATE D A T Lako M ary
Florida this lnd day at January.
IN i
CITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
BY: Carol A. Edwards
City Clark
DEB II
Publish: January 4. II. ten
11CT1041----A D V IR T IIIM E N T FOR BID!
CITY OF LAKE MARY
W A TIR TR KATMINT
FACILITIES
Norm al Project: City ol Lake
Mary. Florida. Water Treat
man) Facilities. Cantract No. I
Locationi Tho pra|acl Is
..

R U E . City ot Laka Mary,
Seminole County. Florida
Description el Work: All work
of the Project shall be con
structed In accordance with the
Drawlngt and Specifications
prepared by Camp Dresser A
McKee Inc.. Environmental
Engineers Tha work will be
awarded and constructed. II
award It made, under one Con
tract Bids shall be submitted
tor telling, delivering and In
stalling all materials and pro­
viding the required plant and
labor tor tha work ol:
Piping and electrical connec
I Hons and general site work
around two well pumps remote
from the plant: raw water
piping from wells to the plant; a
preslressed concrete ground
storage lank; a building housing
h ig h s e r v i c e p u m p s ,
chlorlnators, fluoride feeder,
standby generator and electrical
switchgear: and a transmission
pipeline from the plant con
netting to the existing dlstribu
lion system. The drilling ot two
wells and furnishing and Install
Ing of two well pumps Is covered
under a separate contract.
BMt: Sealed bids must be
received by the City Clerk. City
ot Lako Me*y. Florida either by
mall or hand delivery, no later
than 4:00 p m . E .S.T . on
Thursday. January II, INS al
tha tollo-'/Ing address:
By mall to:
City Manager
City of Lake Mary
P O Box 715
Laka Mary, Florida 11744
or
Hand delivery lo:
City Manager
City ol Lake Mary
150Country Club Drive
Lake Mary. Florida
Any bldt ottered or received
after the above time will not be
a c c e p te d u n der any
circumstances and will be re
turned unopened to the tender
Opening and Reading: The
bldt will be publicly opened and
read aloud at approximately
7 1 0 pm E S T on Thursday.
January II, l ft ! In tha City of
Laka Mary City Hall. Laka
Mary, Florida
Bidding Documents (Prelect
Manual): The Prsiect Manual
will be avallahi* Nr p&lt; rebate
and ravlew at:
Camp Dresser S McKee Inc
Environmental Engineers
7701 Maitland Center Partner
Maitland, Florida 17751
Phone: 1105)440 7557
A payment In cash or check
payable to Camp Dresser A
MdKee Inc.. In the amount of
1115.00 will be required lor each
complete Bidding Document
(D r a w in g s and P r o j e c t
Manual). This payment repre
tents reproduction costs and Is
non refundable.
Material and equipment sup
pliers may alto purchase com
plate sets ot the Prolect Manual
(bidding and contract Informa
lion and Specifications) tor
S7100 and separate drewlngt lor
SI 00 per Drawing, payable In
either cash or check to Camp
Dretter A McKee Inc. This
payment represents reproduc­
tion costs end It non refundable.
Bid Security: Bid security In
the amount ot 5% ol the Bid
mutt accompany each Bid In
accordance with the “ Instrue
tIona to Bidden."
M Withdrawali BM shall te l
be subject to withdrawal for a
period ot ninety (Ml calendar
days alter the Bid opening,
except as provided In the In
struettons to Bidders.
Pertermence end Paymant
Bends i Upon award ol the
contract, tha Successful Bidder
shell execute separate "Per
term ence" and “ Paym ent”
Bonds In substantially tha form
contained In the Bidding Docu­
ments. each In tha amount of
ana hundred percent (100%) ot
the total contract amount.
Notwithstanding the loregoing,
the Bonds must comply strictly
with Section 155.05 of Florida
Statutes.
Federel Centred Require­
ments! The centred awarded at
a result ot this Advertisement
tor Bids Is expected to be lunded
In pert by e toon from the U S.
Farmers Home Administration
Neither the United Slates nor
any el Its departmenu, agencies
or employees Is or will be party

toceto^vtmii^jfjiigj^^Tjg^

to this Advertisement tor BIOS

or any resulting contract
Bidders must comply with the
President's Executive Orders
Not. 11144 and 11175 which
prohibit discrim ination in
amploymant rtgardlng raca.
creed, color, sex. or national
origin. Bidders must alto submit
a certification oi prior work
under Executive Order No.
tllat. A Compliance Statement
form Is Included In the Prelect
Manual.
Award, Walvart and Rajectlan
at Bid: A tingle Bid shall ba
submitted lor the Work The
con tract w ill be awarded
pursuant to the requirements ol
applicable slate and ltderal
laws end regulations To the
extent permitted by such lews
end regulations, tha City ot Laka
Mary reserves the right:
o. to re|ect any or ell BMt.
b to waive any Informality or
Irregularity In any BM received.
c. to accept the BM deemed by
the City ot Lake Mary to be tha
moat advantageous to Its Inter
eats
DefMItoat: Terms used In
this "Advertisement lor Bids"
which are defined In the Bidding
Documents shall have (he
meanings assigned to them by
the Bidding Documents
DATED AT Lake M ery.
Florida this lnd day ol January,
INS
CITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
BY; Carol A. Edwards
City Clerk
PiMIth: January 4, II. INS
DEB 27

legal Notice
N O T I C E OF A P U B L IC
H E A R IN G OF PROPOSED
CHANOES AND AM END
MENTS IN CERTAIN DIS
TRICTS AND BOUNDARIES
OF T H E Z O N IN O O R D I­
NANCE. AND AM ENDINO
THE FUTURE LANO USE EL■ M I N T OF T H E COM
PREHENSIVE PLAN OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D ,
FLORIDA.
Notice Is hereby given that e
Public Hearing wilt be held at
the Commission Room In the
City Hell In the City ot Sanford.
Florida, at 7 00 o'clock P M on
January 14. ISOS, to consider
changes end amendments to the
Zoning Ordinance, end emend
Ing the Future Lend Use Ele
mint of the Comprehensive Plan
ol Ihe City ol Sanford. Florida,
es follows
A portion ol that certain
property lying between Lake
M ery Boulevard and Lake
Minnie Drive end West ol U.S. ,
Highway 17 0] (S R. 154001 Is
proposed to be re toned from
MR 1 (Multiple Family Rrtl
denlial Dwelling) District to
CC 2 (Oeneral Commercial)
Olstrlct. Said property being
more particularly described as
follows
That property described es
Part ol Lots 1 A 4. Lake Minnie
Estates. Seminole County. FL.
according to the plat thereof at
recorded In PB 4. PC S7. Public
Records, Seminole County:
more particularly described es
follows:
Commence it the SW corner
ol Lol a. Lake Minnie E stales.
Ihenca S l**ll'20"E.. (Bearings
bated on FL Depl. ol Trentpor
teflon ROW Map tor Slate Roads
15 A 400). along the N. ROW line
ol Lake Minnie Drive tor 257 44
ft. to the POB; thence continue
S 44*I2)0"E along the said N
ROW line, lor in ao ft. to fht
point at curvature ol a curve
concave NWly; thence NEly
along Ihe S line of Lot 2. along
the ere ol sold curve, having e
radius ot las 71 ft., through a
central angle ol STM4"57", tor
I4SN tt. to the E line of Lot 2
end the point ot compound
curvature ol a curve concave
Wly; thence NEly along Ihe E.
line ol Lot 2. along the ere rf
said curve, having a radius ot
MIA TP II . through a central
angle ol OTMCaj” . tor 174 40 ft
to tha point ot tangency: thence
N 35’ 44'30" E. aiong the E. line
ol Lot 1 tor 357 15 tt. to the NE
corner of Lot 1, thence S
75*54 14" W along the N. line ol
Lot 1 lor ISO40 tt. to lha NE
corner ot Lot 4; Ihtnce S.
44*10'14” W along the N. line ol
Lot a for 11101 ft. to a lina
baarlng N. W2T44" E. bom Ihe
POB: (hence S ll*2*'44" W lor
711II ft. to the POB Containing
4 I t Acres (Including take bol
tom), more or lets
All parties In Interest end
cllliens shell have an opportunl
ty to be heard at said hearing
By order of the City Com
mission of the City of Sanlord.
Florida.
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: It
a person decides to appeal e
decision made with respect to
any matter considered at the
above meeting or hoering, he
may need a verbatim record ol
the proceedings. Including the
testimony end evidence, which
record is not provided by the
City ol Sanlord (FSM4A10S)
H. N. Tamm, Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: Oecember 14. ISB4 A
January a. m i
DEA41

C I T Y OF L A K E M A R Y ,
FLORIDA NOTICE TO RID
* Notice It hereby given that the
City of Lake Mary, ol Stmlnoit
County, Florida, will recalve
seeled bids until 4:00 p.m.,
January 17, lfts. al lha City
Hall. 154 North Country Club
Road. Laka Mary. Florida, tor:
PiAllcatlon of Historical Docu
mant ■ short history ol the City
ol LereMary. Florida.
Saalad bids will be opened and
read al lha regular City Com
mission Moating. January 17,
INI. el 7:10p m
Spec Ideations may bt ob
talned from Carol Edwards.
City Clerk. City Hell. 154 North
Country Club Reed. Lake Mery.
Florida 17744
The City reserves the right to
accept or re|ect any and all bids
In lha best Interest ol the City
C IT Y OF LAK E M A R Y,
FLORIDA
/*/ Carol A. Edwards
City Clark
DATED: December at. IN4
Publish: Decambar 21. IH4
January 4, 1*45
OEA 1)0

C I T Y OF L A K E M A R Y ,
FLORIDA NOTICE TO BID
Nolka It hereby given that the
City of Lake Mary, of Semlnola
County. Florida, will recalve
sealed bids until 4:04 p.m.,
January 17. INS. at the City
Hell. 154 North Country Club
Road. Lake Mary. Florida, lor:
a police pursuit vehicle.
Sealed bids will be opened and
reed el Ihe regular City Com
mission Mealing. January 11,
INS. at 7:10pm
Specifications may be ob­
tained from Carol Edwards,
City Clerk. City Hall. 154 North
Country Club Rood. Lak# Mary,
Florida 11744.
Tha City reserves the right to
accept or re|oct any end ell bids
In the best Interest ol the City.

CI T Y OF LAKE MARY.
FLORIDA
!%/ Carol A. Edwards
City Clerk
DATED: Oecember 11.1*44
Publish: December II. 1*44
January 4. IN i
DEA 111

Doonesbury

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

O rlando - W inter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1
tim
e...................
67C a line
HOURS
3 consecutive time* SIC a line

8 :3 0 #.M . • 5:30 P.M .
MONDAY tkn i FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9

7 consecutive times 52C a fine
10 cbnsecutive Urns 46C a line
Contract Rates Available
3 Unas Mhtlr

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

23— Lost &amp; Found
450 reward tor return ol Zeiss
4x10 pocket binoculars. Sen­
timental value Phone O. A.
Sprer 111 0*4i.

25— Special Notices
ORDER A TRADITION
A CELEBRATE A BIRTH
Mr. Stark visit makes ter a
lifetime el memorial, gifts A
ell I Call Linda 215-4111

27-Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B ab ysittin g In my home.
Fenced In beck yard. Rea
sonable rates: 1118107_______
E x p e rie n ce d M oth er w ill
babysit In my home. Fenced
beck yard 271 0474.__________
FOR QUALITY CHILDCARE
With an Educational Program
_________ Call H I 4414_________

Will Babysit
In my hams. 111-4441

legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,
E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT , IN A N D FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO: 44 2540 CA 04E
IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF
WILLIAMM BRYAN. JR..
Retpondtn I /Husbond.
and
PAGE BRYAN,
Pslllloner/Wlte
DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO WILLIAMM BRYAN.JR.
YOU AN E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that an action for
Dlsiolutlon ol Marriage, a vin­
culo, has baen Iliad egelntl you
end you are required to serve e
copy of your written defenses. If
any. to It on MARK A. KO
TEEN. ESQUIRE, Petitioner's
attorney, whose address Is 1100
Clay Avenue. Suite 177, Orlando,
Florida 11404, on or before
January 21. INS, and tile the
original with lha Clerk of this
Court either before service on
Pefltlorar't attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter; otherwise, a
default will ba entered against
you tor the relief demanded In
Ihe Complaint or Petition.
WITNESS my hand and tha
seal of this Court on the Itth day
of December, 1*44.
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
Clerk of Ihe Court
By: Marge Lewis
Dwotrtv Clerk

Publish: December 21, U. 1*44
January 4.11,1*45
DEA 101
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that 1
am engaged In buslnesa at 170
l or g wood Plata, Long wood.
Semlnola County. Florida under
Ihe fictitious name ol AA
COMPUTER CENTER. INC.,
and that I Inland to register said
name with the Clerk ot the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
provisions ol tha Fictitious
Name Statutes, to-wit: Section
•45 or Florida Statutes 1*57.
/*/ Lewis W. Johnson, Jr.
Publish December 11.14. IN4 A
January 4,11, INS.
DEAN
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In buslnesa at N l
Was! Hwy. 414, Casaelbarry,
Seminole County, Florida 11707
under the flcflllout name o*
DISCOUNT (MOTORS, and that
I Intend to regl
with the Clerk oi the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with the pro
visions ot the Fictitious Nemo
Statutes, to-wit: Section 4U.0*
Florida Statutes 1*57.
/*/ Glenn Sohl
Publish December 74. 1N4 A
January 4, It, I A 1505DEA I l f
FICTITIOUS N A M I
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business At
Township Plata. H I SR 454.
Longwood. Seminole County,
Florida 27750 under the fictitious
n a m o e l A U D I O
EXCELLENCE, end that I In
tend to register said name with
lha Clerk at the Circuit Court,
Semlnola County. Florida in
accordance with Ihe provision*
of the Fictitious Name Statutes,
to-wil: Section 4*50* Florida
Statutas 1457,
!M SadIah Baker
Publish December 14. 1N4 A
January 4. It, 11 INS.
DEA-in

33— Real Estate
Courses
ROAM. BALL JR.
SCHOOL OF R IA L BSTATE
221 41II or 172 7144

Al— Money to Lend
Business Capital 410.000 to
11,000.000 and over. F. O. Box
2411. Winter Pk. Ft*. 12740.

7T— Help Wanted
ACCOUNTS R E C E IV A B L E
CLERK- Strong background In
payment polling t. ompuiar
systems with emphasis on
proof process. Musi be well
organ Ilied with good clerical
Ulllt.
O E N E R A L A C C O U N T IN G
CLERK Good orgenlietlonel
end communication Ulllt. Tho
Individual we ere seeking will
have dally contact with glass
and aluminum vendors. Also,
you will be required to file, do
some typing, end required to
till In es recepllonlsl and
Courier, as needed. It you
have these Ulllicontact:
Harear Aluminum Products Ce.
lie ) Cantwell Rd.
Acrylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coaling on
cars, boats and planes. 45 to
4)1 per how. We train. For
work In Sanford aroa call
Tamp* 412-444-7151.
Ambitious Pointers. Steady
work. Good salaryTbeneflti.
Call alter 7 PM. 144 $344.

Attention tools
Bartenders, waitresses, A bus
wanted lor Seniordi newest
nightclub SLICKS. Please
cell: 171*770 for Interview
between) end 5 this week.
AVON BEAUTY COMPANY
Full- pert time. Fay Xmas bills.
fa ll Immod. n i l U t - T O i m .
AVON EARNINCS WOWIII
OPEN TERRITORIES NOW 111
n t l i f i a r 177-441*
Behind on your payments? I buy
housesl Don't call unless you
need to sell Immediately, and
ere willing to accept my email
dawn payment. Call Deto
111 4*47.____________________
Cape Canaveral firm • spendIng
In Semlnola. I worker* pro­
ducing. 4 more needed (ISO
P/T. 4450 lull tin*. Career
oriented people. Only over 14.
Full training.
Ml 5707, before 4.
Cere ol elderly parents In
private home. Light housekeeping. 5 day week. P I 141*.
Career Opportunity. Will train.
Outstanding Income. Call
Ml 1*11 between* A 1.________
Carpenter • All types ot con­
struction • M utt bo ta ll
motivated. Call U S 4415.
CASHIER/HOSTESS
And AM waitress. Fine dining
restaurant. Apply in person
IPS. Deltona Inn.

★

★

★

★

CORRESPONDENTS
WANTED
To write a weakly column
from your homo. QualL'Icettont:
A nose tor news, a Hair tor
writing, a good spaliar end know
how to type. Call Doris Dtntrlch,
The Evening Herald. 1711411,
attar 1p.m.
if

if

if

if

Debary Manor now hiring exporlenced or certified nurses
•Ides. All thins. Apply at: to
N. Hwy 17-*2, DaBary. or call
444404 EOE________________
DISHWASHER
Mature. Apply In person, M-F,
1-4p m Deltona Inn._________
Drivers. Full A pert lime posi­
tions. Need chauffeurs license.
Prater over age It. Inquire In
person. 1*17 S. French Are.
m i l l * ____________________
EAT YOUR V IO IT A B L E S
Brush your teem
And reed your
_________ WANT AOS_________
E x p e rie n ce d C arpenter A
Driver. Alto various duties.
Honest, hard-working, willing
to travel. Call 221-1710. e U lor
Mrs. Janes._________________
E x p e rie n c e d t a le * r e p r e ­
sentative and supervisor
willing to travel and call on
retail store*. Variety oi duties.
H l lttO eU tor Mrs. Janet.
FRONT DESK CLERK
Frlandly. neat, personable.
Apply In person, M F. is a.m
to I p m Pel ton* Inn._________
Hair Stylist. Experknead with
clkntek, ter Sanlord. Salon
Salon, 232-7111.

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

71— Help Wanted

93— Rooms for Rent

IM M EDIATE OPENINO (or
service technician with one of
Florida's Oldest Pest Control
Companies. No experience
necessary just a desire to
advance and a willingness to
work. Paid training program,
company twtollts. Insurance
and vehicle provided. It Inter­
ested. apply at: Spencer Pest
Control, isai Park Dr.. San
lord.
No phene calls ptosis.

SANFORD, R*a* weekly A
Monthly rate* Util Inc eft

Immodiiti Employment
Opportunity in nfiMisiitd
Sanford Imarine* office.
Mint haw offici shills
and on|oy wrting with
public In a professional
effke atmosphere. Sand
ttsawt fa P.Q. 877, Sanford.
Insurance Agents or anyone
Interested In Insurance. Call
George. HI 5707._____________
LABORERS- Strong reliable,
general laborers needed Im­
mediately. Different location*.
Phone end transportation e
mult. Never a fee. Apply
Kelly Services. 2101 Maitland
C e n te r P a r k w a y . « 14*
Maitland
440 711*
LIVE IN Mature woman with
•Idarly mother end ton In
wheel chair. Houtkaeplng,
salary, own room and bath
mutt hare car, local ref. No
smoking. 177 ION.___________
Maid One# a week tor 7 bdrm,
Sendlewood Villas condo. Own
transports!Ion m -oiQS ____
Make ts nirklng at homei Lush
SASE to 0.6. 3*7* S. Sanford
Are.. Sanford, Fla. 17771
Night Auditor. Exporkncs pref
arable. Will train. Full lime
position. Apply In person. No
phone calls please. Days Inn.
1-4 and St. Rd. 44.____________
Nurses aides wanted. 7-1 shift.
Mutt be certified or experi­
enced. Apply In person al
Lakeview Nursing Center *1*
E. 2nd St. Sanlord.___________
Offlce/Clorlcal person needed
lor busy Sanford office. Outlet
Include typing, filing A gener­
al office. Experienced persons
apply to 500 W. Fulton St.
Sanlord. 177-4441, EOP.

OFFICE CLERK
Type. tile, olflce experience.
Permanent position. Never a
Fae.

TEMP MUM 774-1348
Orlande Based Company
seeking a tew good people to
t r a in In b a th r o o m romodeling. It you hare exparl
once In paint spraying, tile
repair, or looking for a good
trade, we are looking tor you.
Good peyl Good benofltsl
Valid Florida Drivers License
and vehicle required.
Call Mr. M llkr 1232015
Part lime waitress. Friday A
Saturday evenings. Apply
Men.. Tues. or Wed. M l a.m.
Mutt ba 75 or over. Buck's
Restaurant 1270 S. Sanlord
Are.________________________
Sale* people needed tor used car
lot. Experience helpful. Man­
ager* position available for
right person. Call Ron Ml4875.________________________
Secretary. Part time 1 days.
May teed to full
time lob. 2251*00____________
S e c r e t e r y / R e c e p tle n is l.
Longwood area. Pleatar)!
telephone voice. Bookkeeping
background help lu l. 4-5.
Monday thru Friday. 414 4*11.
Secretary tor General Office
w ork fo r m anufactu ring
company, Phone 173 7750.

Employment

323-5171
7511 French Are.
SUPER MARKET- Experienced
cethkr. Polygraph tost re­
quired. Apply In parson: Perk
A Shop, 15th A Perk Are. See
Mrs. Cetil.
SUPER MARKET- Experienced
Stock Man. Polygraph test
required. Apply In parson:
Park A Shop, 75th A Part Are.
Tha Bast "HOUSE CLEANER"
Is a Want Adi
Call Classifiedm M il.
Wanted Part-time
Person to holp In Circulation
Department afternoon hours.
For more Information call:
2721* II and a U for Tony.
Mon.-Frl. 1-5 p.m.
WAREHOUSE
Lift 50 lbs, mutt hare car.
needed Immediately. Perma­
nent position. Never a Fat.

TEMP PERM 774-1341
73— Employment
Wanted
BLOCK I BRICK MASON
lap.- Call Ralph 111-470

93— Rooms for Ront
Chrtetian NeeteiTV, kitchen, laundry, maid, bus,
445 wh. up. 425-5404, 42344)4

Large room- Residential
kitchen privileges. TV.
____________ H I 4455____________

Near Town Quiet Area
Kitchen, prlvieyet. 410 week
1210*4 Evening*.
Room lor rent
In Sanlord. 451 weak.
_________Call 711-41*0._________
SANFORD Furnished room* by
Maid service. Call 30-4507.
5-7 PM. 415 Palmetto Are.

Shopping For A
New Or Used Car1

WfKAUtCK/M,M&amp;
SOamZMN.IFYOUK
m e w H m cA u a a t

POUCtmOlHMiOU
JWfrtWePGP

7m cap always tie d UN
heat deal* to M e Ereatop
Hereto** Claaalflad eectlen.
Read Friday'• C a ta log Herald
fo r the beat aafecKona.

E v e n in g H e r a ld
3 3 3 -M I I

I

500 Oak______ Adulft I 441 7*41

Sanlord Furnlshfd 1 bdrm.,
kllchtn A laundry privilege*
MO week 1215*27___________

9 7 — Apartments
Furnished / Rent
ALLAREA*
Furnished, end unfurnished, t.
2,1. A * bedrooms Kids. peft.
5200and up 11* 7700 F#e*75.
Sav On Renfelt Inc Rssltor
EFFICIENCY
No pet*, no kids 1215 month.
1200damage 127 )44*
Funt. Apts, tor Senior Cltlitnt
711 Palmetto Are.
J. Cowan No Phone falls.
Furnished Garage Apt. 515
week, utilities Included. 1
edulf. 1st A last week. 177 74)f
Large 7 bdrm., 7 bath condo
T o p c o n d it io n , n ic e ly
furnished, wisher-dryer,
m icrow ave, cable. VCR.
phone, pool. All utilities end
tees paid Owner retains one
bdrm. end bath es occasional
office. Very private. 145 week,
singlet only. Child ok, no pet*.
R e d u c e ren t fo r lig h t
housekeeping services. 1710104.
_______________
____ _____j. 1 bdrm. private
lot. adults only. No pets. Ret.
IMP Magnolia Are. Sanlord.
SANFORD COURT AFT5.
Studio Apartments
I bedroom apart men!
I Bedroom furnished apt.
1 Bedroom apartments
Senior clfltetit discount
Flexible leases

1 0 1 — Houses
Furnished / Rent
Private Cottage 1 bdrm , lorely
decor, malntelned-lenced
yard I 7714017

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Attractive 2 Bdrm , I bath house
In nice section o f town. Com­
plete with most me|or appll
ances. R e fe r e n c e s , end
minimum 4 months lease re­
quired Cell 721-1135 after 4
PM for appointment.________
e e e IN DELTONA • • •
• * HOMES FOR RENT * •
e e 574-1*14 e e_______

★

117— Commercial
Rentals
SPACE FOR RENT: ottlc*;.;.
retail, and warehouse storage:'
Cell 171 4401.

________ 171130)_________

12 1 — Condominium* *
Rentals

There ’ l Onty two thIngs
A Fella'can trust:
His mother A wenl ■adst

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
100E. Airport Blvd.
Ph. H I 4420. Efficiency, from
S1S0 Mo. S% discount for
Senior Clfltenx._____________
Huge Brand New 1 Bdrm.. 2
Baft) private apartment with
large rooms. Cerpeti. country
kitchen, appliances. 4475
Very Plush! M l 014*
Large one bedroom. Well. welt,
carpel, no pets. Includes
water. 5745 mo. t ISO deposit
11* French Are. M2 44I7 or
424 4457____________________
Lovely I Bdrm. apl Wall to wall
c a rp e l, screened porch,
downtown area. 5200 sac. da
posit. Rent *75. weak, plus
utilities. Call 111 *422 or
771-4*47.
LUXURY APARTMENT!
Family A Adults faction
Poolside, 1 Bedrooms.
Master Cave Apartments.
121-7*04
Open On Weekends.
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS
134C Ridgewood Are. Ph 321 4410
1.7 A 1 Bdrm*. from SUP.
SANFORD
NEAR LAKE MONROE
NOW LEASINOI
SANFORO LANDING AFT*.

Th* Spring1 1J bdrm . 1 bath. All
amenities. 1400 per mo 47*
0*45. or 447101)

H I — Homes For Sale

H A LL
•UIIV INC
RIAL 10N
IS TIBBS (im t'lN C I

WALK TO LAKE MONROE- 1
Bdrm., 1 bath, Hal tub!
Fireplace I CH end A, family
rml 51x15 screened betanimal _
gardentl Dreamt de came'
true I Only 1111,144.
CALL HALL M1-S7I4
SANORA Large end Lovely'1
Bdrm., 1 balk, cathedral cell­
ing! CH A Al Family reankf
Obi. garag*I fammunlty pee)
fall us quick I
’ t
CALL HALL 211-1774
J
AFFORDABLE and n* quail
lying. ? bdrm. tom* In nice
areal Ftncadl Great far thvastars. 414,444.
CALL HALL 1211774

CALLHALL

NEW Apt*, close to shopping end
-t tjor hwy*. Gracious living
lit our 1 A 1 Bdrm. opts, that
e Garden or Lott Units.
eWether/Dryer Hook-Up* In
our 2 Bdrm. apt*,
e 2 Laundry Faclltf let.
a Olympic Sit* Pool,
a Health Club with 1 Saunas
a Clubhouse with Fireplace,
e Kitchen A Game Rm.
• Tennis, Recquelball.
Volleyball,
a 4 Acre Laka on Property.
e Night Patrol 7 Days a Wk.
o pe n ; daysaw eek
1400 W. 1st SI. In Sanford.
321 4230 or Orlando 445041*
Equal Opportunity Housing.
I bdrm.. wather drysr, pool,
5145 +■ daposlt. Available
11-45. Call m-7111.
2 Bdrm. Adults only. No pats,
5170 per mon or 140 par wk.,
security dap. 4140045 days, or
177-1047 or 177-0757 nlqhfs.

LANDLORDS *

Tired of the headaches? Let u*
manege your rental pro­
perties. Proto** locrl low cost
service. I l l 1413Cel I anytime
United Seles At social**, Ik .
Prep. Mgmt. Div., Realtor
Near 17 41, 2 new reconstructed
1 bdrm.. H* bath. 1525 mo.
First, lest, security. 4*4 444* '
Nice 1 Bdrm . I bath, big yafd.
S4M month. 1500 damage.^
m 14*4 Open on Jan 1st.
*
laniard- 4 bdrm.. 1 balhs.
Cantral air. flreplac*. 1400
mo 47* 0445.447 1411

W* hare many aftortt

-fa

323-5774
1444 HWY. 17-41
'H e w SM YR N A B IA C H - 4
Bdrm., Ito Bath sat Feet
frem OCEAN! I4t.tee.
, ,
BeechtMo Realty, REALTORS
404-417 )111. Open 7 Pays! '
O S T E E N • M U ST S E L L !
Beautiful. B RAND NEW
heme on
10.4 acres with
access to lorely 1*00 + acre
Lake Ashby. Hat pond, fenc­
ing. Ilreplace. luxury appli­
ances end peddle lent. DON'T
WAITI 544,500 Call UNITED
LAND CO. Rtailor *74 5444 /
172-50*5 (14 hrs).
SANFORD CHARMER 1 bdrm .
t bath, 2 car garag*. Only
*22.400. Landstock Brokers
245-2742.

N O W HIRING!
Ou tstan ding Oppo rtunity Foi
EXPERIENCED
G AS
FAST

(

CASHIERS.

ATTE N D A N TS
FOOD

//(

A N D

PREPARATIO N

c !/&lt;&gt;/&gt; CENTERS

S I O C A I I O N S IN S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y

• A u to / Truck Refueling
• Full Line C o tive n ie n ce Stores
• Fast Food Kitchens
Piit-d rtnckpn Subs Donuts

•
•
•
•
•

T o p Salaries
F re e Life &amp; H o s p ita liz a tio n
2 Paid V acations E a c h Year
Profit S h a rin g Plan
O ther Benefits
MAh I A PPL M A I i()N IN P( R SO N
A I .'ll .1 N l .in iH Avt&lt; S .in ltiK )
’•''•'"I ■■r’i • &gt;li, » ». am i ,. .■»«

�H I — Homes For Sale

141— Homes For S«le

141— Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY

By owner; 2 bdrm. 2 bath
Many e itre i VA, FHA or
Conventional 120.000 222 *1 to
Santord-Itfyllwllde. 3 bdrm.-l
•tutfy covered patio all eppll
ancai relocating Priced to
kail In *0 | 144 0*45 or 141 01**
Sanlord By Owner! Baaulllul
home baauiltul view. Lake
Monroe 2 bdrm*. J bath*,
luih tropical oncloiad pool
Huge lot with well A iprlnkler
ly it e m
C o m p le te ly ra
modeled ihroughtoul Haw
kitchen, appliancai. drapariai
+ root! 1121.000 For *p
polntmant call 222 2414_______
SANFORD 2 Bdrm., tty belli,
newly painted, new carpal,
fklf tt. lamlly ream, all eppll
ancai. Orel I home tor anly
S42.2M.

Lie. Real Eitate Broker
3*40 Santord Avt.

keues

a m i me m m+nam

323-3200
DR IFTWOOO VILLAGE
ON LAKE MARY 1LVO.

8 = 3 &amp; l.
M m M M lI WMII s\tH&gt;ni01Ii

KISH REAL ESTATE
63S Wot 25th Strut

321-0759 Eve 332-7443
By Owner- 3 Bdrm. 1 Bath
Detached garage with utility
room Mayfair Section near
old H osp ital W a ll/w all
carpet. CH A A. ((replace
L a r g o Ir a * ih a d a d lot.
Hamilton Elam. School Dlkt.
P ric e *42,300 Akkumabla
*25.000 l!l% . Phona 323 20*0.
attar 4 30pm tor appoint
For Sale by Owner Santord
Nice 2 bedroom home with
living room, dining room,
peneled lamlly room, laundry
room, workthop and large
trreened porch Call tor In
formation. 323 110* *43.000

SPACIOUS 4 Bdrm., l bath
ham* with lamlly room. large
fame roam, latl at itarage,
laik ad bach yard. SVS.SOt.
I BDRM, ] bath, dan, larg*
hit chan, laH a) cablnatt, haat
a«m a, ECU haats walar.
tharma windows, Iat&gt; at cadar.
U t,tN .

R E A L T O R 321-0041
Low down paymant, atfordabto
monthly. ) bdrm , plua lamlly
room. Cal I ownar 44F till.

:

i

^

i i a

J

ILL TOU NEED
io snow
IN REAL ESTATE

STENSTROM
REALTY-REALTOR
Sinfotd’s Salts Ltadtr

1 N ITEI)
SALKS
ASMKHATKS
&lt; f ? REALTOR *
321-3833 -

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

SANFORD Large horn* with
llraplac*. In ground pool,
gueil cottage Vi.u llnlkh and
u v*. Price reduced!
Only 1x2.500

AINT'T IT CUTEI 4 Bdrm.. I
bath ham* cemplately ranavatadl Haw real, patia,
large utility ream, braaklait
bar, VA appratlal 11 SIMM.

SANFORD kpecloui home In
excellent neighborhood, walk
to Drug and Grocery itore
Owner will hold for M yrk. at
11% with kulllciant down.
*23,400

144 W. Lak* Mary Blvd.
IMden Laha Villa'* 2 bdrm .
•p ill plan on cornar lot.
A tiu m a b la . FHA mortg
1S4.400..................... 321» J 3
Jtry Hama nattlad In orangt
grav* Sparkling claan Only
JO.OOO....................... 221 3*22
[Mama- 2 bdrm..2 lull bath.
1 Fla Rm , bar/pa Do Craat
Araa SM.OOO
221 3*23
:•
Maw Brick Duplex- Posltlva
j caih Howl Akkumabla mortg.
1172 500 Maka otter 221 2*32
• * plaa lot 122’ X 122' with
or Akklng S24.V00 221 3*23
r

ik lata- Park Ava. and Oak
t t . R a a d y to b u i l d
SU.W0....................... 221 3*22

FIXER UPPERI 2 Bdrm.. I
bath meblle heme an J.S
a c r a tl N v r it r y building
excellent far nurkery term,
chicken, hortet. Mobile naodk
tome werht kJJ.OdO.

CALL ANYTIME
REALTOR I22-4ttl
WE NEED LISTINOSI
Winter Spgt. Lakolront. large 3
bdrm.. 3 bath, Fla room, *g*
4, mint cond., loaded, hug*
high lot. fenced, tall treat.
125.000. atiume »'*% VA. low
paymant, 425,500 equity. Con
•Idar trade lor older, imaller
rental house 2230IM or *21
2542________________________
Winter Park/Eaitbraak Nearly
3.000 sq tt. ot living are*
Quiet, cornar lot. Wall main
•alnad. Good financing Priced
right al *24.400 HURRY!
UNITED LAND Realtor.
*2* 5*44 /42* 1242____________
Your Horn* Ik Full ol Hidden
Dollar* Turn Idle Item* Into
caih tail with a Want Ad
Dial 222 2*11_______________
4 REPOSSESSIONS In Orlando
from t 12.500 to *53.750 Low
caih down Lak* Mary Realty
REALTOR................ 311-;i44

WE'VE OOT ITI 1 Bdrm., 1 bath
home with cpllt Bdrm.. plan,
central haat, large icreened
patia, cable, fenced backyard I
*41,04*.
JUST FOR YOUI I Bdrm.. HY
bath heme In the country I
Eat In kitchen, 1 ether let*
plui nuriery bwklnekk that
may he purchased *eparatelyl
12040*.
THE NATURAL! 1 Bdrm.. 2
bath hemal Wat bar, calling
tan*, central air and haat,
•at-ln kitchen, latk moral

liasAM.

!★

I
f

LIST FOR L E S S *

f WE WILL LIST. ADVERTISE.
SELL YOUR HOME FOR 4%.
WHY PAY MORET
F R E E C O M P U T E R IZ E D
Marhat A n a ly ilt at yaur

321-3833
★ HELP ★
We need Lkettted Real Ektali
Salei Peeple. Mara warh than
we can handle I Will train
newly llcenied. Attractive
cammlkklan kptlt*. Call 1113*33 tar canfldantlal Interview.

SHENANDOAH
VILLA6E
$50 OFF
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
2 KBtOOfl DUPLEX
^FAMILIES WELCOME

323-2920
422a 1.1

WILL BUILD TO SUITI YOUR
LOT OR OURSI EXCLUSIVE
A G E N T FOR WIHSONO
DEV. CORP., A CENTRAL
FLORIDA LEAOERI MORE
HOME FOR LESS MONEYI
CALLTODAYI

Cw

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale
a REDUCED TO 444.4M a
Priced to tall now I 3 Bdrm
Townhouk* Condom inum 111
W. 35th St. Profaitlonally r*
decorated All n*w cant, haat
and air, appliance*. 52* *1*2
SandI*wood Condominium!
Airport Bird. I Bdrm., I bath
*32.000 Call 313 1242

157-Mobile
Homes / Sate
Buying *r Sailing
A Meblle HamaT
Area'* Largait R atal* Dealer
Many available In Local Park*
EASY FINANCIHQ..2M-21I-I1M
For Sal* 1411 Waitflald by
Fleetwood 12 X 45 Sat up In
lamlly p«rk. 42500 down and
tktum* paymant* Of S154 *4
lor approx. 4 ytart. Mult kail,
311 4141 altar 2 00____________

159— Real Estate
Wanted
Private party naadi
3 or 3 bedroom home.
___________ 213-4441___________

161— Country
Property / Sale

b x

*

•

BSTAYFft v
ESTATES

OPEN WEEKENDS
Caualbarry 1 Acre Zoned PR-1.
445,000 W. Malleiowlkl. Rail
lor. 133 24*1

It you are leaking tar • tuccanlul career In Raa" Citato,
ktenitrem Realty N leaking
tar you. Call Lea Albright
today at 322 2420. Eveningi
311-34*2.

153— AcreageLots/Sate
OSTRRN 5 A lot*. 41000 down.
Tarmi. Lak* Privilege* No
mobile! harry I. Draggort
Realtor 544-5412._____________
Oktaan- 5 acral high, dry,
cleared on hardroad Ironteg*.
1 ml. from ktora*. 42000 down.
llto mo By Ownar 1122 4040
OSTEEN AREA. Batt lot In
Lak* Aihby Estate* 11.000
down pi in doling co»t» and
lak* ovar paymanl* Ownar
424-1242altar* PM.__________
Samlnol* Wood*. Exacutlv*
horn* ill**, 5 5 acre* By
ownar. Call Orlando 222 2420.
Attar 5 PM __________________
tt BEAUTIFUL ACRES
Cypraii III** (Oktaan.) Good lor
Mobil**, home or Investment
Elky accttk Great Buy al
*24.500 with SUPER TERMSI
Trad* considered.

CALL A N Y TIME

3 2 2 -2 4 2 0
U4S S. Park, Sanlard
Ml Lk. Mary Btvd.Lk.Mery

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
o r t x SATURDAY
• Adult B Family
Sbcllom
• W/D Connection*
• Cable TV. Pool
• Short Term la a ie t
Avoiloble
I, 2. J It. Apt*, 2 It. TJL

CALL
BART
REAL ESTATE

Frew * 2 9 0

ISO S W . 25th S L
IU * M N

REALTOR

Debary Auto A Marine Setot
Acrott th* river, top ol hill
17* Hwy 17 42 Debary M* 154*

74 Ford Pick-Up. Nans Good
Coll 211*154,Marl.
74 CMC Slarra Clatkk *■» ton
pickup Loaded Extra dean
1250 down Monthly paymantt
*44 0400 or *44 0400

USED CAR YEAR END
CLEARANCE
EV
ER
YTH
IN
G
R
ED
U
CED

237— Tractors and
Trailers

SA
V
E

1471 Dautt Tractor 4004 Runt
good *2200 323 247*
Traitor I X 40 11000 Firm.
Optional room addition con
kiktlng bad, both, living *3000
Both lor *3500 You hava to
move 323 2424 attar 4 00

uuuw

BOB DANCE DODGE
Hwy »7 41........................ 213 722*
WE FIN AN C E!!
W E E U Y CARS)

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

10 acre parcel* ONLY *24.500
Baaulllul lot*I GREAT larmil
Call for direction*. FREE
BEER AND SODA Every
weekend United Land. RE­
ALTOR. 20* 21* 5044/424sue
I24Hrvl. Or call Lika Hanay,
Sale* Manager. 205 244 4001.

I l l — Appliances
/ Furniture
Dinette Sat al In. X 14 In
Butcher Block 4 Chair* A I
Condlton *50 222 5142________
F rigldara R afrlg., Drop In
St o v e , K i t c h e n Ai d
D lihw aihar all Avocado
Groan Good Condition 130 W
Woodland Dr., Santord_______
Ktnman Parti, Sarvic*
Utod Withers. 21344*7.
MOONEY APPLIANCES
aRENTTOOW N*
Color TV*., ktaraoi. waihan,
dryer*, refrigerator. Iraaiart,
turn! lure, video rocor dark
Spec 111 lit week* rant 4*4
Allarnatlvt TV A Appl- ■*«•*••
Zayrat Shopping Cantor
___________ 1115444___________
Subtract Thai* Thing*
Gathering Dull - "A d " Dollar*
To Your Income

J21-24M

'22 Ferd Truck
71 Maverick
■nCvtlii*

1154 dwn.
tlM dw n.
454 dwn.

OK Corral Utad C*rt 223 1421
1441 VW Bug Rabuill angina
Now wlda roar tlrat 4700
244 5122_____________________
'74 C A P R I O H IA E .c e ll.n l
condition. Now paint. (1500 or
will Irada for boat ol compa
rabla value 223 21*4

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S. Sanford 371-4075
DON'T SPIN TO U R W H EELS
Get going with a
Herald Want Ad 322 1411

TH E U S E D S T O R E
Furniture and appliance*.
Com* In and &gt;**
a 214 E. 2nd Street. 221 4454 a
W ILSO N M AIER FU R N ITU R E
311U S E . FIR ST ST
222 5423
5 place Colonial bedroom tat.
Single A double chan* 2
Hutch** plui daik **51111

D IS C O U N T
, A U TO
SA LES

~ B U Y JUNK CARS 1 TRUCKS
From 110 to *50or more
CHI 322 1*14 311 O i l
TOP Dollar Paid for Junk A
Uted cark.truckk A heavy
equipment 322 5440____________
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JU N K CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS AU TO PARTS 243 4505

I f t l Chevy Hlgh-T*p with New
Cenverkton. Fully equipped,
tow mltot. Only (12,175.
BY FRENCHIE
FRENCHIES CUSTOM VANS
1754 N. Hwy 17/41. Langwaod
222 4152........................*54 4741

w e f TnaAce
15*1 French Ava............ 211-1445

COLOR TELEVISION
RCA 25" Con kola color talavl
•Ion Original prlc* ovar MOO
Balanca due S2M 00 caih or
lak* over paymanl* *20 per
month Still In warranty NO
M O N EY DOWN Fra* horn*
trial. No obligation
Call 14} 5244 Dayornlqhl.

243— Junk Cars

235-Trucks /
Buses/V ins

'77 Chryt. Cardaba- ISOO dwn.
71 MO MMgal Only 44M dwn.
'21 Marc. Cougar Only MM dwn.

183— Television/
Radio / Stereo

O ff*

J i m L a s h ’s
B lu e B o o k C a rs

250 CAMS TO
CHOOSt rWOM

Serving Central Florida Over 30 Yeurt*

1973
1973
IMPERIAL MERCURY

195— Machinery/Tools
Otva Up Gardening?
Sail no longer needed tool*
W ITH H ER ALD W ANT ADSI

LOADED

199— Pets A Supplies
Dog Obadianc* Tra ining , 4
waakt 420. Start Jan. 5th.
10:20 A M . T ra c k in g and
Boarding available Ability
Kannal*. Oktaan 323 2220
Irlih Setter and German Ship
hard. Fra* to good home
Lo va b le and g ra a l w ith
children 221 7524or 223 SS40
York
m*&lt;*. AKC paper*, 10
mot old A tiny Toy I 31* lb*
*150 or bait oiler Ownar
allergic 223 024*

For Sato Camper thell
Good condition *40
________ Call 321 &gt;751_________
For Sato 74 Dodge 20 Motor
Home 111 Motor Phone 223
1413________________________
Pop Topper Toyol* long bed
Scorpion Aluminum, klld*
Iron) window. 3 kertened kid*
window! Good condition SISO
*34 *774

B»d Credit!
No Ctodit?
WE FINANCE

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

to

149— Commercial
Property / Sale

eOEHEVA OSCEOLA RD.b
ZONED FOR MOBILESI
SAcre Country trecti.
Wall tread an paved Rd.
10 \ Dawn. 1* Y n . a tll% l
From til.SMI

M AKE A "SPLASH" with Caih
from Want Ad* II Sail Ihot*
"Unuiad" item* th# EASY
way Call Claiiltiad 322 2*11

235— Trucks /
Buses/ Vans

231— Cars

Gregory Mobil* Homes

COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
nferd- Grocery Store with gak
bar. SI 0.000
aha Mary- Office/ Commercial
building U3 000
&gt;d- Hwy *24 exposure
near Sprlngk Plata tl 12,000

SANFORD Mobil* horn* with
addition* 3 Bdrm.. 2 bath,
lanced, two utility thadi.
Country living, yaf clOk* In.
*13.000

231— Cars

R o i t E u r o t o u r B ic y c le
Itndcrtlier Good condition
*20 321 4442
Satellite TV Syktemi
Complete All you need 100%
Financing No money down
11.344 00 Universal 431 57**
Sell or Trad* Golf Club* com
p!*t* Minolta camera and
accraiorlai Tel 323 540*
Wanted Responsible party to
take ovar low monthly pay
mantk on iplnal piano Can be
keen locally Writ* Credit
Manager P O Box *033 FI
Myer* Beach, Fla 23431._____

••STEMPER AGENCY INC.LAKE ASHBY- Doublo Wide
Mobil* Horn* on 2.3 acrai.
fenced with barn Bring your
horiai Only *23 000

223— Miscellaneous

Protaiklonal typ* pool labia I"
koiid klat* table Batt oiler
Over 1500 00 123 *475

WALL ST. COMPANT...22I-SMS
Sanford *04 Locuit Ava New
CB Home 2 bdrm, I bath,
central haat A air, carpet, all
appliancai Move In todayl
*45,000 termi
222 ISM, or 222 5124

FrldAY. Jen. 4, 14*5— HA

Evening Herald, Sanford, FL

KIT ‘H* CARLYLE *by L«rry Wright

1976
PONTIAC

1976
BUICK

1982 FORD
ESCORT

CATALINA

ILECTRA

AUTO AIR-4 OR

MARQUIS

*399
1970
DUSTER

*449
1974 FORD
TORINO

S CYL, AUTO

NICE

*550
*650 * 3 4 9 5
1977 6 CYL 1 1980 1
1977
FURY i V0LARE |DATSUN210|
2 DR 44.000 Ml :

4 OR.

*835 &gt;1095
*795
li 1978 ! 1974
1980
! ARROW CAMAR0 SUNBIRD

2 0 1 — Horses
Quarter Hurt* II yaan old
Good cond 11Ion *1500 Includ
Ing tack 222 *441

211— A n tiq u e s /
C o lle c ta b le s

COLLECTOR ARMS”
GUN SHOW

AUT® AIR

LT-AIR

AIR. 64.000 Ml

*2495 •1395 *1995
1984
1979
ARIES
SE
ICONCORDI
I, AUTO.
, B CYL

1982 RIVIERA
1882 TORONADO
1981 CUTLASS I
IN I FIN FORD

HWY. 17-92
SANFORD

830-6688

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

.V

Accounting A
Tax Service

* Small bwilnataak Monthly
JklmpularUad llnancial Hat
?Qpm*nt. Quartarly return*.
X J 0440. AM tor Frank III.
^Cleaning Service
toXd Carpet Ctoaatog. Living.
Ulnlng Room B Hall *2400
Sofa A Chair, *15. I l l 1599
MAIDS To Order
For complat* guaranteed Milktaction In your home or oflka
craning, piuk SS caih rabate,
^1132*0000 NOW I

Handy Man

Lawn Sarvica

Big. Handyman. Rat. Reliable
Fraa Ett. meet any |ab Bait
Rato*, 111-0111. Call Anytime

R B S SOD SALES Camm. Ra*.
St. Auguttln* A Bahia
MOOS Santord Ava 311417]
ChrlktUn Bra*. Lawn Sarvica
Camgtoto Lawn Cara
Reaieaebte Rato* 121-44*1
Lawn Maintenance
Landtcaplng Buth Hag Mowing.
1445045

Haalth A Beauty
TOWER S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY Harriett's Baauty
Nook, l i t E. Itl St. 121-I742

Homo Improvomont
Cantor's Bvltdlw* B RamaRallng
Na Jab Ta* Small
111 Burton Lana. Saatord
131-4423
Fan* to Fewcak. Cabinet! to
C tm m adat. F a ir prltak.
to*-775-4445. to*v i mt*4*g*.

Masonry

January4.5.6.
CityA
uditorium
.
Frl.-Set. II noon to 4 P M.
Sunday 12 noon to 5 P M.

A
dm
ission32.50.
Entireshoww
ithad$2.00.

The Chapman Shows

. . TO S A V IN G S A N D G R EAT
D R IV IN G FO R Y O U IN 1985

Th* 2(th Annual Janian Dyar
Antique Show A Sal*. Jan. 4,1
A 4. Frl. 410 p m. Sat. I t p m
Sun. I S p.m. Admlktlon I I 50
wlththliad.

213— Auctions

BEAL Concrtto 3 man quality
operation. Patlot, driveway*.
Dayt 331 7133 Eva* 337 1121.
CONCRETE AND STUCCO
All phata*. 1learned and inkurad
Fraa Ekllmatok Jonn MS 41*7

Homo Ropoirs

Nursing Cara

Price*. Ne |e* toe large
ar too until- 24 hr. korvka.
Free titlm ata*— ....... 222-2121

CARPENTER
Rtpalrk and
ramodallng. No |ob too tmall.
Call 2Z3 444S.
Maintonanc* ot all typ**
Carpantry, painting, plumbing
andatoctHcHlOOia.

General Services

Landclearing

LPN will kit with your elderly Or
dltabled ratallve In your home
weekday! Hour. day. Exp.
Reference#. HI-2114.
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Laktv lew Hurting Center
f i t E. Second St, Santord
122 4707

Electrical
Ouallly Work *t Attordabla

Protokkional Chair Cabling
and ruth teal weaving. Ration
able price* Call 222 4*47.
Rebuilt KIR B Y/IIIM 0 B up
Guar antoad Kirby Co.
714 W. In* SI. 231 5440
B A T YOUR V E G E T A B L E S
Bruih your teeth
And read your
W A N TA D S

CARUTHERSTRUCKINO
Fill dirt and land ctoarlng
344 5000
OENEVALANOCLEARINO
Lot and Land ctoarlng.
till dirt, and hauling.
Call J4454»or 544 5712
LANDCLEARING
FILL DIRT. BUSHOGGING
CLAY B SHALE. 122 1433

Painting
Painting Inter tor/ Eitortor
PAPERING............DRYWALL
Reference* A Reasonable
VERY RELIABLE (04-22*1134
Ratpanklkto Maa and balpar will
point your Home or BukJneu
ate. Give your problem! to ut
WE CARE. Quality work. 20
yn. axp. 227 2047. Lie. coni

217— Garage Sales

Rapalrllamadallng
Experienced-R****nabl*
Free I l l -Call 225-MM

Tree Service

219— Wanted to Buy

JOHN A LLE N S LAWN A T R E E
Tra* ramaval and trimming
Law Prlcait Flrtweod. 331 534*
E C H O L S T R E E SERVICE
Fra* Ektlmat**! Low Prlcakl
LIcaniad/Inturad/ 322 2224
"Let the Pratokkto— li 4* tt"■
S T U M P O R IN D IN O
Fra*
aiilm atatl 312 222* day ar
night I EchotoTra* Sarvica.

Baby i Bad*. Straltort. Ctotha*.
Playpaai, It* . Paparback
Baakt. 122-4277-222*ka«
Paying CASH for
Aluminum. Can*. Copper,
B ra il. Load. Nawipapar,
Glass. Gold. Sllvar
Kokomo Tool, 411W. lit
as ooSat.*■1 212- noo

Upholstery

223— Miscellaneous

PAPERNANOINO
Any typo wallcovering
................ 22*-7*41

Plastering
• ALL PhtMk of Ptaktorlng i
Repair, Stucco. Hard Coal.
Simulated Brkk. I l l 54*3

Plumbing

FURNITURE REPINISHINO
Ratkonabl* Ratal Upholltary
• a rv lc a a v a ila b le . F ra *
aktlmetot 222 5702
Evening* J U M I7
MAKE A "SPLASH'' with Caih.
from Want Ad* tt Stoll tho*a
"Unused" Itom i tht EASY
way. Call C1***1 tied 221 2411.

*4495
1981 VW
JETT A am

TAKE A
TES T

Ocala Antiques Show

Big yard 4*l#l 120 Shannon Dr.
Sat Jan. 5th. * 4 p m. Ditha*.
dryer, furniture A more______
Big Yard and Tool Sato Loti
and tot* ol tool* Saturday
Jan. 5th
I
S PM. IJM
Sum marlin Ava_____________
Laka and 20th * till 2 Chlldron*
clotha* IO* aach. utility trail
tr. trolling motor, dre*tar.
tmall bad. labia taw. tool* and
mlkC. Saturday only. 222 7*57.
MOV I NO SALE King bad | l » .
anllqua d r t iM r and chatl
M O daap traaiar *200. rat.
1150, microwave ovan 200 or
Irada for im all ona. cov.
couch A chair, maka oftar.
Roll away bad *10 2220*00
Ovar 500 ptocat ot poiyettor 4
doubtoknlt malarial BiOuia.
drat*, and pant* tongth. SO*
and *1 a yard. Friday A
S a tu r d a y . *-4 p m IBS
Plnacrait D r. Ibahlnd tha
tchool 1

Paper Hanging

*1*. AUTO SII
tow Milts

321-0741

1985

HONDA
ACCORD LX
HATCHBACK

215— Boats end
Accessories

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

1982
FUTURA

1* 8 4 9 5

Tupparwart Canter
Kliklmma*................Jan. 13-11
4- * PM.............. Public Invited.

1471 Hunt B a u Boat 11 Ft., 20
Evlnruda, trolling motor. 17
Ft. trailer. 12400 00122 2723.

Dog Obadianc* Tra ining , *
waakt 130 Start Jan. Slh
10:20 A M . T ra c k in g and
Boarding avallabl*. Ability
Kannal*. Q»to*n. 222 2220
FlbraglaM icraantng • 100' at
24" and « " width*. Aqua and
Foret I Green IS* per tq tt.
2354471.

1

I T.TM MILES

FOR E S TA TE
Com m ercial or Raildantlal
Auction* A AppralMli. Call
Dall’k Auction 222 5420

CONSULT OUR

ST. WQ., AIR

AUTOMATIC, STEREO
CASSETTE, CRUISE
FULL FACTORY
EQUIPMENT
*

p lu s

m s

$9371

8 2 OLDS
TORONADO

80 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON HATCHBACK

M C f CAN

SHARP

*10,390

*3290

8 0 PLYMOUTH
V0LARE WAGON

8 2 HONDA CIVIC
1300 HATCHBACK

*3990
80 DODGE
OMNI

8 0 DODGE
D-50 RAM TRUCK

4 MM, TV TOM, M Cf

V C lY M C t

*2990

*3990

*3290

80 CHEVROLET
CAMAR0 KRIMETTA

8 2 CADILLAC
ELDORADO

81 MERCURY
CAPRI
BU CK IMT10N M OPS

MCf CAN

*5990

*12,700

*4990

8 0 AMC SP IR IT
DL HATCHBACK

81 DATSUH
200-SX S L EDITION

83 ESCO RT
WAGON
AUTO, k it, SHARP

AUTO

*6990

*2990
c

t B

a

i m

i

e

&gt;4990
h

e

i

e

2913 MUMD0 ML (HWY. 17-92)
SANTORO, FLORIDA
0PCN W OH-fRL 9-8, SA T. 9-5, W N . 2 5
SANFORD 1 2 3 4 10 0

ORLANDO t ll- lM R

�\

1IA— Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Finnish Troops Hunt For Weather
Stalls
Wayward Cruise Missile Search

Friday, Jan. 4, lfts

W O RLD

HELSINKI. Finland (UPI) — Border troops are
searching In almost perpetual darkness and frigid
weather for signs of a Soviet cruise missile
believed to have crashed near an Ice-covered
Finnish lake a week ago.
So far the troops, using helicopters, snow
scooters and planes, have found nothing. They
are hunting for an object that disappeared horn
radar last Friday near Lake Inarl. across the
border from Soviet nuclear bases at Kola
Peninsula.
"W e have not found anything to show what It
Is." said MaJ. Karl Saksela. spokesman for the
Finnish border guards.
The search was to continue today for the
missile reportedly launched from a Soviet subma­
rine In the Barents Sea off Kola Peninsula that
flew over Norway before crashing near the
Ice-capped Lake Inarl In Finnish Lapland.

IN BRIEF
Paraguay Rejects U.S. Charges
Military Involved In Drug Trade
ASUNCION. Paraguay (UPI) - Paraguay hat angrily
denied allegations that its military is Involved In cocaine
trafllcklng and said a massive shipment o f cocalnr-reflnlng
chemicals seized by customs will be destroyed.
The chemicals have become a diplomatic sore spot for
Washington and Asuncion.
The New York Times Thursday quoted unidentified U.S.
officials as saying there were suspicions that the
Paraguayan military may be Involved In drug trafficking.
Paraguayan Interior Minister Sablno Montanaro rejected
the charges as "Irresponsible."
Paraguayan customs agents seized more than 49.000
gallons of ether, acetone and hydrochloric acid — enough
to refine 8 tons of cocaine from coca leaves, roughly 10
percent o f all the cocaine that enters the United States In a
year. The Times said.

In Oslo Thursday. Norwegian Prime Minister
Kaare Wllloch said the missile accidently strayed
off course, but Foreign Minister Svenn Stray said
the government was delivering a protest note In
Moscow against the violation.
"I assume It was an accident, but It Is
nevertheless serious when an exercise takes place
In such a way that Norwegian territory Is
violated." Wllloch said. "W hat has happened
demonstrates how vulnerable this area Is and

Pope Asked To Visit S. Africa
ROME (UPI) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson Is urging Pope
John Paul II to visit South Africa to Inspire antl-apartheld
forces and "help bring about a more Just society."
Jackson, a Baptist minister, made the appeal during a
25-mlnutc private audience with the pontltf Thursday at
iwhlch they spoke mainly about racial segregation In South
Africa.
John Paul Is expected to make a pastoral visit to
southern Africa this summer, but Vatican sources have
said he probably will not go to South Africa because of the
racial tension.
Jackson, who was granted a visa to visit South Africa
this month but changed his plans. Is applying for a new
visa to attend the enthronement Feb. 4 o f Desmond Tutu,
winner of the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize, as the first black
Anglican bishop of Johannesburg.
The civil rights leader also talked to the pope about
famine In Africa, fighting In Central America, nuclear
disarmament and the U.S. Catholic bishops' draft letter on
the economy.

how Important It ts that our defense are
effective."
Cruise missiles — fitted with nuclear or
conventional warheads — skim close to the
ground to avoid detection.
According to some military experts, the missile
could have been a Shaddock, a 1963 model
capable of carrying a nuclear warhead of 350
kllotons. or 27 times the strength of the bomb
dropped on Hiroshima.
.
Radar operators In northern Finland say the
missile entered Finnish airspace from Norway at
a point where the two countries border the Soviet
Union. The missile disappeared from radar
screens as It passed over Lake Inarl.
"A fter It had disappeared from Norwegian
territory, a bang was heard from Lake Inarl and It
Is believed that the missile crashed there." a
Norwegian Defense staff spokesman said.
The sea-launched missile was (lying at 3.000 to
4.500 feet and Is 32 feet long with a range of 125
to 250 miles, the Norwegian defense ministry
said.
In Stockholm. Swedish Foreign Minister Len­
nart Bodstrom said cruise missile "overflights are
a violation or territorial rights and against
neutrality. It Is our duty to attack It.
"M any countries, not the least of which
Sweden, have warned about about the dangers of
mobile cruise missiles." he said.

Housing Sales Down 10.6%, Worst In 3 Years

WEATHER
A R E A FORECAST! Today
N A T IO N A L REPORT! The
second o f two storms blamed for cloudy, breezy and turning cool­
27 deaths blanketed the Ten­ er. Scattered showers ending by
nessee Valley with a foot of snow afternoon. Afternoon high In the
today, triggering "countless" 60s. Wind northwest 15 to 20
accidents, trapping students In mph. Tonight variable cloudi­
snowbound schools and filling ness breezy and cold. Low mid
shelters with stranded motorists. 30s to near 40. Wind northwest
At least 18 deaths have been arou n d 15 m ph . S a tu rd a y
attributed to the snowstorm that mostly fair and cold. High In
spread from Texas Into Ten­ 50s. Wind northwest 15 mph.
AREA READINOS (9 a.m.):
nessee Thursday. Icy Midwest
weather this week has killed temperature: 60: overnight low:
nine people. More than 100.000 6 2 : T h u r s d a y 's h ig h :- 77:
barometric pressure: 29.97: rela­
M ic h ig a n h o m e s and o f f i c e s w e r e
tiv e h u m i d i t y : 9 0 percen t:
w it h o u t p o w e r f o r s f if t h d s y a n d
some could stay In the dark until winds: northwest at 17 mph:
Monday, officials said. A foot of rain: .03 Inch: sunrise: 7:19
snow blasted western Tennessee a.in., sunset 5:42 p.m.
SAT URDAY TIDES:
Thursday and up to 9 Inches fell
Daytona
Boach: highs. 9:30
In northeast Arkansas, southeast
Missouri nnd southern Illinois. a.m., 9:43 p.m.; lows. 2:46 a.m.,
Forecasters culled for snow to­ 3.-34 p.m.: Port Canaveral:
day from Arkansas to Illinois highs. 9:22 a.m., 9:35 p.m.:
and south to Alabama. Freezing lows. 2:37 a.m., 3:25 p.m.;
rain, mixed with some snow, Bayport: highs. 1:39 a.m.. 3:30
was expected from West Virginia p.m.; lows. 8:58 a.m.. 8:45 p.m.
BO ATINO FORECAST: St.
to New England. In Memphis. 10
Inches of snow fell In seven Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
hours. Flights were canceled at miles — Small craft should
the M em phis In te rn a tio n a l e x e rc is e cau tio n . South to
Airport, most businesses closed s o u th w e s t w in d 15 k n o ts
and police officials said they becoming west to northwest
w ere o v e rw h e lm e d by the near 20 knots during today
number of traffic accidents. c o n t i n u i n g t o n ig h t th e n
Memphis schools closed early northwest 15 to 20 knots Satur­
T h u rsd a y. But J o h n n ie B. day. Sea 3 to 5 feet Increasing to
Watson, assistant school super- 5 to 7 feel offshore by late today
tntendant. said buses were un- continuing tonight. Scattered
uble to reach 89 children at four s h o w e rs and a few th u n ­
schools. Police said some of the derstorms mainly north part
students remained stranded ending today becoming partly
cloudy by tonight.
Thursday night.

WASHINGTON (UPI) — New house sales
dropped 10.6 percent In November, the
most severe setback In nearly three years,
as the average price Jumped $6,300 to
$101,000. the Commerce Department says.
The decline brought the annual rate of
new house sales to 591.000 based on
November results, the second slowest pace
of 1984 after August.

been waning and even Improvements In the
mortgage rates of more than 2 percentage
points since summer have not been enough
to rekindle the Interest of potential buyers.
The average price had shown a rare drop
In October, going from $100,900 to $94,700.
But It rebounded In November to $101,000.
That compared to the average for all of last
year o f $89,800.

The figures were adjusted to compensate
for the seasonal variations In sales. Before
such adjustment the drop was an even
greater 25.5 percent.

"It doesn't really make much sense. It Is a
surprise because we expected a fairly strong
Novem ber, at least e v e n ." economist
Mlchuel Sumlchrast said, speaking for the
National Association of Home Builders. "I
think the number doesn't quite represent
what Is happening In the field."
The association's own monthly surveys
Indicate some Increase In sales activity.

The sales slowdown occurred despite
lower mortgage rates. Analysts had been
expecting the dropoff In sales to occur even
sooner, however, and had been surprised at
September’s enormous 16.5 percent In­
crease In sales, followed by a revised 0.9
percent advance In October.
Pent-up demand for new houses, which
sustained sales through most of 1984. has

...Trash
Continued fom page 1A
Russ Megonegal said Thursday,
He said the city, which ts
enjoying rapid growth. Is ready
for an exclusive franchise. Three
other commissioners agreed.
But C o m m is s io n e r C o lin
Keogh, who voted against the
plan, said If an exclusive fran­
chise were granted, the com­
mission would be "taking the
free en terprise system and
throwing It out of the window."
The commission need not
meddle with the free market, he
said. Companies offering poor
service would not survive In the
city because their customers
would switch to their competi­
tion.
In addition to that. Keogh said
an exclusive franchise should
not be granted because the
commission has not been able to
force the existing companies to
comply with Its garbage regula­
tions.
"If we can't police the agree­
ments we all ready have, how
are we go in g to p olice an
exclusive franchise. If they don't

V

"In the last two months the traffic
Improved, sales Improved and builders'
plans Improved" In the surveys. Sumlchrast
said. The surveys Indicated builders were no

put the covers on the trash cans
what are you going to do?"
Keogh asked.
Commissioner Burt Pcrinchlcf
disagreed, saying the city has all
ready "taken the buff by the
horns and said ‘thou shall abide
by the agreement.'"
And Megonegal countered that
Lake M ary, w ith Its rapid
growth. Is In an "enviable posi­
tion" to attract a garbage com­
pany that will provide excellent
service at a fair price.
" I think whoever gets this
plumb will realize they have a
gold mine," he said.
Keogh, conceding later that
support was overwhelmingly for
the exclusive franchise, said at
least the com m ission could
"build teeth" Into the ordinance
so It could exercise its leverage
whenever a company goes back
on Its agreement with the city.
"It needs to say. Either you're
going to do this or you're not
going to get paid.'" he said.
Mayor Dick Fcss suggested the
company be paid one year In
arrears as an added precaution.
"T h e fastest way to get a lot ol
people's attention Is through
their pockctbooks — especially
w h e n y o u 'r e h o ld in g th e

AREA DEATH S
CATHERINE A. LEONARD
Mrs. Catherine A. Leonard. 56.
o f 205 Dogwood Drive, Sanford,
t J d ied W e d n e s d a y at S ou th
Seminole Community Hospital.
• ‘ Longwood. Born Jan. 24. 1928
In Dearborn. Mich., she moved
to Sanford In 1959. She was a
housewife and a member of All
Y. Souls Catholic Church.
Survivors Include three sons.
Patrick. Michael, and Richard,
all o f Sanford; mother. Mrs.
Beatrice Assenmacher. Monroe.
M ic h , t w o s i s t e r s , M rs .
B e rn a d ln e M ack and Mrs.
Elizabeth Sailer, both of Monroe;
four brothers, Frank. Linus.
Joseph, all of Monroe, and Rob­
ert of Tucson. Arlz.
Brlsson Guardian Funeral
Home, Sanford, is In charge of
arrangements.
W ILLIAM "C U R T Y " MUSE
Mr. William "C u rty" Muse. 88.
i ;
s c died Thursday at the home of his
son In Eustls. Born Sept. 15.
1896 In Lawtey. Fla., he was a
former Sanford resident and a
retired farmer. He was a Protes­
tant.
I
t
He Is survived by a son.
Chester I.. Eustls; 36 grand­
children: four g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Brlsson Guardian Funeral
Home, Sanford. Is In charge of
arrangements.
it i
NELLIE M. SWARM
Mrs. Nellie M. Swarm. 89. of
1520 S. Grant St., Longwood.
died Wednesday at Longwood
Health Care Center. Born April

f

X.

L

u
r

25, 1895 In Pennsylvania, she
moved to Longwood from Or­
lando In 1981. She was a
homemaker and a Baptist.
Survivors Include three sons,
John F. o f Orlando. Richard
Elmer of Plymouth. III., James
E.. Colorado Springs, Colo.;
three grandchildren.
Cox-Parker Guardian Funeral
Home. Winter Park, la In charge
of arrangements.

S p rin gs, d ied T h u rsd a y at
F lo rid a H o s p lta l-A lta m o n te
Springs. Bom Sept. 9. 1892 In
Butler County. Pa., she moved to
Altamonte Springs from there In
1947. She was a retired school
teacher and was a member of
Park Lake Presbyterian Church.
Survivors Include a daughter.
Grace Juergcnsen. Orlando; two
gra n d ch ild ren ; three g re a t­
grandchildren.
B aldw ln -F alrch lld Funeral
Home. Forest City, Is In charge
o f arrangements.

HAZEL WEITZEL
Mrs. Hazel Weitzel. 92. of 989
O r le n t a A v e . , A lt a m o n t e

Legal Notice

legal Notice

NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notice It hereby given that tho
general portnort ot o Florida
p o rtn o rih lp lift e d below ,
purtuant to tho "F lclltlou t
Noma Statute.” Chapter MS Ot.
Florida Statutes. will regular
with tho Clerk ot tho Circuit
'Court In and tor Seminole
County. F lor Ido. upon receipt ot
proof of tho publication of thlt
notice, the flctltlout name, to
wtt:
ALVAREZ HARRISONS
PARTNERSHIP
under which told portnorthlp'
expects to engage In butlnett ot
430 Crown Oak Centro Drlvo.
Longwood. Florida 127)0.
That the portlet Intorottod In
told general portnorthlp ore ot

IM4 A January 4. HU.
OEA20_______________________
N O T I C E O P A P U B L IC
N E A R IN O OP PROPOSED
C M ANOES AND A M E N D ­
MENTS IN CERTAIN DIS­
TRICTS ANO BOUNDARIES
O P T H E Z O N IN O O R D I­
N ANC E, ANO AM ENOINO
THE PUTURE LAND USE EL­
E M E N T OP T HE C O M ­
PREHENSIVE PLAN OP THE
C I T Y OP S A N P O R O .
FLORIDA.
Notke It hereby given that a
Public Heorlng will bo hold ot
the Commlotion Room In the
City Hall In the City of Sanford.
F lor Ido. ot 7:4* o'clock P M . on
January 14. lfts. to contider
chonget and amendment! to the
Zoning Ordinance, and amend
Ing the Future Land Ute Ele­
ment of the Comprohontlve Plan
of the City of Sontord. Florida,
etlollewt:
A portion of that certain
property lying between U. S.
Highway 17*2 and Nordttut
Rood and Watt of and abutting
Tarwllligor Lone It propoted to
be reioned tram AD (Agrkul

fOllOWt

JOE A. ALVAREZ. JR.
JOHN C. HARRISON. JR.
MAURICE R. HARRISON
Ootod ot Orlando. Orange
County. Florida on November
20.11*4.
Publlth December 14. 21. 20.

LA PAZ. Bolivia (UPI) - A
search team today spent a
third day watting for weather
to clear In the Bolivian Andes
so It could cllmo to where an
E a s te r n A ir lin e s p la n e
c ra s h ed w ith 29 p eop le
aboard.
Eight Americans — Includ­
ing Marianne Davis, the wife
of the U.S. ambassador to
Paragua. Arthur Davis Jr. —
were among the 29 on the
Tuesday night (light.
U.S. E m bassy C h arges
d 'A ffalres W illiam Walker
said officials remained hope­
ful there were survivors but
that the p o s s i b i l i t y
diminished each day snow
and rain delayed the search.
Bolivian Air Force pilots
who have flown over the
crash site — a snow-covered
slope on Bolivia's Illimani
Mountain about 50 miles
southeast of La Paz — said
thev saw no signs of life.

i

longer "totally preoccupied" with Interest
rates.
Sumlchrast said his group feels the sales
will bounce back again In December and
January because mortgage rates are still
catching up to the Improvements elsewhere
In the money markets.
An estimated 41 .000 new houses were
actually sold In November, bringing sales for
11 months of the year to 601.000. a 4.3
percent Improvement over the same period
of 1983.
The deterioration In sales brought the
closely watched figure on unsold houses to a
7.3 month supply. 349,000. the most since
August and above the 7 percent level
considered by the housing Industry to
represent overbuilding.
The sales decline was steepest In the
Northeast, at 20.4 percent. Sales In the
South were down 10.4 percent and In the
West dropped 6.8 percent. The least decline
was In the Midwest, at 5.5 percent.

pocketbook.” he said.
If. as expected, the franchise
becomes a reality. Fess said he
will recommend that the com­
mission tax residents for the
service. Instead of letting them

pay monthly bills to the com­
pany. He said that would cut
down on collection problems and
keep people from "beating the
system" by splitting garbage
bills with their neighbors.

C N A Burn Victim Dies
Gerald Trbutmun. 66. who
received second and third degree
burns over 80 percent of his
body In a predawn electrical
explosion and fire Thursday at
the CNA Building In Orlando,
died at 4:15 a.m. today, an
Orlando Regional Medical Center
spokeswoman said this morning.
She said the condition of the
other bum victim. Ernest Dinnccn. a manager with Hembree
Construction Co. In Orlando, has
worsened and he Is now listed as
critical. He received second and
third degree burns over 30

percent o f his body In the
accident.
The two men were working on
a transformer near a restaurant
on the top floor of the 19-story
building In the downtown area
to determine the cause of a
partial power failure when the
explosion occurred, buckling a
concrete waff of the maintenance
room, putting cracks In the floor
and damaging the celling.
T ro u tm an was a 40-year
employee o f Orlando Utilities
Commission.
—Jane Casselberry

FULL SERVICE AT ONE LOCATION

OAKLAWN FUNERAL HOME / CEM ETERY
• CON VEN IEN CE — ALL FUNERAL &amp; BURIAL
ARRANGEMENTS AT ONE LOCATION
• SAVINGS — WITH EVERYTHING UNDER ONE LOCAL
MANAGEMENT COSTS ARE LOWER
• C ASK ET SELECTION A ITEMIZED PRICING
• TO TA L PRE-ARRANGEMENT
•flow er shop
3 2 2 -4 2 6 3
_ 0 £ C A U TA KES
^ 4M„ rhinchart soao
CARE OF EVERYTHING
'
sanfmd/umk mart

F u n a r a l N o t ic e s
M U II. WILLIAM "CURTY"
—Funeral services tor Mr. William "Curty”
M u m . M. ot Euttlt. who dlod Thurtdoy. will
bo hold ol 2 p.m. Saturday ot tho graveside In
Ooklown Momorlol Pork. In llou ot flowers,
contributions moy bo mode to tho Hoort
Fund. Vlowing It 24 p.m. todoy. Britton
Cuordlon Funorol Homo In chorgo.
LEONARD,MRS. CATHERINE
—Funorol M ott lor Mrt. Cothorlno A.
Loonord, J4. ol MS Dogwood Drlvo. Sontord.
who dlod Wodnotdoy. will bo ol * am .
Soturdoy ot All Soult Cothollc Church with
Fothor Dovtd Forguton officiating Rotary
will bo rocltod ot 7 tonight ot Britton Funorol
Homo. Burial will bo In All Soult Como lory.
Britton Cuordlon Funorol Homo In chorgo.

Legal Notice
t u r o ll O l t t r l c t to M R 2
(Multiple Family Retldonllol
Dwelling) Olttrlct. Sold pro­
perty being more particularly
detcrlbed ot toilowt:
That property detcrlbed ot a
parcel of land located within the
SW to of SEC. 23. TWP 1* S.
ROE WE. Seminole County.
F lor Ido. detcrlbed ot toilowt:
Begin ot o point U A ft. W. and
ISO ft. N. of tho S. W comer of
told SEC 21 told point being on
Intertectlon of tho N. R/W line
ot Nordttut Rd and the W. R/W
line ot Tarwllligor Lone; thence
W. along the N. R/W lino of
Nordttut Rd and parallel to tho
S. lino of told SEC 23 a dltlonco
of 1*1.40 ft.; thence leaving told
N. R/W lino of Nordttut Rd run
N.. 214 » ft. thence W. 144 00 ft.
to tho E. lino of Lot 17 of FL
Land A Colonliotlon Company'!
Calory Plantation ot recorded In
PB I. PC 12*. Publk Record! of
Seminole County, PL: thence N.
4S0 40 ft. to the NE Comer of
told Lot 17: thence W. along the
N. line of told Lot 17. a dltlonco
of 174.40 ft..- thence leaving told

A MINISTRY OF

Legoi Notice
N. lino ot Lot 17. run N. I02t 72
ft. to the SW R/W line of U. $
H ighw ay l7-*2: thence S.
3**4l'or‘ E . along Mid SW R/W
line ot U. S. Highway 17 *2 a
dltlonco ol 7*0.34 It. to on
Intersection with tho W. R/W
lino ot Torwllllger Lone: thence
S. 1071 t l ft to the POS. Con­
taining therein 13 S3 acre*, more
or let*
All porllet In Intern) and
cltlient tholl hove on opportune
ty to be heard ot Mid heorlng.
By order ol the City Com
m itt Ion of the City of Sontord.
Florida.
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: It
a person dtcldet to appeal a
decision mode with respect to
any matter considered ot the
above mntlng or hearing, ho
moy need a verbatim record of
the proceedings. Including the
tntlmony and evidence, which
record It not provided by tho
City of Sontord. (FS2M 4I4!)
H N. Tamm. Jr.
City Clerk
Publlth: December 24. 1M4 A
January 4. IftS

JA N U A R Y

6- 9 , 1985
SANFORD CIVIC CENTER
401 E. Seminole Boulevard

DEA *3

I

�V .V .W , #V#t * *» • r» &lt;11* i i

•— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 4, IftS

'B e r r e n g e r 's '
By Joan Hmnaner
U P I T V Reporter
NEW YORK (UPI) - "B er­
renger's" Is a nighttime soap
opera about a powerful family
of rich, handsome and not very
nice people who go about In
devious ways doing dastardly
things for fun and profit.
The cast Is big. the produc­
tion Is lavish, the plot is
complicated and the characters
ure simple.
The new series involves a
New York City department
store, not a Texas oil empire,
and It will air on NBC on
Saturday nights Instead of CBS
on Friday nights. Otherwise the
similarity to Southfork and the
Ewings Is unmistakable. That's
understandable, since "Berrenger’s" comes from Lorimar.
those wonderful folks who gave
us "Dallas" and Its spin-off.
"Knots Landing.”
J.R. would feel right at home
shopping at Berrenger's.
Whether "Berrenger's" can
come up with a pluperfect
villain like J.R. Is another
matter.
Judging from the premiere, a
special 90-mlnute show to air
Saturday at 9:30 p.m.. the
likeliest candidate Is Simon
Berrenger. played with a sneer
by Sam Wanamakcr.
Simon Is the patriarch of the
clan who. with the help o f his

late wife, founded the flossy
department store that appar­
ently is a near neighbor of
Berdorf Goodman on Fifth
Avenue.
His sons — store president
Paul Berrenger. played by Ben
M urphy, and ne'er-do-w ell
Billy. Robin Strand — find out
by reading the financial pages
that Simon Is planning to
merge Berrenger's with a not
very classy chain.
Paul vows to fight the merg­
er. even as he Is fighting
unsuccessfully to divorce his
wife, sexy Andrea Marcovlccl.
He also Is un su ccessfu lly
fig h tin g to sed u ce Shane
Bradley, a store executive
played by Yvettlc Mlmlcux.
Shane has a secret sorrow —
five years ago her ex-husband
stole their daughter and she
still employs a private detective
to find the child. The store's
top model, played by Laura
Ashton, also has a secret —
nymphomania.
These people are big on
secrets. Simon's grandson-in­
law Is secretly conniving with
the mob-connected head of the
chain Involved in the takeover,
who secretly hates Simon Ber­
renger and wants to get even
with him for some mysterious
wrong. He learned that hate
from guest star Cesar Romero,
but the details will have to wait

Social Securty Disability
Congress has changed the law.

Is A
fora later show.
S im o n ’ s g ra n d d a u g h te r
wants to get even with her
m other. A n ita M orris, by
seducing her mother's much
y o u n g e r b o y fr ie n d . Mom
d o e s n 't c a r e a b o u t th e
boyfriend — she wants to be
taken seriously and go Into
business with a former Berrenger shoe salesman who
hopes to make a name as a
designer.
That's Just the beginning
there's also the starry-eyed
young kid from Ohio, the
w o m a n izer w ho w an ts to
seduce her. his old dame who

D e p a r t m e n t

S to r e

In "Berrenger's" range from
"learn to live with a dark
There's more. Involving loan secret" to "become owner and
sharks and — oh. why bother. supreme ruler of the world."
You get the Idea — "B e r­
Try "Berrenger's." If you like
renger's" has more subplots hobnobbing with the Ewings In
than "W ar and Peace." and "Dallas." you'll probably enjoy
th a t's on ly the 90-inlnute window shopping at "B e r­
premiere.
renger’s " — even if you hate
The ambitions of characters yourself for It.
now rooms with starry-eyes.

—

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DECEMBER
SEAFOOD SPECIALS

SERVED 7 ORtt
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�Evening Herald

LEISURE
CompUto Wm Ic's TV Listings
Sanford, Florida — Friday, January 4 , 1W

amtmmam

mmammmmmmmsmmm

i

m EZSUBHM BBBE

�3— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 4, 1MJ

Woodburning Attains Status As Fine Art
By Susan Loden
Herald Staff Writer
Viewing Jan Fleck’s wood etchings of street
scenes, animals, and cultural symbols might
send you scurrying for the woodburning set
you dabbled with as a child.
Hut the apples and Indians you burned Into
plywood panels have little In common with Ms.
Fleck’s creations — an art form she claims to
have developed on her own. Inspired by
European wood works fashioned by artisans
working with a somewhat different, centurles-old technique.
"Th e Europeans would create a street scene
by taking a metal plate and what looked like a
pen. but is actually filled with acid, and they’d
draw a scene on the metal.
"The acid eats Into the metal and forms a
design Into the plate. They wipe that acid ofT
and put another kind of acid on and then they
place a block of wood on the plate. The acid
cuts Into the wood, giving a kind of woodburning effect." she said.
Hut that effect Is a bit more subtle than what
Ms. Fleck envisioned.
"I liked the feeling of that. I wanted to have
something like It. to create something In wood
on my own that would look like that, but
would have more dimension. I wanted to go a
step farther."
That was 10 years ago when she went back
to pick up her childhood toy. a woodburner.
"Hut 1 didn't really like the feeling. The
Image was Just kind o f blah with two tones and
It had no texture." Ms. Fleck said. "So. I
eventually took carving tools and combined
carving with the burning."
With a background as a graphic artist and
having studied architectural design. Ms. Fleck
possessed the skills to pursue her goal.
And having developed her unique art form,
she Is reluctant to share her secrets, but will
pass on the basic procedure:
" I draw on the wood free hand In pencil.
Then I take carving tools and I follow each line
I’ve drawn, carve Into it. Then I take an
electronic burning tool (she long ago aban­
doned the conventional woodbumlng tool,
experimented with soldering guns, but now
relies on custom-made electronic burners
ordered from California. Arizona and New
York), and I follow the carving with the
burning. This process is repeted several limes.
"T h e burning process will lift the carving
out. so l need to recarve and reburn several
times. The deepest I carve is about onc-half
Inch Into the wood.
"I haven't tried the acid method, but I would
like to for u less expensive line tha* could be
mass produced." Ms. Fleck said.
As It is. each piece she creates Is Individual
and the prices reflect that originality. A small
seagull Is a modest (1 0 but a large street scene
In which Ms. Fleck Invested 700 hours of her
artistry will set you back (3.500.
The streetscapes are her favorites.
"1 specialize in them because I like working
with perspective. I never put people In my
street scenes. 1 can draw figures, but to put
people In my scenes ... would spoil it for m e."
Ms. Fleck said.
Her current plans call for a series of
Victorian houses... sans people, of course.

It will be a time-consuming task. Her craft
takes patient persistence. Ms. Fleck. 31,
spends 16 to 18 hours a day In her Altamonte
Springs studio home. Her most tedious work
Involves animals.
She spent three hours each day for 1Mi years
working on a large portrait of a lion.
"Each hair Is carved In three different
directions and then burned In three different
directions, so It’ s like there's hair behind hair.
You can feel It. It feels like hair.
"When I first started out I Just tried to
simulate hair and It didn't work. For art that I
like I want It to look good from a distance and
when I go up close, too. I try to put that Into
my own work. 1 want the hair to took like hair
up close and for It to look like the animal from
a distance. I haven't found any other way to do
that besides puling In every hair. I'm not a
patient person, except when It comes to my
work." she said.
For example, when she produces a design
based on ancient symbols, such as Egyptian
hieroglyphics, she spends several weeks re­
searching the culture represented. "1 like
accuracy In my work. I don't want to make a
mistake. I don’t like the feeling of making
something look like It represents a culture. I
like to actually use the characters and the
story behind them," she said.
Unlike most artists, Ms. Fleck has to create a
surface to work on before she can start to
create the actual art work. She scours lumber
yards In search of the perfect piece of clear
Eastern cedar.
"I get real excited looking at a piece of raw
wood, and It's very exciting after Its all ready
to work with," Ms. Fleck said.
Getting the wood ready to lake her design
means hours of planing and sanding. And once
the piece Is complete after many hours of
sketching, scribing, carving and burning. Ms.
Fleck seals her work with a Danish oil.
"It hardens the wood from the Inside out. It
still keeps the pores open, so the wood won't
warp, but It doesn't close It off to make It a
dead piece. It seems to me like It's living.
“ I strive for the end product to look exactly
like the sketch, only with the texture. It's been
difficult to work with the wood, going against
the grain. It's a long process and to get to this
[joint I've done a lot of research," she said.
It’s all beginning to [jay off. Ms. Fleck's work
has risen above the status of a craft and Is
considered to be fine art. although Initially and
still fur some uninitiated, serious acceptance of
her work has been slow In coming.
She said that's probably because of those
woodbumlng kits tucked away In attics which
make everybody recall trying their hand at
woodbumlng.

EVERY KIND OF
SHED AND
GREENHOUSE
FOR YOUR
STORAGE NEEDS
AND PLANTS
VHT AT­

On Thm Cover
This wood-etched street scene Is a far
cry from the woodburning you may
have done as a child, but the Altamonte
Springs artist who created It and the
technique behind it may Inspire you to
once again make your mark In wood.

Guess Who's Coming To Inauguration?
WASHINGTON (UPI) A
host of stars from stage and
s c r e e n , In c lu d in g F ra n k
Sinatra. Pearl Halley. Ray
Charles and Elizabeth Taylor,
w ill a p p ea r In n a tio n a lly
televised festivities for Presi­
dent Reagan's second Inaugu­
ration.
The Committee for the 50th

&lt;#

Jan Fleck scratches away at her latest wood etching, but
she'll spend many tedious hours at her drawing board
before the jungle cat she's creating comes to life.

American Presidential Inaugu­ C h a rle s . W a yn e N e w to n ,
ral announced the star-studded Taylor. The Beach Boys. Mac
lineup for the Jan. 18 Salute to Davis, a n d Michael Davis.
the Vtce President and Jan. 19
Reagan and Vice President
P r e s id e n t ia l G ala at th e George Bush will be sworn In
Washington Convention Center during a private ceremony
and broadcast In part Saturday Sunday. Jan. 30 and again
night Jan. 19 by ADC.
publicly Jan. 21 on the steps of
They Include: Sinatra. Dailey, the Capitol with a parade down
dancer Mikhail Daryshntkov, Pennsylvania Avenue.

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1 7 3 4 *0

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 4, l t U -7

Ricky Ricardo's Nightclub Was Balmy
DEAR DICK — My huaband and I are having a
disagreement about the name of Ricky Rlcardo'a
nightclub in “ I Love Lucy." I aay It la the
Troplcana. but my huaband aaya It la the
Copacabana. Pleaae respond, as we have a bet on
this. B. and P.B., Houston, Texas.
The Troplcana wins.
DEAR DICK — If Emmanuel Lewis, the star of
“W ebster." Is 13 years old, as his mother says,
Is he a dw arf or a midget? Seems to me that only
a year ago be w as acting without hla front teeth,
making his age about 8. B.N., Stuart, Pla.
As a mailer of fact, he's closer to 14 than 13 — he'll
hit 14 March 9. He Is small, but normal. As one of his
producers says. "Nothing wrong with Emmanuel
except that he Just hasn't grown that much."
DEAR DICK — I recently watched “ Kate and
A llle" and I could have sworn that that show
originally was about Identical twins living with
their father. But, to my surprise, now It Is Jane
Curtin and Susan Saint James living as room­
mates. What happened? L.M., Houston, Texas.
Nothing, except you probably got your shows
mixed up. It Is "Double Trouble" that concerns Itself
with Identical twins. "Kate and Allle" has always
been Just what you saw.
D E A R DICK — On "H a rd c a s tle and Me-

WEDNESDAY

January 9

Pursuit" has been axed by NHC, maybe they should
have dedicated the show to Its own memory.
DEAR DICK —- Could you tell me If Jennifer
Runyon of “ Charles In Charge” Is any relation to
Prank Runyon of “ As the W orld Turns”? A.E.R.,
South Haven, Mich.
DEAR DICK — I would like to know If Ted
Koppell, the newscaster, and Bernle Koppell of
“The Love Boat" are brothers. 1 see a strong
Cormlck," please tell me If Daniel Hugh-Kelly's resemblance. D.L., Warsaw, tnd.
hair Is naturally curly or If It’s a perm. D.J.,
You have to watch the way people spell their
Kalamaxoo, Mich.
names, which would give you the answer, Jennifer Is
At last, we’re getting to the Importunl questions. a RUNYON. Frank is a RUNYEON; not related. Ted is
According to a usually reliable Informant on the
a KOPPEL. Bernle Isa KOPELL; again, not related.
H&amp;McC set. It Is naturally curly "but they do kink It
DEAR DICK — I recently watched “The Best
up a little, too."
DEAR DICK — A t the end of the new NBC Little Whorehouse In Texas” on TV, and saw
series, “ Hot Pursuit,” the credits say that the Burt Reynolds sing a song by himself In a
show Is dedicated to a certain woman. Please tell pasture with some mustangs. I say that scene
me who the woman Is and why the show Is was not In the motion picture in the theater. My
roommate says It was. W hat do you aay? 8.G.,
dedicated to her. J.R.O., Gatllnburg, Tenn.
That dedication only rati on one show, and It wasn't Canyon, Tex,
I say you’re right. And I say It because Reynolds'
a woman. It was a man. although 1 can understand
your mistake. That episode, called "Home Is the manager. David Gershenson. says you're right. That
Heart. Part 2." was dedicated to Shelley Maim, the scene was cut out of the movie, for release In theaters,
percussionist. He had worked on that show and died berause they wanted to shorten II at the time, but has
during the time It was being made. Since “ Hot been pul back In for TV.

Ask Dick
Kleiner

CD (8) POLICE WOMAN

10:05

THURSDAY

January 10

OX WORLD AT WAR

11:30

10:30
EVENING

6:00
O S ) ( S O ( S O n ew s
fM )JEf PERSONS
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
(B (t| WELCOME SACK. KOTTEH

8

6:05

tary Emeritus S Dillon Ripley; hab­
its ol howler monkeys. Q
B (8) MOVIE "Breakout" (1975)
Charles Bronson. Robert Duvall A
woman hires a daredevil buih pilot
to rescue her husband from a Mexi­
can (all. where he has been Impris­
oned on trumped-up charges

OX COLLEQE

BASKETBALL Loui­
siana State at Alabama

OX BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6:30

) NBC NEWS
IC8S NEWS
I ABC NEWS g
)(35) ALICE
) (8) GOOO TIMES

6:35
OX GOMER PYLE

7:00
0 (4) JOKER'S WILD
(Vi O P.M. MAGAZINE Italian man
talk about thaw romantic reputa­
tion. Sandy Duncan and hutbend
Don Correia oi Broadway'* "My
One And Only."
O JEOPARDY
(13) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT
CD 110) ALISTAIR COOKE'S AMER­
ICA
QD (•) ONE DAY AT A TIME

S

7:05
OX LITTLE HOUSE CfN THE PflAt-

7:30

B (3) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Featured Roy Bchetdar. Ptryttci*
Aver a-Allen (“Cosby Show").
(1) O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(7J o sioo.ooo name t h a t
TUNE
OX (IS) BENSON
B I D ALL IN THE FAMILY

8.00
a
3 ) HIGHWAY T O HEAVEN
Jonathan reacuea Mark and an
Innocent family horn daalructton at
the hand# of ruthleaa drug amugr a
BARBARA MANORELL:
SOMETHING SPECIAL Barbara
Mandrsa Mara In Ihia musical varie­
ty ihow taped on location In SI.
Joseph, Mo., Naahviila. Term , and
Loe Angela* with guest* Roy Acuft.
Lae Greenw ood, Bert Remken, the
Rev. Alexander Hamilton and The
Voice* oi Inspiration.
CD O I AM ABLE
OX(IS) DALLAS
B (10) BMfTHSOMAN WORLD
Featured observing creature* 2000
test under the tea. erttsl George
Catln'a tOth-cantury painting* oi
Qra*t Plain* Indian*; an Interview
with Smithsonian Institution Secre­

6:05

ffl o

8:30

PILOT A teen-age girl
who's an outcast among her peers
disguises her tel I lo compel#
against her school's break dancing
champion Q
th e

0:00
Q f f i FACTS OF LIFE When Blair
neglects her responsibilities and
dalaa a different boy every night.
Mrs. Garrett la lorced lo put her
tool down, g
©
O MOVIE "Tho Rad-Light
Sling” (1984) Farrah Fawe ell. Beau
Bridges In order to crxivicl a local
racket* king, a government bureau
covertly assumes management ol a
brothel. (R)
(7) O DYNASTY Dominique leeks
the truth ol her birth Irom the dying
Tom Carrington, and Alex It la
stunned by the condition* ol his
WIN; Steven and Claudia quarrel, g
(35) QUINCY
(10) FIRST CONTACT Thi*
award-winning lilm Include* tootage from Ihe 50-year-old movie ol a
New Guinea tribe's first encounter
with three white man and features
Interviews with two ol them and
with Papuans who recall the event.

S

9:30
0 © ITS YOUR MOVE After fool­
ing the whole town with the phony
rock group. Mall asks tor Norman's
help lo gel rid ol them. (Perl 2 ol 2)

10:00
B ® ST. ELSEWHERE As ha
plan* his return lo Alrlca. Wyler
learns government troops have
destroyed hi* cNnic. HaPoran col­
lect! evidence that could threaten
Morrison's medical career.
© O HOTEL Mrs. Cabot tall* In
love with Christmas godfather, an
Illegal alien discover* a true love al
ihe SI. Gregory, an actor prepares
lor a roM by watching Peter, g
(TB (3D MOEPENDENT NEWS
f f l (10) SECRETARCS OF STATE
IN CONFERENCE - IMS Four lormar secretaries ol Slate review
President Reagan's foreign policy
end make Ioxscat It about Iha nail
lour yaars. Edwin Newman
moderates lor Dean Rusk. William
P Roger*, Cyrus Vane*, and
Edmund Muskta.

dl) (35) BOB NEWMART

EVENING

11:00
® © o © onew s
(11) (lb ) BIZARRE
f f i (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
B (8) NIGHT GALLERY
o

11:05
OX WOftLO AT WAR

a®

TONIGHT Host Johnny Car­
ton Scheduled: Alan King
© Q T A »
O ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE
(38) SCTV
B (D TEN STEPS TO WEALTH

S

©O

12:00

MAGNUM. P.L A wealthy
practical |oker‘t greedy rstations
learn that ha's left Magnum over
$50 million in hit will (R)
©O THE SAINT
01) (38) BENNY HILL
B (D KOJAK

12:05

ax

MOVIE "The Devil Al Four
O'Clock" (1901) Spencer Tracy,
Frank Sinatra

12:30
O ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERUAN Scheduled: Jay leno.
N Y Poke* Sgt John Welch
(U) (38) F-TROOP

© O MOVIE

1:00

"A Letter To Three
Wives" (1949) Jeanne Cram. Unde
OarneH
(35) GUNSMOKE
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STYLE Parry amgs perennial favor- O ACE AWARDS HigMghts of IX*
Has nctudiog Feeling* and “ I 1M4 Acs Award* lor CaMa ExcalWrite The Song*." and la lofnad by
Ann-Margrot and Rtefi Util*, who from the winning programs.
doaa impraaaiona of Las Vagaa Ida.

tha Amaron River, focusing on Its
production. dtstrtbiiaon lo tha U S.
and Its roots In andanl Indian cuetome. Orson WsSaa narralaa

930
© O THE THORN BMD6 Maggie,
neglacled by Luka and working as a
housemaid, gfvaa birth to thaw
daughter, Justin*. Unhappy and a.
She unaipecladfy masts Father
Ralph whaa recuperating on a
aaduded Wand share the# love I*
consummated (Part 1 of 4) (R) g

9.35
32 FROM NO MAN'S LAND: A
PORPOISE CfVES A report on
Oraanpeac* bitamattonara aftorts
to ItaR the slaughlsr of baby aaals

Hero Who unJdn't Read" A dedrcatad teacher cornea to Ih* aid jf
an Mlarat* high school student who
dreams of playing professional baakatbak (R )g
EVEMNO

830
f f l O BARBARA MANORELLSOMETHINO SPECIAL Barbara
Mandrel star* n this musical varie­
ty show taped on location In SI
Joseph. Mo . Nashmile. Term, and
Lo* Angel** with guests Roy Acufl.
La* Greenwood. Bert Ramson, the
Rev Alexander Hamiton and Tha
Voices of trap#ation

8:30
CD O THE PLOT A lean-eg* get
who's an outcast among her peers
disguises hatsalt lo compel*
against her school'* braakdandng
champion g

930
S ) (t0| FIRST CONTACT This

1030

■ (W) ON TELEVWOt THE VIO­ ago bom at* SO-year-old movt* of a
LENCE FACTOR Edwin Nawman New Gum#* tribe's Aral encounter
a won si ins wntviof n. pom- with awe* white men and features
&lt;0
(38)
MRS.
AMERKA
PAGEANT
leal and financial Implication* of interviews with two of them and
chos of Argantlna and A Bara
Beautiful
and
talented
married
lalavWon vtotono* Quests induda with Papuan* who raced tho event
Touch Of Vegas
woman compels for the triteof Mrv
NBC Chairman Oram Ttnkar. Joan
America, wllh partormancaa by lop Oaru Cooney of ChMren's TWWv*1030
anlertatnars Inducting singer Vftkl alon Workshop and Ron Powers of 9 (tOt SECRETARKS OP STATE
Carr. Richard Peweon hosts Irom CBS
Bf CONFERENCE - IMS Four tormar secretariat el state review
President Reagan s foreign pokey
and make Forecasts shout th* nest
lour years. Edwin Ntwmsn
1030
moderates tor Dean Rusk, wakam
(II) (38) BLACK BEAUTY TMs
AFTERNOON
P. Rogers. Cyrus Vance, and
dramalliation ol Arms Sewa* a sto­
EVEMNO
Edmund Mutkie
ry begins with Black Beauty's bath
130
In 19th-c*nfc*y Maryland on Ih*
•
(10)
FROM
VCNNA:
THE
NEW
830
farm of Tom Oray (Marlin Milner)
■ (M) HITLER'S NUMBER ONE YEARB CELEBRATION IMS From
whote ansa tores* Mm to **■ her
Bt* museum* and pafacaa of Vien­
ENEMY: BUNCO ALIVE Tha bus
to on* of many Mure owners, the
na. Walter Cronklta host* a conoart
story of Raoul Waaenbarg. a Seedlocal aqua* (Cameron Mitchad)
of music and dance Maturing
(Part t ol 3)
EVEMNO
Straus* seaftta* and poftas par100.000 Hungarian Jew* from Nab
rrHioo oy 03 V3nm nwninnorac
*itermination, and who talar dtoap830
conducted
by
Lorin
M
m
d
AFTERNOON
paararl and N aaa believed to be
f f l 0 THE THORN BROS CardaW
230
da Bileas* art ralums to Auabaia
1230
® (t0) UU A portrait ol wortd- after 30 years and agree* lo taka
030
(U (38) BLACK BEAUTY Alter many
Haggle's son Dan* lo Rom* lo
(D
o
the
THORN
MROS
The
ranoianad
planW
LB
Kraus,
who
owner*. both kind and duel Beamy
study tor th* prtoathood. A wealthy
and* up haukng a cab In New York tragic reeMU of a devastating Bra
German Mptomef tola Si toy* w «i
Cty where 1st* leuntto* her srWi bring Father Ralph, nose secretary World War I In a
JusMna. and Dens announce* Ms
Luka Oray (Kristoftar Tabort), the to Ih* dsdsI least* to * -* • -»plan* lo return lo Drogheda aa a
son of har original oensr. Eileen back toDroghedTrsoyemetsl*.
430
parish prleat. (P w t4ol4)(R )g
Bremen. Mai Farrar and Van John­
ffl
O
ABC
AFTERRCHOOL
“The
to marry Wasp
son rn-atar (Part 3 of 3)
930
Haro
Who
Cotddnl
Road"
A
dark­
lift* OYfaa. (Part 1 of 4) (ft) g
430
ens* to aw aid of ■ (K&gt;) AUBCHWTTZ AND THE
ALLKS Ed Aarwr hosts Uas docu­
mentary on hmtar's death camp at
Auachwtu Included are excarpU
Debra MafMtl and Paid Pag* are
•W P
'a Jerusalem trial
among aw onNrtalnara tobdng
430
account* bom
Bobby Vinton In an* mualea! vartaty
f f l • ABC AFTER9CHOOL "The campawWeors.
836

1130

SUNDAY

WEDNESDAY

M ONDAY

THURSDAY

a a)

TUESDAY

Sports On The A ir
SATURDAY

-a--w
--a
»
,-_
#
730

9 0 N F L -M

830

9 |S) SARJNO TOO FBnad In
oral scenic location*. at* '
of aw Mgh seat w Meed
raw tOQwo companion or
cfeu Mtfboal racing

fc00

035
OWRESTLJNO

430

I"
AjehTjurm—

NBA BASKETBALL
ITn

MONDAY

SUNDAY

12-M

01 ® HULA BOWL HMaman Trophy wbwwr Doug Ftuba of Boston

T V ?

..........
*rw la Wib-

UU ■
NPL FOOTBALL "NFC
Championship Oama" Starting bma
md Mww were not detomwwd at

836
O
NBA BAMETBALL
Cattles si New York KMcks

WEDNESDAY
•36
Q COLLEGE BASKETBALL low-

1130

4:30
_____
nu n o r BPORTI _ _
ntmra imr^ala •
Maturing Mary Lou Ration. Palar

®

9(R tK LPR O M AO AZM E

—

1230
130

§giStas»MUUsUm

_
®

130
fKL FOOTBALL ‘ AFC
Al

0M- 2 “

lord. J^kann* McNamara. .fBthw
Jcvwon (bom Houston). Mart Bralv i« • i Mi iicaid protemnn^ fight
»va bom Aianllc City

( £ ■ NORM SLOAN
) WRESTUNQ
_____
COLLEGE BASKETBALL

KW
O W R E8TU N O

Th* nedoni lop coftog* seniors
compete. bom Palo ARo.CaW
........
( D O BOWUNO 1150.000 AC-OetAFTERNOON
eo Classic Ms bom Ibtlon Square in
1 &gt;fM
Union City. Ca*f
® 9 NFL TODAY

9H )W R ES TU N O

1130

OMOTOWWt m KUJSTRATEO

® ■ EAST-«mPaHRBfEBOWL

1030
9 d )N a w e X M R E V K W

1035

5:35

230

Of
-A U T I
Tha M at
Matures «gh&lt; of aw
world's taodtog p tiyvt, M u d n g
John Mcfaroo. Ivan Lsndl and JMheg Connor*.

HI (38) WRESTUNO

FARMINGTON. Conn. (UPI)
— T o w n s p e o p le w h o r e ­
nounced television for the
month o f January last year
were so Impressed with the
resu lts o f the exp erim en t
they've decided to try It again
this month, organizers say.
Nancy DeSalvo. one of the
originators of the Idea, said
p led ge cards and bum per
stickers have been passed out
to get as many television
viewers as possible to join. The
second black-out began Wed­
nesday.
"W e're stressing that people
should shut the television ofT
c o m p le te ly or redu ce the
number of hours they watch
It." she said.
Some 1,000 residents shut
off their television sets during
January 1984. and about 5,000
viewers watched considerably
less.
"Th ey played games, read.

Of The Week

January 4 Thru January 10
SATURDAY

730

_______ ___a*
WITH
ORLANDO
m if t u
n u w u uW
w Kv-

THURSDAY

EVEMNO
® Q O O O BPORTI
7 AC
5 ,-..
r.3 5
w b o tu n O
i

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r tr r v iV .’■ V i V t W i V C V h m r j v A 'r t v i Y s V k V i V i

Friday, Jan. 4, IM S-3

1035
32 NBA BASKETBALL SaattN
, SuperSome* pi GofOen State Want' or*' .......................... ...

jitr.ivA mu/. &gt;1

exercised, developed hobbles.
T h e y di d o t h e r t hi ng s
together." DeSalvo said. "You
could really see the benefit of
giving up T V ."
DeSalvo said children who
got average or low grades In
school benefited a great deal
from the black-out. "W hen
these kids gave up TV. their
marks Improved so much.
"You can really sec how
young kids are hurt by televi­
sion after you go without It for
awhile." she said. "You have
kids who try to do th eir
homework and watch TV at the
same time or else they rush
through their homework so
'they can watch.
"Television brings out the
aggression In kids. There's a lot
!of bantering around. When
somebody gets hurt now there
doesn't seem to be much con­
cern." DeSalvo said. "I think
this comes from T V ."

G O GUIDE
John Young Planetarium !
Christmas shows: Out o f the
Cast, through Jan. 6, Monday
through Friday. 2:30 p.m;
weekends 2 and 3:30 p.m.,
Orlando Science Center. 810 E.
Rollins St.. Loch Haven Park.
Florida Symphony Orchestra
performs under the direction of
W a rd W o o d b u r y fo r th e
Festival Concert Series at
Rollins Collge Knowles Chapel.
Winter Park. 4 p.m. Jan. 6.
Sponsored by the Bach Festival
society.
Seminole Community Col­
lege Film Series, 7:30 p.m.,
Jan. 9 In the concert hall on
campus featuring Yellow Sub­
marine animated cartoon with
11 Beatles songs and the Ghree
Stooges In Outer Space Jitters.
Free to the public.

C ow b oy a and I n d i a n a :
Common Ground art exhibition
Jan. 6-Feb. 17. Loch Haven Art
Center. 2416 N. Mills Ave..
O r la n d o . H o u rs -T u esd a y
through Friday. 10-5; Saturday
noon to 5; Sunday 2-5 p.m.
Free to the public.
Asolo State Theatre produc­
tion of Children o f a Leaser Cod
to benefit the Very Special Arts
Festival. 8 p.m.. Jan. 11. at the
Annie Ruaacll Theatre. Rollins
College, Winter Park. 025 tick­
et Includes reserved seating,
cast party and donation. Reser­
vations by Jan. 4.
C h ild r e n 's A r t E x h ib it,
through Jan. 11. Monday to
Friday. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. Pine
Castle Center o f the Arts. 5903
Randolph St.. Orlando.
Creative Art Gallery presents
Invitational with works by
artists. J.M. Bojarzuk. Cheryl
Bogdanowltach, Grady Kimsey.
C a r o l N a p o l i , and Jean
Schubert. Jan. 2-26. 11 a.m. to
4 p.m., Tuesday through Sat­
urday.
Maitland Art Center exhibits
paintings o f Erin Sherman.
Atlanta artist, through Jan. 6.

through Friday. 10 a.m. lo 4
p.m.; weekends. 1-4 p.m.
General Sanford Museum
and Library. Fort Mellon Park.
520 E. First SI.. Sanford. 2-5
p.m.. Sunday. W ed n es ­
day .Thursday. and Friday.
Seminole County Museum,
H i g h w a y 17- 92 al Bush
B o u l e v a r d . In o l d A g r l Center/County Home building,
2-4 p.m. each Sunday.
The Armand Hammer
Daumier collection exhibit,
through Jan. 27, Loch Haven
Art Center. 2416 N. Mills Ave.,
O rlando. Hours: TuesdayFriday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.;
Saturday noon to 5 p.m. and
Sunday, 2-5 p.m. Special tours,
lectures. (11ms and workshop
will be held in conjunction with
the exhibit.
Nature hike each Saturday.
10 a.m., Weklwa Springs State
Park. Extended day 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 869-3140 for Information.
Seminole Community Col­
lege Wlnter/Sprlng Concert
Series featuring Rick A. Ross,
Instructor of organ and per­
former. opens Jan. 13 at 3 p.m.
In the Fine Arts Concert Hall on
campus with Ross at the piano
and John Adams, violinist.
Series tickets available for a
tax-deductible donation of $10
or more to the SCC Founda­
tion. Call 323-1450.
"Strings Attached" led by
Jazz trumpeter Ira Sullivan In
con cert. 8 p.m ., Jan. 17.
Winter Park High School. Ticketa available at the door or from
UCF or Seminole Community
College music students. Free
90-mlnute clinic open to all at
10 a.m.. Jan. 17 at University
o f Central Florida music re­
hearsal hall. For Information
call UCF Music Dept.. 2y5ir t f i d

v t u i r o i p o : ) *»iM

�4 -E y w lm Haratd, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 4, IttS

January 4

FRIDAY
EVENING

6:00
B ® ® B ® O N E W S
ID (36) JEFFERSONS
®
(ICS MACNEIL / LEHRER
ucufAum ia
8 ( 8 ) W ELCOME BACK, KO TTEH

6:05
(Q LUCY SHOW

6:30
IN B C NEWS
I ABC NEWS g
1 ALICE
IO O O O TR IES
6 :3 5
32 DOWN TO EARTH
7 :0 0
B QD JO KER 'S WILD
3 ) a PJd. M AOAZME On location
with itunlman Slava Links; a tar«toa lhat provide* acraamlng. try*.
taricN 'Yana'' lor rani.
JB JE O P A R D Y
0 6 ) TO O CLOSE FOR COM .
tO)M DOOR GARDENS

Sin ONE OAY A T A TtolE
BO OM ER m

7 '0 5
i

7:30

B (3) entertainment to m q h t
Faaturad: Angla Dtcklruon, Joan

S'

l O WHEEL O f FORTUNE
_
O
*100.000 NAME THAT
TUNE
go (M | BENSON
ffi (10) THIS W O K W ITH CHRIS
MORGAN
S O ALL M THE FAMILY
7 :3 5
12 AHOY GRWFTTH

6:00
B (D V Altar Ham and Kyla ara
capturad by afana, Chart** Irtaa to
tore* Ham la mm apatrat lha rab(1 ) B OUKES O f KAZZARO Bo
and Luka epook Boa* Hogg into
caMng on a devtou* plot to cheat
Lktda Jaaaa out ot M i rightful inhar-

as

PNHp kilo buying Mm a dog

ion*.g
g rip s ) DALLAS
S (10) W ASHM OTON WEEK IN
■ P I M OVK "Taaas" (1*41) Olann
Ford, Wttam Hdden. Fhands amca
ehAdhood, a cattleman and a ruatlar
Ha tor lha allactiona ot iha aama
P »t

6.-05
B
MOWS “Back To Bataan"
( t*44) John Wayne, Anthony Quinn.
Cut oil Irom American lores*. a
native FMptooa
i army tor a raid on

® B STR EET HAWK (Pramtara)
In Its batda against crime, tha fedaral govammant raendta a young.
undtocipMned cop lo rida lha
w o rld 's faalast m olorcycla
with alala-ol-tha-art
Start Rat Smith, Joa
_
(W t W ALL STREET WEEK
Q uasi: Executive Dlractor Hanry
Kauknan of Salomon Brother*, toe.
M O
B ® H U N T E R Hunter and McCaA
kimatlgala d u n a psychopathic
Mtor baglna staking vtettma who
dtoptey tout at Breads vtdso game*
CD B P A P A S Janna to arraatad
with murdsr; Pam's
to Itod M art to urwucceae-

8

11:10
82 WORLD A T WAR

11:30
B GD TO M Q H T Host: Johnny Carson. Schaduled' Charlaa Natoon
nwwT.
( D O TAXI
( T) O A K NEWS M QH TUNE

ac(3s)scrv

o

QD

FALCON CRSST A
Lanes can't

6 :3 5
32 BETW EEN TH E UNES
730
)NFL*S4
I BLACK AWARENESS
IN O S INCORPORATED
) (35) JIMMY SW AQOART
M OM OVW

12:00

3)
MOVIE "BraMtlng Up"
) Q THE
(1978)
Las SAINT
RarMck. Oranvtoa Van
) BENNY HILL
(! ) KOJAK

12:10
32 M QHT TRACKS

12:30
B
® FRIDAY M Q H T V D EO S
Vldsoa by Prince ("I Would Ola 4
LT'L Don Haniay ( "Tha Boys Of
Summer"), D an Band (“Lai It A l
Blow''), Cyndi Laupar (“Monsy
Changss Evarything"). Tina Marla
("Lover Girt").
O S p S tf-TR O O P

130

(D B MOVW “Tha Ohosl And Mr*.

Muk" ( 1947) Sana Ttornsy, Rax

3D 0 6 ) CM LDREN RUNMNQ O U T
OF f | ^
B (•) MOVW “ Tha Burning HSto"
(1967) Tab Hunter, Nalaks Wood.
1.-05
B N IQ H T TRACKS
230
3D p * ) P U TTR f ON TH E M TS
2 :0 5
O M Q H TTR ACK S
2 :3 0
m (36) I Lo ve LUCY
3 :0 0
® B
MOVW “ Tito tnnooanta1'
(1963) Daborah Karr. Mlchaal
R* § 6 ) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(•) MOVW “ Tha Badga Of M srahN Brannan" (1957) Jkn Darla,
Artoan Whalan.

8

335
3 2 M Q H TTR ACK S
3*30
3D (36) FAIRLY AFFAIR

7 :3 5
32 G E T SMART

6:00
)8NO R KS
| SHIRT TALES
8UPERFRKNOS: LEGEND­
ARY SUPER POWERS SHOW
(IM
l PACT
( 10) LAP
OUKTtHQ
l
| (D M4O TV

E

AFTERNOON
1230
WLANO
B ® 1QSJJGAN’S
&lt;
I SATURDAY 8UPERCADE
_____
( D O IA
i K WEEKEND “ Tha Joka'a
On Mr. Uttla" Two prankalara tout
out about tha kMta of mtochtof ham
an unuauN taochar. (R )g
3D (36) MOVW “ Tha Dovfl Rktaa
Out'* (1966) Chrlatophar Loo.
Chartaa Gray. Tha Black Magic
weaves ha draadad apal upon lha
mlnda of Ha victlma.
B (B) MOVW “ Tha Left-Handed
Gun"
■'' (1956) Pate Newman, Uta
A youthful Blty lha Kid
itoMadaro.
1 2 :3 0
• ® I*AMERKiA'S TOP TEN
I NORM SLOAN
AMERICAN BAN06TANO
Featured: OanarN Pubic ("Tendernaia." "Never You Dona Thai "),
Rabble Jackton ("Centipede” ).
Duran Duran'a vkfao "WNd Boya."

Hr

130

1:30
MOVIE "Staraky And Hutch"
(1975) David Soul. Paul Mlchaal
Gteaar. A pair of lough undercover
cope eel out lo trap a kilter only lo
hnd that they ara Ns neat largata.

(D B

2:00

B ® TERMS "A T tT C h fan g* Of
Champion*" The title match of thto
tournament feature* eight of lha
8 :3 0
world'* Hading player*. Including
) PWK PANTHER ANO SONS
John McEnroe, Nan Landl and Jkn) G ET ALONG QANQ
my Connor*.
RFRWNDS: LEGEND­ aD (35) MOVW "Bret Maverick: The
ARY
POWERS SHOW
Laty Ace" (1961) Jamaa Gamar, Ed
A
R TSSUPER
!
(C IS C O KIO
Bruce. Bret Maverick plana lo caah
(K t) PLAY BRIDGE
•100.000 ha earn al a poker game,
( SAiUNO TO O FHmad In **v- bi* one of tha bear* robe lha bank.
aral acanlc location*, lha freedom B
(D MOVW "JueUne" (1909)
of lha Mgh aaaa to toaad with lha AnoMi Aknaa, Okk Bogarde. A
raw edged competition of world
of her frtonda and tarnty in order to
•and arm* to toraef to protect her
930
poaklon to Egypt.

8 :0 5
CIMARRON 6TRK*
32 cur

M
:i l

SwhJPPET

330
B MKMfTY ORtoOTS
® B EAST-WEST SHRME BOWL
(35) WRE8TLMG
Tha natton'a top codaga eenlor*
( 10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
compete, from Pato Alto, CaM.
(9) BONANZA
GDBBOWUNQ5150.000AC-OMi tom horn Union Square In
9:30
Union City. CaM.
■ J H B DUNGEONS
- DRAB (10) PRESENTS
TURBO TEEN
335
B (KS FRUGAL OOURM, .
3 2 MOVW “Apache U(*teing~
(1966)
Rory
Calhoun.
Corinna Cel9:35
va t An Indian uprtokig compUcelee
32 W RESTUNO
the plena of a corrupt etaga-lina
1030
omdal tor a gold hatol.
® a
BUGS SUNNY / ROAD
3 :3 0
RUNNER
a O W TO N Y BROW KS JOURNAL
B DRAGON’S LAW
ComadUn mid aodaf actMet Otok
BIG VALLEY
Oragory lato* about haaNh. dtet and
M M A Q B O f OK. PABUTNG
Ma muftt-mMon-dolar deal lo pul
6) WRESTLING
money Into tha black community

®a

is

430
3 1 0 6 ) PATTY DUKE

10:30

430
B ® HULA BOW L Hetm an Jro phy
wtrvwr
Doug
FM Ia of Boaton
B SCOORY-OOO MY8TERWS
CoBaga to among the cdtaga tooi(10) THW O LD HOUSE
bafl eantor ak-atara playing m thto
10:35
annual game kt Aloha Stadium.
32 MOVW “Tha Luaty Man" (1951) Honolulu.
Buaan Hayward, Robarl Mitchum A AT) (36) RUNG FU
cowboy doaa avaryiMng to bacoma a |10| ON TH E MONEY Featured
a rodao it o
chooNng a contractor; tax break*
tor charitabto gift*; protecting
®

436
3 2 M Q H TTR ACK S
4 :3 0
(36) DORIS OAY
P ) MOVW
Deep" (1944) Lloyd
Bridge*. Lon
ChansyJr.

8

ALVM ANO THE CHIP-

8

1130

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Mr

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B ® )KKX&gt;
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SCARY BOOOEV FUNNW8
G D f Ii P
O P * ))»WILD, W KD WEST
(W f U VE FROM TH E M ET
lyna Price, Ftorm ia
“ Aida"
Coaaotto, Jamaa M cCrackan,
Simon Eataa. John Macurdy and
DtoktriKavrakos ara laalurad m into
partormanca of VardTa tragic opara
about a woman lom batwwan lora
and pairtobc duty.

a (wi

W B n rn fm vKW

B ® M IL T 11:*

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5 :0 5
' B FtSHW WITH ORLANDO W1LSON

5:30

B

B ® w restu nq
®
O COLLEGE b a s k e t b a l l
North Caroira State at Kentucky
32 MOVIE “ Three Violent People "
(1956) Charlton Heaton. Anna
Baxter. Two man and a woman
bacoma Involved In a triangle white
lighting an unfair provlatonal gay.

7 :0 5
32ETAR CADC
7 :3 0
® Q THIRTY MINUTES
(S o k b sw o r ld

® (•) TW NJQHT ZONE

O W B A R ETTA

I L fTTL E S g
(8) NFL PRO
I
3 MAGAZINE

8

ara

1030
B ® MMMI VICE Crockatt and
Tutob* hafp a pair cl narra man who
frmhmd In a Wg-

MORMNQ

CD O M A TT HOUSTON Mall t
5 :0 0
b o n u s with ladsrN agants to nab a
kldnappar who tsrrortosd Mm as a
ITAR ZAN
chad.g
5 :0 5
(35) M DEPEHOEHT NEWS
32 M Q H T TRACKS
(10) LE T THE OOOO TR IES
ROLL W ITH BA . KINO Orammy
5 :2 5
Award'Winning 8 B. King partorma
H O U YW O O O ANO THE
aoms of Ms moat popular songs In a
19*3 conoart on tha Tufta Udverai630
M campus. (R)
LAW AND YOU
B P ) POLICE WOMAN
OIQOLESNORT HOTEL
10 :10
) (36) EDITOR'S DESK
32 WORLD A T WAR
) NEWS
IP JJto l BAKKEfl
10:30
3D 0 6 ) BOB NEWHART
6 '3 0
® Q IUJQ AN -3ISLAN Q
1130
O SPECTRUM
5 ® ® B ® O new s
O TENNESSEE TUXEDO
(3$) BIZARRE
(38) r r s YOUR BUSW E88

QUNCY

M O
a
(W ) THE MOUNOER Howard
postpones looking tor a )ob whan
ha dadrtaa to wrtta a aiaamy novaL

SATURDAY

tramsd lor tha attampt on Angtea'a

(10) DAVE ALLEN A T LAROE
(2) M QHT GALLERY

January 5 wvSeww,“,,Na,0" **“ *

SmMOVBTON
4:30
® 8 WEW WORLD O f SPORTS
Schadteed: U.8. Olympic gymnaat*
featuring Mary Lou Radon. Paler
Vtdmar. Bad Conner, MHch Gay­
lord. Juienna McNamara, Kathy
Johnaon (Irom Houalcm); Mark Bratend kt Ma aaoond protaaelonN fight
B (W| HEALTH SKfllRS
MA1
pauaa"

SLT

630
GRMTSSTAMmCAN

m
WALL STREET WEEK
Guaat: Executive Dkecfor Henry
Kaufman of Salomon Brother*. Inc.

5:35
32 MOTORWEBt KLU8TRATED
EVEMNO

1SOUTHERN CIRCUIT
IKMOHT
635
O WRESTLING
6 :3 0
o&lt;
O ABC NEWS □
(10) NEWTONS APPLE Computer aaatotance In aporta eelecllon:
an exploration ol radtoectlvtty;
cauaaa of acne; a vton wtth Siberian
Ugara-g
7 :0 0
DANCE FEVER
HEEHAW
SOLIOQOLD
) (36) BUCK ROGERS
(10) AIR FORCE ONE: THE
PLANES ANO THE PRESIDENTS
Jimmy Stewart narrate* a htotory ol
tha "hying Whit* Houae" horn
FDR'* aacret Caiablanca trip dur­
ing World War II to Pretidtnl
naagan'i (ournay lo the Paopto'a
Rapubkc of China
0&gt; (6) TALES FROM THE DAAK-

§

7 :0 5
(DM QH CHAPARRAL

S

7 :3 0
® FIORXMS WATCHING
(I) MQHT GALLERY

630
B ® DWFRENT STROKES Sam
bag* Drummond lo coach hi*
medlocrt battbaH team but regret!
hto cholc* whan ha toame ha'I be
•lltingc
Hawke and Calttoi
® d IAJRWOLF
(
ara ■trickan by a deadly vtru* dur­
ing thak krveetigation of a aacret
laboratory In tha Aleutian*
CD B TJ. HOOKER Hooker eo6ctta Stacy’s help lo capture a
deranged Mtor wtth a penchant tor
maN thoppkra. q
(ID 0 6 ) MOVW “ Tha Bridge* At
Toko-flT (1964) WMMm Hokten.
Fradric March. The paraonN kva* of
man who struggle to eurvfva In tha
dangerous betttoftokte of the Kore­
an War ara as tortuous aa tha war
B

(W ) AM ERKAN PLAYHOUSE

Olga BNkn star to Horton Foote's
1872 Mm adaptation of WNkam
Ftdhner't story about the torn that
davetopi between an toaMoteate
doned pregnant women. □
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r (1975) Pater Fonda. Warren
Oete*. Whan a vacationing tourtom* Inadvertenlty wltnaa*** a
hum an sacrifice by Satan
wanNppsra, they Res to terror.

836
B MOVW “WNktog T N T (1973)
Joa Don Baker, Etaabeth Hartman.
Sheriff Butord Puaaar wegaa a oneman campaign to clean up Me Tan-

B ®

830

DOUBLE TROUBLE Kate
and Atoson concoct a achama to
gal a man Into Margo'* Ma.

930

B ® OMWW A BREAK Na6 totena

that Grandpa'* groucNnasa to
prompted by hto toeing that ha’* a
faUura wNh nothing to wM to hto

®
staying of lha to* tier of an out-offavorjxnk rock band.
CD8 LOVE BOAT The pMoaophy
ol Isaac'* totesl tov* inter eel buga
tha crew; two man miematcried by ■
dating aartrioa meat a strange wom­
an; a tovaatruch man wooa a wont•P

York f.otrtmant Itors* itrugglei
to maintain hi* ampka and prevent
hto opportuntotlc ton (Ben Murphy |
from staging a corporate takeover.
Star* 8am Wanamakar and Yvette
Mknteux.

1030
m o COVER UP
(D O FMOER O f LOST LOVES
Cary hefna find tha hak to a busi­
nessman's fortune; Daisy starches
r a man’s draam gkl. p
) (36) MOEPENDENT NEWS
) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
I (S) PERRY OOMO LAS VEGAS
STYLE Parry tings perennial favorlies Including “ Ftetongs" and “ I
Writ* Tha Songs,” and to lokied by
AmvMargret and Rich Uttla, who
doaa Impressions of Las Vega* Ufa.
Ai*o. denote* Loa Pampas Qauchos of Argentina and A Bara
Touch Of Vegas.
1030
IB O B W W H A R T
(W ) M ONTY P YTH O N S FLYMO
CIRCUS

10:50
32 MQHT TRACKS: CHARTBUSTER8

11:00
a I®® a® Q ( D O n e w 8
op (36)) iP in T S f ON THE HITS
(10)
f f i(t
o )!MONTY PYTHONS FLYMO
CIRCUS
8 (•) H0NEYM00NER8

11:30
B ® SATURDAY MQHT LIVE
Host: Ed Aaner. GuaaU: Tha Kmki
Do If Agakt ’L (R)
o STAR SEARCH
O SUN COUNTRY Quest. Ken-

sSi

(38) MOVW "The Last Remakt
Ol Beau Geats ” (1177) Marty Ftldman. Mlchaal York.
B &lt;•) MOVIE "Ptgs" (1980) Tod
Lawrence, Jaese Vkit.
1 1 :5 0
32 M Q H T TRACKS
1230
CD o

t h is w e e k m c o u n t r y

1 2 :3 0

® o MOVW “ Tha Boya From BraHT (1975) Gregory Pock, Laurence
Oflvtar,
CD Q i c o u n t r y
1 2 :5 0
OMQHT

tr a c k s

130
) 2 ROCKS TONIGHT
( D Q IiNASHVILLE MUSIC
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6 ) MOVW "Crucible Of Ter­
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sr

130

IMUBtccnv.asA.

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(1940) Uto Palmar
Banks.

1 :5 0
B M G H T TRACKS

sr

230

IP O P I G OES TH E COUNTRY

2 :3 0
MOVW “ The Men Who nev­
er Wee” (1956) Carton Webb, Gloria
Graham*.

CDB

230
3 2 M Q H TTR AC K S
330
3D 0 6 ) MOVW “ The Georg* Raft
Story" (1951) Ray Denton. JuSe
B (S) MOVW "Secret Beyond The
Door" (1948) Joan Bennett. Mtchaai
Redgrave.
3 :5 0
O M O H T TRACKS
4 :1 0
® B MOVW “ The Bottom Of The
Bottte'' (1956) Van Johnson.
Joseph Cottan
4 :5 0
3 2 M Q H TTR AC K S

�January 6

SUNDAY
5:00

® O t h is w e e k w ith d
BWNKLEY
ffi(W ) GOURMET COOKING

(35) NEWS
(9)TARZAN

8

AFTERNOON

6*0
LAW AND YOU
AGRICULTURE U.S-A.
3(35) IMPACT

8

(•) MOVIE "Thr** T o n
S1**rs" (1539) John Wtyfw. Carafe
UndN A cowboy Mda lo th* tMcua ol • young woman who ha*
boon ttwaalanad with tha lot* ol h*f
ranch

0:30

12*0
0 ® MEET THE PRESS

(SO NFL TODAY

© PS) BLACK BEAUTY After many
ownara. both kind and cruel. Beauty
and* up haMmg a cab In Haw York
'City where late raunHat her with
I Luka Oray (KrMollar TabonL the
eon ot her original owner. Eileen
Brennan, Mai Farrar and Van Johntonco-tlar. (P*rt ? of ?|
(1010000 NEIGHBORS
(*) MOVE "Dark Purpose"
(1554) Shirley Jones. Rottano
Brazil An American art dealer
bacomaa Invahred In Inthgua and
murder during a vtatt to Italy

§

7:30

8

0:00
S ® VOICE Of VICTORY
(1) O REX HUMBARO
m o BOB JONES
(It (35) JACKSON FIVE
GD 110) SESAME STREET (R) g
02 CARTOONS
S O ) FANTASTIC FOUR

0:30
a ® SUNDAY MASS
O DAY Of DISCOVERY
OORAL ROBERTS
(35) PORKY PIG
(DSPS3ERMAN

i

0:35

®LOSTMSPACE

M 0
a ® WORLD TOMORROW
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(7J O FIRST PRES8YTERMN
CHURCH OP ORLANDO
M (35) TRANSFORMERS
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a ( !) VOLTRON, DEFENDER Of
THEUMVERSE
a

0

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MONTAGE THE BLACK

S'

(35) P B « PANTHER
(10) MAGIC OP WATERCOL-

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10*0
a ® TAMNG ADVANTAGE
m a r r « w i« T T E N
© (35) BLACK BEAUTY TM*
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In ItHh-cantury Maryland on tha
tarm ol Tom Gray (Mm IM MJnar|
whoaa Mnaaa lorcaa him lo *aa bar
to ona ol many Mura ownara, tha
local tqutrt (Camaron MrtchaD)
(Pan l o l l )
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•
m MOV* "Ivanhoe” [15531
Robert Taylor. Ekzabatfi Taylor. A
chhrakoua knighi la In lova wNh ona
woman, but betrothad to another

10*5

&lt;Q OOOO NEWS

10:30
0 ® MOVIE "BamMa Ol Comca~
(1553) Richard Oreene. Paula Ray­
mond. A tyrant maaU dalaat at tha
hands ola patrol Inina
® Q FACE THE NATION
m O FIRST BAPTaT CHURCH
■ ( M l WOOOWROHTS SHOP

10*5
02 M O W "Shafefco" (15111 Sean
Connary. BrtgltM Bardol. A loner
»a*aa a group ol aristocrats horn
Indian attack after defeating tha
Apacha chraTt ton In a light

11*0
* 0 THRTY MMUTES

(IO) NEWTECH HUES

® sinnrnljnw—

(35) MOEPENOENT NEWS
(50) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"The Jewel In The Crown" Teddia is
injured in a si one-throwing incident
on Ms wedding day. leading lo a
confrontation between Merrick and
the Nawab s cruel manlier. (Part 4
ot 14|g

® TO SC ANNOUNCED
(35) DAMEL BOONE
10:05
(tO) FIR M UNE At Na home In (Q NBA BASKETBALL Indiana
Susses. England. Malcolm Mugger-Pacers el Portland Traa Blazers
idge discusses faith. Christian paci­
10:30
fists and the end ol the world (R)
(35) BOB NEWHART
SPIBARETTA
(!) TALES FROM THE DARK5:30
SOE A husband (Lou Jacobi) with
® Q A T T H E MOVES
back pam and a nagging wits (Peg­
gy Cass) goaa lo a doctor who sug­
5:35
gests
an unusual form ol treatment.
(Q WED. WED WORLD OF ANI-

2

*

0 ® NEWSCENTEfl 2 UAGAONE
1 j ) o SPECTRUM
® O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION
12*0
© (35) W.V. GRANT
O ® NFL '54 Starting tlma Msub|act to change
7:00
(D O NFL FOOTBALL "NFC
T8 COMPANY
Championship Game" Starting tune
ROBERT SCHULLER
and frame war* not determined at
PICTURE OE HEALTH
preee time.
p(35) BEN HADEN
®0NEW 8
JWORLD TOMORROW
■ (10) HEALTH MATTERS Lung
)(• ) JAMES ROBISON
Cancer"
HARMONY AND ORACE
ESSENCE
) (35) EJ. DANIELS
) rr IS WRITTEN
) (I) W.V. GRANT

a nurse leave a seriously injured
patient slone during the chaos at
tha hospital foitowtng a bus scct-

5:00

5:05

QNKWfT TRACKS

aw

and Kon Ichikawa provide Ihe* own
personal cinematic record* ol the
1977 Olympic games m Munich
(HI (35) HAWAM FIVE-0
0 ) (10) SARASOTA JAZZ FESTI­
VAL First Ol a three part eerie* Ol
toot-ltpptng music Maturing artrti!
who have performed with Benny
Goodman
01 (5) SWITCH

1 *0
8
® NFL FOOTBALL "AFC
Ch^npwnsiMp Game" At prtat
time, starting lime and teams war*
not determined
® O WALL STREET JOURNAL
REPORT
8 ) (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"The Jewel In The Crown" After
Daphne die* gtYlngr birth to a hallcasta daughter, her mail, lady
Manners, decides lo raise tha child
Neighbor Mddrad Leyton prepare*
lor hsr daughter’s marriage to army
officer Teddia Bingham (Pari 3 ol
I4|Q

11*0

1*0
® o MOVE "Hevtng A WondsrM
Time" (1535) Geiger Rogers. Red
Skelton. A city get heed* lor the
CatsMfe where she hope* lo And
soma cultural enrichment and
winds up IsMng In love Instoad

2 *0
(Q PM MOW "Thunder And
Lightning" (15TT) David Carradme.
Kata Jackson A moonahmar and
Na geimend try lo stop the deavary
ol a batch oI deadly brow eocidanleily concocted by her lather.
• (M) GREAT PERFORMANCES
"Dance In America: Balanchine
Tribute, r George Balanchine's
career Mtraced bom Ms training tn
Imperial Russia lo the budding ol
the Naw Yort Ctty Bedel (Part 1 ol
7)(R|
•
p ) MOVE "Eaal Ol Eden"
(15551 Jamas Oean. M e Hama.
Baaed on the novol by John Sleev
bech. Frjttrslsd love create* con
Ikcls between two boy* and the*

2:55
® O MOVE "Daddy Long Lags '
(1955) Fred Astaes. Lesha Caron.
When a wealthy playboy decide* lo
sand ■ French orphan gel to col­
lege. ha doesn't armapaia that a
dung Ike love might kiterters

8

EVENING

6:00
® 0® 0NEW 8
It] (35) QRQ2LY ADAMS
9 ( 10) NATURE OP THINGS
9 ( f ) BLUE KMGHT

0

(£2 UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

IrO

MOVC Eleanor And franklm" (1575) Jane AJeiender. Edward
Herrmann
® O UFESTYLEb OF THE RICH
ANO FAMOUS
7:00
a i (35) MRS. AMERICA PAGEANT
a ® o o o o SPORTS
Beautiful and talented married
i») 0 5 0 minutes
® O ON TOUR WITH LAW­ women compete lor the title d Mrs
RENCE WELK A continuation ot America, with performance* by lop
Lawience WMk's US lour, both antsrtainers including singer Vikkl
behind tha scenes and on stage Carr Richard Dawson hosts horn
Parlormere** by Anacanl. Bobby tha Las Vegas Hilton
and Elaine, Art Duncan. Henry B (9) MOVC ’ The Americano''
Cuesta and Jim Roberts (Part 2 ot (1955) Glenn Ford. FranS Lovejoy
7)
12:20
116 (35) FAME
(Q JERRY FALWELL
CD (10) AUSTIN CfTY LIMITS
12:30
George Stmt I The Kendaa*"
0 ® GUILTY OR INNOCENT
CD (») TONY RANDALL
® O AMERICA'S CHOICE

0:30

(J ) O CBS NEWS
® 0 ABC NEWS g

7*5

(Q WRESTLING

0®

7:30

Q ® PUNKY BREWSTER Punky
transforms Henry's study into her
bedroom, while grocery ihoppmg.
1:20
Punky tears that Henry has aban­
0 MOVC ' Cromwab" (I670I Rich
doned har.(R)
ard Harris. Alec Qumnaaa.
B I O TEN STEPS TO WEALTH

®o

2:30

Friday, Jan. 4 , 1W —5

PBS' Je w e l'
Truly Sparkles
By David Handler
Thi s hasn't been a bad
season so Tar. “ Miami Vice” Is a
fine new show. "Murder, She
W rote" and "T h e Cosby Show"
are cute. So Is "W ho's the
Boss?" "N igh t Court" gets
better and funnier every week.
The second season offers some
promising new ventures.
Still, one thing has been
missing for me — a big, meaty
new "M asterpiece Theatre"
series to anchor my TV week
around. I m ay be getting
spoiled, but I’ ve come lo expect
at least one good one per
season.
Happily, that series has ar­
ri ved. " T h e Je we l in the
Crown." a 14-parter based on
Paul Scott's "Raj Quartet." Is
sweeping and powerful. It takes
us right to the cutting edge of
modem history and dramatizes
It vividly.
The setting Is India. 1942.
Gandhi wants the British rulers
out. The Japanese, meanwhile,
anxiously want In. This Is a
scene of great social and politi­
cal upheaval. The lives of our
c ha r a c t e r s Il l ust rate that
turbulence. Clips from actual
British newsreels set the time
and prevailing attitude.
Our first three episodes cen­
tered around a shy. gawky
upper-cruat British nurse.
D a p h n e M a n n e r s ( Sus an
Wooldridge), who la newly ar­
rived to Mayapore. and her
budding romance with Hart
Kumar (Art Malik), a handsome
Indian newspaperman.

0 *0
CBS NEWS XttHTWATCH
0 ® KMQHT RIDER Michael
3*0
engage* In a lethal battle with a tut
man whoee weapon ta a car compa­ ® 0 MOVC "Footsteps" (1972)
Richard Crams, Joanna Panel
rable to KITT.
® B MUROER. SHE WROTE Jee4*0
Mca mud overcome pobbcal boon­ ®
0 MOVC "Sandcastle*"
doggling and sohr* a murder whan ( 1977) Bonnie Bedwka. Jan-Michael
she a appomted to M a daceaaed
O R A T PATROL
m ^ n t T n i O W i M OB Baaed
on Cobaan McCulough'a novel
m
spanning three ganarallona ol an
Auatraban family After the death ol
wealthy matriarch Mary Carton
(Barbara Stanwyck), Father Ralph
(Richard Chamberlain) must choose
SHEFFIELD. England (UPI) — Drummer
between hit affection lor Maggfe
(Radial Ward) and his commitment Rick Allen o f the rock group Def Leppard
to tha Church. (Part 1of 4)(R)Q
was Improving today but still In serious
(35) C H A W S ANGELS
condition after Tuesday's surgery to reat­
(tOt NATURE Japanese war
tach fits severed arm and doctors say he
natNnsry sunk In tha South racmc
during World War 5 provide* an may never drum again.
anvbonmanl lor the underwater
Fans Inundated his hospital with tele­
plant and animal Ha eiammed w
phone calls after the New Year's Eve car
this Nm (R )g
crash In which the 21-year-old pop star's
B ft) MOVC Fanny'' (1551) Mau­
rice Chav*i«r . Leake Caron A
left arm was severed.
young French girl teas in love with a
boy who goaa lo aaa whan ha hndt
An ambulance man picked up the arm
out tha t pregnant

Hart was raised and educated
In Britain. He Is a lost soul now
that he's home. He doesn't
even speak the language. He
has grown bitter and testy. The
Brits lead a privileged life In
India. The Indians do not.
"You may find things here of
which you do not approve."
Daphne Is told at the British
hospital where ahe works.
"Perhaps." Daphne suggests,
"they should be changed."
And soon they will be. Colo­
nial rule Is being seriously
challenged by Gandhi. The
Brits are respon din g with
shows of force and of pomp.
“ One waves the flag to show
who It belongs to." declares
Ronald Merrick (Tim Plggott-Smlth). the rigid, arrogant
racist who Is district superin­
tendent o f police.
T hi s romance between
Daphne and Hart Is taboo. It Is
particularly frowned upon by
Merrick, a lonely bachelor of
"humble origins" who wants
Daphne to marry him. When
she rejects him. he orders her
to stay away from Harl. "Color
does matter." he says. " I can't
help It. The Idea revolts me."
Future episodes o f "T h e
Jewel In the Crown" bring us
more British characters we
haven't met yet. more stories.
The canvas Is huge. This Is an
amazing accomplishment, one
o f taste, depth and Intelligence.
The performances are marvel­
ous.
You can't ask for more than
this from your televtson.

Def Leppard Drum m er M ay Never Play Again

S

0*5

Q ACE AWAR06 HupWght* ol tha
1554 Acm Awards lor Cable EscM• (M) GREAT PERFORMANCES
lance are praaantad including ckpa
"Danes In America: Balanchine
bom (he winning programs.
Tribute. M" George Baianchna tabs
moat ol Na own story m taped Mar9*0
views bom 1535 lo 197*. tootags o&lt; 0 ® MOVE Tha Road Warrior"
htt mayor baAets is featured (Part 2 11951) Mai Gibson. Bruce Spence
In a deeolale Auslrake ol the krlure.
o(2| (R|

3:15

(Q MOVE ChartolteT Web" Milti tn oS-ftodudng comwumty
(19731 Animated A net pig is infer attack lor II* praooua feel.
saved bom daughter by a charmng ® 0 CRAZY UKE A FOX Whan
spidw, a rat snd a stuttering gooM Harry Mwrtti a fear feat 04 190# Mm
and toma otd btttbts cards, ha

4*0

®

I nolMng lo hara Bwm
gcpeiQUMCY
Debra Maffstt and Paw Pegs are 0 (10) N0MPVT10N TELEW ON'
among the antartabiars (obSng A look al the 1939 WorU'a Fab at
Bobby Vbdon in IMa mMcal variety
«wudee mol Mieped the 20th con® 00 MOMS "VIMona « B(p4"
Eta dlfwtea
ftfsran
(1973)-----------------------------MM Zaltar ling. Arthur Ponn,
10*0
MkMM PNagftar, MBot Forman. ®0TIM PFCRJ0HH.M *.Jae5r.

p

1*0

OUS.TY OR INNOCENT
® o
MOVC "Pinky" (1549)
Jeerma Cram. WUiam lundigan
0 ( 5 ) THE AVENGERS

3*0

jgpo

11:30

®
ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK Featured Shemm Hem*

6*5

1:05

(Q MOW "Barefoot In The Park”
(1557) Robert Redtord. Jane Fonda.
Problem* ansa whan an eitrevert­
ed young bnde tries lo settle Into
her lawyer husband's conesrvsthe
Butyls.

® ® 0® 0N E W 3
(35) SANFORD ANO BON
(10) ADAM SMITH'S MONEY
WORLO “ Biotechnology: Can
Genetic* Engineer Prohtt?"
BIMHONEYMOONERS

Evbfiing H'r*W, Sanford, FI.

*

■

torn off at the shoulder when his Corvette
Stingray left the road and overturned near
Sheffield around noon Monday as he was
driving home to see his parents.
After the initial operation, however,
severe bleeding continued and doctors
stopped It with further surgery.
His Dutch girlfriend. Mlrlum Barcndsen.
22. suffered head Injuries In the crash, but
was discharged from the hospital Wed­
nesday. the spokeswoman said.
"W e have been Inundated with phone
and surgeons sewed It back on In two calls here from his fans around the world
operations.
and especially from the United States, and
"R ick’s condition Is Improving. But he Is we are expecting a big batch of gct-wcll
still on the critical list and Is still cards In the mall." she said.
unconclous," said a spokeswoman at the
Allen had Interrupted a busy recording
Royal Hallamshlrc Hospital In Sheffield schedule In the United States to spend
some 150 miles north of London.
Christmas with his parents and relatives In
She said doctors expected to be able to his hometown of Sheffield.
tell In a few days whether (he micro­
Def Leppard gained fame after louring
surgery had been successful.
the United States In 1980. Their 1983
Allen’s brother. Robert, who was at his album "Pyrom anla" was voted best rock
bedside, said there was "some warmth" In album last year In the Grammy awards
Rick's left hand — Indicating blood was and the group was picked as America's
most popular In the Gallup youth poll.
flowing through.
The band, formed In 1978 In Sheffield, is
Surgeons warned, however, that It was
not yet dear If Allen would be able to play still comparatively unknown In Britain.
again with Def Leppard, the heavy metal They have never had a hit record In their
British band which stormed America with home country but hope to change that
with their next album, recorded with Jim
Its 8-mllllon-selllng album "Pyromanla."
During the first operation on Allen, "M eatloaf' Stelnman In the Netherlands
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